Abbey Brooks Galleries

⚡ ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻
Abbey Brooks Galleries
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it. Ok
Abbey Brooks was born on 17.02.1983 in USA. Zodiac sign — Aquarius. In real life she often displays the traits typical for her astrological sign. She is American and proudly proclaims it in most of the interviews. Blonde with Dark brown eyes is adored by millions of people all over the world. Her body proportions are almost perfect and deserve attention as well. The bra size: 40E (US) / 90E (EU), the hip circumference: 35 in / 91 cm and the waistline is 27 in / 69 cm.
Abbey Brooks is an Actress, model with a busy schedule, though she tries to take time for her hobbies. She is keen on travelling, sports, music, modern literature and often holds fan meetings.
Abbey Brooks is very friendly, upbeat and cheerful person.
View all All Photos Tagged ABBEY BROOKS
SmugMug + Flickr .
Connecting people through photography.
About
Jobs
Blog
Developers
Guidelines
Report abuse
Privacy
Terms
Help forum
English
SmugMug + Flickr .
Connecting people through photography.
Abbey Brook taken on the way up to Derwent Edge, via Lost Lad, June 2016 , Peak District ,UK
The car park at Fairholme, located at the upper end of Ladybower Reservoir, was surprisingly busy yesterday, despite our 10am arrival - although perhaps not so much of a surprise given the school holidays and parents surely keen to escape the confines of the house on what promised to be a good-weather day.
Our planned walk was comparatively short at 10 miles and took in the eastern side of Derwent Reservoir before turning right uphill at Abbey Brook, just before the dam-wall of Howden (the three reservoirs being effectively stacked and a key source of water to the East Midlands).
The hike continued to climb up to Lost Lad and eventually Back Tor on Derwent Edge with great views over the length of the Hope Valley a few miles to the west and South Yorkshire to the east, before descending near Whinstone Lee Tor and back to the car park.
It must be almost twenty years since we walked this route but the one element we never forgot was the heather display along Abbey Brook, when the moorland on this side is guaranteed to turn pink in August. Strange then that as we ambled along, no more than 2-3 miles from the car-park, not a soul was seen taking in the beauty of this approach, and that despite a 20 minute break for an early lunch.
Maybe that was a good thing though. This was one of the favourite walks of my Dad who, having lived with us for the last three years in an urn in my den, was finally set free to enjoy the visual delights of the heather moorlands against the soundtrack of the chattering brook below. Together with a similar hike last week to Kinder Downfall, another one of his favourite spots, he's now finally where he wanted to be.
PS Apologies for the tardy responses and stream visits of late, real life has been getting in the way but I'm hoping to catch up over the next few days.
Think this is Bardrden Aqueduct,.. but im not 100% sure !! confirmation anyone?!.June 2017, Bolton Abbey estate, Dales Way, Yorkshire Dales UK
The Dijver, a canal and street in the Markt and Burg Quarter, central Bruges, Flanders, Belgium.
The Dijver is part of the course of the original river Reie and is spanned by the Gruuthusebrug and the Johannes Nepomucenus bridge.
The name dates back to Celtic times and derives from the Indoganian deiwo, god or divine. It is a toponym that, like "Reie" (Rogia), means "holy water".
In those times the Dijver then formed the northern border of an island covered with oak trees, which the Celta saw as sacred trees and was used as a meeting place of Cetic cults. Around 1050 after the Christianization the hermit Everelmus settled here and later the Eekhout abbey was developed. From at least 1127, the Dijver was part of the first city wall of Bruges.
Today the area has a varied function, including commercial, the College of Europe, catering and to a lesser extent housing. There are also often clutter and folklore markets helf here. The Dijver also has an important museum function with the presence of the Groeninge Museum, the Arentshuis and the Gruuthuse Museum.
Wenlock Priory, Much Wenlock, South Shropshire, TF13-6HS
Wenlock Priory Coordinates...: 52.59739°N 2.55506°W
Wenlock Priory, or St Milburga's Priory, is a ruined 12th century monastery, located in Much Wenlock, Shropshire, at grid reference SJ625001. The foundation was a part of the Cluniac order, which was refounded in 1079 and 1082, on the site of an earlier 7th century monastery, by Roger de Montgomery.
The tranquil ruins of Wenlock Priory stand in a picturesque setting on the fringe of beautiful Much Wenlock. An Anglo-Saxon monastery was founded here in about 680 by King Merewalh of Mercia, whose abbess daughter Milburge was hailed as a saint. Her relics were miraculously re-discovered here in 1101, attracting both pilgrims and prosperity to the priory.
