Cotswold Celebrities
Mark Nicholson
When he's not snapping Royalty, Mark Nicholson is often visiting and capturing the finest aspects of some of the Cotswolds most glorious homes.
Mark is an acclaimed photographer who lives near to the market town of Charlbury, in the eastern Cotswolds. His work is heavily focussed on bringing together the Cotswold's traditional values but with a contemporary perspective. Specifically he has specialised in interior and architectural photography (he has recently published a fabulous book titled 'English Country Interiors Inside Cotswold Homes') although he is also very much in demand for his portrait work. When not in the Cotswolds, Mark travels the globe on assignments in places such as Africa, the US and the Caribbean.
You will reguarly see Mark's work in numerous magazines including the Sunday Telegraph, Homes & Gardens, Country Homes & Interiors, Tatler, the Evening Standard magazine, Deco (Germany), Interni (Italy) and Country Living (US). He is currently working on the development and production of 3 more coffee table books.
Say it quietly, but Mark also carries out assignments for the Royal family as well as many other private clients!! Enjoy his work at www.marknicholson.co.uk
JACK RUSSELL
When not coaching Ashes-winning cricketer Geraint Jones, the former England wicketkeeper has an art gallery in Chipping Sodbury
“The Stroudwater Canal was my playground as a kid. We would go looking for Big Ben, a monster pike, and chuck big bits of meat in to try to catch it. My favourite place is Saul Junction, where the Stroudwater meets the Gloucester-Sharpness canal, not far from Frampton on Severn. A few winters ago, I spent many an early morning painting there: it’s reedy and tranquil, and full of ghosts. The mist rising from the water is magical, but you have to be quick to catch it. Once the sun is up, some of the atmosphere goes.”
Details: you can walk out from Saul Junction to meet the Severn at Upper Framilode and along the river. Circle back via Overton and Fretherne for lunch at the Bell Inn ( 01452 740346 ), beside Frampton village green. It’s six miles in all; OS Explorer map OL14.
ROB REES
The pan-wielding prodigy won his Michelin star at the Country Elephant, in Painswick; he is now launching his own cookery school in Far Oakridge
“Stroud farmers’ market is something visitors tend to stumble on, then come back and build weekends around. I think it’s the best in the country, and it’s a real carnival day for the town: 40 local producers, jazz bands and a brilliant setting, with views across the wolds At this time of year, I always start by grabbing a mulled apple juice from Days Cottage and a bacon bap from Adey’s organic farm, which is just down the road at Berkeley.”
Details: Stroud farmers’ market is held on the first and third Saturday of every month; call 01453 758060 for more information and to check times.
Cottages: Owlpen Manor, The Dower House (Uley)
DAVID WIEMERS
David traded in a career writing and producing Tarzan and Winnie the Pooh for Walt Disney for life as the village postmaster in Bourton-on-the-Water
“A few years back, I decided I wanted to live in the prettiest spot on earth. I fell in love with the Cotswolds as a tourist, and figured buying the post office would put me at the heart of the community. Now I’m busier than I ever was in Hollywood.
“Bourton is a honeypot, but few people seem to make it to my favourite place, on the eastern edge of the village. There’s a gorgeous mosaic of ponds and lakes there, the Greystones Farm nature reserve, where I take our dogs — you just walk out past the cricket ground and you’re in this idyllic backwater, with wild flowers everywhere, lots of little islands and dabbling waterfowl.”
Details: for more information on Greystones Farm, call Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust ( 01452 383333 ). You can pick up directions for a three-mile walk through the reserve at Bourton’s tourist information centre ( 01451 820211 ).
Cottages: Windrush House, Tagmoor Hollow, Chimneys
IRENE GEORGE
The former potato-picker began painting professionally at 50, and the surreal adventures of her Yellow Hat Tribe now sell for up to £10,000 a go. Her gallery is on an ostrich farm at Church Westcote, across the road from Kate Winslet’s house
“When I retire, I’m going to take my easel to Bruern Wood and spend three weeks just painting bluebells. It’s a really huge wood soaked in blue, with just a glimmer of sun striking the flowers through the tree canopy. “There are kingfishers along the River Evenlode there, and you get speckled wood butterflies spiralling up in the glades. I rarely see anyone else, even though places such as Stow and Bourton are just up the road. It’s like magic.”
Details: the best place to see Bruern’s bluebells is on the two-mile wildlife walk at Foxholes nature reserve, a mile south of Bledington ( 01865 775476 , www.bbowt.org.uk).
Cottages: in Stow on the Wold, Bourton on the Water and Burford
DR MARK PORTER
The dishy darling of TV and radio health divides his time between his NHS practice in Stroud and presenting Case Notes on BBC Radio 4
“My family’s really special place is Woodchester Mansion, a Victorian gothic pile salted away in a secret valley below Minchinhampton Common, near where we live. It’s a vast place, abandoned half-finished by an eccentric Catholic convert named William Leigh — they reckon he was building it as a holiday home for the Pope. I’ve been a GP here since 1989, but I only found out about Woodchester in 2001. You have to walk there — it’s a good mile from the nearest road — but there are guided tours. When the masons left in the 1870s, they abandoned their tools and ladders where they lay. It’s dead spooky and full of bats and gargoyles. “You need a pint of Uley Old Spot by the fire at the Ram, in Woodchester, as a reward.”
Details: trails run through Woodchester’s “lost valley” from the car park north of Nympsfield. The house is open on January 1 and 2 (11am to 5.30pm), then every Sunday from Easter (£5; 01453 861541 , www.woodchestermansion.org.uk). To contact the Ram, call 01453 873329 .
LORD NEIDPATH
As master of Stanway House, James Donald Charteris is in charge of the grandest Jacobean manor in the Cotswolds
“Lots of people visit Hailes Abbey, the Cistercian ruins just to the south of us. But it’s a pity so few seem to walk up to Farmcote church, just a mile above it, right on the brink of the Cotswold escarpment. The old pilgrim track from Hailes has a real medieval atmosphere about it. It was laid by the monks themselves, and the church at the top was a chapel of ease, where pilgrims would rest on the way to seeing Hailes’s phial of holy blood.
The church has old tombs and “leper squints” — holes that allowed lepers to watch the services from outside. There are sheep grazing all around, and juicy views across the Vale of Evesham.”
Details: The footpath to Farmcote from Hailes Abbey is walkable all year (take OS Explorer map OL45), though the abbey itself doesn’t reopen for visitors until April 1 (£3.30/£1.70; 01242 602398 ). You could extend the walk two miles east from Farmcote to Ford, where the Plough ( 01386 584215 ) is super-cosy for lunch.
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