Living lightly, staying deeply at Goytree

Most breaks promise comfort or calm, but rarely both alongside a clear conscience. At Goytree, you find practical ways to tread lightly on the land without giving up deep comfort or privacy. Our eco retreat in Herefordshire offers hand-built treehouses and yurts where off-grid living meets thoughtful care for the earth. Stick with us to see how your stay supports the land while letting you truly switch off.

Living Off Grid in Comfort

Imagine waking up with birdsong as your only alarm. This is life at The Goytree, where comfort and sustainability go hand in hand. Our accomodation redefines what it means to live off-grid, ensuring you enjoy the best of nature without compromising on luxury.

Sustainable Glamping in Herefordshire

If the thought of sacrificing comfort for eco-friendly living makes you hesitate, let us prove otherwise. Our accommodations feature all the luxuries you crave, from plush bedding to a copper bath, without leaving a footprint. Each space is a testament to what sustainable glamping in Herefordshire should be—luxurious, yet kind to the planet.

You’ll find our hand-built yurts and treehouses scattered across 18 acres of lush landscape. This is not just a stay; it’s an invitation to experience how nature and comfort can coexist beautifully. With every booking, you contribute to our mission of regenerative land care. This isn’t just a place to rest your head; it’s a movement toward a better way of living.

Off Grid Treehouse Experience

The idea of staying in a treehouse might evoke childhood memories, but at The Goytree, it’s a grown-up dream come true. Our off-grid treehouses offers a rustic luxury experience that’s hard to match. It’s the perfect blend of adventure and comfort, designed for those who want to disconnect from the digital buzz and reconnect with nature.

Each treehouse is equipped with solar lighting and wood-fired heating. You’ll find no Wi-Fi here, by choice. It’s a digital detox break in the UK you’ll cherish. But don’t worry, there’s excellent mobile coverage if you need it. The moment you step inside, you’ll feel the world’s weight lift, replaced by the soothing sounds of wind through leaves and the gentle crackle of a wood fire.

Eco Retreat on the Border

Nestled on the Herefordshire Welsh border, our eco-accomodation offers more than just a place to sleep. It’s a sanctuary where nature and comfort embrace. Here, every element has been crafted with care, from the local materials used to the community spirit that thrives on our land.

Nature Positive Stay in Herefordshire

Our commitment to sustainability goes beyond words. A stay with us is a nature-positive experience. You’ll notice it in the way we manage our land, focusing on biodiversity and regenerative practices. Our retreat embodies what it means to be a nature-positive stay, offering guests a chance to be part of something bigger.

Each visit supports our ongoing efforts to enhance biodiversity through projects like tree planting and wildflower meadow creation. You’re not just a guest here; you’re a participant in a meaningful journey toward ecological harmony.

Romantic Treehouse with Hot Tub

Imagine a romantic treehouse with a hot tub, where every evening ends under a starry sky. Our treehouses are designed for couples seeking privacy and a touch of magic. The wood-fired hot tub offers a chance to soak under open skies, making it an ideal spot for special occasions or simply unwinding.

Whether celebrating an anniversary or just the joy of being together, this is a setting that enhances every moment. The combination of natural beauty, luxury amenities, and total privacy makes it a unique offering. Most people think glamping can’t combine romance and eco-consciousness, but we’re here to challenge that notion.

Practical Ways to Reduce Impact

Living sustainably doesn’t mean sacrificing comfort. At Goytree, we believe in practical ways to reduce our footprint while enhancing guest experiences. Let’s explore how simple choices make a big difference.

Compost Loo Glamping

You might wonder how compost toilets fit into a luxury retreat. At Goytree, they’re a key part of our eco-friendly commitment. These composting systems offer a modern take on an ancient practice, turning waste into a resource. It’s part of our effort to ensure that every guest enjoys a guilt-free connection with nature.

Our compost loos are clean, odour-free, and a small step towards a big impact. They align with our land stewardship goals, ensuring we leave the earth better than we found it. This is eco-glamping done right, showing that luxury and sustainability can coexist.

