The Major Oak in Sherwood Forest rests beneath the snow, its ancient branches holding winter’s silence. Frost traces the deep lines of its bark, and the forest seems to pause around it—my spiritual place, old, watchful, and quietly alive.
1 comment:
Neil
said...
This snowy scene takes my thoughts back to 30 April 1951, when Richard Todd woke up to find an ample covering of snow on the very first day of filming ‘The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men’. That first day was scheduled to be at Burnham Beeches but had to be abandoned. My own view is that those scenes were filmed too early with the trees not quite in full leaf
1 comment:
This snowy scene takes my thoughts back to 30 April 1951, when Richard Todd woke up to find an ample covering of snow on the very first day of filming ‘The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men’. That first day was scheduled to be at Burnham Beeches but had to be abandoned. My own view is that those scenes were filmed too early with the trees not quite in full leaf
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