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Saddle up: 10 of the best horse riding breaks in Europe

Saddle up: 10 of the best horse riding breaks in Europe

The Guardian22-03-2025
Known for their fortitude and amiable nature, Andalusian-thoroughbred cross horses are ideal partners for this adventure in the Sierra de Gredos west of Madrid. Fit, experienced riders can expect up to seven hours daily in the saddle, with plenty of pace. The guided trails follow the route of the Tormes River, taking in pine forests, plateaux, ravines and villages. A support truck delivers aperitivos and picnics, including table and chairs, leaving time for a swim and siesta, before returning to the Parador de Gredos each evening. From £1,200 for four nights including rides and meals, next departure 16 April, blacksaddle.com
There's no choice but to slow right down on this Gypsy caravan camping trip. The wagon is harnessed to two mares, Meg and Biddy, who are led at a gentle walk by proprietor Barny down quiet country lanes to an off-grid site in the Eden valley, which links the Lake District to the north Pennines. Barny sets up a fire pit and canopy and tends the horses, returning to break camp after a night or two. The beautifully decorated wagons are insulated and can sleep a family of up to five. There's a hot shower, cooking is on open fires, swimming is in streams, druid circles can be explored. Travel light and spare the horses.From £960 for four nights, year round, wanderlusts.co.uk
Just under an hour from Paris in the Rambouillet forest, Le Barn is a former equestrian farm that has been turned into a stylish and welcoming retreat where every room looks out on to meadows. It shares its 200 hectares (500 acres) with Haras de la Cense, a world-famous school for equestrian skills. There is plenty of riding on offer (as well as Nordic baths, yoga, cycling, swimming and even a dog to pet). But the magic is the weekly Whisperer's Experience, a masterclass in learning how to forge a connection by working on foot with a free horse and using your body language and exercises to communicate with them and build trust. Be warned, it's emotional. From £165 a night for two B&B, including whispering and all other activities, lebarnhotel.com
The Greeks have known the value of riding since Hippocrates, medicine's founding father, spoke about its 'healing rhythm'. Where better to learn to ride than the countryside of Crete, with views over the Lagada valley, reliable horses and ponies (for kids aged five and over), starting with a bareback introduction in an enclosed ring, progressing to walking, trotting and possibly cantering through the olive groves by the end of the week. Guests stay in a 12-room, stone-built boutique hotel set in a couple of hectares in Avdou. Saddle-sore beginners can recover by the infinity pool or on the sandy beaches of nearby holiday town Hersonissos.From £935 for seven nights including meals and daily rides, year round, unicorntrails.com
Take your horse on holiday and enjoy the company of red deer, native ponies and soaring buzzards as you ride the heather- and gorse-covered moorland, woodland and trails of Exmoor national park. At the self-catered converted stone barn on private rolling farmland, there's stabling and grazing for three horses. Host Louise is on hand as a guide. Saunton Sands is a four-mile beach open to riders year round – a gallop from one end to the other takes 15 fantastic minutes. From £135 a night, horses from £12.50 a day, guiding from £50, year round, hollacombefarm.co.uk