By then Wenlock had been re-founded by the Normans as a priory of Cluniac monks. It is the impressive remains of this medieval priory which survive today, everywhere reflecting the Cluniac love of elaborate decoration. Parts of the great 13th century church still stand high.
Much Wenlock was also the home of Dr. William Penny Brookes (1809-95), originator of the still-continuing Wenlock Olympian Games, a major inspiration for the modern International Olympics.
The Dijver, a canal and street in the Markt and Burg Quarter, central Bruges, Flanders, Belgium.
The Dijver is part of the course of the original river Reie and is spanned by the Gruuthusebrug and the Johannes Nepomucenus bridge.
The name dates back to Celtic times and derives from the Indoganian deiwo, god or divine. It is a toponym that, like "Reie" (Rogia), means "holy water".
In those times the Dijver then formed the northern border of an island covered with oak trees, which the Celta saw as sacred trees and was used as a meeting place of Cetic cults. Around 1050 after the Christianization the hermit Everelmus settled here and later the Eekhout abbey was developed. From at least 1127, the Dijver was part of the first city wall of Bruges.
Today the area has a varied function, including commercial, the College of Europe, catering and to a lesser extent housing. There are also often clutter and folklore markets helf here. The Dijver also has an important museum function with the presence of the Groeninge Museum, the Arentshuis and the Gruuthuse Museum.
The area around what is now the town of Sankt Goar was already settled in Roman times. The name in the Early Middle Ages was Wochara, after a short brook emptying into the Rhine here. The name by which the town goes today is from Goar of Aquitaine, who came to live on the site where the town now stands during Frankish, Merovingian King Childebert I’s reign (511-538). Goar came as a young clergyman (actually, a monk) from Aquitaine in the southwest of France and at first lived as a hermit in a cave on the Rhine. With leave from the Bishop of Trier, he worked as a missionary to the local people. He was well known for his great hospitality, particularly towards the Rhine boatmen. Later, he built on the site where the town now stands a hospice and a chapel.
Many legends gathered about him. After his death, about 575, Goar’s grave became a pilgrimage site and the place was named after him. Frankish King Pepin the Younger transferred the hospice and chapel in 765 to the Abbot of the Benedictine Prüm Abbey as a personal benefice. From this grew the Sankt Goar Canonical Foundation, witnessed as early as the late 11th century. The Catholic Encyclopedia notes that “a small church” was dedicated to Goar of Aquitaine in 1768 “in the little town on the banks of the Rhine which bears his name (St. Goar).” It is also reported that Charlemagne built a church over the site of Goar's hermitage. It is around this church that the town of Sankt Goar grew on the left bank of the Rhine between Wesel and Boppard.
Winter Wharfe - A bitterly cold winter morning on the River Wharfe, with first light hitting the ruins of the Augustinian Priory at Bolton Abbey, reflected in the flow of the river.
The Dijver, a canal and street in the Markt and Burg Quarter, central Bruges, Flanders, Belgium.
The Dijver is part of the course of the original river Reie and is spanned by the Gruuthusebrug and the Johannes Nepomucenus bridge.
The name dates to Celtic times and derives from the Indoganian deiwo, god or divine. It is a toponym that, like "Reie" (Rogia), means "holy water".
In those times the Dijver then formed the northern border of an island covered with oak trees, which the Celta saw as sacred trees and was used as a meeting place of Cetic cults. Around 1050 after the Christianization the hermit Everelmus settled here and later the Eekhout abbey was developed. From at least 1127, the Dijver was part of the first city wall of Bruges.
Today the area has a varied function, including commercial, the College of Europe, catering and to a lesser extent housing. There are also often clutter and folklore markets helf here. The Dijver also has an important museum function with the presence of the Groeninge Museum, the Arentshuis and the Gruuthuse Museum.
Dawn at the Abbey - The early sunlight of dawn catching the ruins of the Augustinian Priory at Bolton Abbey reflected in the River Wharfe on a frosty winter's morning.
Here is another photograph of the young Lammergeier on the Peak District Moors in South Yorkshire. This shows the breathtaking wingspan from above, which would dwarf a Golden Eagle. This bird has appeared on the BBC website www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-derbyshire-53383387 and has featured on local BBC TV news too. Also it is still present today, frequenting the Howden Moors and roosting on crags at Abbey Brook.
