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Fowlescombe Farm
Three hours from London Paddington, a working regenerative farm on the southern edge of Dartmoor has become one of the quietest, most considered hotels in England. Established in 1537 and still in the hands of the same family, Fowlescombe spreads across 450 acres of Devon valley, where rare-breed cattle and sheep are rotated through pastures the soil scientists pray for, sixteen bee hives hum through summer, and a Victorian farmhouse and a cluster of converted stone barns have been turned into ten suites by Caitlin Owens, a hospitality veteran who grew up on the land, and her partner Paul Glade, a creative director with a sharp Scandinavian eye. The interiors are spare in the right way, oat-coloured linens, wool throws, locally made furniture, art chosen by someone who understands restraint, the kind of keys that reward unpacking properly. Stays are full board, which means long breakfasts with eggs collected that morning, lunch on full days, cake at three in the farmhouse because someone decided that mattered, and a four-course dinner in the Refectory that changes every night and is eaten at one big communal table looking into the open kitchen. The cooking is genuinely excellent, the kind that leaves you satisfied without ever feeling too full and hungry again by breakfast. This is a place for people who want their luxury muddy at the edges, who'd sooner pull on a pair of borrowed wellies and walk the farm with someone who can name every animal than be handed a turndown chocolate. There are sheep to meet, vegetables to pull, yoga in the greenhouse if you want it, forest school in the apple orchard for the children, kayaks for an estuary paddle to the family's sister pub, the Millbrook Inn, where lunch is waiting. Nothing is performed, nothing is staged for Instagram, the regeneration is real and the animals are not props. You should not come if you need a spa with a treatment menu the length of your arm, if uneven terrain is difficult for you, or if the idea of eating dinner at a long table with strangers fills you with dread. You should come if a hotel built around its own land, its own seasons, and its own slow rhythm sounds like the most generous thing anyone could offer you. The short version: A 450-acre regenerative farm on the edge of Dartmoor with ten exquisitely restored suites, communal farm-to-table dinners, and the kind of slow, rooted luxury that comes from a family running its own land for generations.
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What to Know Before You Go
Where you'll be
A few notes on your visit.
Experience authentic farm life with daily activities.
Enjoy home-cooked meals made with locally sourced ingredients.
Explore the surrounding countryside and take in breathtaking views.
Experience the tranquility of rural life away from the city's hustle and bustle.
Get close to nature with the farm's variety of animals.

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Founder’s Note
THE PINK NOTEBOOK VERDICT

Your taste already has an address
Proper waterproofs and the warmest jumper you own. Wellies are loaned at the door, but the wind comes off the moor and the evenings turn quickly, even in August. A book worth reading slowly will earn its place in your bag.
There is cake every afternoon in the farmhouse, baked that morning, and skipping it is a small tragedy. Arrive a few minutes early and take it slowly in front of the fire.
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Phone number and address
+1 (929) 998 0996
368 9th Ave New York, NY 10001 USA
Information & Bookings
Mon-Sun 9 AM to 10 PM CET
+1 (929) 998 0996
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