Johanna Ruter
"Absolutely fabulous! Each day a different experience -
from canal paths, to pastures, to fabulous gardens, to secret
valleys - idyllic settings that become a reality, no longer
a dream" |
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Sadell Cantor
"I've developed a passion for walking tours all thanks
to David and Jennie. I can't believe four days went by so fast.
I'd do it again in a heart-beat" |
Deb Mendenbach
"Just beautifully planned. Something almost mystical about
going through beech forests on old tracks and ancient ways"
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Frances Takvam
"It's been more than we ever expected - the beautiful gardens,
the ambience of the pubs, the hospitality of our hosts"
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Professor Mary Fleming
& George Thompson
"Seeing the most beautiful countryside, carefully managed
sometimes for a thousand years.
We strongly recommend it"
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Tamsin Treverton-Jones
It’s 8.30 on a sunny, sparkling
May morning and we are thundering along country roads in a
Landrover towards the picturesque Gloucestershire village
of Bibury. Swaying around in the back with the cool box and
a couple of loose pairs of walking boots, I manage to hold
some amiable conversation with my fellow travellers, whom
I met for the first time twenty minutes ago.
Preliminary niceties over, we start
thinking about the day ahead as we bowl in to the centre of
Bibury, memorably described by William Morris as “the
most beautiful village in England”. We glance from side
to side, taking in the Trout Farm, the haunted mill, the duck-strewn
river and the exquisite Arlington Row: a low-lying, sunken
string of cottages with overhung, stone roofs and tiny windows.
But we don’t stop here – at least, not for the
time being: we motor a further mile into the neighbouring
village of Ablington where we park up and jump out.
Read more...
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