Rural Accommodation

Lowe Farm B & B

B&B
£32.00
 -  £45.00
Notes : per person per night
Lowe Farm B & B
Pembridge
Leominster
HR6 9JD
Visit England Gold Award Breakfast Award
Please mention FarmingUK when enquiring about accommodation

Lowe Farm B & B Pictures

Description

Owner Information
Juliet Williams
Herefordshire
Phone : +44 (0)7855 904715
At our Gold Award B & B in Herefordshire we offer you affordable accommodation of the highest quality. Our farm guest house has been in our since my grandfather bought it in 1939. Myself and Juliet started running this bed and breakfast with our twins Hannah and Stuart.

At Lowe Farm Bed and Breakfast we offer a relaxing, stress free rural hideaway in the beautiful Herefordshire countryside. The high standard of service says it all in the Awards our B & B have won since it opened in April 1998. The accommodation caters for all individual visitors needs.

Holders of the Prestigious 'Visit Britain Gold Award'
plus many others...
Our guest house in Herefordshire is a fully working farm and thanks to our dedication to providing luxurious guest house accommodation, we have received the Visit Britain prestigious Gold Award since year three and became a Four Stars establishment,

We have also received the Heart of England Excellence in Tourism Awards in Bronze and Silver two years running and the coveted Gold Award for the best B & B in Heart of England. We are a national finalist in Enjoy England Awards in Silver and Gold thanks to our Service mark plus a Silver Award for Green Business Tourism.

Get in Touch
When you want short breaks in Herefordshire choose the Lowe Farm Bed and Breakfast for your accommodation. If you would like more information please call me or Juliet on 0845 263 1365 (Local Rate. Alternatively, use the enquiry form provided on our contact page.
Access to Golf Course 
Business Facilities 
Credit Cards Accepted 
Fishing Nearby 
Laundry Facilities 
Serves Breakfast 
Working Farm 
Evening Meals Available 
Garden Patio 
Cycle Hire Available 
Cycle Storage 
Hot Tub 
Internet Access 
Parking On-Site 

Maps

Things to see and do in Herefordshire

Hereford Cathedral
Hereford Cathedral

Hereford Cathedral's main role is as a centre of Christian mission and the seat of the Bishop. Each day, three acts of worship take place which ensure that the life of prayer which gives energy to Christian mission is carried on. The Bishop of Hereford's throne near the high altar gives the Cathedral church its name; the Latin word for throne is cathedra. The Bishop is chief pastor of a large diocese stretching from the Welsh borders in the west across to Worcester and Gloucestershire in the east, and from just south of Shrewsbury in the north to Monmouth in the south.
Cider Museum
Cider Museum

Visit Hereford's famous Cider Museum and learn about the history of cider making - how the apples were milled and pressed and how the resulting juice was fermented to produce cider.
Hereford Museum and Art Gallery
Hereford Museum and Art Gallery

Hereford Museum and Art Gallery, housed in a spectacular Victorian gothic building, has been exhibiting artefacts and works of fine and decorative art connected with the local area since 1874. Although the exterior of the building has changed very little the museum and gallery have kept up with the times. The exhibitions begin in the foyer of the building with a regularly changing small display in the foyer case. Don't miss the Kenchester mosaic on your way upstairs and the changing art exhibitions on the stairwell walls. The museum is full of interesting local history with hands-on elements for all the family.
Herefordshire Light Infantry Museum
Herefordshire Light Infantry Museum

A small collection of objects associated with the regiments raised in Herefordshire dating from the Volunteers of the Napoleonic period.
Goodrich Castle
Goodrich Castle

The development of "the castle" from a fortified site into a home and administrative centre can approximately be dated to the period between 1160 and 1270. Castles of this period often incorporated earlier motte and bailey sites into this new role, and this could create spatial problems - many early motte and bailey sites were relatively small, being intended for use as purely military sites, and could not contain all of the necessary facilities required for this new role.
Hereford Mappa Mundi
Hereford Mappa Mundi

The Mappa Mundi is unique in Britain's heritage - an outstanding treasure of the medieval age which reveals how 13th century scholars interpreted the world in spiritual and geographical terms. The map is undated but bears the name of "Richard de Haldingham e de Lafford", whom some historians have identified as Richard de Bello, Prebendary of Lafford in the diocese of Lincoln during the late 13th century. Together with evidence interpreted from the content of the map, a date of around AD 1290 is considered reliable.
Courtyard Centre for the Arts
Courtyard Centre for the Arts

The Courtyard is now 10 years old and has evolved and developed into a well established and highly regarded, vibrant arts centre serving the whole of Herefordshire and the surrounding region. The Courtyard also hosts regular twice-monthly sell-out comedy and monthly folk clubs, hosts exhibitions by local, national and international artists and has developed a wide ranging film programme to add further to it’s role as the principal cultural provider for Herefordshire. The Courtyard has also established a wide-ranging participatory programme.
The Old House
The Old House

The Old House is a remarkably well preserved example of a 17th Century timber-framed building and is situated in the heart of Hereford, surrounded by the commercial centre of the city. It is a startling sight, standing as the sole reminder of times-gone-by in the middle of a modern shopping precinct. Built in 1621, the house has been used for many purposes over the years, starting life as a butcher's home and shop and finishing its commercial life in the hands of Lloyds Bank in the late 1920s. Since 1929 it has been a fascinating museum giving an insight into daily life in Jacobean times.
Hellens Manor
Hellens Manor

This beautiful historic house in Much Marcle, Herefordshire, is a living monument to much of England’s history. It remains a home and not a museum although it contains a wealth of period furnishings, paintings and decorations. In 1096 the Manor was granted to the de Balun family who witnessed the signing of the Magna Carta by King John. Thereafter by marriage,deed or gift it passed through the powerful Mortimer family to the Lords Audleys by 1301, who were created Earls of Gloucester in 1337.