Mickleton and Hidcote Manor Garden
"Exploring two early 20th-century gardens of international repute"
Walk directions
With your back to the church, turn right up a bank to reach a kissing gate to the left of Cowland Orchard. Continue diagonally right across a field to a kissing gate at a thicket. Follow a path through trees and go through another kissing gate to emerge into a field. Follow its left margin to reach a kissing gate at the end.
In the next field, go slightly right to a gate in the top corner. Cross a road and go up some steps to a gate. Turn right to walk around the edge of the field as it bears left. After 250yds (229m), take a path among trees, a steep bank eventually appearing down to the right. The path brings you to a field and then a Dutch barn.
At the barn turn left, briefly joining a semi-surfaced track to the left. On the far side of a hedge, turn right and follow the edge of a field to the bottom corner. Go through a gap to a bridge with a stile on each side over a stream, cross and turn left.
Follow the margin of the field as it goes right and then right again. Continue until you come to a gateway on the left. Go through this and walk until you reach a field gate at a road. Walk ahead through Hidcote Boyce. Where the road goes right, stay ahead to pass Top Farm.
Beyond a kissing gate, take a rising track along the edge of successive fields. Nearing the top, follow the track through a gate, and bear left and then right around a hedge and head for a field gate at the top of the slope. In an area of grassy mounds, stay to the left of a barn and head for a gate in the top-left corner.
Follow the path to a road. Turn sharp left to follow the lesser road. Immediately before a radio mast, turn left onto a track and follow this all the way down to pass through Hidcote Manor Garden’s car park entrance. Go straight on for 30 paces to turn left through a gate, and then immediately right to walk a path parallel to the road with Hidcote’s trees on your left. Walk through a beech copse, enter a field through a kissing gate and cross it to a gate on the far side.
At the road, turn right and then, before Kiftsgate Court, turn left through a gate and descend through a field. Pass through some trees and follow the left-hand side of the next field, through a gate and left around another field, until you come to a stile on the left. Ignore a footbridge to your left. Follow the edge of the next field to a gate. Go through this and head towards Mickleton Church and a path between walled graveyards to return to the start via a gate.
Additional information
Terrain
- Fields, firm tracks, possibly some muddy woodland
Landscape
- Woodland, open hills and villages
Dog friendliness
- On lead in livestock fields, good open stretches elsewhere; dogs not allowed in Kiftsgate Court
Parking
- Free car park at church, Mickleton
Toilets en route
- None on route
About the walk
This walk takes you within striking distance of two of the finest planned gardens in the country. The first, Kiftsgate Court, is the lesser known of the two, but nonetheless demands a visit. The house itself is primarily Victorian, but the garden was created immediately after World War I by Heather... Muir, who was a close friend of Major Johnston, the creator of the nearby Hidcote Manor Garden. Kiftsgate’s gardens are designed around a steep hillside overlooking Mickleton and the Vale of Evesham, with terraces, paths, flower beds and shrubs. The layout is in the form of rooms and the emphasis is more on the plants themselves, rather than on the overall design. The second horticultural treat is Hidcote Manor Garden. This garden is the fruit of more than 40 years of work by Major Lawrence Johnson, an East Coast American who purchased the 17th-century manor house in 1907 and gave it to the National Trust in 1948. Many people consider it be the greatest of English gardens, and certainly it is one of the most influential. Hidcote grew from almost nothing – when Major Johnson first arrived there was a just a cedar tree and a handful of beeches on 11 acres (4.5ha) of open wold. To some extent it reconciles the formal and informal schools of garden design; Hidcote is not one garden but several. Like Kiftsgate, it is laid out in a series of ‘outdoor rooms’, with walls of stone and of hornbeam, yew and box hedge. These rooms are themed, having names such as the White Garden and the Fuchsia Garden. There is also a wild garden growing around a stream, as well as lawns and carefully placed garden ornaments. This walk begins in Mickleton, at the foot of the Cotswold escarpment, below these two fine gardens. It’s clearly a Cotswold village, with its mixture of stone, thatch and timber. The church has a 14th-century tower and a monument to Thomas Woodward, the 18th-century quarry owner from Chipping Campden. Near the hotel in the village centre is a Victorian memorial fountain designed by William Burges, the architect behind Cardiff Castle.
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Been on this walk?
Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.
Walking in Safety
Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.
Get an AA guide
Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.
About the area
Gloucestershire is home to a variety of landscapes, including the Cotswolds, a region of gentle hills, valleys and gem-like villages that roll through the county. To their west is the Severn Plain, watered by Britain’s longest river and characterised by orchards and farms marked out by hedgerows that blaze with mayflower in the spring; beyond the Severn are the Forest of Dean and the Wye Valley.
Nearby places to stay
View all (8)
Hotel
Three Ways House Hotel
Quality Assessed
"Flying the flag for traditional English puddings...."
- Family rooms:
Self-Catering
Groves Barn
★★★★★
"Perfect for weddings, horse-riding, or just being comfortable...."
- Washing machine
- Sky or freeview
- En suite
- Linens provided
Self-Catering
Norton Grounds
★★★★★
"Perfect for weddings, horse-riding, or just being comfortable...."
- Total units: 1
Nearby places to stay
Three Ways House Hotel
Built in 1870, Three Ways House Hotel has welcomed guests for over 100 years and is home to the world famous Pudding Club, formed in 1985 to promote traditional English puddings. Indivi...
Quality Assessed
Groves Barn
Norton Grounds is a 120-acre Cotswolds farm that offers, among many other things, holiday accommodation in three beautifully converted barns and a dovecote. Groves Barn sleeps 8 plus an...
★★★★★ Rating
Norton Grounds
Norton Grounds is a 120-acre Cotswolds farm that offers, among many other things, holiday accommodation in three beautifully converted barns and a dovecote. Sleeping from two to eight p...
★★★★★ Rating
Cotswold House Hotel & Spa
Cotswold House Hotel is a luxury hotel and spa that has been at the heart of Chipping Campden for over a century. Parts of the buildings are much older than that, however, and many orig...
Quality Assessed
Cotswold Charm Holiday Cottages
This accommodation is centred on Top Farm’s 18th-century farmhouse in the tranquil hamlet of Westington, an easy five-minute walk from Chipping Campden’s historic and delightful curved ...
★★★★ Rating
Rosary Cottage
The cottage's central position on Chipping Campden's famous High Street provides convenient access to not only the town's many pubs and restaurants but also its specialist food shops, c...
★★★★ Rating
Rosary Cottage
The cottage's central position on Chipping Campden's famous High Street provides convenient access to not only the town's many pubs and restaurants but also its specialist food shops, c...
★★★★ Rating
Ranch Caravan Park
An attractive, well-run park set amidst farmland in the Vale of Evesham and landscaped with trees and bushes. Tourers have their own excellent facilities in two locations, and the use o...
★★★★★ Rating
Places to eat nearby View all







