A homely and relaxed atmosphere awaits you at Blounts Court Farm, which is located in the heart of mystical Wiltshire. The farm is situated in 150 acres of arable farmland on the edge of woodland. Many beautiful walks are close at hand and is an ideal location for a get away from it all break. We can even boast a cricket pitch, home of the village cricket team, in our back paddock. The farmhouse dates back approximately 200 years and has been carefully renovated to provide a lovely, happy family home.
The ground floor guest accommodation is located in a recently converted barn adjoining the farmhouse. The rooms are tastefully decorated with many exposed beams. The double bedroom has a four-poster bed and the twin bedroom has original French iron bedsteads, both rooms being en-suite. Television, tea & coffee making facilities, hairdryer and radio/alarm clock and many more personal touches can all be found in the rooms. Guests have their own sitting room. Centrally heated throughout.
Breakfast is taken in the dining room around a large mahogany dining table surrounded by antiques. Guests can choose from a comprehensive breakfast menu which includes homemade marmalade, preserves and bread. We endeavour to use as much local produce as possible. Special diets can be catered for with advance notice.
This quiet, rural location is an ideal choice as a base to tour the surrounding area. The World Heritage Sites of Avebury and Stonehenge can be reached in under 20 minutes. The Roman City of Bath is only 40 minutes distant, Salisbury 30 minutes and one of the prettiest villages in England, Lacock, is 15 minutes away. We have plenty of good, home cooking in the local pubs (one within walking distance) and Devizes, with its shops and many varied continental restaurants and hotels , just two and a half miles away.
The market town of Devizes sits in the county of Wiltshire. Devizes played an important part in events of the country's early history. The town
grew up as settlement around a great castle built by Bishop Roger of Salisbury
in the early twelfth century, a castle that was described as 'the finest and
most splendid in Europe'. The castle's position, at the precise meeting
point of two of the church's manors with another belonging to the King, was
chosen to identify and defend them. It became known as castrum ad divisas,
'the castle at the boundaries', and thus provided a basis for the name
of the town that followed: Devizes. The extensive walls and ditches that were
built to defend the fortress dictated the shape of the town that developed
outside and around it and to this day the streets of the modern town follow
this pattern. The old castle has gone, destroyed on the orders of Cromwell
after the Civil War, but on the site of it stands a Victorian castle built
by a local businessman. Although fanciful in design and built as a home
rather than a fortress it is nevertheless an attractive feature in the town,
peering over a barrier of encircling trees. Devizes has a wealth of interesting
and much older buildings than this 'new' castle: there are two medieval churches,
a street of sixteenth-century timber-framed houses, some fine Georgian town
houses and a Market Place with a fountain, market cross, corn exchange and
a traditional English coaching inn called the Bear Hotel. The Wadworths family
brewery, built in Victorian redbrick, dominates the Market Place and still
delivers beer to the town's hostelries by horse drawn dray. There are two museums:
  
  
The Farm
Devizes