Published by TI Media Limited Country Life, the quintessential English magazine, is undoubtedly one of the biggest and instantly recognisable brands in the UK today. It has a unique core mix of contemporary country-related editorial and top end property advertising. Editorially, the magazine comments in-depth on a wide variety of subjects, such as architecture, the arts, gardens and gardening, travel, the countryside, field-sports and wildlife. With renowned columnists and superb photography Country Life delivers the very best of British life every week.
Mrs Rebecca Metcalfe • Rebecca is an art adviser and interior decorator, who sources rare objects for clients. She is the daughter of Stephen and Katrina Reitman of London NW3 and the wife of Misha Metcalfe, whom she married at Oakley Court, near Windsor, Berkshire, in July 2024.
Nature’s jigsaw puzzle
Country Life
The best of Bodmin
Town & Country Notebook
Letters to the Editor
The urban takeover
Athena • Cultural Crusader
My favourite painting Zoë Wanamaker
A house of many inspirations • A pre-eminent country-house adviser has created a home from a 300-year-old farmhouse and farmyard, as Jeremy Musson explains
The legacy • Joe Henson and native breeds
From this slumber you shall wake • The dozy, golden-coated hazel dormouse may have got its paws under the Mad Hatter’s table, but numbers of this elusive woodland rodent are worryingly low, laments Jack Watkins
All ‘Clough-ed up’ • A romantic experiment surrounded by the natural majesty of North Wales, Portmeirion began life as an oddity, but has evolved into an architectural phenomenon kept alive by dedication, discovers Ben Lerwill
The imitation game • Feats of cunning and creativity, Britain’s thousands of defensive pillboxes were disguised as Gothic lodges, haystacks, public loos or even branches of WHSmith, discovers Harry Pearson
Telling a tail • It’s tricky to carry a framed portrait of your favourite pet with you, says Hetty Lintell, so why not immortalise them in a beautiful piece of jewellery
Are you sitting sociably? • Carefully placed furniture encourages conversation, says Emma Burns of Sibyl Colefax & John Fowler
In search of Arcadia • In any country estate, owners ought to be able to find refuge from the busy world–something entirely possible at these three properties
Always in style • Old rectories and vicarages have never lost their crown, taking architectural pride of place in villages across the country for centuries
London Life • Your indispensable guide to the capital
Need to Know
It all happened on Booksellers’ Row • Fire, murder and regicide plotting–Cecil Court has a colourful history and remains one of London’s most atmospheric streets, says Huon Mallalieu, who has spent a lifetime browsing there
A prince among plantsmen • The magnificent magnolias, many of them collected as seed in the wild, are only one aspect of this enthralling garden, reports Charles Quest-Ritson
A touch of honey
Kitchen garden cook Jersey Royals
Queen of the hedgerow • With a scent like summer, frothy heads of elder were once used to minimise the ravages of smallpox, but avoid sitting under the tree, warns John Wright
Island state of mind • Libby Brodie reveals everything you need to know about the Maldives, from getting there in style to sustainable certifications, as Rosie Paterson visits four of the best resorts
Having a meltdown
Like duck to Turner • J. M. W. Turner was a mystery, but his home in Twickenham lifts the veil on his devotion to his father and, through a forthcoming exhibition, his interest in animals and his sense of humour
Close to your chest •...