Solar Powered Glamping

Harnessing the sun’s power is central to our sustainable approach. Our glamping accommodations are solar-powered, offering an environmentally friendly way to enjoy the comforts of modern life. This isn’t about going without; it’s about enjoying more with less impact.

In choosing Goytree, you’re not just selecting a place to stay—you’re joining a community dedicated to a hopeful and practical response to the environmental challenges we all face. Let us show you how good it feels to live lightly while staying deeply connected to what matters.

Why we created the Goytree recognition stays

For more than twenty years, Matt and I have worked across climate, environmental and community development spaces. Again and again, we’ve seen how much essential work is carried by people who rarely seek recognition. Often under-resourced, often unseen, and almost always driven by care rather than credit.

Using The Goytree to support environmental and community work

Now that we run The Goytree, a small collection of handcrafted, off-grid treehouses and yurts on the Herefordshire–Welsh border, we’re exploring how this business and this land can support that wider work. One way is by using our platform and community to help people feel seen, and by offering our accommodation as a genuine way of giving something back.

Gifting stays to people showing up for people and planet

In early 2026, we’ll be gifting four Goytree stays to people doing meaningful environmental and community-focused work. These stays are not prizes for being exceptional. They are gestures of gratitude and acknowledgement for showing up, often over long periods of time, for people, land and planet.

The people being recognised here

The people below are being recognised as a simple but powerful statement. Your work matters. We see you. Their contributions span food systems, land stewardship, mental health, community organising, creativity, care and climate action. Some are well known. Many work behind the scenes. All are part of a much wider web of people trying to do thoughtful, values-led work in challenging times.

Growing a community of care and connection

This feels like the beginning of something for us. Beyond these stays, we’re interested in how Goytree can grow into a place of connection for people doing this kind of work. A place where stories are shared, relationships are built, and ideas can take root over time. If you want to stay in touch as we develop these ideas future – join our community here. 

With thanks to everyone involved

We’re deeply grateful to everyone who made a nomination, and to everyone taking part by recognising someone else. What you’re reading here is just a small glimpse of a much larger community of care. We hope it encourages you to pause, notice, and celebrate the people shaping a more hopeful future.

 

Recognise Someone Here

ALEX MORSS

Links to Alex’s work:

www.alexmorss.co.uk

@morss_alex

@alexmorssauthor

 

Alex is an ecologist, journalist, author and environmental campaigner whose work has shaped public understanding of ecology, wildlife and environmental responsibility for more than 25 years. Through freelance journalism, Alex has brought evidence-based reporting on nature, biodiversity and environmental change to wide and diverse audiences. Alongside her media work, she has written children’s ecology books and delivered workshops on wildlife and environmental literacy, supporting people of all ages to build deeper, more informed relationships with the natural world. Her contribution also includes long-standing involvement with organisations such as the Bristol Naturalists’ Society, where she serves as a trustee, and advocacy work supporting species protection and media ecoliteracy.

What stood out to us at The Goytree is both the breadth and the consistency of Alex’s commitment. She has combined, ecology, journalism, education, grassroots organising and international campaigning with remarkable persistence, including co-founding the global Plastic Attack movement and leading ecology and public engagement for the Flowers in Their Footsteps project in Bristol. Her work has reached far beyond any single platform or place, while remaining grounded in care, integrity and a belief in the power of environmental literacy. This shortlist recognises not only the scale of Alex’s contribution, but the courage and steadiness required to keep showing up for environmental truth over decades.

 

Recognise Alex Here

 

 

 

Babs Gonzalez

Links to Babs work:

Better Nature CIC

@betternaturecic

 

Babs is co-founder of Better Nature Ecotherapy CIC, a pioneering organisation working at the intersection of mental health, nature connection and environmental behaviour change. Through therapeutic nature-based programmes, Babs supports people experiencing anxiety, depression and isolation while fostering reciprocal relationships with the natural world. A particularly powerful aspect of this work is its integration into health systems. Better Nature acts as a bridge between medical practices and green social prescribing opportunities, supporting people who may be struggling even to leave their homes to gently reconnect with nature and community. Many participants go on to volunteer, engage in environmental projects or adopt more sustainable lifestyles.

