British Travel Journal | Spring 2021
Ah, the sweet smell of spring is finally here. Flowers are beginning to bloom, the sun has started to shine and there is hope on the horizon for a great British summer! I’m sure you’ll agree that spending so many months at home has only made our adventurous, curious hearts grow fonder with a passion for travel and exploration. I will appreciate my upcoming travel trips so much more, and it has only made my job as travel Editor, and the content in our latest issue, seem even more special than usual! Lockdown might have put a stop to many things, but it certainly hasn’t stopped the travel industry preparing to ensure a super fun and warm welcome once it is safe for visitors to return. From new hotels and luxury spas, exciting holiday resorts full of adventure and off-grid activities, luxury boutique stays in acres of unspoilt countryside and coastline, brand new attractions to immersive one-of-a-kind experiences – it seems there has perhaps never been a better time to explore the British Isles! With so much ‘British staycation’ wanderlust flying about we couldn’t resist compiling our Ultimate British Bucket List. Deep in the West Dorset countryside we Meet the Makers behind the world’s only vodka made from cows’ milk. We uncover 10 of the most wonderful places to visit in Yorkshire and discover that there’s much more than just Cheddar Cheese and ancient apple orchards to Somerset’s epicurean offering in The Rise of Food and Drink. In search of beautiful destinations where social distancing is made easy, you won’t find better than a remote Sea Garden Cottage on the white sandy shores of Tresco island, a luxury family stay in the heart of Suffolk’s rolling countryside at The Ickworth or a whisky tour around the southernmost island of the Inner Hebrides of Scotland, Islay - the Lord of the Isles. Wherever, and whenever, you next plan to take a holiday in the British Isles, we hope British Travel Journal continues to deliver as your indispensable travel magazine, and wish you a safe and seamless journey full of wonderful memories.
Ah, the sweet smell of spring is finally here. Flowers are beginning to bloom, the sun has started to shine and there is hope on the horizon for a great British summer!
I’m sure you’ll agree that spending so many months at home has only made our adventurous, curious hearts grow fonder with a passion for travel and exploration.
I will appreciate my upcoming travel trips so much more, and it has only made my job as travel Editor, and the content in our latest issue, seem even more special than usual!
Lockdown might have put a stop to many things, but it certainly hasn’t stopped the travel industry preparing to ensure a super fun and warm welcome once it is safe for visitors to return. From new hotels and luxury spas, exciting holiday resorts full of adventure and off-grid activities, luxury boutique stays in acres of unspoilt countryside and coastline, brand new attractions to immersive one-of-a-kind experiences – it seems there has perhaps never been a better time to explore the British Isles!
With so much ‘British staycation’ wanderlust flying about we couldn’t resist compiling our Ultimate British Bucket List. Deep in the West Dorset countryside we Meet the Makers behind the world’s only vodka made from cows’ milk. We uncover 10 of the most wonderful places to visit in Yorkshire and discover that there’s much more than just Cheddar Cheese and ancient apple orchards to Somerset’s epicurean offering in The Rise of Food and Drink. In search of beautiful destinations where social distancing is made easy, you won’t find better than a remote Sea Garden Cottage on the white sandy shores of Tresco island, a luxury family stay in the heart of Suffolk’s rolling countryside at The Ickworth or a whisky tour around the southernmost island of the Inner Hebrides of Scotland, Islay - the Lord of the Isles.
Wherever, and whenever, you next plan to take a holiday in the British Isles, we hope British Travel Journal continues to deliver as your indispensable travel magazine, and wish you a safe and seamless journey full of wonderful memories.
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BRITISH TRAVEL
JOURNAL
explore the british isles
SPRING 2021 | ISSUE 08
BRITISHTRAVELJOURNAL.COM
WANDERLUST
DESTINATIONS
HOW TO MAKE YOUR NEXT
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C O N T R I B U T I O N S
BRITISH TRAVEL
JOURNAL
BritishTravelJournal.com
EDITORS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Jessica Way
FEATURES EDITOR Samantha Rutherford
CHIEF SUB-EDITOR Angela Harding
CONTRIBUTORS
Melanie Abrams, Chantal Borciani,
Helen Holmes, Emma Johnson,
Adrian Mourby, Karyn Noble, Emma O’Reilly,
Lydia Paleschi, Adrienne Wyper
COVER PHOTO
—
Our Editor arrives on the sandy shores of
Bryher, one of the smaller of the inhabited
islands of the Isles of Scilly. See p72.
Published by
CONTISTA MEDIA
Mitchell House, Brook Avenue, Warsash,
Southampton, SO31 9HP
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unsolicited submissions, manuscripts and photographs.
While every care is taken prices and details are subject to
change and Contista Media Ltd take no responsibility for
omissions or errors. We reserve the right to publish
and edit any letters. All rights reserved.
@BritishTravelJournal
@BTravelJournal
@BritishTravelJournal
Welcome
EDITOR’S LETTER
—
A
H, THE SWEET SMELL of spring is finally
here. Flowers are beginning to bloom, the sun
has started to shine and there is hope on the
horizon for a great British summer!
I’m sure you’ll agree that spending so many months at
home has only made our adventurous, curious hearts grow
fonder with a passion for travel and exploration.
I will appreciate my upcoming travel trips so much more,
and it has only made my job as travel Editor, and the content in
our latest issue, seem even more special than usual!
Lockdown might have put a stop to many things, but
it certainly hasn’t stopped the travel industry preparing to
ensure a super fun and warm welcome once it is safe for
visitors to return.
From new hotels and luxury spas (p10), exciting holiday
resorts full of adventure and off-grid activities (p16), luxury
boutique stays in acres of unspoilt countryside and coastline
(p90), brand new attractions (p18) to immersive one-of-a-kind
experiences (p22) – it seems there has perhaps never been a
better time to explore the British Isles!
With so much ‘British staycation’ wanderlust flying about
we couldn’t resist compiling our Ultimate British Bucket List
(p28). Deep in the West Dorset countryside we Meet the Makers
behind the world’s only vodka made from cows’ milk (p44).
We uncover 10 of the most wonderful places to visit in Yorkshire
(p62) and discover that there’s much more than just Cheddar
Cheese and ancient apple orchards to Somerset’s epicurean
offering in The Rise of Food and Drink (p84). In search of
beautiful destinations where social distancing is made easy,
you won’t find better than a remote Sea Garden Cottage on
the white sandy shores of Tresco island (p72), a luxury family
stay in the heart of Suffolk’s rolling countryside at The Ickworth
(p50) or a whisky tour around the southernmost island of the
Inner Hebrides of Scotland, Islay - the Lord of the Isles (p56).
Wherever, and whenever, you next plan to take a holiday
in the British Isles, we hope British Travel Journal continues to
deliver as your indispensable travel magazine, and wish you a
safe and seamless journey full of wonderful memories.
Jessica x
JESSICA WAY
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
–
BritishTravelJournal.com 3
Time for the
little things
luxuryfamilyhotels.co.uk
CONTENTS
SPRING 2021 | ISSUE 08
—
09
28
28
90
JOTTINGS
09
TRAVEL NEWS
From a former jail turned sumptuous
hotel, luxury spa resort openings, to new
attractions including the launch of RHS
Bridgewater and re-imagined Nottingham Castle.
MAGICAL MOMENTS
24 Feel inspired and escape the everyday
with these stunning travel photos of beautiful
landscapes from around the British Isles.
CULTURAL AGENDA
39 Unmissable events, shows and
exhibitions for your social calendar this spring
FOR YOUR JOURNEY
98 Latest travel essentials and crossword.
FEATURES
28
ULTIMATE BRITISH BUCKETLIST
From taking a classic Morgan car for
a spin around part of the North Coast 500, to
taking to the air and flying an iconic 1943 plane,
and cruising around the UK in the world’s largest
square-rigged luxury sailing vessel.
BLACK COW VODKA
44 We discover the world’s only vodka
made from cows’ milk deep in the West Dorset
countryside.
TEN OF THE BEST LUXURY
90 BOUTIQUE STAYS
Fancy hunkering down for the night in front
of a burning log fire in a cute, cosy cottage or
luxurious accommodation nestled in the middle
of acres of beautiful countryside, a quaint village
or coastal clifftop?
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 5
62
E D I T O R L O V E S DESTINATIONS
These stylish limited edition
weatherproof backpacks,
handmade to order from The Level
Collective as part of an ethical
British-made craftsmanship
collaboration. Together with Blok
Knives founder Ben Edmonds,
(the Aston Martin of the cutting
world), who is crafting 100
outdoor knives handmade in
Derbyshire, Cornish based
creative Mark Musgrave has
designed 100 British-made stylish
organic backpacks. Limited edition
backpacks £375.
Limited edition Blok Knives £155.
thelevelcollective.com
THE ICKWORTH
50 Spending quality family time
together in acres of glorious British
countryside just doesn’t get better than at
this sumptuous Suffolk retreat.
TOP TEN PLACES TO VISIT IN
62 YORKSHIRE
From walks through National Parks, beautiful
historic cities, luxury hotels to charming
seaside resorts, there’s plenty to discover on
a tour of Britain’s largest county.
48 HOURS IN TRESCO AND
72 BRYHER
Spend your days exploring ruined castles,
discovering tales of shipwrecks, and enjoying
the sounds of the ocean on Britain's very own
Island treasure.
72
50
FOOD AND DRINK
56
LORD OF THE ISLES
Join us on a whisky tasting tour
around Scotland's isle of Islay, one of the
premiere whisky-producing areas in the
world.
THE RISE OF SOMERSET'S
84 FOOD AND DRINK
This English county is not merely the
home of Cheddar Cheese or ancient apple
orchards, Somerset’s epicurean delights are
in abundance.
HOTEL
GIFT CARD
WORTH
£25!
Subscription Offer
Subscribe to three issues of British Travel
Journal for just £20 and receive a £25 gift of
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6 BritishTravelJournal.com
Crossbrook Farm, Worcestershire
Find your special place
From luxury contemporary barn conversions to charming thatched cottages,
we’ve hand-picked the very best to bring you holiday memories to treasure.
A portfolio of over
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View the properties
ruralretreats.co.uk
Call for our brochure
01386 897 959
Fly direct with
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Time to be...
Soul-reviving spa soaks and subtropical garden strolls.
Great times in the great outdoors and long, lazy lunches.
Deserted sandy bays and towering heather-clad cliffs.
Island-hopping adventures and spellbinding sunset suppers.
Whatever the season, rediscover time to be on Tresco, the family
owned island at the heart of the Isles of Scilly archipelago.
Just 28 miles from Cornwall. Somewhere else altogether.
TRESCO.CO.UK
SPA & WELLNESS | ACCOMMODATION | ABBEY GARDEN | DINING | GALLERY
LOOKING AHEAD...
TRAVEL NEWS
Once lockdown lifts and it is safe to visit, reignite your passion for
travel with our selection of what's new across the British Isles
HOTELS
RESORTS
ATTRACTIONS
from page 10 from page 16
from page 18
BritishTravelJournal.com 9
New hotels
BATH
The Townhouse
For the ultimate city break you would
be hard pushed to find a better place
to stay than the new Townhouse at the
Gainsborough Bath Spa Hotel. The TV
series Bridgerton had us swooning over the
ravishing city of Bath, used as a location,
and now there’s this. Offering the best of
both worlds – ultra luxurious self-catering
for up to five people, plus the hotel next
door for dining out or using the spa. The
real wow factor facility here, however, is
private access to the Cross Bath. This sacred
open-air bath taps in to the city’s thermal
waters and beats a hot tub any day!
Prices start from £183 per night. ◆
thegainsboroughbathspa.co.uk
DERBYSHIRE
ENSANA BUXTON CRESCENT HOTEL & THERMAL SPA
Buxton Crescent
In need of some pampering in the elegant surroundings of one
of England’s finest Georgian buildings? It feels as though we’ve
been anticipating the opening of this 80-bedroom five-star
hotel and visitor attraction for years now – and that’s probably
because we have! Originally the launch was scheduled for 2019,
and with the pandemic forcing closures throughout last year
it has all just taken longer than planned. However, by no small
feat, the impressive £50m redevelopment and restoration of the
magnificent building completed last summer and opened, under
Covid-19 restrictions, on 1st October 2020. The luxury hotel
offers accommodation with all the trimmings - as well as the
thermal natural mineral water spa in the Natural Baths there’s
the splendid 18th Century ballroom – known as the Assembly
Room – which has also been fully refurbished, café, restaurant,
two bars and six prestigious retail premises along the front
ground floor façade. Choose from a selection of all day spa packages
and soak in the thermal pool, to include use of all facilities, robe
and slippers, lunch, therapy treatments, Jet Bath, Salt Cave and
much more. Have something to celebrate? You might prefer
the Twilight spa evening with a glass of fizz on arrival, Ensana
wellness treatment and evening meal. Prices from £125 per night. ◆
ensanahotels.com/buxton/en
10 BritishTravelJournal.com
BERKSHIRE
Fairmont Windsor Park
Destined to be the UK’s leading wellness retreat comprising a
sprawling world-class spa spanning 2,500 square metres with
indoor and outdoor pools, 18 treatments rooms, a salt room,
Hamman and Japanese foot spa. fairmont-windsorpark.com
BRISTOL
Artist Residence
Arty micro chain Artist Residence is set to
open its fifth hotel in a former boot factory
in Bristol’s Portland Square. An eclectic
mix of art and vintage, the new venue
includes 28 quirky bedrooms alongside
a café, bar and events space. Your home
from home in the heart of creative Bristol,
with comfy beds, powerful rainfall showers
and an eclectic mix of industrial, vintage
and bohemian style. Book the bohemian
Artist Suite – it features original Georgian
cornicing, super king size bed, open
bathroom with free-standing roll-top
bathtub and powerful rainfall shower. ◆
artistresidence.co.uk/our-hotels/bristol
Editor loves
BELFAST
The Harrison
Looking to add a little more sass to your staycation?
Having hosted scoundrels and scholars since
1879, this bohemian bolthole has been designed
for the culturally curious traveller located right
in the heart of Belfast’s theatre and museum
quarter. Book the Ruby Murray Room – it’s divine!
Antique furniture, stunning four poster bed and
stylish bathtub. Priced from £150 per night. ◆
chambersofdistinction.com
BritishTravelJournal.com 11
In the capital
STRATFORD
The Gantry
Launching a year later than originally planned, The Gantry
will bring together, under one roof, a hotel, artisan food market,
restaurants and cocktail bars, in what is London’s fastest
developing creative and cultural community. Collaborating
with local producers, artists, brands and independent
London restaurateurs, The Gantry is a single urban resort
offering a fully integrated eating, drinking, travel and social
destination for East Londoners and international visitors
alike. With a silhouette inspired by New York’s famous Flat
Iron building, The Gantry’s design is influenced by industrial
Victorian East London and Stratford’s historical role in the
city’s train building industry. Situated on the 18th floor with
floor to ceiling windows, The Gantry will also boast the
highest rooftop bar in East London, offering a truly iconic
sunset across the capital when the bar and outdoor terraces
come alive with live music and DJs.
Prices start from £173 per night. ◆
thegantrylondon.com
MAYFAIR
The Mayfair Townhouse
Bridging the gap between West End’s ritzy and corporate hotels,
the Townhouse redefines what it means to be a London
hotel. Curious, engaging, witty – and dandy. Think: Oscar
Wilde meets Alice in Wonderland. Launched by the people
who brought you Cliveden House and Chewton Glen, The
Mayfair Townhouse occupies the Grade-II listed Georgian
buildings that line Half Moon Street – once the setting for
Oscar Wilde’s most famous play, The Importance of Being
Earnest. The aptly named Dandy Bar is the heart and soul of
the Townhouse; a theatrical, dimly lit atmosphere that
creates a place to see and be seen. Say hello to Head Concierge
Dianna Beran, formerly from Belmond Cadogan Hotel, and
one of the very few female concierges in the world to hold
the title of Les Clefs d’Or! Book a mixology experience with
Pierpaolo Monaco and enjoy a Mayfair Dandy – an avant-garde
take on the classic Dandy cocktail once enjoyed by hedonists
of the area. Room rates priced from £252 per night. ◆
themayfairtownhouse.com
LEICESTER SQUARE
The Londoner
More ‘urban resort’ than ‘city hotel’ spanning across
16 storeys, The Londoner features a whopping
350 guest rooms, suites and tower penthouse with
panoramic views! Yet there’s more to this sophisticated
Leicester Square playground - an expansive ballroom,
wellness centre, hair and nail salon, barber shop, a
mix of eateries and roof top bar with firepits. Prices
from £469 per person, per night. ◆
thelondoner.com
12 BritishTravelJournal.com
GREAT GIFT IDEAS
BEST GIFT FOR
MOTHER’S DAY?
Mother’s Day is on Sunday 14th March
Have you been missing your mum during lockdown?
