7 of the best urban gardens in England. The best gardens in Britain. DIY bags master class

7 of the best urban gardens in England.  The best gardens in Britain.  DIY bags master class
7 of the best urban gardens in England. The best gardens in Britain. DIY bags master class

The 16-hectare grounds around the romantic ruins of Armadale Castle include gardens and woodland. In these warm latitudes of Scotland's east coast there is almost never frost, so Armadale Castle's garden enjoys a sheltered location and has been growing and thriving since the 17th century. The gardens of Armadale Castle are a paradise of scent and color. Here you will find a rich variety of wonderful trees, bushes and bulbs from all over the world. South American shrubs such as Chilean firebush (Embothrium coccineum) and Hooker's crinodendron (Crinodendron hookerianum) with their exotic flowers.

Luxurious trees, some nearly 200 years old, tower over stunningly beautiful carpets of wild hyacinths, orchids and wild flowers in spring and summer. Beneath the cover of majestic giants nest young fir trees that will one day replace them, and the same goes for the growing collection of elegant birches and beeches.

The garden is open to the public from 9.30 to 17.00.

Boowood, Wiltshire

One of the best parks to visit in the UK in spring is the woodland garden at Bowood House. Rhododendrons bloom here for six weeks from mid-April to early June. The garden occupies 24 hectares and surrounds the mausoleum of Pallas Athena, created by Robert Adam in 1762. We can safely say that in these gardens you will be shown a master class on the technology of growing Asian rhododendrons. Magnolias, camellias, azaleas, pieris and a number of others blooming in spring bushes - this is the splendor you can swim in!

The park is open to visitors from 11.00 to 18.00 from mid-April to early June.

Dorothy Cleeve Garden, Shropshire

Dorothy Clive Garden is a magnificent landscape on the border of two English counties - Shropshire and Staffordshire. This beautiful garden was created by the owner of the site and loving husband Colonel Harry Clive for his wife Dorothy. This garden is the perfect place for family relaxation on a beautiful spring day... A superb woodland garden in an abandoned quarry will pleasantly surprise you with informal bursts of flowering bulbs and carpets of wild hyacinths. While walking along the azalea alley, you will enjoy the sweet aroma of daffodils, rhododendrons and magnolias.

Stonyford Cottage, Cheshire

This beautiful garden is created in moist soil around a tranquil pond in a wind-sheltered valley bordering the Delamere Forest. This garden does not have geometric rigor and is generally distinguished by a relaxed, informal style. Here, in the shade of decaying trees, moisture-loving primroses, astilbes and hostas grow peacefully - they frame ponds, streams and a fountain. In April, May and early June, candelabra primula, irises and giant marigolds bloom here. By the way, there is also a plant nursery here.

Magnificent Stonyford Cottage is open to visitors from 10am to 5pm, Tuesday to Sunday and Bank Holiday Mondays from April to October.

Lydney Park, Gloucestershire

Lydney Park in Gloucestershire, the estate of Viscount Bledisloe between the River Severn and the Forest of Dean. This park is broken large gardens that are blooming in early spring delicate snowdrops. There is also a magnificent collection of Japanese cherry blossoms growing here - these cherries so gently frame the lawns and driveways! But you will experience the real thrill of spring in Lydney Park in the secret forest clearing behind the house. Here, surrounded by several lakes, mature camellias, rhododendrons, azaleas and magnolias grow.

Lydney Mystery Park is open to visitors from 10.00 to 17.00 on Sundays, Wednesdays and Mondays (public holidays) until 5th June.

Pashley Manor, East Sussex

< Усадьба Пашли (Pashley), Восточный Суссекс известен как «один из лучших садов Англии»! Усадьба Пашли (Pashley) - former house famous family Boleyns. The landscape of this estate is very romantic, full of color and interesting all year round. Wild hyacinths, wisteria) and thousands of tulips are just a modest part of the entire wealth of this park, which attracts tourists here every spring, again and again. By the way, this year the Tulip Festival is taking place here from April 27 to May 8 - more than 100 different varieties are presented at the festival.

The romantic Pashli manor awaits visitors from 11.00 to 17.00 on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Mondays (holidays).

Picton Castle, Pebrokeshire

Picton Castle (Pembrokeshire) covers 16 hectares and is home to the largest and oldest trees in west Wales. There is Cyathea arborescens (tree fern), a restored swimming pool and a new “jungle garden” with ginger, banana trees and other delicate exotics. This garden is also home to the world's largest rhododendron, 'Old Port', with dramatic plum-colored blooms.

