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Willow Vale, Snowshill

Willow Vale, Snowshill

Willow Vale, 3 Springhill Cottages, SNOWSHILL, WR12 7JU, United Kingdom

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Property details

Three bedrooms: 2 x king-size (one second-floor), 1 x child’s bunk. Bathroom with bath, walk-in shower, basin and WC. Open-plan living space with kitchen, dining area and sitting area with woodburning stove

Key features & notes

Bath
Bed linen
Broadband/wifi
Coffee machine
Cot available
Dishwasher
Fridge/freezer
Garden/patio
Hairdryer
Heating
Highchair available
Hob
Microwave
Off road parking
Oven
Pub
Shower
Towels
Tumble dryer
TV
Washing machine
Woodburning stove

About where you'll be staying

Snowshill village sits on the top of the escarpment above the villages of Broadway, Buckland, and Laverton. It is a secluded village where ancient pretty cottages and a 19th century church cluster around a small green. As its name implies – if there is any snow about then you will find it here first. Snowshill is renowned for its manor house, now administered by the National Trust. The Manor was owned by Winchcombe Abbey as early as 821, until the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1539. It was at one point part of Katherine Parr’s marriage dowry, although she probably never visited. The house passed through many different hands and the way it has been added on to at different points in its history reflects this. The northern end of the house is the oldest surviving part, dating from around 1500, still medieval in its design. It was extended and reshaped in around 1600 but it was the additions by the Sambach family in the early part of the eighteenth century that from one viewpoint radically altered the aspect of the manor from an Elizabethan to a Georgian house. The village is also home to a wonderfully unspoiled fifteenth century inn – The Snowshill Arms. If you’re feeling energetic, and are in the village over the summer months, then wander 3/4 mile up through the village and visit the famous lavender fields. The fame of the village has increased in recent years with many tv and films using it as a beautiful location – the most notable of which is probably the filming of Bridget Jones’ Diary.
See More Holiday Cottages In The Cotswolds

Bird watching in The Cotswolds

The Cotswolds is a richly rural area with more than 3,000 footpaths and trails running through farmland and wildflower meadows, as well as ancient woodlands to explore.

For woodland birds, Box Wood tucked away in a valley near Minchinhampton is well worth a visit. Comprised mainly of beech, with some limestone streams running through it, in summer it becomes alive with birds. Listen out for great-spotted woodpeckers and tawny owls, and keep your eyes peeled for treecreepers and nuthatches as they run up and down the trees.

More woods can be found on Crickley Hill jointly managed by the National Trust and Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust. Located just south of Cheltenham its habitats also include grassland, scrub, and limestone rock exposures. Mixed flocks of tits and finches are common in the woods, while kestrels can often be seen hovering above as they hunt for prey. In summer, the site is also a haven for wildflowers and butterflies.

Cotswold Water Park which straddles the Gloucestershire and Wiltshire border is a vast marl lake system spread over 42 miles. Cleveland Lakes Reserve is made up of two of the largest lakes and is an important site for both wintering and breeding birds including coots, great crested grebes, and little egrets. For bitterns, reed buntings, water rails, and snipes, head to Shorncote Reedbed which also has two bird hides so you can view the wildlife close up.

If you want to see some exotic and rare birds, Birdland in Bourton-on-the-water has a variety of attractions set in nine acres of gardens and woodland. Some of the highlights include the Parliament of Owls, home to eight species of owl, the Pandemonium of Parrots, where you can learn about the 16 species of parrot housed there, and Penguin Shore which has daily feeding displays. There are plenty of spots to have a picnic, as well as a children’s play area, and a gift shop.

Nearby Greystones Farm nature reserve is home to wildflower meadows, Iron Age ramparts, a replica Iron Age roundhouse, a working organic farm, and an interactive discovery barn. The old farm buildings are used by swallows and house martins for nesting and there are plenty of birds of prey to be spotted gliding overhead. There is also the opportunity to view a live camera feed of a barn owl box, and watch the birds as they bring up their chicks.

Farmland birds can be found all over the beautiful Cotswolds countryside. Look out for corn buntings, grey partridges, turtle doves, and yellow wagtails.

Nature on your doorstep

Broadway Gravel Pit
3.1 miles
The Christopher Cadbury Wetland Reserve
23.2 miles

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