Tuesday 27 November 2018

Bury St. Edmunds Ramblers Walk - Knettishall Heath

For the very first time, I led a Ramblers' walk today, at Knettishall Heath. This was my route...


Thanks are due to Chris for advising me on my plans and Derrick for being my back marker. In all there was a total of 43 people on the walk, so it was hard to address them all with facts along the way. The walk was planned to allow us to walk through the several different habitats to be found in and around the Knettishall Heath Nature Reserve.

We were in Breckland here. Breckland is one of the UK’s biodiversity hotspots and the designation of much of Knettishall Heath as a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) reflects this.
It is managed by the Suffolk Wildlife Trust. As their site says...

"Of the more than 12,500 species living in the Brecks, 30% are nationally rare. Despite its name, Knettishall Heath is in fact a diverse mosaic of habitats with woodland and riverside meadows, as well as large areas of heath. It extends to over 430 acres.

The open landscape created by our Bronze Age ancestors 4,000 years ago had changed very little until the 20th century when forestry and modern farming transformed large parts of The Brecks. Knettishall Heath still retains a sense of what this ancient landscape must have looked like in the past. The 18th century rabbit warren and the Bronze Age burial mound at Hut Hill are evidence of thousands of years of human occupation, but at the western end of the heath, the ‘patterned ground’ is the product of a much earlier time. At the end of the last ice age, repeated freezing and thawing of the ground created a unique mixing of the sandy soil and the underlying chalk. The unusual vegetation stripes seen here reflect the two soil types and the different plants that grow in each."

The walk took in some of the Blue, Red, Green and Black waymarked trails, together with a bit of the distance paths the Peddars Way and Icknield Way.



We started by walking alongside a stretch of  the River Little Ouse, which has its source just a few miles East of our walk at Lopham and Redgrave Fen... (which features in my old blog in a post from 2006) and which is also the source of the River Waveney, which flows East.




For much of its length the river defines the boundary between Norfolk and Suffolk. The course continues through Rushford, Thetford, Brandon, and Hockwold before the river joins the Great Ouse north of Littleport in Cambridgeshire. The total length is about 37 miles (60 km). The river is currently navigable from the Great Ouse to a point 2 miles (3.2 km) above Brandon.

We left the river, turning south, when we got to the Peddars Way. Going the other way, you eventually get to the North Norfolk Coastal path.



It was lovely walking through the woods. Beneath the murmur of conversation I could hear the sound of 43 pairs of boots shuffling through the fallen leaves.



We got to the end of the Peddars way and continued on the Icknield way, one of the "four highways" of ancient England. In the south-west some writers take the Way to Exeter, while others only take it as far as Salisbury. To the north-east, Icklingham, Suffolk, and Caistor-by-Norwich, Yarmouth and Hunstanton, Norfolk have all been proposed as the destination.



We went past the boundary of the Nature Reserve and on to a broad path across some fields  to the south of the woods.. ...


...stopping for a drinks break along the way, until we came to the road. Here we had a view of Knettishall Airfield, with its commemorative line of trees along the route of the original main runway - used by American B-17 Flying Fortress bombers in the second world war. It was numbered as Station 136 by the United States Army Air Forces while home to the 388th Bombardment Group of the Eighth Air Force between 1943 and 1945.


After a short walk along the road, we re-entered the Nature Reserve and took in some heathland...



....coming close to the Exmoor ponies...


...before returning to our start via the river again.

People seemed to enjoy it, and I managed not to lose my way.. or lose any ramblers en route, so I guess that counts as a success. Slightly shorter than the 5.7m advertised as I had altered the route, but nobody complained about being short-changed. We were blessed with excellent weather... which helps!

No photos from the day, but these were from my recce the week before... and added to the post once I was reunited with my camera!

You can see more details of the walk on my MapMyWalk log.

Sunday 25 November 2018

Bury St. Edmunds Christmas Fayre

It's that time of year again - the Bury St. Edmunds Christmas Fayre!


I walked down on teh Friday morning, entering the Abbey Gardens from the bottom. It was good to see th Dr. Who paraphernalia...


...but even better to taste this seasonal beer...


from Farr Brew brewery.

A little further on, look who I found helping out on a stall serving mince pies from Incredible pies!


And can you spot another walking friend in the queue to buy some?


I bought some and they were indeed incredible. "The best mince pies I've ever tasted", said the missus. A bit further on were some pies more to William's liking...


