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Cindy
& Kathleen

QuestsDiaries


Kathleen has completed the quest of
"Northern Light" !


26th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 1/25

Northern Light: Ladybower
Northern Light creates difficulties for a cameraman who wants to shoot colour. All too often it means iron grey skies for a month at a time.

Sunsets can seem strange, because the horizon is nearly as high as the clouds. Sometimes you can view lightning from the side, an orange shaft fired from clouds almost overhead to a valley hundreds of feet below. Hail may briefly fall from a clear sky, and sports have been cancelled due to snow in mid-June.

But on those few rare days when the clouds depart, the northern sky can be a deep rich shimmering blue, where unpolluted air sings of summer … for an hour or two.

I both love, and am exasperated by, Northern Light. I always wanted Derbyshire to look like Florida. But now I am in Florida, I know it will never, ever look like Derbyshire.

My shots from Derbyshire begin with Ladybower Reservoir, trapped between a 1300 foot climb eastward to Sheffield, and Kinder Scout, the 2000 foot brute of the Peak District, to the west.

@ Northern Light: Ladybower
Kathleen begins her photographic tour of Northern Light: Derbyshire.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Little Fang.

Kathleen shook paws with Little Fang the Wolverine. They both received one silver mole!

Little Fang and you found 5 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 485 Find points today: 71 Hunt total: 1589

Little FangKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 5


26th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 2/25

The Long and Winding Roads
‘Dry’ stone walls are so called because no cement is used in their construction. They dominate the fields of North Derbyshire, delineating ancient boundaries. There is no shortage of stones up there to make them from … but the skill to make these well is fast being lost.

These fields are on the high plateau above Bradwell, an area of marginal farming land where sheep are commoner than cows, and sun less common than lashing rain.

@ The Long and Winding Roads

Blue And Copper Egg
The first painted eggs came from Mesopotamia, and because eggs were forbidden food during Lent, people painted eggs while Lent was being observed—after Lent, they would eat the eggs on Easter Day.

Beautifully decorated eggs “pysanka” are associated with Ukraine, and the oldest painted egg that was unearthed in northern Ukraine is dated to the end of the 17th century.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Ceeda Lepsis.

Kathleen shook paws with Ceeda Lepsis the Chameleon. They both received one silver mole!

Ceeda Lepsis gave you 1 "Blue And Copper Egg" FULL SIZE

Tries today: 781 Find points today: 100 Hunt total: 1618

Ceeda LepsisKathleenQUEST REWARD
(edible)


27th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 3/25

Fleeting Sunshine
As grey clouds scud across the sky, shafts of sunlight illuminate one field, then another in turn. One moment sunshine, another drizzle, but always wind. Tideswell is about a thousand feet up on the north west Derbyshire plateau, and there are far more sheep than people in the area.

@ Fleeting Sunshine
In 1806 an exceptional seam of fine clay was discovered in Denby. By 1809 a pottery had been established on the site. Denby Pottery, a family business, is still going strong today. Generations of craftspeople have been making pottery here since 1809. Many traditional hand-crafting techniques have been preserved and are still used in the Denby factory today. Denby's beautiful tableware is widely renowned. Denby Pottery Village is based in Derby Road, Denby, Derbyshire.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Lady Jane.

Kathleen shook paws with Lady Jane the Yellow Lovable Labrador. They both received one silver mole!

Lady Jane and you found 5 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 3 Find points today: 3 Hunt total: 1627

Lady JaneKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 5


27th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 4/25

The Pennine Way
The first long distance trail in Britain was the Pennine Way, beginning in the heart of Derbyshire and ending in the borders of Scotland. Here we are close to the start, on the vast morass of Bleaklow, having just climbed “Jacob’s Ladder“ and crossed Featherbed Moss, where one foot in the wrong place is a leg lost in mud up to the thigh. Bleaklow (pronounced ‘Blake Low’) is even bleaker, but mercifully less damp, than Kinder Scout to the south.

@ The Pennine Way
The flag of Derbyshire consists of a green cross on a blue background, colours chosen to represent Derbyshire's green countryside and its rivers respectively. Central in the flag is a Tudor rose, the county badge since the 1400s. The rose is coloured gold instead of the more usual red and white, to differentiate from the emblems of Yorkshire and Lancashire.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Ariella.

Kathleen shook paws with Ariella the Blue Beautiful Unicorn. They both received one silver mole!

