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Horseshoe Clump

Horseshoe Clump.jpg Brass to Sir John D’AbernonThumbnailsEsher Old ChurchBrass to Sir John D’AbernonThumbnailsEsher Old ChurchBrass to Sir John D’AbernonThumbnailsEsher Old ChurchBrass to Sir John D’AbernonThumbnailsEsher Old ChurchBrass to Sir John D’AbernonThumbnailsEsher Old Church

Leaving the village behind and pursuing the Portsmouth road, the woodlands of Claremont Park are left behind as we come downhill towards Horseshoe Clump, a well-known landmark on this road. This prominent object is a semicircular grove of firs on the summit of a sandy knoll, looking over the valley of the Mole, the “sullen Mole” of the poets, flowing in far-flung loops below, on its way to join the Thames at Molesey. This is a switchback road for cyclists thus far, for the ridge on which Horseshoe Clump stands is no sooner gained than we go downhill again, and so up once more and across the level “fair mile,” to descend finally into Cobham Street, where the Mole is reached again.