The valley has some quite ancient history.
I have put together some of my own pictures of North Leigh Roman Villa, with wiki images which help to give an indication of what the place would have looked like between 100 and 400 AD.
It will be possible to see inside the covered areas of the site on 15th September this month between 10.00 and 4.00. This is a rare opportunity not to be missed for history lovers.
If you can't go click on the link at the bottom to see the BBC animated version.
An open courtyard of a single story villa like, though ours may have been closed in for the colder climate ours.
Looking down on the site from the hillside
The old Roman road of Akeman street runs across the valley below the villa.
http://streetmap.co.uk/place/Akeman_Street_Roman_Road_in_Oxfordshire_561611_331611.htm
The people who lived here at the time the villa was abandoned may have looked like this. http://www.lookandlearn.com/blog/14699/britannia-falls-prey-to-invaders-as-the-romans-abandon-her/
Angles and Saxons fought with Vikings for the next few hundred years. It has taken us till the twentieth century to re-discover central heating. I think the roman farmers may have been less barbaric too.
This is the covered mosaic floor. many of the rooms had mosaics like this, with under-floor heating.
This picture outside the site shows a rather grander two story villa, unlike our own.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningzone/clips/the-roman-villa-at-north-leigh-oxfordshire/5266.html
Sunday, 1 September 2013
Sunday, 4 August 2013
Kingfisher in flight
I finally worked out how to catch the kingfisher flying.
This little fellow seemed to have left the valley for good. But suddenly I saw him again last week The kingfisher is back in the valley.
I am pretty sure that the floods last year prevented them from breeding. I never saw them this spring; but here they are again for summer.
Last week I saw him flying first one way then the other down the river.
Coming back he banked and swerved as he saw me on the bank. Wonderful.
For these photos I chose a spot in the alders on the bank and only had a minute or two to wait before he came along.
Now all I have to do is learn to get him in focus in flight.
I have been trying to catch an enormous dragon fly I saw in the trees the other day; never saw one before. I always thought the little damsels were dragon flies. Now it is enter the dragon time; like a small helicopter; I think they call them emperors.
This little fellow seemed to have left the valley for good. But suddenly I saw him again last week The kingfisher is back in the valley.
I am pretty sure that the floods last year prevented them from breeding. I never saw them this spring; but here they are again for summer.
Last week I saw him flying first one way then the other down the river.
Coming back he banked and swerved as he saw me on the bank. Wonderful.
For these photos I chose a spot in the alders on the bank and only had a minute or two to wait before he came along.
Now all I have to do is learn to get him in focus in flight.
I have been trying to catch an enormous dragon fly I saw in the trees the other day; never saw one before. I always thought the little damsels were dragon flies. Now it is enter the dragon time; like a small helicopter; I think they call them emperors.
Saturday, 25 May 2013
Upcoming Exhibition: Poetry and Pictures at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford.
From July to September there will be a poetry and pictures exhibition featuring works taken from the secluded valley at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford. I thought I would share a taste of it with you on the blog to whet your appetites.
There will be poems and pictures about landscape and animals, trees and plants.
Dr Giles Watson shares the exhibition space with me, featuring his own poetry and pictures on the natural world.
There will be poems and pictures about landscape and animals, trees and plants.
Dr Giles Watson shares the exhibition space with me, featuring his own poetry and pictures on the natural world.
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