Go through this and a wide tarmac lane is now followed straight ahead for the next half a mile or so all the way back to Disley. |
|
Distinction, the 11-4 favourite, takes up the running with about half a mile to go and soon has the field strung out. |
|
Also on the left bank, but about half a mile downstream is a landing platform. |
|
He is absolutely right in saying that local children would benefit as the nearest play park is at least half a mile away. |
|
Placed half a mile East, or situated on Church Road it would doubtless do a roaring trade. |
|
One dark night he helped row a collapsible boat carrying a dozen men half a mile out to sea in the hope of finding a ship to take them. |
|
The tail fin and the rudder attached to it were discovered half a mile from where the fuselage and engines came to rest. |
|
About half a mile away, starlight finally hit it, revealing a sleek chestnut brown body with ruffled russet red tail feathers. |
|
There were traffic tailbacks stretching for half a mile as cars waited for the police to reopen the road. |
|
The whales surfaced again about half a mile off the port beam, having dived beneath us, then turned north and headed towards Mazatlan. |
|
We were on the beam all the way, and passed to the side of the temporary field built by Wilkinson by approximately half a mile. |
|
Finally after about half a mile the thickness of the trees parted to reveal a small meadow. |
|
Leave the Pennine Way at the road and turn right, following the road downhill for about half a mile until a gated track is reached on the right. |
|
The women were attacked within the space of two hours early on Friday, half a mile apart. |
|
Some measure little more than half a mile across, and the newest discovery, a Neptunian moon, is almost 3 billion miles from Earth. |
|
All I could hear, for half a mile, was the sound of our feet crunching on the gravel, and the gentle moos coming from the cows in the fields. |
|
After half a mile of climbing, the path levelled and the landscape opened out, there were drifts a couple of feet deep at gaps and gateways. |
|
In fact there's only half a mile or so to go, I can see the lights of the houses, but near enough is good enough, it will have to be. |
|
There was a causeway bridge which spanned the waterway a half a mile ahead. |
|
If full, then verge south of start, lots down at Bonfield Gill half a mile from start. |
|
|
After half a mile cross the expansive plateau to a high level lochan and the summit cairn. |
|
The waste from both flows to the small New Labour sewage works half a mile away. |
|
About half a mile north-west of Easton he could see a group of mounted figures watching over a herd of large animals. |
|
Seabound exit from the cult compound was blocked by half a mile of chain-link fence, topped with razor wire. |
|
The southeast face of the South Tower is more than half a mile wide and 3,000 feet high, and exposed to the nastiest Patagonian winds. |
|
There are some ten to fifteen fishable pegs here, over a distance of about half a mile. |
|
Karthan looked ahead, but a small incline in the road prevented him from seeing more than half a mile ahead. |
|
This is over half a mile away and consists of one cubicle with an internal diameter of less than one metre. |
|
The airport looked like a construction site from our position about half a mile away. |
|
The journey takes you half a mile along a cactus-lined track, and into a village. |
|
An attempt to restart the right engine was too late and the plane crash-landed half a mile from the runway. |
|
This continued its course west, directly parallel to the island, and in it, at a distance of half a mile from us, three galliots lay at anchor. |
|
It shattered windows in nearby buildings and sent debris flying for half a mile. |
|
All nine coaches were derailed, but continued upright for half a mile before colliding head-on with a coal train. |
|
It may be worth noting that I'm watching the game on my computer roughly half a mile distant from the stadium. |
|
Women and children have to walk up to half a mile to draw drinking water from a water source. |
|
About half a mile from the Desolate Borough's walls, the city dumped the by-products of dyes, tatters of textiles, and every other waste that had no use for. |
|
Much of the island is a mantle of ice more than half a mile thick. |
|
Ana Cross stands proud on a tumulus, visible from half a mile away. |
|
Before you turn south note that north-west, about half a mile away and probably visible is Ana Cross, a tall, complete cross shape and a magnet for walkers and bikers. |
|
|
The sea was just a half a mile south of the fort and some men made plans to bathe in its waters tomorrow, while others just wanted to drink and eat and remain by the fires. |
|
The later levels of the game are so unbearably evil, that this game really should have been locked in a lead case and buried half a mile underground. |
|
The intended targets were military vehicles parked about half a mile away. |
|
A city garbage truck hit him and left him where he stopped rolling, beside the road on a hill half a mile from the house. |
|