Ariella and you found 5 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 19 Find points today: 8 Hunt total: 1632

AriellaKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 5


27th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 5/25

Bleaklow
High on my list of regrets is never having stepped beyond this point on the moors. Beyond lies a Roman road known as “Doctor’s Gate”, having been improved by a Doctor Talbot in the middle ages. In those days, ‘gate’ meant ‘road’. So I have never taken the Doctor’s road, and probably never will.

A bleak place indeed. One can only marvel at the determination of the Romans to dominate northern England, making roads in the pitiless wilderness where snow can fall deep enough to cover the tops of telegraph poles.

@ Bleaklow
The first human settlement of Derby was by the Romans, who built a fort on high ground around Belper Road, overlooking the River Derwent, with the aim of protecting the first boundary of their newly-conquered province. In around CE 80 they moved across the Derwent and built a new fort, Derventio, on the east side. In the 1970s, an industrial suburb of Derventio was discovered on Derby Racecourse, consisting of a 25ft wide road lined with timber buildings, two pottery kilns and a cemetery. The great Roman Road of Rykneld Street connected the garrisons of the wild north with the civilised Roman towns of the south and passed straight through Derventio. The Romans stayed for over three centuries, in which time they introduced ground-breaking engineering and plumbing.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Sephira.

Kathleen shook paws with Sephira the Green Happy Dragon. They both received one silver mole!

Sephira and you found 75 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 24 Find points today: 11 Hunt total: 1635

SephiraKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 75


27th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 6/25

On the “Monk’s Way”
Small reminders of departed powers litter the landscape of North Derbyshire. This post lies by the “Monk’s Way”, which led tens of miles from the Peak to a priory in far off Nottinghamshire. Where is the other post to form a gate? Where is the wall it might have opened a way through? Or is this a way marker for the weary traveler in high places?

In a lonely place like this, it is quite likely nobody knows any longer. The priory is long gone, as is the power of the Norman knight who founded it and gave it lands (stolen from the Saxons) almost a thousand years ago. Only the stones know why they are there.

@ On the “Monk’s Way”
Lara Croft, the fictional beautiful, intelligent English archaeologist and adventurer (1996-present) was the creation of Derby game company Core Design. She has been the heroine of several video game sequels, short films and Hollywood blockbusters and is now owned by Square Enix, previously Eidos Interactive.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Mini.

Kathleen shook paws with Mini the Majestic Monarch Butterfly. They both received one silver mole!

Mini and you found 15 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 62 Find points today: 20 Hunt total: 1644

MiniKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 15


27th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 7/25

Cromford
Cromford is a pleasant village set among steep slopes just to the south of Matlock. You would not guess from this picture that the Industrial Revolution began here!

Richard Arkwright made the worlds first water powered cotton spinning mill and sited it here in 1771, because of the fast flowing River Derwent. Later the Cromford Canal was built to take woollen goods to the river Trent, and thus to the world.

Before Arkwright, there was only cottage industry. His was the first factory anywhere. What he did in rural Derbyshire rapidly changed the world.

@ Cromford
Derby’s Silk Mill is thought to have been the first factory in the world – and it was the first silk mill in England. Lombe’s Mill, as it was known, was built next to the River Derwent after John Lombe visited Piedmont in 1717 and returned with details of the Italian silk-throwing machines and craftsmen.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Splodge.

Kathleen shook paws with Splodge the Chocolate Milky Moo Cow. They both received one silver mole!

Splodge and you found 20 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 139 Find points today: 36 Hunt total: 1660

SplodgeKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 20


27th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 8/25

Lathkill Waterfall
The River Lathkill has many weirs and human works along its length, but only one natural waterfall. Often enough there is no water to fall over it, as the river disappears underground and gurgles its way through mines and tunnels instead of following the river bed.

There’s no way to reach this spot without walking several miles or making a long climb down a steep trail that makes you think what it will take to get back up it; and thus, you are guaranteed a nice peaceful rest at this spot.

Too busy to take notice of you are the white throated dipper, which makes its nest in the face of the waterfall, and numerous yellow wagtails, all of them hungry for insects, of which there are plenty. The waterfall is only four feet high; but it forms a welcome break on the trail by the river’s side.

