Kiftsgate Court

The Cotswolds & Oxford

2405 | 4 to 10 June | 7 days | maximum number 12

This tour includes visits to Broughton Grange, Hidcote Manor, Upton Wold, Kiftsgate Court, Kelmscott Manor, Rousham House, Buscot Park, Sezincote, Batsford Arboretum, the National Herb Centre, Burford Garden Co, Cotswold villages and market towns, National Gardens Scheme Gardens Open for Charity Day, and a whole day exploring historic Oxford

As quintessentially English as afternoon tea…

We’ve been showing off the Cotswolds for over twenty years. It’s a permanent fixture in our tour calendar and we know it well. We know its quiet country lanes, we know the best country pubs and its pretty, chocolate-box villages and its bustling market towns.

And there’s a good reason why it’s an ‘annual’, and that’s because the Cotswolds is home to some of England’s finest gardens, world-famous gardens like Hidcote Manor, highly-acclaimed contemporary gardens like Broughton Grange and historically important gardens like Rousham House.

All these beautiful gardens, plus a whole day exploring the delights of Oxford and a week criss-crossing one of England’s most iconic landscapes. And that’s not all, we stay in an excellent hotel, in Lower Slaughter, as pretty and picturesque a village as you could ask for!

Prices

Per person, sharing

2,600 GBP | 3,640 USD | 2.860 EUR | 31.200 SEK

Prices, per person, sharing a double or twin room

Per person, single occupancy

3,200 GBP | 4,480 USD | 3.520 EUR | 38.400 SEK

Prices, per person, for the single occupancy of a double room

Prices, reservations & payments

Please read the Prices, reservations & payments section in the Information & FAQs page and the comments in the additional tour information below the tour itinerary.

Itinerary

Scroll down to see Additional tour information – sleeping and eating, general information and a tour area map

Broughton Grange

D1 Tuesday, 4 June

Tim will collect you from the Sheraton Heathrow Hotel, immediately north of Terminal 5, Heathrow Airport and, once we are all together, we drive just north of Banbury, Oxfordshire, to the National Herb Centre for lunch and a look around their extensive range of herbs – from kitchen to medicine cabinet.

We’re not far from Broughton Grange, where we spend the afternoon exploring this wonderful contemporary garden. Set amongst some 350 acres of parkland and farmland, with planting that owes its origins to the Victorian era, the gardens at Broughton Grange were brought into the modern era by the current owner, Stephen Hester, when he bought the estate in 1992. Hester commissioned leading landscape designer Tom Stuart-Smith to transform the six-acre south-facing field into a walled garden and now Broughton Grange is widely recognised as one of the most significant private contemporary gardens in Britain.

It is not too far from our hotel, The Slaughters Country Inn, in Lower Slaughter, a picturesque Cotswold village, where we will arrive in good time to check in, relax and enjoy a drink before dinner at the hotel.

Today's total driving is about 100 miles/160 km

Upton Wold

D2 Wednesday, 5 June

Our day starts with a private guided tour of Upton Wold, like Broughton Grange, an exceptional private garden. Created by its owners, Ian and Caroline Bond, it is astonishing to think that there was no garden here, at all, when they moved to Upton Wold in 1973, just a piece of land surrounding a beautiful house, two very ancient yews, an imposing holly, some old apple trees and a very beautiful view.

Our second visit is to nearby Batsford Arboretum, for lunch and to explore its wide-ranging collections, including the National Collection of Japanese Flowering Cherries. Batsford Park, the house (closed to the public), was home to the Mitford sisters.

Today’s final visit is to neighbouring Sezincote, an extraordinary English County House built in the 'Indian Style', a unique combination of Hindu and Muslim architecture. The gardens, designed with the help of Humphrey Repton, are a romantic landscape of temples, grottoes, waterfalls and canals, all reminiscent of the Taj Mahal. We’ll stop in Stow-on-the-Wold, one of the Cotswold’s chief market towns, on our way home to the Slaughters Inn, where we will have dinner.

Today's driving is about 50 miles/80 km

Kiftsgate Court

D3 Thursday, 6 June

We start the day exploring Chipping Campden, a busy, honey-stoned Cotswold market town, where we visit St James' Church, a fine example of a medieval wool church. Then to Hidcote Manor, the world-famous Arts & Crafts gardens created by Lawrence Johnston. Johnston, an American anglophile who settled in Britain with his mother, bought Hidcote in 1907, was gardening by 1910 and, by the 1920s, had 12 gardeners! Hidcote was his life's work and remains one of England's most influential 20th-century gardens.

