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.
There's something special taking place in the Black Bourn Valley.
The flowery riverside meadows at what was previously known as the Grove Farm nature reserve are already one of the largest and richest in central Suffolk.
And now, following a public campaign and legacies from Gerald Ford and Mary Newman, 70 acres of river valley have been added to the site to create a magnificent landscape for wildlife that sweeps down the valley sides with the Black Bourn at its heart.
The linking of Grove Farm to the river to form the Black Bourn Valley nature reserve will, in time, enable the rejuvenation of the valley and the creation of an even wilder, wetter river corridor.
Later in the year, when conditions are drier under foot, work will also begin to improve trails and car parking at the reserve, opening up this lovely piece of lost Suffolk for everyone.
But at the heart of the reserve remains Grove Farm with its wide field margins, scrub and thick hedges of hawthorn, hazel, dog rose, oak and willow that support a large number of bird species. In the spring, blackcap, willow warbler, yellow hammer and linnet breed while skylark can be seen hovering above the set aside fields and snipe winter in the meadows.
You may even be lucky and see a secretive otter – reintroduced to the waters of the Black Bourn just north of Ixworth in 1984 – which are seen on the grazing marshes and intersecting dykes.
Plants like southern marsh orchid, marsh marigold, marsh valerian and ragged-robin bloom in the wet meadows bordering the River Black Bourn, in early summer. On the higher, drier land flowers like self heal, ox-eye daisy and common cat’s-ear can be found.
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