St Augustine's Reach a culverted section of the River Frome before it enters the River Avon at Bristol Harbour, Bristol, Avon.
It is approximately 20 miles (32 km) long, rises in Dodington Park, South Gloucestershire, and flows in a south westerly direction through Bristol, joining the former course of the river Avon in Bristol's Floating Harbour. The name Frome is shared with several other rivers in South West England and means 'fair, fine, brisk’. The river is familiarly known in east Bristol as the Danny.
Originally the Frome joined the Avon downstream of Bristol Bridge, and formed part of the city defences, but in the thirteenth century the river was diverted through marshland belonging to St Augustine's Abbey (now Bristol Cathedral), as part of major port improvement works. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the lower reaches of the river were culverted and the river now flows under The Centre into St Augustine's Reach.
As with many urban rivers, the Frome has suffered from pollution, but several stretches run through parks and reserves that sustain a range of wildlife. The power of the water was harnessed in many watermills and the area around the river mouth was developed as shipyards by the eighteenth century. As the city of Bristol developed in the nineteenth and twentieth century, flooding became a major problem, remedied by the construction of storm drains and diversions.
Seen the Japanese Gardens at Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire.
Explore #8 03/01/2017 ... many thanks to everyone who has taken time to view, fave or comment, it's very much appreciated
Winter Abbey - Dawn sunlight just catching the ruins of the Augustinian Priory at Bolton Abbey reflected in the River Wharfe on a bitterly cold and frosty morning
The River Wnion, as it runs through Dolgellau, a town in Gwynedd, North Wales.
It begins high on the slopes of Aran Benllyn about five miles south of Lanuwchllyn and flows south-west into the River Mawddach near Cymer Abbey. It flows past several villages, including Rhyd-y-main and Bontnewydd, where a bridge crosses over the river that dates from the 18th century. It then flows to Dolgellau where another locally famous bridge, known as "Y Bont Fawr". Its total length is approximately 12 miles.
The river may get its name from 'White' which turned from "gwyn" (white) into "gwn" (gun); indeed, there is a place called 'Pennar(th) Gwynion' in the vicinity, near Hengwrt.
Well this is a title I never imagined I'd be adding. I gave up chasing rare birds some years ago but a juvenile Lammergeier (aka Bearded Vulture) has appeared in the Peak District. It is a 20 minute drive from home plus an hour and a half's walk high onto the moors, so it was too close to pass over. This bird was so close this morning that I could count the whiskers in its beard.
Apparently this is a wild bred bird that was seen in Belgium, Normandy then the Channel Islands during the last half of May. It was first seen in Britain on June 26th in Staffordshire. It then appeared in the Peak District but sightings were fleeting and sporadic but on 10 July it was found going to roost on cliffs in a remote valley called Abbey Brook. I went early morning on 11th and saw it, but didn't get any decent photographs. I returned this morning and it was still roosting on the cliffs at Abbey Brook. But then it flew round several times allowing amazing photo-opportunities. I'll apologise in advance as I may upload several.
The name Lacock dates from Saxon times when the earliest permanent settlers lived by the Bide Brook, which runs through the middle of the village. They called it lacuc or 'little stream'.
Lacock village is a firm favourite for film and TV producers, most notably for its picturesque streets and historic cottages, untouched by modern alterations. The village's most famous appearances include 'Downton Abbey', the BBC's 'Pride and Prejudice' and 'Cranford', and the films 'Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince' and 'Wolfman'.
The well-preserved remains of the medieval village known since Domesday times as Hundatora Village standing in the dip between Hound Tor and Greator Rocks overlooking the valley of the Becka Brook on Dartmoor.
First recorded in the Domesday book of 1086 and believed to have been abandoned about 1350; archaeological excavations some 40 years ago revealed the presence of a number of Dartmoor longhouses, smaller houses and corn storage barns. The Domesday Book recorded the settlement as belonging to Tavistock Abbey.
The two large flying buttresses were a later addition to prevent the collapse of the tower after the removal of the North transept. A smaller arch closer to us has remarkably remained intact. It is interesting to observe the little vertical slit windows in this view. Starting in the near corner of the South transept, we shall shortly climb the internal spiral staircase, follow an internal passage along the top of the West wall to the tower, and then climb to the top of the tower.