What stood out to us is the scalability and care embedded in this work. As Better Nature moves toward national expansion, it demonstrates how wellbeing and environmental action can reinforce one another rather than compete. Matt’s own experience developing nature-based wellbeing programmes makes this work feel especially resonant. This shortlist recognition celebrates the innovation, compassion and persistence behind this work. It reflects the future we believe in: one where healing people and healing land are inseparable.

 

Recognise Babs Here

 

 

 

cat Fletcher

Links to Cat’s work:

Freegle

@thisisfreegle

@resourcefulgoddess

 

Cat has been a driving force in the UK reuse movement for many years, dedicating her work to reducing waste, strengthening communities and reshaping how people think about consumption. Through her leadership as a co-founder of Freegle and hands-on initiatives such as the Brighton Free Shop, Cat has helped make reuse visible, practical and accessible, showing what circular systems can look like in everyday life. Alongside this, she has led national media outreach for Freegle, extending its reach far beyond what funding alone could enable and helping reuse become part of mainstream conversation.

What stood out to us at The Goytree is the steadiness and depth of Cat’s commitment. This is not a role she steps into occasionally; it is a way of living that permeates how she shows up for people and planet. Her work has supported countless individuals to rethink waste, sharing and mutual support at a time when community resilience matters deeply. This shortlist recognition honours the creativity, care and persistence required to sustain values-led environmental work over the long term, much of it unseen, underfunded and essential.

 

Recognise Cat Here

 

 

 

 

celeste lewis

Links to Celeste’s work:

Holistic Hoarding CIC

@holistichoarding

Celeste Lewis is Head of Sustainability at Holistic Hoarding CIC, a Welsh social enterprise working at the intersection of mental health, housing and environmental sustainability. Her work has played a  part in preventing 86 people from losing their homes in the last year alone while diverting large volumes of materials (140 tonnes per year) from landfill into community reuse. Celeste’s contribution goes beyond operational success. She has led on and embedded circular economy principles at every level of the organisation, creating a redistribution hub, educational programmes and partnerships that model how care for people and planet can be integrated. Her work has influenced commissioners, funders and schools, extending impact far beyond immediate services.

 

What stood out to us is how seamlessly care for people and planet are woven together in this work. Celeste’s approach reflects our own belief that sustainability can be innovative and hopeful. Her leadership demonstrates this using a deeply human approach.

 

Recognise Celeste Here

 

 

 

DOMINIQUE DELEON

Dominique’s work:

@healing_for_me_2025

Dominique has dedicated years to helping people of colour reconnect with the outdoors and build meaningful relationships with nature. Her work directly supports access to nature for all, supporting confidence, well-being and environmental stewardship within communities who have not always felt welcome in outdoor spaces. By fostering curiosity and care, Dominique’s work helps cultivate long-term relationships with land and place.

What stood out to us is Dominique’s ability to bring people together and seed new leadership. Many participants she has supported have gone on to lead walks, form their own walking communities, and engage in projects that strengthen local connection to nature, extending the impact of her work far beyond individual sessions. This shortlist recognition reflects our belief that environmental futures must be rooted in belonging and access for all.

 

Recognise Dominique Here

 

 

 

Ed AllnuTT

Ed’s work:

@allnutted

Ed’s work spans multiple grassroots campaigns protecting commons, parks and public access to nature. Through voluntary roles with groups such as Guardians of Whitewebbs and Friends of Clapham Common, Ed has supported legal challenges, research, fundraising and community mobilisation. His work is collaborative and connective. Ed brings people together across campaigns, sharing knowledge, strategy and support, often stepping in wherever momentum is needed. From fundraising and media engagement to research and policy advocacy, his contribution strengthens the capacity of community-led environmental action.

What resonated with us at The Goytree is Ed’s willingness to reshape his own path in response to the climate crisis, choosing work that felt urgently necessary. That willingness to adapt one’s life in service of wider ecological good reflects deep integrity. This shortlist recognition celebrates Ed’s care for shared natural spaces and the communities that depend on them.

