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Cotswolds & Stow on the Wold

Step Outside, Step Back in Time

Maugersbury Manor is tucked just above the historic market town of Stow-on-the-Wold—an easy walk down the lane, and a beautiful way to begin the day. Perched high on the rolling Cotswold hills, Stow is a town of honeyed stone, crooked alleyways, and centuries-old charm.

Spend the morning exploring independent shops, cosy tearooms, and antique treasure troves. Stop for lunch at one of the many characterful pubs or pick up fresh local produce from the markets and farm shops nearby.

Beyond Stow, the wider Cotswolds stretches in every direction: picture-book villages like Bourton-on-the-Water and The Slaughters, Daylesford Organic for food lovers, and walking trails that wind through wildflower meadows and ancient woodland. Whether you're after quiet beauty or gentle adventure, this is a landscape that restores you—slowly, completely, and without ever trying too hard.

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Stow On The Wold

Just Down the Lane

Stow-on-the-Wold is the kind of town that lingers with you. Perched high on a hill and full of character, it’s a place of crooked cottages, antique shops, and age-old inns where the fires are always lit.

Just a half-mile walk from Maugersbury Manor, Stow is your local town during your stay—ideal for morning pastries, lazy afternoons browsing books and interiors, or an impromptu lunch in a historic pub. Its market square, once the site of medieval sheep fairs, is now lined with independent shops, galleries, and cafés serving everything from cream teas to seasonal British fare.

Small but storied, elegant but unpretentious—Stow is a town to return to again and again, even in the same day.

The Cotswolds

A Landscape That Knows How to Breathe

The Cotswolds has a kind of beauty that doesn’t ask for your attention—it simply offers it. Rolling hills stitched with dry stone walls. Meadows scattered with wildflowers. Villages of golden stone, where time seems to soften around the edges.

It’s a place made for walking slowly, for stopping often, for noticing things: the sound of boots on gravel, the curve of a gate, the way the light hits an old barn in late afternoon. Whether you’re exploring picture-book towns, following quiet footpaths, or simply watching the sky shift from a garden bench, the Cotswolds moves at a gentler pace—and somehow, invites you to do the same.

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