The lush greens of Spring give way to the bold colours of peonies and roses on this late June tour of some of the West Country’s most magical gardens and estates. We are delighted to bring you several exclusive visits, including the 16th-century home and garden of Julian and Isabel Bannerman, and the intimate, secret garden at Chilcombe.
The price of the tour includes your 6 night stay at Symondsbury Old Rectory, a spacious 300-year old Georgian house, as well as delicious teas and dinners prepared by Caroline and Clare, with help from Dorset’s best cake baker, Haley. As usual we will be lunching at a variety of our favourite restaurants in this beautiful corner of south-west England. It’s all included.
PLEASE NOTE: ALL PRICES ARE PER PERSON.
Not a hotel, but a private house perfectly designed to host our ‘country house week’ tours, Symondsbury Old Rectory is an elegant classical Georgian house with high ceilings and sash windows.
Delicious breakfasts, restaurant lunches and dinners prepared by our chefs Caroline and Clare, with Hayley's cakes for tea
Your favourite tipple, plus wines selected for us by Johnnie Boden.
You'll travel in the luxury minibus to the gardens and restaurants
Enjoy talks from leading garden designers and photographers
Simon and Jason welcome you to a week of good company, good food, and wonderful garden visits, meeting the great gardeners of the West Country
You'll arrange your own flights and trains etc
We recommend you arrange your own insurance to cover delays and cancellations
Extra wine etc in restaurants
Arrive at Symondsbury Old Rectory for tea. We have time to unwind and enjoy the garden over drinks, before dinner is served.
Simon Tiffin and Jason Goodwin will set the scene with an introductory talk on the history and gardens of west Dorset.
Lunch is at the award-winng Brassica restaurant in Beaminster.
Set nearby in a beautiful valley, close to the village of Netherbury, Slape is the perfect example of mellow-stone, seventeenth-century English manor house. The wonderful gardens were laid out in the nineteenth century, just when Thomas Hardy, young architect and later novelist, was working on the design for the manor’s library and coach house.
Slape’s owners have been extensively restoring the gardens and rewilding some of the grounds (including the reintroduction of beavers). Slape Manor is also home to the River Cottage made famous by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall.
After dinner at the Old Rectory, there will be a talk and demonstration by celebrated florist Kate Reeves. After many years working in London, Kate opened the wonderful Rambling Rose florist in Beaminster to bring her flair and creativity to West Dorset.
After lunch at the Barrington Boar, a Somerset pub featured in the Michelin Guide 2023, we head to the handsome village of Martock. Here we visit Fergus
and Louise Dowding’s secret garden at Yews Farm, described in Gardens Illustrated as ‘a theatrical paradise’. This is a playful garden packed with a menagerie of topiary beasts, swathes of self-sown umbellifers and a layout that entices you to explore what Frederic magazine called ‘its flow of quirkily shaped box topiary nestling under verdurous bay, quince, and hawthorn trees, its towering licorice root and delicate Mexican daisies, and its scattered softness epitomizing cottage planting.’
“I’ll point the baton here and there, but the way that everything grows and pulls together is up to the plants and not me,’ Louise has said, with typical modesty. ‘It is often so much better than I could have possibly imagined, like a kind of magic.”
The stunning garden surrounding medieval South Wood Farm was first conceived by Professor Clive Potter, with the designer Arne Maynard helping him bring the garden together into a cohesive design. The result, in its owner’s words, is ‘a garden that slowly melts into the landscape’, in perfect harmony with its surrounding landscape and the medieval building at its centre.
We will enjoy a splendid picnic lunch, prepared for us by our cooks Caroline and Claire, in the grounds at South Wood.
In the afternoon you are free to explore further this wonderful corner of west Dorset. A walk along the nearby hollow way of Hell Lane – memorably described by nature writer Robert Macfarlane as “the view down a rifled barrel; an eye to the keyhole; a glimpse into the shade world” – or a trip to Lyme Regis
are excellent options.
We end the day back in Symondsbury, at the specialist plant nursery of Charles Chesshire. As well as curating this spectacular nursery, Charles has designed gardens at Burford House, consulted at Sudeley Castle gardens and is restoring
the park and gardens at Lydney Park. The nursery is also home to Charles’s extensive collection of herbaceous and itoh peonies.
This morning we visit Farrs, the Beaminster home of the furniture maker John Makepeace and his wife Jenny, to explore two strikingly different but equally
enchanting gardens.
John has created a landscape of order and precision, featuring clipped monumental topiary and precisely planted grass borders. Yet pass through a door into the internal walled garden and you enter Jenny’s world of carefully curated colourful chaos; a true plants woman’s paradise.
Lunch is overlooking the cliffs and Chesil Beach at the Seaside Boarding House.
In the afternoon, we go up the valley to Chilcombe. Created by the artist John Hubbard and his wife Caryl, and justly compared to Sissinghurst and Hidcote, the garden at Chilcombe is a paradise in every sense, composed of linked enclosures all hidden away in the hills behind Chesil Beach. The main walled garden is divided into a series of rooms by pleached apple trees and sculpted yew hedges. Each of these intimate spaces invites you to stop and admire the plantsmanship and love that went in to its creation.
After lunch at The Green, an award wining restaurant close to Sherborne Abbey, we travel to the home of fabled designer Jasper Conran. One of England’s loveliest smaller houses, Bettiscombe Manor has a garden to match, with orchards, mellow brick enclosures, and broad beds flanking an unforgettable view of the Vale, looking down to the sea. We have an exclusive invitation to visit in the afternoon, to hear about Jasper’s design principles and the work that has gone into creating this magical English garden.
We return to the Old Rectory for a valedictory dinner.
Depart Symondsbury Old Rectory after breakfast.