Selected Films

Carefully Selected From The Pool Of Greats

Pub Walks In The Peak District - Tissington


Walks in the Peak District publication in an exciting new series of guides filmed walking in the Peak District. This DVD lets you see places like the Tissington trail (including an exclusive interview with Sir Richard Fitzherbert Tissington baronet 9), Carsington Water, Dovedale and Thorpe Cloud and many other beautiful places. Each Pub Walks In The Peak District - Tissington DVD contains two walks are circular routes, including publication of guidelines recommended.

These walks will help you discover the beauty of Brittany first national park in all its spectacular glory. Film Studies has partnered with award-winning documentary producer Paul Arnett for the beauty of the Peak District to life in this wonderful DVD.



6 Responses to “Pub Walks In The Peak District - Tissington”

  1. Thomas Jefferson Says:

    If I had the money to immigrate I would go to Switzerland, its the only country worth running to.

  2. Chris Heath Says:

    There will be a day when we can wirelessly transfer those massive 12 megapixel image files from your digital camera to your mobile phone in a matter of seconds, then here’s an answer. The technology is called Bluetooth 3.0 + High Speed (HS) and is being worked on by Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG). The main objective of the project has been to improve the interoperability between Bluetooth devices. This technology will add WLAN to the MAC layer, physical…

  3. SheerFolly Says:

    Thanks for posting this!

  4. Jess72j Says:

    what channel are you watching? Is it a special interest one?

  5. N.Onur ATAHAN Says:

    Among the special-interest groups poised to get lathered up over Sacha Baron Cohen’s new movie: Everyone.

    read more

  6. Woody Says:

    Well said. My stimulus plan would have been "short-term spending, long-term stimulus". Namely, investment in high-tech, eco-friendly initiatives like transportation infrastructure, alternative energy, and electric automobiles, and technologies like vertical farming, desalination, anaerobic digestion, ultralight alloys, and even cold fusion. Rather than focusing on immediate job creation (because those jobs are almost all temporary if not purely hypothetical), I would have chosen to focus on a technological revolution. With the jet engine, helicopters, and the space race, it wasn’t just the burgeoning aerospace industry that boomed in the ’50s and ’60s.

    We need to stop "looking" for solutions to the energy crisis, climate change, and entitlement expenditures and start implementing them. That’s the downfall of the free market: predicting change. That’s one of the reasons why futures trading is so risky. Instead of trying to outguess the market concerning present-day economic conditions ("Wow, real estate prices are too low!" "Oh no, not enough people are buying Chryslers!" "Dearie me, corrupt financial firms are unjustly plummeting toward bankruptcy!"), the government should compensate where the market has actual failings.

    And government should get out of bed with all the corporations sitting on the Council on Foreign Relations…regardless of the scope of that lobby’s direct influence, the list of companies party to it are a "who’s who" of special enterprises Uncle Sam is looking out for. If the government is going to play a real regulatory role, conflicts of interest need to be investigated and neutralized. Otherwise we get no-bid contracts to Halliburton, flat refusals from the House Finance Committee chair to consider anything rotten in the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac sausage as late as last September, and massive subsidization of uncouth energy conglomerates like ExxonMobil. Government can’t regulate while it’s in the game itself. That’s as dumb an idea as teen abstinence as a birth control program.

Leave a Reply