We parked at the entrance to Southey Wood, and walked along Langley Bush road north-east to the corner where the plaque, erected in 2009, tells of the history of Langley Bush. John Clare wrote a poem about Langley Bush.
We stopped at the car for a break 0 a little early as we hadn't yet covered four miles.
Next we took the bridleway opposite the Southey Woods car park. This goes south, past a farm building and a stretch of woodland, underneath a line of electricity pylons, then past a small church on the left. This is part of the tiny settlement of Upton.
The church of St John the Baptist, Upton. |
Is this a sundial? See link about Upton. |
Perhaps not a way-marker? It'd be a good one. |
What? Why? We saw a similar arrangement with a bench. |
Not quite New Forest ponies |
At one point we heard the loud call of a green woodpecker and saw it disappear into the woods.
Map and details
7 comments:
The funny arrangement (hay trough) and the bench - could it be jumps for horse riding.???
We did wonder, but it seems a funny place - the wide edge of the field. A definite possibility, if there is such a thing!
In my former career it was called, 'A definite maybe'.{:)
Hello, I am a part of a small group trying to keep this land to the west of Peterborough from becoming a town with industry.
www.protect-rural-peterbrough.org
May we use any part of your walk and ideas to make the planners realised what they will be loosing?
Elaine
We were really impressed with the walk and the style, to the point where I (Elaine) wondered if we could do something similar, or link our walks to yours?
Feel free to link to my blog, if you find it useful. Do you have a site I can read or possibly link to?
i clearly read your second comment first - oh dear, too quick to hit the keyboard in reply . . . off to lok at your site.
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