With Mother’s Day fast approaching, and the opportunity
to take your mum out looking unlikely, why not
give her something special to look forward to? Give her the
gift of roomcard and she can start planning a weekend for
when lockdown lifts – and if you’re lucky, she’ll take you too!
roomcard is the digital gift card and wallet for the
world’s 10,000 most inspirational hotels, covering the very best
of Britain and beyond. roomcard allows you to add your
own customised wrapping and personal greeting – whether
you prefer a video, photo gallery, spoken or written message.
Schedule the delivery of roomcard at precisely your chosen
time… and then, right on cue, it will be delivered straight
to your mum’s phone. Roomcard.com
TM
1334
INNOVATIVE | UNIQUE | EXCLUSIVE
Putting the British into British tea
for the first time in history.
Tregothnan has pioneered botanical firsts since 1334,
experimenting with new plants like the tea genus for over two
centuries. We finally perfected the first ever tea production in the
UK in 2005. Today we continue to innovate inspired by our precious
plants and gardens.
www.tregothnan.co.uk /tregothnan @tregothnan @tregothnan
Boutique hotels
EAST SUSSEX
The Star Inn
The third in Olga’s Polizzi Collection, spreading her wings
from the south west to the south east, and her first official
joint venture with her daughter, Alex Polizzi, presenter of
Channel 5’s, The Hotel Inspector. thepolizzicollection.com
NORFOLK
The Harper
The Harper is a brand new 32-bedroom
boutique hotel taking residence within
Langham’s famed old glass blowing factory,
the rugged, chic interiors are light, airy
and dotted with locally-crafted artisanal
glass features playing quiet homage to
its heritage. Only a short drive from the
picturesque coastal haven of Blakeney,
The Harper nestles in the quaint and
typically British village of Langham, North
Norfolk and even boasts its own Harper
Hikes walking routes. Rooms (inc Harper
Breakfast) start at £175 per night. ◆
theharper.co.uk
WEST SUSSEX
THE PIG in the South Downs
With the latest launch of THE PIG in the South
Downs becoming the eighth addition, you will now
be able to stay in a PIG in every south coast county!
Plus, the team is creating the group’s first vineyard
here too - on the two-acre field directly in front of
the main restaurant of the hotel previously used for
grazing alpacas. Rooms from £155 per night. ◆
thepighotel.com
BritishTravelJournal.com 15
New resorts
CORNWALL
Una St Ives
One of the most exciting new launches in
the active holiday resorts has to be this £25
million development of a former caravan
park above Carbis Bay. There are 30
self-catering eco-houses and Una Kitchen
already open, with a further 55-bedroom
apartment hotel and around 100 villas
and luxurious lodges opening soon. From
clifftop ambles and wild sea swimming, to
night-sky sessions around the fire pit. Join a
morning yoga class, paddle out to surf on
Porthminster Beach and head to St Ives Bay
for sea-to-fork fresh fish. ◆
unastives.co.uk
SNOWDONIA
Adventure Parc,
Hilton Garden Inn
Launching in tandem with the brand new Wave Garden
Spa, the Hilton Garden Inn Snowdonia, surrounded by
mountains, forests, and beautiful natural landscape,
makes a family holiday to Adventure Parc even more
enticing than ever before. The 106-bedroom hotel is the
perfect place to check in and enjoy the surf lagoon and
parc activities, including an outdoor adventure climbing
centre, zip lines and freefalls, gorge walking, mountain
biking, water sports and more. The floor-to-ceiling
windows in the stylish bedrooms and Zephyr’s bar and
grill make the most of the unique backdrop, and offer big
views across the lagoon, where you can enjoy watching
surfers catch rolling waves. Home to some of the biggest
peaks in Wales, as well as a population of wild ponies
there will never be a dull moment to be had here – and
when you need some space to relax, indulge in solitude
at the adjoining Wave Garden Spa. Think warm vitality
waterfall pool, an iconic oversized Himalayan salt sauna,
outdoor hot whirlpool, relaxation pods and fire pits. ◆
adventureparcsnowdonia.com
16 BritishTravelJournal.com
CORNWALL
Harbour Beach Club, Salcombe
50 spacious bedrooms and suites on the stunning South Sands
beach. Think laid back vibes, hammocks between the trees,
beanbags to chill out on with a mojito in hand to watch the
sunset. Adventures from watersports to wild swimming.
harbourhotels.co.uk/harbour-beach-club
CORNWALL
Three Mile Beach
Fifteen new luxury self-catering beach houses
opening this Easter, tucked away on Gwithian
Towans, an unspoilt part of the stunning
Cornish coastline, with never-ending Atlantic
Ocean views – this is a surfer’s paradise. From
bodyboarding, stand-up-paddle, kitesurfing
to surfing, you will not only master your skills
on the water, you will also enjoy going off-grid,
hunkering down and switching off from the
everyday world. This is tranquillity at its very
best, with three miles of stunning beach and
views over Godrevy lighthouse and the lights
of St Ives. Each beach house has its own private
deck, sunken hot tub, and barrel sauna. ◆
threemilebeach.co.uk
You might also enjoy
KENT
Leopard Creek
Following the successful launch of the soughtafter
Lion and Tiger Lodges, Port Lympne
Hotel & Reserve are opening their next big cat
accommodation, Leopard Creek this April. Choose
from a cosy cub hut, stylish family cabin, to luxurious
four-person wigwam. Prices to stay in Leopard
Creek’s wigwams from £699 a night. ◆
aspinallfoundation.org
BritishTravelJournal.com 17
New attractions
BATH
Mary Shelley's House
of Frankenstein
Mary Shelley’s House of Frankenstein is a
new visitor attraction in Bath, and a world
first as the only horror experience dedicated
to author Mary Shelley and her most
infamous creation, Frankenstein! Mary
Shelley wrote the majority of this timeless
classic whilst living in lodgings situated
in Abbey Churchyard in 1816, where you
will now find the iconic Pump Room (next
to The Roman Baths). The experience
promises to be scarily atmospheric, multisensory
and fully immersive. ◆
houseoffrankenstein.com
MANCHESTER
©RHS/MARKWAUGH/HARRIS BUGG STUDIO
RHS Bridgewater
Europe’s largest gardening project springs into life
this May with RHS’s latest green oasis attraction.
RHS Garden Bridgewater is a new spectacular 154-acre
garden, offering a tranquil escape in the transformed
historic grounds of Worsley New Hall, Salford. This
beautiful green space is set to join the prestigious
RHS’s portfolio as its fifth garden and the first new
addition in 17 years. This will be the largest gardening
project in Europe and will include a kitchen garden,
heritage orchard, therapeutic garden and a historic
11-acre walled garden – one of the largest in the UK
for visitors to enjoy all year-round. Though the Worsley
New Hall mansion no longer remains, echoes of the
original gardens, ice-house, lake and formal terraces,
can still be seen. Other highlights include The Paradise
Garden - a spectacular blend of Mediterranean and
Asiatic planting inspired by the earliest gardens, Middle
Wood, 30-acres of forest glades, pools and ponds and
The Chinese Streamside Garden, a unique, Chineseinspired
garden representing an exciting and unique
fusion of Chinese and British horticulture. ◆
rhs.org.uk
18 BritishTravelJournal.com
NOTTINGHAM
Nottingham Castle
Following a multi-million-pound investment, Nottingham Castle
and its sprawling caves below are anticipating an exciting
relaunch. Once lockdown lifts you will be able to step into the
story of the epic retelling of Robin Hood, rebellion and creativity.
nottinghamcastle.org.uk
DERBY
Museum of Making
On the site of the world’s first factory (The
Derby Silk Mill) the Museum of Making is an
impressive 5-year, £18million project funded
by The National Lottery Heritage Fund – now
ready to open. Located in the Derwent Valley
Mills UNESCO World Heritage Site, one
of the key sites of the industrial revolution,
this brand-new museum will showcase the
region’s 300-year history of making and
celebrate its rich history of innovation. From
the world’s smallest engine, run using a human
hair, to a seven tonne Rolls-Royce Trent 1000
engine suspended in a new atrium above visitors’
heads, there will be 30,000 objects to enjoy. ◆
derbymuseums.org
LAKE DISTRICT
Wordsworth Grasmere
Poetry fans will be delighted to hear the news of this
re-imagined museum celebrating William Wordsworth
in the Lake District. The former Wordsworth Museum
has been completely transformed to include a
reinterpretation of Dove Cottage, where William lived
when he produced most of his greatest and bestloved
poems, a Sensory Garden and Woodland. ◆
wordsworth.org.uk
BritishTravelJournal.com 19
mg.co.uk
Pre-book tickets now
Part of
Royal Museums
Greenwich
Explore Greenwich and
step on board an icon
Visit Cutty Sark and experience the dramatic
history of the fastest ship of its time.
Greenwich Pier
Cutty Sark
Greenwich (only 8 mins from London Bridge)
CORNWALL
Bodmin Jail
After almost 100 years of ruin new life has been injected into this
neglected relic to create a brand new £8.5million immersive visitor
experience and hotel. Stay in a luxury bedroom converted from three
jail cells or head to the cocktail bar, the former Governor’s Office.
bodminjail.org and bodminjailhotel.com
PLYMOUTH
The Box
The south-west coast’s brand new cultural
hub, The Box is showing a commemorative
exhibition this spring marking 400 years
since the Pilgrims made their maiden voyage
to America, titled Mayflower 400: Legend and
Legacy. The 12 new exhibitions will showcase
300 illuminating objects until 18 September
2021. There is also an outdoor Mayflower
Trail for visitors wanting to see key locations
in the city first-hand. The Box is an impressive
£40 million glass panelled museum space
redeveloped from the Plymouth Museum and
Art Gallery and Central Library, which opened
for the first time to visitors last summer. ◆
theboxplymouth.com
Adventurers will love
PEMBROKESHIRE
Llys-y-Frân Lake
This brand-new 350 acre Outdoor Activity Centre is
to launch as a Welsh Water adventure attracting over 100,000
visitors a year, following a £4 million investment. There are
over 14km of trails to explore, while on the water visitors can
enjoy sailing, kayaking, fishing, canoeing and stand-uppaddleboarding.
There will be a café, cycle hire as well as
lessons in axe and knife throwing, crossbow and archery. ◆
llys-y-fran.co.uk
BritishTravelJournal.com 21
New experiences
CORNWALL
The Nare
New to The Nare Hotel, Cornwall is a
themed walking and art break overlooking
Carne beach. Four days to draw inspiration
from the stunning sea views and coastal
scenery of the Roseland Peninsula, an Area
of Outstanding Natural Beauty. With plenty
of sea air and hands-on creative tuition
unlock your newfound artistic flair and take
a personally hand-painted canvas home
forever to remind you of your holiday.
The hotel is also about to unveil four of the
largest sea-view hotel suites in Britain,
The Whittington Suites. ◆
narehotel.co.uk
BUCKINGHAMSHIRE
Nomadic Dining
Escape to the Chiltern Hills and join Nomadic Dining for a
woodland foraging feast inspired by the wild ingredients.
Immerse yourself into the magical experience of living off the
land, cooking on an open flame with menus curated by the
fruits and finds of your forest forage. Enjoy lunch or dinner
experiences, woodland cocktails, hand-picked herbal teas
and toasted marshmallows. Priced from £99 per person. ◆
experiencenomadic.com/woodlandfeasts/
GLOUCESTERSHIRE
Tudor Farmhouse
In the Forest of Dean, take a foraging break with a fungi
expert forager at Tudor Farmhouse and spend hours off the
beaten track discovering delicious ingredients, whilst enjoying
fresh air and beautiful countryside. Having returned to the
Farmhouse with your basket full of edible delights you’ll be
greeted by a comforting lunch using the best of seasonal and
foraged produce. Prices from £195 per night. ◆
tudorfarmhousehotel.co.uk/foraging-trips
22 BritishTravelJournal.com
KENT
Hangloose Bluewater
If you are looking for a way to let off some adrenaline-fuelled
steam then this brand new zipline could be just the ticket! England’s
longest and fastest zipline, the biggest adventure centre in Europe,
is landing at the much-loved Bluewater Shopping Centre.
hangloosebluewater.com
SOUTH DOWNS
Hambledon
Visitors will for the first time have the chance
to enjoy some of the South Downs’ finest
tipples at the Hambledon Vineyard’s new
facilities. Located in 200 acres of lush
countryside, the vineyard will welcome a
brand-new tasting room and visitor centre,
giving guests the chance to savour a range
of delicious wines and discover behind-thescenes
stories and techniques of one England’s
finest wines. Hambledon comprises over 200
acres of vineyards planted with Chardonnay,
Pinot Noir and Pinot Meunier – the three
grape varieties most commonly used in the
production of Champagne. ◆
hambledonvineyard.co.uk
Editor loves
SOUTH COAST
England’s Creative Coast
Stretching from the East Sussex Downs through
to the Thames Estuary 1400km of stunning
coastline is becoming a cultural treasure hunt
brimming with seaside tales inspiring creativity
through adventure. This is the world’s first art
Geotour alongside ‘Waterfronts’. Launching at
Turner Contemporary this May until November. ◆
englandscreativecoast.org
BritishTravelJournal.com 23
Pretend like you’re on the Kingsroad in this
avenue of ancient trees in County Antrim,
Northern Ireland, which has featured in the TV
show, Game of Thrones. Photo by Steve Allen
24 BritishTravelJournal.com
MAGICAL
MOMENTS
Feel inspired and escape the everyday
with these stunning travel photos
Thinking about your first post-lockdown
getaway? From stunning countryside views
to city architecture, there are plenty of
beauty spots across the UK just waiting to be
discovered.
To help inspire your next trip, this collection of British travel
images have been taken by photographers in picture-perfect
spots across the UK. The photos have been shortlisted as part
of the 2021 edition of the CEWE Photo Award, the world’s
largest photo competition, which aims to celebrate the best in
photography across the globe.
All the photos will be judged by a panel of five world
famous photographers from across Europe, including Christie
Goodwin, the official photographer for the Royal Albert Hall.
Clare Moreton, photo expert at CEWE UK, commented:
“Travel abroad may be restricted for the foreseeable future,
but once the current lockdown is lifted, many of us will be
choosing to embrace the beauty that the UK has to offer.
There are so many stunning locations across Britain that are
waiting to be discovered and the beautiful photos submitted
to the CEWE Photo Award are a perfect example of the
hidden gems on our doorstep.” ◆
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 25
ç Why not escape your worries
by taking a trip on the Hogwarts
Express with a visit to the Glenfinnan
Viaduct, Scotland, which featured in
the Harry Potter film franchise. Photo
by David Philip.
ê Rydall Caves, located on the slopes
of Loughrigg Fell, is a fantastic location
for an afternoon of exploring. Photo
taken by Jose Almada.
The Yorkshire Dales is
famed for its limestone
landscapes, with crags
and caves set amidst
expansive heather
moorland, rolling hills
and dramatic waterfalls.
This photo, taken from
the top of Malham Cove
is a perfect example of
the stunning views on
offer. Photo by Peter
Watson.
26 BritishTravelJournal.com
Richmond Park, in Surrey, is home
to 630 Red and Fallow deer – a
perfect place for nature lovers to
do some wildlife spotting. Photo by
Matteo Schirmer.
ç Scotland has some of the most beautiful
beaches in the UK and you might even be
lucky enough to have one to yourself!
Photo taken in Sandwood Bay beach by
Jason Eddings.
êSituated on an island where three sea
lochs meet and surrounded by majestic
scenery, Eilean Donan Castle is the
perfect place to get away from it all.
Photo by Richard Paksi.
The narrow streets of Plymouth’s
old town are a great place to spend an
afternoon exploring. Photo by
Farkasné Molnár Mária.
BritishTravelJournal.com 27
10 OF THE BEST
ULTIMATE
BRITISH
BUCKET LIST
We have all been deprived of holidays, so the
ADVERTISEMENT
next one needs to be good! Get booking now
with our ultimate wanderlust — destinations!
NOT AVAILABLE IN THE PREVIEW
Words | Emma O'Reilly
FOR THE MOTOR ENTHUSIAST
The Torridon: Location, location… This Victorian former
hunting lodge in the Scottish Highlands certainly has it,
sitting in 58 acres of parkland on the edge of a glittering sea
loch, encircled by moutains. What’s inside isn’t bad either,
with cosy lounges and bars and exquisite food to suit your
mood – fine dining or casual. You won’t be short of things
to do. The hotel can arrange adventures, such as taking a
classic Morgan car for a spin around part of the North Coast
500. It’s one of the most spectacular driving routes in the
world, with sightseeing enroute, like Dunrobin Castle with its
gardens inspired by Versailles, and the woodland waterfalls
the Fairy Glen at Rosemarkie. Other options include munro
baggings walks and stargazing with a qualified astronomer.
The night skies here are truly magical. thetorridon.com
British Travel Journal top tip End your day with a dram
1of whisky or the hotel’s own-brand gin by the fire.
