Antony Woodland Garden
Gardens

Antony Woodland Garden

We had been round Antony Woodland Garden previously but I got few photos then. On this occasion, in April 2007, I took plenty of photos, so I felt it was time for a report. Antony House and its garden are in the care of the National Trust. The Woodland Garden remains in the ownership of the Pole-Carew family but is free to members of the NT when the house is open. If you go to Antony, on the Rame Peninsula, to visit house, garden and woodland garden you would do well to allow most of a day; the full circuit of the woodland garden is the better part of five miles and there is a lot to linger over. The woodland garden has its own car park, close to the warden's lodge. The western part of the garden has the major spring interest: hundreds of superb camellias, abundant magnolias, azaleas and rhododendrons, lovely mature woodland with carpets of primroses and bluebells. For part of the way the path follows the River Lynher with views to Ince Castle and Anthony Passage. Sculpture is dotted around and you see a Georgian bath house. The eastern part overlooks the Lynher and the Hamoaze with views to Trematon Castle and the Tamar Bridges. Just off the path is an ancient dovecot. A lovely place for a fairly serious walk. And, if you are visiting the house, its more formal garden is a delight, too.

Antony is signed off A374 close to Torpoint

Primroses line the Camellia Walk

This review was written by Oliver Howes and is reproduced here in his own words. All text and photographs remain his work, preserved in his memory.

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