Across our six houses, the data is consistent. Guests who stay two nights leave well-rested. Guests who stay four leave changed. We are not making this up — we have asked, for years, and the answer is reliable.
The reason is structural. The first day is for arriving. The second is for orientation — the spa, the kitchen, the walking routes. The third is when the house starts to know you, and you start to know its rhythm. By the fourth day, you are reading in the library at the same hour every morning. The staff stop asking for your room number.
This is what we mean when we say "slow stay". It is not marketing. It is what the building, the staff, the kitchen — quietly, without prompting — can give back to you, if you give them the time.