à
2
FOR THE AVIATOR
Goodwood: Goodwood is celebrated for its
motor racing but this 12,000 acre sporting estate
has much more to offer – including exciting flying
experiences. These operate from Goodwood
Aerodrome, used as a Battle of Britain station
during World War II. During the Harvard Warbird
Fly & Dining package, for example, you can take
to the air in – and even have a go at flying - this
iconic 1943 plane, once used for training Spitfire
pilots. Afterwards, there’s a Champange lunch
at The Kennels – former home to the Duke of
Richmond’s hounds, now a rather smart estate
members’ club. Or, for the really keen there’s
Flying Through the Ages - a full day experiencing
three different planes plus a behind-the-scenes
tour of the aerodrome and meeting with the
aviation teams. At the end of the day, retire to
the Goodwood Hotel, with its restaurants, health
club and two golf courses. goodwood.com
British Travel Journal top tip For an extra
special stay, book the exclusive use ten bedroom
Hound Lodge, which has a private chef and butler.
3
30 BritishTravelJournal.com
4
FOR THE COASTAL SCENERY LOVER
Luxury Irish Tours: The Northern Irish coast
encompasses some of Britain’s most interesting and
wildly beautiful scenery. Let specialists organise
a bespoke tour around the top sights, including
a private driver in a luxury vehicle (or self drive if
you prefer) plus accommodation in five star hotels
or castles, private, behind-the-scenes tours, fine
dining and, of course, visits to all the ‘blockbuster’
sights – the Glens of Antrim, Giant’s Causeway
and Dunluce Castle to name but a few.
luxuryirishtours.com
British Travel Journal top tip Special interests can
also be catered for – if you want to see every single
Game of Thrones location, here, your wish is their
command. Or play golf at the top courses, including
the world famous Portrush…all is possible.
FOR THE CRUISER
Abercrombie & Kent: Not being allowed to visit
even the next county has got us all gagging to
get out and explore the UK. The Tradewind
Voyage gives the chance to do that, on the
Golden Horizon – the world’s largest squarerigged
sailing vessel. The design is based on
a traditional clipper ship, with wood panelled
interiors alongside modern facilities - think
three swimming pools and a spa! During the
13 night trip, the many destinations to explore
include Glenveagh National Park in Donegal,
with its mountains and lakes, the exciting city of
Liverpool, some of the tiny uninhabited islands
in the Isles of Scilly, the lovely little Cornish town
of St Ives and the Channel Islands of Jersey and
Guernsey. abercrombiekent.co.uk
British Travel Journal top tip Many of the
optional excursions include cycling or walking.
Take advantage to counteract the effects of
the copious onboard food and wine.
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 31
5FOR
THE ULTIMATE
ADVENTURE
WILDNIS: For a five-star wilderness
experience with ex-British Army Majors
in restored Land Rover Defenders, this
new luxury adventure will take you on an
unforgettable pioneering journey through
the Scottish Highlands! Think packrafting,
abseiling, climbing and open-fire feasts.
From reaching the summit of Ben A’an,
scrambling along Aonach Eagach
ridgeline, two Munro summits, to a sea
kayaking trip in Arisaig with sheltered
sea lochs, countless isles and skerries and
hidden beaches. Feeling brave? Then
head to a remote quarry, and in the style
of SAS: Who Dares Wins try a front abseil,
descending cliff faces – you daredevil you!
Every evening at basecamp you’ll be fed
like Robert the Bruce, as Wildnis’ private
chef, Tom Byrom rustles together whole
grouse ‘porcetta’, venison shoulder with
a foraged nettle sauce and a Scottish
seafood platter while you share stories by
the campfire with a dram of single malt.
A 4-night expedition, including guiding,
all activities, all meals, Land Rover vehicle
hire and transfers costs from £3,500pp
sharing. Departure spring 2021.
wildnis.co.uk
British Travel Journal top tip Get
involved in the cooking too, Tom offers
masterclasses on foraging, butchery and
open-fire cooking.
à
6FOR THE ROYALIST
Dream Escape: As with a Savile Row suit, the
team at Dream Escape can tailor-make the most
majestic royal tours. A sample itinerary is their
England Royal Residences & Retreats – a 10-day
private jaunt around significant royal landmarks.
Mooch around Buckingham Palace, Windsor
Castle and Sandringham House and take a
behind-the-scenes look at Clarence House, home
to Charles and Camilla. Ogle the Crown Jewels
at the Tower of London, watch the Changing of
the Guard and visit Westminster Abbey, where
William and Kate got hitched. There are trips
to shops which provide the royal households, a
chance to shop in Eton and Champagne boat
trips along the Thames, including one ending in a
meal at the three Michelin-starred Waterside Inn,
and stays in luxury accommodation - it’s a trip fit
for a King or Queen. dreamescape.co.uk
British Travel Journal top tip Plan your trip
for May or September and it’s possible to tour
Eton College (William and Harry’s Alma Mater).
© GETTY IMAGES
FOR THE TRAIN SPOTTER
Jules Verne: You don’t really need to be a train
geek to enjoy the Tracks of the Welsh Dragon.
This steam train journey will transport anyone
back to the romantic Golden Age of travel, with
its traditional Pullman carriages, hauled by
the 61306 Mayflower locomotive. The first two
days of the four-day trip are spent chugging
through the English, then the Welsh countryside,
departing from London. You can wistfully watch
the country’s most dramatic scenery drift past -
including the Camarthenshire Hills, the Brecon
Beacons, The Black Mountains and the Lleyn
Peninsula. Come the evening guests disembark to
stay in a hotel – the first night in Shrewsbury, the
remaining three in the ‘fantasy’ Italianate village
of Portmeirion, from where excursions take you to
explore the spectacular Snowdonia area before
the homeward train journey. vjv.com
British Travel Journal top tip No need to
climb Wales’ highest peak – take the Snowdon
7Railway to the summit.
34 BritishTravelJournal.com
FOR WILDLIFE LOVERS
Hebridean Princess: The Western Isles of
Scotland are famed for their blinding white
8beaches, edge of the world feeling and
out of this world wildlife - golden eagles,
minke whales and otters are just some of
the species you might see, on or offshore,
from the Hebridean Princess. This boutique
cruise ship hosts a maximum 50 guests,
and her small size means she can access
more remote spots, unreachable by larger
vessels. On shore, experienced guides can
take you to see the wildlife plus sights like
the ancient Callanish standing stones and
Colonsay House Gardens. If you prefer to
do your own thing, grab one of the ship’s
bikes and set off on your own explorations.
The Western Isles Wildlife cruise runs from
18-26 May 2021. hebridean.co.uk
British Travel Journal top tip If you
miss the boat (pardon the pun) this year,
there’s a very similar cruise next year.
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 35
9
© TREVOR WAUGH
FOR THE ARTIST
Lundy Island Sketchbook Safari: Whether keen
amateur or complete beginner, then an opportunity
to – ahem – brush up on your technique is on the
Lundy Island Sketchbook Safari with Trevor Waugh.
Lots of time in the great outdoors (or en plein air if
you want to sound like a real artist) is guaranteed,
sketching the landscape and wildlife of this tiny,
quiet island off the North Devon coast. The bird
life is particularly prolific in the early summer, when
you may even get the chance to paint puffins and
their chicks. Trevor will demonstrate water colour
techniques and tips for capturing animals and
there will be both group and individual tuition.
Accommodation is in a large house overlooking a
wooded valley, with views out to sea. The trip runs
for four nights from 14 June 2021.
wildlifeworldwide.com
British Travel Journal top tip Snorkel at
Gannet’s Bay and you may be lucky enough to
swim with seals.
36 BritishTravelJournal.com
10
FOR THE HORTICULTURALIST
Sisley Garden Tours: Green fingered readers may be
interested in the brand new ‘secret gardens’ tours
introduced by Sisley Garden Tours. These Exclusive
Escapes for Garden Lovers allow small groups
(maximum 12 people) to visit some of the best private
gardens in the UK, many never open to the public. The
stays are each based at just one comfortable hotel and
then gloriously unhurried days are spent delving into
these stunning gardens, chatting to their owners and
then getting back to your hotel for some wining and
dining… maybe the odd gardening anecdote! The tours
will run May to September, when the gardens are at
their spring and summer best. Destinations for 2021 are
Cornwall, Dorset, the Wye Valley, North York Moors and
the Cotswolds. sisley.co.uk/vip
British Travel Journal top tip Do the North York
Moors tour in June and find out how to make the best
summer cocktails using herbs from your garden!
BritishTravelJournal.com 37
PHOTO CREDIT: CLAIRE TAKACS
New for 2021 – Exclusive Escapes for Garden Lovers. Available for booking now.
+44 (0)1423 396506 I [email protected] I www.sisley.co.uk/vip
NESTLED IN THE ROLLING VALLEYS OF
DARTMOOR NATIONAL PARK,
YOU WILL FIND AWARD WINNING LUXURY AT BOVEY CASTLE
Escape to Bovey Castle
Set in 275 acres of beautiful countryside within Devon’s Dartmoor National Park.
The hotel offers 60 bedrooms and 22 self catering country lodges tucked away in the
grounds, fashioned from local granite and vaulted with English oak. Smith’s Brasserie,
luxury ‘Elan Spa’, award-winning 18 hole championship golf course and an array of
outdoor pursuits and activities.
@boveycastlehotel @BoveyCastle /BoveyCastleHotel
WWW.BOVEYCASTLE.COM | 01647 445000
BritishTravelJournal - 120mmx191mm - 17_09_2020.indd 1 17/09/2020 13:37
LOOKING AHEAD...
CULTURAL AGENDA
Visitors are encouraged to always check individual attraction
websites for the latest information, as details are subject to change à
BritishTravelJournal.com 39
LONDON
Alice: Curiouser and Curiouser
The iconic novels of Alice in Wonderland and
Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll are
brought to life at the Victoria and Albert Museum
in London until 31 December 2021. With over
300 objects, the high concept exhibition, Alice:
Curiouser and Curiouser, takes visitors through
a rabbit hole from the 1865 manuscript to the
novels’ various adaptations into film, ballet, art,
fashion and more. Disney’s cartoon is an example.
Highlights include early illustrations, showing
how the White Rabbit and other characters were
developed and a virtual reality game of croquet
against the Queen of Hearts. ◆
vam.ac.uk
SCOTLAND
Night Fever:
Designing Club Culture
Ever since Bianca Jagger rode a white horse
inside New York nightclub, Studio 54,
in 1977, clubs have captured the cultural
zeitgeist. They have also shaped people’s
identity, says Kirsty Hassard, curator of
Night Fever: Designing Club Culture at
the V&A Dundee, which explores clubbing
experience from Berlin to Glasgow since
the Sixties, to 5 September 2021. Among
photographs, films, clothes and more
that evoke the vibe, like a disco gold lamé
Halston dress worn at Studio 54, there
are also objects from the clubs themselves
including the Hacienda’s mirror ball and
the papier-mâché submarine from above
the bar at Glasgow’s Sub Club. ◆
vam.ac.uk/dundee
40 BritishTravelJournal.com
We're visiting
LONDON
Pantechnicon
Sachi is ready to open in Pantechnicon, a Japanese-Nordic food,
drink and design emporium in Belgravia. It complements the eclectic
shops, selling books to bikes, exclusive products and made-to-order
furniture – and the Nordic restaurant, Eldr, with roof terrace.
pantechnicon.com
LONDON
Royal Albert Hall’s
150th birthday
The Royal Albert Hall celebrates its 150th
birthday on 29 March. Opened by Queen
Victoria in 1871, this Kensington landmark
has hosted gigs, operas, ballets and more
as well as the annual summer music festival,
the BBC Proms. So much more than just a
beautiful Victorian venue, it’s the place of
countless performances, stories and memories
from countless visitors – where people have
been singing, dancing, laughing and crying
together since 1871. In March The Who
plays with a full orchestra. ◆
royalalberthall.com
CIRQUE DU SOLEIL, LUZIA, 2019 © ANNABEL MOELLER
Editor loves
LONDON
LUCY DAWKINS © TATE
Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirror Rooms
For a dazzling experience after months of lockdown, head to
Tate Modern. The Bankside gallery has cleared two rooms for
polka dot queen, Yayoi Kusama’s immersive installations, on
until 27 March 2022. Her signature dots go psychedelic and
flash in ‘Filled with the Brilliance of Life’, whilst rotating
chandeliers shimmer seemingly into infinity in ‘Chandelier of
Grief’. Kusama’s infinity rooms have become a global
phenomenon. Prepare to be revitalised. ◆
tate.org.uk
BritishTravelJournal.com 41
OXFORDSHIRE
Blenheim Palace Food Festival
For a lively food experience in an august setting, head to
Woodstock in Oxfordshire for the Blenheim Palace Food
Festival from 29 to 31 May. Whet your culinary skills and
tastebuds by watching the demonstrations or listening
to talks from top chefs like Jean-Christophe Novelli, a
previous participant. Over 100 regional food and drink
specialists will attempt to tickle your palate, showcasing
their gourmet produce, from burgers to craft beers. You
might even bump into your favourite Bake Off contestant.
Located by the Pleasure Gardens, take a miniature
train to visit the palace too with its paintings, porcelain,
tapestries and more. ◆
blenheimpalace.com
LINCOLNSHIRE
Burghley House
When Burghley House in Lincolnshire re-opens on 20 March,
the 16th century stately home will be celebrating a milestone:
500 years since the birth of its designer, William Cecil, the
first Baron Burghley, Elizabeth I’s Lord High Treasurer and
chief adviser. It’s still the family home. To celebrate the birth
and lasting legacy of Lord Burghley there will be a series of
special events taking place throughout 2021 providing a
fascinating insight into the man and his legacy.
Burghley is one of the largest and grandest houses of the
first Elizabethan age, Cecil's life as the most powerful man
in the court of Elizabeth I was both eventful and effective,
and helped to shape the history of the British Isles. His
lasting legacy reaches far beyond the building of Burghley
House to the magnificent collection of works of art from
across the globe gathered by his descendants. Book for
exhibitions to live music to 31 October. ◆
burghley.co.uk
CORNWALL
Charlestown Harbour
In Cornwall why not try your hand at traditional sailing? Jump aboard
one of Charlestown Harbour’s fleet of traditional wooden boats for a
day sailing experience, join a sailing holiday or commission your own
private charter. Learn to hoist the sails, trim the rig, take the wheel
and set a course along Cornwall’s coastline – or sit back and relax
with wind under sail and spot for dolphins! 2-day cruise to Cawsand
(sailing on Anny, a 1930’s Topsail Schooner) in April 2021 priced from
£210 per person, including all your food aboard ship. ◆
charlestownharbour.com
© JAMES PEARCE/LEXISPLACE
42 BritishTravelJournal.com
We're ordering
DELIVERED NATIONWIDE
Northcote At Home Gourmet Box
If you are missing top-notch Michelin-starred cuisine, Northcote in
Lancashire’s Ribble Valley has created new dishes using finest seasonal
ingredients (£105 for two people), courtesy of creative Executive Chef,
Lisa Goodwin-Allen and her team, to enjoy at your own dinner table.
northcote.com/at-home/gourmet-boxes
WILTSHIRE
As seen in Bridgerton
Wilton House
Easter marks the re-opening of Wilton House, the Palladian
Wiltshire home of the Earls of Pembroke, rebuilt by celebrated
architects, Inigo Jones and John Webb in 1647. The ornate
rooms may seem familiar, often acting as television and
film backdrops. Most recently on Netflix, Wilton House
was used to create four different residences in the period
drama series Bridgerton, and the Double Cube Room with
its Old Master paintings and Chippendale mirrors are the
Buckingham Palace interiors for Netflix’s The Crown. Other
must visits include the Gothic Cloisters where Napoleon I’s
dispatch box, a lock of Queen Elizabeth I’s hair and more are
displayed. Roam around the 21 acre parkland or head for the
Holbein Porch, the house’s original Tudor entrance. ◆
wiltonhouse.co.uk
© TIM GOODMAN
DAVID HOCKNEY, NO. 299, 29TH APRIL 2020 AND NO.
339, 18TH MAY 2020 IPAD DRAWINGS © DAVID HOCKNEY
LONDON
David Hockney: The Arrival of
Spring, Normandy
After two blockbuster shows at the Royal Academy of Arts (a
50 year retrospective in 2012 and portraits in 2016), David
Hockney returns with vibrant new work. This time, he reveals
his sprawling garden in Normandy through over 100 iPad
drawings created between 11 February and 4 July last year,
using his Brushes app, upgraded to his own specifications,
depicting trees, flower beds, his home and more. ◆
royalacademy.org.uk
BritishTravelJournal.com 43
MEET THE MAKERS...
BLACK
COW
PURE MILK VODKA
Visiting farms deep in the West Dorset countryside, it’s not unusual
to discover examples of innovation meeting necessity. But would
you expect to find the world’s only vodka made from cows’ milk?
We meet the trailblazers responsible...
