I didn’t travel far. Part 4
Continuing the “I didn’t travel far” posts. They were all taken within the city of Lincoln, an ancient small town of some 96,200 people (2014 figure) in the East of England.
Continuing the “I didn’t travel far” posts. They were all taken within the city of Lincoln, an ancient small town of some 96,200 people (2014 figure) in the East of England.
Continuing the “I didn’t travel far” posts. They were all taken within the city of Lincoln, an ancient small town of some 96,200 people (2014 figure) in the East of England.
Continuing the “I didn’t travel far” posts. They were all taken within the city of Lincoln, an ancient small town of some 96,200 people (2014 figure) in the East of England.
The images in this set, and future “I didn’t travel far” posts were all taken within the city of Lincoln, an ancient small town of some 96,200 people (2014 figure) in the East of England.
I’ve been rationalising these pages recently. I’ve included a section on the site called “Projects and Series” . You can see it top right in the heading navigation. This leads to a page providing links to the different projects and series I’ve been working on (and continue to do so). Some of the pictures in these sections date back to the late 1960’s – early 1970’s. I hope you enjoy them all. PDBarton Lincoln 2018
For the purpose of navigation, the earth is notionally divided into Eastern and Western Hemispheres. The line which divides those hemispheres is the Prime Meridian Leaving the North Pole the line travels towards the South Pole. The first land it reaches is on the East coast of England, just above the Humber estuary in the ancient coastal area of Holderness, an area of chronic coastal erosion. The Meridian project, entitled “A line runs through it “ involved travelling along this line from landfall in Holderness in the North, south across the Humber to the seaside towns in North East Lincolnshire and onwards into Lincolnshire, passing through the Lincolnshire Wolds and the fenlands around Boston and Holbeach, and finally to the Lincolnshire/ Cambridgeshire border. The whole distance travelled from Landfall in the North to the Cambridgeshire border in the South is 121.4Km ( 75.43 miles). The Images were captured along the line and to either side over the space of 6 months. These images are bound together by nothing other than their geographic proximity to a …
There’s little to be said other than it’s an image of a tree in the low fields beneath Lincoln Edge at Wellingore, Lincolnshire. Winter 2018.
…and your mind turns to other things whilst walking the dog. Winter mist in the flatlands beneath Lincoln Edge, Lincolnshire. February 2017.