Brandyhouse Farm
We offer you modern standards of comfort in a traditional setting and have a choice of twin, double, four poster or family rooms available for B&B as well as self-catering in our beautifully converted stone barn. Nestled into the hills of the still undiscovered Welsh borders, The Brandy House is a traditional farmhouse set among charming
gardens
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Knighton (Welsh: Trefyclo or Trefyclawdd, "Town on the Dyke") is a town in Powys (traditional county of Radnorshire), mid-Wales, but also partly in Shropshire, England. It lies on the River Teme and straddles the English-Welsh border, with the town's railway station being located in Shropshire, England, as well as part of the town's built up area.
Knighton is known for its well preserved section of Offa's Dyke, and it lies on the Offa's Dyke Path and Glyndwr's Way, two long-distance walking paths. The Offa's Dyke Association has a visitors' centre in the town. Wat's Dyke also runs parallel to Offa's Dyke, a few miles to the east. Caer Caradoc, an Iron Age hillfort associated with Caractacus lies nearby, towards Clun, and Watling Street passes a few miles away at Leintwardine.