Words | Karyn Noble
“
WEST DORSET IS A GREAT place to visit, it’s a lovely
gentle landscape. But a lot of people drive past us or go
on to Cornwall, and there’s a lot to do here.” Paul Archard
(aka ‘Archie’), co-founder of Black Cow Vodka, is sitting
in the custom-designed Bar + Kitchen adjoining the distillery in Childhay. He
casually reels off the outstanding cheese, cured meat and wine producers of
the famed agricultural region; the flourishing arts scene; the local creatives
making knives and “amazing things out of metal”. But what about the little
project he has going with his dairy farmer neighbour, Jason Barber? “We set
out to make the world’s best vodka, that’s what we set out to do, basically,”
chimes in Jason. “And we’re pretty much there, to be honest.”
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 45
WHEN WHEY IS NOT A WASTE
PRODUCT
Jason’s family have been making
Cheddar cheese since 1833, which
makes the Barbers the oldest surviving
Cheddar cheesemakers in the world.
‘Basically, my cows are milked twice
a day and I sell the milk to my family,”
says Jason. “They want the protein [the
curds] to make the cheese and we want
the lactose [from the whey] because
it’s the sugar that makes the alcohol.”
They venture they’ve made one of the
most sustainable vodkas on the planet,
given whey’s reputation as a waste
material. “Typically, whey is a rather
forgotten-about product,” says Archie.
“Especially in this country.
Pictured previous
spread: Black Cow
vodka founders
Paul Archard (left)
and Jason Barber
(right). Pictured
above: The Black
Cow Distillery
Bar + Kitchen.
Pictured right: The
distillery - where the
magic happens.
The Italians really know how to
use whey. We end up feeding it to the
pigs. What we’ve done is we’ve taken
an almost valueless by-product from
cheese-making production and turned
it into something wonderful.”
The whey is fermented with a
special yeast that converts the lactose
into alcohol. This milky beer is distilled
in a pot called Ermintrude (named after
the cow from children’s TV show The
Magic Roundabout), then blended and
triple-filtered into a very pure, smooth
and velvety vodka. The realisation that
they didn’t need to add water was a
significant breakthrough texturally
and taste-wise. “There’s a real lack of
minerality,” says Archie, “It’s incredibly
46 BritishTravelJournal.com
“
Not needing to add water was
a significant breakthrough... It’s
incredibly soft. It’s got this creamy
texture and that’s because
everything comes from milk
”
soft. It’s got this creamy texture and that’s because
everything in that bottle comes from milk.”
While it was initially difficult to get their distilling
licence (“When we talked to HMRC, they didn’t
know quite how to deal with it”, says Archie), they
give kudos to “maverick” Julian Temperley from
Somerset Cider Brandy Company (see page 84) who
obtained the UK’s first-ever cider-distilling licence, for
paving the way and breaking the monopoly of larger
distilleries. The first bottle of Black Cow Vodka was
sold in May 2012 and then it was a matter of winning
over bartenders and distributors. “When we first went
to the bars, there were probably about 12 vodkas on
the back bars,” says Jason. “Now there’s probably
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 47
“
Everyone makes Espresso
Martinis with liqueur – Kahlua or
Tia Maria – we don’t - and yet, you
still get the most perfect Espresso
Martini with the perfect head.
”
five: you’ll find a rye one, a wheat one, a milk one. Now
it’s all about the raw material and I like to think that we
had something to do with that.” The vodka is now sold
in 17 countries. “Once we get people to try it, they’re
normally converted to it,” says Archie. “We have a very
good conversion rate.”
THE FOODIES’ VODKA
‘What grows together goes together’ is the ethos
behind their recommendation of pairing their pure
milk vodka with cheese. “We really see ourselves as the
foodie’s vodka of choice and it’s a great thing to have
with food,” says Archie. “In Poland and Russia, people
think they knock back vodka as shots. They do but
they’ve always got little bits of food, whether it’s nuts
or dried fish. One of the best things is cheese. Jason’s
family made this incredible Black Cow Deluxe Cheddar
that we sell at Fortnum & Mason. It goes really well
with a bit of Jarlsberg or a bit of Brie or Stilton or
anything. It also goes really well with seafood, it’s great
with oysters, it’s great with prosciutto.”
They have branched out into a sustainably
produced English Strawberries Vodka (launched in the
summer of 2019) as well as a Christmas Spirit that was
much lauded by locked-down Brits across the winter
of 2020. But bartenders are particularly impressed
with the purity of the original spirit, which lends itself
to holding fragile flavours very well. “Everyone makes
Espresso Martinis with liqueur – Kahlua or Tia Maria
– we don’t,” says Archie. “The reason why they do
that is to make it sweeter and because they want it to
froth up, so it’s got a head like a Guinness. But if we
just put in maple syrup and make an espresso, you put
them with our vodka in a shaker, and you get the most
perfect Espresso Martini with the perfect head like a
Guinness, and that holds because of the lack of the
minerality in the water. Restaurants love it because
they don’t have to pay for the shot of the liqueur, which
means they make a better profit on it as well.”
48 BritishTravelJournal.com
THE VISITOR EXPERIENCE
While the team have missed hosting distillery tours
during Britain’s COVID-19 lockdown, there’s usually a
variety of idyllic, bucolic experiences for food and drink
lovers. “We’d go out on the farm and take you around
the cows,” says Jason. “Have plenty of drinks, see a bit
of the countryside.”
Acclaimed local chef and restaurateur Mark Hix is
also a frequent visitor to the Black Cow Bar + Kitchen,
having designed the three-course lunch that’s part
of the Distillery Experience, which also includes a
cocktail-making class in addition to the distillery tour.
“Mark puts a recipe together for us with locally sourced
food,” says Archie. “We integrate the vodka and the
cheese. There’s hand-picked scallops out of the bay at
the moment or someone’s shooting rabbits or picking
mushrooms.”
Whatever the future brings, Archie and Jason
remain as inventive as ever, particularly when it comes
to cocktail creations. “I would love to do a Gorgonzola
cheese wash martini with a pear infusion,” says Jason.
“Do you think the world is ready for it? We could do it.”
While Archie concedes that he and Jason “always
like to think quite big”, despite their enthusiasm and
ambition, neither can have truly anticipated the
outcome of a casual chat in 2002 with one of the dairy
workers, Jozef. Jason was gauging Jozef’s opinion on
their latest distilling experiment, an eau de vie: “he’s
Polish, so I said to him, come on Jozef, how do you
make vodka, it’s your national drink? And he said
‘anything with sugar in it’. And I thought, hold up,
JASON AND ARCHIE’S DORSET
FOOD AND ACCOMMODATION TIPS
–
THE FOX INN, CORSCOMBE
“We already love going to Mark Hix’s restaurant
(The Oyster & Fish House in Lyme Regis:
theoysterandfishhouse.co.uk, but he’s just taken over
this pub, which locals have been going to for decades,
and it’s amazing.”
thefoxinncorscombe.co.uk
BRASSICA RESTAURANT,
BEAMINSTER
“Our friend Cass is the chef there and the owner, with
his wife Louise. Foodwise, it’s really good.”
brassicarestaurant.co.uk
THE SEASIDE BOARDING HOUSE,
BRIDPORT
“Run by our friend Mary-Lou Sturridge, who used to
be the MD of the Groucho Club [in London]. She’s set
this up, which is really a hotel. It’s a really good place
to stay, very relaxing, right on the sea”
theseasideboardinghouse.com
THE OLLEROD, BEAMINSTER
“The Ollerod, which is the name of a flower, is a
wonderful place to stay, the food’s really good, the
bar’s really lively and the rooms are really nice.”
theollerod.co.uk
CRAFTY CAMPING, HOLDITCH
“Guy Mallinson, who is a friend of ours, has built
absolute luxury treehouses, which have got beautiful
bathrooms in them: proper five-star treehouses.”
mallinson.co.uk
HARRY MAY DEEP SEA & MACKEREL
FISHING TRIPS, LYME REGIS
“Harry takes people out on day trips fishing, which is
excellent if you want to come and catch your own fish
and eat it.”
mackerelfishinglymeregis.com
milk’s got sugar in it.” Archie remembers the two of
them looking out the kitchen window towards Jason’s
herd of 250 grass-fed dairy cows. “We took one
look at those lovely ladies and I looked at Jason and
saw a lightbulb go on over his head.” It took years of
experimentation to get them to a unique product: a
vodka not just derived from milk, but made entirely
from it.
BritishTravelJournal.com 49
THE
ICKWORTH
Nestled in the heart of the Suffolk countryside,
surrounded by acres of protected woodland within
a National Trust landscape, The Ickworth is a
sumptuous family retreat like no other.
Words | Jessica Way
50 BritishTravelJournal.com
PICTURED
LEFT-RIGHT:
THE ICKWORTH
HOTEL FROM
THE ITALIANATE
GARDEN;
CYCLING IN
THE ESTATE
GROUNDS; FUN
SPLASHING
IN MUDDY
PUDDLES;
THE LIBRARY
It’s been a difficult year for all, living
through a global pandemic, and
an especially confusing time for our
younger generation. If there’s one
proven remedy that’s always worked
for my children it’s getting them outside,
enjoying the countryside and exploring the
great outdoors.
The simple pleasure little ones receive
from splashing in muddy puddles,
clambering up ancient trees, being in
nature and breathing in the crisp clean
air - it’s both therapy and family-time at its
best.
Set in an unrivalled location, 1,800
acres of beautiful parkland and rolling
Suffolk countryside, there’s no better
place to spend quality time than this
exquisite country house. The Ickworth
Hotel, which dates back to the Domesday
book (when it was merely one of hundreds
of assets belonging to the Abbey of
Bury St Edmunds), is not only one of
the Luxury Family Hotels’ five stunning
hotels, renowned for their individual
character and exceptional family-focused
hospitality - but it’s also one of just three
independently-owned British hotels that
are also National Trust properties (the
other two being Cliveden House, Berkshire
and The Causeway Hotel, County Antrim).
The National Trust, who own just five
hotels themselves, (The Causeway Hotel,
Northern Ireland, Hunter's Inn, Exmoor
National Park and the Historic House trio,
Bodysgallen Hall, North Wales, Hartwell
House Hotel, Buckinghamshire and
Middlethorpe Hall Hotel, North Yorkshire)
is Europe’s largest conservation charity.
The trust - which celebrated its 125-year
anniversary in 2020 - care for hundreds of
historic buildings and miles of coastline,
woodlands, countryside, gardens and
precious collections throughout the British
Isles.
The Ickworth, just two hours from
London, is a preserved masterpiece of
Italian-inspired architecture, and said to
be one of the first of its kind in the UK.
Its most distinguishing feature,
over 100 feet high, is its very own
grand Italianate Rotunda.
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 51
“
The Ickworth is a preserved masterpiece of Italian-inspired
architecture, and said to be one of the first of its kind in the UK.
”
The long straight driveway leading you
directly to it only enhances the wow-factor,
watch the kids’ excitement grow as it gets
seemingly larger as you edge your way closer
on arrival.
This impressive building was the brainchild
of Frederick Augustus, 4th Earl of Bristol
and the Bishop of Derry (also known as the
Earl-Bishop) who wanted to create a house
for his family and provide galleries for his art
collection. The East Wing of the house is today
the hotel, while the West Wing is a visitor
centre and café.
There are daily tours exploring the
magnificent Italianate palace while
uncovering the stories behind Ickworth, and
the flamboyant pride of the 4th Earl of Bristol.
A multi-million-pound major conservation
project mending the Rotunda roof was
in progress during our stay, and we were,
unfortunately, unable to delve into the Hervey
family’s legacy, but will be sure to return at a
time when we can see the Rotunda back to its
original glory.
The parkland and gardens at Ickworth
proved more than enough to keep us occupied.
Maps are available from reception providing
routes ranging from a sedate stroll along the
half-mile Lady Geraldine walk to an energetic
seven-mile bike ride along Grand Tour. Armed
with a GPS device you can even try geocaching
here (basically a modern-day treasure hunt
around the parkland!) Worried you don’t have
a pushchair designed for countryside walks?
PICTURED
LEFT-RIGHT:
THE ROTUNDA;
ENTRANCE TO THE
ICKWORTH HOTEL;
OUR EDITOR
JESSICA TAKES A
BIKE RIDE ALONG
THE RIVER; THE
ROUND HOUSE IN
THE ICKWORTH
STATE GROUNDS;
THE RIVER LINNET;
THE WALLED
GARDEN
52 BritishTravelJournal.com
Don’t worry, iCandy’s are available for complimentary
hire from the hotel. We hired bikes (stabilisers and
toddler seats available), and began our journey through
Deer Park where Ickworth’s resident herd of deer roam
free. Look out for Parson's Pond on your right before
passing rows of old oak trees and St. Mary’s Church
on your left, the oldest building on the estate. Recently
restored, here you can see a 13th century altar and 14th
century wall painting of the Annunciation of Angel
Gabriel.
Take some time to explore The Walled Garden and
canal lake, the 1st Earl’s ‘springe’ garden, whose son
John so eloquently describes “lavish Nature’s favourite
Blessings flow, and all the seasons all their Sweets
bestow”. Discover the Earl's Summer House and look out
for the tin man scarecrow made from recycled objects.
There’s an abundance of flowers, wildlife, apple trees,
and other fruits and vegetables growing - it’s the perfect
picnic spot.
Carry on along the river and pick up the Monument
Trail, passing grazing sheep and miles of beautiful
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 53
IMAGES LEFT: THE
CONSERVATORY;
VINTAGE WINE
RECOMMENDED BY AN
EXPERT SOMMELIER;
HEDGEROW BAKEWELL
TART, VANILLA ICE
CREAM, TOASTED
MARZIPAN AND SOUR
CHERRY
woodland. If you’re lucky you might see deer as you glide
through Stoney Hill and Lownde Wood. Pass the Round
House to your left, a mini cottage resembling a folky
version of the rotunda before heading over Fairy Lake
bridge. From here you can choose to turn left along the
River Linnet back towards The Walled Garden, or pick up
another trail - Lady Hervey’s Walk which takes you through
Fontainebleau Grove and Adkins Wood then back to the
hotel entrance.
As a guest staying at the hotel you are welcomed to
explore the estate and discover the house both by day,
(with free access to the Ickworth National Trust site), and,
as night falls, with exclusive after-hours access to the
wonderful Italianate Gardens (from 6pm until 9pm) via a
gate behind the house.
Spend your time in this magnificent landscape gently
strolling the neat pathways, lined with à manicured
hedges, lush lawns, beautiful borders and towering cypress
trees. Walking in the footsteps of aristocratic ladies and
gentlemen, who in the gardens’ heyday, would spend their
leisure time here playing croquet or promenading on the
raised terrace, will leave you feeling invigorated. And as
Lady Mary MacRae, granddaughter of the 4th Marquess
remarked, wandering through the blossomed trees in the
gardens in spring is "like walking through lace".
The children will enjoy playing ‘find the giraffe
sculptures’, and if they still have energy left to burn, there’s
a slide and swing in the fairy garden, cars, trampolines,
sandpit, scooters and scavenger hunts. We opted for the
indoor heated swimming pool, which is well stocked with
floats, foam noodles, and everything else your little ones
might need.
And this is certainly what sets Luxury Family Hotels
apart from other great British hotels, being family-focused
is at the heart of ‘everything’ they do. Their attention to
detail is unsurpassed.
From every item of baby equipment you could possibly
need, including cots, nappy bins and bottle warmers,
fresh morning and evening milk delivered to your room,
free childcare each day, to collecting your children and
entertaining them with a Sunday morning breakfast club,
so that you can enjoy a lie-in.
When dinner time comes, there’s a baby-monitoring
system available in the room - the option for an earlier
Children’s High Tea, ‘Younger Ones’ menus, together with
‘mocktails’, and a chef on hand to provide puréed food.
54 BritishTravelJournal.com
Older children will love making friends in the Games
Room, watching the latest blockbusters in the cinema
room (daily at 6pm) or challenging themselves to a
game of tennis.
As this is a hotel that makes couple time easy, be
sure to book yourself a table for two at Frederick’s -
the hotel’s two rosette fine dining restaurant. Spend
a romantic evening for two dining by candlelight,
sipping vintages recommended by an expert sommelier,
sampling cuisine based on seasonal ingredients from
local and artisan suppliers. The À la carte menu is
every bit as sensational as the setting, overlooking the
Italianate Gardens, including tandoori spiced scallops,
truffle and parmesan chips, King oysters, Shakshuka
and decadent desserts - the Hedgerow Bakewell tart
with vanilla ice cream, toasted marzipan and sour
cherry was divine!
Another highlight of our stay was our bedroom
‘Grand Tour’ - decorated exquisitely in period style,
IMAGES ABOVE: WELCOMING GUESTS TO THE ICKWORTH;
FREDERICK’S - THE HOTEL’S TWO ROSETTE FINE DINING
RESTAURANT; THE LOUNGE; GRAND TOUR PERIOD-STYLE
BATHROOM OVERLOOKING THE ITALIANATE GARDENS
complete with an 8ft bed and views (also overlooking
the Italianate Gardens), we felt like the Lord and Lady
of the manor! The hotel boasts 27 family suites and
interconnecting bedrooms, or for something more
private book The Lodge - the former Dower House set
on the estate just half a mile from the main hotel, with
eight further apartments and three double rooms set
amongst four acres of gardens.