We enjoy the whole of the mid part of the day at Hidcote before crossing the road to neighbouring Kiftsgate Court. Another Arts & Crafts garden, Kiftsgate is a romantic garden enjoying stunning, far-reaching views over the Vale of Evesham and, of course, it is home to the Kiftsgate Rose. Unusually, Kiftsgate has twice passed from mother to daughter – from Heather Muir, who created the garden, via Heather’s daughter, Diany Binny, to Diany’s daughter, Anne Chambers, who, with her husband, Jonny, gardens Kiftsgate today.

We stop for dinner at The Halfway, Kineton, en route home to Lower Slaughter.

Today's driving is about 50 miles/80 km

All Souls College, Oxford

D4 Friday, 7 June

We spend the whole day in Oxford, a busy, historic city most associated with its university.

The University of Oxford can trace its teaching to 1096, making it the oldest university in the English-speaking world and the world's second-oldest university in continuous operation. It also has the world’s largest university press and the largest academic library system nationwide.

Important though the university and its 39 colleges are, Oxford is much more than that. From Alice in Wonderland and Inspector Morse to Harry Potter, and from boutique shopping to exceptional heritage, there is a great deal to occupy a day in Oxford and to help you get the most out of your day, we start our visit with a guided walking tour with superb, specialist guides from Footprint Tours.

There is plenty of time to explore and visit colleges and museums, before we meet for tea and scones at the Old Parsonage Hotel, after which we will return to Lower Slaughter for dinner.

Today's driving is about 60 miles/100 km

Harold Peto Garden, Buscot Park

D5 Saturday, 8 June

We start our day in Burford, for a brief walk around this charming, busy Cotswolds market town, before a late-morning visit to Kelmscott Manor, the country home of the writer, designer and socialist William Morris. One of the 19th century's most celebrated designers and a leading light in the Arts & Crafts Movement, Morris made Kelmscott his home from 1871 until his death in 1896.

We have lunch at Kelmscott before enjoying the afternoon at nearby Buscot Park, a beautiful Italianate country house. Built between 1779 and 1783, it is the home of Lord Farringdon and his fabulous art collection. Overlooking a lake and surrounded by extensive pleasure gardens the late 18th-century house has, to one side, the original kitchen garden, now the Four Seasons garden, and, to the other side, woodland walks leading to one of Britain’s finest Harold Peto water gardens. An unusual, but wonderful, marriage of Italianate formality with an English parkland landscape.

We dine at a long-time favourite, The Village Pub, Barnsley, on our way home to Lower Slaughter.

Today's driving is about 60 miles/100 km

Arlington Row, Bibury

D6 Sunday, 9 June

We begin the day at Misenden, an early 17th-century house and garden overlooking the rolling Cotswold hills. It is a tranquil garden with magnificent mixed borders, an array of roses and perennials and a contrasting topiary yew walk. After morning coffee at Miserden, we meander along the ever-so-pretty Coln Valley, stopping in Coln Rogers, to visit the 11th-century Saxon church of St Andrew, and stopping in Bibury, to visit Arlington Row, a 17th-century row of Weavers’ Cottages, ending up at the extraordinary Burford Garden Company for lunch and a little light shopping.

We will visit private gardens in the afternoon, courtesy of the National Garden Scheme (NGS). Over the course of a year, some 3,000-4,000 gardens across England & Wales open their gardens to the public, charging for entry and donating those fees, via the NGS, to charity. So far, the NGS has raised over £55m for nursing charities since 1927, when the scheme began.

We won’t know which gardens we’ll visit until nearer the time, but wherever it is we will return to Lower Slaughter for dinner.

Today's driving is about 80 miles/130 km

Dovecot Garden, Rousham House

D7 Monday, 10 June

Our final day starts at Daylesford Organics, an organic farm shop like no other, where we pick up supplies for our picnic lunch, before setting off to Rousham House, an historically-important, 18th-century landscape garden designed by William Kent, and one of the few gardens of this period to have escaped alteration. To one side of the house are two large walled gardens, complete with herbaceous borders, parterres and an original pigeon house.

The Sheraton Heathrow Hotel is just over an hour away, where the tour ends and where we plan to be in good time for evening flights home. If you are staying in the UK and don't need, or wish, to return to London or Heathrow, then please let us know your onward travel plans, so that we may assist you in getting to your next destination.

