Category Archives: Video

Jewel of the Seas — Dover; Dover Museum and a Bronze Age Boat


Ground Floor, Dover Museum —  Archaeology Gallery

In Market Square, bound by North Downs Way and Cannon Street, is the Dover Museum. The main attraction here is on the second floor, or third floor if you’re one of us yanks since the first floor is the one above the ground floor here in the U.K. The ground floor contains the Archaeology Gallery, and it’s here you’ll find stuff such as a wooden bucket dating back to the 6th century:

6th century wooden bucket
View of the Archaeology Gallery as seen from the first floor looking down

Head on up to the first floor for the Temporary Exhibition Gallery. On this day the “temporary” exhibit had a decidedly military theme with no specific era in mind:

Roman Invaders
V-1 Flying “Buzz” Bomb — ancestor of today’s military drones
Medieval Might
V-1 Buzz Bomb closeup
Protecting Dover Western Heights, c1812
Patrol Boat

But it’s not all military on this floor. Other services are featured as well, including fire, police, and maritime.

Port Pilot (not “porch pirate”) Boat

Okay, time to head on up to the second (third for us yanks) floor and take a gander of this Bronze Age Boat, but before we do:

Bronze Age House exhibit
Bronze Age House diorama

Now on to the main attraction, Dover’s Bronze Age Boat:

Dover Museum Bronze Age Boat exhibit

As you can see from the placard below, this remarkably preserved boat dates back to around 1550. It was found in 1992:

Dover Bronze Age Boat information

And here she is:

Dover Bronze Age Boat
Dover Bronze Age Boat

In an effort to determine how this boat was put together, archaeologists decided to recreate a portion of it. The result is on display in this next photograph:

Sectional reconstruction of the Dover Bronze Age Boat

This Fun Photo Friday will be the first of two featuring Dover favorites. Next week we head over for a closer look at St. Mary’s Church and the Dover Western Height fortress.

Слава Україні! (Slava Ukraini!)

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Jewel of the Seas — Reykjavik; Skógafoss and Seljalandsfoss video


Today I present a video showing off the magnificence of both the Skógafoss and Seljalandsfoss waterfalls. I put together this video for you (as well as my YouTube channel audience) because sometimes static photographs fail to capture the dynamics of moving scenery. This is particularly true in nature for things such as waterfalls. I hope you enjoy this short video (1 minute 27 seconds):

Слава Україні! (Slava Ukraini!)

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Circumnavigating New Zealand — Rotorua’s Redwoods and Okere Falls


Silver Leaf Fern

We’re still in and around Tauranga and Rotorua for today’s blog article, but we’re heading away from these towns and into the nearby forests. Just minutes from downtown Rotorua lies a redwood forest. Yep. You read that correctly. Redwoods. As in, the same type redwoods for which areas of northern California are famous.

Whakarewarewa Redwood Forest

The redwoods here, however, are not quite as large as the ones I highlighted in my article on Muir Woods, as you can see from this Muir Woods photograph from that article:

The giant coast redwood

So, how did redwoods come to grow in New Zealand? No; these trees are not indigenous. Yes; these are indeed California coastal redwoods. They were brought here nearly 100 years ago and naturalized into the environment.

Whakarewarewa Redwood Forest

These sequoias have taken to the local climate and soil quite well. Since being brought here sometime around 1923, some of these trees have already reached heights of 230 feet/70 meters. This particular stand of redwoods make up the Whakarewarewa Redwoods Forest.

Whakarewarewa Redwood Forest

The redwoods are not the only flora of note here. What about that silver leaf fern pictured at the top of today’s article? Here is another view:

Silver Leaf Fern

Not very silver, now, is it. But not so fast. The silver leaf does not get it’s name lightly. To see the silver, one must turn over the leaf to observe the underside:

Silver Leaf Fern

Now let’s continue farther away from Rotorua and head north to Okere Falls Scenic Reserve:

Welcome to Okere Falls

It is here, at Okere Falls, that we trek into the forest for a view of a popular rafting area over the Tutea Falls. Let’s start with the upper portion of Tutea:

Okere Falls

And head on down just below that to the lower portion (in the lower right frame below you’ll see the remains of an old hydroelectric generating station):

Okere Falls

Now, that doesn’t look all that daunting for rafters, right? Well, let’s watch what happens to a pair of rafts heading down Tutea Falls. The following video recaps some of what you saw last week in the geothermal area near Rotorua, and beginning at the 0:43 mark you see this intrepid duo of rafters heading over the falls:

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Filed under Photography, R. Doug Wicker, travel, vacation, Video