Welcome to Stafford Forum. Please or sign-up and start posting!
I bet you don't have one of that area smothered in snow? It's a bit bleak...
One person's bleak is another person's calm and peaceful.I bet you don't have one of that area smothered in snow? It's a bit bleak...
Snow would be a fairly rare event there.I bet you don't have one of that area smothered in snow? It's a bit bleak...
Bloomin' lovely!One person's bleak is another person's calm and peaceful.
It's a bit bleak...
Not far from where the car was pictured, it is safer to lie down and peep over the edge...I love areas like @Gramaisc s photo. Where you can sit atop the hills for a few hours, just letting you mind wander, whilst being away from everyone and everything.
I'll stay well away from the edge, I think.Not far from where the car was pictured, it is safer to lie down and peep over the edge...
![]()
Google Maps
Find local businesses, view maps and get driving directions in Google Maps.www.google.com
The erosion seems quite slow, that fort has been there for a couple of thousand years, but, it is a bit over three hundred feet straight down.I'll stay well away from the edge, I think.
It's not the erosion that bothers me. It's the height.The erosion seems quite slow, that fort has been there for a couple of thousand years, but, it is a bit over three hundred feet straight down.
Not a place to wander about in after dark...
The erosion seems quite slow, that fort has been there for a couple of thousand years
Street View doesn't go back that far.But how far from the cliff edge was it 2000 years ago?
That's if the 'airborne assault' wasn't successfully attacked by one of those drone things.The cliff-top fort discussed above is the subject of a picture from another arm of the state apparatus this morning.
![]()
This shows how, no matter how effective the defences might have been at the time, they completely failed to consider the possibility of an airborne assault.