Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts

The Legendary British Airport

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Heathrow airport is considered one of the most loaded and most comfortable airports in the World. Each terminal has currency exchange offices with accessible exchange rates, information racks and information bureaus for placing of visitors. There is also a section of storage of luggage. Heathrow airport has special licence «CAA Public Use Aerodrome Licence» (№Р527), allowing to carry out flights and to train in flight business.

Heathrow, UK

In Heathrow there are 17 international hotels of different level of comfort and the price. To reach them from Heathrow it's possible by the bus «Heathrow Hotel Hoppa» from «National Express» company. Besides it there is a rent car service and a protected Heathrow parking. For safety responsibly aviation division of Capital Police though the national army, including special divisions, also is involved in the airport when it's necessary to strengthen protection degree.

Heathrow, airport
At Heathrow airport there are Anglican, Catholic, Muslim, Hindu and Jewish priests. Heathrow airport has own mass-media consisting of six photographers and one television command, working for the most popular newspapers and telecasts worldwide.

Aviation division

At Heathrow, taxi are usually built in turn on the special airport parking, because to "carry" passengers is a truly competitive & profitable business. The fare is supervised by the taxi counter and highlighted on the display. Additional payment, for example, in the evening or during week-end, is here too specified. Tip, usually at a rate of 10%, is paid at your discretion.

A Walk on the Edge at Stanage

Friday, March 2, 2012

Stanage Edge, Peak District
There's nothing quite like a long, leisurely walk in the countryside, is there? Breathing in all that clean, fresh air and feeling that all that walking is 'good for you'. My recent trip to Stanage Edge, a 4 mile long gritstone cliff overlooking Hathersage in the Peak District was exhilarating but perhaps for all the wrong reasons! The day started off with blue skies and sunshine and us following the map correctly. Unfortunately as the day went on, the sky grew darker, the wind grew stronger and the hail and snow arrived - meanwhile we had become sure that the OS map was wrong (always a mistake - since the map NEVER lies!) Whilst the weather could have been better, it certainly didn't dampen our spirits. The views across the heather laden moorland reminded me how lucky we are to have such beautiful places in such easy reach! There's something quite exciting about walking on Stanage Edge during the winter. There's not a lot of people about which makes the views across the Hope valley just that little bit more special, knowing that you don't have to share them with anyone else!




As we reached the summit of Stanage Edge (458m) I only had to glance over the edge to see a picture perfect image of history - the abandoned millstones scattered around the area that have formed part of the landscape since the 19th century. The nearby village of Hathersage was once an important area for quarrying stones. They were used for grinding corn and metals in mills and later for the production of needles and pins, which Hathersage became famous for. It's sad to think of the grinders who had an average life expectancy of just 30 due to the fragments of dust and steel that entered their lungs.IT was also not uncommon for the gritstone wheel to shatter as it was rotating, causing injury to the grinder.

North Lees Estate
Walking from Hathersage towards Stanage Edge, we came across North Lees Hall, an Elizabethan manor house. It is said that it was the inspiration for Thornfield Hall in Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre after she stayed in the area in 1845. The Hall has since been used in Pride and Prejudice (2005) and the BBC's production of Jane Eyre (2006).












Getting to Hathersage & Stanage Edge
Hathersage is situated in the Derwent Valley, Derbyshire (in the Peak District). There is a train station at Hathersage and from there you can do the 9 mile walk to Stanage Edge and back. Be sure to stop off at the quaint Cintra's Tearooms in Hathersage for a hot cup of tea and a warm scone on your return - especially if you get soaked by the rain, hail or snow during your walk!

Click here for directions for the 9 mile walk from Visit Peak District - On the Edge at Stanage...Enjoy!


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