This gentle landscape of sloping hills lays on hiking trails, glorious gardens and organic farms, with spa-starring hotels to rest up in at the end of the day.
LessThe ancient Foxholes woodland along the River Evenlode will immerse you in a tranquil setting of blue bells in spring and foxgloves in autumn. The abundant honeysuckle feeds 23 species of butterflies, and the woodland is also home to nuthatches, treecreepers and seven species of bats, including the seldom-seen Bechstein’s bat. The ideal way to explore the ancient nature reserve is to follow the 11km (7mi) circular Wild Walk, starting in Shipton-under-Wychwood.
The Cotswolds Garden Route is not linear, so it’s a good idea to plan which blossom-filled havens you’d like to visit before setting out. Hugely popular is the Hidcote Manor Garden, in the village of Hidcote Bartrim, near Chipping Campden. Hidcote is one of the most highly regarded Arts and Crafts gardens, known for its linked “rooms” of hedges, shrubs, rare trees and herbaceous borders. Walk the glossy green grounds and breathe in the calm.
Spa-starring stay Dormy House entices guests with its log fires, haute cuisine and elegant rooms – in addition, of course, to its wellness offering, which features a state-of-the-art flotation tank filled with 500kg of Epsom salts and 1,000 litres of water, where you can defy gravity, float away, relax your muscles and rid yourself of tension. For post-treatment sustenance, sit down to a healthy lunch on the sunny terrace of the Greenhouse spa cafe.
If you were to walk the entire 164km Cotswold Way route from Chipping Campden to the Roman city of Bath, you’d likely have to reward yourself with a very long soak in the Somerset city’s natural thermal baths on arrival. But you don’t have to hike the entire trail. One popular stretch runs from Cleeve Hill to Dowdeswell. At 317m, Cleeve Hill is the highest point along the trail and on a clear day you can see all the way to Cheltenham and beyond to Wales.
In the heart of the Cotswolds, Chedworth Woods sits between the villages of Chedworth with its Roman villa and Withington on the south side of the River Coln. The woods are home to huge beech, oak and hazel trees – perfect for forest bathing. That’s where author and nature guide Ian Banyard takes participants for mindfulness walks to relax, unwind and discover the benefits of bathing in sylvan sounds, also known as forest therapy or shinrin-yoku – its Japanese name.
Horses have been part of Lucknam Park for over 300 years – and there’s plenty of room for them on the 500-acre estate, where you’ll also find the restored Palladium mansion reimagined as a leading spa hotel. Just as the well-appointed rooms provide comfort, so too do the 30 horses, which guests work with during therapeutic sessions in which humans connect not only with the four-legged animals, but with themselves.
Barnsley House is regarded today as one of the finer country-house hotels in the Cotswolds, but before that incarnation, it was the home of the grande dame of British horticulture, legendary landscape gardener, Rosemary Verey, whose love of all things floral led her to create what’s known in leafy circles as “the famous laburnum walk in the Cotswolds.” The floral archways get rave reviews – as do the spa treatments, some of which are conducted in the privacy of the garden terrace.
You know you’re in farm country when your restaurant of choice is called the Trough, which is the main dining room at this award-winning organic farm by Carole Bamford, where all ingredients are produced by organic farmers. It’s an ideal midday stop if you’re hiking or cycling: kick off your boots (or cleats) and enjoy a feed of freshly caught fish, grass-pastured beef or risotto made with Daylesford’s Greek-style cheese. You can load up on goodies in the Daylesford Farm Shop to take home, too.
The Cotswold Water Park, which straddles the Wiltshire-Gloucestershire border, is the largest marl lake system in the country with 180 lakes spread over 25,000 acres (10,000ha). You’ll have your pick of birdwatching, cycling and hiking, but most people come for the watersports – including kayaking, wakeboarding, canoeing, swimming, sailing, water skiing and windsurfing. There’s also a forest school where kids can learn survival skills and plenty of picnic spots for soaking up the scenery.
This 600-acre national treasure trove of trees (15,000 at last count) includes 2,500 different species from around the world. You won’t just be looking at them from the ground up. Tree-lovers can get a more elevated view on the Tree Top Walkway – a 300m walkway through the tree canopy, 13m off the ground.