30th October 2023 we’re heading out to Smockmill Common on outskirts of Saxlingham Nethergate, an excellent location for a fungi-hunt. But the Common is no long walk from the bus stop, so we go the longer way round. Please join us. You’ll need waterproof footwear…
So it’s along West End and through Foxhole where my father’s Grandma Kemp used to live…
An ancient hollow way takes us towards the common…
Graceful beech along the way, before we join a little lane running out from the village…
Glorious weather…
Nearly there, just need to cross the Broad Slough, which is a very damp corridor running through the village which in really wet conditions flows with streams…as here
The Common has two different environments. There’s a hill, upon which a smock mill once stood, and which has been quarried small-scale for aggregates, and there’s a very wet part!
My father played here as a boy, when there weren’t so many trees…
River Tas in full burst-the-banks flow
This is my favourite tree in this place…
I suspect this tree existed in the days when my father played football here (1920s)
Walking back to catch the bus…
I do hope you enjoyed this walk. As you might have noticed, this place is close to my heart…













Your favorite tree is just so unique.
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Isn’t it fantastic! I wish I’d found it as a kid. I’d have climbed it… or clambered over it!
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It’s never too late 😂
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Just beautiful Crispina! 🙂 ❤
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Thank you, Deborah 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Lovely walk and that tree is amazing!
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I love that walk, it’s so close to the city and yet still unspoilt
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That’s a wonderful thing.
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Also was home to my forebears in C19th
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That is so very cool.
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Your talk of what it used to look like reminds me of the brook near the elementary school on the street where I grew up. Tracing that brook back to its source was one of my great childhood adventures. Sadly, further development of the school property obliterated the brook.
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That’s sad. I have the same problem of a place I used to love as a child. All gone!
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