Friday 10 February 2012
Rural Accommodation

Malt House Farm

  

B&B  -   £28.50 - £28.50   per person per night

Malt House Farm
Lower Wood
Church Stretton
Shropshire SY6 6LF
Please mention FarmingUK when enquiring about accommodation
  Malt House Farm Pictures
Malt House Farm


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  Description
We are quietly located amidst stunning scenery in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. All bedrooms en suite with colour TV, tea tray etc. guest lounge. Licensed. Non-smoking. No children or pets.

 Working Farm 
Owner Information
Lyn Bloor
Shropshire  
Phone : +44 (0)1694 751379





  Maps


Things to see and do in Shropshire
   
RAF Museum, Cosford      View website
Admission is free to the museum in the West Midlands, which houses 70 aircraft and is home to War Planes, Missiles, Transport & Training and Research & Development collections. The National Cold War Exhibition with its interactive kiosks and hotspots gives visitors a chance to see what life was like behind the Iron Curtain.
 
   
The Iron Bridge
The Iron Bridge crosses the River Severn at the Ironbridge Gorge, by the village of Ironbridge, in Shropshire, England. It was the first arch bridge in the world to be made out of cast iron.
 
   
Stokesay Castle
Stokesay Castle, located at Stokesay, a mile south of the town of Craven Arms, in southern Shropshire, is the oldest fortified manor house in England, dating to the 14th century.
 
   
Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery      View website
Shrewsbury Museum & Art Gallery at Rowley's House occupies two adjoining buildings, one of which is timber-framed (originally built as a merchant's warehouse in the 16th or early 17th Century) and the other a stone and brick building built around 1618 (the mansion of the merchant William Rowley). The buildings are among the finest in Shrewsbury.
 
   
Shrewsbury Castle
Shrewsbury Castle is a red sandstone castle in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England. Its location is on a hill situated on the neck of the meander of the River Severn which the town originally grew up in. The castle is situated directly above Shrewsbury railway station.

In 1138, King Stephen successfully besieged the castle held by William FitzAlan for the Empress Maud during the period known as The Anarchy.
 
   
Ludlow Castle      View website
Ludlow Castle is a large, now partly ruined, non-inhabited castle which dominates the town of Ludlow in Shropshire, England. Construction of Ludlow Castle began in the late 11th century as the border stronghold of one of the Marcher Lords, Roger de Lacy.
 
   
Hoo Farm Animal Kingdom      View website
Once inside Hoo Farm there are lots and lots of activities to take part in.
 
   
Charles Darwins House      View website
One of the world's most eminent scientists, it was at Down House that Darwin lived with his devoted family for 40 years, and it was here he researched and wrote his most famous and explosive of works, On the Origin of Species.
 
   
Shrewsbury Abbey
The Abbey of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, commonly known as Shrewsbury Abbey, was a Benedictine monastery founded in 1083 by the Norman Earl of Shrewsbury, Roger de Montgomery, in Shrewsbury.
 
   
Shropshire Hills      View website
Shropshire Hills area is designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), in the English county of Shropshire, close to its border with Wales.
 
   
Charles Darwins Birthplace      View website
The Mount was built by Dr Robert Darwin in the 1790’s on a fine site overlooking Shrewsbury and has remained largely unaltered to the present day. This house was Charles Darwin’s home during his school and college days and the place to which he returned from his famous voyage round the world on HMS Beagle.