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Where do ( did ) you walk locally in 2024?

On Nidderdale way from Pateley Bridge to Lofthouse
Lovely grassy paths and pretty villages
At Wate village we visited the smallest Methodist church in England
We met the warden who told us the history of the church, an irregular pentagon built in 1859
The warden then was Joseph Kipling, grandfather of Rudyard Kipling
This stretch of the walk is also shared with the 6 Dales trail
The little Dales bus took us back to Pateley where afternoon tea was enjoyed
Note the table covering ..pattern of multiple shells …can’t get away from it!IMG_8677.jpegIMG_8686.jpegIMG_8682.jpegIMG_8687.jpegIMG_8689.jpegIMG_8692.jpegIMG_8694.jpegIMG_8697.jpegIMG_8699.jpeg
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
On Nidderdale way from Pateley Bridge to Lofthouse
Lovely grassy paths and pretty villages
At Wate village we visited the smallest Methodist church in England
We met the warden who told us the history of the church, an irregular pentagon built in 1859
The warden then was Joseph Kipling, grandfather of Rudyard Kipling
This stretch of the walk is also shared with the 6 Dales trail
The little Dales bus took us back to Pateley where afternoon tea was enjoyed
Note the table covering ..pattern of multiple shells …can’t get away from it!View attachment 175054View attachment 175055View attachment 175056View attachment 175057View attachment 175058View attachment 175059View attachment 175060View attachment 175061View attachment 175062
Have you walked the Herriot Way, @Annette london? I walked it 3 years ago, and enjoyed it very much
 
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Sunday....
...in the fields on an overcast day - a dusty eight hours from meadow to village, through swamps and grain, then an hour or so at the end of the day along a roman road, passing through fields of waist high borage...

...to Wiggington, South Newington, Milcombe & Tadmarton then beyond. Oxfordshire in summer.

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Nice scenery, forests, ferns and rocks on this section of the Nidderdale way
Just off the path is Brinham rocks, hundreds of thousands in the making
The ice age and before that shaped the rocks, then more erosion with wind rain and frost
The shapes are amazing and the children and not so young children were enjoying the climbing there
I won’t be bringing my 4 grandsons however as I might just have a heart attack.

Then we got lost in the ferns which were higher than myself
Yes there was a path through them, just not the right path
It was a long walk! IMG_8738.jpegIMG_8751.jpegIMG_8756.jpegIMG_8759.jpegIMG_8761.jpegIMG_8767.jpegIMG_8769.jpegIMG_8775.jpegIMG_8778.jpegIMG_8782.png
 
23 July 2024. Penrhys Pilgrimage Path. Day 1

My wife decided at very short notice that she would like to walk the pilgrim route from Llandaff cathedral to Penrhys. By "short notice" I mean I was still in bed when she asked me to be on a bus to Swansea within the hour! :cool: So we made our way to Llandaff by bus and train and set off about 1pm for a short day. Ended at Groes-faen - a village north of Cardiff. A surprisingly green and rural walk considering the starting point. Preparations along the way to mark the upcoming National Eisteddfod. Back into Cardiff for the night - passing Nye Bevan on the way to the hotel. A warm bright day.

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Ideal sleeping bag liner whether we want to add a thermal plus to our bag, or if we want to use it alone to sleep in shelters or hostels. Thanks to its mummy shape, it adapts perfectly to our body.

€46,-
24 July 2024. Penrhys Pilgrimage Path. Day 2.

Bus this morning back to Groes-faen. A cooler and occasionally damp day. Mix of farmland , moorland and some quite sizeable hills. Passed through Llantrisant and saw the statue of Dr William Price. An extraordinary eccentric - look him up! Otherwise an pleasant but unremarkable small town sometimes uncharitably known as "the hole with the Mint". Past daffodil-coloured wind turbines and up into the Rhondda hills. A brief encounter with some Welsh bonsai ponies before a last climb to Penrhys with the final approach slightly surreally through a golf course. Penrhys itself looks an unlikely spot for a pilgrimage destination these days: one of the most deprived communities in an area with more than its share of problems. But it has a long interesting history. Like many Marian pilgrimage sites there is a spring once believed to have healing properties. A bit of a challenge to find even though I've been there before! :)

