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This is a first attempt to get photos of the Ingleton Falls on the web. Contrary to what you might think, they are not very old sepia prints, they were taken on a very cold, dull, rainy Christmas morning in 1989. The ordering is significant - the photos were taken sequentially on a clockwise walk around the Falls. At the end of the walk we discovered a local drink in a cafe in Ingleton - hot chocolate well laced with brandy. We still refer to this drink as an 'Ingleton'. There is no significant text: some day I'll rediscover the names of the Falls..
The photoalbum is arranged in three layers: when you click on the [slideshow] link below, you start at the first layer, and get the first page of 16 thumbnail pictures (Slides). On these pages there are VCR-like controls which allow you to move on t other pages of thumbnails (First, Previous, Next and Last). Currently there are four pages of thumbnails, but the last has only a few, awaiting more photos.
If you click on one of the thumbnail photos, you move to the second layer and get an information page about the photo and a repeat of the thumbnail you clicked on. The purpose of this page is to describe the action - who is there, what is going on etc. None of this information has been entered at the present time. Also on the information page is a small table for identification and indexing information. Again there is little information entered other than the filename of the picture and its location on Jacqui's Mac.
Finally, if you click on the thumbnail picture on the information page, you move to the third layer and get an enlarged (roughly screen-sized) copy of the photo. This is what it's all about.
On both the information pages and the large photo pages you can cycle through the pictures using VCR-like controls (First, Previous, Next and Last), and also choose to reurn to one of the previous layers(Info or Slide) or this introductory page. This makes it easier to skip all the junk and just look at the pictures.
To the best of my knowledge, all the links are working, and you shouldn't get any errors such as 'Page not found on this server'. If a photo comes up blank, then it doesn't exist. If you do find any links that are completely broken, or lead to strange results, please let me know by email so I can put things right.
Currently there is only one page of photos (11 in all) - the rest are blank.