Herefordshire’s rustic beauty hasn’t slowed a new wave of sharp accommodation, shopping, food and drink operators. For an unheralded rural retreat with a dash of contemporary attitude, put this forward-looking county on your radar.
22 March, 2022
This article appears in Volume 36: Discovery.
Home to some of the UK's wildest landscapes and timeless black-timbered villages and towns, Herefordshire feels a world away from city life. Just three hours from London by train or car, this county has somehow humbly flown under the travel radar - despite the diverse array of fine produce, skilled makers and stylish hoteliers contributing to the scene.
That's not to say that this bucolic region, with two Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, in the Malvern Hills and Wye Valley, has been left undiscovered. Those in the know are charmed. Netflix producers have been setting up camp here since 2019 for coming-of-age comedy-drama Sex Education; the striking wooden chalet belonging to Gillian Anderson's character, Jean Milburn, sits above the handsome hamlet of Symonds Yat East.
But it's the county's urbane leanings that make it feel all the more special. The cathedral city of Hereford is packed with thriving restaurants and small shopping streets in its Independent Quarter. Nearby Chase Distillery is hailed as a pioneer of Britain's craft drinks movement, with world-renowned gin and vodka stemming from its Rosemaund Farm base. To the west, on the border of England and Wales, is the market town of Hay-on-Wye, which draws the great and good of the literary world for its annual Hay Festival. Then there's Ledbury, where locally owned stores line cobbled alleyways and Tudor houses double as artist studios, wine shops and delis.
A robust agricultural heritage has long kept the county busy, but there is a sense that Herefordshire is ready to take the spotlight. Younger farmers and landowners are pivoting from their traditional offerings in order to entice travellers seeking sustainability-led, design-driven experiences, taking farm-to-fork restaurants with rooms to the next level.
A long weekend of market town-hopping in Herefordshire, savouring the local ingredients and unearthing the rural retreats among lush, sheep-dotted fields, is one well spent. It feels as if the county is on the cusp of a new chapter as a great British getaway, but, also, that there's still time to explore it before the secret's out.
To find out more, head to visitherefordshire.co.uk
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