North of Sprow's Pits it meets Swardeston, and passes west of an electricity substation.
A few hundred metres south of the A140/A47 interchange it meets Caistor St Edmund, where the parish includes the Mangreen quarry owned by Lafarge.
It follows Chandler Road, part of Boudica's Way, eastwards and north of Notre Dame Wood.
It passes north of Highfield Farm and Narborough House, and Upper Stoke (part of the parish).
Stoke Holy Cross mill, to the west of the village, was the location from which Colman's produced their very first mustard products.
One is one of three former Chain Home radar towers from the Battle of Britain, then known as RAF Stoke Holy Cross.