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Hi to all our members ... We  would just like to draw your attention to the latest post on the following link... Thank you for your attention .If you have already responded to my note  on Chatbox  about this please ignore this sticky note ... Thanks  folks ....

http://www.tipf.co.uk/forums/topic/46369-important~-the-forum-its-future-and-finances/

Clicker and Ryewolf   ADMIN TEAM 

Regretfully we have to once again ask members for  some financial support in order to  keep TIPF  running till December 2023. The more pledges we have to become  FRIEND OF THE FORUM  the less the individual cost will be so  if you want this Forum to continue  please follow the link below  and decide  if you are able to  support us . Thank you all for your support in the past ... it has been appreciated  a great deal ...

https://www.tipf.co.uk/forums/topic/57184-202223-forum-finances-update-important-notice/

 Clicker and Ryewolf  ...  Admin Team 

Hi TIPFers 

I AM HERE AGAIN WITH THE  BEGGING BOWL TO ENSURE THE FORUM CAN KEEP GOING ... Please follow  below if you want to  support the continuation  of this Forum and  this  small but friendly community. 

As always your support is  both vital and appreciated ...

 Clicker and Ryewolf ...

https://www.tipf.co.uk/forums/topic/57184-202223-forum-finances-update-4th-july-2023/

 

Denis

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Posts posted by Denis

  1. And welcome from me too :)

     

    I would love to have gone straight in with a full frame, But I'm still getting my head around learning to use Nikons (older) entry level!

     

    and dont get me started on processing software...thats harder for me to understand than the damn camera:)

  2. That said we did have a nest of False Widows in the garden two years ago, we left the old sun parasol on the patio table furled up with the cover over it instead of bringing it in for the winter. When we opened it there were about ten of these spiders up inside the top of the parasol.

    All the markings were correct for type,So I folded the parasol carefully and put it in a skip a neighbour had!...... bye bye nest of man eating 'orrids :)

  3. I have been twice before Dennyboy, but my son and I did it this year together. We took our time and spent six days from 'Utah' beach to the Orne Canal & 'Pegasus'.

     

    There is so much else to see inland as well, that by my reckoning it would take a good eight days to see all you can. This trip we finally got to hill112, hill 262, the Falaise pocket, and the lonely Tiger Tank that sits on the roadside at Vimoutier where it ran out of fuel escaping the carnage of the Falaise gap. Places like those I depicted, the 'Azeville Batterie', the 101st airborne museum at St Mere Eglise, Brecourt Manor, Tilly, The Suffolks Regt  objectives at 'Hillman' and 'Morris', plus the radar station at Douvres all go to tell a very compelling and sad story.

     

    Strangely 'Omaha', despite the terror and terrible losses leaves me...well...a little underawed. Apart from the memorial in the sea and the museum there is little to actually see. The Canadian beach 'Juno' and its excellent museum wins hands down for emotional experience for me, I actually came out of there with tears on my face. And i have no emotional connection with Canada or the landings on their beach, it was just so well presented.

  4. Again, these are just snaps with no skill whatever in their making. But they are a pictorial tale of something that I found...well..fascinating and wanted to keep.

     

    The USS Nevada survived the attack on Pearl Harbour in 1941. On the morning of the sixth of June 1944 she was designated to fire on beach defences on Utah Beach, this was the western end of the series of beaches chosen to mount the invasion of France by the allied forces .

     

    She switched targets and fired on the German heavy gun battery at Azeville, three kilometres inland from the actual beach,at this point she was eight miles out to sea. Her first salvo from her fourteen inch diameter guns fell just behind the two western reinforced concrete casemates where the craters can still be seen today.

    10213758234_6ce3a8c5a7_z.jpg

     

    Two shells from her second salvo struck the casemate, one blowing a hole right through the light machine gun 'Tobruk' mount, the second entered the firing room of the casemate itself at a very low trajectory.

     

    10213781104_d4f2026fa5_z.jpg

     

    It drilled a hole through the rear wall of the firing room and entered the main command room of the huge bunker where it killed sixteen German soldiers. It had still not exploded. Their deaths caused by shock and the massive amount of concrete splinters that were hurled around inside the command room.

     

    10213883096_9010478e96_z.jpg

     

    It bounced off the floor and exited through the inch thick armour plate that held the MG34 machine gun that pointed out of the rear of the command room for defence.

     

    10213781074_1ebb6cf308_z.jpg

     

     

    After creating its path through, it then glanced off the side of the metre thick inner blast wall that blew out at least half the width of the wall itself...it still didnt explode.

     

    10213781024_ec44aea217_z.jpg

     

    It then bounced and hit the right side of the blast wall and exited through the rear doorway and steel door, removing it completely, then the shell itself embedded itself standing on its nose five feet outside the rear entrance.

     

    It laid there for 50 years until it was found when the gun battery was being cleaned up to open as a museum. It was finally detonated, and the remaining nose cone of the four foot long shell was placed back inside the casemate where it has first entered the room (pic 3). The plinth below shows when, and where it was found.

     

    10213869655_aa71b18cc7_z.jpg

  5. Aged 53 I suffered a a serious heart attack that resulted in stents being fitted in all three main arteries. Three months later I had a triple bypass. I have now taken up walking and cycling, have put on 2 stone and staring my 60th birthday in the face!

    You really dont know whats around the corner :)

  6. Not joined a club although there are several in the area, As I said, I take pictures for meself and dont think they are good enough for publishing. Out of the six thousand or so taken on my D3000, about 20 are what I would call good :)

  7. I only have View NX2 that is Nikons own software,  ColinB gave me a few good tips to using it but this lightroom thingy sounds quite good.

     

    I am afraid of buying it and not understanding how it works,  the same as freeware programs like GIMP ect.  I for some reason, turn into Mr Cabbage Head when trying to understand processing software!

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