We were looking for property with an agent one day. We were basically bush crashing over to a quartz mine that was believed on the property and we were interested having a look. Sometime later we uploaded the pictures taken day and it was some time later going through them reviewing I came across this image. It's something that I can't figure out and still a head scratcher. I've enlarged the image from it original state, showing the image.
It's all fun and games when one goes out for a little paddle. "Oh look dear we're on the lunch menu".
Click to enlarge and have a look along the bank to see what I mean.
When I travel over into jeff-gordon's CWAZ (I have yet to see RO papers ), there is a property with rows and rows of old cars like this. I hope to get a pic someday.
They use the Golden Eagle and the Golden Eagle Owl as this one, for the Fox Hunt now.
She was really camera shy, and it took a few minutes to look back at me.
Something else golden came off this very spot in the field, but much older.
Celtic gold full stater - Clacton type 6.43g, 20.30mm Ref Hobbs 142British A1 or E stater. This coin is from the same obverse die that was later used to strike the Waldingfield type, VA 1462, ABC 2335. It’s from an unrecorded reverse die with an uncertain symbol below the horse and is midway between the Westerham and Waldingfield types, if anything closer to the latter, which is extremely rare (not the Clacton type though this particular coin is very similar)
Stunning 13thC medieval heraldic harness shield pendant A medieval copper alloy horse harness pendant, shield-shaped, red enamel survives. Gules three owls ?Or/Argent. Possibly for Sir Richard BERMINGHAM, Gules three huits (owles in margin, L) Argent (Papworth 1874, rep. 1985, p. 329).