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A year ago, farmer’s wife Kate Grubb was cleaning self-catering cottages in
the South Shropshire Hills to earn some cash after the birth of her
daughter.
Appalled by the endless waste generated by holidaymakers who came from outside
the area bringing bundles of supermarket-bought food and spending little
locally, she matched a £29,000 Rural Enterprise Scheme Grant from the
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and built Ecocabin on her
family’s farm.
I found her creation in a secluded valley, where the cabin’s wooden porch
looks out towards the Long Mynd and Wales. Built entirely from recycled or
reclaimed materials, and using renewable energy sources, the cabin has walls
and floors made of local Douglas fir and ash, strengthened by reed boards
and insulated with sheep’s wool. Inside, walls are adobe-smooth, painted
with non-toxic paints in lemon and off-white. Solar panels heat the water in
summer, while winter heat comes from a wood-pellet stove.
Kate has added contemporary furniture, with crafts made by local artists. The
kitchen has a Belfast sink, a 1950s dresser and a worktop made from recycled
yoghurt pots (flecked with the silver lids). Tiles are made by a local
ceramist, a colourful “painting” is actually melted-down wellington boots,
and the recycled furniture is chic and sleek.
The cabin sleeps four (one double, one twin) with organic cotton bedding,
naturally dyed in blues or yellows. I had a preserved-heather foam bath,
washed my hair with organic aloe vera, and soaked the dishes in
chemical-free liquid. I made soup from organic vegetables which I ordered
from a list of goodies from small-scale local producers. Other buys included
smoked salmon, Weobley butter, fruit cake and eggs. I prepared the veg on
the porch, scattered the peelings in the wormery, then raised my glass of
blackberry and elderberry wine to the lambs in the field.
When the grass has grown and Kate’s newly planted cooking-apple and pear trees
and native wildflowers sprout, the garden will not look so bare. Some guests
might not like being adjacent to the farm with its cows, sheep and birdsong,
but it makes for an interesting morning alarm call. Each day I walked a
different route over pastures or along the hawthorn hedge lanes without
meeting a soul. You can hire or bring your own bicycles, or explore using
the shuttle bus.
If you love the outdoors, your planet — and sheep — this is an impressive
retreat in which to eat proper food and practise the art of sustainable
living.
Bottom line: £400-£550 a week or £75-£85 a night for four people.
Two-night minimum stay.
Sampling the fare: a “buy- local” shopping service for an
additional £5 collection charge.
Need to know: Ecocabin (01547 530183, www.ecocabin.co.uk),
Obley, nr Bucknell, Shropshire (15 miles from Ludlow).
Cabin: 9.5 out of 10.
Food: 10 out of 10.
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