There is plenty of time and chances are your baby will turn by itself. That said, my DD was one of the few that didn't, and I was glad I knew in advance so that I'd had a chance to think, try things and plan what I wanted to do.
Try and get hold of "Breech Birth" by Benna Waites - its very approachable and gives a good balanced view of the different options available. It also has a chapter on complementary ways to encourage baby to turn (in addition to those mentioned, a chiropractor skilled in the Webster technique might help). "Breech Birth: What are my options" by Jane Evans is also very informative.
How you birth your breech baby is a very personal choice. Our decision was to have DD at home as a breech baby with independent midwives skilled in breech birth (completely hands off, as practiced by Mary Cronk). A CS wasn't our first choice, but we recognised that that was where we'd go if things didn't work to plan. We were not prepared to consider a medicalised vaginal breech delivery (on your back in stirrups, probably in theatre, probably with an episiotomy, probably with an epidural and almost certainly with forceps - oh, and probably being used as a training exercise so with a large supporting cast looking on...).
NHS midwives should have breech skills (around 50% of breech babies are undiagnosed before labour, so they must deliver some of them) but whether they are confident and what their hospital protocol states may make it difficult to get a vaginal breech birth in hospital.
Note that it is not for your hospital to "permit" or "allow" you to plan a vaginal breech birth (in the words of Mary Cronk, "'Allow' is not a word to use to a mentally competent adult"). That said, I'd be very cautious of trying one without competent and confident midwives.
Fingers crossed DD turns for you, but you do have options either way