Rooms from £199 per night B&B, +44 (0)208 0765555
luxuryfamilyhotels.co.uk
BritishTravelJournal.com 55
ISLE OF ISLAY...
LORD
OF THE ISLES
Islay was once home to Scotland’s fearsome
Lord of the Isles. Today it is one of the premiere
whisky-producing areas in the world.
Words | Adrian Mourby
IN THE FAR west of Scotland, only 25 miles from the coast of
Northern Ireland, lies a whisky-producing island known as
Islay. At 239 square miles it is slightly smaller than Singapore
(260 sqm), yet this mossy, windswept rock is home to
seven of Scotland’s greatest distilleries: Ardbeg, Bowmore,
Bruichladdich, Bunnahabhain, Caol Ila, Lagavulin, and Laphroaig,
as well as two of the newest, Kilchoman and Ardnahoe.
Long-term and passionate lovers of whisky, my wife and I arrived
one autumn evening in Islay’s Port Askaig after a rainy, two-hour
crossing from the mainland. As our ferry squeezed slowly up the
narrow channel that separates Islay from its sister island, Jura, it
was already growing dark and the tiny port was lit up. Caledonian
MacBrayne, the ferry company that keeps Scotland’s islands
supplied in all weathers, is very efficient at loading and offloading.
We were swiftly marshalled off, and followed every other car
up the steep harbour road. Dark, flat moorland dotted with white
cottages led us south to Bowmore, Islay’s capital.
56 BritishTravelJournal.com
© PAUL TOMKINS/VISIT SCOTLAND/SCOTTISH VIEWPOINT
Pictured above right
inset: On board
the MV Finlaggan
Caledonian
MacBrayne ferry as
she sails through the
Sound of Islay en
route to Islay
Close to Bowmore stands Islay House,
which was built by Sir Hugh Campbell
of Cawdor in the eighteenth century.
Sir Hugh’s great grandfather, Sir
John Campbell had been granted the
whole of Islay by the Scottish Crown.
His mission for King James VI was to
tame the troublesome local lords who
ruled the islands in almost complete
independence. He succeeded.
Various owners added to Islay House
over the centuries until it became the
island’s grandest home, resembling
a white Balmoral. In the twentieth
century its owner, Lord Margadale
hosted not only the Queen but several
Conservative prime ministers at his
home. Since 2014 it has been a hotel,
with one of the top floor bedrooms
where the Iron Lady often stayed
named “Thatcher”.
We were delighted to abandon
our mud-bespattered car outside the
front door and step into an entrance
hall with a blazing log fire. There was
a whisky decanter and two glasses
waiting in our bedroom. Dinner was
in the Jib Door, a gracious, antlered
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 57
©VISITBRITAIN/TOMO BREJC
“
The next morning Islay was
bathed in sunshine as we relaxed on
the old leather sofas in the drawing
room and planned our attack on the
island’s distilleries.
”
Islay House Hotel
graveyard of the ruined Kilchoman church. Anthony
Wills, who started this distillery in 2005 chose the
site because it was the best farmland on Islay and he
wanted to grow as much of the barley he needed on
site. There are signs in the fields nearby telling you
how much grain and therefore how much whisky each
produces (most Islay distilleries buy in their barley from
the mainland).
Kilchoman has a lovely modern visitor centre with
an elegant glass and metal log-burning stove in
the middle. This was welcome because already the
weather had shifted and rain was blowing up the loch
from the Atlantic.
That afternoon we spent some time in Bowmore,
an eighteenth century new town of low, white-washed
buildings - built by the Campbells on the other side
of Loch Indaal. This is Islay’s capital and also where
the famous Bowmore distillery is located. We visited
the unusual Round Church and Celtic Stores which
sells fairisle sweaters, seawashed paintings, unusual
souvenirs like the Islay version of Monopoly, and many
books about the island. From photo essays to poetry
collections to highly-detailed history books, it’s clear
that Islay has inspired a lot of writers.
Dinner that evening was at the Bowmore Hotel, an old
stone inn whose most recent extension was built in 1912.
In the tartan-carpeted dining room, the chairs were made
of local ash and elm. The array of fresh seafood on the
menu was impressive and owner Big Peter MacLellan is
renowned as an expert on Scotch whisky.
dining room added to the house by the prolific
architect – and aristocratic favourite - Detmar Blow at
the beginning of the twentieth century. (The restaurant
gets its name from the fact that you access it through a
hidden doorway in the panelling of the old house.)
The next morning Islay was bathed in sunshine as
we relaxed on the old leather sofas in the drawing
room and planned our attack on the island’s
distilleries. Eventually we decided to drive west round
the bay of Loch Indaal to one of the newest distilleries,
Kilchoman. It stands very close to Kilchoman Cross, a
fine piece of fourteenth-century Celtic carving in the
58 BritishTravelJournal.com
Ocean coast lighthouse in Port Charlotte
Cattle near Port Ellen
The next day we headed down the most famous
road in the history of distilling. Port Ellen stands on
one of the southernmost tips of Islay. From it the A483
road runs east and along it, within a two mile stretch
it passes three of Scotland’s best-known distilleries:
Laphroaig, Lagavulin and Ardbeg. We were going
to be down this end of the island for a while on our
whisky pilgrimage so I had booked into No1 Charlotte
Street, a stately Victorian hotel with lofty public rooms,
which have been given a funky colourful make-over by
its manager, Caroline Park.
After checking in to our very purple bedroom we
drove along the coast. It was a misty day and when we
got to Laphroaig great damo clouds of black smoke
were hanging over the pagoda-like chimney above its
kiln. The smell of the peat smoke was unmistakably
the flavour of one of my favourite whiskies. We had an
appointment with John Campbell, the manager, for
a tour, during which he showed us the furnace where
peat is burned to flavour the barley grains before they
are mashed and distilled.
John removed the bung from an enormous wooden
cask in a warehouse so we could taste some of the
whisky. It stays here on site for up to 15 years before
being shipped to the mainland for bottling.
Behind the distillery, Laphroaig owns all the land
running up to the hills where its spring rises. Water is
as important to the taste of whisky as barley (or indeed
peat smoke). In 1908 the owner of what was about
to become Lagavulin Distillery next door, “Restless”
Peter Mackie tried to dam Laphroaig’s stream. So now
Laphroaig owns the whole length of the watercourse.
Just to be on the safe side…
Laphroaig Distillery
© PAUL TOMKINS/VISIT SCOTLAND/SCOTTISH VIEWPOINT
Lagavulin Distillery
Relations with Lagavulin are much more cordial
these days. We weren’t in time to get a tour of their
distillery, but we did get to taste four excellent whiskies
in the company of Isla Gale, one of the company’s
whisky guides. Isla chatted amiably with us for over
an hour, and we learned not just about whisky but a
lot about life on this island, including some indiscreet
details (which you won’t read here).
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 59
“
We produce the best whisky in the world here but
everything has to be delivered by boat - I’ve run out!
”
Ardbeg, the last in these three whisky
gods was closed that day so we drove
on past it to a lovely little sandy bay,
Loch a’Chnuic where people were
swimming.
Even though the sun had come
out briefly they were all in wet suits
against the chill weather. Soon
afterwards on a headland we came
upon Kidalton (another of Islay’s
ruined churches) and its eighthcentury
Celtic cross. Almost on cue
the mist began to descend, which lent
the ruins and its graveyard a suitably
brooding quality. Inside the roofless
church there were tombstones
representing armoured knights from
the days when Islay was ruled by the
Lord of the Isles.
That evening we ate at the Islay
Hotel in Port Ellen. It was another
great meal of seafood in a packed
dining room with Isias, a jovial
Spanish wine waiter who told us he
was waiting for supplies of bottled
Laphroaig to be shipped back from
the mainland: “We produce the
best whisky in the world here but
everything has to be delivered by
boat - and I’ve run out!”
Our ferry back to the mainland
was booked from Port Ellen the
next morning. The MV Finlaggan is
named after the ancient capital of
the Lord of the Isles. It seemed an apt
way to leave this enchanting place.
This time we’d only managed three of
the eight distilleries, but that’s a very
good excuse to return next year.
The Caledonian Sleeper leaves Euston
Station nightly to arrive early morning
in Glasgow. Prices from £140,
sleeper.scot Caledonian Macbrayne
run ferries from Kennacraig on the
Scottish mainland to both Port Askaig
and Port Ellen. A single journey takes
approximately two hours, prices from
£41.20 calmac.co.uk
© VISITSCOTLAND / JOHN DUNCAN
WHERE TO STAY
–
ISLAY HOUSE
Bridgend PA44 7PA
01496 810287
islayhouse.co.uk
1 CHARLOTTE STREET
Port Ellen PA42 7DG
01496 300120
no1charlottestreet.com
THE LOCHSIDE
Bowmore PA43 7LB
01496810244
lochsidehotel.co.uk
WHERE TO EAT
–
BOWMORE HOTEL
Bowmore, PA43 7HL
01496810416
bowmorehotel.co.uk
THE ISLAY HOTEL
Port Ellen, PA42 7DF
01496300109
theislayhotel.com
DISTILLERIES TO VISIT
–
LAPHROAIG
Port Ellen, PA42 7DU
01496 302418
laphroaig.com
LAGAVULIN
Port Ellen, PA42 7DX
01496 302749
diageo.com
KILCHOMAN
Rockside Farm, Bruichladdich,
PA49 7UT
01496 850011
kilchomandistillery.com
60 BritishTravelJournal.com
Pictured:
Looking from
the steps of a
hillside towards
the pier at
Whitby, North
Yorkshire.
62 BritishTravelJournal.com
©VISITBRITAIN / SIMON PALMER
TOP TEN PLACES TO VISIT IN
YORKSHIRE
Britain’s largest county has a proud
identity all of its own
Words | Adrian Mourby
BRITAIN IS A long country,
running over 700 miles on its
north-south axis. This means
that our greatest national
variations are not found
between towns on the east and west
coasts but between the north and south.
Half way up the country, and closer to
Scotland than London, stands
Yorkshire, solid and sturdy, and the
biggest county in England. Historically
Yorkshire was so far from the king in
London that it had its own autonomous
archbishop since before the Norman
Conquest. In the Middle Ages the dukes
of York were so powerful they seized the
English throne from time to time.
Today Yorkshire remains proud of its
sense of difference. It has produced many
great writers including the Brontë sisters,
Ted Hughes and even Alan Bennett. In
the visual arts it was the birthplace home
of Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore
and of David Hockney, whose work still
celebrates his native Saltaire in West
Yorkshire. Moreover the British music hall
and BBC television would have run out of
comedians years ago if it weren’t for the
dry humour of Yorkshire.
So here is our guide to the Top Ten places
to visit in Yorkshire in 2021 and if this
whets your appetite there are many more
for you to discover on a second visit in the
years to come.
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 63
1BEST ABBEY
RIEVAULX
Because of its remote moorland Yorkshire was often
chosen as a place for religious retreats. Rievaulx
Abbey was founded in the early twelfth century
by Cistercian monks from France. It occupies
a romantic wooded valley deep in the North
York Moors. St Aelred, one of the first abbots of
Rievaulx, wrote of the location 'everywhere peace,
everywhere serenity'. Under Aelred the abbey
grew to great wealth thanks to the enterprise of
its 140 monks and 500 lay brothers. This religious
community farmed, brewed, traded and even set up
an early blast furnace on the site. When Henry VIII
dissolved the monasteries in 1538 Rievaulx fell into
disrepair, but in the eighteenth century its beautiful
remains became a place of inspiration for artists.
In the 1750s local land-owner, Thomas Duncombe
MP built a terrace along the valley top from which
the abbey ruins can be still be admired today. The
soaring Gothic arches of Rievaulx’s choir -mercifully
intact - continue to inspire visitors and there is also
a new café and museum on the site.
english-heritage.org.uk
64 BritishTravelJournal.com
Pictured
above:
Rievaulx
Abbey is the
perfect choice
for a peaceful
day out, with
its extensive
ruins and
fascinating
museum in a
secluded North
York Moors
valley.
Right:
Young woman
looking at the
window of
Betty's Cafe
Tea Rooms,
York.
©VISITBRITAIN/ASHLIEGH WICK
2
BEST TEA ROOM
BETTYS
Bettys occupies a prominent position
in Helen's Square, York and on the corner
of Parliament Street and Montpellier
Parade in Harrogate. It also occupies a
special place in the heart of Yorkshire
people. This small chain of elegant cafes
was begun in 1919 by a Swiss confectioner
called Frederic Belmont who arrived in
Harrogate speaking very little English. At
the time this spa-town was a goldmine
thanks to wealthy visitors seeking to
drink it restorative waters. (To modern
sensibilities the sulphurous waters of
Harrogate are far too pungent to support
a tourism industry!). Belmont’s business
prospered, later merging with the famous
coffee-makers, Taylors of Harrogate.
Today there are six Bettys across Yorkshire
and the company is still owned by Frederic
Belmont’s descendants. The Lady Betty
Afternoon Tea presented on a three-tier
cake stand is the signature dish of these
tea rooms but also popular are Bettys
Champagne Truffles, Yorkshire “Fat
Rascal” Scones, Lemon and Lime Cake
and the Bettys Bread Box.
bettysandtaylors.co.uk
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3
©VISITBRITAIN/MATTCANT/ANDREW PICKETT
BEST TRAIL
THE LYKE WAKE WALK
This 40-mile crossing of the remote North York
Moors starts near Osmotherley and finishes
near Ravenscar on the East Sea coast. It is
possible to do the entire route on heather,
hardly ever stepping onto a roadway. Although
the walk was only designated in 1955, it took
its name from the old Scandinavian word for
a corpse (Lyke) because when the Vikings
ruled Yorkshire the people who inhabited
this area would carry their dead across these
moors to their ancestral burial grounds. There
is a powerful ancient hymn (set by Benjamin
Britten, amongst others) called The Lyke-Wake
Dirge which conjures up the terrors of crossing
these moors by night.
When farmer/broadcaster Bill Cowley
created the Lyke Wake Challenge in 1955 he
proposed that all 40 miles be completed in 24
hours. Undertaking the route today in a less
spartan manner, the Lyke Wake Walk offers the
chance to see a landscape crossed by few other
travellers and no signs of modern development.
It feels like stepping into history.
lykewakewalk.co.uk
BEST CITY
YORK
York is one of the most beautiful cities in Britain. Its encircling
medieval walls remain almost complete and where they had
to be blasted apart to let the railways in, it has one of the
most graceful late nineteenth-century train stations. When,
opened in 1877 this was the biggest station in the world with
13 broad platforms. In the twentieth century the station’s
interior featured in the Harry Potter films as part of King
Cross. Another Potter connection is the medieval shopping
street known as “Shambles”. Its overhanging upper floors
were the inspiration for the design of Diagon Alley. York has a
history of occupation going back to Roman and Viking times
but its absolute glory is York Minster, a sublime construction
from the fourteenth and fifteenth-centuries whose east
window is the largest stained glass in Britain.
visityork.org
Pictured above left-right: Two people walking in
the North Yorkshire landscape; The Shambles is an
old street in York, England, with overhanging timber-framed
buildings, some dating back as far as the
fourteenth century.
66 BritishTravelJournal.com
4
Pictured: The centre of York, surrounded by
walls whose foundations date back to medieval
times. There is a wall walk around the city.
York Minster at sunset.
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 67
VISTBRITAIN/ANDREW PICKETT
5BEST SEASIDE RESORT
SCARBOROUGH
“Scarborough Spa” became Britain’s first seaside
resort after a stream of acidic water was
discovered running down one the cliffs above
its port in the seventeenth century. In those
days such waters were considered good for
one’s health and by 1735 Britain’s first bathing
machines were being rolled out into the sea from
Scarborough’s beaches.
In the nineteenth century many hotels were
constructed on top of Scarborough’s cliffs
including The Crown, which was Yorkshire’s first
purpose-built resort hotel and The Grand, which
was the biggest hotel in Europe when it opened in
1867. Both still welcome guests today. The town
also has a number of Georgian structures built
for visitors including the Rotunda Museum, the
Cliff Bridge, and Scarborough Pier Lighthouse.
Its church contains works by the Pre-Raphaelite
artists Rossetti, Burne-Jones, William Morris and
Ford Madox Brown.
Another famous name associated with this
fashionable resort was the novelist Anne Brontë
who in 1849 died in a clifftop boarding house
where the Grand Hotel stands today. Ironically
she had come to Scarborough to try and recover
her health.
visitscarborough.com
© BRITAINONVIEW/GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO
68 BritishTravelJournal.com
7
BEST TOWN
RICHMOND
James Herriot, author of All Creatures
Great & Small told the story of a man from
Richmond going to heaven only to be told
by St Peter that he might find his new home
a bit disappointing.
