
However badly other try to knock you down, rise up again.
Your inner strength is all you need to pull you through.
Be reborn.

However badly other try to knock you down, rise up again.
Your inner strength is all you need to pull you through.
Be reborn.

Preparation is key.
Have everything in place before embarking on a project will help that enterprise to move forward smoothly.

Harness the strength of your convictions.
You can do whatever you set your mind to.

Where do you fit in to the world we have created for ourselves?
Make a stand, and hold by it.

Focus on your intentions.
They give you the drive to succeed.

Try looking at things in a different way.
There is always a new perspective to be had.
Expand your horizons.

Ever feel that you’re only getting one side of the story?
Don’t take what you see as read.
There may be more to things that you understand.
With everything else that has been going on in the world, it’s taken a while to get there, but here is the complete list of alphabetical Somerset villages posts. What started out in August 2020 as something of a lockdown photographic project, helping me explore parts of my new home county that I might normally bypass, became much more than just something to challenge my satnav.
Twenty six villages, each with their own individual personalities and traits. Each came into being in different ways, for different reasons, but each brings something different to the county, adding different stories to the county’s history.
(The previously mentioned disclaimers apply to the alphabetical journey. There are no villages in Somerset beginning with a J or a V, so K and W are doubled up. Zeals is technically not in Somerset, but is within a few hundred yards of the border, so I have taken the liberty of including it in the list, as there are no other places in the county starting with that letter.)
Click on an image to visit the village post.

Think big.
There is no issue with having aspirations; they are what drive us, to greater things.
Think positively and positive things will happen.

Nestled under the northern slopes of the Mendips, close to the Blagdon Lake in the Chew Valley, lies the quiet and unassuming village of Ubley.
The derivation of the village’s name is lost to time: in the 10th century it was known as Hubbanlege; a century later is was Tumbeli (or “rolling meadow” in old English). The name may come from local king Ubba, although it may also have been given the name in Veb, after the Latin word for lead, from the lead miners who lived in the area.





Today, the village has a population of around 330 people, most of whom live in old, stone built houses around the village green.



Ubley is a village that takes pride in its appearance, although the Best Kept Village signs date from twenty or thirty years ago. It is a quiet place in a quiet valley, and one with a community feel that is even more apparent because of the events of the last year or so.






At the heart of the village lies St Bartholomew’s Church. Grade I Listed, it was closed on the day I visited, but was being frequented by a large number of crows, diligently building nests within its open steeple.
The grounds around the church are a peaceful, safe haven for those who have been buried within them over the years.







The village War Memorial remembers the five villagers who died in the First World War. There is only grave to a fallen solder in the churchyard and, ironically, that is for Second Lieutenant Alfred Newington, who wasn’t even a local man. (You can read more about his life and story by clicking on his name.)



Within easy reach of both the Mendips and Blagdon Lake, Ubley is worth a visit; it provides plenty of opportunity for walking and cycling. It is far enough away from the hubbub of the main Weston to Bath road, but accessible to it, to warrant stopping off.

Commemorating the fallen of the First World War who are buried in the United Kingdom.
Looking at - and seeing - the world
Nature + Health
ART - Aesthete and other fallacies
A space to share what we learn and explore in the glorious world of providing your own produce
A journey in photography.
turning pictures into words
Finding myself through living my life for the first time or just my boring, absurd thoughts
Over fotografie en leven.
Impressions of my world....