Off-leash friendly
Pets can be off-leash at this Hipcamp.
In The Guardians Top 10 Best UK Off-Grid Retreats *Dog Friendly*
Is it time for an escape from too much concrete and too many commitments? Escape Off The Grid will give you just that: this totally off-grid experience in Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty is so peaceful that it’s hard to believe you’re just one-two hours from London.
So what’s on offer here? A cool, sustainably made wooden cabin with a woodburner to keep you cosy, simple but comfy furniture, and best of all, a double bed set next to vast glass windows looking out on a wonderfully quiet landscape. Chances are you’ll want to stay there all day looking down the valley… breakfast in bed may well become a necessity.
Everything is ready for you (bedding, cooking stuff, a fridge, kindling for the firepit and woodburner) so all you need to bring with you is food – pick up supplies from local farm shops – or eat at the rural pubs in the quaint local villages.
With no phone signal and no wifi connection to distract you, you’ll have all the time in the world to chill out, read a book, write a journal, hike the unknown, or meditate in nature.Brace of pheasants (the local) - 2 minutes walk in Plush. Most popular among our guests. Thatched roof, fire and garden
We provide a map & compass or showcase the local walks on Komooot.
Dorset Gap & Iron Age Hill Fort - A complex motorway junction with five paths from another age.Write your name in a book that has been there since 1972. Might find Robin Hood. Hill Fort from 1,200-600 BC
Cerne Abbas Chalk Giant - Britain’s largest chalk figure at 55m tall. Created in the late Saxon period (10th-11th Century). Theory holds that the figure was carved around the body of a giant who was slain
Lulworth Cove & Old Harry's Rock - a short drive to the coast to see these famous coastal features
Gold Hill - One of the most photographed streets in Great Britain & famous for a Hovis Ad. A steep cobbled street through a village to a 14th century church
Corfe Castle - Built by William the Conqueror, the castle dates to the 11th century and commands a gap in the Purbeck Hills. It was built at a rate of 3-4m a year and then destroyed in 1646 under orders form the House of Commons.
Tyneham Ghost Village - Abandoned ghost village since the Second World War. Visit on weekends as the Army use it during the week