The market town of Richmond at the
foot of Swaledale is truly gorgeous and
full of elegant Georgian houses that teeter
down steep wynds (streets) towards the
river Swale. It’s dominated by the 100-foot
keep of a huge Norman castle that was
completed here in 1086. Scolland’s Hall,
a residential building within the castle
complex is one of the oldest buildings in
England and the castle’s outer bailey is now
the town’s market place. Today Richmond
has a working cinema in its old railway
station and a tiny Theatre Royal which
dates back to 1788 and has recently been
restored to its original Georgian colour
scheme.
Not surprisingly Richmond is also
a popular base from which to explore
the Yorkshire Dales National Park of
Swaledale, Wharfedale and Wensleydale.
richmond.org/guide
6
BEST HOTEL
MIDDLETHORPE HALL & SPA
Middlethorpe Hall is one of the National Trust’s Yorkshire gems, a
sublime example of William and Mary architecture. It was constructed
in expensive red brick in 1699 for Thomas Barlow, a wealthy Sheffield
industrialist.Thomas sited it close to the main road into York so no one
could fail to notice his wealth. When the Barlow family went on the
Grand Tour in 1712 they let their house to Lady Mary Wortley Montagu,
who had just eloped with her new husband Edward. He was soon
appointed the British ambassador to Constantinople and after their
departure she went on to be an eminent Georgian woman of letters.
Today the house and its chequered marble floors are furnished with
eighteenth-century antiques and – delightfully – it doubles as a hotel run
by the Historic House Hotels group. There are ten bedrooms in the house
itself, 16 in the adjoining eighteenth-century stable block courtyard and
three cottages in the grounds. The hotel’s wood-panelled Oak Room is
one of the most glamorous restaurants in the York area.
middlethorpe.com
à
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9
For
8BEST DISTILLERY
SPIRIT OF YORKSHIRE
Located in the village of Hunmanby, Spirit of
Yorkshire is the county’s first whisky distillery. It
produces a range of “Filey Bay” single malts whose
label features a gannet for the simple reason that
Britain’s biggest gannet sanctuary lies on the coast
nearby.
All the barley used in the distillation process here
is grown on the farm of Tom Mellor, co-founder of
Spirit of Yorkshire. The water, a crucial ingredient in
any successful whisky, comes from a borehole on the
farm that is sunk deep into chalky soil. The company
even bottles on-site, allowing them to assert that the
whole whisky process “from field to bottle” happens
here in Hunmanby.
One-hour distillery tours cost £12.50. There is
also a longer brewery and distillery tour (£22) as
Tom and his wife Gill also set up the nearby Wold
Top Brewery.
spiritofyorkshire.com
more inspiration on visiting Yorkshire take
a look at the Welcome to Yorkshire website:
yorkshire.com
70 BritishTravelJournal.com
BEST LITERARY PILGRIMAGE
HAWORTH
The Brontë Sisters lived and wrote most of their
novels in the parsonage at Haworth, West Yorkshire.
This interior of this building has been meticulously
restored to how it looked when these three remarkable
young women were publishing novels like Jane Eyre,
Wuthering Heights and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.
Today the village is extremely picturesque and it’s
difficult to believe that in the Brontës’ time it was one of
the most polluted places in Britain – one of the reasons
the sisters died so young.
The Church of St Michael and All Angels, where
Rev Brontë preached, still broods over High Street and
the Black Bull, where his wayward son, Branwell drank
away his talent, still stands nearby on Main Street. You
can also see the Old School Room where the sisters
taught and the Apothecary Shop where Branwell
bought his opium.
bronte.org.uk
BEST PORT
WHITBY
Anyone who has read Dracula will know that the
Transylvanian vampire arrived in Britain via the port
of Whitby. It’s a suitably dramatic town with a ruined
cliff-top abbey that has been home to several saints,
with narrow streets of red pan-tiled houses below
and a memorial to Captain James Cook which gazes
romantically out to sea. Cook learned seamanship in
Whitby where the harbour was always full of whaling
ships, colliers and the herring fleet that contributed
massively to the town’s prosperity.
Fishing, supported by tourism, is still a mainstay of
Whitby's economy and its harbour is sheltered by two
Grade II listed piers, both with working lighthouses.
The west lighthouse (1831) is 84 feet high and has a
foghorn that sounds a blast every 30 seconds during
reduced visibility at sea. This is a working harbour
designed to protect fishermen whose lives depend on
the often stormy North Sea.
visitwhitby.com
10
BritishTravelJournal.com 71
Pictured: Tresco Sea
Garden Cottages
48 HOURS IN...
TRESCO
AND BRYHER
In search of an idyllic private island with magical charm,
blessed with exotic plants, translucent seas and endless
amounts of golden sand? Somewhere you can spend
your days exploring ruined castles, discovering tales
of shipwrecks, and enjoying the sounds of the ocean?
Welcome to Scilly, Britain's very own Island treasure.
Words | Jessica Way
IT’S AS IF YOU’RE watching high-definition drone footage of the
most beautiful sub-tropical paradise you could possibly imagine,
mesmerised by the perfect aeriel view of an archipelago surrounded
by turquoise ocean, outlined by craggy coastlines and white sandy
bays. Waves lapping onto the shores and sweeping against the
rocks, whipping up an effervescent trace of brilliant white as they break
before they seemingly melt away again into the mica twinkling waters.
It’s a satisfying contrast to watch - from the deep greens of the islands
and the crisp whiteness of the waves to the contouring blue of the sea
- the glistening sapphire in deeper waters, blending into a crystal-clear
emerald in the shallows.
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 73
Pictured left-right: Jessica's daughter (Daisy)flying
to Tresco with Penzance Helicopters; aerial view
over Tresco Island; Tresco Cows; Tresco Ruins; Old
Grimsby Quay; Sea Garden Cottage.
THE FORTUNATE ISLES
Classed as part of Cornwall, The Isles of Scilly (to
include Tresco, Bryher, St Mary’s, St Agnes and St
Martin's) might feel more like you’re abroad, but they
are in fact the UK’s largest group of islands - and quite
surprisingly - still one of Britain’s best-kept secrets.
Bathed by the warming influence of the Gulf
Stream, the temperature rarely dips below 5°C, and
this balmy climate not only means it feels warmer than
on Britain’s mainland but that plants flower here all
year round.
Described sometimes as 'The Fortunate Isles', the
islands are a kaleidoscope of colour in both flora and
fauna - a myriad of wildflowers, abundant wildlife, and
palm trees apparent in every landscaped vista.
We're flying by helicopter from Penzance to Tresco
on a new 28-mile direct flight, taking just 15 minutes
to reach utopia. From the air, the 140 specks of land,
five of which are inhabited, look more like the tropics
than the south of England. Beautiful enough to rival
anywhere in the Caribbean, Scilly is every bit as
dreamy, yet without the cars, the hurricane season
or the need for passport control! There’s a sense of
magic on these tranquil lands - a place where simple
pleasures and outdoor adventures invigorate feelings
of contentment, relaxation and a profound sense of
wellbeing. So whether you’re an international globe
trotter considering your first British staycation, or a
hardened British Isles adventurer, I hope this account
of 48 hours spent in paradise will inspire you to
visit these remarkable islands and experience the
enchantment for yourself.
74 BritishTravelJournal.com
“
The Isles of Scilly are a
kaleidoscope of colour in both flora
and fauna - a myriad of wildflowers,
abundant wildlife, and palm trees
apparent in every landscaped
vista.
”
In 2020 yet more fortune came Tresco's way with
the launch of the long-awaited return of the Penzance
to Isles of Scilly helicopter service. Not a small feat
when you consider this is one of very few scheduled
helicopter services across the entire world!
Penzance Helicopters, following many years of
hard work, is now running a service of up to 17 flights
per day, six days a week, over 313 days a year to both
Tresco and St Mary’s..
There is no better way to travel to this luxurious
private island than to ‘do it in style’ aboard a state-ofthe-art
AW139 helicopter flight across the Atlantic.
The bird’s eye view from the sky, from the legendary
St Michael’s Mount on departure to your very first
glimpse of the Isles of Scilly and watching your pilot
master a grand crescendo of a flawless landing, makes
the journey of getting to Tresco now every bit as special
as staying there.
ARRIVING ON TRESCO
Tresco is the Isles of Scilly's second-largest island,
and the only island to be privately-owned, leased from
the Duchy of Cornwall to the Dorrien-Smith family
since 1834. From the moment you step foot on the
island, you feel an incredibly warm welcome.
There is a true sense of this being a family-run estate
- home-from-home - you barely even need to say who
you are, your luggage is lifted into your transfer buggy
and you’re benevolently escorted to your cottage.
We stayed in Driftwood, one of the Sea Garden
Cottages situated on the east side of the island, and I
couldn’t have imagined a more beautiful property as
our island holiday home. Light flooded through the
open plan living space, with a modern kitchen, beachydesigned
lounge with beautiful Scilly artwork, exposed
beams and log fireplace and a huge dining area with
painted lobsters and mackerel dinner plates and floor
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 75
“
There is a true sense of this being
a family-run estate - home-fromhome
- you barely even need to
say who you are, your luggage is
lifted into your transfer buggy and
you’re benevolently escorted to your
cottage.
”
to ceiling views out to Old Grimsby harbour.
When we visited Tresco a few years before we had
stayed on the opposite west side of the island, in
Flora, one of the beautiful Flying Boat Cottages - both
properties are equally as luxurious, highly deserving of
their 5-star status, and within footsteps of white sandy
beaches with breathtaking views.
The Flying Boat Cottages have the advantage of being
directly alongside many local conveniences, from the
local stores, Island office and bike hire, however, the
Sea Garden Cottages on the quieter side of the island,
with the beautiful beach bays, sailing school and Ruin
Beach Cafe was my idea of complete heaven - almost
unimaginably beautiful.
Whichever side of the island you choose (there are
also rooms and apartments ideal for shorter stays)
all guests to the island are entitled to entry to Tresco
Island Spa (which includes one outdoor and two indoor
swimming pools) and the Abbey Garden. There’s also
good wifi available throughout the island - especially
useful for ordering deliveries from the Tresco Stores & Deli
(a new service launched in 2020).
The stores are a shop, bakery and delicatessen all
in one - stocking everything from breakfast essentials,
light snacks to pizzas and frozen Cook meals. There’s
plenty of option of cereals, fresh bread, croissants,
pastries, fruit, vegetables, meat, fish - as well as a
fabulous selection of beers, wine and tasty treats!
My husband pre-ordered from home before we set
off and our shopping was in our cottage on our arrival.
For top-ups throughout your stay as long as you make
the order before 2pm Monday - Saturday they'll even
deliver to you on the same day.
Be sure to add some of Zoë's locally-made chocolate
chip brownie slices to your order - they are heavenly!
76 BritishTravelJournal.com
RUIN BEACH CAFÉ
Once we had unpacked and settled in we strolled
out of our back door and down our garden steps to
arrive at the two AA Rosettes Ruin Beach Café. The
café takes its name from the ruined smuggler’s cottage
that forms part of its terrace, overlooking Raven’s
Porth - but don’t be mistaken, it might be small but its
Mediterranean-inspired menu far exceeds the selection
of light meals and drinks you might imagine would be
available from a beachside café.
Serving lunch and dinner throughout the season,
a visit here is one of the many highlights of Tresco.
Famed for its pizzas, sharing boards, salads and
chargrilled meat dishes, at the heart of the restaurant
is the wood-fired oven, roasting fresh fish, chicken and
vegetables - as well as producing delicious pizzas.
The Ruin dinner menu features ‘catch of the day’
from local fishermen or, for another sea to fork delight,
the seafood platter (to include Tresco gin cured sea
trout and dressed Bryher crab) is an absolute must.
If there’s any space for more, decadent desserts,
including local Troytown Farm Ice Cream, become
difficult to resist.
DAY ONE
We woke up to the sun rising over the Old Blockhouse
lighting up the quay, and took a stroll by the water’s
edge. For an endorphin boost like no other, we chose
to take a dip in the ocean for a cold water swim. You
will be likely to see at least one other islander doing the
same, wild swimming is gaining in popularity across
the UK, said to improve general health and wellbeing.
It has been a treasured pastime for islanders and
coastal lovers for generations, and I can see why so
many add it into their daily routine, there’s really no
better energiser for starting your day.
You might find Tresco offers enough escapism
purely from its idyllic landscape, but for even more
natural healing you might choose (as I did with my
Pictured left-right: Old Grimsby
Harbour; Tresco Island Spa;
Tresco Sea Garden Aerial view;
Ruin Beach Café.
daughter Daisy) to head to the new Flying Boat Yoga
Studio with Gem Hansen, who lives on Bryher. Gem’s
practice offers a balance of strength (sthira) and
serenity (sukha) and uses visualisations and techniques
inspired by Scilly’s scenery and natural surroundings.
This includes visualising the breath as the ebb and
flow of the tide, and honouring the mythic qualities of
asana (poses) that were inspired by the islands and
the environment, from the fearless lion to the reticent
tortoise.
For lunch we headed to The New Inn - Tresco’s
authentic island pub. You can spend much of your
holiday under the sense of having travelled to your very
own private island, other than the odd encounter on a
walk, meeting very few others during your stay - so it
feels quite apparent that The New Inn has an important
role to play. More than just a pub serving delicious
food, this is the island's social heartbeat - a place for
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 77
Pictured left-right: The New Inn;
Gallery Tresco; all other images
Tresco Abbey Gardens.
TRESCO ABBEY GARDEN
Tresco Abbey Garden, built around the 12th-century
ruins is home to a wonderful variety of sub-tropical
species. Augustus Smith established the Abbey Garden
in 1834 - he built up a collection of exotic plants from
South Africa, Brazil and Mexico that thrived in the
micro-climate - and the gardens have been lovingly
tended by successive generations of the same family
ever since.
There’s not a bad time of the year to visit - thanks
to the balmy weather plants flower in Tresco all year
round. Visit in the spring to see flowers blooming weeks
islanders in need of some good conversation and time
to catch up with friends.
As a holidaymaker, you are made to feel every bit
as welcome as the locals, the atmosphere is warm and
inviting with genuine wreck wood and marine relics
adorning the ceilings, beams and walls. They serve
traditional pub fare from crispy whitebait and dressed
Bryher crab to traditional cottage pie, using locally
grown, reared and landed produce.
There’s also a sheltered terrace decorated with
candlelight and fairy lights, and occasionally live music
- an opportunity for visitors and locals to dance the
night away under the stars!
We popped into the gallery next door - formerly
the pilot gig shed, the Gallery Tresco hosts art by some
of Cornwall's most established artists, as well as a
selection of unique giftware inspired by the islands. We
then continued our stroll south to Tresco Abbey Gardens,
turning left along Abbey Drive for a river walk (or head
straight onto Appletree Road passing Appletree Bay).
78 BritishTravelJournal.com
“
Visit in the spring to see flowers
blooming, and in the autumn,
beautiful reds, golds and ambers
contrast with the magnificent
proteas, aloes and camellias.
”
ahead of those on the mainland, and in the autumn to
see beautiful reds, golds and ambers contrast with the
magnificent proteas, aloes and camellias - even during
the winter solstice, there are usually more than 300
species of plant in flower!
A tradition dating back 150 years, there is a flower
count to see how many different species are in bloom
conducted by the team of gardeners in the first week of
every new year - the record is 313 in 2017.
Tresco Abbey Garden is one of the main attractions
in the Isles of Scilly, there are daily tripper boats from
the neighbouring islands of St Mary’s, Bryher and St
Martin’s, and regular trips from St Agnes, but if you’re
lucky it is not unusual, especially at either end of the
season, to visit at a time when you have the gardens
almost entirely to yourself. Luckily for us it was one of
those occasions.
We had fun looking out for red squirrels as we
roamed the garden's criss-cross paths through
towering palms and giant trees, admiring the great
blue spires of Echium and shocking-pink drifts of
Pelargonium. Don’t miss the fascinating Valhalla
Museum – a collection of figureheads collected from
shipwrecks around the islands - and take a pit stop at
the Garden Cafe for a coffee and cake - there’s a wellstocked
gift shop and an interesting exhibition telling
the history of the Abbey Garden.
We fancied a movie night in, so were delighted to
discover a good selection of DVDs available to rent
from the Tresco Stores on the way back to our cottage,
(alternatively, there’s the option to log into Netflix from
your cottage). Walking back to Old Grimsby Quay we
passed St Nicholas’ Church and the primary school before
stopping in at Lucy-Tania, Tresco’s boutique and sewing
studio.
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 79
“
You can clearly see Bryher across
the azure waters - in fact, it is so close
to Tresco that if you are lucky enough
to visit during dramatic spring tides
the channel between the islands
becomes dry enough to cross on
foot.
