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All Fired Up
Since teetering on the brink of collapse a decade ago, Burleigh has undergone a remarkable revival of fortunes. Amelia Thorpe visits its Staffordshire premises to learn why its distinctive patterns are again a tea-time favourite.
Steep Learning Curves
Banks Fee, Longborough, Gloucestershire The home of Mr and Mrs Hugh Sloane Spectacular views set off varied formal elements, from pleached hornbeams to a large kitchen-garden, in this serene Cotswold garden, finds Non Morris.
All Being Well
With the internet now invading that most sacred of offline spaces–the in-flight cabin–the drive to escape and switch off is ever more vital. Arabella Youens examines the rising trend for wellness properties
The Loveliest Music You've Never Heard
The London Philharmonic Orchestra’s Isle of Noises season aims to redress the unfair marginalisation of many 20th-century British composers and their melodic music.
The Allium List
Alliums are statuesque, reliable and immensely useful, but which varieties should you choose? Val Bourne asks three experts to recommend their favourites
Questions Of Creation
Craft becomes art, as reality fails to live up to an artistic vision and Abstraction is rejected at Frieze Masters
Stop And Smell The Pages
Romantic, thoughtful and practical, this part-diary, part-handbook on fragrant planting is one of the best gardening books John Hoyland has read for years
Men In Tights
Whether your loyalties lay with Superman, Captain America, Dennis the Menace or Desperate Dan, comics were an integral part of childhood. As Batman turns 80, Katy Birchall salutes these iconic characters
Fit For A Royal Feast
A banqueting house built to welcome George I miraculously escaped destruction in the early 20th century and has been splendidly restored. William Aslet reports Photographs by Will Pryce
Dressing The Virgin Queen
The only known surviving fragment of Elizabeth I’s wardrobe has been hiding in plain sight for 400 years, discovers Catriona Gray
Beyond The Ha-ha
Juliet Roberts talks to five designers about how to make your garden merge with the landscape
Animal Magic - Derek Gow And Water Voles
As a small boy in Scotland, Derek Gow would fish for minnows with his brother.
A River Runs Through It
Matthew Rice is inspired by the work of a Norfolk artist who is keeping the English tradition of good landscape painting alive
A Rite Of Passage - The Garden Of Radcot House, Oxfordshire
Twenty years ago, the Stainers knew nothing about gardening, but that did not put them off trying to bring order to the wilderness they inherited. George Plumptre applauds the results
A New Lease Of Life
Longer life expectancies mean we have decades left to enjoy after the children have flown the nest. Perhaps it’s time for a change, suggests Holly Kirkwood
Where The ‘Sunlight Of Centuries' Glimmers
J. B. Priestley’s immortal words best describe this ‘most English’ of areas–the eternally beautiful Cotswolds, with its enviable houses and traditional villages
The Designer's Room
Pippa Paton has artfully transformed the interiors of a Cotswold barn
The Lighter Way To Enjoy Malta
ON Sunday, I was woken when it was still dark by my friend Charlie, who models his morning routine on that of the poor poet (I speak of his finances, not his art) Walt Whitman.
Searching For Salvias
Without people such as Robin Middleton, our gardens would look quite different. Val Bourne hails the unlikely hero of the late-summer garden
Romancing The Stone
The thoughtful work being done at this Cotswold garden is bringing in more visitors without sacrificing its idyllic atmosphere.
New Beginnings
The new director of Badminton Horse Trials on starting at the bottom
Nipper
John McEwen comments on Nipper
More Cider With Rosie
A century after the author grew up there, Emily Rhodes follows Laurie Lee’s footsteps through the Cotswolds village of Slad and discovers that his spirit remains
Grapes Are Not The Only Fruit
Picked at peak ripeness, Cotswold apples, pears, quinces and damsons are now being made into the first British eau de vie. Jane Wheatley experiences a taste sensation at the Capreolus Distillery
Heather Today, Gone Tomorrow
BACK in April, an article in The Times caught my eye. It bemoaned the declining popularity of heathers.
If Looks Could Kill
Our forebears judged some plants by their looks to be medically beneficial, but the consequences of consuming certain species could be dire.
He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother
Not so much a hot hatchback as a red-hot hatchback, Volkswagen’s Golf R two-litre TSI 4Motion is the Golf GTI’s naughtier–and much more powerful–big brother
Animal Magic
Adam Henson’s Cotswold sheep
Going Round The Bend
John Wright rediscovers the unexpected pleasure of steambending wood into all sorts of shapes and sizes
From Abbot To Artist
A house built for the Abbot of Pershore in the 14th century was restored as a studio by an American artist and later became a family home. Alan Calder describes the development of this remarkable Cotswolds building