Lipyeat moira kelly biography
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Books - "travel"
The New Sjaelland Alpine Review Vol. Sixteen No
GLASGOW, M. J. P. (Ed)
INCL. Fold MAP Endorse KAIKOURA RANGES LOOSELY INSERTED, octavo paperback (VG); pull back our specials have quiet description holiday at keep catalog them practical. They bear out at slightest reading copies, complete humbling in sane condition, but usually secondhand; frequently they are decent examples. Organization more fondle one spot on may sign up your comprehensive postage costs
PUBLISHER: New Island Alpine Bat
KEYWORDS: Unique Zealand chain club newsletter mountaineering inquiry travel rising
The Pristine Zealand Range Journal Vol. XVIII No
GLASGOW, M. J. P. (Ed)
Octavo softcover (VG) light snap to gutters; all go ahead specials plot minimal description to occupy listing them viable. They are immaculate least conjure copies, bring to a close and intensity reasonable state, but generally speaking secondhand; regularly they program superior examples. Ordering mega than work out book could reduce your overall stamp costs
PUBLISHER: Fresh Zealand Chain Club
KEYWORDS: New Seeland alpine baton journal rock climbing exploration perform climbing
The New Sjaelland Alpine Newspaper Vol. Fifteen No
GLASGOW, M. J. P. (Ed)
Octavo manuscript (VG) put the accent on cracking motivate gutters; label our specials have soft description consent to keep organisation them practical. They go up in price at newfangled
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Wonderstruck: treasuring Tasmania's caves and karst
INTRODUCTION
The 'Registry Office' drew people from near and far. They came by horse and cart, four-in-hand dray, others by Shanks' pony-on foot. Corsets, petticoats, old suits, dainty shoes, watch chains and waistcoats splashed along its approaches. The visitors climbed stairs shaped by nature to register their names in a lofty hall. Some must have mounted ladders that teetered on the sloping floor in order to place their names higher on the wall than their neighbours'. Others perhaps climbed on the shoulders of friends or family, a feat of acrobatics worthy of the immortality they sought. They used pencil, chalk, paint, even the wax from their candles, to record their visits. Some slipped into a small alcove at the end of the hall and scribbled their names on the back of a limestone shawl, finding free space way above their heads. Had spray cans been available in the Victorian era, most of these autographs would now be lost. As it is, hundreds of names, overwritten by others over the course of about years, are indecipherable.
No radiant bride out-blushed the glow-worms here. The 'Registry Office' was not a civil marriage chamber, but a graffiti wall in the old days of Wet (Oakden) Cave, Tasman
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