If you are planning on travelling distance to attractions, we would recommend that you contact the venues directly in advance to avoid disappointment.
If you, or any of your party have a new persistant cough, or develop a fever of 38C, we would instead advise you to use the NHS's dedicated website for professional advice.
Knettishall Heath is an ancient place, which echoes with the past. From the top of the Bronze Age round barrow you can wander through the haze of heather down to the banks of the Little Ouse. With its tapestry of woodland, riverside meadows and grassland as well as heath, the big skies and sheer scale of Knettishall Heath make it an uplifting place to explore.
The open landscape created by our Bronze Age ancestors remained relatively unchanged for 4000 years until changes in forestry and farming in the mid 20th century transformed large parts of The Brecks beyond recognition.
Knettishall Heath gives a sense of what this ancient landscape was like and is a refuge for Breckland plants and animals, like grey carpet moth, purple milk vetch and dropwort, which have disappeared from much of our countryside.
Over the coming decades, our herd of Exmoor ponies will gradually turn back the clock, roaming freely across the heath to create a more natural grazed landscape.
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