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A hotel that thinks it is a playground

We find that learning to cycle in Suffolk was an uphill adventure.

March 24, 2011 11:14
Playtime is like falling off a log at the 1,800 acres of National Trust parkland of Ickworth Hotel (Photo: Sam Pearce)

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

4 min read

Suffolk is not as flat as you might think. From the road, the undulations seem gentle but if, for example, you should find yourself at the bottom of one of these undulations with two small children - both learning how to ride bikes - the hill can appear as daunting as the north face of Everest.

Unfortunately, it had just started raining; worse still, my eight-year-old daughter Lucy had just fallen off her bike and her demeanour was, to put it delicately, less than stoical. However, as Hillary and Tenzing would no doubt have confirmed, when confronted with a steep gradient, motivation is everything.

And at the summit was Ickworth Hotel, a luxurious, child-friendly place to which Lucy and her five-year-old brother, Alex, were very keen to return - rain or no rain, hill or no hill.

Ickworth, a National Trust Property, is the ancestral seat of the Hervey dynasty and the hotel occupies the east wing - it manages to be both grand and intimate in equal measure which is not a bad trick to pull off.

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