Bradt Dog-Friendly Weekends: Cotswolds Guidebook
25 breaks for you and your dog
Dog-friendly travel guide for the Cotswolds. Expert advice on excursions and short breaks for dog lovers in Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, Somerset, Warwickshire, Wiltshire and Worcestershire. Twenty-five ideas cover city breaks, campsites, hiking and rainy-day activities. Includes Bath, Bristol, Cirencester, Oxford, Stratford-upon-Avon and Stroud.
Edition: 1
Number of pages: 208
Bradt Dog-Friendly Weekends Cotswolds Guide
The new Bradt guide to dog-friendly breaks in the Cotswolds.
About this guide to Dog-Friendly Weekends Cotswolds
This new Bradt Dog-Friendly Weekends Cotswolds Guidebook is written by canine-travel expert Lottie Gross (author of Bradt’s best-selling Dog-Friendly Weekends). Lottie proposes 25 excursions and holiday ideas for dog lovers in this popular English region just 60 miles from London – from city breaks to outdoorsy days, from characterful campsites to pubs welcoming furry friends.
The Cotswolds has endless appeal for any traveller thanks to its handsome, golden-hued villages and bucolic landscapes. But for dog owners, it is especially enchanting.
Rolling hills criss-crossed by well-marked footpaths, including the 102-mile-long Cotswolds Way National Trail, make this prime walking country, and with a healthy smattering of incredible dog-friendly pubs and hotels across the region, it is the perfect destination for a fresh-air-filled break with your pet.
It’s not all about walking here, though – the Cotswolds’ beautiful towns and villages are home to as many dogs as visitors bring, so shops and restaurants cater well for the canine-accompanied.
There are also myriad attractions that welcome dogs alongside people, from the Cotswold Motoring Museum, duck race and river football match in Bourton-on-the-Water to Cotswold Farm Park and steam trains.
Energetic activities abound too, from canoeing on the River Thames to propelling a pedalo around the Cotswold Water Park, while cultural highlights include castles, Neolithic stone circles and Roman remains.
Beyond the boundaries of this much-loved National Landscape are some of the UK’s most exciting urban centres, which are perfect for rainy days, cultural enrichment or fine dining.
There’s Oxford, home of literary greats, to the southeast, Bristol and Bath in the south, and Gloucester, Cheltenham and Worcester in the northwest. Stratford-upon-Avon also sits on the fringes of the Cotswolds, offering excursions into Shakespeare’s world to complement meanders along its river.
The 25 ideas are complemented by assessments of accommodation options: to research this book, the author personally tested the dog-friendliness of hundreds of places to stay.
With suggestions to help dog owners be more responsible travellers in the Cotswolds, where wildlife and ecology are fragile and livestock is precious, the new Bradt Dog-Friendly Weekends Cotswolds Guidebook is the perfect source of advice for dog lovers seeking to explore this charming region.
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Contents
Introduction
1 Bath
2 Bristol
3 Lacock & Castle Coombe
4 Malmesbury
5 Tetbury
6 Wootton-under-Edge
7 Lechlade
8 Cirencester
9 Oxford
10 Stroud (& Nailsworth)
11 Painswick
12 Chedworth & North Leach
13 Woodstock (including Charlbury)
14 Burford & Witney
15 Gloucester
16 Bourton-under-Water
17 Cheltenham
18 Stow-on-the-Wold
19 Chipping Norton
20 Winchcombe
21 Moreton-in-Marsh
22 Broadway
23 Chipping Campden
24 Stratford-upon-Avon
25 Worcester
Index
About the author
Lottie Gross (lottiegross.com) is a travel writer, editor and dog lover from Oxfordshire. She has been reporting on tourism in the Cotswolds for over a decade, writing articles and reviewing hotels in the region for The Telegraph, loveEXPLORING, AFAR in the US and other titles.
She has lived on the fringes of the Cotswolds for most of her life, walking her dogs along its trails innumerable times. It was in the Cotswolds that she conceived the idea of a dog-friendly guidebook, discovering many intriguing attractions that genuinely welcomed dogs (rather than simply allowing them inside), and realising that there could be more to a dog-friendly holiday than just walks and nice pubs.
Pairing her local knowledge and dog travel know-how – as the author of best-selling books Dog-Friendly Weekends (Bradt) and Dog Days Out (Bloomsbury), and a Dogfest speaker – gives Lottie a unique perspective with which to write the new Bradt Dog-Friendly Weekends Cotswolds Guidebook.