For confident riders, this circular ride of about 75 miles over five days explores unspoilt Transylvanian backwaters where locals still use horses and carts for transport. Starting at Count Kálnoky's restored guesthouse in Miklósvár, riders head north, enjoying views of the Carpathian mountains. They pass through villages and the Hatod region's forests to the slopes of the Olt River. Accommodation is in modest farms or guesthouses, including a retreat near Zalánpatak (also called Valea Zălanului) owned by King Charles III, 60 miles and a far cry from Dracula's Castle. Horses are lively and well mannered crossbreeds, Lipizzaners, and robust Huzuls (also known as Huculs).From £1,225 for six nights including riding, accommodation, guiding and meals, from April to October, rideworldwide.com
A family-run farm and horse sanctuary high above Cartmel valley, just south of the Lake District national park, is the setting for an unusual B&B experience. Guests checking into the Grade-II listed barn at Greenbank Farm get to share their living quarters with a friendly friesian horse. On one side of the barn are bunk beds with heated blankets, cobbled floor, kitchenette, and wet-room. On the other side of a half-height transparent divide is your equine room-mate, whose noble face appears delightfully over the top bunk the minute you're installed, seeking snacks and invading your space. Come dawn, he'll gently snuffle you awake for breakfast. Or you could choose to spend the night with a shetland pony, who will share your own side of the stable. Cartmel village and racecourse is next door.From £360 for one night, sleeps up to three people, year round, thefriesianexperience.org
What Icelandic horses lack in stature, they make up for with superpowers: strength, apparent immunity to the cold and an extra gait, the tölt. Daily rides (with kit) across Iceland's largely uninhabited north-western area, just a few degrees south of the Arctic Circle, take in meadows, the slopes of Reykjafjall mountain, the hot springs of the Gufudalur valley, and the glacial River Ölfusá (a landscape so extraordinary that Nasa astronauts prepped for lunar landings here). Evenings include restorative dips in warm geothermal water, hot tubs amid snowfall and, possibly, the northern lights. A farewell minibus tour includes the famed spouting Geysir geothermal area, golden waterfall Gullfoss and Thingvellir national park.From £995 for three nights including rides, meals and guesthouse accommodation, next departure 10 March, equestrian-escapes.com
Experience first-hand the powerful bond between horses and humans by volunteering at an equine therapy centre on the outskirts of Porto. The project is designed to help people facing physical and mental challenges. Mornings are spent helping out with a variety of tasks, from assisting with therapy sessions to patrolling local forests on horseback to assess fire risks, tending the vegetable garden and caring for the horses, as well as the farm's goats and pigs. Afternoons are free for volunteers to explore the cobbled streets, cafes and river cruises of Portugal's second city. From £1,095 for six days (additional weeks cost £400) including meals, dorm accommodation (private rooms an extra £50 a night), year-round, responsibletravel.com
Guests staying at the 150-year-old converted barns on this farm, in the Madonie mountains on Sicily's north coast, are as much a part of the family as the horses grazing the surrounding paddocks. The host leads daily morning trails for competent riders on well-behaved warmbloods and Sicilian crossbreeds. One route includes a ride to his friend's house for a slap-up lunch. Afternoons are for walking tours of the beautiful town of Cefalù or surrounding medieval hills towns, dinners are in traditional restaurants. And, with year-round village feasts, fairs, and shows, there's plenty to do here for non-riders too. From £930 for five nights including full board, riding and sightseeing excursions, year round, farandride.com
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All the fun of the feria: why August is the time to visit Málaga
All the fun of the feria: why August is the time to visit Málaga

