Click below to support Francis in his excursion into crime
Francis is now on Twitter
- RT @SammyJoAstro: @unbounders as promised I have finally made a pledge! Supporting @PryorFrancis and his interesting project. #excited. 16 hours ago
- RT @microburin: @unbounders @PryorFrancis Cheaper seats? Well slap me with a wet haddock. Indolent? Perhaps. Canapés no = homegrown veg and… 1 day ago
- RT @RachelandDesign: Just upgraded my support for @PryorFrancis book The Lifer's Club with @unbounders A trip to Flag Fen beckons! #excited 1 day ago
Follow with RSS
Francis Pryor’s books available from Amazon
-
Recent Posts
Archives
Categories
Tags
Alan Cadbury archaeology autumn colour BBC Belton House Brancaster Channel 4 copper mine Corylus avellana cowslips crowd funding DigVentures farming Flag Fen Francis Pryor gardening hazel hazelnuts hellebores hillfort Iron Age lambing lambs Maisie Taylor Making History Northern Ireland Phil Harding Radio 4 Raksha Dave Roman fort Romans shearing sheep sheep farming snakes head fritillaries snowdrops Stonehenge Time Team trees tups Unbound vegetables weather World War I writingMeta
Tag Archives: hazelnuts
Hazel Nuts: Britain’s first farmed food? Part 3
In this experiment I was not so much concerned with yield, as with storage. Having grown hazels for nearly twenty years, I do not need to be convinced of their productivity and to some extent estimates of ancient yield are … Continue reading
Posted in Archaeology, Gardening, My life
Tagged cobnuts, Coryllus maxima, Corylus avellana, hazel, hazelnuts
Hazel Nuts: Britain’s first farmed food? Part 2
My interest in hazel nuts began on my first dig, back in 1963 when I was a volunteer excavator on an Iron Age hillfort in Bedfordshire, about half an hour’s drive from my parents’ house. I’d just passed my driving … Continue reading
Posted in Archaeology, Gardening, My life
Tagged cobnuts, Coryllus maxima, Corylus avellana, hazel, hazelnuts
Preliminary Musings: Hazel Nuts: Britain’s first farmed food?
Prehistory and archaeology are subjects where traditions die hard and where orthodoxies can rule the roost for generations. It must be great to prick balloons, but having said that, I don’t think I’m a great believer in acting the iconoclast: … Continue reading
Posted in Archaeology, Gardening, My life
Tagged archaeology, Corylus avellana, Francis Pryor, hazel, hazelnuts, Maisie Taylor, trees, writing