Picton Castle's spectacular gardens are open to visitors from 10.30am to 5pm daily.

Ramster Garden, Surrey

Ramster Garden, Surrey is famous for its collection of rhododendrons and azaleas, which grow under the canopy of the woodland. This garden was founded in the early 20th century by Gauntlett Nurseries of Chiddingfold and now covers over 8 hectares. In spring, daffodils, camellias, magnolias and muscari bloom, and Ramster's gardens also include a Bog Garden, where Himalayan candelabra primula cascades colorfully to complement the spectacular leaves of the giant gunnera.

Wentworth Castle, S. Yorks

Wentworth Castle Garden is one of the most important historic gardens in the North of England. This gem of horticultural skill was undeservedly forgotten and neglected, and it was only after the BBC television series Restoration that the garden was finally fully restored. In the past, this garden was the pride of the Earl of Strafford and surrounded by an 18th century castle. Now here you will meet the National Collection of rhododendrons, camellias and magnolias. From March to early June, an area of ​​24 hectares is covered with a luxurious carpet of flowering bulbs. There are 26 buildings, pavilions and monuments scattered throughout the area.

The garden is open to visitors from 10.00 to 17.00 daily.

Special Park, Worcestershire

Spetchley Park in Worcestershire is one of the most luxurious gardens of the Victorian era, spread over an area of ​​12 hectares, surrounded by a deer reserve. Speshli Park, without undue modesty, boasts a collection of plants from all over the world. This park was the home of the Berkeley family for almost 400 (!) years. Victorian garden designer - Ellen Willmott. Carpets of spring bulbs (April-May) including 'Spetchley' daffodils are some of the best in England, add to this the spring color of rhododendrons, camellias, magnolias and azaleas and you get the idea...

The garden is open to visitors from 11.00 to 18.00 from Wednesday to Sunday until the end of September (and also on weekends in October).

Translation: Anna Zhurbenko
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Aberglasney was a once prosperous estate in the Welsh county of Carmarthenshire that fell into disrepair in the 20th century. By the mid-1990s, the estate had become a “haunted house” with empty eye sockets. window openings, with gradually crumbling stonework and weed-overgrown gardens. But just as Aberglasney seemed to be coming to an end, the Restoration Trust stepped in. A team of experts determined the extent of the damage caused by time and decided to return the estate to its former glory. Restoration Trust specialists were especially interested in the gardens of the Welsh estate, laid out at least 500+ years ago. The antiquity of the estate gave researchers a lot of scope for imagination, and amazing discoveries were not long in coming.

Historians and archaeologists got involved in the case. One of the first finds became a real sensation. A work team attempting to excavate traces of a late Tudor or early Stuart formal garden initially discovered walled stone walls monastery buildings right next to the western facade of the estate. Then coins from 1288 were found. Currently, specialists from the Restoration Trust are bringing Aberglasney back to what it looked like in the 17th century. You can stroll along the stone path along the top of the monastery walls, admire the geometric shapes of the lawns of the medieval formal garden and imagine yourself traveling back in time to the “good old days”.

From the southern façade of the estate it is being implemented interesting project: the ruins of a medieval building and courtyard were covered with a glass dome, creating a subtropical greenhouse there. The greenhouse is named Ninfarium, after the famous Italian gardens Ninfa. There is real Zen-Buddhist tranquility here, lots of shade, well-groomed paths.

Aberglasney Gardens, Llangathen, Carmarthenshire, website: www.aberglasney.org

Drummond Castle Gardens, Scotland, Perthshire



A long road lined with shady beech trees leads to Drummond Castle. The medieval castle is surrounded by turreted buildings that were restored in the 19th century. Passing through the courtyard, you will find yourself on a wide stone terrace, and before your eyes an unexpected charming garden. The symmetrical garden of Drummond Castle is laid out in the best Italian landscape traditions, and its shape resembles the Scottish flag with the cross of St. Andrew. The diagonally intersecting lines of the stripes of St. Andrew's Cross are marked on the ground with urns and statues of ancient heroes. At the geometric center landscape composition there is an obelisk of the 17th century in the form sundial. This is an amazing garden in every way. Steep steps lead down to the sundial, then the path passes a topiary and flower beds and connects to a wide alley plunging into the dense forest, continuing the line of the path at the central parterre of the garden, harmoniously visually connecting not only with the composition of the ancient formal garden, but also with the landscapes of the territory adjacent to the garden.

