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Rod Gourlay
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My grandparents owned sea bank John and Agnes Pringle,my mum used to talk about them living in the cellar!!

The quarry... Par 3, Green and a couple sand-traps surrounded by a 20-30 metre plunge to a unforgiving limestone quarry. If you don't hit the island, you may as well and get a new ball, tee up and have another crack. Many a ball has been squandered due to that quarry... I think the course has made its landscaping cost back for that hole at least in recovering stray unretrievible balls... Have fun with this hole... :P

The main tree looks like a preacher talking to his flock.Interesting photo.LIKE

Actually, Kenny Dam does not have any electric power generating capability. It was built to divert the Nechako River and help create the Ootsa Lake Resevoire, forcing all of the water in the resevoir to flow through one of two outlets. The Cheslatta River flows out through a spillway, and into the Nechako far below its historic route. On the west end, Ootsa Lake flows through a mountain tunnel system to the Kitimat area where the actual power generating system is. In essence, the Kenny Dam is just a giant earthen plug in what was once a much longer river than it is today.

Excelent capture

March Contest--Beautiful photo...thank you.~~!

Thankyou Rod, I stayed in colburn for 2 years while working in england and if ever I was down myself for the weekend I wasted days wandering through the fields around here, real beautiful yorkshire countryside, Glad you enjoyed the picture

I think it captures the danger and darkness of the place

A very pleasant cottage indeed! Hope your dreams come true!

This bridge is officially titled as "The Forth Road Bridge" to distinguish it from "The Forth Bridge" which is the Victorian railway bridge nearby.

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