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kissing gate การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • New gates, kissing gates and paths have been installed to improve access.
  • A wooden footbridge and kissing gate lead to the main village.
  • Keep left at the base of a gorse-covered slope to a kissing gate.
  • The majority of paths have wicket gates or kissing gates, but there are some stiles.
  • Subsequently, genuine WHR fencing, including a kissing gate, was erected along the back of the platform.
  • The'Cambridge'sign marking the entrance to the yard and also the'Kissing Gates'of 1884 vintage remain preserved in place.
  • Pass through a kissing gate and follow the right hand boundary of the field for 50m to a white farmhouse.
  • There used to be around 600 stiles along the route, but many of these have now been replaced by kissing gates.
  • However, on popular paths, stiles are increasingly replaced by gates or kissing gates or, where the field is arable, the stile removed.
  • Access to the station was " via " a kissing gate and a flight of steps from the roadside on the south side of the bridge.
  • There is a picnic area near the free main car park, and three radar-operated kissing gates have been installed next to the main pedestrian entrances to the park.
  • The stones can be reached by following the public footpath accessed via the kissing gate which is situated on the left about from the main road toward Leechpool.
  • Alternatively they ( or horses ) may pass instead through an adjacent conventional gate, or an additional latch may allow the kissing gate itself to open fully for this purpose.
  • Facing the car park on the opposite side of the lane, a kissing gate allows wheelchair access to a level asphalt track running past the cromlech down the length of the gorge, passing within about of the cairn.
  • A weather vane made by local blacksmith Albert Gabe was accepted by the Parish Council to complete the monument, and a Lime tree and privet hedge were planted behind the tower and iron railings with kissing gates erected at the front.
  • The walkers'right-of-way passes through the farmer's back yards, and every few minutes we'd have to climb over footholds in a stone wall, called stiles, or try to squeeze through a " kissing gate, " a narrow gate that proved diabolical with a backpack.
  • The Long Ashton Footpath Users Group have replaced 29 stiles on the public rights of way around the village with kissing gates to create a complete circular walk around the village, accessible to older people and those with mobility problems, although it can be muddy in places.