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Things to do in Petworth – a weekend in West Sussex

I was on my way to meet my sister, for a couple of days exploring the delightful market town of Petworth and the countryside nearby. The town makes an ideal base for a relaxing country weekend with plenty to see, great food and gorgeous walks within the South Downs National Park. Here’s a flavour of how to spend a perfect weekend in Petworth.

As I drove through the West Sussex countryside, I was captivated by the gently rolling landscape. The fields were filled with spring crops of yellow rapeseed. Pretty villages boasted red brick and stone cottages.

A perfect weekend in Petworth featured

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Saturday Morning – A wander around Lodsworth

I always try to discover what’s around the places I stay. Our morning started with a short drive up the road from The Halfway Bridge, to the pretty village of Lodsworth.

It would have been a beautiful walk across the fields, filled with yellow rapeseed. However, we planned to continue on to Petworth, we took the car and popped into the Langham Brewery.

Lodsworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Yellow fields of Rapeseed in Lodsworth, West Sussex

The brewery is housed in an 18th century granary barn and there’s a small tasting area by the door as you enter. Friendly brewers are only too happy to give you a few tasters, to help you decide what to buy. As you savour a taste of West Sussex real ale, look around at all the vats where the beer is being brewed.

The Langham brewery is well known locally for its traditional cask conditioned real ales. These will probably be on sale in many local pubs you stop at for a drink. Enthusiasts will be happy to hear that you can arrange a 2 hour brewery tour for your group, with plenty of tasting opportunities!

You may also enjoy: 10 things to do in Cheltenham in just one day

Langham Brewery at Lodsworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Craft beer tasting at Langham Brewery at Lodsworth, West Sussex

Buying our picnic at the Lodsworth Larder

A little further up the road is the heart of the Lodsworth village. We stopped at the community-run Lodsworth Larder, to buy a few items for our picnic lunch.

Look out for the ciabatta bread that’s made at the Farreti bakery next door to the Langham brewery. There’s also local cheeses and other items made by Sussex craft producers.

Lodsworth Larder, Lodsworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Lodsworth Larder, Lodsworth, West Sussex

St Peter’s church in Lodsworth

Leaving our car in the Lodsworth Larder car park, we took to opportunity to look around the village. We discovered pretty cottages made of stone and red brick, in the West Sussex style.

Down the lane, past gardens overflowing with wisteria and flowering clematis, we found the church of St Peter’s. We had a look around the beautiful medieval stone interior with modern stained glass at the entrance.

Read my review of The Halfway Bridge where we stayed

St Peter's Church, Lodsworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
St Peter’s Church, Lodsworth, West Sussex

A wander around Petworth

Our next stop was the attractive market town of Petworth. It’s known as a centre for antique shops and stylish boutiques, with plenty of good food, arts and culture.

If you’re shopping, you’ll find all the necessities of life such as a bank, supermarket and pharmacy. But, Petworth is really a place to shop for the better things in life.

There’s designer fashions, delicious food and artistic finds for your home. This is the home of independent shopping, with small streets and pedestrian lanes. You can get a glimpse into courtyards and gardens tucked away through an archway or gate.

Lombard Street in Petworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Lombard Street in Petworth, West Sussex

There is a town car park if you’re staying a while, but the first hour of parking is free in the streets of Petworth. This was just long enough for us to have a look around the clothes shops and browse in the second hand book stores. We had a wander along some of the pretty cobbled streets and courtyards.

Shopping in Petworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Shopping in Petworth, West Sussex

Shopping in Petworth

Stopping at The Hungry Guest Deli, we could have lingered for hours, drooling over the delicious food, much of it locally sourced. They even have a cheese room where everything is beautifully laid out and kept at the perfect temperature. There are a few stools and counters at the window where you can buy something in store and then eat or drink it there and then.

