Fields of Corn
- David Guyton

- Jan 9
- 1 min read

Remember a loved one
The Lincolnshire Rural Charities, Lincolnshire Agricultural Society, Lincolnshire Rural & Agricultural Chaplaincy and Lincolnshire Rural Support Network, have joined together to remember those in Lincolnshire’s agricultural and horticultural communities that are no longer with us. The aim is to create a field of corn at the Lincolnshire Show made up of individually crafted ears of corn made by talented Lincolnshire blacksmith Cameron Huggins.
Purchase your ear of corn and remember your loved one while supporting the rural charities in Lincolnshire, following the display at the Lincolnshire Show your ear of corn can be collected and displayed proudly in your own garden.
Click here to purchase an ear of corn in memory of your loved one, friend or family member.






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I stumbled onto this site after seeing a small link while checking a UK sports forum well past midnight. Curiosity took over, so I poked around and spent more time looking at the interface than I intended. What stood out was how the Casigood pages handled the sticky header and the transition between game categories without any lag. It made the whole browsing experience feel a bit more refined. I logged off feeling informed rather than just sold to, which is rare these days.
I stumbled onto this site after seeing a small link while checking a UK sports forum well past midnight. Curiosity took over, so I poked around and spent more time looking at the interface than I intended. What stood out was how the Casigood pages handled the sticky header and the transition between game categories without any lag. It made the whole browsing experience feel a bit more refined. I logged off feeling informed rather than just sold to, which is rare these days.
I stumbled onto this site after seeing a small link while checking a UK sports forum well past midnight. Curiosity took over, so I poked around and spent more time looking at the interface than I intended. What stood out was how the Casigood pages handled the sticky header and the transition between game categories without any lag. It made the whole browsing experience feel a bit more refined. I logged off feeling informed rather than just sold to, which is rare these days.
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