We're a small, family-run retreat on the land we've farmed for three generations — built slowly, by hand, for people who want to slow down too.
It started with a quiet field and a stubborn idea.
[Placeholder] For three generations our family has farmed this corner of Galloway — a patchwork of grazing, woodland and big open sky above Port William. Like a lot of small farms, we reached a point where the land needed to earn its keep in a new way.
[Placeholder] Rather than sell up or scale out, we chose to share what we already loved: the silence, the stars, and the feeling of being genuinely away from it all. The first timber pod went up in a top field with the best view. Guests asked to stay longer — so the cabins followed.
[Placeholder] Today there are eleven spaces, but the intention hasn’t changed: somewhere considered, private and quietly luxurious, still run by the same family who farm the fields around it.
Three things guide everything we do.
Quiet over noise
No reception desk, no crowds, no schedule. We design for stillness — the rarest luxury there is.
Craft over convenience
Natural oak, warm plaster, brass and linen. We build slowly and choose materials that only get better with age.
Light on the land
Solar, battery and air-source heat. We tread as lightly as we can on the place that gives us everything.
A small team who live on site.
Founder name
Third-generation farmer who swapped livestock records for guest books, and still checks the fields every morning.
Founder name
The eye behind the interiors and the warm welcome — responsible for the linen, the hampers and the little touches.
Luxury that leaves the place better.
[Placeholder] We run on solar and battery storage, heat with air-source pumps, and are planting native woodland across the farm. The cabins themselves are built from reclaimed steel — given a second, quieter life.
- 100%
- Renewable Powered
- 3
- Generations Farming
- 120
- Acres of farm & wood
- 2,000+
- Native trees planted
“We didn't set out to build a hotel. We set out to give people the feeling we get here every day.”