Rural Accommodation

Swallow Cottage

Self Catering
£300.00
 -  £420.00
Notes : per week
Lower Pen-y-clawdd Farm
Dingestow
Monmouth
NP25 4BG
Please mention FarmingUK when enquiring about accommodation

Swallow Cottage Pictures

Description

Owner Information
Averil Bayliss
Monmouthshire
Phone : +44 (0)1600 740223
Lower Pen-y-Clawdd Farm is set in the stunning countryside between Monmouth and Abergavenny in South Wales and offers a range of beautiful cottages to suit all tastes all year round.

Our latest barn conversion offers stunningly modernised accommodation with en-suites, underground heating, LCD TV's, comfortable living areas and perfectly equipped high quality kitchens. Everything you could ask for to make your stay as idyllic as possible.

The Farm and Local Attractions
The farm is situated two miles from Raglan and its famous castle, six miles from Monmouth and the beautiful Wye Valley. The Welsh capital Cardiff is 30 miles away. An excellent location to explore the Forest of Dean, Black Mountains and the Brecon Beacons. The area is good for fishing, golf and walking. There are many excellent pubs in the area.

Coarse Fishing Facilities
We have everything a Coarse Fishing fan could want, all on site and situated in stunning countryside with breathtaking views. Lower Pen-y-Clawdd Farm offers 3 purpose built and well stocked coarse fishing lakes ready to keep you occupied and entertained in peaceful surroundings.

Local Amenities
Lower Pen-y-Clawdd Farm is close to both the stunning market town of Abergavenny and the beautiful town of Monmouth. Both towns offer many attractions and a full range of amenities.

The vibrant and unspoilt market town of Abergavenny acts as the Gateway to the Brecon Beacons National Park with The Black Mountains being the closest mountain range. This allows visitors to Abergavenny to experience the stunning scenery whilst walking, cycling and bird watching or for the more adventurous why not try paragliding or mountain biking? Family holidaymakers might like to take advantage of our close proximity to the World Heritage Site at Blaenavon with Big Pit being one of the many free local attractions.
Accept Children 
Fishing Nearby 
Freezer 
Laundry Facilities 
Microwave 
Pets Accepted 
Working Farm 
Fridge 
Linen Provided 
Parking On-Site 

Maps

Things to see and do in Monmouthshire

Chepstow Castle
Chepstow Castle

If there is a castle that comes close to matching Harlech in historical importance, that castle is surely Chepstow. Chepstow is a Norman castle perched high above the banks of the river Wye in southeast Wales. Construction began at Chepstow in 1067, less than a year after William the Conqueror was crowned King of England. While Edward had his master castle builder in the person of James of St. George, the Conqueror, some 200 years earlier, had his equal in the person of his loyal Norman lord William FitzOsbern.
Llanthony Priory
Llanthony Priory

Llanthony Priory was one of the earliest houses of Augustinian canons to be founded in Britain, and is one of only a handful in Wales. It is chiefly famous today for its wild and beautiful setting, far up the Vale of Ewyas in the Black Mountains. It was the priory's remoteness in the Welsh hills which was its undoing, however, making it vulnerable to attack. Giraldus Cambrensis described it, in the late 12th century, as being 'fixed amongst a barbarous people'.
Brecon Beacons
Brecon Beacons

The Beacons Way walk offers some of the best views the National Park has to offer. If you want to complete the whole 163km (101 mile) walk it takes eight days, or you can do it one day at a time at your convenience. Some days are more challenging than others so you can choose what suits you and maybe set yourself a challenge to build up to the more strenuous days.
Raglan Castle
Raglan Castle

Remains of impressive fifteenth-century castle built by Sir William ap Thomas and his son William Herbert, remodelled by William Somerset, third earl of Worcester, 1549-89. Despite demolition attempts during the Civil War, much of the hexagonal-shaped Great Tower and lavish suites of state apartments still survive.
Monmouth Golf Club
Monmouth Golf Club

Monmouth certainly has every justification for its claim to be one of the prettiest courses in Wales and is undoubtedly one that is renowned for the warm welcome offered to its’ guests.
Tintern Abbey
Tintern Abbey

Cistercian abbey, founded in 1131 in the beautiful Wye valley. Remarkably complete abbey church rebuilt in the later thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, with extensive remains of cloister and associated monastic buildings.
Caldicot Castle
Caldicot Castle

Visit Caldicot Castle in its beautiful setting of tranquil gardens and a wooded country park. Founded by the Normans, developed in royal hands as a stronghold in the Middle Ages and restored as a Victorian family home, the castle has a romantic and colourful history.
Abergavenny Food Festival
Abergavenny Food Festival

The Abergavenny Food Festival is going from strength to strength.
Usk Valley Walk
Usk Valley Walk

A 48 mile (77km) walk between Caerleon and Brecon through the beautiful Vale of Usk.
The Nelson Museum
The Nelson Museum

Find out about the life, loves, death and commemoration of the famous admiral through displays of weapons, pictures, fine ceramics, silver and glass, ships models and letters. Horatio Nelson was born in Norfolk, died at sea, and is buried in St. Paul's Cathedral - yet Monmouth is home to a magnificent collection of Nelson material. Find out about the origins of the collection, and about the life, loves, death and commemoration of the famous admiral through displays of weapons, pictures, fine ceramics, silver and glass, ships models and letters.