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The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
A lovely fresh morning heading south east on Dublin Bay. Long years ago, this area, in the video, saw multitudes of working class Scots have their seaside holidays in Boarding Houses. Long before airbnb. The lady of the house might cook, or the visitors might have brought the food from across the sea! They were simpler times.
The flowers were placed on a bench, which I imagine, was a favourite spot of the person whose memory is remembered on the inscription of the bench.
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View attachment IMG_2808.movIMG_2809.jpeg
 
A lovely fresh morning heading south east on Dublin Bay. Long years ago, this area, in the video, saw multitudes of working class Scots have their seaside holidays in Boarding Houses. Long before airbnb. The lady of the house might cook, or the visitors might have brought the food from across the sea! They were simpler times.
The flowers were placed on a bench, which I imagine, was a favourite spot of the person whose memory is remembered on the inscription of the bench.
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Memorial flowers on a seaside bench is something I saw along the english coast also -from Ramsgate to Eastbourne. There was even one with a yellow on blue camino symbol attached. I've forgotten where, though...
 
Long years ago, this area, in the video, saw multitudes of working class Scots have their seaside holidays in Boarding Houses. Long before airbnb.

Nice morning for a whirlwind tour!
Was it the chicken or the egg that came first though, I wonder? In any case, it's apt then, that the stretch in your video from the East Pier across to the Forty Foot is called Scotsman's Bay. 'Bug Rock' was what us kids called it, I have no idea why, I must look into it.

The flowers.. there have been innumerable tragedies along there through the ages, they could equally be to mark a recent as a long remembered event. Doesn't every bit of coastline have its ghosts and memories?
 
Perfect memento/gift in a presentation box. Back is blank for engraving.
Roaming Sundays...
In the heat : Churchill via Cornwell Manor and Salford to The Rollright Stones then.... &.... to.......

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1. St James. All Saints Church, Churchill.
2. St James. St Peter ad Vincula Church, South Newington (last Sunday)

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St Peter's Church, Cornwell Manor

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Whispering Knights, Rollright Stones

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...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
This weekend I visited my brother who lives in Manhattan and went jogging with him him in Central Park. (I only intended to walk, as I never run, but he pushed me and I did it). I had an underlying motive of course -- getting him to commit to doing a Camino with me, which I'm still working on.

I mention this because my brother suffered a series of bilateral strokes a few years ago and as a result has paralysis of various degrees on both sides of his body (and is non-verbal), but twice a week he runs with a group called Achilles International, which matches volunteer guides with disabled walkers and runners for organized walks/runs, usually weekly (although in NY, they have walks/runs twice a week). There are chapters all over the US and countries around the world. So consider this a pitch, if you would enjoy walking a local route more regularly and with a purpose, look into becoming a volunteer for the organization. https://www.achillesinternational.org/find-a-chapter

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Perfect memento/gift in a presentation box. Back is blank for engraving.
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I can only see a still. I know your habit of posting little videos with the sound of the wind...I will imagine! Thank you!
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
I can only see a still. I know your habit of posting little videos with the sound of the wind...I will imagine! Thank you!
I can see a moving tractor. I don't know anything about phone videos or computer glitches. Have you been able to see other videos which I jave posted here?
 
I can see a moving tractor. I don't know anything about phone videos or computer glitches. Have you been able to see other videos which I jave posted here?
Yes the tractor is moving and the farmer is doing a good job bringing in the hay
I’ve been able to see all the other videos
 
3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
Border hopping between Belgium and the Netherlands with Albert Canal in between.
An old abandoned border marker.
Bunker from WWII. The region was badly hit during those years.
Now there is a museum.
Walk of fourteen kilometers.




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We finally have had a walk up the hill near us. Wet winter weather and ongoing either damp or heat has kept us on other walks. However we took the path uphill yesterday and along the top road to the path downhill. From the road at the top the photo looks back down to the town. It gives some idea of how steep the hill is and the distant hills are Dartmoor.