 

Recognise Ed Here

 

 

 

hamish evans

Hamish’s work:

www.weareavon.com

www.middlegroundgrowers.com

Hamish is co-founder of Middle Ground Growers, an organic veg project delivering produce to local households by bike, and project lead for We Are Avon, a community initiative focused on restoring the Avon river valley. His journey along the River Avon brought hundreds of people into relationship with their local waterways, encouraging them to become guardians of specific stretches of river and take collective responsibility for their care. His work weaves together food, environmental conservation and community into a shared vision of local stewardship.

What resonated with us at The Goytree is Hamish’s relational approach. Through storytelling, public engagement and collective action, he helps people form lasting connections with the places they live. Food and land are central to our own values, and we recognise the physical and emotional demands of sustaining such work. His work reflects the belief that regeneration happens through everyday participation, care and shared responsibility.

 

Recognise Hamish Here

 

 

 

hannah mishan

Hannah plays a vital role in organising grassroots climate campaigning, particularly within Bristol-based movements. Much of her work happens behind the scenes: coordinating volunteers, organising meetings and creating the conditions that allow collective action to take place. These invisible roles are often the backbone of effective movements, yet rarely receive recognition.

What stood out to us was how strongly others recognised Hannah’s commitment. Those around her speak of the personal sacrifices she makes and the energy she continues to give, even during periods of exhaustion. This shortlist recognition acknowledges the care, coordination and persistence that underpin meaningful environmental action, and honours the people who keep movements alive long after public attention moves on.

 

Recognise Hannah Here

 

 

joe howlett

 

 

Joe’s environmental contribution is rooted in integrity and personal courage. His commitment to climate action through peaceful protest has required profound personal sacrifice. He chose to put planetary wellbeing ahead of his own personal security, facing serious legal consequences as a result. During this period, he demonstrated remarkable resilience and compassion, using his time in prison to support others through teaching and dialogue. That ability to turn adversity into an opportunity for positive connection speaks powerfully to his character.

What resonated with us at The Goytree is Joe’s humility and humanity. His story reflects the often unseen costs carried by those who stand up for environmental truth, and the importance of spaces that allow people to regroup and reconnect with themselves. This shortlist recognition acknowledges the courage required to act with conscience and reminds us that sustaining environmental action means caring for the people behind it.

 

Recognise Joe Here

 

 

Kai’s work brings together climate action, creativity and collective voice. As a conductor, composer and organiser within the Climate Choir Movement, Kai helps people come together to sing in protest, hope and solidarity. Through choirs throughout the UK and internationally, this work transforms climate concern into shared emotional expression and visible public presence.

What makes Kai’s contribution distinctive is its ripple effect. The Climate Choir Movement has inspired similar initiatives across the UK and internationally, showing how collective creativity can sustain movements and nurture courage. At The Goytree, we were drawn to how closely this work aligns with our values: community, expression, and connection as foundations for long-term change. This shortlist recognition celebrates Kai’s role in helping people feel less alone in facing the climate crisis.

 

Recognise Kai Here

 

 

Kate MacDonald is founder of the Frome Valley Growing Project, a community-led permaculture initiative bringing people together to grow food, learn skills and care for local land. Since its beginnings, the project has grown into a hub for workshops, volunteer days, school engagement and seasonal events, all rooted in biodiversity and community wellbeing. Kate’s work is deeply relational, creating spaces where people can reconnect with food, land and one another through shared, practical action.

Alongside this, Kate is a Director of the Frome Valley Environmental Network CiC, an active organisation supporting positive action for climate and nature across the local area. Through initiatives such as intergenerational Repair Cafes, tree and meadow planting on common land and green travel campaigning, this work helps turn care into collective action. What stood out to us is the breadth of responsibility Kate holds with steadiness and generosity. This shortlist recognition honours her long-term commitment to nurturing connection between people, place and possibility.

