Visitors to this Grade I listed house and park can see herds of fallow deer and summer sights. 

Petworth House and Park, run by the National Trust, is a beautiful 17th century house with a brilliant art collection set in a 700-acre deer park.

Camera club snapper Joanna Kaczorowska visited one sunny June day and saw the sights of summer, from the deer munching grass to an Egyptian goose with its young.

Bright magenta fox gloves are also out and look impressive against the luscious green lawns.

READ MORE: 5 of the best National Trust gardens in Sussex to enjoy during the spring

Visitors can potter around the grounds, follow one of the walking routes or go inside the home to see the state rooms featuring paintings and sculpture, including artwork by Van Dyck, Turner, Reynolds and Gainsborough. 

The servants’ quarters, including the historic kitchens, show a glimpse into the life of the people who worked here.

As well as the landscaped park, there is also a 30-acre woodland garden, known as the Pleasure Ground.