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The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
Yesterday. And a link.

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Today. A foggy start, including foghorn blasts down at the port.
Sun soon shone through.
The fourth photo shows a new pedestrian/cycle path in the making. As in, maybe four years in the making! 🤣
I chanced my arm and found a spot to exit without having to retrace my steps...although it took a bit of acrobatic manoeuvres...
Who responded to a wave of recognition? The few lorry drivers. The car drivers were maybe too anxious about departure time!

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The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
A walk from Lofthouse by the river Nidd which was completely dry even after a lot of rain
Public paths went through a few farms and onto the ridge to Scar house dam completed in 1936
Then on the highest part of the Nidderdale way to Middlesmoor, one of Yorkshires highest settlements
In 1843, 128 people lived here and everything apart from the pub was now long gone
Too early for coffee so it was onto How Stean Gorge through the fields to their cafe
We passed on the Via Ferrata IMG_8616.jpegIMG_8620.jpegIMG_8624.jpegIMG_8626.jpegIMG_8630.jpegIMG_8640.jpegIMG_8644.jpegIMG_8651.jpegIMG_8653.jpegIMG_8654.jpeg
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
Hi Kirkie
Yes that’s the name alright.
The gorge is deep and we were more than happy just to look down on it
No high jinks for us, we value our old bones too much!
 
A quick walk before work this morning, down by the harbour for a dip. I'd almost forgtten about these tiles, they've been laying around the shed for ages. As the Bray Coastal Route, one of our recently established 'Celtic Caminos' passes right by Coliemore Harbour, I thought: sure, where else would I put them? Less than an hour later, with the grinder and bolster chisel, I set them right into the wall so they won't be going anywhere. These will mark roughly 10km from Bray, 20km from St James's Church, a third of the way. Look out for them if you happen to be passing!

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When I picked these up some years ago, I thought they might look nice in the garden or somewhere. I'm pleased they've ended up with a real purpose, on an official camino and point in the right direction, the shell especially, as they seem to do consistently, only in Asturias..
 
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3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
Hi Lovingkindness,
Your post from Banbury Cross reminded me of the nursery rhyme we used to sing to the children
“Ride a cock horse to Banbury Cross
To meet a fine lady upon a white horse
With rings on her fingers
And bells on her toes
She would have music wherever she goes”

The horse being a pretend hobby horseIMG_8851.png
 
Hi Lovingkindness,
Your post from Banbury Cross reminded me of the nursery rhyme we used to sing to the children
“Ride a cock horse to Banbury Cross
To meet a fine lady upon a white horse
With rings on her fingers
And bells on her toes
She would have music wherever she goes”

The horse being a pretend hobby horseView attachment 176121
Hello @Annette london

I love the pictures in old childrens books. Thanks for posting your's.

Here's a photo of the info board beside the bronze horse at Banbury Cross.

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The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
Sunday 18th I am walking the Downslink from home to Guildford, mostly an old railway route, now for cyclists and loony day walkers like me. Mid 30's miles and coming back the same way Monday

Photos to follow
Does the link coincide with the St Swithun's way from Winchester cathedral to Guildford ? - a nice walk. I set of in snow one winter. The North Downs were magnificent in the cold.
 
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Does the link coincide with the St Swithun's way from Whinchester cathedral to Guildford ? - a nice walk. I set of in snow one winter. The North Downs were magnificent in the cold.
not sure will investigate. From me it would be the South Downs Way to Winchester and the Downs link does cross the South Downs way nearer my end. Yes both Downs look wonderful in the frost


St Swithuns way goes from Winchester to Farnham. Might have to look into that 1 more as it's not too far for me
 
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...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
not sure will investigate. From me it would be the South Downs Way to Winchester and the Downs link does cross the South Downs way nearer my end. Yes both Downs look wonderful in the frost


St Swithuns way goes from Winchester to Farnham. Might have to look into that 1 more as it's not too far for me
The trail passes by a house where Jane Austen lived for a while. It is now a museum... i think there is a memorial to her as well, in Winchester Cathedral.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
There are many good walking tracks around Wellington, and I've been spending quite a bit of time on the Southern Walkway as I see about getting into Camino trim. (I'll move on to some of the others if/when I get bored and/or fitter.) This is how some of it looked a few days ago.