Spectator

time10-08-2025

  • Spectator

All the fun of the feria: why August is the time to visit Málaga

If I were a doctor specialising in alternative treatments, and someone came to me feeling depressed, I wouldn't send them off with a herb-based elixir or a bunch of St John's Wort. I wouldn't cleanse their chakras or refer them to an acupuncturist. I'd send them off to Málaga's annual fair, which this year runs from 16 to 23 August. Summer in Andalusia is feria season – the best cure that I know of for a bout of the blues. Usually lasting three or four days, or an entire week in the regional capitals, ferias are occasions of pure alegria (joy) and inclusivity. Happiness is taken very seriously in Spain, especially in Andalusia, and nowhere is this more evident than at a summer fair (Spaniards from the north like to say that all Andalusians are idle hedonists, more likely to be found in a bar than at work). Although tremendous amounts of alcohol are consumed, I have never witnessed any anti-social behaviour in the decade that I've been attending them: no fights or public vomiting, no sexual aggression, not even a drunken argument. Unlike Brits, Spaniards tend not to actively seek oblivion through alcohol; it is a social lubricant, not the activity around which ferias revolve. Families can be seen pushing prams well past midnight. Teenagers mostly carry cans of Monster energy drink, not cider or lager. One of my favourite village ferias takes place in mid-August in Pastelero, a mountain hamlet near Málaga with a population of around 500. Everyone gathers along the single road to feast on paella, which is cooked outdoors in a pan the size of a tractor wheel. Farmers ride around on horseback, sipping sherry in the saddle. At ferias of all sizes, but especially at the larger ones, you'll wander among women wearing intricately-designed flamenco dresses with scarlet flowers pinned to their hair. At the biggest fairs, hundreds of marquees (casetas) are erected on a fairground (recinto), where revellers drink, eat and dance. I particularly love the colours of the feria: the dusty yellow of the recinto floor; the multi-coloured paper lanterns strung between white casetas; the childish blue of the summer sky; explosions of red on flamenco dresses; and the sleek black coats of Andalusian horses (pura raza Española), one of the world's finest breeds. Most of these celebrations started out as livestock fairs in the Middle Ages. Ranchers would come to town to sell their cattle, and because in Spain every transaction is also a social occasion, vendors would wander among them offering refreshments. These boozy trade fairs steadily expanded over the centuries to become the huge events they are today. Seville's Feria de Abril, which launches the season two weeks after Easter, is the largest: more than 1,000 casetas spread over a recinto several times the size of Pastelero (the downside for visitors is that only a handful are open to the public). The major ferias also feature several bullfights – Málaga will hold seven this month, starring the biggest names in the business. Other seasonal highlights include Jerez de la Frontera's lovely Feria del Caballo (Horse Fair) in May and Ronda's Feria de Pedro Romero, held in early September and named after the town's famous 18th-century bullfighter. Here, the partying happens amid some of southern Spain's most dramatic scenery. Málaga's fair is unique (and probably my favourite) for also hosting a giant street party in the Old Town during the day, before those with enough youth or stamina jump on a bus to the recinto for the night session. The best way to experience the daytime celebrations – and the advice I would give to my imaginary depressed patient – is to do as everyone else does. Go to the nearest Tabac and buy a bottle of the feria's signature wine, a sweet white called Cartojal, made from Málaga's moscatel grape. As you swig or sip (you'll receive a little paper cup with the wine), meander up the Old Town's main artery, Calle Marqués de Larios. Watch the street entertainers; admire the women in their long, colourful dresses; linger on the palm-lined Plaza de la Constitución, where live music will make your body vibrate. Continue up Calle Granada and stop in a couple of the crowded bars for a tapa and small beer (caña). Repeat until your senses can't take any more. The heat, the noise, the colours and wine will purge you of tension and stress, filling your whole being until there's no room for misery. I would confidently expect my patient to come back from Málaga a different person, still fizzing with energy and Cartojal – or to simply not return at all.

EasyJet launches flight sale with £15 tickets – here are the holiday destinations you can head to
EasyJet launches flight sale with £15 tickets – here are the holiday destinations you can head to

Scottish Sun

time08-08-2025

  • Scottish Sun

EasyJet launches flight sale with £15 tickets – here are the holiday destinations you can head to

