Once you have found the entrance to the footpath, at the far left corner of La Flambé car park, it is quite well-marked and is easy to follow all the way to the River Avon (the boundary between the parishes of Sutton Benger and Christian Malford). Walk diagonally across the Church Piece field and you will come to a locked gate, with a stile, at the northern end of today's Barrett Lane. Note that the photo of the stile from the other side shows a Planning application to build 60 houses on the field you are about to walk across.
Turn half-left and continue following the footpath between the houses and the large field on your left. This footpath is part of the original Barrett Lane, and in the 1700s / 1800s was known as the 'Drove to Barretts'. The 1839 map shows three fields identified as #176, #177 and #178 which today are one large field. This track might have been a 'green road' from Sutton Benger to Christian Malford, about 500 years ago.
The field shown as #177 of the 1839 map was 'Great Barretts / Barratts'; it is here, and in #178 to the north, that there is evidence of an old Anglo Saxon settlement, with crop marks showing the probable location of two round houses. There have also been finds of Romano-British pottery. It is possible that the people who settled here originally were forced to move to the current location of Sutton Benger after the Avon flooded, leaving the fields closest to the river as communal meadows. The following map shows this area in 1885, but with a Romano-British evidence overlay in blue.
There are also some old crop marks south of the main road, in the field that is closer to Christian Malford church, suggesting a second settlement that also got abandoned. The field immediately south of the main road, next to the sewerage works, was quarried for sand and gravel for several years in the 1950s.
You eventually come to a hedgerow between #177 and #179; there is a double stile and a step down to the lower level of the meadow leading to the river. Note the mass of vegetation in the adjacent corner of the field to your left; this vegetation is covering the remains of a Second World War bunker.
When you reach the end of the field, take extra care when stepping onto the main road to cross the bridge into Christian Malford; there are speeding cars and there is no footpath for the next 20 yards or so!!!