A glimpse of the harbour, not far from the northern end of the track. Bit breezy down there on the water today:
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Nice dappled light as we go up:
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Boring paved bit as we get close to crossing a road. I prefer dirt!
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Over the road and into the trees again, getting up tothe summit of Mount Victoria. Gnarly narrow bit here - walking poles are good to help with stability:
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Danger - here be hobbits!
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I didn't go down to the actual location this time, but as many of you will remember from the films it looks like this:
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Nearly to the end of today's walk we get a look at Cook Strait in the distance, over the Hataitai Velodrome:
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Tibetan bridge from Sellano to Montesanto, then hiking the San Giuseppe Trail to Cascade della Rota, and tail from Montesanto to Lake Vigi and back up to Sellano. Near where I live in Umbria, Italy.
 

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Ideal sleeping bag liner whether we want to add a thermal plus to our bag, or if we want to use it alone to sleep in shelters or hostels. Thanks to its mummy shape, it adapts perfectly to our body.

€46,-
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Whichford, Oxfordshire.

an eight hour amble from Aston Magna -just over the border in Gloucestershire, through cropping fields and pastural scenes, via Todenham, the Wolfords and Long Compton....
.....making a beeline for pudding and coffee at the Whichford pub... then another hour or so over Iron Age tracks to paradise.

Roaming Sundays
 
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Downslink trip was hard going, flat miles but with little in my pack and ok weather. 35 to and 40 back

Old Railway path linking the South downs and and North Downs ( Pilgrim Way also) follows the route from Shoreham By Sea West Sussex (home) and Guildford in Surrey

West Grinstead station is currently fenced off as unstable so have attached older photo

Map of Pilgrims way which you cross nearer the end, IIRC goes from Winchester to Canterbury
 

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A 15 minute ride on the bus and into the wildlife sanctuary
Walked mostly through meadows and river Roding and lake
Picked blackberries and came across the cricket club house where we had a coffee and chatted with some interesting locals
I’ll never understand the game of Cricket!
Part of the walk is on the London LoopIMG_8884.jpegIMG_8879.jpegIMG_8881.jpegIMG_8877.jpegIMG_8873.jpegIMG_8868.jpegIMG_8869.jpegIMG_8889.pngIMG_8871.jpeg
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
Making the most of the last days before school starts again
Bus to the local park to feed the ducks and squirrels
Through the walled garden and onto the “Magic carpet” and some moves on the roads
Nothing wrong with their knees

Back to high street for lunch and a 10 minute ride to the forest for blackberry picking
A long walk through the forest and more rope high jinks hidden amongst the trees
Then onto the visitors centre for some painting and the animal farm, then home to make the pie (of sorts)
Surprised at walking 15,000 steps, and that was just the adultsIMG_8818.jpegIMG_8821.jpegIMG_8831.jpegIMG_8833.jpegIMG_8843.pngIMG_8902.jpegIMG_8912.jpegIMG_8914.jpegIMG_8924.jpegIMG_8927.jpeg
 
Perfect memento/gift in a presentation box. Back is blank for engraving.
Making the most of the last days before school starts again
Bus to the local park to feed the ducks and squirrels
Through the walled garden and onto the “Magic carpet” and some moves on the roads
Nothing wrong with their knees

Back to high street for lunch and a 10 minute ride to the forest for blackberry picking.... View attachment 176821.....

