Sleeps 2 - 4 | 2 Bedrooms | Reviews
Accommodation Summary: cottage sleeps 4 South West, West Country.
Book with the owner direct
Key Holiday Home Information:
Family-Friendly, Facilities include: Cot, Highchair.
Nearest Airport and Railway Station: .
Nearest city or town: Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, approximately 6 miles away.
Type of holiday rental: No pets rural retreat.
Short Breaks and weekend breaks:
Set in the heart of the lush green Somerset countryside between the popular tourist centres of Wells and Cheddar, Honeyhurst Farm is situated in an idyllic location with lovely views over the Mendip Hills and the Somerset Levels. A babbling brook carrying spring water from the Mendip Hills passes through the property. Open fields surround the Farm complex providing an idyllic private, quiet (with the odd ‘moo’ or ‘bah’) rural location.
The spacious, farm cottage sleeps 4 and offers 800 sq. ft. (75 sq. m) of living space. It has been converted from a single storey stone farm building, formerly used as a cider store in bygone times and has been equipped to a very high standard. The accommodation has a double bedroom and a twin bedroom, with a lounge, large kitchen/dining room, shower over bath room, entrance porch and a small conservatory with french doors opening onto a south west facing sun terrace with charcoal barbecue, table and chairs.
Flexible changeover day: No
Recommended Attractions near Rodney Stoke: Honeyhurst is an ideal base for exploring the many interesting local villages such as historic Axbridge with its village square and King John?s Hunting Lodge, Priddy on the Mendips with its village green is home to a 650 year old sheep fair and there is genteel Wedmore with its up-market shops. You may wish to visit the nearby towns of Cheddar with its famous gorge and caves, Medieval Wells is England?s smallest city with its magnificent 12th and 13th century cathedral and bishops palace, Bath is a World Heritage Site, with its Roman Baths, cathedral, Georgian buildings and shopping and Glastonbury, is famed for its early English Christian history, its ruined 12th century Benedictine Abbey and its annual pop festival. It also has a much photographed local conical hill known as the Tor with its connections to the legendary King Arthur and the ancient Isle of Avalon. The coastline, including Burnham (15 Miles), Breen (17 miles), Clevedon (20 Miles) and Weston Super Mare (18 miles) suits all tastes from isolated dune and estuary shorelines to modern man made attractions with entertainment, fast food, arcade games, donkey rides, piers and boat trips..
More about the Location:Good places to eat near Rodney Stoke: Since this part of the West Country is a year round tourist attraction suiting a variety of tastes, the many local pubs, cafes and restaurants are able to serve moderately priced food to a relatively high standard. English, continental and ethnic cuisine is available. For those who wish to prepare their own food there are several traditional butchers and bakers in the area and fresh local vegetables and fruit, including the famous local Cheddar Valley strawberries, are available at a number of roadside stalls. Cheddar cheese and ?scrumpy? cider are two of the better known local products and are widely available from shops or direct from local manufacturers. .
Short Breaks: No, minimum 7 nights
This owner does not offer secure online booking. We recommend wherever possible booking online via secure online booking.
If you would like to book, please call the owner, and discuss their booking process with them. Owners that do not accept online booking, may request you fill out a booking form and pay via Bank Transfer.
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