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Sundial trails competition 2008 |
This competition for new sundial trails is promoted
jointly by Internetworks Ltd, the webmasters of www.sundials.co.uk and
the British Sundial Society. The closing date is 21st December 2008, and
two prizes, of £250 and £100 are offered for the best entries
submitted.
Entry requirementsA. Entries should be submitted to Sundials on the Internet by noon on 21 December 2008 by post on a disk or CD ROM to POBox292, Epsom, KT17 4LQ, England, or by Email to competition@sundials.co.uk. Receipt of your entry will be acknowledged.B. Entries must be complete in themselves (ie without requiring
a page to be called from any other website). Guidance for competitiors1. The main purpose of writing a sundial trail is to help others who come to the area concerned to find interesting sundials to see.2. So it is most important to give really clear directions of where to start the trail, and how to get from one sundial to the next. 3. The second most important thing is to make the sundial trail interesting, so that it will encourage people who do not know much about sundials to follow the trail. 3. Sundials must not be included in trails if they are not visible from a public highway. 4. Sundials must not be included in trails if they are liable to be vandalised or stolen. This applies particularly to historic horizontal sundials. Advisory points 5. There are no formal requirements about the number of sundials on a trail, but it is best not to have too few or too many. Normally, between 4 and 12 is a good number. Depending on mode of travel and distance, these can usually be covered within a day. But some places, such as Tasmania, do not have as many as 4 dials, but it is still worth having a sundial trail for it, particularly since one of the dials is very unusual. If there are more than 12 dials on a trail, it is usually best to pick the best, and to refer very briefly to the others (eg. there is also a badly weathered vertical dial nearby on the church porch at......) 6. It is desirable to include some geographical co-ordinates if possible. If latitude and longitude are given, they should be given to the nearest second to be really useful. In Great Britain, a 6-figure National Grid reference serves as well, or an alternative is to find the postcode of a neighbouring building, and to put in a link to a national mapping website such as www.streetmap.co.uk or www.multimap.com. Similar possibilities exist in many other countries. 7. References to other pages should be made by explicit text links (i.e. "You can find further details of other dials in this area at http://www.otherpage.com" (with a hyperlink to the website concerned)(but such webpages can not form part of your entry - see B. above) 8. Overall maps of the whole route can be helpful if they are clear. It is best to use one of the national mapping sites for this is possible; otherwise, a diagrammatic map is recommended. 9. You will find it useful to read the judges comments on our competitions in 2001 and 2000 10. Entries may be in any language. Entries in languages other than English should have an English translation.
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