I got a game pie on the Friday and William a pork pie when we visited today.

I enjoyed some Rocking Rudolph from the Greene King Beer tent....


...and a freshly made wood-fired pizza for my lunch.


There were some festive characters around...



Sadly, my phone ran out of charge before I could take many more photos, but you can see my full album here on Flickr.

Friday 23 November 2018

QC Blogging Day

My first Corelli QC to blog, I think, and what a fun one! I was about two-thirds of the way through it before I spotted what was going on with the across clues. I've seen this device in the Times Concise before, but never in a cryptic. A couple of unknowns for me, but I found the wordplay helpful. The rest seemed fairly straighforward and the theme helped me finish in about an average time. COD to DOUBLE, as it wittily has a double definition....and is half of a double answer.  A QC of just the right level of difficulty, I thought, and cleverly constructed to give us extra entertainment. Thanks Corelli! How did you all like it? [Edit: I should perhaps explain to those who haven't come across it, as it is referred to in the comments, that what we have here is known as a Nina - "a special feature of the crossword grid: a word, words or phrase hidden within a pattern of cells in the completed grid. The word comes from Al Hirschfeld (1903-2003), American caricaturist, who was famous for hiding his daughter's name "Nina" in his drawings".]

Tuesday 20 November 2018

Felixstowe Sunrise walk


"I thought I'd do a very early sunrise walk at Felixstowe on Tuesday Nov 20th. Probably meeting at 7am at Old Felixstowe and walking the 6 miles to the docks for some refreshments at the View Point Cafe (Open at 9am). Then walk back again ....", said the invite from Joyce. That sounded good. I said I'd go. "Lovely sunrise this morning. I hope we get the same on Tuesday", she said. Umm...

We met at the BP garage at 6:15 am and Joyce gave me a lift. The skies didn't look promising. We met up with 5 others at The Ferryboat Inn in the pre-dawn gloom and set off just after 7am. Wow! It was windy! And the sea was quite spectacular. Rather different from my half-distance version of the walk in May.

We got most of the way to Landguard Point and the Viewpoint Cafe before it started to rain. We arrived just as the cafe was opening at 9 o'clock and lingered for nearly an hour over breakfast. We were amused to find how busy the place got within minutes of opening.

It rained off and on on the way back, but never too hard and our clothes were kept dry by the brisk wind. The last stretch back past the golf-course was particularly bracing as we were walking straight into the wind and had horizontal rain stinging our cheeks. Now that was a proper wintry walk! And we never did get to see the sun!

Unfortunately, my proper camera went AWOL so I had to rely on my dodgy phone. Here are some of my photos...












You can see a slideshow of all of them here (Flash required)


Or my album here on Flickr.
Thanks, Joyce, for a lovely walk... and the lift. My turn to drive next time!

Sunday 18 November 2018

Sara Dowling Quartet Concert


William and I went to this lunchtime concert at Stapleford Granary. I first heard Sara at the Bury St Edmunds Festival in May and I jumped at the chance to hear her perform again. This time she had a backing group of Piano (John Pearce), Double Bass (Conor Chaplin) and Drums (Matt Fishwick).

We got there early and got front row seats...


The concert was excellent. I particularly enjoyed the Jerome Kern songs. Here they are performing....


She set us a challenge... to identify the composer of the song "My mood is You", originally recorded by Jack Jones, which she had transcribed. She offered of a pint of beer to the finder. So I did a bit of web-surfing later and found the answer... Carl Sigler. So I left her a message on Facebook and Sara now owes me a pint!

You can find Sara on Facebook or on her website. This video will give you an idea of her amazing talent. I can't wait to go and hear her again...and claim my pint of beer!

Tuesday 13 November 2018

Bury St. Edmunds Ramblers Walk - Skirting around Kirtling

This was somewhere I'd never been to before...

 It was a lovely sunny day for a walk too. So I thought I'd go along and join in. This was our route.


We started at Kirtling Village Hall. Here is Carole explaining the route.


Highlights of the walk included a huge field, puddles, some woodland walking, weirs on the River Stour, Kirtling Tower. some lovely horses and some sunny autumnal vistas.








Well. That was a selection of my photos. Here is a slide show of all of them. (Flash required).



You see them all individually on Flickr and more details of the route on MapMyWalk.

What a lovely morning's walk in the sunshine. Thanks Carole!