Snow Riding

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Spartan

New Member
Excellent! But man dear wear that right gear next time :smile: Love to see more...

Mike
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
Nice shots of the medieval equivalent of the M6, that lane was worn down by the millions of packhorse ponies' hooves that carried all the goods before roads were invented.
 

rualexander

Legendary Member
Good quality video, shame about the annoying music track, why do so many people have to put raucous music onto any videos they put on youtube?
 
Nice video, great camera. :ohmy:
 
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tombikess

New Member
Being pants with a camera myself, i d say that was very very good , was it shot remotely ?

No, this was shot with my friend and me behind the tripod (I'd like to think that I'm a much better rider! ;))

Nice shots of the medieval equivalent of the M6, that lane was worn down by the millions of packhorse ponies' hooves that carried all the goods before roads were invented.

Do you know mark house lane well then? Never knew that about the lane though!

Good quality video, shame about the annoying music track, why do so many people have to put raucous music onto any videos they put on youtube?

Because the inbuilt sound is boring and rather tinny on my inbuilt mic, but I have left it in somewhat. I'd hardly call it racous though! Perhaps in comparison to Beethoven, but I'm sure you can just mute it if its that much of a nuisance?
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
Do you know mark house lane well then? Never knew that about the lane though!

No, but it has all the characteristics of a very ancient packhorse trail so I Googled it. Packhorses were used for many hundreds of years for transporting goods before large-scale manufacturing started and brought the need for bigger capacity transport networks; first the canals and turnpike roads, then the railways and now the motorways. Not many people appreciate the size and extent of the packhorse network and the power of a train of 40 or more packhorses belting along like the medieval equivalent of a white van. Thanks to the width of a loaded packhorse pony, bridges had to have pedestrian refuges built on top of the cutwaters. Hebden Bridge is a superb example. If two packhorse trains met in opem country the drivers would fight it out with cudgels or blunderbuses over the right to the trail because once a pony left the hard trail it could sink into the bog with the weight it was carrying and it would take hours to get the whole train reassembled and moving again.

The biggest packhorse trail was the one entering London, where the V groove worn in the ground was tens of feet deep. The grooves were called hollow ways, hence the name of that district of London.
 

steveindenmark

Legendary Member
Nice vid, didn`t like the music.

You protect your hands and not your head...what does that tell us ?????:biggrin:

I am looking for a new Canon but I already have the Rebel and the 550 is about the same size, I need a new compact camera. Be careful leaving £500 of camera laying around by itself on a country lane.

Did you use an editing programme for your video?

Steve
 
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