”
There’s a luxe selection of island-inspired homeware,
swimwear, jewellery and more - and I couldn’t resist
buying a navy blue Tresco branded hoodie and Lobster
embroidered cap.
Back at our cottage it was time for dinner, a movie,
and playing a family game of Catchphrase (the board
game version) in front of the log burner before falling
asleep to the sounds of the ocean.
DAY TWO
Tresco is a world away from the hustle and bustle of
the British mainland - with no cars on the island you are
not only filling your lungs with pure coastal air, instead
of breathing in fumes, you are naturally exercising more,
taking your bike or walking whenever you leave the
front door. It doesn’t take very long before you feel the
positive effects of this - and from the time spent outdoors
connecting with the beautiful landscape.
For me, this happened on day two. I woke up glowing
and feeling more vitalised than usual. I had a Kundalini
Back Therapy massage booked at the Island Spa and
remember wondering if I even needed it!
As it turned out it though, I did - I felt the tension
in my computer tight shoulders being released and
my body felt more balanced. It was wonderful - and
thanks to Ila Spa the delightful scent stayed with me
throughout the rest of the day.
From the spa it is just a short walk to New Grimsby
Quay - our departure point for visiting the neighbour
island, Bryher. You can clearly see Bryher across the
azure waters - in fact, it is so close to Tresco that if you
are lucky enough to visit during dramatic spring tides,
(when lunar forces combine) the channel between the
islands can become dry enough to cross on foot. As
such, every year the islanders (never ones to pass up an
opportunity for a shindig!) prepare for a mid-channel
mini-festival, low-tide event. This involves teams from
Tresco and Hell Bay setting up benches, bar and
firepits on a long sandbar between the islands - then as
the water recedes further the celebrations begin with a
80 BritishTravelJournal.com
Pictured left: Jessica in Old
Grimsby Harbour; Bryher.
below: Island Fish café and fresh
fish private orders and deliveries.
host of impromptu games, live music, food and drink.
Thankfully for the other 362 days of the year, regular
services by Tresco Boat Services will get you there safely
instead! Weather permitting of course.
It was a very pleasant 10-minute inter-island boat
trip across to Bryher. Remember to listen out to hear
the scheduled return times on landing - and whether
it is the new Anneka's Quay (named after Anneka Rice
who managed to build it in less than 4 days) or Church
Quay (inaccessible at low tide).
We stepped out onto one of Bryher's white sandy
beach bays. Although smaller, it very much resembled
those on Tresco. The island is smaller in general,
around one kilometer wide and two kilometers in
length - home to 80 residents - you can easily walk it in
a day or spend an afternoon enjoying the highlights.
An island of dramatic contrast - Bryher is pounded
by Atlantic waves on one side, yet blessed with calm
sandy beaches on the other. You might recognise
it from the movies as Bryher was also the setting of
the film, "When the Whales Came", based on Michael
Morpurgo's novel inspired by the island. (Samson Hill
on the southern end of the island was the site of the
birdman's cottage).
We enjoyed meandering our way around, walking
past the dotted stalls selling fresh produce including
farm eggs, local vegetables, freshly-landed seafood
and mouth-watering island fudge. It is all so pretty, a
picture-perfect postcard at every turn - you do feel as
though you are wandering through a movie set.
Lending itself to a real ‘Swallows and Amazons’
style adventure you can choose to spend your time in
Bryher exploring rocky coves, relaxing on white sandy
beaches or hiking up one of its small granite hills for
some great views.
An absolute must for us was watching the Atlantic
rollers thunder into Hell Bay (especially spectacular in
the winter!) and we also enjoyed the calm tranquillity
of Rushy Bay overlooking Samson.
There are a number of restaurants, bars and cafés
located around the island. Stepping off at Bryher
Boatyard we first stumbled upon Island Fish, owned by
the Penders - a traditional fishing family who go back
generations on Scilly. You won’t find a better crab
roll or lobster salad than here, and they have a great
selection of coffee and cakes with the most picturesque
immaculate lawn, where beautiful birds dart about,
from which to enjoy it.
Also, good to know is that while they supply to local
hotels and pubs they also take private orders (delivered
within 24 hours notice) so you can enjoy fresh shellfish
while on holiday from the comfort of your own cottage.
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 81
the freshest island produce. Islanders and visitors
journey from across the islands to dine here. Think
dishes like tender Hell Bay gin cured salmon, succulent
roast partridge, pan roasted sea bass and Richard's
sensational tangy lemon meringue pie.
Order the oysters - they were by far the best
I have ever had. By evening, you can dine in the
contemporary yet intimate Czar restaurant - named
after one of the islands historic island pilot gigs - and
lap up the views as the sun sets over Gweal Hill and
dips into the Atlantic.
Following our lunch we continued south along
the coast and stumbled upon Golden Eagle Studio - a
gig shed transformed into a studio and gallery for
local artist Richard Pearce. You can step out from the
gallery and look out across the exact view of one of his
paintings. His artwork is mostly of Tresco and Bryher
and is incredibly beautiful, capturing the Scilly spirit so
perfectly.
From here you can choose to continue around
the south of Bryher, passing Droppy Nose Point and
watching seals swimming off the rocks while dipping
your toes in the white sands of Rushy Bay. Take a walk
Pictured above: Hell Bay Hotel. Left-right: Jessica
visits Golden Eagle Studio; walking towards Droppy
Nose Point; Byrher and Tresco from the water; views
from Samson Hill.
Next we made our way up the hill passing Olivia's
Kitchen at the Vine, a small, family-run café situated in
“the Town'' in what was originally a flower and bulb
shed (previously Vine Café) serving sumptuous lunches
and suppers, light snacks and cream teas.
A must here is the Scillonian tattie cake - it is so
good you might want to buy some to take home too!
We passed the Bryher Shop and Post Office before
taking Newton Road on our right. We followed this for
a few hundred yards before reaching the luxurious Hell
Bay Hotel - Scilly's highest-rated restaurant, with a 3
AA Rosette rating and open to non-residents to enjoy.
HELL BAY HOTEL
At the helm is Head Chef Richard Kearsley - known
for serving the finest food on the islands, using only
82 BritishTravelJournal.com
“
Continue around the south of Bryher,
passing Droppy Nose Point and
watching seals swimming off the rocks
while dipping your toes in the white
sands of Rushy Bay.
”
up to the summit of Samson Hill where the views are
sensational – or head to the rugged north of the island
towards Fraggle Rock, one of Britain's smallest bars,
overlooking Hangman's Island, famous for their Friday
Fish & Chip night. Feeling somewhat ambitious and in
awe of the island we opted to take the later ferry back
so we were (just about) able to experience all three.
SCINTILLATING SCILLY
Once you have stepped foot on the white sandy
shores of the Isles of Scilly it has an incredible way of
capturing your heart - offering a notion of escapism
to rival that of any coastal destination on mainland
Britain. I was so smitten three years ago I choose to get
married on Scilly – and visiting for the second time, I
was surprised to discover that there was yet even more
to love.
It is no surprise the same guests visit year after year
– and Tresco’s successful Islandshares is testament
to this. Often passed down from generation to
generation the scheme offers families the chance
to become owners of their very own week, in their
favourite cottage, for up to 40 years.
Closing my eyes to remember the views, I will
regularly take myself back there – always dreaming
about my next visit to this incredible destination – this
is a holiday that just can’t come again soon enough.
Now where did I put the Islandshares listings again?
On the way to Fraggle Rock we passed Mike and
Sue Pender’s honesty stall in front of their house, selling
a broad range of herbs, fruits, eggs and vegetables.
Our final stop was at Veronica Farm’s fudge stall for a
bag of delicious homemade fudge.
Jessica was a guest staying on Tresco Island tresco.co.uk
Travel by train with Great Western Railway from London
Paddington to Penzance Station with advance one-way
tickets starting at £26.20 gwr.com.
Flights with Penzance Helicopters start from £130 per person
one-way penzancehelicopters.co.uk
Prices to stay at Hell Bay Hotel, Bryher start at £95 per
person per night (based on two sharing) on a bed and
breakfast basis hellbay.co.uk
BritishTravelJournal.com 83
THE RISE OF SOMERSET’S ...
FOOD
AND DRINK
A visit to the pastoral landscapes of Somerset can
both soothe the soul and nourish the palate. But this
south-west English county is not merely the home of
Cheddar Cheese or ancient apple orchards,
Somerset’s epicurean delights are in abundance
Words | Karyn Noble
©VISITBRITAIN/ BEN SELWAY
I’M STARING AT A LAMINATED newspaper clipping of Prince
Harry and Meghan Markle’s Royal Wedding menu, pinned with
two gold thumb tacks to a pole. Amid the usual suspects – beef
from Prince Charles’ Duchy organic farm, Scottish trout roe –
someone has neatly circled ’10-year-old Somerset cider brandy’
from the short ‘Wines, Beers & Liqueurs’ listing in blue pen. I suspect
that someone is hovering over my shoulder. ‘They might have chosen
it because they thought it was jolly good stuff,’ says Somerset Cider
Brandy founder Julian Temperley, ‘Or they may have chosen it
because the label matches the good prince’s hair colour. Anyway, it’s
a song that we’ll sing for a very long time.’ After tasting said brandy,
I’m inclined to agree with Temperley’s first opinion: it’s jolly good stuff.
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 85
Unlike most people packing their Wellington boots for
Somerset’s famed Glastonbury festival, I’m stomping about
in mine in apple orchards. In distilleries. On dairy farms. In
cheese rooms. In smokeries. Even around an organic spelt and
walnut farm. While the Glastonbury festival may be uncertain
again due to pandemic concerns, the real showstopper for
anyone considering an extended road trip is Somerset’s
permanent food and drink line-up.
The small radius of extraordinarily high-quality producers
has a lot to do with this south-west county’s geography. Over at
Thatchers Cider, which has been a commercial cider business since
1904, chief cidermaker Richard Johnson points out the Mendip
Hills around us at Myrtle Farm: ‘They were produced hundreds of
millions of years ago when Africa crashed into Europe and pushed
Britain up out of the water. At the time we were under water here.
The Mendip Hills are limestone, so for millions of years all that
limestone was under the sea and when it was pushed up out of the
water, all its microscopic sea creatures were pushed into the valleys,
so we have really deep, rich, mineral soil, which provides really
good nutrients.’ Combined with the temperate climate this close to
the sea, it makes the west of England an excellent spot for growing
apples, which is why you’ll find most of Britain’s cider makers here.
But Somerset’s not just about the cider. I emerge from Brown
& Forrest Smokery in Langport as aromatic as a blazing wood
bonfire, but I’ve tasted some of the best smoked meat and fish of
my life here. ‘I’m only interested in the best quality I can find,’ says
owner Jesse Pattisson, who supplies the likes of chefs Mitch Tonks
Don’t Miss: Porlock Bay
Oysters
Porlock Bay, on the Exmoor
coast, produces oysters that
are akin to France’s Speciale
de Claire or Fine de Claire in
terms of quality. Benefitting
from one of the highest
tidal ranges in the world
(second only to Canada)
and Grade-A water quality,
Porlock Bay oysters are
sought after by some of
the top chefs in Britain, not
just for the pure taste but
because, unusually, they’re
available year-round.
porlockbayoysters.co.uk
86 BritishTravelJournal.com
©VISITBRITAIN/ BEN SELWAY
IMAGES ABOVE: SHEEP
GRAZING AT SOMERSET
CIDER BRANDY FARM;
COUPLE, SITTING AT
A TABLE OUTSIDE A
SOMERSET PUB, HAVING
DRINKS AND A MEAL.
IMAGES LEFT: APPLES
IN THATCHERS CIDER
ORCHARD; YEO VALLEY
FARM YOGHURTS
“
Forget Glastonbury festival,
I’m here in my wellies to stomp
about in apple orchards. In
distilleries. On dairy farms. In
cheese rooms. In smokeries.
”
and Nathan Outlaw with bespoke smoked
produce, as well as restaurant chain Hawksmoor
and Fortnum & Mason. You won’t find Brown
& Forrest produce in supermarkets either, which
is reason enough to make the trip to the redchecked
tableclothed restaurant here (closed
during lockdown, though the shop remains
open) to indulge. ‘Ninety per cent of my stuff
comes from within 20 miles of here,’ says Jesse,
as we survey the rain-spattered, glowing-green
landscape. ‘Somerset grows great grass and that
makes great milk and that makes great cheese.
It’s not rocket science.’
‘Somerset is fantastic for grass,’ echoes Tim
Mead, CEO of Yeo Valley Organic Farm, which
has been making yoghurt since 1969 but decided
to back organic farming 20 years ago and now
has 1800 employees. Unlike Brown & Forrest,
Yeo Valley’s wide range of dairy products
is available in supermarkets across
Britain, and they have a cafe in Somerset’s
Blagdon, as well as one in London’s
Bayswater that serve breakfasts and
brunches, both of which will open again
when COVID-19 restrictions allow.
It’s a slick operation. At the quirkily
decorated Blagdon outlet, there’s
even a dedicated space for their food
ambassador (chef Paul Collins) to do
regular cooking demonstrations, and they
also hold a festival (Valley Fest) at the
end of July that attracts 50,000 visitors
annually, with the hope to run it in a
socially distanced manner in 2021.
‘Today we have over 100 dairy farmers
from the southwest supplying the Yeo
Valley dairies,’ says Tim, ‘We’ve got two
dairy farms of our own and we buy milk
from another 100 dairy farms, and the
total organic milk produced in the UK is
about 5% and we’ve set ourselves a life
goal of 10%. That’s just a big enough
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 87
IMAGES LEFT: COUPLE
ENJOY THE SOMERSET
COUNTRYSIDE;
CHEDDAR GORGE
AND CAVES; CHEDDAR
CHEESE; CHEDDAR
VILLAGE. IMAGES
RIGHT: FOUNDER OF
MULBERRY, ROGER
SAUL: SPELT AND
GRAIN PRODUCED
ON SHARPHAM PARK
FARM; THE ORIGINAL
CHEDDAR CHEESE
COMPANY
©VISITBRITAIN/BEN SELWAY/©NICKSMITHPHOTOGRAPHY.COM
sector that we don’t lose all the knowledge and consumers
now have an option to not have factory-farmed milk.’
True dairy aficionados shouldn’t pass up the opportunity
to sample cheddar cheese in the Somerset village of
Cheddar and from the world’s only cheesemaker that
matures some of it in the caves of Cheddar Gorge itself. ‘It’s
traditional cheddar cheese made by hand,’ says Katherine
Spencer who, along with partner John, took over the small
business when it was in decline in 2003 and turned it into
the Cheddar Gorge Cheese Company. ‘We only make
between six and nine cheeses every day. It’s small batch,
it’s very much an artisan process.’ Cheese products and
accessories can be purchased on-line during COVID-19
restrictions, but when the shop re-opens, visitors can also
watch the cheese being made from a viewing gallery.
But the most overachieving small producer I meet is
Roger Saul. The former founder of the Mulberry designer
label was born in Somerset, and after leaving the fashion
world in 2003 he bought a farm here and started growing
spelt. ‘It was a rundown dairy farm that came up for sale for
the first time in 100 years,’ he says, still impeccably attired
as we jolt around the Sharpham Park estate in a buggy (he
also used to be a racing car driver!) as his herd of red deer
frolic below Glastonbury Tor. ‘It was just as organic farming
was really coming back in. Food was the new fashion. So,
I literally jumped out of fashion to being back in fashion by
being in food. And nobody was growing spelt in the UK.
There were millers milling it but no one was actually
growing it seriously.’ Saul’s farm produces not just an
astounding range of spelt products (flour, bread, muesli,
88 BritishTravelJournal.com
“
The most overachieving small
producer I meet is Roger Saul -
former founder of the Mulberry
designer label... born in Somerset
”
porridge) that are stone-ground in the traditional way,
but organic venison and walnuts (‘With 300 trees, we’re
the biggest organic walnut farm in the country, if there
are any other organic, because it takes so long’).
And while the 300-acre Sharpham Park isn’t open
to the public, its organic produce is sold at Waitrose
and Sainsbury’s supermarkets or, when freedoms allow,
can be enjoyed close to the source at the Sharpham
Pantry Restaurant or Harlequin Café in Kilver Court,
essentially a designer village that Saul founded on the
edge of Shepton Mallet in 2011. For a British organic food
trailblazer, he’s remarkably humble. ‘Provenance, I think,
today couldn’t be more important,’ he says as we lunch
on his spelt pasta range,’ And we always want to know
where our food comes from. And if it’s organic, from my
perspective, it’s 100 times better for you.
WHERE TO VISIT
–
SOMERSET CIDER BRANDY
somersetciderbrandy.com
–
THATCHERS CIDER
thatcherscider.co.uk
–
BROWN & FORREST SMOKERY
brownandforrest.co.uk
–
YEO VALLEY ORGANIC FARM CAFÉ
yeovalley.co.uk/come-and-visit-us
–
CHEDDAR GORGE CHEESE COMPANY
cheddaronline.co.uk
–
SHARPHAM PANTRY RESTAURANT
kilvercourt.com/cafe-and-restaurant/
sharpham-restaurant
HARLEQUIN CAFÉ
kilvercourt.com/cafe-and-restaurant
/local-cafe
It is a 90-minute train journey from London’s Paddington
Station to Somerset (Bath) with Great Western Railway.
