21.04.2016 Views

Wealden Times | WT171 | May 2016 | Restoration & New Build supplement inside

Wealden Times - The lifestyle magazine for the Weald

Wealden Times - The lifestyle magazine for the Weald

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Above: Morning sunshine floods the yellow drawing room with light, leading you through the elegant hallway and into the heart of the Old Rectory<br />

Few things are as quintessentially English as cricket.<br />

The same could almost be said of the Old Rectory at<br />

Offham, with its ragstone gateway, sweeping gravel<br />

drive and classic Georgian facade. It’s the perfect setting for a<br />

period drama – and one can’t help imagining a vintage Rolls<br />

parked outside or an elegant housekeeper answering the door.<br />

Or perhaps the sound of leather on willow, as members of<br />

the family practise a few plum shots along the smooth lawn.<br />

As it happens, all of the above could be true, as this<br />

stunning house has been home to the Cowdrey cricketing<br />

family for the past 10 years – and a very happy home too.<br />

“I felt like I had known this place forever, every detail, every<br />

blade of grass,” says Christel Cowdrey, who had first visualised<br />

and drawn a picture of her ‘perfect home’ back in the 1990s.<br />

“We looked for four years before we found it, and moved<br />

in on the very day the boys started at Tonbridge.”<br />

Being near to their twin boys, Julius and Fabian, now 23,<br />

while they were at Tonbridge School, was the main reason for<br />

their move to Offham. The family had lived in Mystole near<br />

Canterbury for several years, while Christel’s former husband<br />

Chris captained both Kent and England cricket teams, before<br />

moving to Ascot when his commentating career took off.<br />

“It was the ideal location – equidistant from Sevenoaks<br />

and Tonbridge and only a mile and a half from the<br />

motorway.” Other, less practical elements also played<br />

a key part. “The agent was rather apologetic about<br />

the murals in the drawing room, and said, ‘Don’t<br />

worry, you can paint over that stuff on the walls!’”<br />

The murals, as it happened, were painted by Josef<br />

Holst. “My maiden name was Holst-Sande, so it felt like<br />

fate. Plus, they are the most stunning chinoiserie.”<br />

Sitting in the drawing room in front of the open fire, it<br />

It’s the perfect setting for a period drama – and one can’t help imagining a vintage Rolls parked<br />

outside or an elegant housekeeper answering the door<br />

<br />

87 www.wealdentimes.co.uk

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!