
Why the Cotswolds are the perfect place for JD Vance to spend his holidays
Firstly, where to stay? If it's an authentic working smallholding you want, you could do worse than the Soho Farmhouse, set in 100 acres with horse stables, a cinema and barns with underfloor heating. Your room will be a converted pigsty with cast-ion tubs and curated ducks. You will have a chance to discuss rural life with friendly and knowledgeable countrymen.
If it's kids' entertainment you're after, try nearby Estelle Manor, where your offspring can race around in mini–Land Rovers. It's where all the local kids learn to drive. Premium cabins are a very reasonable $1,500 a night.
From there, it is a short hope to another working farm, the quaintly-named Diddly Squat, owned by a real local 'character', Jeremy Clarkson. He is your kinda guy: a petrolhead, anti-woke, no-nonsense salt of the earth multi-millionaire.
You will undoubtedly bond. You use your outrage to galvanise voters. Clarkson uses it to sell books, TV rights and chilli-flavoured mayonnaise. You will love his fart jokes and his encyclopaedic knowledge of 14th-century sheep taxation.
Understand that Clarkson's agricultural odyssey is genuinely rooted in the absurd realities of British farming — but it's also brilliantly edited television. Think the Apprentice meets James Herriot. The show is a love letter to rural life, a middle finger to government overreach, and a sitcom disguised as a documentary.
You will doubtless meet another delightful local, Kaleb Cooper, who works alongside Clarkson. You'll instantly recognise him as the archetype of the forgotten working man, except that he has 2.9 million Instagram followers, which is about a million more than you. See this as a meeting of populist icons. Don't try to win him over with libertarian homilies or war stories from Senate hearings: he'll just challenge you to reverse a trailer into a tight gate without taking out a water pump.
Next, you must drop in on Daylesford Organic, where all the locals shop. It is technically a farm in the same sense that the nearby Blenheim estate is a garden. Don't be put off by the prices, which might be considered a hate crime in Appalachia (organic active manuka honey for only £36 a jar!). Only this is not Appalachia: it's Aspen with sheep. You'll love the owner, Lady Bamford, who will acknowledge the trauma in your memoir Hillbilly Elegy, but also wonder if the aesthetic has potential. You can discuss diggers with her old man, the Tory-donor Lord Bamford of JCB. Just don't mention the £500m tax inquiry that was reportedly launched in 2020 – the outcome of which remains unknown.
You may be feeling peckish by now, so where better for a pint and some grub than a local hostelry? May we recommend the Bull Inn in Burford, a 16th-century grade II coaching inn lovingly restored by another real Cotswold 'character', Matthew Freud?
Know that Matthew doesn't do small talk: he does narrative control. Once married to Elisabeth Murdoch, he will admire your origin story and suggest that he could help you with some strategic rebranding.
Next, it will be time to meet the other members of the Chipping Norton set: think the Hamptons, only older, colder and with mud-speckled Defenders and labradors named Beckham.
It is now a slightly marginal but still potent clique of political-media aristocracy that peaked during the Cameron years. These days their power is subtler, more slippery. Do not try to bond over populism. They'll nod politely, then have you edited out of the group photo. If you meet Rebekah Brooks remember Trump is suing her boss Rupert Murdoch for a cool $10bn. When in doubt, change the subject to the weather.
Do not, on any account, travel south to Oxford; it will simply annoy you. If you think Harvard is bad, just wait until you encounter the real thing, with their obsession with pronouns, unisex toilets and trigger warnings; and woke professors who don't believe in American exceptionalism. They also have a tiresome obsession with facts. They still speak Latin at dinners and graduations, and when you learn about the ructions over a tiny statue of Cecil Rhodes you'll just get mad. He was just trying to Make Africa Great Again.
Head north instead to the RSC at Stratford, where you may just catch the Winter's Tale, a character study in paranoia and power. Or too much of a busman's holiday? Is there something about Leontes that might resonate – an uncanny capacity for self-destruction, reinvention and spectacular ideological whiplash?
Back in Shakespeare's day, every female character would have been played by a teenage boy in drag. But thankfully, there is no gender-bending cross-dressing in modern performances. You can relax.