 

Recognise Kate Here

 

 

Laura’s work through Shift Bristol embodies the kind of practical, hopeful response the climate and ecological emergency demands. As co-founder and Creative Director, Laura helps people develop hands-on skills rooted in permaculture, ecology and systems thinking, empowering people to respond creatively and collectively to environmental challenges. What distinguishes Laura’s contribution is her ability to inspire grounded action. Through practical education, mentorship and facilitation, she supports people to feel capable, connected and resourced and able to tackle the environmental and climate challenges we face. This work builds long-term resilience by strengthening relationships, confidence and shared purpose.

What distinguishes Laura’s contribution is her ability to inspire grounded action. She creates spaces where people feel capable, connected and supported to make meaningful change. At The Goytree, we see deep alignment with our mission to incubate change-makers and support regeneration through community skill-building. This shortlist recognition honours Laura’s steady leadership and the care she offers so generously to others.

 

Recognise Laura Here

Liz is a central figure within Stump Up For Trees, a grassroots organisation working to plant and nurture trees across the local landscape. In both paid and voluntary roles, Liz coordinates volunteers, is instrumental to the work at the nurseries, supports planting programmes and shares her growing knowledge generously with others. She dedicates her time to nursery projects such as cultivating nutritious compost, planting seeds and growing them into strong saplings ready to be planted on the hillsides, ensuring their best chance of survival. She brings her creative vision, passion and affinity with trees to the organisation and she feels very privileged to be part of something so nourishing to the local community and the planet. Her work directly supports biodiversity, climate resilience and long-term land stewardship.

What stood out to us is how indispensable Liz is to the organisation’s everyday life. She consistently goes beyond formal expectations, bringing patience, skill and deep care to work that unfolds slowly and demands constant attention. Living and working on this land ourselves, we see the impact of this kind of dedication firsthand. This shortlist recognition honours Liz’s persistence and the vital role people like her play in restoring landscapes over time.

 

Recognise Liz Here

 

 

 

 

lucy swain

 

www.treeaid.org

 

Lucy’s work addresses the climate and ecological emergency through sustained engagement with agroforestry, sustainable agriculture and nature-based solutions. Her career spans international and UK contexts, including several years working with smallholder farmers in Burundi, supporting food security alongside improved soil health and land management.

Now working at Tree Aid, Lucy continues to support landscape restoration projects that integrate biodiversity protection with strengthened livelihoods. What resonated with us at The Goytree is her grounded, relational approach. Having worked in similar contexts ourselves, we recognise the care and long-term thinking required to create change that genuinely serves both people and ecosystems. This shortlist recognition acknowledges Lucy’s steady leadership and the depth of human care embedded in her work.

 

Recognise Lucy Here

The perfect Day out

Meeting the Pigs

River Paddles and Piggy Celebrities

The “Pignic”

Final Thoughts

Welcome to Goytree Glamping and Treehouses. Glamping might have become more mainstream but this off-grid eco-glamping site comes with a touch of luxury and some magical touches.

Nestled in the heart of the Golden Valley in Herefordshire, around 20 minutes’ drive from Abergavenny, Wales, The Goytree offers something a little different to most glamping sites.

With four unique spaces – two treehouses and two yurts – each is hidden away in its own glen and you’re unlikely to see any of the other guests while you’re there.

A rather bumpy driveway leads you into the car park, from which the views across the Golden Valley open up in front of you. From here we grab some ice blocks for our cold box, a wheelbarrow for our bags and head off to our home for the weekend.

Gabriel’s Yurt

The Goytree Glamping and Treehouses

We stayed in Gabriel’s Yurt, an off-grid hideaway that was full of luxury. The main yurt is a large bedroom/lounge space, complete with a double bed, sofa and wood. The decoration has lots of thoughtful touches from the softest bamboo sheets, eco-firelighters, handcrafted light and an incredible sheepskin bed throw.

The yurt itself is a beautifully handcrafted structure with each of the hazel poles slightly different in size and shape, each reaching up to the window at the peak that lets in lots of natural light.

The kitchen is found in a second smaller yurt, complete with gas stove and hot and cold running water. It was well equipped with a good selection of pots and pans, coffee beans and a hand coffee grinder, and a charging point from which you can charge your phone.