Fly into Bristol or Exeter airport or take the M5 motorway.
visitsomerset.co.uk greatwestway.co.uk
BritishTravelJournal.com 89
10BOUTIQUE
OF THE BEST
STAYS
1
AULINN, ISLE OF SKYE
Anyone who stays at this cute hideaway for couples must feel as if they’ve
bagged front row seats for one of the best natural shows on earth. The views from
the terrace, hot tub and all the windows are nothing short of spectacular – with
the sea mere metres away, fringed by misty mountains. This area is rich in wildlife,
too, with a RSPB otter hide nearby. The building is a simple croft turned sumptuous,
with light-filled rooms, cosy textiles, a slick modern bathroom. There’s a wooden
swing bench on the terrace where you can enjoy special moments – from morning
coffee watching the day unfold, to wrapping up to stargaze as darkness falls. Outside
are three acres of your own grounds to roam. Or get out and explore Skye’s amazing
scenery. Take a dip in the sea or in the crystal clear Fairy Pools. Tramp around the
crags and pinnacles of the Quiraing or up the Old Man of Storr. Hop on a boat to go spot
sea eagles and whales. In between, dine out in some of Skye’s excellent restaurants
– indeed people cross continents to dine at the legendary Three Chimneys. Bring the
credit card! Prices from £1,352 for a long weekend or mid week break. ◆
boutique-retreats.co.uk
90 BritishTravelJournal.com
Some fabulous
self-catering properties
have opened around the
UK during lockdown – all
offering privacy, space
and inspiring locations.
Just what we all need!
Words | Emma O'Reilly
3
CLIFFTOPS, DORSET
The Isle of Portland is joined to the rest of Dorset by the
shingle barrier of Chesil Beach. Most visitors bomb
straight to Portland Bill, the famous lighthouse. There’s
much more to see. Clifftops, a new venture at the
Pennsylvania Castle Estate is a good base from which to explore
it. Five sleek looking lodges, each sleeping four, are carved into the
cliffs – made from the local Portland stone, then clad in copper,
designed to weather and blend into their environment. Each
provides sparkling views over the English Channel, best seen from
the terrace. Thoughtful planting of indigenous flora attracts birds
and butterflies. The rooms are sexy and simple, with blonde woods,
neutral furnishings and big windows – it’s all about the view! It’s a
mere totter down to tiny, secret Church Ope Cove for a swim.
Or get out and see the rest of the island – from Portland Castle,
built by King Henry VIII, and with an interesting war-time history to
The Tour Quarry Sculpture Park, set in a disused quarry and used as
a vast outdoor studio by artists. Chesil Beach is wild and windswept
– good for long walks and wildlife spotting. Lodges priced from
around £585 for a three-night stay. ◆
thepennestate.co.uk/the-estate/clifftops
2SANDYBURY BARN, SHROPSHIRE
This big, modern rustic barn sleeps up to seven across its four
bedrooms. Double height windows and open plan spaces
mean plenty of room to spread out. Speaking of space, there
are no less than 3000 acres literally on the doorstep. The barn is on
the Dudmaston Estate. Bring your bike and cycle, or walk, through
the parkland and woodland paths, past lakes and babbling brooks.
Dudmaston House is a very pleasing rainy-day option. It’s been lived
in by one family, inherited through birth and marriage, for 875 years
and, for a stately home, it has a surprisingly homely feel. It would be
easy to spend a break here and go nowhere else, but it would be a
shame to miss out on the bucolic scenery of Shropshire – the beauty
spots of Long Mynd and Wenlock Edge are both just a short drive
away. Prices from £975 for a three night stay. ◆
nationaltrust.org.uk/holidays
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 91
4
EDITOR'S CHOICE
FRITTON LAKE,
NORTH NORFOLK
Fritton Lake, set in 250 acres of mature woodland
with stunning views of the open countryside and one of the
most beautiful lakes in East Anglia, has recently completed its
luxury refurbishment to include a new outdoor heated swimming
pool, tennis courts, children’s adventure trail and other outdoor
games. Since the coronavirus pandemic has left us all searching
for ways to live a healthier lifestyle, thinking more about our
happiness and wellbeing, the timing of this, along with the
launch of their new luxury holiday lodges, couldn’t be better.
This simple peaceful retreat offers the perfect setting in which
to reconnect with nature and de-stress from the modern world.
It’s a members club, with 100% self-owned lodges located in
fields and woods around the tranquil grounds, all within a few
minute’s reach of the lake. Some of the property owners rent out
their properties for holiday-goers while others enjoy the facilities
around their second-home, retreating to them whenever they get
BRITISH
TRAVEL
JOURNAL
LOVES
2021
92 BritishTravelJournal.com
EDITOR'S HIGHLIGHTS
ENJOYING THE LAKE
The lake is the heartbeat of Fritton Lake - In
addition to the main resort hub, watersports and
open water swimming clubs, the weekly classes
including trail running, dancercise and yoga also
take advantage of the beautiful views.
SOMERLEYTON HALL
Fritton Lake sits as part of the Somerleyton country
estate, and Somerleyton Hall and Gardens are
just under four miles away. One of the great
Victorian country houses surrounded by 12 acres
of arboretum and formal gardens, including
Nesfield’s famous maze and finely restored
parterre. Enjoy cream teas and charming guides.
CLAY AND GRASS COURT TENNIS
The club has four tennis courts, a pair of lawn
tennis courts, and two clay, one of which is a new
‘all-weather clay’ allowing for year-round play.
Tennis coaching is also available.
the chance (out of lockdown!). In the centre there’s a charming pub,
The Fritton Arms, with eight beautiful guest rooms, serving also as the
resort club house exclusively for members and guests.
Think locally sourced seasonal menus, roaring fires, wooden beams,
deep sofas and pretty fairy lights in the courtyard garden – a beautiful
spot to dine alfresco and enjoy as the sun is setting. Adventures can
be found in the nature and on the lake, to include wild swimming, trail
running, yoga, canoeing, rowing and even Croquet – but most of all
Fritton Lake is a place to relax, to enjoy the peace and quiet and great
local food – to sit and read a book or take a gentle stroll along the lake
and replenish your sense of wellbeing. Cabins are priced from £647 off
season and £1734 peak season for a 3/4 night stay. Rooms for B&B at
The Fritton Arms are priced from £140 per night all season ◆
frittonlake.co.uk
PONIES ARE WELCOME!
Formerly a farmstead, Fritton Lake is blessed with
wonderful stables. For a small extra charge you
can bring your pony on holiday and either enjoy a
guided ride around the lakeside woodland or brush
up on your show-jumping and dressage.
VINEYARD AND BREWERY TOURS
Discover more about the emerging food and drink
scene in the Wild East of England by joining a tour
with a selection of local breweries and vineyards to
hear from passionate owners and to taste fantastic
locally sourced produce.
à
BritishTravelJournal.com 93
5
WILD ESCAPES, HAMPSHIRE
Treehouses just went up a notch! These five snazzy little numbers
by Wild Escapes are the first ever to be built on a UK vineyard. So, as
guests, it would surely be rude not to lie in your outdoor bath, a glass
of (ultra local!) Black Chalk wine in hand. If you like it, organise a vineyard
tour and tasting with lunch (truffle hunts in late Autumn too). Each of the
four treehouses sleeps a couple (two can take a further two adults) and
is slightly different but they all have an ultra large outdoor bath, outdoor
and indoor showers, a loo, kitchen, wood burner and electric heating and
lighting. You can still say you’re camping though, right? The local town,
Stockbridge, has plenty to divert – independent shops, tea rooms, pubs and
restaurants, galleries and gift shops. Danebury Hill Fort, Houghton Lodge
Gardens, and the Museum of Army Flying at Middle Wallop are also nearby.
But you’ll probably want to spend most of your time hiding away in your
beautiful bolthole. Prices from £280 per night for 2 adults. ◆
canopyandstars.co.uk
6THE LAVENDER SHACK, SUFFOLK
This bijou barn conversion for two is a delight – all vaulted ceilings
and restful Scandi chic interiors. It sits in deep countryside on the
Suffolk/Norfolk border, just a half hour or so from the Suffolk coast
(and under an hour from the beaches of Norfolk). On warm days
bifold doors can be flung open, with views of woodland and flowers - the
florist owner’s cutting garden is here. In cooler weather there’s underfloor
heating and a wood burner to keep things cosy. The little details have
been thought out – like a super king size bed, a second smart TV in the
bedroom, a Lavazza coffee machine and an electric car charging point
outside. Close by is the village of Broome, with its dog-friendly pub. Also
minutes away is paddle boarding and canoeing on the River Waveney and
Beccles, gateway to the Norfolk Broads from where you can spend time
messing about in boats. Prices from £391 for a midweek stay. ◆
norfolkhideaways.co.uk
94 BritishTravelJournal.com
7
LITTLE RED LOCK,
THE COTSWOLDS
A kind of alchemy happens when city folk fall in love and up sticks from
the city in search of a secret country bolthole. Filled to the beams with
English eccentricity and encircled by a wooden picket fence, this unique
canal-side home near Banbury in the Cotswolds is a perfect example.
Little Red Lock's waterfront setting on the Oxford canal oozes tranquillity,
while inside its brick walls, a carnival-like celebration of eclectic rustic
charm awaits. In true English country home style, copper pans hang
above a clotted cream coloured Aga and heavy curtains frame bucolic
views as far as the eye can see. Mornings are best spent plotting the
day's adventures with a generous breakfast spread laid out on the picnic
table by the water's edge; the mooing cows or odd passing narrowboat
your only neighbours. The market town of Banbury (six miles south) is a
higgledy-piggledy affair with narrow alleyways and independent shops.
Sleeps 6, prices from £1,950 per week, £1,495 per short break ◆
uniquehomestays.com
8
TREGONCE FARMHOUSE,
CORNWALL
Relax, unwind and reconnect in this beautiful Grade II Listed
stone built farmhouse with breathtaking views across the North
Cornish coast. From your holiday door it is a short walk down to the
banks of the Camel Estuary and along the Camel Trail into Padstow
where Michelin starred restaurants, artisan shops and cool cafes blend
beautifully with the Cornish harbour life. Take a trip around the bay at
high speed, hop aboard the Padstow to Rock Ferry, stop for a local ale
and crab sandwich and simply immerse yourself in the beauty of this
wonderful coastal town. Join the South West Coast path from Padstow to
the dramatic high cliffs, across golden sand beaches and across stunning
headlands. Hit the waves at nearby Harlyn Bay or Trevone, stretch
out across the beach at Constantine and Treyarnon Bay and find your
favourite corner of this magical corner of Cornwall. Sleeps 7.
Prices from £1620 (3 nights) and £2025 (7 nights). ◆
cornishgems.com
96 BritishTravelJournal.com
9
THE WELLS GLAMPING,
HEREFORDSHIRE
With most events cancelled for the foreseeable, what to do with all
those trendy Airstream trailers used for housing pop stars and festival
goers? Well that’s exactly what the team at The Wells Glamping thought.
They’re keeping five of them busy in two big, peaceful (ie. minus the loud music!)
meadows in Herefordshire. Each sleeps 2-5 guests with everything needed within
– kitchens, beds, shower rooms and loos. Outside are picnic tables, and firepits
and hot tubs are available to hire if you want them, too. Within a 20-minute
drive of the site are plenty of sightseeing options – from the National Trust’s
Brockhampton Estate to the Malvern Hills for walking and the city of Hereford,
whose cathedral is home to the Mappa Mundi. Herefordshire is a delight to drive
around, with the 40-mile ‘Black and White Village Trail’ brimming with pretty
timbered and half timbered houses, orchards and hop fields. Prices on request. ◆
thewellsglamping.co.uk
10National Park. It’s an area jam packed with amazing beaches – with more
GRANAR TREHILYN, PEMBROKESHIRE
Stunning location, stunning house…what more could one ask for?
Strumble Head is a rocky headland and lighthouse (and excellent
place to view dolphins, grey seals, even orcas) in the Pembrokeshire Coast
Blue Flags than anywhere in the UK. Just a short walk away from it all is this
former stone granary, once used to store grain or feed. The house has been
lovingly converted by comedian Griff Rhys Jones and his designer son, and is
part of the family’s 70 acre Trehilyn Estate - the restoration of the farm was seen
in BBC series ‘A Pembrokeshire Farm. Prices from £564 for a midweek stay. ◆
underthethatch.co.uk/granart
BritishTravelJournal.com 97
BRITISH TRAVEL JOURNAL CROSSWORD 08
ACROSS
1 Pulled over (7)
5 Saucer study (7)
9 Urbane (6)
10 Sidmouth's cliffs are from this
period (8)
11 Loch Ness castle (8)
12 Avaricious (6)
13 Advocates (10)
15 --- Thames, an historic street
next to Tower Bridge (4)
16 Parliamentary productions (4)
18 In a unified manner (10)
21 Burns brightly (6)
22 Rebelled at sea (8)
24 The Granite City (8)
25 William III's favourite fruit? (6)
26 Annie and Oliver Twist (7)
27 Secreted (7)
DOWN
2 Devon/Cornwall border river (5)
3 Scandalous affair of the early
1960s (7)
4 Mountainous gardens near
Faversham, Kent? (7)
6 Cold spots (7)
7 Flat fillers (7)
8 Ceremonial centre of the City of
London (9)
10 Egyptian subject of a permanent
exhibition in Dorchester (11)
14 Vale of Avalon brand? (9)
17 Cumbrian stately home (7)
18 Artificial reservoir (7)
19 So Titus, drunk, doesn't dance
(4,3)
20 Roman sackers (7)
23 Caernarfon Castle's most
impressive tower (5)
The first correct crossword received will be rewarded with a free gift from
The Travelling Reader. Simply send your completed crossword (or the answers)
with your choice of The Original, The London, or Simply British Tastes box,
(thetravellingreader.com) and your postal address, by post to British Travel
Journal, Mitchell House, Brook Avenue, Warsash, Southampton, Hampshire,
SO31 9HP, or email the answers to [email protected]
Answers will be printed in the Summer Issue out 4 June
ANSWERS TO CROSSWORD 07 | AUTUMN/WINTER 2020
ACROSS: 8 Oil palm 9 Yule log 10 Napoleon 11 Missus 12 Aintree 13
Orcombe 14 L S Ts 17 Etive 19 Sham 23 Thrones 24 Cuillin 25 Glasto 26
Romancer 27 Ingrate 28 Islands DOWN: 1 Cornwall 2 Slip knot 3 Sailors 4
Immodest 5 Submerge 6 Tensions 7 Columbia 15 St Helena 16 Scousers 17
Eyemouth 18 Victoria 20 Holocene 21 Montrose 22 Sizable.
FOR YOUR JOURNEY
Books, apps, travel gadgets and crossword
W E LOVE
THE FLIGHTLESS
TRAVELLER
Trips that can be made via land or sea
ensuring greener, more sustainable journeys.
Includes Scotland’s western isles, Dublin and
Galway, Bristol, Wales Coast Path, West
Highland Way and County Wicklow. £22
waterstones.com
98 BritishTravelJournal.com
SAMSONITE KONNECT
BACKPACK
The Samsonite Konnect-i slimline Backpack
seamlessly connects with your mobile via a
tag that tucks into the strap, allowing you to
accept calls, hear text messages and play
music with just one touch! £179
samsonite.co.uk
RICHARD OSMAN'S
HOUSE OF GAMES
Based on the hit BBC2 show, the House
of Games board game is the ultimate
test of knowledge and skill. Team up to
tackle some trivia or face off against each
other in the iconic Answer Smash. £25
johnlewis.com
CLANLANDS BY
OUTLANDER STARS
Sam Heughan and Graham McTavish's
wild Scottish adventure! Plus don't miss
their eight-part TV series of their journey
Men in Kilts: A roadtrip with Sam And
Graham coming out soon. £20
hodder.co.uk
Unforgettable Cornwall Holidays
DISCOVER YOUR CORNISH GEM
Let Cornish Gems set the scene for your holiday highlife in Cornwall.
Choose from over 180 luxury holiday homes offering beautiful settings from groups of 2 to 20.
BEACH APARTMENTS • COUNTRY HOUSES • COASTAL COTTAGES • DOG FRIENDLY
www.cornishgems.com | 01872 241 241
DESIGNED & MADE IN ORKNEY, SCOTLAND
Snowdrop
COLLECTION
These small, delicate flowers herald
the beginning of spring, and are
a welcome sign of life and renewal.
Shown in silver with Leaf enamel
and also available in 18ct gold
with Opalescent enamel.
ORKNEY | EDINBURGH | GLASGOW
01856 861 203 | sheilafleet.com