SPECIAL
THEME TOUR
In Search of...'SPA Towns and Medicinal
Waters'
13-day tour
inc. arrival/departure days
| One
of the things you often hear from those returning from their holidays
is that 'we need a holiday to get over it'!
Well, here's the ideal holiday
for those who would like to return home, or get back to work,
relaxed and in the prime of health - a tour of historic spa
towns where you can still take the waters and pamper yourself
with a variety of beauty and massage treatments!
Our tour combines some fine sightseeing,
unusual and interesting places far from the madding crowd, with
the mind-refreshing effects of stunning scenery and, for those
who'd enjoy it, the opportunity of actually experiencing water
and bathing-related treatments popular for centuries.
What's more, in seeking out this
health giving well and springs, we are touring parts of England
and Wales often neglected by visitors to these shores - to their
cost. Featured on our tour are elegant towns like Cheltenham
and Leamington that grew under royal patronage and offer super
shopping opportunities. We have towns set amidst miles of woodland
and hillside walks like Malvern and Buxton. We include 'hidden'
market towns and villages where you can really experience local
culture, like Wales's Llandridnod and Lincoln's Woodhall.
Your tour not only includes the
sites but time actually taking the waters at salt baths, Turkish
baths and steam rooms and in modern newly renovated spas in
historic buildings. And if you wish you can also book optional
special beauty treatments and massage therapy for several days
where we allow you some 'organised independence'. Gentlemen
partners may enjoy the alternative of a round of golf at this
point! On our October departure you will have the added highlight
of sampling the newly restored Roman baths in Bath itself!
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DEPARTURE
DATES & PRICES FOR 2008
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itinerary operates on request for groups only (from 2 persons
above). You choose your departure date. The itinerary can be lengthened
or shortened according to your own preferences. The description
set out below is meant as a guideline only and to provide some
idea of what can be done with the theme of 'Spa Towns'. |
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Tour
Code
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Arrive
London
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Depart
London
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SPA
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Your
choice
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Your
choice
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Price
depends on number travelling and time of year.
Indicative price based on a minimum of six travelling is GB£
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TENTATIVE
ITINERARY
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NIGHTSTOP
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Day
One
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You arrive in
London where you're met by your Back-Roads Touring Co. Ltd guide,
and are transferred to our hotel base. Today you'll be free
to explore the pretty neighbourhood in which our hotel is situated.
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London
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Day
Two
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We depart early
for England's west country, and Bath, perhaps our best-known
spa town. From Celtic times people have been coming here to
take the restorative waters. The Romans built their baths here
(you'll see the pump room) and then in the 18th century Bath
was rediscovered by the Georgian elite and the city took on
its current elegance.
A highlight of our afternoon
will be actually taking the waters here in the fabulous new
spa centre.
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Bath
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Day
Three
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Leaving Bath,
we cross the Severn Bridge to Wales and this morning experience
one of the most scenic drives in the UK. We follow the Wye Valley
to Monmouth, thence across the Brecon Beacon mountain range
to Llandridnod Wells in central Wales.
This is a pretty, traditional
market town that suddenly rose to prominence in the mid 1800s
with the establishment of the old medicinal baths and treatment
rooms. We'll spend the afternoon here exploring the town at
leisure and taking the opportunity of drinking the fresh saline
waters from one of the town's four springs.
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Llandridnod
Wells |
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Day
Four
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Another splendid scenic drive
awaits this morning as we turn east, driving through the border
regions of Powys, Herefordshire and Worcester. This area is
famed for its black-and-white cottage villages.
By lunch we'll be in Malvern, often described
as one of the loveliest resorts in England. It is source of
the famous Malvern Water, first bottled in 1622 but appreciated
long before this date. In the 19th century both Charles Dickens
and Florence Nightingale took the Malvern 'cold water cure'.
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Malvern
Hills
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Day
Five
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We'll stay here a day to relax
and enjoy the town. You'll have a choice of walking miles of
footpaths, many incorporating the sixty springs and fountains
to be found around the hills, or join your guide in a day tour
through the Cotswolds to Cheltenham Spa.
Cheltenham was another town made fashionable
by George III in the 18th century. In addition to trying the
waters here, we'll also be enjoying the town's colourful parks
and gardens, its Regency architecture and the shopping. There
are some fine museums here too, for those who might like to
explore the town's history.
The northern honey-coloured villages of the
Cotswolds will also delight and we'll perhaps have time to visit
Snowshill Manor or Sudley Castle.
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Malvern
Hills
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Day
Six
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Our first call this morning
will be at the city of Worcester. Dominated by a stunning cathedral,
this city on the river Severn is also home to the Royal Worcester
Pottery and a fine English Civil War Museum.
Our afternoon will be spent in the Midland spa town of Droitwich.
