Scottish Rock Garden Club Forum
General Subjects => Travel / Places to Visit => Topic started by: David Nicholson on March 14, 2007, 08:05:03 PM
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One of the benefits of being retired is being able, at the drop of a hat, to enjoy a beautiful day by going out somewhere. Having said that we always make a point of going somewhere together on a Wednesday (the Nicholsons are creatures of habit!). Today we visited Cotehele House and gardens in Cornwall (just!) and thought that those members overseas, and others who haven't seen Devon and Cornwall, might like to see a little bit of it. So here goes and I hope I don't bore everyone. By the way, the reason we went today was to see the annual Daffodil Festival only to find (thanks to another example of Nicholson "planning slip" that the festival is in two weeks time!
Cotehele was one of the Estates of the Earl of Mount Edgcumbe (he had another estate not to far away as well!) which in 1947 was handed to the National Trust to avoid Death Duties, and was the first estate to be handed over in this way. The River Tamar is the boundary between the Counties of Devon and Cornwall and Cotehele stands high on the side of the valley of the Tamar on the Cornwall bank. It is surrounded by small market gardens growing fruit and vegetables but in the days before the Second World War the area was famous for growing very early cherries, strawberries, and loads and loads of Daffodils. The growers made use of the River Tamar to ship their produce upstream to Bere Alston wher there was a rail link via Plymouth to the lucrative London markets. During the war most of the daffodil fields were utilised for food production and in clearing the fields of bulbs some were just chucked over the hedge and the hedgerows and verges are full of daffodils many of which are said to be rare. It would have been nice to get some pictures of these but the lanes in the vicinity are single track and the locals do not take kindly to "Grockles", their term for tourists, blocking their roads.
But, to pictures:-
the first: shows the front of the House with Maureen, my wife, just in view having spotted the sign that sais "Refreshments"
the second: the rear of the house and back garden
the third: more back garden
the fourth: Daffs and anemones in the grounds
the fifth: more Daffs in the Grounds
the sixth: an Iris with no name attached
the seventh: a shrub with a nick name of "Lobsters Claw", I did write down the real name of it, which begins with C but lost the bit of paper!!
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More pictures:-
the first: Magnolia
the second: a remaining Daffodil Farm
the third: more of the Daffodil Farm
the fourth: Another bit of I K Brunel (he designed the viaduct) looking up river on the Cornwall bank
the fifth: Down river to Plymouth-eventually
the sixth: up river to the station for the daffs
the seventh: over looking Devon
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Oops, missed on out, and I promise, this is the lot. More of the Daff Farm
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Thanks David, for sharing a really pleasant day out, somewhere quite new to me. I've had a brief look at most parts of the British Isles but not Devon or Cornwall.
The Lobster's Claw looks like our native kaka (large parrot) beak, Clianthus puniceus, though it looks a bit flattish and sparse, rather than the usual upright vase shape.
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Hi David
thank you very much for taking the time to write about Cotehele. I do enjoy these virtual tourist spots in the forum and have added Cotehele to my ever growing list of places to visit. I wasn't aware that we were commercially growing daff bulbs in the UK.
It is good to know where the refreshments are in advance too! Was the cake any good?
kind regards
John
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Thanks for this little trip David - I hope to spend some time in the South West in a not to distant future and this is certainly inspiring.
;)
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Why this obsession with cake? Surely that's nothing to do with me? Oh well, there is a wonerfully rich and whisky-scented fruit cake in the oven as we speak, but - confession time again - Roger made this one.
Talking of scented, it's well known that bulbs of Fritillaria imperialis smell like foxes (so I've read, I've never smelt a fox). So imagine what 100 foxes smell like in the warm, in the back seat of my car, as I drove home from a meeting in town tonight.
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Lesley- you got it! It was Clianthus puniceus.
John- there has been commercial daff growing for the flower market for many years throughout Cornwall and the Scilly Isles, and to support that a lot of breeding work. Cotehele provided the best bowl of carrot and lentil soup I have had in many a year, and Lesley, some pretty good lemon drizzle cake.
Note from Maggi: Soup and cake: excellent facilities!
Glad you all enjoyed the "ramble"
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David,
Thank you so much for the photographs! Beautiful house and gardens! A good candidate for my April trip, I think.
