We left London at quarter past two on a Monday afternoon, and for the next four hours, the Bentley Bentayga did what most cars can only pretend to do on the M40 and M6. It made the motorway disappear. Settle into the driver’s seat of this Speed variant, and the first thing you notice is how little there is to notice – and yet how much there is to appreciate. The cabin is hushed to the point of unease, wind and road noise simply refusing to show up, leaving you enveloped in a space that celebrates analogue tactile pleasure in an increasingly digital world. Front and centre on the dashboard sits a Breitling analogue clock, anchoring the cabin with old-world authority. Below it, the knurled metal organ stop levers for the air vents operate with a satisfying mechanical resistance that no touchscreen has ever replicated.
The audio system is by Naim – the Wiltshire-based hi-fi company whose amplifiers have been a byword for sonic purity since 1973 – and with Pavarotti filling the cabin at modest volume somewhere past Birmingham, it was immediately clear this was not a system installed merely to tick a specification box. Rear seat passengers, meanwhile, had their own touchscreen for climate and media control – ours showing Pavarotti mid-aria, which felt, in a Bentley, entirely correct. Neither the Bentayga nor Lancashire feel the need to tom-tom their virtues. Both simply get on with it, and trust that the right people will notice. I have driven this route north before in lesser company, and it has never once felt this short.
We continued north, crossing into Lancashire before finally turning off the motorway. Our destination was Northcote, nestled in the Ribble Valley near the village of Langho. As we made our approach, England changed its mind about what kind of country it wanted to be. The road narrowed and hedges closed in from both sides, threatening the Bentley’s two-metre width. The light was dropping into that long northern evening glow, and at the end of a gravel drive, Northcote appeared looking exactly like the opening shot of a film about an English country weekend. The Bentayga rolled up the approach, announcing its arrival with the polite crunch of low-profile Pirelli tyres on small stones – a suitably understated entrance for a 19th-century manor house that has seen a thing or two pull up outside.
We were here for dinner, bed and breakfast, and Northcote does none lightly. Chef Patron Lisa Goodwin-Allen has been translating this landscape into food since 1996 – three decades of a Michelin star, unbroken, which in the restaurant business is closer to a geological era than a career. Five courses arrived in unhurried succession, featuring asparagus, scallop, sole, local Lake District lamb, and a rich Valrhona chocolate to close – each dish a study in contrast and harmony, every course making the next feel inevitable. After dinner, we retired to one of the garden lodge deluxe suites: a fireplace casting a warm glow across the room, a private terrace looking out toward the dark valley, a deep tub in a bathroom that invited lingering. I went to bed deeply content, waking to a golden Ribble Valley morning that invited long, lazy walks. But the ribbon of tarmac through the Forest of Bowland was waiting, and the Bentayga was beckoning from the car park.
The road out runs through Clitheroe, where a Norman keep sits on a limestone mound with views stretching all the way to Pendle Hill, then climbs into the Forest of Bowland proper – 312 square miles of open moorland, fell, and river valley, largely left alone by the twenty-first century. I flicked the rotary drive selector into Sport early, curious to see what a two-and-a-half tonne SUV would make of roads that seemed written for something small and nimble. The transformation was immediate and theatrical – the car drew a long breath, settled onto its haunches, and changed its personality entirely. The steering weighted up with quiet authority, the throttle sharpened to a hair-trigger, and the Bentley Dynamic Ride system – it uses a 48-volt electrical architecture to split the anti-roll bars and sandwich an electric motor and planetary gear set between the halves, applying up to 1,300Nm of torque to each bar and reacting in as little as 0.06 seconds – kept the big SUV as flat through corners as a saloon car, entirely unbothered by its own considerable mass. The Bentayga had stopped being a grand tourer and become, without any fuss whatsoever, a driver’s car.
Dunsop Bridge slid past in a matter of seconds – a handful of stone houses, a red telephone box marking the geographic centre of Great Britain, and directly opposite, the Puddleducks Tearooms, where actual ducks were crossing the asphalt in front of us with the unhurried confidence of creatures who know they own the place.