Read my review of The Halfway Bridge where we stayed

Hungry Guest deli Petworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
The Hungry Guest Deli in Petworth, West Sussex

Other shops in Petworth

  • Petworth Antiques Market – a light and airy warehouse, full of smaller stands stocked by different antique dealers. Good for collectables and fun things for the home. (East Street)
  • Petworth Vintage Market – in the lane beside Coco Café and Sugar Lounge, a shed and courtyard selling cool collectables and antiques. (Saddlers Row)
  • Kevis House Gallery – A small gallery in Lombard Street with changing exhibitions of different artists. They also have the Petworth Penthouse – a luxurious 3 bedroom self-catering apartment above the gallery.
  • Artful Teasing – scented toiletries and skincare, heavenly fragrances for you and your home. (5 Lombard Street)
  • Red Card – The place for pretty greeting cards and small gifts. (6 High Street)
  • Tallulah Fox – Inspirational pieces for the home with cushions, ceramics and quirky printed aprons and tea towels. (Lombard Street)

Places to eat in Petworth

  • Cates Deli – A family run deli filled with delicious things to buy for your picnic and a small cafe area attached.
  • The Hungry Guest Cafe – sister café to the Hungry Guest deli, serving brunch, light meals and coffee all day. (Lombard Street)
  • Coco Café & Sugar Lounge – cakes, chocolates and nostalgic sweets accompanied by tea, coffee and hot chocolate with ices and sodas in summer. (Saddler’s Row)
Petworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Petworth Vintage Market in Petworth, West Sussex

We’d have liked to pop into Petworth Cottage Museum, to see how people lived in days gone by. However, it wasn’t open until the afternoon and it was time to press on to Petworth House.

If you go: Petworth Cottage Museum Open 2-4.30 pm April-October daily Tuesday-Saturday.

Petworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Petworth Cottage Museum, West Sussex

Petworth Park

Just on the edge of Petworth town, Petworth House and Park are easy to visit both in one day. This impressive mansion was built in 1682 by the heiress Elizabeth Percy and her husband the Duke of Somerset.

It’s surrounded by a 700 acre deer park, which was landscaped by Capability Brown. The successive owners: the Earls of Northumberland, Duke of Somerset and Earls of Egremont, built up an outstanding art collection over the centuries.

It features important artists such as Van Dyck, Reynolds, Titian and Turner. This makes it one of the best collections of Old Masters outside London and a heaven for art lovers.

Petworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
The Ionic temple in Petworth House, West Sussex

After our picnic lunch on the edge of the deer park, we entered the pleasure gardens of Petworth House. The grassy slopes were covered with daffodils that had mostly finished flowering.

They were now replaced with a thick carpet of bluebells under the trees. Beside the path were rhododendrons and azaleas. The big blowsy blooms of pink like frothy ball gowns were a contrast to the delicate bluebells and white bark covered with lichen.

We followed the path up to the Ionic Temple, created by Capability Brown, which stood on a mound, with views over Petworth town.

Read my review of The Halfway Bridge where we stayed

Petworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Bluebells in Petworth gardens, West Sussex

Petworth House

Our walk led on towards Petworth House, which although packed with artwork is not too overwhelming if you just home in on a few different rooms or paintings. There are leaflets that allow you to pick out themes of some of the most famous paintings.

Look for the eight Turner paintings including a couple of Petworth Park, or the collection of paintings of scenes from Shakespeare collected by the 3rd Earl of Egremont.

Petworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
The Marble Hall of Petworth House, West Sussex

Marble Hall

One of my favourite rooms was the Marble Hall, originally the grand entrance of Petworth House. Everything about it was designed to impress visitors, who arrived along the driveway and past the formal gardens, before Capability Brown turned them into a deer park. I also loved the Carved Room with the Holbein copy of Henry VIII, surrounded by wooden garlands of fruit and flowers, created by Grinling Gibbons.

Petworth House, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
The carved room at Petworth House, West

Across the courtyard from the main house we found the Servant’s Quarters, in a long low building housing the original kitchens and store rooms. We wandered through the meat larder and winter dairy, and the grand kitchen with shelf upon shelf of polished copper pans and jelly moulds.

