[3] Muston Meadows is a nearby 41-hectare (100-acre) grassland nature reserve featuring 33 types of grass and over 100 other species of flowering plant.
[6] The Viking Way, a long-distance footpath between North Lincolnshire and Rutland, passes one-half mile (0.80 km) to the east of the village.
The local pub, the Muston Gap, occupies a Grade II listed building dating back to the 18th century.
Some detailed, amply illustrated information on Muston and its past appears on the Bottesford Living History website.
[13] John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (1870–72): "MUSTON... stands on the River Devon, adjacent to the boundary with Lincolnshire, near the Grantham Canal, 1½ mile east-south-east of Bottesford railway station, and 5½ west by north of Grantham; and has a post office under Nottingham.
The church is a handsome structure; and consists of nave, aisles, chancel and two porches, with central tower and spire.
[15] The poet George Crabbe (1754–1832) moved to Muston Rectory (later Glebe House)[16] from a curacy at Stathern in 1789, having previously been chaplain to the Duke of Rutland from 1782 to 1784.