Salle

I was keen to see Salle parish church which I remembered as being on its own in the middle of a field, which is not quite true.   It was surrounded by snowdrops.   A fine west door with two angels in the spandrels above:-

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Cromer

I had a romanticised idea of Cromer as a late nineteenth-century seaside resort, opened up by the railway which arrived in 1877, with a direct service from Liverpool Street from 1897, stopping only at North Walsham.   The pier was opened in 1897:-

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Nice brickwork lettering in one of the side streets:-

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The Shell House

The last of my posts from rural Norfolk is of a Shell House which we saw last night in a garden looking out over fields, made in the last couple of years with mussels sent in boxes from Cornwall and set in patterns:-

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Binham Priory

We were bumbling along the byways of north Norfolk when we came across Binham Priory in a field on the edge of the village, built in the time of Prior Richard de Parco between 1226 and 1244, looking much as it does in early nineteenth-century engravings:-

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Old Town Holt

No trip to Holt would be complete without calling in on Old Town in Bull Street to see Marie and any developments in the shop.   It was all very ship-shape, as ever, and I just had time to record it before Marie went off to the catch the last post:-

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Cold Press

Last time we were in Holt we discovered Cold Press, the nicest imaginable small gallery in a house in Albert Street which was previously a Methodist Chapel.   It shows the work of Japanese craftsman artists, including Takahashi Kougei whose wooden beakers we bought last time:-

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Houghton (1)

We called in at Houghton for lunch and to see the James Turrell exhibition, which is more extensive than any Turrells I have seen before.   The park was surprisingly empty as compared to two years ago for the Walpole exhibition, beautifully looked after, and still with the avenues laid out by Charles Bridgeman in the late 1720s.

These are the stables:-

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South Creake

Noon struck as we arrived at South Creake church, surrounded by cottages with spectacular hollyhocks:-

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Creake Abbey

We started our Norfolk tour at Creake Abbey, originally St. Mary of the Meadows, an Augustinian priory founded in 1227 by Sir Robert de Nerford.   There was a fire in 1484 and the Abbey was dissolved after a plague in 1506, but it has reasonably well-preserved monastic remains:-

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Burnham Norton

I went for a quick early morning constitutional across the fields and marshes towards the sea with the boats and harbour of Burnham Overy Staithe in the distance:-

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