Baker’s Creek

http://rainbowology.net/sid/bookernew12.html

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http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL52154B34A59CA62E

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seathwaite_Fell

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moonsun

Sun Yellow swallowed by Moon Blue… sexual copulation. Two children of opposite sex Green/Red. They are streams on either side, running away from parents. Sun is Dry, Moon: Wet. Sun and Moon alone isolated from World. Children connect.

Seathwaite Fell is a northern ridge of Great End in the Scafells. It projects out from beneath the great northern cliff of its parent, occupying a tongue of land between two tributaries of the River Derwent. These are Styhead Gill to the west and Grains Gill to the east, the streams meeting at Stockley Bridge below the nose of the fell. Sty Head Gill falls from the walkers’ pass at Sty Head, the main pedestrian route from Borrowdale to Wasdale. Near the head of the pass is Styhead Tarn. This in turn is fed by the outflow of Sprinkling Tarn, a beautiful indented pool lying between Seathwaite Fell and Great End. Sprinkling Tarn lies very close to the course of Grains Gill, ensuring that Seathwaite Fell is almost surrounded by water.

If Seathwaite Fell would have been surrounded by water, it would have been cut off and isolated. Grains and Styhead are the 2 children, connecting it to normal physics of our World.

Seathwaite is listed as having 3552mm of rainfall annually; this figure makes it the wettest place with rainfall statistics in England.

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Singing Hermans

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Filed under collages 2d, Lake District, SID's 1st Oz, Wiltshire

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