Thoughts from Thyme
Conversations, Cultivations, Inspirations
Welcome to Thoughts, a place where we share recipes, articles and guides, from our family, team and friends.
Explore our Thoughts
The Telegraph: Seven Ways to Give Your Veg Garden a Lift
We are delighted to have been featured in The Telegraph, with fabulous winter gardening tips provided by Bunny Guinness in the grounds of Thyme’s Kitchen Gardens.
The Winter Garden
A simply dressed plate of seasonal leaves picked that morning is a delight to all senses, but it’s important to remember just how much work goes into producing what seems at first to be a very simple offering.
Country Life: Cotswold Water Meadows
Country Life: Cotswold Water Meadows
‘You realise how important areas such as this are to conservation and begin to understand how connected every- thing is. We’re not an isolated little spot here, of orchids (marsh, common spotted, pyrami- dal, twayblade and bee orchids), and then meadowsweet, vetch, vetchling, plantain...we’re part of something much bigger.’
-Caryn Hibbert Country Life September Issue 2022
Season Finale - The English Garden
“In the last of our series on the kitchen garden at Thyme in Southrop, head gardener Victoria Bowsher harvests and stores winter squash and considers hardy brassicas and green manures”
Words by Vivienne Hambly, photographs by Sussie Bell
September’s Last Hurrah - The English Garden
“Summer is fading into autumn, but a golden, late-season sun is still bringing crops to fruition at Thyme in Southrop, with apples and root vegetables at their finest, and the final waves of courgettes, tomatoes, sweetcorn and beans ready to harvest”
Words by Vivienne Hambly, photographs by Sussie Bell
Water World - Bloom
“Historic water meadows are sites of ecological diversity and essential parts of rural green corridors. Zena Alkayat meets Caryn Hibbert, the founder of Cotswolds hotel Thyme, who sees the value in conserving a third of her land purely for nature”
Words by Zena Alkayat, photographs by Kim Lightbody
Languid Summer Days - The English Garden
“July brings with it a sense of lazy abundance, with wave after effortless wave of crops and blooms. At Thyme in Southrop, flowers are cut for guest rooms, potatoes are ready to harvest and head gardener Victoria Bowsher makes some last-minute sowings”
Words by Vivienne Hambly, photographs by Sussie Bell
A Taste of Things to Come - The English Garden
“After the intense energy of June and July, the kitchen garden at Thyme at Southrop, Gloucestershire, is settling into a more relaxed pace.”
Words by Vivienne Hambly, photographs by Sussie Bell
Inspired by Nature’s Bounty - Ox Country
Ox Country - Inspired by Natured Bounty
“Whilst they certainly celebrate summers abundance, they are guaranteed to add a little wit and beauty to your dining area throughout the year.”
Far more than the average Cotswold Space - Cotswold Life Magazine
"Sweetly scented roses, clouds of nepeta and clipped yew, at first glance the Ox Barn Yard garden at Thyme appears typical of so many in the Cotswolds. Yet closer examination reveals something far more interesting."
Words and photos by Mandy Bradshaw
Thyme in Bloom - The English Garden
“Spring Blossom lights up the pathways, gardens and orchards at Thyme in Southrop, promising an abundant harvest of fruits as the season matures ”
Words by Vivienne Hambly, photographs by Sussie Bell
Spring in Full Swing - The English Garden
“As the season gathers pace, Victoria bowser and her team are hard at work in the kitchen garden at Thyme, sowing and planting to meet the chef’s needs- including some of their more unusual requests.”
Words by Vivienne Hambly, photographs by Sussie Bell
Brushing Up - Botanical Art lessons in The Cotswolds - The Financial Times
At Thyme, a country-house hotel in Gloucestershire, guests can stroll in the gardens then learn to paint the plants that grow there.
Words by Rebecca Rose
The Gentle Pace of Thyme - The English Garden
“Set amid a landscape of breathtaking natural beauty, Thyme is one of the Cotswolds’ most elegant country retreats, where the abundant kitchen garden provides inspiration for our new nine-part series on growing your own produce.”
Words by Vivienne Hambly, photographs by Sussie Bell
September in the Gardens
It's time for apples, plums and pumpkins. There's crumble for pudding (and leftovers for breakfast). Blue tits hang off the sunflowers, eating the seeds. We pick the dead flower heads, threading the stems through the wire fence, a final feast for the birds.
THYME NEWSLETTER
Join our flock