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Brokers Mortgage in Martock, TA14
Brokers Mortgage in TA14 Martock These Brokers Mortgage companies are located in Martock
No added Brokers Mortgage are located in Martock

The following Brokers Mortgage are the ones that we have found closest to Martock
Rapid Mortgage Services
Company Type: Financial Adviser
18 Glebelands
, TA16 5RE
Tel. 0845-230 0292
Fax. 0845-230 0292



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TA14 Brokers Mortgage services in Martock
Places of interest in Martock, TA14

Ham Hill, Somerset

Other changes are due to farming habits. In years past the plateau fields were almost exclusively used for grazing or growing spring wheat, and left fallow during the winter. In some years the fields were lightly ploughed and Mangolds grown for winter fodder. Following a change in ownership during the 1980s this altered to winter-sown grain with deep ploughing with sludge injection. The change caused an immediate change to the wildlife. The winter flocks of finches were lost, the yellowhammers disappeared, the skylarks nearly so. The deep ploughing proved counter productive as millions of poppy seeds were brought to the surface making the grain difficult to harvest - something that had been warned of years earlier by a previous farmer but disregarded. It was around this time that deep ploughing probably damaged the remains of the Roman Mozaic at Batemore: the site was ploughed over (it had never been marked on the ground) and small pieces of tile were brought to the surface. The plateau fields are now under the control of the park authorities, who are attempting to restore them by allowing natural grassland regrowth, with controlled sheep grazing.

Montacute House

Montacute House is a late Elizabethan country house situated in the South Somerset village of Montacute. This house is a textbook example of English architecture during a period that was moving from the medieval Gothic to the Renaissance Classical; this has resulted in Montacute being regarded as one of the finest houses to survive from the Elizabethan era.[3] It has been designated by English Heritage as a grade I listed building,[4] and Scheduled Ancient Monument.[2] It was visited by 110,529 people in 2009.[5]

The Abbey, Charlton Adam

The Abbey, Charlton Adam in Somerset, UK is an irregular two and three-storey late 16th century house probably incorporating pre-Reformation work, which was restored in 1902 for Claude Neville of Butleigh Court, probably by C.E. Ponting, who also restored Lytes Cary in the same parish. The house takes its name from the fact that it was the site of the Chantry Chapel of the Holy Spirit, founded in 1237, of which some fragments may be incorporated. The interiors contain some Elizabethan panelling and reused earlier bits and pieces. The northern part of the house was damaged by fire in the 1960s and plainly restored. It has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building.[1]

Hurcott Farm

Avon · Devon · Dorset · Wiltshire

Great Breach and Copley Woods

Great Breach and Copley Woods (grid reference ST500320) is a 64.8 hectare (160 acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest 1 km south of Compton Dundon and 5 km south-east of Street in Somerset, England, notified in 1972.

Information by Wikipedia.com

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Brokers Mortgage ©2008 - May 24, 2012, 02:39 am