The first Lord Drummond began building the castle at the end of the 15th century. There is evidence from historical chronicles that in 1508 the garden already supplied cherries to King James IV when he and his courtiers hunted in these places. The hourglass was built by Charles I's court mason in 1630. In the next century, the Drummond family had no time for growing roses - they actively participated in the Jacobite uprising, supporters of King James II. In calmer times, in 1842, Queen Victoria personally planted two dark crimson forest beech trees in the gardens of Drummond Castle. The Queen loved to walk in the garden with Albert.

The gardens at Drummond Castle retain the feel of a palace garden. The tracks are so neat that it seems as if they were sewn by royal tailors. It’s nice to take a walk here, enjoy the view of marble statues and fallen leaves.

Drummond Castle Gardens: www.drummondcastlegardens.co.uk

Mottisfont Abbey



Before you can see the roses of Mottisfon Abbey (which, by the way, are definitely worth seeing), you will have to cross from one bank of the River Test to the other. It is possible that the Test is the most beautiful river in England. She carries her crystal clear waters through picturesque meadows and lowlands covered with green grass. This place seems to have been created solely for walking here. Or just sit on the grass and fish.

Then stroll through the charming heavenly gardens Mottisfonta, with its cool and clear springs, old oaks and sweet chestnuts. The abbey itself is also worthy of attention. beautiful mansion with Tudor wings, Georgian front gardens and eccentric interiors designed by the English pre-war artist Rex Whistler.

Behind the mansion and the river is the “heart” of Mottisfont, rose gardens enclosed by two rows of walls. They are simply adorable. The collection of ancient rose bushes in the Mottisfont Abbey Garden is one of the finest of its kind in the world. Among six hundred types of roses you will find such amazingly beautiful and exotic varieties, like Tuscany Superb, Reine de Violette and Ispahan, as well as “more English” varieties: Common Moss Rose, Eglantine and others. Planted on top of high brick walls climbing plants, noisette and climbing roses. The gazebo is covered with ivy, and apple and pear trees grow nearby. Rose bushes grow between rows of hedges and lawns, and both sides pedestrian paths decorated with lavender. There is a lot to see here, especially in spring and summer.

Mottisfont, five miles north of Romsey, Hampshire, www.nationaltrust.org.uk.

Alnwick Castle Garden



It is no coincidence that the sign with the inscription “Poisonous Garden” is hung on the gates of the gardens of Alnwick Castle (Northumberland, UK). It makes sense to lock up dangerous criminals and wild animals... but plants?! Well, depending on what plants we're talking about. The 40-acre Alnwick Gardens, Alnwick Castle's botanical addition, is home to a collection of deadly flowers and shrubs. Poisonous plants are separated from visitors, but still, in the midst of this collection of “botanical death,” you should be especially careful. At least, don’t sniff too much... It’s not for nothing that there is a sign with a skull and crossbones on the gate and a sign that says “These plants can kill.”

Unlike the rest of the Alnwick Castle gardens, the Poison Garden can only be visited as part of organized group tourists with a guide. Only then is the heavy wrought iron gate opening into the garden. The flower beds contain tobacco and mandrake, hemlock and coca (cocaine is made from it), cannabis (marijuana) and poppy, from which opium, heroin and morphine are made. While walking through the garden, you will hear many interesting things from the guide. historical facts, myths and legends associated with the plants growing here.

Alnwick Castle Garden, Denwick Lane, Alnwick, Northumberland, www.alnwickgarden.com

British Horticultural Society's Wisley Garden

As soon as you enter through brick arch to the Wisley garden, you will immediately feel the lasting floral scent, soaring in the air. The well-kept garden covers many, many acres. 240 to be exact. In front of you is the calm water surface of the irrigation canal and the enclosed high walls garden, hidden paths lead through “wild forests” park area to a modern glass structure rising straight from the waters of the lake. Inside, an appropriate microclimate is maintained and tropical ferns, palm trees and creeping plants grow. There is even an “indoor” waterfall here.

But you don’t have to go straight to the lake. If you turn left from the entrance, you will find yourself on a path that runs through a huge meadow full of flowers in every color of the rainbow. Nearby is an elegant garden with roses, rhododendrons and magnolias on Battleston Hill. On back side hill you can see the Fruit Field, where about 450 varieties of apple trees, plums and pears grow. Many rare and unusual varieties. If you get into the garden at the very beginning of autumn, you can eat a ripe pear that fell from the tree, or even two. Or buy pears at the store.

