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Broadway in the Cotswolds
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11 brrrilliant winter day trips from London

From majestic light shows to new steam-train rides, here are the best winter day trips from London

Ed Cunningham
Written by
Ed Cunningham
Contributor
Ellie Muir
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While there are always more than enough festive things to do in London – light displays, ice rinks, Bavarian markets, endless department-store browsing – sometimes we all need to get out of the Christmas-infested capital. Away from the noise, smog and, yes, all that endless, crowded shopping. What’s needed is crisp country air, a stiff walk or a serene spa day. Here are our fave day trips from London to enjoy this winter, all under two hours from Zone 1.

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London isn’t the only place lit up with shimmering LEDs at this time of year. Swap Oxford Street’s baubles for a magical winter garden in West Sussex. Wakehurst – Kew’s bigger, rural sister site – is all aglow this November and December thanks to hundreds of otherworldly lanterns adorning its trees, water features and forest floor. Expect owls glowing in ancient oak trees, strings of astral shapes, kaleidoscopic blooms and ponds filled with flickering flames. The mellow hues make for a pretty mega afternoon out. Plus, you get to enjoy the botanical beauty of Kew Gardens without setting foot on the District line. 

Glow Wild 2023 at WakehurstArdingly, West Sussex. Selected evenings from Nov 24 to Jan 1. £11.50-£19.

Get there: 43 minutes by train from London Bridge to Haywards Heath, then bus; around one hour 30 minutes by car.

Is there anything more magical than a train journey? Okay commuters, let’s rephrase that. Is there anything more magical than an old-fashioned steam locomotive? There are steam-powered train routes across the country, and one of the closest and most charming is the Kent & East Sussex Railway – a route which runs from picture-perfect Tenterden to the small village of Bodiam. Even Santa Claus can’t resist, and in December and early January, he hops on board to hand out gifts to well-behaved children. All aboard! 

Kent and East Sussex RailwayTenterden, Kent. Santa Specials from £150 for a table of four. Check website for details, including times and dates.

Get there: 57 minutes by train from London Bridge to Headcorn, then 20 minutes by bus.

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For the fuzzy-headed
Photograph: Shutterstock

3. For the fuzzy-headed

Whether you want to walk off the nut roast, exercise the dog or escape the family, at some point over the festive break you’ll need to leave the house. If walking is your thing, make the trip to Oxford for this gorgeous stroll over ancient meadows. Spot ponies, wildflowers and the River Thames looking pretty on this tranquil stretch of common land. And city folk relax: it’s reassuringly close to civilisation and the quaint streets of the university city. After stretching your legs and admiring the views, find a spot by the fire at The Perch, at seventeenth-century thatch-roofed pub framed by an old willow tree. Their mulled cider is worth the trip alone. 

Port Meadow, Oxford.

Get there: Around one hour by train from Paddington Station to Oxford. 

For dedicated drinkers

Warming your toes by a proper fire is one of the best things to do in the chillier months, and nowhere does roaring blazes better than a country pub. Spend an afternoon hopping from one cosy boozer to another along Rye’s cobbled streets. Grab a log-side seat and a Sussex real ale in The George (High Street) before heading to the Globe Inn Marsh (Military Road) for a toasty hour or two with a warming glass of red in hand. As the temperature plummets, trot back into town and pull up a chair beside the ancient Mermaid Inn’s enormous fireplace (Mermaid Street). Fun fact: it comes complete with priest’s hole (no sniggering, please) and is where local smugglers used to hang out in the 1700s.

Rye, East Sussex.

Get there: around one hour 30 minutes by train from London St Pancras International; around two hours 30 minutes by car.

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For the always-peckish

Like a marathon runner building up to a race, prepare your body for the coming festive influx of food with a trip to Chapel Down in the Kent countryside. Visit the vineyards and tour the winery to whet your appetite, before settling down for a tutored wine tasting. Each glass of vino will be paired with an English cheese – we’re talking hard, full-flavoured rounds and seriously strong blue stuff with grapes and crackers. Chuck on your stretchiest trousers and you’ll be in great shape come December 25.