ABBEY CHURCH OF HOLY CROSS WITH SAINT EDBURGHA, CHURCH WALK, PERSHORE, WORCESTERSHIRE
National Grid Reference: SO 94785 45789
Abbey Church of Holy Cross with St Edburgha
(Formerly Listed as: Abbey Church of Holy Cross)
Abbey, now parish church. Founded C7; present building C11-C13 with some later-medieval remodelling; some C17 buttressing following Dissolution; major restoration 1860s by Giles Gilbert Scott; further alterations early C20.
MATERIALS: mainly of limestone ashlar with parapeted plain tile, stone-tile and lead roofs.
PLAN: apse; chancel with choir aisles, N and S transepts and crossing tower; the nave demolished at Dissolution.
EXTERIOR: C19 apse has narrow lancets with continuous hoodmould; diagonal buttresses with offsets; corbel table; and steeply pitched roof. Chancel N aisle has moulded single-light windows; continuous hoodmould; plain corbel table; moulded plinth; offset buttresses which have moulded strings and crocketed pinnacles with geometric blind tracery and rise as flying buttresses extending to clerestory. N clerestory has single-light windows with deep moulded embrasures surmounted by continuous hoodmould; lombard frieze and embattled parapet; polygonal E end surmounted by crocketed pinnacles. NE chapel has coped gable with apex stone and Perpendicular tracery to its E window. S chancel aisle similar to N aisle with Perpendicular E, SE and S windows; clasping buttresses, some incorporating slender 3/4 round shafts; blocked pointed and moulded arch to former S transept chapel with clustered shaft piers and remains of springing to vaulting. South transept: mostly Romanesque. Its E wall has two further attached moulded pointed arches with blocked round-arched features; adjacent are three bays of C13 crocketed blind arcading of former sedilia and piscina, with quatrefoil mouldings; embattled parapet with lombard frieze incorporating grotesques. South transept S wall: chevron-moulded blind arcading to gable, interspersed with single round-headed lights; cable-moulded string course; remodelled triple lancet window; roofline of former monastic buildings visible; central pier and blocked doorway.
South transept W wall: similar lombard frieze; roofline of former nave S aisle visible, and blocked aisle round arch with adjacent 3-light Perpendicular window and lancets to corner stair turret. West wall has blocked round-headed crossing arch with relieving arch above; remains of nave and arcade walls have Romanesque piers with cushion capitals; heavily moulded former S doorway of six orders with stiff leaf capitals to E; inserted W window and door; the W wall all now heavily buttressed. North transept: remodelled and reinforced, but retains blocked round-headed arch to former N nave arcade.
Tower: of four stages, completed 1330; four octagonal pinnacles, embattled at base, surmounted by large crockets with weathervanes; ringing chamber has four windows to each side, of two lights with geometric tracery, each central pair louvred and flanked by blind outer windows; ballflower-moulded string course and parapet; third stage has embattled string course with ballflower mouldings at base and 2-light windows with trefoil-headed tracery; on W side, former nave roof-line is visible and small blocked round-arched window; on E, N and S sides, former chancel and transept roof-lines interrupt 2nd-stage windows; lancets to staircase corner turrets.
INTERIOR: comprises apse and former chancel of five bays, now used as church, and crossing with nave truncated at W arch. E apse, built C19 in Early English style on site of former Lady Chapel, is 5-sided with three narrow lancets to E end flanked by triple-arched blind arcades, all with narrow pointed moulded arches, stiff leaf capitals and detached shafts, some of Purbeck marble; vault has heavily-moulded ribs and central boss. Chancel: rebuilt following fire in 1223, has polygonal E end with pointed E arch of six orders with roll mouldings supported by stiff-leaf capitals above clustered piers of detached or 3/4 round shafts, some of Purbeck marble; similar, unmarbled, piers to chancel arcades; combined triforium and clerestory, rising above moulded string course, incorporate single pointed lights within triple pointed-arched arcades of tall clustered shafts with stiff-leaf capitals, blind at E end; tierceron vaults have ribs rising from stiff-leaf corbels and stiff-leaf bosses. Aisles: slender attached piers of clustered shafts with stiff-leaf capitals and quadripartite vaults with roll-moulded ribs; N aisle lancet windows are all moulded with shafts and stiff-leaf decoration. NE chapel: moulded piscina in S wall and trefoil-headed shallow niche on E wall; S aisle has mainly Perpendicular windows; SE chapel has medieval floor tiles and
Bodystocking Blowjob
Maja Porn
Eve Valentine Porn