Wakehurst Place in spring
Seasons and flowering times, especially in spring, can vary
by up to three weeks so the periods below are only approximate.
In early spring, the dogwoods and willows in the Winter Garden
still look splendid, especially set off by snowdrops all around.
A little later, daffodils and crocuses make their entrances, closely
followed by primroses and lady's smock among the birches in Bethlehem
Wood.
April is a good time to see magnolias and Wakehurst's very own
pieris, Pieris formosa var. forrestii 'Wakehurst',
which is perhaps the most flamboyantly-leaved of all. The rhododendrons,
for which the estate is rightly famous, are showing well.
The Spring Border is blooming by the Mansion Pond and in May,
the bluebells are up in Horsebridge Wood; with early wild flowers
in Westwood Valley.
Featured plants include the dramatic Chilean fire bush and the
the spectacular show of Australia's waratah with its big head of
bright red flowers carried right at the end of the shoots.
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