Best Cotswold Tours

Best Cotswold Tours Blog

Best Cotswold Tours Blog

OwlPen Manor

OwlPen Manor often described as the “Loveliest house in England ” is situated in the woods along Fiery Lane near Uley. The Tudor Manor house is a Grade 1 listed building owned privately by the Mander family. After a gap of 100 years, the house was restored by Norman Jewson

Read More »
Best Cotswold Tours Blog

Kiftsgate Court Gardens

Kiftsgate Garden, near Chipping Campden, is one of the Cotswolds finest gardens. It is a remarkable garden created and developed by three generations of women from the same family. It is well known for the Kiftsgate Rose (Rosa filipes) a heavenly scented rambling rose. The garden was first created in

Read More »
Best Cotswold Tours Blog

Castle Combe – The Prettiest Village in the CotswoldsDescribed as the loveliest and prettiest village in England, Castle Combe was a small weaving town at the heart of the Cotswold Wool trade. Originally a Saxon Village, with evidence of nearby Roman Settlement, the village grew beside the Castle built in 1140 after the Norman Invasion. Sadly the Castle has now gone. The 12th century St Andrews church has a 15th Century faceless clock that used to ring the hours and is one of England’s oldest working clocks. Visitors well photograph the bridge that crosses the Bybrook River used as a backdrop in many films such as Dr Dolittle, War Horse and Hercule Poirot.

Read More »
Best Cotswold Tours Blog

How were the Slaughters Named

Upper and Lower Slaughter are two of the loveliest unspoilt villages in the Cotswolds. There are two theories of the origin of their name:  the name Slaughter comes from the old English word “Slothre” meaning muddy, and so it became known as muddy crossings of the River Eye. There is

Read More »
Best Cotswold Tours Blog

Bourton on the Water, Venice of the Cotswolds

Bourton on the Water is one of the most popular destinations in the North Cotswolds. The River Windrush was diverted through the village in the early 17thC. to power the mills, with bridges built to cross the river. Today visitors come for a day out not only to feed the

Read More »
Best Cotswold Tours Blog

Stow on the Wold The Highest Town in the Cotswolds.

At 8oo ft above sea level, Stow on the Wold is the highest town in the Cotswolds. Controlled by the Maugersbury Monks in 1086 the Viking settlement grew on the convergence of eight roads on the Roman Fosseway. But it was the Saxon farmers who laid the foundations of the

Read More »
Best Cotswold Tours Blog

How the Cotswolds was named

Think of the Cotswolds and immediately you think of villages, stone walls, towns and small streams, and woodland. “Wold” means rolling hills and countryside. “Cots” is an Anglo-Saxon word for sheep enclosure, thus putting the two together becomes rolling hills where sheep are kept.  However, the Domesday Book refers to

Read More »
Best Cotswold Tours Blog

10 of the best walks and rambles in the Cotswolds

Whether you are looking for a short amble or a hill hike here are some of the best walks in the Cotswolds. There are over 3000 miles of footpaths and rights of way in the Cotswolds which is a wonderful area to explore on foot.  The longest walk is 102 mile

Read More »
Best Cotswold Tours Blog

Magical Cotswold Church Door

The two ancient Yew trees that have grown around the North Door in St. Edwards Church, Stow on the Wold look more like an entry into a fairy tale than into a Church. There is little doubt that J.R Tolkein was inspired to write “The Doors of Durin” as a

Read More »
Best Cotswold Tours Blog

The Olympick Games held in the Cotswolds in 1612

The Games and festivities began on Dovers Hill near Chipping Campden in 1612, under the auspices of Sir Baptiste Hicks. It was claimed that games, contests and races would keep locals fit to fight for the King. There were much merriment dancing and drinking which was frowned upon by the

Read More »

BEST COTSWOLD TOURS BLOG

Posts

BLOG TAGS