Holehird Gardens

Holehird Gardens is an extensive 10 acre site located near Windermere, Cumbria, England. It is the home of the Lakeland Horticultural Society. The garden consists of a large variety of plants, particularly those suited to the local climate with its high rainfall.[1] It is made up of extensive rock and heather gardens, alpine houses, and a walled garden which is of particular interest for its herbaceous borders. It was once voted by BBC gardeners to be one of the nation’s favourite gardens.[2]

A pathway leading through Holehird Gardens

History

Holehird was built in the 1860s as a private home to a design by J. S. Crowther. The house is currently used by Leonard Cheshire Disability.[3]

The garden was created in the late nineteenth century by three successive owners of the mansion. The landscape architect Thomas Mawson enlarged the garden in 1902.[4] However by 1945 it became too expensive to maintain and it was effectively abandoned and totally overgrown.

In 1969 the Lakeland Horticultural Society was formed and began to rescue the derelict garden.[5] The staff at the gardens are all volunteers from the Lakeland Horticultural Society. They are the planters, weeders, propagators, designers and administrators.[6] The guidebook “The Best of Britain” described it as a garden with “numerous different areas to explore including rock heather and walled gardens and herbaceous borders all bursting with colourful plants and enhanced with stunning views".[7] The astilbes are a national Plant Heritage collection.

Access

The garden is open to the public throughout the year. Donations are invited for the upkeep of the gardens. There are also openings as part of the National Gardens Scheme. Holehird has been a regular participant in a "daffodil day", which the NGS organises in Cumbria.[8]

gollark: I'm against most implementations.
gollark: I am not against education generally.
gollark: * bad
gollark: Also overreliance on rote memorization abd.
gollark: My main issue with it is that it forces people to study unnecessary things they do not actually like much in inefficient ways, goes around grouping people by age when this is wrong and bad, and encourages conformity and whatnot.

References

  1. "Gardens - Holehird". Holehird.
  2. The Best of Britain: The Lake District, p. 90
  3. "About Holehird". Retrieved 2018-03-23.
  4. 1900-05 Mawson Archive
  5. Longville, Tim, p.96.
  6. Longville, Tim 2007 “Gardens of the Lake District”, Frances Lincoln Ltd, London, p. 95
  7. The Best of Britain: The Lake District, p. 90.
  8. "Holehird". Retrieved 2018-04-12.

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