4.2
(152)
1,125
등산객
179
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마지막 업데이트: 2월 20, 2026
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4.6
(9)
29
등산객
15.0km
03:48
30m
30m
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5.0
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9
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9.38km
02:33
140m
140m
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3
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10.3km
02:41
70m
70m
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12
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5.11km
01:17
10m
10m
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9
등산객
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9월 21, 2025, East Lambrook Manor Gardens
East Lambrook Manor is a small 15th-century manor house in East Lambrook, Somerset, England, registered by English Heritage as a Grade II* listed building. It is surrounded by a "cottage garden" planted by Margery Fish between 1938 and her death in 1969 Source: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Lambrook_Manor&sa=U&sqi=2&ved=2ahUKEwixtq-agOqPAxVwQUEAHW63LpYQmhN6BAhHEAI&usg=AOvVaw2J1ImdC6M0ozT6V4IKxFAt
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7월 26, 2025, St. Mary's Church, Donyatt
Built in the 15th century on the site of an earlier church.
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7월 26, 2025, Donyatt Halt
Donyatt Halt Records for Donyatt Halt state: "This halt, opened on May 5th, 1928, has a single platform edged with wooden sleepers, and a small wooden shelter. A pathway leads up from the platform to the road, which crosses the line by an overbridge at the Ilminster end of the platform. An ornate oil lamp stands at the top of the path and there are various posts with brackets for hanging oil lamps in winter." It would be the guard's duty to light and extinguish these lamps. Five trains a day operated in each direction taking about 45 minutes for the 15 - mile journey from Taunton to Chard, having made stops at Thornfalcon, Hatch, Ilton, Ilminster and Donyatt. Donyatt.com
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Southmoor Pumping Station is a historic pumping station located in Somerset, England, primarily designed for land drainage. It is part of the complex network of pumping stations and drainage systems that manage water levels in the Somerset Levels, an area prone to flooding due to its low-lying position.
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8월 11, 2024, The Pump That Saved Langport
Chris Osborne, a well known local figure who was active in community affairs and chaired the Town Council, was instrumental in rescuing a long-disused water pump and putting it on display in the Walter Bagehot Town Garden in 2011. This is his story explaining the significance of the pump to the town. The floods in the winter of 1960 were worse than usual. The river had burst its banks and the moors were flooded. It looked as though Bow Street would be flooded again, and badly. Houses and businesses were at risk. Chris, then a young man in his 20s, was busy in his workshop at the Great Bow Yard. He had come to Langport to construct the Langport Huish sewer system, replacing the old channel of waterways and canals. He remembers the following events well. He said: “I was wearing my Wellington boots because the water came up to your shins. I was working in my workshop when a chap called Hugh Binder walked in. He said: ‘Chris, this bloody flood is getting serious.’ Everybody was concerned at the level of rising water and could see what was going to happen. “The next thing there were four or five Green Goddess fire engines at the bank and pumping water and chucking it on the moor. I said: ‘What about the pump?'” A huge G & H Gwynne of London water pump installed in the early decades of the 20th century, sat redundant by the side of the Parrett. It was called the Invincible. He said: “It was rusty and solid as anything. We got a tractor to pull it out and we stripped it down. We replaced the glands, the bearings and totally cleaned it out. It’s a remarkable piece of engineering. “We managed to get it going about 3.15am and the noise woke everybody in the town. We removed two inches of water in the first hour and just needed to keep it going. We then got to removing eight inches per hour no problem. It worked like a dream.” The pump was kept running and drained enough water to reduce the level running through the town and keep it out of the properties. Many years later, that same pump was rescued from the river bank again and put on display www.langportheritage.co.uk
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4월 14, 2024, Thorney Bridge
Beautiful Mill with the river flowing down towards Thorney. As you look towards Thorney bridge, you can see the large turning area where the boats carrying their goods would turnabout
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4월 14, 2024, Pitt Drove Waterway, West Moor
It is a lovely and quiet walk across the start of the Somerset Levels
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1월 27, 2024, River Isle and Southmoor Pumping Station
Closed due to pumping, bridge fenced off
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1월 8, 2024, Burrow Hill
Check out the view from the top of the Hill and pop into the cider farm at the bottom
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9월 11, 2023, Swimming Pontoon on the River Isle
Wonderful stretch of river for a swim. Pontoon there spring, summer and autumn
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2월 21, 2023, Homemade Jam & Chutney Stand
Here you can buy very tasty chutneys and jams.
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6월 23, 2021, Donyatt Halt
Nice statue of a girl waiting for the train that will never come along the well maintained gravel track but some sharp changes in direction make the run from ilminster to chard confusing if you expect to be on the old railway tracks
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1월 7, 2021, River Isle and Southmoor Pumping Station
Pumping stations are dotted around the Somerset Levels to help manage its rather determined proclivity to flood. As the Levels are only marginally above sea level, it doesn’t take much to turn the area into a giant pond and water management practices have been in use since the Roman times. This pumping station sits right next to the River Parrett Trail and River Isle is a fine sliver of land in the Southmoor Main Drain which you must walk over to cross the water.
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1월 7, 2021, Thorney Mill (Silent Mill)
Thorney Mill, otherwise known as Thorney Silent Mill, occupies a particularly pretty point on the River Parrett. No longer in use, it’s a watermill that once ground corn, built in 1823. Why the ‘Silent’? It has wooden cogs which would’ve been far quieter than had they been made out of metal. The mill lies just off the River Parrett Trail and next to a footbridge which gives the best view of it.
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