View allAll Photos Tagged StayAlert
The large parkland trees scattered throughout the park are mainly oaks and are remnants of a vast forest that historically covered much of this area. These ‘veteran’ oaks are important for the invertebrates (beetles, flies and bugs) that thrive on them. This is because of the amount of dead timber that occurs both on standing trees and on fallen limbs or trunks on the ground.
Southwold is a charming north Suffolk seaside town on the Suffolk Heritage Coast. Almost an island, being bounded by the North Sea to the East, by the River Blyth and Southwold harbour to the South–West and by Buss Creek to the North.
A copse of trees planted in 1815 to commemorate the part the 1st Marquis of Anglesey played in the Battle of Waterloo.
Ruin by the River Trent.
The Every family, lords of the manors of Newton Solney and Egginton, constructed at Newton Solney a substantial but whimsical, folly-like tower on the river-bank, called Rock Tower, and it is the only indication of their use of the Newton Solney estate for leisure in the 18th century. The tower, which survives embedded in the river frontage of the present Rock House, was built by 1758 on the site of the former manor house, and would have been used by the Every family to arrive in Newton Solney by boat.
St Edmund's Church.
Southwold is a charming north Suffolk seaside town on the Suffolk Heritage Coast. Almost an island, being bounded by the North Sea to the East, by the River Blyth and Southwold harbour to the South–West and by Buss Creek to the North.
Cruck Cottage, thought to be the Old Parsonage. Some of the beams date back for 400 years. The Curates of Holy Trinity Parish lived there and conducted services across the cutting in the Church Rooms, which became Berry Hedge Lane School, before St Mark’s Church was built.
Southwold is a charming north Suffolk seaside town on the Suffolk Heritage Coast. Almost an island, being bounded by the North Sea to the East, by the River Blyth and Southwold harbour to the South–West and by Buss Creek to the North.
The large parkland trees scattered throughout the park are mainly oaks and are remnants of a vast forest that historically covered much of this area. These ‘veteran’ oaks are important for the invertebrates (beetles, flies and bugs) that thrive on them. This is because of the amount of dead timber that occurs both on standing trees and on fallen limbs or trunks on the ground.