logo
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
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inside Scotland's 'cleanest town' that's home to Iron Age homestead and 17th Century fort
Inside Scotland's 'cleanest town' that's home to Iron Age homestead and 17th Century fort

Daily Record

time8 hours ago

  • Daily Record

Inside Scotland's 'cleanest town' that's home to Iron Age homestead and 17th Century fort

Home to around 7,000 people, town is packed with history and nature. While major cities like Dundee and Glasgow continue to struggle with growing levels of litter, studies have found that Shetland is setting an example for the rest of Scotland in cleanliness. ‌ A report from environmental charity Keep Scotland Beautiful last year highlighted that 98.7 per cent of public spaces in Shetland are predominantly litter-free, the highest rate in the country. ‌ This remarkable achievement has earned Lerwick, Shetland's capital and main port town, the title of Scotland's cleanest town. It is home to around 7,000 people and serves as the largest settlement in UK's most northerly archipelago. ‌ Lerwick offers a perfect base for exploring the remote island chain. Situated almost equidistant between Aberdeen and Bergen in Norway, the town boasts a unique blend of Scottish and Nordic culture, historic charm and natural beauty. Visitors to Lerwick can explore some of the town's standout attractions, including Clickimin Broch, one of Scotland's best-preserved Iron Age structures. Located on the shore of Clickimin Loch, the broch complex showcases over a thousand years of settlement history. The broch tower itself still stands impressively tall, while the site is surrounded by a thick stone wall. ‌ A particularly intriguing feature is a sculpted stone on the causeway bearing a pair of human feet, believed to date back to the late Iron Age or early historic period. Experts suggest it may have been linked to ancient kingship or inauguration rituals. Another major landmark is Fort Charlotte, one of just three 17th and 18th century military bases in Scotland that still serve a military role, alongside Edinburgh Castle and Fort George near Inverness. ‌ Built between 1652 and 1653, its first incarnation was destroyed 20 years later during the Third Anglo-Dutch War. It was built in its current form in 1781 and named after Queen Charlotte. Though it never saw active combat following its reconstruction, it housed a garrison during the Napoleonic Wars and later served as a Royal Naval Reserve base. Between 1837 and 1875, it functioned as Lerwick's jail and courthouse, and was later used as a custom house and coastguard station. ‌ Despite now being surrounded by homes and streets in the centre of Lerwick, Fort Charlotte remains an important historical site, connected to the Anglo-Dutch Wars and the town's early development. Beyond its historic sites, Lerwick also offers an abundance of natural beauty and wildlife experiences. Visitors can go orca spotting in the surrounding seas or stay onshore to explore the island's diverse marine life. ‌ Lerwick even has its own beach, Bain's, just a short walk from the town centre. It has featured heavily in BBC crime drama Shetland, as it sits beside main character Jimmy Perez's home. Those seeking solitude can venture further to explore more remote beaches scattered across Shetland's mainland. Sumburgh, located at the southern tip of the island, is famed for its sweeping white sands - and you can also spot puffins there at certain times of the year. Spiggie Beach, also in the south, is praised for its crystal-clear waters, often compared to those of a Greek island, albeit with a cooler climate. ‌ Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. St Ninian's Isle beach is one of the most iconic and beautiful places in Shetland. The sand causeway that links the mainland to the uninhabited St Ninian's Isle is the largest tombolo in the UK. Another popular Shetland bay is Skaw Beach, which takes you away from the mainland to the island of Unst. The beach, which is famous for being the most northerly in the UK, is backed by a meadow of wild flowers during spring and summer. After a day of sightseeing, visitors can enjoy a meal or drink in one of Lerwick's welcoming pubs and restaurants. The Lounge Bar, rated the top spot on TripAdvisor, is popular for its live music and relaxed atmosphere. For a bite to eat, No 88 Kitchen and Bar comes highly recommended, offering a unique fusion of Scottish, British and Philippine cuisine.

Sweating for world peace at the Expo saunas
Sweating for world peace at the Expo saunas

