Saturday 23rd July 2011 our first Alpacas arrived at Uppermill
The glasshouse…, originally uploaded by David Blades.
J. Arthur Campbell was a descendent of the Campbells of Inverawe in Argyll, and in the mid-1880s, on his return from managing the family tea estates in what was then Ceylon, he looked about for a site to build a house. Finally deciding in favour of the ‘green point’ above Asknish Bay, he bought the site from the McIver Campbells of Asknish, built his Mansion House, as he called it, and began to set out the garden in the comparative shelter of the promontory. Apparently McIver Campbell requested that he refrained from calling himself ‘Campbell of Asknish’, so he coined the name ‘Arduaine’, solving the problem and naming the garden in one fell swoop.
Many years and much tree planting later, Arthur began the ornamental collection and by his death in 1929, the garden contained some 220 different rhododendrons, most of which were species. The garden was passed to his son Bruce, who after the difficult period of the war years, in turn bequeathed it to his son Ian, but by 1965 it had become impossible to continue and the house was sold, to become initially the Loch Melfort Motor Inn and later the Loch Melfort Hotel. The family retained the garden until 1971 when it was bought Edmund and Harry Wright, nurserymen from Essex, who dedicated the next 21 years to restoration and replanting and finally gave the garden to The National Trust for Scotland in the spring of 1992.
It’s for sale!, originally uploaded by David Blades.
This girls hot!
Posted: 23/03/2008 in PhotographyTags: fashion, great angle, great view, model, pointy shoes, pout, Sexy, stunning
IMGP0886-Edit, originally uploaded by Brilliant Shadow Photography.
RIP
Posted: 20/03/2008 in PhotographyTags: cute, daneli, dead, poor, puppy, rip, sad story, wee guy
This little baby died today of a crushed windpipe. He suffered all night and helpless me could only cry my eyes out. He had to be pulled out by the vet because he was too large to fit through the birth canal.
I know the doctor saved the rest of the litter by doing this…. I cant even see… because i’m crying….
Id like to think it will be fun like this…g o to sleep little baby
Just a note… This is not a picture of a dead puppy…. this was taken a few days before, and I thought he would be okay.
The Aisle, originally uploaded by David Blades.
St Machar’s Cathedral
Posted: 15/03/2008 in PhotographyTags: aberdeen, church, HDR, st machar cathedral
St Machar’s Cathedral, originally uploaded by David Blades.
St Machar’s Cathedral
There has been a church here since circa 580 AD when, legend has it, Machar, a companion of St Columba of Iona, founded a church here! Bishop Gavin Dunbar and Alexander Galloway brought about many changes in church buildings in the Aberdeen area and here in the Cathedral they built the western towers in sandstone and inside the building, installed the heraldic ceiling. Today the nave only, survives, and the ceiling is a great adornment, but the message of the ceiling related to the figure of Christ on the wooden screen at the east side of the crossing. The three rows of potentates, representing the kings of Europe, the Pope and clerics of Scotland, and the King of Scots with his nobles, are shown in procession to the King of Kings. The ceiling perhaps illustrates the text from the psalms “the shields of the earth belong unto the Lord”.
The flat ceiling contains 48 heraldic shields in three rows of sixteen. At the east end are the principals of each group, in the centre Pope Leo X is followed by the Scottish archbishops and bishops in order of importance. The Prior of St Andrews represents other Church orders and the westmost shield is that of King’s College, a local church foundation, strongly supported by Gavin Dunbar. On the north side the first shield, with a closed or imperial crown is that of the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, who appears on the ceiling in five guises since he was at that time also King of Spain, Aragon, Navarre and Sicily. Henry VIII is accorded the arms of England only. The last shield in this array shows the arms of Old Aberdeen, again a church foundation by Bishop Elphinstone. On the south side James V, King of Scots has an imperial crown and since he is a young boy not yet married, he is accompanied by St Margaret of Scotland rather than his consort. This series is ended with the coat of arms of the royal Burgh of Aberdeen. Here are represented the north-east families of Gordon, Lindsay, Hay and Keith. In the episcopal list the Bishops of Moray and Brechin and the Prior of St Andrews are members of the Hepburn family.
The ceiling is set off by a freize which starts at the north-west corner of the nave and lists the bishops of the see from Nechtan in 1131 to William Gordon at the Reformation in 1560. This is followed by the Kings of Scots from Malcolm II to Queen Mary. Significantly in the list of Kings, Alexander III is followed by Robert Bruce. As far as our sixteenth-century ceiling is concerned, John Balliol was never King of Scots.




