The gate creaks open onto a quiet corner of the Weald, where orchard branches lean over dry-stone boundaries and the only sounds most mornings are woodpigeons and distant tractors working the Kent clay.
This is a spot for couples after a proper escape, touring caravanners who don't need a club site, and campers happy to pitch among the apple trees without a playground in sight. You're deep in Kent's High Weald AONB here — hop-garden country, castle-dotted, with footpaths threading through ancient woodland and half-timbered villages that haven't changed much in three hundred years. The shepherd's hut gives it away: this is a working farm site, not a leisure park, and all the better for it.
Facilities are straightforward — clean toilets and showers, tent and tourer pitches spread across the meadow. Campfires are a maybe, so ask when you arrive if you've hauled the firepit down. The vibe is genuinely peaceful, the kind of place where you remember why you started camping in the first place, before sites became glamping catalogues.