@ Lathkill Waterfall
Derbyshire was the birthplace of the Midlands Enlightenment. It brought together some of the brightest and most talented minds of the 18th-century – great thinkers in art, philosophy and inspiring scientific and technological breakthroughs. They included innovative artist Joseph Wright and John Whitehurst, a clockmaker and philosopher. Erasmus Darwin, doctor, scientist, philosopher and grandfather of Charles Darwin, founded the Derby Philosophical Society in 1783. The Midlands Enlightenment formed a pivotal link between the earlier Scientific Revolution and the later Industrial Revolution as the great thinkers of the day exchanged ideas that enabled the technological preconditions for rapid economic growth to gain ground.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Asparagus.

Kathleen shook paws with Asparagus the Green Happy Dragon. They both received one silver mole!

Asparagus and you found 5 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 206 Find points today: 46 Hunt total: 1670

AsparagusKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 5


27th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 9/25

Limestone Gorge
The River Lathkill runs through a limestone gorge, sometimes towering high on both sides, sometimes widening, lowering or fading away as one travels down its length. There is one rough path over stones worn slippery-smooth by the feet of countless years.

@ Limestone Gorge
Whether it’s simply a nostalgic journey back to a bygone age or a discovery of the sights and sounds for very first time of a steam locomotive, it's well worth visiting one of the several railways offering the opportunity to visit their railway stations and take special trips on preserved railway lines whilst travelling through the delightful Derbyshire countryside.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Sweetie.

Kathleen shook paws with Sweetie the Strawberry Milky Moo Cow. They both received one silver mole!

Sweetie and you found 5 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 486 Find points today: 77 Hunt total: 1701

SweetieKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 5


28th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 10/25

Head of the Ancient River
The River Lathkill emerges from the rocks just a little way from here. The valley was gouged by meltwater from glaciers, not the current river, which now follows the route they once carved … as have countless walkers who love the river.

@ Head of the Ancient River
A Derbyshire man was the Father of the American Industrial Revolution. Samuel Slater, who was born into a farming family in Belper in 1768 went on to become the Father of the USA’s Industrial Revolution. He received a basic education and, at the age of 10, began work at a cotton mill opened by Jedediah Strutt. Slater was well trained by Strutt and gained a thorough knowledge of the organisation and practice of cotton spinning. Slater was aware of the American interest in developing similar machines – and of British laws against exporting the designs. So he memorised as much as he could and departed for New York in 1789, aged 21. Some Belper people called him “Slater the Traitor” but in America he was welcomed with open arms. He helped to create the first successful water-powered roller spinning textile mill in America and many more were built. His original mill, Slater Mill, in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, is now a museum dedicated to preserving the history of Samuel Slater and his contribution to American industry.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Mischief.

Kathleen shook paws with Mischief the Grey Playful Kitten. They both received one silver mole!

Mischief and you found 75 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 15 Find points today: 8 Hunt total: 1734

MischiefKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 75


28th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 11/25

Mandale Mine
Lead mining began in the Lathkill Valley no later than 1495. Remains of later workings include an aqueduct and buildings where the ore was processed. But all these exist because of the mines.

Here’s a shot looking out from Mandale Mine with my camera bag in the entrance to give some scale. I wasn’t going any further in!

@ Mandale Mine
Arbor Low near Bakewell is a "henge", i.e. a Neolithic stone circle, which was a meeting place for the first tribes in the area.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Molly.

Kathleen shook paws with Molly the Grey Playful Kitten. They both received one silver mole!

Molly and you found 10 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 42 Find points today: 16 Hunt total: 1742

MollyKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 10


28th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 12/25

Dovedale
Dovedale is one of the best known walks in Derbyshire, though the average tourist gets no further than this. Three miles further the walk ends at Milldale, after passing a rare rock arch and 'Doveholes', a series of natural caves.

Here, the east side has no footpath and blends into the river. I shot from there because I could be well away from other people. There are a few in this shot, but they are small stick figures, insignificant in the towering landscape.

@ Dovedale
The first human settlement of Derby was by the Romans, who built a fort on high ground around Belper Road, overlooking the River Derwent, with the aim of protecting the first boundary of their newly-conquered province. In around CE 80 they moved across the Derwent and built a new fort, Derventio, on the east side. In the 1970s, an industrial suburb of Derventio was discovered on Derby Racecourse, consisting of a 25ft wide road lined with timber buildings, two pottery kilns and a cemetery. The great Roman Road of Rykneld Street connected the garrisons of the wild north with the civilised Roman towns of the south and passed straight through Derventio. The Romans stayed for over three centuries, in which time they introduced ground-breaking engineering and plumbing.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot PluttiPott.