The Goytree Glamping and Treehouses

The third structure is a cabin with a composting toilet and hot shower. This is a beautiful structure with repurposed barn doors and distinctive wooden detailing.

The toilet is a great example of a composting toilet for the initiated – clear signing and a great design means you will barely miss your plumbing!

The central feature to this space is the wood fired hot tub. It takes about 3 hours for the amazing bell shaped tub to heat up (you can pay for someone else to do this for you if you’d rather not be tending the fire), but it was definitely worth the wait to sit in a blissfully hot tub in the candle lit space and relax under the stars.

There’s also an outdoor seating area with a firepit that you can cook on if you fancy dining outdoors, as well as a hammock that I found to be a perfect spot to spend a few hours reading my book.

It’s worth noting that it can still get cold in the evenings, so I was glad I’d taken the owners advice and packed slippers and warm clothes, as while there is a wood burner, we were still sleeping in yurt in the middle of May!

The Goytree Glamping and Treehouses

The rest of The Goytree site

There are a total of four different spaces to stay on the site. The other yurt option is Mimi’s Tree Yurt, with its copper bathtub and attached roundwood cabin. There’s also an amazing outdoors shower for anyone feeling adventurous and wanting a shower with a view.

Phoenix Tree has a bedroom perched on an old oak tree, with a spectacular range of eco-building methods on show from straw bale walls to bamboo rafters. There’s also a private wood-fired hot tub in front of the treehouse for a soak at the end of the day.

The final spot is Bees Bower, a stunning wood, canvas and cob cabin built around a central tree. With its very own copper bath, this site looks over its own wooden valley and is the most secluded of all the sites.

A great ecotourism destination in Wales

The whole site is set up in an environmentally conscious way, with eco-soaps, composting toilets throughout and the stove wood coming from the site. And staying here is an experience for the nature lovers for sure – I fell asleep to the hooting of the owls and woke to the dawn chorus.

As well as the huge wildflower meadow, the owners have been building a series of water management ponds, so you can expect to hear woodpeckers and song thrushes, and perhaps see a red kite or a deer if you’re lucky. As well as the rewilding they’re doing, they’ve got plans to start farming on the land too in the next few years, with a small market garden and maybe even a microdairy on the cards.

One for the foodies

This part of the world is a perfect haven for food lovers. From ice cream sundaes ten minutes up the road at Rowlestone Farmhouse Ice Cream to local Ty Gwyn Cider, whose cider shop is part of the Herefordshire & Wye Valley Cider Trail.

If you’re looking for treats to enjoy in your hot tub, I recommend a Hilly Billy Gin from Black Mountains Distillery paired with some cured fish from the Severn and Wye Smokery.

If you’re fancy a meal out, the local pub, The Carpenters Arms is a 20 minute walk away down quiet country lanes and comes with a characterful landlady and decent pub grub. For those in search of a more gourmet meal, the Bulls Head in Craswall is an old Drovers Inn with a focus on local ingredients, and the Bridge Inn in Michaelchurch Escley are known for a cracking roast based around meat cooked overnight in a wood fired oven.

Hills on the doorstep

If you love to hike, you’re spoilt for choice. You can see the Skirrid (Ysgyryd Fawr) from the site, with its distinctive double peaked hill rumoured by local legend to have been caused by a split at the time of the crucifixion of Jesus.

Further afield the Black Mountains offer great walking for the gentler ambler or serious hiker alike, with the Offa’s Dyke long distance path only a few miles away.

The Goytree Glamping and Treehouses – our verdict

This is a perfect hideaway for nature lovers with an eco-conscience, and the surrounding area has more than enough to entertain you for a weekend or even a week.

Each of the four spaces is unique and has been lovingly crafted and has special and luxurious touches that make a real difference and create some special memories.

The Goytree Glamping and Treehouses

This guest post was written by Steph Wetherell, a freelance writer with a specific interest in food, farming and the outdoors. When she’s not cooking up delicious food, she can be found hiking long distance paths across the UK and has a real passion for exploring lesser known parts of the UK.