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Programs at
Retreat Center · Totnes, Devon
Mindfulness and Buddhist retreats on the River Dart estate.
Sharpham House sits in a dramatic horseshoe bend of the River Dart, three miles south of Totnes in Devon, its Palladian facade presiding over 550 acres of organic farmland, rewilding meadows, and ancient woodland. The Grade I-listed Georgian mansion, completed around 1770 to designs by architect Sir Robert Taylor for Captain Philemon Pownoll, who had struck fortune capturing a Spanish galleon, contains what Nikolaus Pevsner called "one of the most spectacular and daring later 18th century staircase designs anywhere in England," a cantilevered elliptical marvel that appears to float in the entry hall. But the house's contemplative chapter began in 1962, when Maurice Ash, environmentalist, writer, and heir to a property development fortune, and his wife Ruth Elmhirst Ash purchased the estate and began a quiet revolution.
Maurice, influenced by Wittgenstein and Buddhism, and Ruth, daughter of the founders of Dartington Hall, transformed Sharpham into a working farm producing Jersey cheese and English wine while laying out formal gardens designed by Percy Cane in the parkland attributed to Capability Brown. In 1982, facing the question of what to do with an estate none of their three daughters could manage, they endowed The Sharpham Trust as an educational charity "marrying Eastern and Western philosophy." Ruth died of motor neurone disease in 1986; Maurice continued living at Sharpham until his death in 2003. Their vision, integrating the arts, Buddhism, conservation, and rural regeneration, continues through the Trust, which has welcomed retreatants from around the globe for over forty years.
Today Sharpham operates four distinct retreat venues across the estate. Sharpham House itself hosts mindfulness and silent retreats for up to seventeen guests in single-occupancy rooms ranging from grand river-view chambers to cozy standard singles, two with ensuite facilities. The Barn Retreat Centre, founded on Maurice Ash's three pillars of "meditation, community, and working on the land," runs weekly Buddhist retreats where up to eleven participants live in community, sitting three daily meditation sessions and tending organic vegetable gardens. The Coach House, a £1.6 million conversion of Grade II-listed 18th-century stables opened in 2022, offers eighteen mostly ensuite bedrooms in a contemporary timber-and-glass meditation space designed specifically for nature-connection retreats. In summer, woodland retreats unfold under bell tents, with canoeing on the Dart and campfire gatherings.
The estate itself has become a laboratory for rewilding. Sixty acres are dedicated to regenerative agriculture, former vineyard land returned to wildflower meadows where Cirl Buntings, an endangered species, now thrive alongside barn owls, kestrels, and greater horseshoe bats. The three-mile stretch of riverbank includes reed beds, marshes, and walking trails through the Grade II*-listed gardens. Sharpham House retains its bones of grandeur, paintings by Polish artist Zdzislaw Ruszkowski on the walls, Reynolds portrait copies in the Music Room, a library and octagonal room for quiet contemplation, but the atmosphere is one of gentle discipline rather than luxury spa. Shoes come off at the door. Silence descends after dinner. Vegetarian meals sourced from the walled garden and local suppliers regularly earn rave reviews. The River Dart flows past, seals occasionally surfacing, the Dartmoor hills rising in the distance.
Programs span beginner-friendly three-night mindfulness introductions led by experienced teachers like Lynette (author of 'Reclaimed'), to week-long Buddhist dharma retreats exploring the Brahmaviharas or Seven Factors of Awakening, to themed offerings addressing burnout, self-compassion, aging mindfully, and LGBTQ+ identity. Teachers include Lucy (trained in Insight Meditation and Plum Village traditions), Ethan (who spent five years at Plum Village with Thich Nhat Hanh), and visiting dharma instructors from Bodhi College and Gaia House. The Sharpham lineage is non-sectarian Buddhist with strong roots in Insight Meditation, informed by figures like Stephen Batchelor, who served as Sharpham Trust coordinator in the 1990s and co-founded Sharpham College for Buddhist Studies and Contemporary Enquiry in 1996. The Trust describes mindfulness as having "its roots in Buddhism but a secular practice" that underpins all activities, a both/and approach that welcomes beginners and seasoned practitioners alike.
What's Happening
4 programs scheduled at Sharpham House
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