Kathleen shook paws with PluttiPott the Playful Penguin. They both received one silver mole!

PluttiPott and you found 10 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 127 Find points today: 34 Hunt total: 1760

PluttiPottKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 10


28th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 13/25

Lush Moorland
Although moors are by definition uncultivated, they are often thick with undergrowth. Ferns and bracken predominate, along with scrub trees. Underneath there is a variety of wildlife, which may include three different kinds of snake. I have found snake casts on this moor, but have never seen a snake there myself.

@ Lush Moorland
Derbyshire County Cricket Club is one of eighteen first-class county clubs within the domestic cricket structure of England and Wales. It represents the historic county of Derbyshire. Its limited overs team is called the Derbyshire Falcons in reference to the famous peregrine falcon which nests on Derby Cathedral.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Spark.

Kathleen shook paws with Spark the Arctic Feisty Fox. They both received one silver mole!

Spark and you found 10 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 201 Find points today: 49 Hunt total: 1775

SparkKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 10


28th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 14/25

Jousting at Bolsover Castle
Bolsover is a mining district, as is most of north-east Derbyshire, a plateau where crops are grown. But the mines came a long time after the castle.

There is a lot to do at Bolsover Castle, but jousting is a rare bonus.

@ Jousting at Bolsover Castle
Blue John stone is found in Treak Cliff hillside at Castleton. It is the only place in the world it is found. The pretty purple/blue stone is made into jewellery and small ornaments.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Choose a name.

Kathleen shook paws with Choose a name the Tabby Cat. They both received one silver mole!

Choose a name and you found 5 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 501 Find points today: 82 Hunt total: 1808

Choose a nameKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 5


28th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 15/25

Peak Forest
If you look for a forest at Peak Forest, it was felled long ago. Some say the last wolf in England was killed in that forest in the 15th century, at nearby Wormhill. Thus sheep may safely graze; but without huge subsidies, they are uneconomic here.

Northern Light at sunset on the high plateau is an eerie thing. 1100 feet up, light is subtly different. The distance from cloud to ground is small, and night steals up on you.

@ Peak Forest
Oh look ... you won a little pet!


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Orpheus.

Kathleen shook paws with Orpheus the Green Beautiful Unicorn. They both received one silver mole!

Orpheus gave you 1 "Papa Brown Bear" size 7

Tries today: 524 Find points today: 86 Hunt total: 1812

OrpheusKathleenQUEST REWARD
size 7


29th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 16/25

Where the Fields Have No Name
Much of North Derbyshire is too rugged and barren even for sheep. When people earned a living from the earth, they thought of these places as a wasteland. Those of us who make our living in the town think of them as ruggedly beautiful. The emptier they are, the more we love them. But they’re empty for a reason; dead lands no-one could scratch a living from in times gone by. Majestic in their emptiness, but a shapeless brown desert for those who lose their way.

@ Where the Fields Have No Name
Lara Croft, the fictional beautiful, intelligent English archaeologist and adventurer (1996-present) was the creation of Derby game company Core Design. She has been the heroine of several video game sequels, short films and Hollywood blockbusters and is now owned by Square Enix, previously Eidos Interactive.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Lady Jane.

Kathleen shook paws with Lady Jane the Yellow Lovable Labrador. They both received one silver mole!

Lady Jane and you found 5 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 3 Find points today: 3 Hunt total: 1845

Lady JaneKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 5


29th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 17/25

The Paths Which Time Forgot
In the heart of the Derbyshire hills lie trails once made for light railways, carrying stone to build dams. Had the reservoirs not been built, the only roads would be sheep tracks. There are not even villages here, just a very few scattered farm houses miles apart. These are some of the longest dead-end roads you can find in Britain … and some of the loveliest, especially in autumn.

@ The Paths Which Time Forgot
Peak District metalliferous minerals are mesothermic in origin. They were created at moderate depths, pressure and temperature as the mineralogy is galena and sphalerite. In the Castleton area, Blue-John (a type of fluorite) and barytes exist alongside galena. This mineralogy suggests an epithermic origin i.e. closer to the surface.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Redington.

Kathleen shook paws with Redington the Red Feisty Fox. They both received one silver mole!

Redington and you found 5 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 88 Find points today: 26 Hunt total: 1868

RedingtonKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 5


29th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 18/25

Silent Woods
Once there were settlements such as ‘Tin Town’ in these woods, where workmen lived a few years whilst the dams were built, only to move on when the job was done.

