This picture is just downstream of the previous entry. The trees on the left hand side normally stand well clear of the water.
By this time the Lune has changed course by almost 180 degrees, and is flowing in the opposite geographical direction. Because of the change in the structure of the rocks the current seems much faster, and the colour of the water shows how much soil is being washed downstream. The hills in the background are the northern edge of the Forest of Bowland, one of the few areas in the North West of England that could be described as wilderness.
By this time the Lune has changed course by almost 180 degrees, and is flowing in the opposite geographical direction. Because of the change in the structure of the rocks the current seems much faster, and the colour of the water shows how much soil is being washed downstream. The hills in the background are the northern edge of the Forest of Bowland, one of the few areas in the North West of England that could be described as wilderness.
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