"Snap"

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Crumble pudding. Yes!
Hi there @Annette london
 
After nine years we are back in the Peak District in Derbyshire, one of the Uk national parks
Yesterday, it was Thorpe cloud fell ridge and today along the beautiful Dovedale via the famous Stepping stones.
Looking at the information on the yellow arrow, it seems this way could be a pilgrim path

Some wonderful rock formations above us and then a steep climb up some steps through the woods
All was well until t wasn’t and the path came to an end…..apparently the signs had disappeared
A family with 3 children were in the same boat but they were quite IMG_8959.pngIMG_8963.jpegIMG_8966.jpegIMG_8968.jpegIMG_8974.jpegIMG_8982.jpegIMG_8984.jpegIMG_8985.jpegIMG_8991.jpegIMG_8994.pngskilled at jumping over gates with us lagging behind
We’re not sure where they went
Eventually we got down to Ilam and back home
22 km and seven hours but we’re ready for tomorrow
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
10 km loop. Organised walk with a stop in a shed , courtesy to a friendly farmer who opened it.
Longest walk was 45 km🙈. Shortest loop of 5 is always accessible for wheelchairs.

A roadside chapel from end 18th century.
Modder translates into mud. A project to prevent flooding.
Last of the pearharvest.

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€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
A misty morning as we set off from Hartington and along Beresford Dale in the upper part of the Dove river
Still on the pilgrim path

Over a narrow bridge and a steep climb up to Alstonfield where Franks cafe made a strong coffee for us
Then down to the bridge again and back to Hartington via narrow Biggin Dale with steep sides, almost like a gorge
An easy enough walk of 20 kmIMG_9056.jpegIMG_9058.jpegIMG_9066.jpegIMG_9070.jpegIMG_9072.jpegIMG_9074.jpegIMG_9077.jpegIMG_9080.jpegIMG_9085.jpegIMG_9087.jpeg
 
Wonderful scenic walk through Lathkill Dale, Bradford Dale and Cales Dale
There seems to be more Dales in this neck of the woods than the Yorkshire dales
The first Dale saw a rockfall at some stage and the path was slow going over wet rocks from the rain last night

Then the river suddenly appeared and was wide and fast flowing in the Bradford Dale
Coffee at Hendon
Little waterfalls and weirs along the way
Going down and then up Cales Dale was hard enough

Then it was back by the well marked Limestone way where we passed an ice cream parlour like we’ve never seen before in the farmers yard
There was a fair amount of money in the “honesty tray”

Today, we walked part of 3 “Ways”

The Hope pilgrim way from Ilam to Edale


The Peak Wesley way, a 6 day organised walk where pilgrims live as a community and stay each night in churches from Matlock to Edale

The Limestone Way running for 46 miles through the heart of the white Peak and very well marked

There are 17 “Ways and trails” running through the southern area of the White Peak,
Including the E2 European Long Distance path


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Ideal pocket guides for during & after your Camino. Each weighs only 1.4 oz (40g)!
Wonderful scenic walk through Lathkill Dale, Bradford Dale and Cales Dale
There seems to be more Dales in this neck of the woods than the Yorkshire dales
The first Dale saw a rockfall at some stage and the path was slow going over wet rocks from the rain last night

Then the river suddenly appeared and was wide and fast flowing in the Bradford Dale
Coffee at Hendon
Little waterfalls and weirs along the way
Going down and then up Cales Dale was hard enough

Then it was back by the well marked Limestone way where we passed an ice cream parlour like we’ve never seen before in the farmers yard
There was a fair amount of money in the “honesty tray”

Today, we walked part of 3 “Ways”

The Hope pilgrim way from Ilam to Edale


The Peak Wesley way, a 6 day organised walk where pilgrims live as a community and stay each night in churches from Matlock to Edale...
Hi there @Annette london
Re the Peak Wesley way....

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In April this year I stumbled upon the tree where John Wesley preached his last outdoor sermon on 7 Oct, 1790. It was outside the St Thomas church in Winchelsea (on the 1066 Country Walk1066 Country Walk from Eastbourne to Rye).
 
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Change of plans, not via the Mosel and Luxembourg to Spain. We will now stay 8 days at the Mosel, then one week at home and then a few more days to Bruges and surroundings. This is because I ended up in the hospital again last Saturday where after all kinds of tests a slight inflammation was found in my body again. That is why we did not think it was responsible to drive so far. I feel fine by the way.
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In Bernkastel-Kues
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Brauhaus Kloster Machern
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Hochmoselbrücke
 
Perfect memento/gift in a presentation box. Back is blank for engraving.

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