The Mail on Sunday

Cotswold cuties you’re going to fall in love with

From luxuriatin­g in a grand hotel to sleeping in a ‘potting shed’, we’ve found the ten best...

- By Sarah Turner

THE Cotswolds – stretching from Oxfordshir­e to Warwickshi­re and touching Wiltshire, Worcesters­hire and Gloucester­shire – are the picture-perfect showcase for England at its loveliest. The area’s a big hit with tourists from home and abroad, all drawn to its palpable history and extraordin­ary beauty.

In late summer and early autumn, village pubs spill out into nearby greens with tables and benches, while the last of the year’s fetes and horticultu­ral shows blend in among the rivers and meadows.

The best hotels, inns and ‘pubs with rooms’ have a glorious sense of old-world charm – and a cutting-edge approach to good food and service. Here are ten of our favourites.

THE BLOOMING BEAUTIFUL Barnsley House, near Cirenceste­r

A HORTICULTU­RAL shrine with full-on hotel frills. This 17th Century manor house was once the home of famed gardener Rosemary Verey and the grounds still follow her classic British planting scheme; the five gardeners who keep it looking artlessly beautiful are known to pass on tips to guests.

The 18 rooms aren’t conformist either, ranging from more formal in the main house to whimsical hideaways, such as the Potting Shed nearby. There’s also a spa with an outdoor hydrothera­py pool, and two restaurant­s, the Italian-accented Potanger nger and the robustly local Village Pub. ub.

B&B doubles from £309. 09. barnsleyho­use.com

THE BARGAIN Mason Arms, Meysey Hampton

IT’S an unusually named village, but it’s a charmer – and has a very nice village pub. Landlord Paul Fallows is a local boy with a vision. In four years of f ownership, he has already dy built up a collection of awards for his food.

While still a hub for villagers, there are eight bedrooms dotted d tt d around the building. They are understate­d but comfortabl­e, with beamed ceilings, wing armchairs and cool white furnishing­s.

The pub downstairs i s more rustic with scrubbed tables, wooden floors and local touches that include coffee roasted in Cirenceste­r and a menu that’s big on British classics.

B&B doubles from £90. sawdays.co.uk

OLD SCHOOL CHARMER Buckland Manor, Broadway

WORCESTERS­HIRE may be the sleepier part of the Cotswolds – but Broadway has plenty of life. It’s one of the region’s honeypots with antiques shops, National Trust properties and a great little museum. Buckland Manor, which opened in the 1980s, was one of Britain’s first posh country house hotels and still plays to its ancient, mullion-windowed strengths, although the restaurant (men need to pack jackets) has food that is lighter and more thoughtful than of yore. Of the bedrooms, the Oak Room still goes for full oak panelling and four poster charm, but the rest are souffle-light and sweet, with pale greens and yellows.

In summer, the tennis court and croquet lawn come into their own while the ultra-posh leather Dubarry boots on loan for walks will help you fit in with the locals.

B&B doubles from £234. (bucklandma­nor.co.uk)

THE CLASSIC POSH PUB Lion Inn, Winchcombe

THIS part of Gloucester­shire is the walking heart of the Cotswolds, which means you’ll have the opportunit­y to work up the perfect appetite for the meals at Winchcombe’s Lion Inn. Greenfinge­red vill agers supply t he inn with vegetables (they receive free drinks in return) and guests are the beneficiar­y, with full-of-flavour tomatoes and courgettes on the menu. Upstairs, behind the pub’s wisteria- clad walls, you’ll find eight charming, television-free bedrooms.

B&B doubles from £165. thelionwin­chcombe.co.uk

THE ARTY TYPE Artist Residence, South Leigh

THIS is the Cotswolds at its most boho. The hotel, in the Oxfordshir­e village of South Leigh, has five bedrooms and three suites, kitted out with kilim rugs, while packing cases are repurposed as bedside tables. If you want to spread out, opt for the Barn. There’s art in the bar, where the decor feels urban but it’s all local farm produce in the kitchen. The menu is strong on British classics, so there’s fish and chips among the steaks and shaved courgettes.

Doubles from £170, room-only. artistresi­dence.co.uk

THE UBER- COOL SPA Minster Mill and Spa, Witney

ON THE banks of the River Windrush, this newly-refurbishe­d hotel has seen the honey-coloured stone polished to within an inch of its 600-year-old life.

Bedrooms, meanwhile, have been given a pared-down but high-comfort Scandi look. Oh, and there’s a spa, now with everything from ice caves to tropical rain showers.

Anglers will be happy, too; there’s a mile of riverbank where you can tickle trout and the hotel can supply rods and tackle. Or just watch the water glide by, glass in hand. B&B doubles from £159. minstermil­l.co.uk

A TASTE OF FARM LIF E Lowfield Farm, Tetbury

PRINCE Charles and Camilla may live next door on the Highgrove Estate – but this is a charming and decidedly more low-key place to stay. Owners Amanda and Giles offer just two comfortabl­e, stylish rooms on their family farm, alongside the grazing sheep and laying chickens ( you’ll be eating their efforts for breakfast).

There are woodland walks galore and a short drive gets you into a dif

ferent world amid the boutiques and restaurant­s of historic Tetbury.

B&B doubles from £95. sawdays.co.uk

THE GEORGIAN GEM Bower House, Shipston-on-Stour

HALFWAY between Stratfordu­pon-Avon and Chipping Norton is the quaint market town of Shipston-on-Stour – and one of its grand Georgian townhouses is now the Bower House, updated with huge attention to detail, lavished on both the food and the accommodat­ion.

Downstairs, for the former, it’s all beetroot carpaccio and scallops ( t he Sunday l unch gets r ave reviews, too).

Upstairs are five rooms with a side order of panache. You get art, walk-in showers, eau-de-Nil tiles and bunk beds for children.

B&B doubles from £130. bower.house

VINTAGE CHARACTER Three Choirs Vineyard, Newent

IT MAY not seem like it, but things do change in the Cotswolds – witness the arrival of a burgeoning wine industry in fields sheltered by the Malverns and Brecon Beacons. As well as producing 300,000 bottles a year, Three Choirs Vineyard has eight hotel rooms and three lodges tucked among 75 acres of vines. There’s a restaurant as well, with wine-minded food such as baked camembert and Chateaubri­and.

Doubles from £129, room-only. three-choirs-vineyards.co.uk

THE HIDDEN GEM The Tudor Farmhouse, Coleford

WITH a history stretching back to the 16th Century, this is a farmhouse with all the flagstones and panelling you’d expect, at the edge of the Cotswolds by the Forest of Dean.

All 20 rooms are categorise­d as different types of poultry. Hatchlings are the smallest, cockerels bigger – and all are stylish, with roll-top baths and beds to sink into.

The restaurant makes the most of its rural setting. The chef tries to source within 20 miles and there’s an in-house forager to take guests on trips to his favourite spots.

B&B doubles from £159. tudorfarmh­ousehotel.co.uk

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TRENDY: The Lodge at Thyme, right, with its Baa bar, inset top. Above: Food at Bower House
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