Time Out

timea day ago

  • Time Out

Sweating for world peace at the Expo saunas

While hot-spring bathing is still Japan's go-to form of wet and sweaty relaxation, Nordic sauna culture has been making massive inroads across the country in recent years. The steam-room boom has even reached Expo 2025 Osaka, Kansai, where the toughest reservation of them all is neither any of the national pavilions, nor one of the stunning 'signature pavilions' produced by some of the country's brightest scientific minds – it's a sauna. Named 'Taiyo Tsubomi' – roughly 'buds of the sun' – the Expo sauna is a unique take on the Finnish sweat chamber, composed of petal-like air membrane cushions that converge to form a sprout reaching toward the light. Tickets for the 14-person bathing sessions that take place daily are doled out through a devilishly competitive lottery system, and scoring one is considered a minor coup among sauna heads. But whose idea was it to build a high-tech sauna at the Expo, and how does this decidedly laid-back project fit with the World's Fair's message of building a better society for the future? We asked Yuki Nohmura, president of the company behind Taiyo Tsubomi, and got an exclusive look at the in-demand attraction – along with a story of how the cutting-edge materials Nohmura's firm specialises in make some of the Expo's most spectacular sights possible. Steamy rituals, naked connections A cluster of pearly white, translucent structures standing tall on the edge of Osaka Bay, the Taiyo Tsubomi saunas are hidden away in a secluded corner of the Expo's Green World area. Constructed by the Taiyo Kogyo company using ETFE film, a lightweight, durable and energy-efficient resin material, the saunas harmoniously blend natural elements with advanced technology. Bathing in them isn't your average sweat-cool-repeat deal. What goes on inside is best described as a series of rites – 11 consecutive 'actions' that all participants undergo. 'If regular sauna bathing is like ordering à la carte,' says Taiyo Kogyo's Yuki Nohmura, 'our sauna is a multicourse meal.' The idea is to stimulate the senses and encourage connection. 'At the end, all 14 bathers reach a state of reconnection – to themselves, to their fellow participants, to Earth,' explains Nohmura. 'Sauna bathing heightens the senses. Relaxed, you notice things you hadn't paid attention to before – birdsong, the wind, how blue the sky is.' There's a strong spiritual aspect to the Expo sauna experience, with the story of the Japanese sun deity Amaterasu providing the foundation for the 11-part 'ritual'. The core message Nohmura hopes to send with his saunas, however, is more universal. 'I think sauna bathing has the power to further peace,' he says with a smile. 'At the Expo, you get visitors from all over the world – Americans and Russians, Israelis and Palestinians, Indians and Pakistanis. Our sauna offers everyone a place to reconnect, to build ties – and these ties can help bring about peace in the future.' Festival focus While the sauna experiment marks a new avenue for Taiyo Kogyo, the Osaka-based materials company is no stranger when it comes to Expos. On the contrary, Nohmura's firm has been a key player at World's Fairs ever since the first Osaka Expo in 1970, when it helped build and run several pavilions on the sprawling grounds of what is now Expo '70 Commemorative Park. And the company's involvement with global mega-events doesn't stop there: Taiyo Kogyo has long been a fixture in stadium construction for sporting extravaganzas including the World Cup, and is currently part of the team rebuilding the NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas to prepare it for hosting matches during the worldwide football showcase's 2026 edition. For Nohmura, these events all have something attractive in common. 'They're all festivals, and at Taiyo Kogyo there's nothing we love more than a good festival,' he says. 'Festivals have the power to bring people together, to excite and to move them.' And some festive fun might be just what Japan – and the world – needs right now. 'An event like the Expo can provide a boost to culture, technology, even society as a whole,' Nohmura argues. 'And since it's one of the world's biggest festivals, you get that cosmopolitan atmosphere. It's an opportunity for people from all over the globe to get to know each other, make friends – and strive for a better future.' Material worlds Nohmura's passion for the Expo is reflected in the extent to which his company is engaged with the ongoing 2025 edition. Besides the Taiyo Tsubomi saunas, Taiyo Kogyo is a major driving force behind structures such as null², the 'signature pavilion' by media artist Yoichi Ochiai. The mirrored exterior of null² vibrates and warps, distorting the viewer's senses. Its striking appearance is made possible by a new sheet-like material developed by Taiyo Kogyo and fitted onto the pavilion by the company's architects and engineers. However, the reflective surfaces of Ochiai's pavilion weren't even the toughest task for the Taiyo Kogyo crew at Expo 2025. 'What we really struggled with was Nishijin-ori,' says Nohmura. This traditional brocade from Kyoto, which covers the clam-like pavilion shared by housing manufacturer Iida Group Holdings and Osaka Metropolitan University, was designed by a master of the centuries-old textile art, but the painstaking work of applying it to a building fell to Taiyo Kogyo. 'Converting a textile intended to be worn by people into a construction material was incredibly tough,' says Nohmura. 'We had to figure out how to make it resistant to the elements while retaining the distinctive matte appearance and texture of Nishijin-ori.' Affixing the textiles to the building's curved surface caused more headache. 'The alignment had to be just right, because even a tiny error would cause the floral pattern to look off on the finished building,' Nohmura says. 'But after many sleepless nights, we managed to make it work.' Days of wonder Having spent all that time behind the scenes in Osaka, Nohmura is the ultimate Expo insider. Despite being in the building business, his favourite part of the massive event isn't any specific pavilion or exhibition – it's the daily programme of 'national days' organised by the participating countries. 'The national days are amazing, since you get to see a different country put on a proper festival every day,' he says. 'They feature top-level artists and performers, and you really get a feel for the organising country's culture.' And don't forget about all the amazing food. 'If I could, I'd like to eat everything [available at the Expo],' Nomura laughs. 'Each country has brought its own chefs over, and they're putting some serious effort into the food. Just eating your way around all the pavilions makes for a great experience.' Pair that with a sauna session, and you've got yourself an Expo day to remember.

Klättermusen opens first store in Japan
Klättermusen opens first store in Japan

Fashion United

time2 days ago

  • Fashion United

Klättermusen opens first store in Japan

Swedish mountaineering brand Klättermusen, known for its premium ready-to-wear clothing catering to expeditions, hiking, and skiing, as well as backpacks and accessories, has opened its first store in Osaka, 25 years after entering the Japanese market. Located in the heart of Shinsaibashi at 4-7-11, Minami-Semba, Chuo, the store spans 830 square feet and marks the brand's first store in western Japan. The store has been designed by Studio Doughnuts to offer consumers more than a transactional interaction but to act as 'a hub and meeting point for outdoor enthusiasts' with a space that celebrates the brand's Nordic roots through natural materials and a stripped-back design, which puts the product at the heart of the store. The opening coincides with Klättermusen's 50th anniversary this year, as well as its 25th anniversary of being available in Japan, the brand's first global home outside of Scandinavia. The Osaka store joins its flagship in Tokyo. Hodaka Endo, chief executive of Sputnik Inc., Klättermusen's Japanese distribution partner, said in a statement: 'Klättermusen's product designs and responsible ethos, which are delicately thought out down to the smallest detail, are of great interest in Japan and for Japanese adventurers, and have been for a long time.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store