Today's driving is about 90 miles/145 km

St James’s Parish Church, Chipping Campden

The Cotswolds

The Cotswolds or, more properly, the Cotswold Hills, is a range of rolling yellow oolitic limestone hills running roughly southwest to northeast, some 25 miles/40 km wide and 90 miles/145 km long, and largely in the counties of Gloucestershire and Oxfordshire. It is a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and is especially characterised by picturesque market towns and villages, each of a slightly different hue of stone, varying in colour from a warm grey to a rich, deep honey colour.

Since Norman times the Cotswolds have been inextricably linked to sheep farming and wool production, and it is largely the medieval wool trade that made the Cotswolds the prosperous place it remains today.

The Cotswolds are notable, too, for being something of a spiritual home of the Arts and Crafts Movement, examples of which we will see throughout the tour.

Additional tour information

Sleeping & eating

We will stay in the heart of the Cotswolds, for all six nights of the tour, at The Slaughters Country Inn, in the impossibly pretty village of Lower Slaughter.

We dine in, in the hotel dining room, on four evenings and dine out twice, once at a new establishment, The Halfway at Kineton, which has recently been taken over by an established chef with an enviable reputation, and once at The Village Pub, Barnsley, a long-standing favourite eatery.

The gardens

Few areas of England can compete with the quality of the gardens on offer in the Cotswolds – and across gardening styles and eras too. Arts & Crafts gardens, like Hidcote Manor, the garden first visited in 1931 by Vita Sackville-West and her husband, Harold Nicolson, the then-new owners of Sissinghurst Castle, and Kiftsgate Court, gardened by three generations of women. Historic landscapes at Sezincote (Humphrey Repton), Buscot Park (Harold Peto) and Rousham House (William Kent), and contemporary gardens, like those at Upton Wold and at Broughton Grange. All of them world-class, well-renowned gardens.

Oxford

Most famously, the city is home to the University of Oxford, an institution first mentioned in 12th-century records and the oldest university in the English-speaking world. Oxford is also an important centre of motor manufacturing too, ever since Morris Motors was established in the city in 1910. Even today, it is BMW’s principal production site for Minis.

To get the best out of your day in Oxford, we suggest a little research on the things you may like to see and do. Visit Oxford is the official tourist website.

Bedrooms & upgrades

We will generally book standard rooms (however described) for the group, although these may vary from room to room in the hotel.

Single travellers
Single travellers will have their own room, typically a ‘smaller’ double room or, very occasionally, a twin room.

Upgrades
If you would like to upgrade your room, please look at the hotel’s website and then contact us to enquire as to availability.

Cotswold tour group 2022

Good to know

The Cotswolds cover a huge area – almost 800 square miles – and run through five counties (Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, Warwickshire, Wiltshire and Worcestershire).

The word ‘wold’, from the German ‘wald’, meaning “highland covered with trees, wood, forest”.

The Cotswolds has over 3,000 miles of footpaths and bridleways, ancient woodlands and wildflower meadows and some 4,000 miles of Cotswold stone walls dividing up the landscape.

Joining instructions

The meeting arrangements, as outlined in Day 1 of the itinerary, above, will be confirmed by email some 8-weeks before the tour.

NB. Where we specify a hotel as the meeting point, it is because of the hotel’s location, the ease of access to it for the minibus and because it affords customers, who are not staying at the hotel, a comfortable and secure environment in which to wait. It is not because we endorse the hotel.

Useful links

Click here for some useful links to other websites, notably websites of our national and regional tourism, heritage, horticultural, cultural organisations, and travel and transport websites.

Please let us know if any website links are dysfunctional. Thank you.

Accuracy & faithfulness

We try to be as accurate as we can, when describing our itineraries, and as faithful to the itinerary as we can, when undertaking the tour, but changes do occur, either necessarily or unavoidably.

Acknowledgements

We would like to acknowledge the assistance of the many guide books and websites we use in planning our tours. Thank you.

 

Adderley Travel's garden tour of the Cotswolds greatly surpassed my expectations. Yes, of course I expected lovely gardens; however, I had no idea we would meet the head gardener at Broughton Grange. Nor did I imagine being given a garden tour at Upton Wold by the owner of the estate. These are only two of the many noteworthy experiences on the tour. Our home base, Slaughters Country Inn, was outstanding in comfort, location, and service. Our trip leader, Timothy Ray, was organized, knowledgable, patient, and unfailingly considerate. In conclusion, I highly recommend Adderley Travel and look forward to joining them in future for another garden tour.

— Eileen Kramer USA, June 2022