Some people, like me, are driven to explore dead ends and find life in them. Everyone else stops at the picnic area, then turns round and goes back to the aimless roads connecting yesterday to long ago. But some of the best sights in the Peak District are down dead ends.

@ Silent Woods
The first human settlement of Derby was by the Romans, who built a fort on high ground around Belper Road, overlooking the River Derwent, with the aim of protecting the first boundary of their newly-conquered province. In around CE 80 they moved across the Derwent and built a new fort, Derventio, on the east side. In the 1970s, an industrial suburb of Derventio was discovered on Derby Racecourse, consisting of a 25ft wide road lined with timber buildings, two pottery kilns and a cemetery. The great Roman Road of Rykneld Street connected the garrisons of the wild north with the civilised Roman towns of the south and passed straight through Derventio. The Romans stayed for over three centuries, in which time they introduced ground-breaking engineering and plumbing.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Wrex.

Kathleen shook paws with Wrex the Grey Playful Kitten. They both received one silver mole!

Wrex and you found 15 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 294 Find points today: 59 Hunt total: 1901

WrexKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 15


29th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 19/25

The Princess Bride
I first saw “The Princess Bride” with Lisa in 2013. The more I watched it, the more I felt I was looking at familiar places, though I was now an ocean away. It was in a scene set here, around Owler Tor, that I realised most of the film had been shot in Derbyshire. If you look hard enough you may recognise other locations from the film in this set of photos!

@ The Princess Bride
The famous English actor Robert Lindsay was born in Ilkeston, Derbyshire. Lindsay's career covers TV, films, Broadway and West End theatre. In the late 70s he starred in Citizen Smith and later had a long-running role as disgruntled dentist Ben Harper in the successful BBC sitcom My Family. He also appeared alongside Ricky Gervais in Extras. He played Captain Pellew in the Hornblower series and also portrayed Prime Minister Tony Blair in the Channel 4 satires A Very Social Secretary and The Trial of Tony Blair. The actor is a lifelong Derby County fan and his voice is heard on the popular ‘Steve Bloomer’s Watchin’ anthem which is played on matchdays at Pride Park.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Ziggy.

Kathleen shook paws with Ziggy the Midnight Happy Dragon. They both received one silver mole!

Ziggy and you found 15 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 314 Find points today: 63 Hunt total: 1905

ZiggyKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 15


29th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 20/25

Winnat's Pass
Winnat's Pass rises 900 feet from bottom to top at one-in-five (20%). It is the only major hill in Debyshire I have never been up on a bicycle. One wobble and you could be under a car. The road is too narrow for a centre line, and if you try walking up it, your heels will not touch the ground.

This ought to be a lonely spot, but it is now the only route west out of Castleton. The main road between Sheffield and Manchester used to run up the face of the 'Shivering Mountain', Mam Tor, a hundred yards away. But Mam Tor has shivered too often. Half a century ago the main road was closed forever, utterly ruined. So incredible as it sounds, this is the most direct route between two major English cities.

@ Winnat's Pass
Harry M Stevens (1856–1934) was born in Litchurch, Derby. He is credited with the invention of the hot dog in the USA. He designed baseball's first scorecard and secured concessions for supplying refreshments. On a cold April day in 1901, he ordered his staff to collect together "dachshund sausages", whereupon he stuffed them into bread rolls. A cartoonist was reputed to have been unable to spell dachshund, so wrote hot dogs instead.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Pixie.

Kathleen shook paws with Pixie the Ragdoll Kitten. They both received one silver mole!

Pixie and you found 75 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 405 Find points today: 77 Hunt total: 1919

PixieKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 75


29th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 21/25

Autumn Hillside
When the summer draws to an end, Derbyshire hillsides are awash with purple heather, and as autumn continues, brown with bracken.

@ Autumn Hillside
Swarfega, a gloopy, dark green, industrial-strength hand cleaner, was invented in 1947 by Audley Bowdler Williamson, an industrial chemist from Heanor, Derbyshire.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Noelle.

Kathleen shook paws with Noelle the Ragdoll Kitten. They both received one silver mole!

Noelle and you found 10 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 472 Find points today: 85 Hunt total: 1927

NoelleKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 10


29th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 22/25

River of Mist
Looking at a temperature inversion from above, one can see the fog flowing between the hills as if it were a river. Underneath it lies the real river, the Derwent, which carved the hills through which the misty river flows. Also beneath the misty river is the village of Calver, which has completely disappeared beneath it.