There was a passageway from the kitchens leading under the courtyard. This provided for food to be transported to the house, without having to go outside. At one end of the building is the shop and café, with some seating extra at tables outside in the courtyard.

Read my review of The Halfway Bridge where we stayed

Petworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
The Kitchens at Petworth House, West Sussex

If you go: Petworth House is run by the National Trust, open most days 10am-5pm (house from 11am). Entrance charges to house and pleasure grounds. Entrance to the deer park only is free. There are regular guided tours. Check the website for more details.

Petworth House, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
The Servant’s Quarters at Petworth House, West Sussex

Where to stay for a weekend in Petworth

I highly recommend staying at The Halfway Bridge just outside Petworth – read my review of The Halfway Bridge here. The old coaching inn is set back from the road between Petworth and Midhurst and rooms are in a separate converted barn which is a couple of minutes up the lane.

The rooms were cosy and comfortable, stylishly decorated and overlooking a grassy courtyard. Most of all we enjoyed the delicious dinner and breakfast at the inn. It’s served at wooden tables among the exposed brick and wooden beams surrounded by old photos of the inn.

The food was outstanding, beautifully presented and featuring local produce. There’s a comfortable bar area if you just want a pint of local ale or a G&T.

There is free Wi-Fi and parking. Lodsworth, Midhurst, GU28 9BP. Check prices and book for The Halfway Bridge

Halfway Bridge Inn, Lodsworth, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Halfway Bridge Inn, Lodsworth, West Sussex

A country walk from Lurgashall

For Sunday morning, what better than a country walk across the fields, followed by lunch at a country pub? My sister had found just such a walk. It started at the nearby village of Lurgashall and made a circular route through Lickfold, passing the Blackdown distillery for a quick wine tasting.

We parked our car by the Noah’s Ark Inn in Lurgashall and felt we’d discovered a quintessentially English village. The pub overlooked the village green, surrounded by old brick houses, covered with wisteria in full bloom.

A small pavilion with a clocktower seemed to be waiting for a village cricket match to start. The red telephone box and old signposts pointing to nearby villages, completed the perfectly English scene.

Read my review of The Halfway Bridge where we stayed

Noahs Ark Inn at Lurgashall
Noahs Ark Inn at Lurgashall

As we left the village behind, we could hear pigeon cooing in the ancient oak trees with a froth of cow parsley along the edge of the lane. We followed the footpath beside a freshly ploughed field, with bright green shoots of spring wheat in the next. The verges were scattered with bluebells and we could look up to the wooded slopes of Bexley Hill with an aerial at the top.

Mill pond near Lurgashall photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Mill pond near Lurgashall

The mill pond and farm

Reaching a lane, we walked towards a large millpond, with water running through the sluice gate. The water was gushing down to the meadows, where a tranquil stream meandered through the reeds,.

A little further up the path we reached a farm. In the enclosed farmyard, the pigs were wallowing on the muddy ground, with cockerels pecking in the dirt. In the orchard opposite more hens were clucking under the apple trees and a baby lamb gazed at us from the safety of its mother’s back.

Walk near Lickfold, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Walk near Lickfold, West Sussex

Lickfold Inn

At around the halfway point of the walk we reached Lickfold Inn, a country pub with a fine dining restaurant upstairs. We settled into the bar for a mid-morning coffee, a comfortable place with a fire laid and herringbone brick floor.

The furnishings here were definitely up a notch from your average pub. Oak tables and chairs mixed in with leather bar stools and rather elegant sofas, upholstered in smart tweeds and linens.

We had a peek upstairs at the restaurant which took the elegance to another level. It would definitely be the place for a special occasion lunch or dinner. In the bar we eyed up the tempting menu of English bar snacks, such as local asparagus, chicken and foie terrine or pork and prune sausage roll, but decided to save ourselves for lunch at the end of our walk.