The Weasleys are not about refined charm or drama. This is life, passion and energy. The Royal Horticultural Society has a strong focus on research and teaching, so it's no surprise that on a garden tour you can learn a lot about the plants that grow here.

British Horticultural Society Wisley Garden, Surrey, www.rhs.org.uk/wisley

Highgrove Gardens



It's amazing what just a few words can do. When the Prince of Wales bought Highgrove House from the town of Tetbury in Gloucester, there wasn't even a shabby lawn on the estate. About thirty years have passed. On the site of the wasteland grew one of the best gardens in all of Great Britain. It is said that Charles often talked to his plants.

Tours start from the Highgrove mansion, surrounded by fragrant wisteria, honeysuckle, jasmine, and thyme. A two-mile journey awaits you along the most different gardens, starting from the “Sundial Garden” in front of the house and ending with the tree nursery. One of the most attractive in form and content is the Islamic-style Carpet Garden, winner of the Chelsea Flower Show. The flowers are chosen in such a way that the “floral designs” are reminiscent of the patterns on Persian carpets.

Although perhaps the most interesting sections are the Wildflower Meadow and the Walled Kitchen Garden. These gardens were created with the participation of leading British biodiversity experts who are actively involved in the conservation of the country's flora and fauna. The Meadow is home to over thirty varieties of British wildflowers, including bull's eye, daisies, autumn rattles and cuckoo's flowers. It is also home to part of the National Beech Collection, part of the endangered plants protected by the UK government's botanical heritage programme.

Highgrove House, Gloucestershire, www.highgrovegardens.com

Dawyck Botanic Garden



The famous Edinburgh Botanic Garden has received the attention of the British royal family and the press. But just 45 minutes south lies a little-known tree nursery that may be the best in the world. Daveyk is a masterpiece of horticultural art and creativity set in six acres of stunning botanical forest.

The secret of this place lies in the selection of plant samples from climatically similar corners globe. One of the best times of year to visit Daivika Botanic Gardens is spring when everything is in bloom. Huge 300-year-old red trees grow on the hillside, and a stream babbles nearby. Fits perfectly into the atmosphere of this amazing place an ancient chapel, a stone “humpbacked” bridge and the Daveik house are what remain from those times when the botanical garden was simply part of the Daveik estate. Here you can take great pictures, and the picturesque landscapes will forever remain in your memory.

Dawyck Botanic Garden, www.rbge.org.uk/the-gardens/dawyck

Sissinghurst Castle Garden, Sissinghurst, Kent, England



The famous White Garden of Sissinghurst Castle is equally beautiful long distance, and nearby. You can admire him with different sides: from a shadowy arch, for example, or from the time-worn walls surrounding the Priest's House. Here freshness and beauty emanate from every snow-white iris, every lupine and daisy reaching towards the sun.

The garden is divided into many zones with varied vegetation. The botanical garden appeared thanks to the poetess Vita Sackville-West and her husband Harold Nicholson, a diplomat and politician. When they arrived in Sissinghurst in 1930, it was a wasteland. But Vita, who inherited the castle, decided to change everything. Vita and Harold approached the creation of the garden differently. Harold liked the right ones geometric shapes And brick walls, yew trees and neatly trimmed hedges. Vita, on the contrary, was more romantic. She enjoyed bringing an element of mystery and mystery even into the garden. In 1938 they opened a botanical garden with an entrance fee of just one shilling. The romantic-looking Elizabeth Tower, overlooking the estate, was originally an observation deck. From the upper windows you can see how truly magnificent Sissinghurst's gardens are, with their orchids and vegetable beds.

Sissinghurst Castle Garden, Kent, www.nationaltrust.org.uk

Gardens of England... perhaps that says it all. This is where garden fashion for seasons and decades is created, this is where they originate the best traditions and new trends landscape design.


The English garden is a tremendous pleasure for anyone who is not indifferent to the joys of life, living nature and knows how to see beauty. This is a fairytale old England, which will not leave anyone indifferent. We invite you for a walk through the most beautiful gardens in England!

Foggy Albion is the ideal place to get acquainted with modern trends development of landscape design. More than 85% of the UK population are city dwellers and are passionate gardeners. On scientific research Millions of pounds sterling are spent annually in this area, and the British have made tremendous progress in this area.

It was a favorite haunt of Henry VIII, located in Richmond upon Thames in Greater London. This place is known as one of the most beautiful gardens in the world: an example of the Tudor style - " English version Versailles".

Here you can admire the ancient architecture, preserved to this day and carefully preserved.

