A frosty morning at Flatford
It was a cold and frost morning when we visited Flatford Mill, and we were pleased to see that everywhere was covered in, what my dad called, `a hoar frost` Not the usual warm day that you visit Flatford , but nevertheless, very pretty!
This image was taken on a cold and frost morning with the sun creeping round from the other side, and the water frozen.
Originally part of Gibbeon’s Gate Farm, Willy Lott's House is a Grade 1, listed building. Willy Lott (1761-1849) was a tenant farmer who worked the 39 acres around Flatford that made up Gibbeon's Gate Farm. He lived in a house attached to the farmland, which long after his death, became known as Willy Lott's House. Willy Lott's parents lived in this house, Willy and his sisters and brothers were born there.
A image facing in the opposite direction, depicting the Field Study Center, leased by the National Trust to the Field Studies Council, FSC, which is an environmental education charity `providing informative and enjoyable opportunities for people of all ages and abilities to discover, explore, and understand the environment`.
As you can see, this is the `Mill` of Flatford Mill.
Some interesting iron work against one of the Mill walls.
Sometimes misty, but still a lovely spot.
And of course, sometimes very cold and frosty. Taken on the pathway beside the river.
Comments