Best Cotswold Tours

South Cotswold Tours

South Cotswolds Day Tour

SOUTH COTSWOLDS

TOUR INFORMATION


Experience our South Cotswold Day Tour, a curated journey through charming villages and rolling countryside in the southern Cotswolds. This South Cotswold Sightseeing Tour provides a relaxed and flexible way to explore the region with a local guide.
Usually single-day tours, but 2 -3-day tours available upon request at a discounted price.
Full-day Tour from as little as £575/day  depending upon the time of year. All tours are fully inclusive but do not include lunch tea or admission to attractions or sites.
Full payment by card or cash is requested on the day of tour. 

DURATION 
Minimum 8 Hours

STARTING LOCATION
From your Hotel, train station, B&B or wherever you are staying in the Cotswolds.

Painswick, The Queen of the Cotswolds, is regally perched on the Painswick Valley’s steep slopes,was famous for its Cloth  Trade in the Middle Ages. The fast-flowing streams were used to power the mills, and the village became settled by Flemish Weavers in the 17th.C.Painswick’s most striking feature is The Norman church of  St.Mary, extended in 1480 with its graceful 17th.C spire. The Churchyard, with its clipped colonnades of yew, is very well known. The colonnades are made up of 99 trees. Many attempts have been made to plant the 100th. but with little success. This is supposedly the work of the Devil who kills the 100th.! Just outside the town, you’ll find the 18th C landscaped Roccco Gardens wrapped around Painswick House.

Tetbury, known as The Gateway to Southern Cotswolds was a major centre for the Cotswold wool trade in the Middle Ages. Founded on the site of an ancient hill fort, ans Anglo Saxon monastery was established here in 681. Access to the town in the Middle Ages, was up the historic Chipping Steps. Highgrove, a private residence of King Charles 111 and Camilla, Queen Consort  is just a few miles to the south of the town.The market place built by the Feoffees in 1668 is the centre piece of the town. Regular markets are held here. With a population of just under 6000, the town offers a  charming and quintessentially English style. The Woolsack races are held here every May where contestants have to run up Gumstool Hill carrying 65 lbs of wool, a tradition that  dates back to the 17thC.  

WOODCHESTER

This Historic building is hidden in a beautiful Cotswold valley. A Unique and amazing Grade1 listed Victorian Gothic house—an unfinished masterpiece by a local architect Benjamin Bucknall from Rodborough. The building was started in 1857 but stopped abruptly in the late 1860s, so floors and ceilings are missing, walls not plastered, and windows unglazed. All the secrets of construction are visible to all visitors. Set in a secluded Cotswold valley untouched by time, the building was saved from dereliction but never completed. The Mansion is situated in National Trust owned Park-Land. There is a 3/4 mile walk from the car park to the Mansion.

BIBURY

Described by William Morris as the “Most Beautiful Village in England”, Bibury is certainly worth visiting. Bibury has Saxon Origins -Becheberie, which can be seen in the Saxon Church of St Mary’s in the original chancel arch jambs. The trout-filled River Coln glides slowly past the most photographed spot in the Cotswolds – Arlington Row. Once a wool store, but converted into a row of weavers cottages in the 17th.C and now owned by the National Trust. The only nod to the 21stC has been the introduction of superfast Broadband to the cottages!. A line drawing of Arlington Row was featured on the inside page of the British passport four years ago.

“We wanted to send a note to you today to thank you for our day yesterday. We had a fabulous time and very much enjoyed your company and your detailed knowledge of the Cotswolds. We saw so much that we never could have covered on our own and learned a great deal. We are grateful.” Z & M