This is a unique brine spa. Here we'll not be drinking the waters
but enjoying an incomparable bathing experience. Imagine the
pleasure of floating, perfectly relaxed in a warm pool of natural
salt water, no intrusions, no pressures, simply weighlessness
and warmth. The salt content makes this water ten times stronger
than sea water and is only rivalled by the Dead Sea!
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Droitwich/
Leamington Spa
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Day
Seven
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The Heart of England is the
focus of day's explorations. Mediaeval Warwick, Kennilworth
castle and the elegant town Royal Leamington Spa will all be
visited.
Leamington was Queen Victoria's favourite town
and Nathaniel Hawthorn writer of 'The Scarlet Letter' lived
here. We'll enjoy the magnificent Jephson Gardens at the heart
of the town and also visit the historic Pump and Assembly rooms.
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Droitwich/
Leamington Spa
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Day
Eight
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Two spa towns today set in breathtaking
beauty of the Peaks District. First Buxton. The Romans, who
discovered the curative waters, called the town 'Aquae Arnemetiae',
meaning 'the Spa of the Goddess of the Grove', and over succeeding
centuries this has been a popular inland resort.
At Matlock Bath, set in the spectacular Derbyshire
Dales, visitors can still 'take the waters' from an ornate Victorian
pump, and bath in natural spring spa pools. There's a promenade,
the Derwent gardens and even a cable car to the surrounding
peaks.
The poet, Lord Byron, called the area 'Little
Switzerland'.
This is a super day is our evening which offers
either an optional musical performance at the theatre or Opera
House, or a stroll along the riverbanks to see the illuminations.
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Buxton/Matlock
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Day
Nine
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Travelling along the Pennines,
backbone of England, we continue north through the Peaks to
the Yorkshire Dales and ultimately to the town of Harrowgate,
nothern England's most elegant town. It was as long ago as 1571
that the magical restorative waters of the Harrowgate Trewit
Well were first discovered. You'll visit the Royal Pump Room
Museum which houses the original sulphur well, the Valley Gardens
and the Spa Promenade room. If there's a show on at the Victorian
theatre then that will provide for or optional evening's entertainment.
Harrowgate also provide the opportunity of experiencing an original,
functioning Victorian Turkish bath!
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Harrowgate
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Day
Ten
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We'll enjoy a day's general
touring today. The Yorkshire Dales region offers a great variety
of sightseeing opportunities including the ancient romantic
ruins of monastaries dissolved in the time of Henry VIII, castles
and fortified towns from the years spanning the Wars of the
Roses. There are historic stately homes, quaint villages and
towns with bustling markets and the stunning Yorkshire dales
scenery. Our exact touring schedule can be decided upon according
to weather, local festivals and group interests.
Of course, you may simply elect to spend a day
of 'organised independence' in Harrowgate itself and pamper
yourself at the spa.
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Harrowgate
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Day
Eleven
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Lincolnshire is a little-visited
county of England, yet the Lincolnshire 'wolds' are a designated
'area of outstanding natural beauty' and the city of Lincoln
itself, with its magnificent gothic cathedral, is one of England's
finest mediaeval cities.
You'll have an opportunity to judge what others
are missing for yourself as we head for our last great spa -
Woodhall Spa. In many ways, this is the most intriguing of all
our visits. It's a village rather than a town, whose waters,
containing more sodium, calcium, bromine and iodine, than any
other in the UK, were discovered by accident when a coal-mining
shaft was sunk here in 1811.
Though the spa itself is no longer operational,
the village offers some very interesting and unusual attractions
including the Victorian 'Kimema in the Woods', a memorial to
the men of the famed WW2 'Dambusters' of the RAF bombing squadron
and some truly delightful craft shops and tea rooms.
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Woodhall
Spa
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Day
Twelve
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Alas, our last day, and we motor
south towards London. In keeping with our overall theme of enjoying
some of the UK's less-known natural attractions, we'll spend
our morning discovering the 'fens'. This flat land, covered
by drainage ditches and dykes, was virtually completely flooded
until the 17th century. Many of the villages we'll visit were
effectively islands in the middle of a great marsh. Today, it
reminds one of Holland, complete with windmills and flower-filled
fields.
Also on today's itinerary will be visiting the
lovely Georgian town of Stamford and Burghley Stately Home.
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London
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Day
Thirteen
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Home time, unless extending
your stay. You'll be transferred to your airport of departure.
There's one thing, however, we can guarantee. After taking the
medicinal waters of England, having relaxed in Turkish baths
and spas, having floated in pure salt waters, having pampered
and spoilt yourself with a variety of treatments, and having
enjoyed the serene of the English countryside, you'll be going
home in a finer condition than when you arrived!
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| Itinerary note:
please note, the order of attractions visited may
change depending on opening times and seasons. |
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©
As we publish full tour descriptions, you may find others offering
our unique itineraries. But, just as you find when others
sing the songs of Paul McCartney, they're often not quite as
good as when sung by the original composer!
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