And then came the Inn at Whitewell. It sits on a bend of the River Hodder, a low stone building with the fells rising behind it and the river running just below the terrace, dating to the 14th century when it housed the keeper of the King’s Forest. The manager told me that King Charles III had stayed the night here once, arriving by train to Lancaster and driving up through the valley. We parked the Bentayga in the gravel yard among vintage Land Rovers in active use by local farmers – the Bentley not looking remotely out of place, which says everything about both the car and the inn.
We had lunch at the exact spot where Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon filmed the opening episode of The Trip. Head chef Jamie Cadman has been running this kitchen for 29 years, and the scallops, the ribeye cooked medium-rare, and a crème brûlée of memorable creaminess proved that his tenure was very well spent. Afterwards we walked – an hour and a half across stepping stones and up into the moors, dappled afternoon light, the swish of boots in wet grass, sheep in fields arranged for maximum Englishness. We came back with deep-cleaned lungs, finding the Bentayga still flanked by a mud-caked Land Rover and a tractor. Even if it had feelings about its utilitarian neighbours, it kept them, with characteristic British restraint, entirely to itself.
Then came the Trough of Bowland – and the Bentayga’s finest hour. On these sweeping corners and squiggly bends that open into long glorious straights, the V8 deepened into a proper barrel-chested growl, the eight-speed ZF gearbox snapping through ratios with surgical precision. Burying my right foot out of a long right-hander, the 4.0-litre twin-turbo unleashed 850Nm of torque across a broad plateau between 2,250 and 4,500rpm – not a single violent hit but a sustained, relentless wave that simply didn’t stop. 2,440 kilograms of hand-built British engineering launched forward, brutally and joyfully hard, dispatching 0-100kph in 3.6 seconds. Yet at no point did it feel like it was getting away from me. The permanent all-wheel-drive system shuffles power between axles with imperceptible speed, while the all-wheel steering tightens the car into corners at low speed and plants it with absolute authority on high-speed straights. The confidence arrives quickly and stays.
Lancaster revealed itself in the late afternoon, featuring cobbled streets, a castle that hosted the Pendle Witch Trials of 1612, and a quayside built on 18th-century trading wealth. Our base was Quite Simply French on St George’s Quay, four boutique rooms in a 1750 warehouse with bare stone walls, timber beams, and the River Lune drifting past the windows. The 360-degree camera system made light work of threading the Bentley down the narrow quayside street. Dinner was a proper French feast including lobster, escargots, and a wine list worth lingering over.
Breakfast the next morning was the quiet revelation of the trip: scrambled eggs of extraordinary creaminess, sourdough toast, hand-churned butter, sea salt, genuinely good coffee – a little slice of France transplanted into the heart of Lancashire, courtesy of head chef Luke Johnson, fifteen years in this kitchen and showing no signs of slowing down.
From Lancaster, we pointed toward the coast. Lytham is a handsome Edwardian seaside town of independent shops, a sprawling seafront green, and the wide Ribble Estuary beyond. At its centre stands a solid white 19th-century windmill, which we explored as the weather turned grey and blustery in the way English coastal mornings sometimes insist upon. We spent the night at the Clifton Arms on the seafront – Grade II-listed, dating to 1839, cast-iron balconies and classical columns looking out over the Green. The next morning’s photograph said everything: the Bentayga framed against the stark white of the windmill, hand-assembled British engineering against handmade British stone, both entirely unhurried and at home.
The drive back down the M6 was every bit as uneventful as the journey up. This is perhaps the highest compliment a grand tourer of this calibre can be paid. Over three days, the Bentayga had done everything asked of it by devouring a motorway slog in near-total silence, charging through the Trough of Bowland with a soundtrack fit for a film score, threading a medieval quayside without breaking a sweat, and reshaping its chassis, drivetrain, and suspension to whatever the road demanded, all while making every mile feel like it was exactly where it was meant to be.
Lancashire is a county most tourists simply ignore, and that is precisely its saving grace. A few slow days spent looping through its corners delivered everything the quintessential English road trip ought to be – cosy country inns with roaring fires, smashing food that makes a detour entirely mandatory, and layers of medieval history etched into stone castles. There were long walks across the wet moors that left my boots soaked and my head clear, and scenic roads that begged to be driven. This is the good old English countryside exactly as it should be. It is a landscape that deserves to be savoured in a leisurely manner and preferably from the cockpit of something exactly this magnificent.