@ River of Mist
Derby’s Silk Mill is thought to have been the first factory in the world – and it was the first silk mill in England. Lombe’s Mill, as it was known, was built next to the River Derwent after John Lombe visited Piedmont in 1717 and returned with details of the Italian silk-throwing machines and craftsmen.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Blástjarna.

Kathleen shook paws with Blástjarna the Midnight Happy Dragon. They both received one silver mole!

Blástjarna and you found 10 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 487 Find points today: 90 Hunt total: 1932

BlástjarnaKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 10


29th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 23/25

Storm Chaser
Just for once I decided to be a storm chaser. My take on that was to get up where the clouds were and see the storm point blank. The high plateau of North West Derbyshire was the best place to be.

1700 feet up, the storm was finally passing. Light was chasing the gloom away. I wound down the car window, took the picture, lowered the camera and got a faceful of hail.

Later, when I had written 'Aurorielle', I was searching for an image to express the content. The character for which the book was named was an angel who took care of the fertility of the land, bringing sunshine and rain as she was commanded. She stood between the darkness and the light. If one ever caught her flying by on a camera, she would have been on the edge of this storm, ushering it where it was supposed to go, with the light of heaven behind her. In fact I think that is her, shining bright near the top right of the picture ....

@ Storm Chaser
In 1806 an exceptional seam of fine clay was discovered in Denby. By 1809 a pottery had been established on the site. Denby Pottery, a family business, is still going strong today. Generations of craftspeople have been making pottery here since 1809. Many traditional hand-crafting techniques have been preserved and are still used in the Denby factory today. Denby's beautiful tableware is widely renowned. Denby Pottery Village is based in Derby Road, Denby, Derbyshire.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Zoomer.

Kathleen shook paws with Zoomer the Tabby Cat. They both received one silver mole!

Zoomer and you found 15 Travel Tokens!

Tries today: 618 Find points today: 104 Hunt total: 1946

ZoomerKathleenQUEST REWARD
x 15


29th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 24/25

Northern Half-light
I do not retouch colours in landscapes, ever. These were the real colours at sunset high in the hills early in March 2011. Deliberately underexposing the shot deepens the colours and encourages detail to morph into areas of solid colour. That's using the camera to show what my mind's eye perceived, rather than what my eyes saw; the difference between what my friend Sarah calls 'art photography' and taking out your iPhone. Art is a matter of taste. This is how I remember the Northern Light, but not exactly how it appeared.

@ Northern Half-light
Jane Austen once wrote there is “no finer county in England than Derbyshire”. Pride and Prejudice is very much based in Derbyshire. Austen is thought to have based fictional Lambton largely on the town of Bakewell where she wrote much of the novel. Austen based Pemberley, the fictional ancestral home of the dashing Mr Darcy, on Chatsworth House and both the TV series and film were filmed here. Scenes from Pride and Prejudice were also filmed at nearby Haddon Hall, a mediaeval manor house with beautifully romantic gardens.


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot Fino.

Kathleen shook paws with Fino the Black Lovable Labrador. They both received one silver mole!

Fino gave you 1 "'Northern Light' Travel Token"

Tries today: 841 Find points today: 123 Hunt total: 1965

FinoKathleenQUEST REWARD


30th Apr 2023
Kathleen views : Derbyshire!
Photo 25/25

Ladybower by Night
I started at Ladybower and I will finish there, too. That lens flare was caused by the moon. You can see the lower half of Orion in the top left of the picture. There are few lights out here; the tourist cottage on the hill opposite shines like a beacon. So here, the moon seems very bright.

I stood and watched as a river of clouds poured down the Ashop Valley from the top of Kinder Scout, 2000 feet up. Soon the last of the Northern Light was extinguished by the clouds which so often suffocate it.

@ Ladybower by Night
Kathleen has now completed her viewing of Northern Light: Derbyshire. As she prepares to go home, she receives a wonderful gift!

Kathleen has enjoyed her photographic tour of Northern Light: Derbyshire, but it is time to go home now! "Northern Light" is over now, but there will be more events in PnF soon!


While peeking through the viewfinder, you spot George.

Kathleen shook paws with George the Blue Beautiful Unicorn. They both received one silver mole!

George gave you 1 "Papa Brown Bear" FULL SIZE

Tries today: 16 Find points today: 8 Hunt total: 1977

GeorgeKathleenQUEST REWARD