Description
Located at the border where England meets Wales, a land of beautiful rolling hills, unspoiled wilderness and magical attractions awaits your discovery on this brand-new weekend break. Experience an area of endless beauty with many awe-inspiring viewpoints and with nature on the doorstep - in the Forest of Dean and the Wye Valley, time slows down. Experience historic, characterful towns, a forest heritage railway journey through beautiful medieval woodland and countryside and a boat trip along the River Wye. NEW for 2025 - a visit to Tintern Abbey!
Itinerary
Highlights
- Hotel for 3 nights with breakfast and dinner- Porterage & welcome drink on arrival- Included visits to Ross-on-Wye- Heritage train ride on Dean Forest Railway- Symonds Yat Boat trip- Entrance to Tintern Abbey- En-route visits to Monmouth & Burford (time permitting)
Quintessential England
Day 1 - After joining your holiday coach, relax and enjoy the scenery as you head through the charming Cotswolds. Make a stop in Burford with its famous High Street which sweeps downhill towards the River Windrush, its medieval bridge and impressive church. Both sides of the street are flanked by an unbroken line of ancient houses and shops. Onward to check into Bells Hotel & Country Club on the outskirts of Coleford surrounded by the Forest of Dean - 3 nights here with breakfast & dinner.\n\nDay 2 - 3 - At leisure with two included excursions. DBB\n\nINCLUDED EXCURSIONS\nRoss-on-Wye & Dean Forest Railway\nEmbraced by the River Wye, hilly Ross-on-Wye is an inviting and friendly place to potter. With its picturesque location and stunning 17th century Market House and Tudor timbered houses, it's hardly surprising Ross-on-Wye is regarded as one of the loveliest towns in the UK. You can browse independent shops, saunter alongside the town's 19th-century mock-Gothic walls and Gazebo Tower folly and admire pastel-hued dwellings tumbling down the hillside to the river. The spire of St Mary's church has shaped the town's skyline for over 700 years. Saturday is market day which can be found under and around the historic Market House and which specialises in local crafts and foods.\n\nThen head off to Norchard Station for a nostalgic aboard the Dean Forest Railway (NB may be steam or diesel hauled). Founded by the Dean Forest Railway Society in 1970, the Dean Forest Railway runs along part of the old Severn & Wye Railway lines, which were first built as a tramroad over 200 years ago. The 4.5 mile line runs through beautiful woodland and countryside, offering the chance to experience the relaxing pace of a typical country branch line. Norchard is the main station where you will find a shop, museum, locomotive restoration shed and cafe and you will travel down the line to Lydney Junction, back to Norchard and up the line to Parkend before coming back to Norchard (Please don't alight at Norchard until you have completed the full journey). A visit to the museum explains how the railway used to look, what uniform was worn and the equipment used in yesteryear.\n\nTintern Abbey and Symonds Yat\nCross the border into Wales to visit the Gothic masterpiece of Tintern Abbey, a national icon - still standing in roofless splendour on the banks of the River Wye nearly 500 years since its tragic fall from grace. It was founded in 1131 by Cistercian monks and the abbey ruins lay forgotten until the18th century when something wild and romantic began to stir in British hearts. Visitors began to flock to its ivy-covered great walls and arches in their setting of wild natural beauty. JMW Turner made his first trip to Wales to sketch at Tintern and William Wordsworth returned to Tintern in 1798 to write his famous poem 'Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey'. NB The abbey is mainly flat and laid to grass with some gravel paths. The site can be enjoyed at ground level, but there are a few small steps dotted around the area. NB Ongoing conservation and repair work is being undertaken at Tintern Abbey until 2029. This may restrict access to some areas of the site at the time of your visit\n\nTime for a spot of lunch in the Georgian town of Monmouth, nestled in the tranquil lower reaches of the beautiful Wye Valley. The town is situated where the River Monnow meets the River Wye, so at the mouth of the Monnow. Monnow mouth, hence Monmouth, and although right on the border with England, it has been firmly established as Welsh since 1974! Then headonto the renowned beauty spot of Symonds Yat, one of the most iconic and beautiful locations in the Dean Wye. The coach can take you to Symonds Yat West where you will find the Butterfly Zoo, Riverside Bar and it is from here that you board your included 40 minute cruise along the River Wye (subject to river conditions). There are steps with handrails to board\n\nDay 4 - Depart the hotel this morning to head back to your home towns via interchange
Venue Information
Bells Hotel & Country Club, Coleford
Located in the Forest of Dean on the outskirts of the historic market town of Coleford, this independently-owned 3* hotel is positioned in a peaceful location on a hill with beautiful views over the Wye Valley. \n\nEach of the comfortable 53 bedrooms are of a high standard and traditional in style and offer free WiFi, TV and tea / coffee making facilities. \n\nThe hotel does not have a lift but there are plenty of ground floor bedrooms. The hotel is located across two buildings, with the reception, bedrooms and beauty suite in one, and the bar, restaurant and terrace in the other (approx. 20 yards fairly flat walk between the blocks). \n\nThe hotel also boasts a county standard bowling green as well as an 18-hole golf course (both payable locally). The walk into town is approx. 10 minutes.