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Hookhill Plantation - near Crediton, Devon

Situated between the national parks of Dartmoor and Exmoor, Hookhill Plantation is just a short detour from The Two Moors Way. The countryside is riddled with footpaths, so you can wander across green fields and through woodland to your heart's content. Bluebells, snowdrops and fresh green hazel catkins adorn the lanscape in spring.

Owners Alison and Scott are keen gardeners and the extensive ornamental grass gardens at Hookhill Plantation have been featured on Gardener's World. They also run a Chelsea Medal winning plant nursery. The large kitchen garden and chickens provide ample seasonal produce which guests can buy at a very reasonable price. There are six large landscaped ponds, two of which are available for boating and swimming on a sunny day. All the buildings on the property have been hand-built by craftsman and owner Scott.

Alison & Scott purchased their property in 1990 after having travelled and worked all over the world. Looking for somewhere to live The Good Life - inspired by American "back to the land" pioneers rather than Felicity Kendall - they toured in a caravan for thirteen years before pitching up in Devon and setting about building a house.

Environmental policy

Everything at Hookhill Plantation reflect Scott and Alison's passion for sustainability. They were off grid for 5 years, and now they're connected they barely use electricity. The neighboring Swanney Copse, which is on a rotation coppice programme, supplies the house with wood and garden with beanpoles. Energy efficient, sustainable and rooted in the environment, the plantation uses alternative technologies and recycled materials wherever possible.

Wildlife

Blackberries

The grass gardens attract a huge range of insects and birds, including kingfishers, ducks and geese. Buzzards, sparrow hawks andd peregrines are also frequent visitors to Hookhill Plantation. If you're really lucky you may glimpse the ghostly specter of a barn owl flying past. Deer and foxes are often seen in the woods and in dry summer spells badgers can be seen at dusk digging for worms in the fields. In springtime, bluebells carpet the woodland floor. Make sure you take a basket with you, as in season, the trees and bushes are positively dripping with blackberries, sloes, greengages & elderberries.

Spaces at Hookhill Plantation