Over at Garsington Opera, things are more fluid, so you should probably give their current production of Fidelio a miss. The vibe includes quite a lot of cross-dressing, tyranny and liberation – though the disguise theme arguably aligns with your own trajectory of self-reinvention from Middletown, Ohio, to Yale Law School to MAGA Trumpworld.
If you were hoping for a bit of shooting, you're out of luck since partridge and pheasant shooting on estates such as Coombe End or Salperton Park doesn't start until October. It's probably just as well. Semi-auto shotguns are frowned on: everyone shoots vintage hand-engraved Purdeys that cost more than a Cadillac. Even the ammo is woke: lead-free and bio-degradable. Do not mention AR-15s. No one knows about the Second Amendment.
A note on clothing. A MAGA hat in the Cotswolds would be like turning up at Garsington Opera wearing camo. Barbour, yes. Patagonia, never. Cotswolds outerwear must say: 'I could survive a blizzard, but I'm really just popping to the farm shop for some heirloom fennel.'
The trick is to look poor, but in a rich way. In the Cotswolds, wealth is whispered, not shouted. Leave behind anything from Under Armour, North Face, LL Bean, or anything that says 'Outlaw and Hillbilly' in League Gothic script. Forget your loafers: wear boots. Mud is a class signifier, but maybe not in the way you imagine.
The locals in the Cotswolds do not know what 'pill mills' (that illegally dispense drugs) are, and they'd very much like to keep it that way. If you strike up a conversation in the Bull Inn about intergenerational trauma and opioid dependency, you may be asked to leave. Or, worse still, taken for a Guardian columnist.
In summary: keep your opinions zipped and your nostalgia for Appalachia hidden. When in doubt talk about Europe: the locals share your loathing for it. Remember you're not in Yoo-S-A! any more. You're in Clarkson Country, which — odd as it may seem — may be even more confusing.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
11 minutes ago
- The Independent
Bull Burford: How a 16th-century coaching inn became the Cotswolds' hottest hotel
The warning is in plain sight on a sign outside Bull: 'a curious coaching inn'. And indeed, this is no everyday pub quietly hidden in the heart of the Cotswolds. As Alice might have noted of this new hospitality wonderland, it does actually get curiouser and curiouser the moment you step over the threshold. Don't for a minute think 'quaint', in spite of the ancient heritage, when you pull up at this pub in Burford, quite possibly the most beautiful town in the Cotswolds; this 18-room hotel turns the concept of an English pub on its head. Matthew Freud, the PR tycoon and commercial strategist turned pub landlord, adds much zen, zip and zaniness to his modern reinvention of the country pub hotel. The result is 50 shades of cosmopolitan luxury. But be warned: it's distinctly anti-loner, the kind of place where you're encouraged to integrate, not isolate; to break bread with other guests over dinner and share in new experiences. Along with the communal dining, where guests are instructed to sit together and (shock horror!) talk to one another, there's also a holistic programme offering activities including yoga, meditation, photography workshops, chess, flower picking and a book club. Mixers are not just drinks to accompany spirits, but are how Freud defines his guests. He wants them to embrace the community spirit and throw themselves into making connections over dinner. Bull also has more of a modern art gallery vibe than that of a traditional boozer, partly because Damien Hirst and Harland Miller works adorn the walls. Housed in such an old building but with such modern, on-trend interiors, it's the hotel version of a Warhol portrait in an old gilt frame. And there's no dinging brass bell or indifferent receptionist either; here you'll find Californian sunshine service with zippy friendliness. The wobbly stairs and corridors lead through a labyrinth of newly carpeted landings and corridors to the 24/7 pantry, full to bursting with gourmet goodies. This is midnight feast territory (or perfect for greedy elevenses). A tap on the state of the art fridge illuminates a light behind the glass door to show chocolate cakes and cans of drink so shiny they could be sculptures rather than thirst-quenchers. This pub may have 16th-century vernacular, with oak beams and wattled plaster, but its rooms are more Dr. No, a 21st-century Bond boozer. When Bull opened in 1536, it was a basic coaching inn, a place for tired horses to recover and prepare themselves for the next long ride. The mantra of the new Bull aspires 'to offer the same service to anyone on a journey who might need a moment to catch their breath'. This is more private home in feel than public bar. Marble mosaic tiles in the bathroom have been individually selected. Photographs in black and white of Mick Jagger and Vivienne Westwood stare out from the corridors, and equally famous living guests are not unusual either (Bob Geldoff and a slew of star actors among them). This is a deceptively spacious rural retreat; oddly Tardis-like, it makes you feel as if you're sneaking into someone's private, tycoonish home. The food, meanwhile, is simple and delicious – think Soho House chic twisted with modern Brit cuisine. Breakfast ham and eggs straight from a nearby farm sit alongside avocado mash, while staff seem more like they've been plucked from a Netflix series than catering central casting. But then again, it is all spun together by Freud, a master image maker. The laird has his own lord-of-the-manor mansion down the road. As you slope up to bed, there are dozens of slim volumes of single short stories to choose from; Sonos for your music; lemon, a sharp knife, ice and gin for that final nightcap... The only downer? You may never want to move out.