Exotic trees and flowers were planted by Elizabeth the First herself; the grape vine has been growing for more than 250 years and brings a harvest of 900 kg!

On a sunny day, you can book a boat from Westminster that will take you along the banks of the Thames to these amazing gardens and Hampton Court Maze. Exactly as I described these most beautiful places Jerome K. Jerome in the story "Three in a Boat and a Dog"!

The gardens of the Royal Horticultural Society Wisley are a mecca for all gardeners around the world. The Wisley Garden was originally an experimental woodland garden. Now its territory houses the best gardens, which received recognition at exhibitions in Chelsea. It's not without reason that the Weasleys are considered a school landscape art Great Britain.

Rare spotted orchids and colorful crocuses are adjacent to a number of exemplary gardens, a magnificent rose garden and a garden with decorative stone slides. The 121 hectare area contains a number of very different gardens and interconnected ponds.

The garden was laid out in 1878 by J.F. Wilson, a successful businessman and avid gardener. Its plantings are partially preserved even now, this is the so-called " wild garden"with an interesting collection of trees, shrubs and perennials, including amazing bulbous ones.

A striking landmark of Wisley is the wonderful double mixborder, 130 m long, lined with clipped hornbeam. Behind the mixborders is the Portsmouth field, where work on the introduction and acclimatization of plants and the breeding of new varieties is being carried out in experimental areas. Another experimental field, Howard's Field, houses the national collection of heathers, including more than 1000 species and varieties of these plants. National collections of mountain weeds, crocuses, snowdrops and rhubarb are also located at Wisley.

Sissinghurst Gardens in Kent were founded in 1930 by the English writer Vita Sackville-West and her husband Harold Nicholson. Since then these have been some of the most visited gardens in England.

The “White Garden” is especially famous, in which only white flowers and shrubs are planted.

The Rose Garden features ancient varieties of rose bushes in a wide variety of colors and shapes. The Yew Alley along the ancient estate gives them a special charm.

Hever Castle is a 14th-century castle where Anne Boleyn, wife of Henry VIII, spent her childhood. Here you will find household items and original documents from the Tudor era, and wonderful gardens the castle will take you back to those distant times.

History gives this castle its unique charm. fatal love which took place here in the 15th century. Anne Boleyn was distinguished by her intelligence, attractiveness and seductiveness. The loving Henry VIII could not miss this. King Henry the 8th charmed the young beauty Anna, who later became his second wife and bore him a daughter. After some time, the relationship between Anna and the flighty king began to deteriorate. Henry put Anna, who had bored him, on trial for “high treason and adultery.” Unhappy Anna was sentenced to death penalty and on May 19, 1536, she was beheaded in the Tower of London. They say that here you can meet the restless spirit of a beauty who became a victim of a greedy and cruel king.

An “old English garden” with a yew labyrinth and intricately trimmed trees has been recreated here. However, the creation of the garden dates entirely back to the 20th century.

The gardens at Hever Castle are planted in Italian and English styles. Their climbing roses, lake and stream create a unique landscape and are unforgettable.

Royal Botanic Gardens Kew

The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, are among London's most famous attractions, along with Westminster Abbey, the Tower of London, St Paul's Cathedral and Buckingen Palace. This largest botanical garden in the world was included in the UNESCO World Heritage List in July 2003.

Kew Gardens is 121 hectares of beautiful gardens and botanical greenhouses in southwest London, between Richmond and Kew. More than 2 million tourists visit them every year, but the gardens are not only for them. Kew Gardens is a leading center for botanical research and the training of professional gardeners. Here they spend Scientific research, and the plants are also used as a source for other beautiful parks in England.

Richmond Park is the hunting ground of Charles I and is famous for its beautiful deer. Richmond Park covers more than 900 hectares, making it the largest English enclosed park and the largest of London's Royal Parks.

There is also an area of ​​700-year-old oak trees and an organic forest garden. For sports lovers there is a golf park, bicycle rentals and fishing opportunities.

Ham House is located in an idyllic location on the River Thames in southwest London. The house itself was built in 1610 and is now owned by the National Trust. The gardens have been restored to their 1600 condition. It is better to come here to unite with nature on clear sunny days, when you can enjoy the cherry orchard and the southern terrace with lush, wide lawns.

Gardens of Canizaro

The gardens of Canizaro are reliably hidden from prying eyes. More than 450 azalea and rhodendron bushes are planted here. Garden in english style, located on the Hill, is decorated with trees and shrubs of bizarre shapes. They go well with open lawns and mature lawns.