Read my review of The Halfway Bridge where we stayed

Lickfold Inn, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Coffee at Lickfold Inn, West Sussex

A pastoral setting

Walking up the path from Lickfold Inn we came upon a flock of black faced sheep and lambs, lying in the field under Blackdown hill. Once they realised that we had no food for them, they decided our paparazzi photos were too much of an intrusion. With a loud Baaa they walked haughtily off in the opposite direction.

Pathfinder West Sussex and South Downs Walks

Looking for more walks in West Sussex? We recommend the Pathfinder West Sussex and South Downs Walks

The path took us past woodland full of bluebells and into an open field, where we breathed in the rich aroma of cow manure. Across the field we could see the source of the smell, with cows in the straw filled barn peering out at us.

Walk near Lickfold, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Walk near Lickfold, West Sussex

Blackdown Distillery

Not long before our walk took us back to Lurgashall, we made another welcome stop at the Blackdown Distillery (now closed). Within an old barn was the distillery shop, where a friendly lady pressed us to try some of the spirits and fruit liqueurs made at the distillery.

There was Sussex dry gin and silver birch vermouth, as well as raspberry, strawberry and black cherry liqueurs. I also saw the more unusual flavours of walnut, elderberry and rose petal.

The shop was quaint with all the bottles nicely displayed. An “alchemist at work” area at one end is where they do group tastings or create bespoke gins for special clients. Of course we couldn’t resist buying a few miniatures to take home and the full bottles are also on sale as well as available by mail order.

Blackdown Distillery, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Blackdown Distillery, West Sussex

From the distillery we walked on through the wood with banks of bluebells on either side. The path opened out to a couple of open fields, where a white pony was grazing and the apple orchards were a sea of blossom. Through the trees, we could spot the church spire by the Lurgashall village green, where we had started our walk.

Apple blossom near Lurgashall West Sussex
Apple blossom near Lurgashall West Sussex

By the time our 2.5 hour walk brought us back again to the Noah’s Ark Inn, we felt we had really earned our lunch. We found a table in bar area and ordered from the specials board.

I chose smoked salmon sandwich on granary for me and a lamb kofta from the main menu for my sister. I’d highly recommend the Noah’s Ark Inn for either lunch or dinner, although I imagine that it must be packed on summer weekends, so you probably need to book.

Noah's Ark Inn, Lurgashall, West Sussex Photo: Heatheronhertravels.com
Noah’s Ark Inn, Lurgashall, West Sussex

Petworth Flickr photos

Plan your weekend in Petworth

More information to plan your weekend on the Discover Petworth Website

More hotels in Petworth

The Angel Inn – This is a good choice if you prefer to stay in Petworth itself. There’s a traditional bar serving local ales and dishes made with fresh, locally sourced produce. Upstairs are 6 bedrooms which have been recently refurbished in soft shades.

Check prices and book for The Angel Inn

The Old Railway Station – For something a little different check out The Old Railway Station where you can stay either in Old Station House or in one of four restored Pullman carriages.

Check prices and book for The Old Railway Station

Spread Eagle Inn
Spread Eagle Inn

Hotels in Midhurst

The Spread Eagle Inn – Midhurst is a good alternative to Petworth if you’d like to stay in another of West Sussex’s charming market towns. The Spread Eagle Inn is one of England’s oldest coaching inns and has 39 elegant bedrooms as well as an indoor pool and spa and a restaurant with huge inglenook fireplace.

Check prices and book for The Spread Eagle Hotel and Spa

Hotels near Chichester

Goodwood Hotel – Close to Chichester, the Goodwood Hotel is set in the 12,000 acre Goodwood estate, with luxurious décor and the Farmer, Butcher, Chef restaurant featuring produce from the estate.

Check prices and book for The Goodwood Hotel

Goodwood Hotel
Goodwood Hotel

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This article is originally published at Heatheronhertravels.com

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