The Independent
11 minutes ago
- The Independent
Lionesses party until 4am celebrating Euro 2025 win with champagne and a very special guest
England 's women's football team celebrated their Euro 2025 victory well into the early hours, with some players staying out until 4am. At their Zurich hotel, staff had prepared a festive champions' welcome. The Lionesses arrived cheering, with players raising glasses of champagne to the cameras. Wearing 'Champions 2025' T-shirts and their freshly won gold medals—secured after Chloe Kelly 's decisive penalty—the players embraced the celebrations with joy. Reggie, the Cavapoo who accompanied the squad throughout their campaign, also joined in, with the team chanting his name. The Lionesses now return to London for a parade and ceremony at Buckingham Palace on Tuesday.


Daily Mirror
11 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
'Prince William's adorable gesture to Princess Charlotte is rare royal moment'
As the royal father-daughter duo celebrated the Lionesses powerful win in the Women's Euro final, a body language expert has thrown light on their rare, sweet moment A body language expert has decoded a rare, sweet moment between Prince William and Princess Charlotte at the Women's Euro final. The young princess joined her father in Basel, Switzerland, for the epic final showdown of the competition between England and Spain, with the Lionesses claiming their victory after a nail-biting penalty shoot-out. As the England team were presented with their trophy, the Prince of Wales and 10-year-old Princess Charlotte were captured in a heartfelt embrace, with a body language expert analysing the 'strength of bonds' between the royal father-daughter duo as they showed off the special nature of their 'powerful' relationship. Body language expert Judi James said that the rare moment displayed the 'shared joy' of the pair, indicating the powerful nature of how sport can bring people together. James told the Mirror: 'There are signals of shared joy and awe as the pair lean together waiting for the presentation of the trophies. With his arm around his daughter's shoulders and her legs crossed towards her dad, this is a rare moment for any royal, illustrating the levelling power of sport on everyone's psyche.' The expert also commented on how the status of the royal family was undercut by the celebratory moment of the Lionesses win, showing that even William and Charlotte, who are looked up to by so many, can have their own personal heroes. Judi said: 'William is always the centre of attention and affords respect wherever he goes, but the glorious thing about a win in sport is that allows athletes and competitors to leapfrog that pecking order, leaving moments like this, where a royal prince and princess are left gazing in awe at the England team as they celebrate their phenomenal win.' 'William and Charlotte take this pecking order knock-down willingly and with obvious enjoyment, too. When you're as famous as they are it's good to be an awe-struck fan and William has always been the best role model for his children when it comes to this modest response to celebs like Taylor Swift and his football heroes. 'His suppressed smiles and excited grins as he hands out the medals shows exactly how proud and in awe of the women he is.' After analysing the body language of William and Charlotte throughout the tense match, Judi pointed out a striking similarity between the father and daughter in the way they expressed their excitement, stress and exhilaration over watching the Lionesses claim their victory against Spain. She told the Mirror: 'Watching the match was clearly the usual agony though and this match took us right up to the wire before the win. This produced what is called William's 'warrior response' that every fan will know. His teeth are displayed in a snarl, his arms fly up, he hides his face during tense moments and he forms fists and punches the air at a win. 'And happily Charlotte is in role as a chip off the block here, coming up with her own 'warrior' responses, although modified a little thanks to the elegance she has inherited from her mother. 'Her gestures mirror her father, with the face-hiding and the hands curled into fists. She is wonderfully expressive throughout the match, bonding herself with the entire country in the process.'