An archaeological watching brief was carried out on the groundworks pertaining to the construction of a new house. The archaeological monitoring identified a series of alluvial flood deposits, undoubtedly the product of various alluvial flooding and resultant deposition episodes given the location of the site in close proximity to the River Welland. Although three such deposits of this origin were identified, only one yielded pottery of late 12th - 14th century date: suggesting that at least this deposit was of medieval origin. One of these alluvial flood deposits sealed the single archaeological feature identified by this monitoring. This comprised the cut of a shallow and isolated pit with a single fill which produced three sherds of 13th - 14th century pottery. This in turn suggested that the overlying alluvial flood deposit may be stratagraphically post-medieval in origin.