Broadway Manor Cottages

03/02/2010

Farmers’ Markets, Broadway, The Cotswolds - Local Food for Local People

Filed under: cotswolds, Environment, Cotswold Cottages — admin @ 11:28 pm

Themed Farmers’ Markets are returning to Broadway on Sundays this summer starting at the end of May:

  • Sunday 3oth May there will be an ‘Asparagus Themed Market’ on the Village Green to tie in with the British Asparagus Festival that takes place in the Vale of Evesham from 23rd April to 21st June 2010.
  • Sunday 27th June, the middle weekend of the Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships, a ‘Strawberry Themed Market’ will take place on the Village Green.
  • Sunday 15th August, the Village Green will be host to a ‘Plum Themed Market’ during the middle of the 2010 Pershore Plum Festival.

strawberry2.jpgasparagus.jpgThe Markets will open at 10am selling a wide range of local delicious produce. The stalls will be staffed by the producer, their family or an employee who is directly involved with the growing and production of the local products that will be on sale. A visit to a Farmers’ Market is healthy and fun for all ages and a great place to buy local food produced for local people!

31/01/2010

Learn a Rural Skill whilst staying in a Cotswold Holiday Cottage

Filed under: cotswolds, Green Tourism, Environment, Cotswold Cottages — admin @ 09:14 pm

Iron gate on Cotswold Way near Belas KnapDry stone walling is an ancient rural skill that you can learn whilst staying in one of our Cotswold holiday cottages in Broadway. Courses in the art of dry stone walling are held throughout the year by the Cotswold Conservation Board in a number of locations in the Cotswolds Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.

Dry stone walls are an important feature of the British landscape and have existed in the Cotswolds since the Neolithic period 6,000 year ago when many of the long barrows on the Cotswolds had dry stone walls at their entrances and along their sides. Built of the local Jurassic limestone, most of the dry stone walls which can be seen today in the upland areas of the Cotswolds, separating the fields and lining the roadsides, were mostly built in the 18th and 19th centuries. 

Belas Knap neolithic burial groundOver recent years, many walls have fallen into a state of disrepair as the walls are expensive to maintain and can be replaced more cheaply with fencing. The art of dry stone walling was a dying skill throughout Britain. Today, however, dry stone walling is prospering with the recognition of the environmental value of walls, being a sustainable product made from natural materials.

With regular maintenance a dry stone wall can stand for well over 100 years and at the same time offer shelter and habitat for a wide variety of flora (walls are a particularly important habitats for lichens, mosses and ferns) and fauna (insects, spiders, snails, birds and small mammals such as voles, mice and rabbits).

This year, 2 day dry stone walling courses (£80 per person) are being held in the Cotswolds in Long Compton near Shipston-on-Stour starting on Saturday 1st May, near Tetbury starting on Saturday 17th April and Saturday 8th May, in Lansdown on Saturday 5th June and Saturday 24th July, at Huntsmans Quarry near Stow-on-the-Wold on Saturday 7th August, at Crickley Hill overlooking the Vale of Gloucester on Saturday 28th August and in Bradford on Avon on Saturday 2nd October.

Our Cotswold holiday cottages at Broadway Manor Cottages are open all year round and are an ideal location to stay whilst attending a dry stone walling course and learning a traditional rural skill. For more information about our holiday cottages in Broadway and the dry stone walling courses in the Cotswolds contact us.

25/01/2010

Gloucestershire Warwickshire Steam Railway - A Great Day Out

Filed under: cotswolds, The Cotswolds, Local History, Cotswold Cottages — admin @ 11:15 pm

Gloucestershire Warwickshire Steam Railway CotswoldsThe Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway (’The Honeybourne Line’) is a fantastic steam railway that currently runs from Toddington (approximately 5 miles from our Cotswold holiday cottages in West End, Broadway) to Cheltenham Racecourse through the picturesque Cotswold countryside.

The route from Toddington to Cheltenham is a 20-mile round trip.  From Toddington the line passes by the National Trust’s Hailes Abbey, through Winchcombe (home of Sudeley Castle), occasionally stopping at Gotherington Halt (on request) and on to the station at Cheltenham Racecourse. Trains pass through some of the most spectacular scenery with fantastic views across the Vale of Evesham towards the Malvern Hills and of Cleeve Hill near Cheltenham, the highest point in the Cotswolds. Hogwarts Express Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway The Cotswolds

Trains operate on certain days of the year and during the summer months and Bank Holidays there is a frequent service. The GWR also runs trains to and from Cheltenham Racecourse on race days (trains run during Cheltenham Gold Cup Festival week in March and the Cheltenham Open in November) and holds many special events during the year. Last year ‘Hogwarts Express’ (no. 5972 “Olton Hall”) from the Harry Potter films was a popular visitor and Thomas the Tank Engine often puts in an appearance.

This year the GWR is celebrating its 175th anniversary with the Cotswold Festival of Steam from 29th May and 6th June 2010. Many events and themed days are planned and there will be an impressive array of locomotives and displays.

A visit to the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Steam Railway is always a great way to spend time whilst visiting the Cotswolds and the Cotswold Festival of Steam will no doubt appeal to all ages.

For this and other Cotswold events in 2010 click here.

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