A programme of archaeological work comprising an evaluation and subsequent recording during construction of a detached dwelling and associated drainage was carried out in September 2018 and again during July and August 2019 at land west of Owlet End, The Close, Clifford Cambers, Warwickshire. The OS 1886 map shows Owlet End situated at the north-west end of the village on the floodplain between the main road and the River Stour. The historic core of the medieval village lies further to the south-east. Analysis of the fabric of the building suggests that it was constructed during the late C17 and subsequently divided into three cottages by 1886. The combined results of the excavations showed the remains of a large north-east to south-west aligned linear ditch feature dated by a few sherds of pottery and a fragment of roof tile to the Romano-British period. Within the fill deposit was a large assemblage of animal bone associated with domestic food waste, cattle being the most abundant species. The evidence suggests contemporary occupation in the vicinity. The ditch itself appears aligned reasonably perpendicular to the river frontage, acting perhaps as a boundary/drainage ditch within a wider settlement pattern. An earlier evaluation to the south of Owlets End, albeit small in scope, was negative suggesting little occupation extending immediately south of Owlet End.