The county council is urging all parents to start walking their children to school, even if it is just for the last half a mile to the school gate itself. |
|
It was about a half a mile downhill, with an absolutely beautiful view of the countryside, although it was always a bit harder to get back up again after a few pints. |
|
By the time we reached Roman Road, only half a mile as the crow flies from our starting point, the bus was jam-packed full and sailing past the waiting queues. |
|
In addition, two main temples were constructed on the acropolis, and a thriving seaport at present-day Minet el-Beida was located about half a mile away. |
|
None the less, I had gone barely half a mile in my Scenic when a bus driver, alongside me at a junction, put his window down to express his admiration. |
|
Her choice was the bedroom of a tiny studio apartment half a mile from campus, and there she emerged the winner, though it was well past midnight before Jack conceded defeat. |
|
As I write these words, an inch above my monitor yet half a mile away, I can see the Union flag fluttering at what appears to be three-quarters-mast on the Senate House. |
|
By the time the march reached the other end of town, it had grown to nearly half a mile long, taking up both sides of the wide boulevards that crisscross Pittsburgh. |
|
A short walk from the cathedral is a cable car, which ascends around half a mile to provide an impressive view of the island and the surrounding fjords. |
|
It is visible down a straight approach road for nearly half a mile. |
|
Meanwhile, in the southern city of Guangzhou, the queues at toll gates saw cars moving just half a mile an hour. |
|
He claimed there was less than half a mile between the end of the runway and houses at the Horsforth end and that an extension could raise safety concerns. |
|
We raced madly for about half a mile, behaving in as wild a manner as the poor bestung animals. |
|
It was by that time dark but proceeded to build scances and prepare to hold the position on a front of about half a mile. |
|
Wanting to get some distance between the girls and us, we jogged for half a mile on an old skid road. |
|
Eton College is located within about half a mile of the castle, across the River Thames. |
|
|
A new location was quickly found but it was half a mile away from the ground, and so the players had to walk that distance in their playing kit. |
|
The bridge had four main spans, overall half a mile long, at that time the largest of its kind in Europe. |
|
The border, coterminous with a spur of the Cleveland Way for about half a mile from the East, exactly bisects Roseberry''s summit. |
|
Theophilus Somba, whose farm is around half a mile away from Lati's, has moved from maize to sorghum, pigeon peas and finger millet. |
|
Shortly before sunset Atahualpa left the armed warriors who had accompanied him, on an open meadow about half a mile outside Cajamarca. |
|
As I say for half a mile round the fort it is rutted gravel. We call this sort of gravelly stuff reg. |
|
The third arm is a truncated spur, running only half a mile to the summit of the Old Man before tumbling away south eastward to the valley floor. |
|
Although the quarry has not been identified, it has been suggested that the Gear, a rock now submerged half a mile from the shore at Penzance, may be the site. |
|
It is situated about half a mile northeast of Hugh Town and is a popular tourist spot with a number of guest houses, a restaurant, several gift shops and art galleries. |
|
The upper section of Great Gable has a roughly square plan, about half a mile on each side, with the faces running in line with the four points of the compass. |
|
An aerodrome, chiefly of steel, weighing, apart from fuel and water, about twenty-four pounds, was launched on the Potomac River on May 6, 1896, and flew for over half a mile. |
|
For example, if a hay-fever sufferer has a bout of eight or nine sneezes while travelling at 70mph, they could be taking their eyes off the road for up to half a mile. |
|
I'd covered nearly half a mile and was considering turning back when a dense patch of mountain laurels suddenly erupted with noise and flying snow. |
|
For half a mile a tranquil road stretches between columns of 80-foot-tall slash pines, inviting you to linger and to cherish life at its most serene. |
|
A short Allotment House and Elephant Tree walk will be led by Bryan and Dorothy Chambers at 2pm on Sunday from a point half a mile south of White Kirkley, near Frosterley. |
|
About half a mile before you arrive at Frongoch, follow the appropriate signs for the Eisteddfod by turning left and following the back road into the car parks. |
|
Located in the leafy Bournville, Oakville Place is just half a mile from St Laurence Church Junior School and a mile from the highly regarded St Brigid's RC Primary School. |
|
You look like someone drug you behind a horse for half a mile. |
|
The schooner ploughed on Northerly for a minute longer, before tacking again to lay herself half a mile in advance of the nearer corvette, now up on their larboard quarter. |
|
Many sturgeon leap completely out the water, usually making a loud splash which can be heard half a mile away on the surface and probably further under water. |
|