Plus, the sale applies to multiple airports across the UK MAKING IT EASY EasyJet launches flight sale with £15 tickets – here are the holiday destinations you can head to IT'S good news for globetrotters as easyJet has launched a sale with £15 flights to top city break destinations. The airline is offering up to 20 per cent off flights to key city break destinations when booked before the end of September. Advertisement 8 EasyJet is offering up to 20 per cent off flights Credit: Getty And you can get money off city break packages as well. Here are some of the top spots and prices. Malaga, Spain Malaga is known for having 16 sandy beaches and featuring clear Mediterranean waters. The Andalusian city was also the birthplace of famous artist Pablo Picasso. Advertisement The region is also known for its tapas dishes, with many thriving neighbourhoods as well. You could fly from London Southend on October 15 for £14.99. Or perhaps head from Leeds Bradford, on October 5 for £17.99. And Newcastle has an early flight to Malaga, on September 15 for £14.99. Advertisement Majorca, Spain Much-loved Majorca is known for its sprawling beaches, with inviting waters. It is the largest of the Balearic Islands and has plenty of resorts to choose from. This European castle was the inspiration for Disney Visitors can also explore sheltered coves and limestone mountains and the island's nightlife is vibrant as well. You could head to Palma from Birmingham on August 31 for just £14.99. Advertisement Or for an additional pound, you could head from Manchester on September 1. For the same price you could also go from Leeds Bradford on September 8. Or back at £14.99, you could head from Newcastle on August 27. Alicante, Spain Located in southeastern Costa Blanca, Alicante is another beautiful Spanish hotspot. 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Head to Paris from Birmingham on September 28, for £14.49. 8 Or if you are in Liverpool, you could head to the City of Love on September 28 for £14.99 Credit: Getty Or from London Southend on October 2 for £14.99. Advertisement If you are in Liverpool, you could head to the City of Love on September 28 for £14.99. Or travel from Manchester on September 1, for £14.49. Berlin, Germany The capital of Germany is bursting with history, such as the Brandenburg Gate, Reichstag Building and Checkpoint Charlie. In addition to this, the city is well-known for hosting many amazing markets such as flea markets, food markets and at Christmas, festive markets. Advertisement If you fancy heading to Berlin, you could head from Birmingham Airport on September 22 for £18.99. 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Advertisement If you want to see the Sagrada Familia nearing its completion, you could fly to Barcelona from London Southend on November 16 for £15.99. 8 And you could head to the popular Spanish city of Barcelona for less than £16 Credit: Alamy Corfu, Greece Corfu offers a serene retreat with idyllic beaches. There are many coves and dramatic cliffs to explore as well, and many tourists enjoy snorkeling and boat tours. Advertisement If Greece is more to your liking, grab a flight from London Gatwick on September 23 for £26.99. Mykonos, Greece Also in Greece, you could head to Mykonos. The beautiful island sits in the Aegean Sea and popular during the summer months for its vibrant music. 8 Mykonos in Greece is known for its summer nightlife Credit: Getty Advertisement There are many dance clubs on the island that attract DJs from across the globe as well. You could fly from London Gatwick on September 24, for £26.99. 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Missing journalist Alec Luhn who vanished during hike in Norway is found ALIVE
Missing journalist Alec Luhn who vanished during hike in Norway is found ALIVE

Daily Mirror

time07-08-2025

  • Daily Mirror

Missing journalist Alec Luhn who vanished during hike in Norway is found ALIVE

A journalist who went missing nearly one week ago after hiking in bad weather has miraculously been found alive. Alec Luhn, 38, spent days alone in the wilderness in a remote national park in Norway - somehow surviving on very little to no food - after vanishing during the trek. When the reporter, who has worked for titles including the New York Times and the Guardian, missed his flight back to London, his family alerted authorities who spent days searching for the man. And following a massive search of the Nordic park, Mr Luhn was found alive, albeit with a serious leg injury, which he suffered the first day he set out. His miracle reflects that of a man from Belfast, Northern Ireland, who was recently discovered weeks after he vanished in Paris. In relation to Mr Luhn, Stig Hope, head of the operations leadership team at Folgefonna and a Red Cross volunteer, said: "I can't remember us finding someone alive after so many days. The search doesn't always end like this – but today, it did. It is a huge relief for everyone who's been part of the effort." The journalist was supposed to fly to the UK on Monday from Bergen, a city around 40 miles northwest of Folgefonna National Park, where he was trekking. He had last spoken to his wife the previous Thursday, July 31, to inform her of his itinerary. And so the situation looked bleak when Mr Luhn was reported missing, a following huge team effort, the tourist was located - despite bad weather persisting. Upon assessing Mr Luhn, Geir Arne Sunde, the head of the local air ambulance service and trauma centre, said: "He is seriously injured, but not critically injured." Folgefonna National Park is a desolate 136,000 acre park which is home to one of the country's biggest glaciers. Mr Luhn was there exploring the vast landscape with his sister, it is believed. Tatjana Knappen, an operations manager from Vestland police, said: "Weather conditions started to get really bad around midnight. It was not reasonable to continue the search up in the mountains." Speaking before the rescue, Mr Luhn's wife said: "I just really want him back. I can't sleep or eat properly. It's very hard not to know anything." Folgefonna National Park is known for being a popular challenge for hikers who fly in from all over the world to conquer the difficult terrain and admire its natural beauty.

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