Back in the day, Deva (Chester) was a major staging area for every aspect of Roman life. The recent findings that have been discovered, have revealed more than anybody had predicted.Helen is sixty today and was at Chester Zoo yesterday, one of her favourite places, today she will be looking at Roman Chester.
Hope she has a very happy day.
Perhaps it's not too wet!
We have had rain overnight and today in prospect is a very wet day in Cumbria, according to the forecast.
Have your best day.
Derek
Ps. I keep getting thwarted going down the Solway to see a Yankee, a Lesser Yellowlegs at Port Carlisle in the creek at low tide.
Hi @dunelmGood morning everyone on an overcast start to an overcast day here in the decidedly dark and dangerous north. It’s a bit rainy but never mind, better than being in a drought. 5.8 this am. Pots put away from last nights washing up and exercises done. Also, now that Mrs Miggins is up, bed made. Latest from the Zoe study indicates that ultra processed foods damage your brain: https://zoe.com/learn/podcast-ultra...aign=newsletter_week68_zsn&utm_content=2-68-2. Blimey, (No S… Sherlock) never would have guessed. Garbage in, garbage out. My body is a temple. One not too careful owner. Lots of restoration work needed. Art bit, mixed media, acrylics and Chinese ink. Probably going to play around with it. Happy birthday to Helen @lindisfel and I hope everyone has a pleasant day. I shall reward myself with another koffy.
I have rescued most of then @Krystyna23040Hope you were able to rescue your SD cards @gennepher. You could well be right and you were saved from a worse disaster.
Many thanks Lamont, she was meeting a Roman soldier guide this am.Back in the day, Deva (Chester) was a major staging area for every aspect of Roman life. The recent findings that have been discovered, have revealed more than anybody had predicted.
This also coincides with other recent discoveries on the peninsula, and how the Roman connection to Meols, which was in theory a point of invasion to the places around the Irish sea area!
It was revealed, many years ago, that in ancient and Roman, and including the Vikings eras. That they looked at the maps a different way. If you turn the map, viewing from the East towards the West. This puts the Isle of Man at the centre of all the trade, shipping and influence in the Irish sea. This is why there was a coastal community around the sea. Deva was an integral part of the empire because the River Dee was more navigable than the Mersey.
Happy birthday to Helen!
@dunelmOh dear, sounds so USA - very easy in a city all laid out in aligned blocks but not anywhere else. Why do we now need a compass? I use the online route plan and follow that but those A to Z books must still be the easiest way of following where roads and streets go.
Happy Birthday Helen!!!Helen is sixty today and was at Chester Zoo yesterday, one of her favourite places, today she will be looking at Roman Chester.
Hope she has a very happy day.
Perhaps it's not too wet!
We have had rain overnight and today in prospect is a very wet day in Cumbria, according to the forecast.
Have your best day.
Derek
Ps. I keep getting thwarted going down the Solway to see a Yankee, a Lesser Yellowlegs at Port Carlisle in the creek at low tide.
Hope it wasn't an appointment with an amphitheatre guard.Many thanks Lamont, she was meeting a Roman soldier guide this am.
Yup, me too @AnnbThere are a lot of us out there Krystyna. I failed my first driving test for that very reason. Even now after 78 years of practice, I still have, often, to ask myself which hand I write with to get a direction right. As for turning east or west...who knows where they are? Actually my husband did - he had an amazing sense of where he was in the world, but then, he was a navigator. I don't think he ever really understood why I had no such sense.
Probably been mined in the War!@dunelm
@Krystyna23040
I always have a compass with me. Don't people carry compasses nowadays? I have one on my handbag strap...
I have a collection of compasses...
The only place it was no good was when I went over to Hilbre Island on the sands at low tide (decades ago when I could walk), and the thick dense mists suddenly dropped. No problem I thought, look at my compass....
But it was going bananas. Later I was told that I was on the stretch of sand that had some magnetic disturbance or something below.
Obviously I survived the experience 'cos I am still here...
Thank you @gennepher. I have added a bit to it this afternoon but hopefully not too much. Will have to see.Hi @dunelm
I absolutely love this watercolour.
It is a good technique...
Hope that coffee went down well...
I have a few compasses. I take one with me when walking in hills, a map also. Silva make good, basic ones and I have one with a clinometer. I think that my old orienteering thumb compasses are probably out now - they do that after a while. Interestingly, the mag to grid, add - grid to mag, get rid for conversion of magnetic north to a map and vice versa is the opposite if you cross the equator - most annoying.@dunelm
@Krystyna23040
I always have a compass with me. Don't people carry compasses nowadays? I have one on my handbag strap...
I have a collection of compasses...
The only place it was no good was when I went over to Hilbre Island on the sands at low tide (decades ago when I could walk), and the thick dense mists suddenly dropped. No problem I thought, look at my compass....
But it was going bananas. Later I was told that I was on the stretch of sand that had some magnetic disturbance or something below.
Obviously I survived the experience 'cos I am still here...
My dad was exactly the same and so is my youngest daughter but her youngest daughter has a brilliant sense of direction.There are a lot of us out there Krystyna. I failed my first driving test for that very reason. Even now after 78 years of practice, I still have, often, to ask myself which hand I write with to get a direction right. As for turning east or west...who knows where they are? Actually my husband did - he had an amazing sense of where he was in the world, but then, he was a navigator. I don't think he ever really understood why I had no such sense.
Beautiful!Fbg 6.9
Wildlife nighttime cameras
Fox & Badger looking for food together
Foxes & Cats & Badgers all within a metre/yard of each other!!!
It seems amazing to me that they were all there together...
58 seconds
Creative ... a fairy chair in my garden under the fuschia bush...
Time for a rest and a cuppa tea
Was working in the garage this afternoon. Repaired an old radio, just so I can have some background noise while painting...
Still a wee bit more tidying and sorting to do, and then I can start some painting ideas...
The rest of the garage still needs sorting and tidying, but that will be a later date, or I will never start painting....
View attachment 63166
Thank you for sharing that wonderful chair and part of your garden. Enjoy making art in the garage. Here's an idea that may help a few people although my instinct is you are more visual/shape oriented.Fbg 6.9
Wildlife nighttime cameras
Fox & Badger looking for food together
Foxes & Cats & Badgers all within a metre/yard of each other!!!
It seems amazing to me that they were all there together...
58 seconds
Creative ... a fairy chair in my garden under the fuschia bush...
Time for a rest and a cuppa tea
Was working in the garage this afternoon. Repaired an old radio, just so I can have some background noise while painting...
Still a wee bit more tidying and sorting to do, and then I can start some painting ideas...
The rest of the garage still needs sorting and tidying, but that will be a later date, or I will never start painting....
View attachment 63166
Never saw anyone having a problem after being taught that you always step off on the left foot, the one banged with a pace stick on day one. So, “by the left, quick march” - or slow march. Light Infantry 140 paces per minute rather than the standard army 116 and marked by the drill sergeant’s pace stick opened for a 30 inch stride. Drill for recruits is carried out evey day and perhaps twice a day with the pace called out by the drill sergeant. Well, it was when I was in the military - who knows nowadays.For new recruits, Those who were unaware of right and left, used several methods including a rag on one arm.
Some learnt straight away but others were often punished until they drilled properly.
Maybe one of those who did military things could enlighten us!
For myself, never an issue, and I'm talking very young, but knowing right or wrong, in a deprived area, is very much a grey area!
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