Chapel Down Cheese and Wine Pairing. Tenterden, Kent. Various dates. £65 per person.

Get there: 55 minutes by train from London Bridge to Headcorn then taxi; around one hour 45 minutes by car.

Stripping down to your swimmers might not seem like an obvious wintertime activity, but Thames Lido is a real delight, whatever the season. Brave the chill in the air to spend a softly lit evening in this whimsical, Grade II-listed stunner. The pool, heated to around 23 degrees, might feel a little fresh, but you’ll soon warm up after a turn in the open-air hot tub and colourful sauna. Your post-swim reward is a festive two-course dinner in the twinkly poolside restaurant. Who said lidos are just for summer?

Swim. Reading, Berkshire. Starts at £20

Get there: 25 minutes by train from London Paddington to Reading; around one hour 15 minutes by car.

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For party planners

Hosting a festive shindig? Brush up on your cocktail-mixing skills at the Bombay Sapphire Distillery. Learn all about the gin-making process (stellar party small talk, sorted) and explore its botanical glasshouses. Take an hour-long tutored cocktail masterclass to learn how to shake up (and then sample) fruity blends and perfect gin martinis.

Cocktail-making masterclass. Whitchurch, Hampshire. £45.

Get there: 55 minutes by train from London Waterloo to Overton, then bus; around one hour 30 minutes by car. 

Teeming with half-timbered medieval halls, cute cottages and pastel shopfronts, Rochester is one of Kent’s prettiest, greenest towns. In the shadows of its glorious twelfth-century castle, the Christmas fair runs for three weeks from the end of November. Wrap up warm and set off after dark to explore the stalls, funfair rides, Bavarian food village and late-night shopping. By the time you’ve sipped mulled wine, listened to carol singers and waltzed down the town’s Dickensian-like high street, Rochester will have charmed your thermal socks off.

Rochester Christmas Fair. Rochester, Kent. Selected weekend dates from Nov 25 to Dec 10. Free entry.

Get there: 45 minutes by train from London Victoria to Rochester; around one hour 15 minutes by car.

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For night owls

Watching the light fade out of your office window hours before you leave for the day can make even the cheeriest of us feel a bit down. Rather than hibernating till March, channel your inner night owl and embrace the longer nights. The night of Thursday December 21 – aka winter solstice – is as long and dark as it gets, and Brighton is marking it by getting lit. The annual Burning the Clocks parade sees the city taken over by brilliant illuminated lanterns which snake around the streets before being passed on to a huge midwinter bonfire on the beach. Summer, we’re so over you.

Burning the Clocks. Dec 21. Brighton, West Sussex. Free for spectators.

Get there: one hour by train from London Victoria; around two hour 20 minutes by car.

When the crowds in central London get too much, ditch Zone 1 for a field in the middle of nowhere. For a day of wintry repose, head to the Cotswolds and stride across some frosty fields. The village of Broadway, with its honey-coloured cottages, sweet shopfronts and rustic pubs, is an excellent place to start. Earn a pub lunch by strolling up to the grand turrets of Broadway Tower and admiring the view or, if you’re feeling energetic, hike part of the bucolic Cotswolds Way from Broadway to pretty market town Chipping Campden. Last one to the pub gets the first round in, yeah?

BroadwayWorcestershire.

Get there: one hour 35 minutes by train from London Paddington to Moreton-in-Marsh then bus to Broadway; around two hours by car.

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Home cooks beware: a trip to this humble pub will put your roast dinner to shame. It’s worth it though, just to say you’ve been to the only pub in the UK with two Michelin stars: Tom Kerridge’s The Hand and Flowers. There’s no overcooked turkey here, more like loin of Cotswold venison with maple-roast pumpkin or beer-roast chicken with salt-baked celeriac. And if all that sounds catastrophically out of your budget, pull up a stool at Kerridge’s pub The Butcher’s Tap, scoff a pork pie and take on the locals at the weekly pub quiz. 

The Hand and Flowers. Marlow, Buckinghamshire.

Get there: One hour 30 minutes from Paddington to Marlow, changing at Slough and Maidenhead; one hour 20 minutes by car.

Staying in London this winter?

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