As the sun set softly over Loke Road (or simply 'the Loke'; as the natives term it) so Margot indulged her passion for pylons.
St Nicholas' spire in the background |
I admit it's the same pylon from a different view.
The short part of the Long Pond |
The Loke crosses the Long Pond cutting this ancient water course in two. I'm guessing it's a monastic structure to do with drainage, monks were real clever at drainage... Old maps (1887) show a Short Pond close by and I'm guessing now filled in as no-body mentioned it when I was there. There was also another large pond named the Loke (sic) filled in and covered over and now a playground close by yesterday's picture.
If I'm right then this is the very pylon Margot used to dawdle under on her way home from school despite her mother telling her not to.
A drowning shopping trolley, when will they ever learn that they can't swim?
Some local wild life.
And with this post we've come to the end of our little day trip to King's Lynn and must make our way back to Hull. I enjoyed meeting Margot's old friends (who I'd only known from Facebook) and even the hanging around for a locksmith in the cold of the evening seems like a dream now (OK a nightmare) ... Hoping to be back soon ...
None of this would have been possible without the kind assistance of Dave Hunter and Betsy Smith, friends also met on Facebook, who offered us a lift both ways, seems they like driving a lot. Once again many thanks ...
Yes, it is the very pylon that Margot used to dawdle under. We were usually darling together. Life was simpler then, it was a joy to wander along with your best friend.
ReplyDeletePylons in late or early light can be quite photogenic.
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