The Peddars Way - Knetishall Heath to Watton
- The Dog and Partridge, Stonebridge: 52.480938 0.835854 http://www.dog-and-partridge.org.uk Excellent range of ales but a rather cantankerous landlord who threw Martin M out for eating a pastie in the pub garden as we waited for the pub to open. I think the pub has since changed hands.
- The Hare and Barrel, Watton: 52.571199 0.812017 http://www.hare-and-barrel-hotel-norfolk.co.uk/ Pleasant hotel serving a couple of guest ales - nice pint of Brains' Reverand James. I managed to lose my house keys here and the Hotel found them and returned them to me by post. Most excellent service.
- The Kings Arms, Watton: 52.571698 0.825621 rather rough town pub - afraid not much choice of ale and the sample we quaffed was not very well kept. Had most of a pint and quickly left.
- Stones of the Songline for Norfolk: 52.32682 0.59803 A Norfolk Songline was a multimedia arts project inspired by the Peddars Way, and as part of the project five stone sculptures were placed along the its length, the first placed near Stowbeddon Plantation and the last being at Holme next the Sea. The idea of a songline comes from the Australian Aboriginal belief system, in which each ancient track is the score of a vast, epic song, whose verses tell the stories of how the landscapes and its landmarks came into being. Each stone bears an inscription, these are, in order -
'The footprint of our ancestors
Familiar as our own faces
Remote as fossils
Written on clay
And washed away
Over & over
Over and over'
'Surveyors have made their lines on the land
Trapping Albion in a net of roads
A taut web on the edge of empire',
'The piety of every man and every woman's whispered prayer
Clasped in the grain of wood and stone & in the grace of ancient air',
'From Blackwater Carr to Seagate
Since the plough first broke the bread of land
Pightles and pieces plots & pastures
To every man his stony acre', and finally
'And I being here have been part of all this
Caught & thrown like sun on water
Have entered into all around me'
- Giant Hogweed at Merton Park: 52.54970 0.80046 Giant Hogweed, also known as giant cow parsley, is a plant native to Central Asia. It was introduced to Britain in the 19th century, mainly for ornamental reasons and its most revealing feature is its size, which can be up to 5m tall. Care should be taken when handling the plant as its sap can cause burns and irritation to the skin.
- Stanford Battle Area: 52.51272 0.81479 Stanford Battle Area, also known as the Stanford Training Area, is a British Army infantry training area covering approximately 30,000 acres of breckland. The area was originally established in 1942 although tanks had trained here during in the First World War. The complete takeover involved the evacuation of the villages of Buckenham Tofts, Langford, Stanford, Sturston, Tottington and West Tofts and the battle area includes four historic churches, the one at West Tofts having been restored by Pugin, and a new "church" that forms part of the specially constructed village of Eastmere, which was originally built to provide experience of fighting on the northern European plains. The battle area was used in the filming of many of the episodes of the comedy series Dad's Army, especially those where the platoon goes on exercise.
- Waylands Wood: 52.56013 0.83899 Close to the Peddars Way, and just outside of Watton is a piece of woodland called Waylands Wood whose old name is Wailing Wood. It is here that folklore tells us is the setting for the childrens tale 'Babes in the wood'. The story is of two orphaned children who are left in the care of an uncle. The uncle hands the children over to cut-throats to be killed, in order to acquire their inheritance but they are unable to go through with the act and abandon the children in the wood. Left alone in the woods and unable to fend for themselves, the children eventually die, and are covered by leaves by the birds. It is said that the Uncle lived at the nearby Griston Hall. The ghosts of the murdered children are said to haunt Wayland Wood. The village signs at both Griston and nearby Watton depict the story.
There may be some truth in the folklore. In the 16th century the de Grey family owned Griston Hall and a family rift grew between Edmund de Grey and his brother Robert who was a devout catholic and refused to turn to the new Protestant church as was the want of Edmund. In 1562, Edmund de Grey died leaving his seven year old son Thomas to inherit the estate. Young Thomas became a ward of the crown and, according to the custom of the day, was sold in marriage to a Carbrooke heiress. As Robert stood to inherit the house and land if the boy died before he grew up there was a motive for murder. Sure enough, four years after his fathers death, young Thomas and his sister died mysteriously after a visit to his stepmother, Temperance Carewe, of Baconsthorpe and local gossip had it his uncle had somehow done away with them.
- The Icknield Way - Herringswell to Knettishall Heath
- The Peddars Way - Watton to Castle Acre
- The Angles Way - Knettishall Heath to Diss
- The Peddars Way - Overview of the Trail
- The Peddars Way - Thetford to Knettishall Heath
- The Peddars Way - Castle Acre to Heacham
- The Peddars Way - Ringstead to Holme next the Sea
- OS Explorer Map Sheet 229 Thetford Forest in The Brecks
- OS Explorer Map Sheet 237 Norwich
Last Updated: 2014-01-02Z


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