Chloë
in Portugal where Spring has already arrived with a bang!
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It looks wonderful - thanks for posting.
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Chloe, although I have lived in Devon for 20 years now this was my first visit to Cotehele House. The grounds are a magnificent sight in the Spring with the daffs, crocus and anemones but once they are past their best there will not be lot to see in the grounds until the perennials come out. Some of the Camellias are now going over and there are few Rhododendrons. April may be a little early for the apple tree blossom. But, having said that it is a place worth seeing for the surrounding scenery alone.
Cornwall has quite a few gardens worth seeing but many of them specialise in Camellia and Rhododendron, and the same goes for Devon too. As far as alpines are concerned Devon and Cornwall are a bit of a desert.
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David, your second lot of pics didn't come up for me yesterday, but were fine this morning, so it's another lovely episode, in effect. Devon must be a beautiful county so don't be surprised if, one day, I drop in for a cuppa (with cake of course).
What I specially enjoyed, were the pics of the daffodils. They reminded me vividly of those delightful books of Derek Tangye, "A Cat in the Window," "A Donkey in the Meadow," "Sun on the Lintel" and others. I have them all and re-read them every 2 or 3 years. They're very refreshing with none of the interminable sex, violence and filthy language that is in just about every book one opens or TV programme one watches. Just decent people doing honest and enjoyable things. So thank you again for sharing your lovely day out.
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David, your second lot of pics didn't come up for me yesterday, but were fine this morning, so it's another lovely episode, in effect. Devon must be a beautiful county so don't be surprised if, one day, I drop in for a cuppa (with cake of course).
Lesley, you would be very welcome, that also goes for any other South Western UK bound Forumists.
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Chloe, don't know how much time you will have in Devon?Cornwall but if you do have the time for anyone interested in plants a visit to the Eden Project is a must- see www.edenproject.com
It's about an hour and a half drive from the Ferry Port in Plymouth to St Austell in Cornwall. Enjoy.
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John
To my knowledge there are at least 3 places in the UK where bulbs are grown commercially, apart from the Devon/Cornwall area, The fens in the Spalding area grows both Daffs and Tulips and probably others in very large numbers, and here in the North East of Scotland where daffs both for bulbs and cut flowers are produced.
Brian WIlson
Aberdeen
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David,
I have only now caught up with posting of the past few days and so have only now viewed your photographs from Cotehele. It is obviously a very beautiful place in an excellent setting. Of course, Devon and Cornwall enjoy a great reputation for their gardens. Many thanks.
Lesley, Clianthus punicens is regularly grown as a wall- trained shrub here as it is regarded as being tenderish and is given the protection of a wall. However, I have seen plants grown as free-standing shrubs and they generally fare better. The white flowered cultivar is very attractive.
Paddy
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Your pictures of Cotehele reminded me of one of our visits here in March. We came down for the Blackpool show and then continued down to Plymouth amazingly getting by Birmingham without the usual 12 mile traffic jams. My main recollection of the trip to Cotehele was wearing all the warm clothing I had with me and drinking coffees laced with rum to avoid hypothermia. I should have suspected something when I saw that this was part of the catering on the boat. However, it is a charming spot with a real feeling for history. Blundering about the house in the dark because they don't allow electric lights is also interesting !
Nearbye Mount Edgcumbe holds the national Camellia collection and at this time of year is certainly worth a visit. It is interesting to compare the growing season with the west of Scotland. I reckon that Spring comes about 3 weeks earlier than up here. The large flowered Magnolias are in full flower in early March, in an average year whereas, up here it is nearer the end of March. We forget how fortunate we are in having a long growing season from South To North
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Tom, glad the pictures brought back some memories and I thoroughly approve of your remedy for the avoidance of hypothermia. We go to Mount Edgcumbe quite regularly but haven't been so far this year, it's on the agenda for sometime during the next couple of weeks.
You are right about the early Springs down here (and even more so in Cornwall). If I can sort them out I have some pictures of a Magnolia campbellii, a Champion Tree in full and glorious flower. We do tend to be warmer in Winter, and a lot wetter than most places (Glorious Devon, rains six out of seven) but less hot in Summer than the South Eastern side of England. The trouble is, as this is a tourist area, people tend to think we get "holiday weather" each and every day.