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Entries in uk (3)

Saturday
30Jan2010

Birmingham canals

Copyright © Mark Pedley. All rights reserved.

One of my favorite places to visit when in Birmingham is the canal area near Gas Street Basin and Brindley Place. Located directly in the centre of the city, the canal area has received a massive facelift over the past decade, transforming it into a hip place with modern cafes and bars, fine restaurants, and upmarket canal side accommodation. Despite massive investment, the area retains an atmosphere of tradition dating back to the Industrial Revolution, the time when Birmingham and it's outskirts thrived on heavy industry, and when canals were the major transport route for moving goods into and out of the region.

Copyright © Mark Pedley. All rights reserved.

The canal network also runs directly past Birmingham University and the student campus. When I was a student, I used to paddle in my canoe from the campus to the university every morning, even in winter when the canal was covered in a thin layer of ice. The trip was quiet and peaceful, no vehicles, no people, just faint remnants of the industrial age just visible beneath the bushes and trees that had taken back control of these backwaters. The silence  broke by my paddle breaking the ice.

In a later article, I will present a few images of the stretch of canal I used to paddle along. I walked the stretch back in 2009. It is the same today as it was at the beginning of the eighties when I was studying at Birmingham University.

Saturday
30Jan2010

My Forgotten Playground

Copyright © Mark Pedley. All rights reserved.

It was a strange, even sad feeling. I returned to the place where I had spent most of my early childhood in Birmingham, UK. I had not been back for many years. I remember quiet streets with vast expanses of carefully-nurtured grass lawns, bordering directly onto countryside that seemed to stretch to the end of the world.

Now it's a forgotten place. All the houses have gone. All the lawns have gone. All the open fields and woods have been replaced by new housing estates. Strange that the very place I grew up has not been consumed. A sanctuary left untouched since I left at the age of eleven. That was thirty nine years ago. An island. A wilderness, ruled by wild grasses and raspberry bushes, and remains of wrought-iron street lamps that once lined the narrow streets that passed by our home.

My Forgotten Playground.

Copyright © Mark Pedley. All rights reserved.

Saturday
30Jan2010

Where's the beef?

Copyright © Mark Pedley. All rights reserved.

It's such a pleasure to see small, traditional businesses thriving, such as the butcher's shop I shot last year in a side street in the old city of Bath, UK. The two elderly ladies went into the shop shortly after I took this photo, and it was clear that they had been visiting this shop for may years. Observing from outside, I saw that the service was familiar and friendly, and the shopping experience itself seemed to be more important than the produce on offer.

I stood on the corner of the street for at least ten minutes watching the scene. A window into rural English life.

Copyright © Mark Pedley. All rights reserved.