1
Sunset
Portishead housing estate
Image: © MDS
Taken: 12 Feb 2007
0.07 miles
2
Portbury Ditch
An unappealing name for the sizable watercourse that drain the Gordano valley and runs through the eastern side of the town. Here, with its banks and a grassy area behind, it forms a natural corridor between housing on Brampton Way (right) and Heron Gardens.
Image: © Derek Harper
Taken: 1 Apr 2010
0.08 miles
3
Roundabout, Gordano Gate
A sculpture in the form of a sail and mast, reflecting the town crest of a sailing ship, stands in the centre of this roundabout on Wyndham Way.
Image: © Derek Harper
Taken: 1 Apr 2010
0.10 miles
4
Sail Sculpture on a Roundabout
Traffic island on Wyndham Way (A369).
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 16 Jul 2021
0.11 miles
5
A369 at Middle Bridge roundabout
Image: © Colin Pyle
Taken: 21 Apr 2018
0.11 miles
6
Portbury Ditch
Looking the other way, downstream, along
Image, with Heron Gardens on the right.
Image: © Derek Harper
Taken: 1 Apr 2010
0.13 miles
7
Premier Inn, Portishead
Image: © Mike Pennington
Taken: 6 Jan 2019
0.14 miles
8
Portishead Retail Park
Image: © Steve Daniels
Taken: 18 Aug 2010
0.14 miles
9
Where?s my dinner
A local ginger cat committing woodwork after Frost, before Melt, north along the rhyne ditch.
09:47 04 February 2007 Sunday and the Frost until 09:51
08:45 Monday the much heavier overnight basin microclimate frost, although there was little by midnight, had melted before this submission. It is that hour that makes the difference to survival when migrating to work in the local area.
Image: © MDS
Taken: 4 Feb 2007
0.15 miles
10
Bear Reeds
It used to be The Bear pond, now it is advertised by Lenny Henry, but the point is still the same, the estate flood attenuation and hotel restaurant discharge pond is now finally an ecologically decorative landscape as the reeds have grown with the assistance of some dedicated people. The map shows a reach now under culvert and soil which is a shame, but then drowning people's very active children that climb fences at lunchtime is not to be advised for restaurants seeking business, so one can understand the removal from alongside the garden. Pity about the delayed weed development also shown, but soon we may be rid of that too, I thought government and local authority wanted trade (Arthur Llewellyn Jenkins, we had to go to Cribbs Causeway to replace a collapsed sofa, her brother went to a good part of the West Country for a care relative, very good sofa, but we would have preferred to buy locally as we did our other furniture and half an antique or two) and they like development to increase the Rateable income, especially of old sites re-used under central funding rules, however relief of planning regulations has just destroyed design, saturated places with housing with no work base, congested, flooded streets, on waste tips and left us with many offices that are empty and rented by government to keep up the appearance; the Council has fought this left right and centre and we begin to see progress as poor plans are vetoed, good ones passed and the general junk attitude of British society (a note made by my Geology teacher at School during the 1960s) is overcome. Little by little these sorts of projects are winning, so thugs can throw glass and rocks at ducks and fill the place with plastic waste, alike About a Boy (film with Hugh Grant) a point about a new form of duck shooting, in old marshlands, but we are gradually winning as this shows. Thank you Aidan Millerick.
Image: © Michael Dennis Stagg
Taken: 25 Jun 2011
0.17 miles