At Thorpeness, you can visit the Meare Shop and Tearoom,
and say hello to Henry, the Muscovy duck.

Thorpeness was largely built as a pseudo-Tudor holiday village in the early 20th
century.
This impressive "Elizabethan" courtyard entrance dominates
the northern edge of the village.

The Meare, with the boathouse on the far right
.
Walking from the Elizabethan end of the village, with my back towards "The
Meare" - the man-made boating and wildfowl lake, created at the same time
as the rest of the holiday homes.

I use a Mavica MVC-FD7,
which has a 10x zoom - I took this shot from same spot as
I took the two-part panorama above.

What so many kids do (whatever their age!) -
learning to love and respect
animals in the wild by feeding them.

The Canada Goose is not indigenous to Britain (surprised,
eh?) and
in some parts is becoming a pest due their large
numbers.
January 2000
Someone asked if "The House in the Clouds" is
still there.
Yes, it certainly is, and so is the nearby windmill



April 2001 - views of Thropeness from the shingle beach




