
Bradford on Avon and the surrounding area is truly a garden lovers dream. These pictures are of the more intimate gardens that can be visited. Below are links to just some of the country's finest gardens - all of them within easy reach of Quince Cottage.
Please click on the underlined titles below for more information on each specific garden.
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Made famous by the 'Naked Gardeners' TV series, this five acre garden includes monastic ponds, thousands of bulbs, roses and herbs, herbaceous borders, a Celtic knot garden and a laburnum walk.
Visiting these gardens in the historic Malmsbury gives you the
opportunity to explore this lovely Cotswold town, in particular the
abbey. Click here and here.
An early supper can
then be devoured at the highly thought of and, after a day in the
garden, the very appropriately named Potting Shed pub. This is 3 miles
beyond Malmsbury in the village of Crudwell, which is on the way back to
Bradford on Avon. Click here. Princes Harry and William have been known to sup
here so you might find yourselves rubbing shoulders with them! . |
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Just two miles down the road from Quince Cottage and you come to Holt, and 'The Courts' gardens. This is a very colourful, English country garden, with peaceful water gardens and an arboretum. There are also kitchen gardens, an orchard and unusual topiary. Just a walk away across country is the Medieval and moated Great Chalfield Manor and gardens. Click here and here.
Local eating can be found near this manor and at Holt, although
recommended eating is at the Fox at Broughton Gifford, just beyond Holt. Click here. |
The
best time to go to Iford Manor is in early May, when the wysteria is
spilling over walls and releasing its wonderful perfume. It is also
best to visit in the afternoon, so you can round off your tour with a
delicious cream tea.
You must try and approach Iford Manor from the A36, down a narrow
lane, to enjoy the most magical views of the house with the river
flowing in front of it. This is very, very romantic and their are
gorgeous views from the Italianate summer house and terraces. There are
cloisters in which classical ornaments are housed and one wide pathway
is edged by sarcophagi.
A perfectly good lunch can be enjoyed at nearby Freshford's The Inn (See 'really useful stuff/pubs' on this site). At Freshford
you can build up your garden viewing skills by peering over many a
cottage wall at the delightful gardens in that stunning village.

This is sweeping 18th century
Capability Brown landscape, with a huge lake and one of four of the
world's Palladian bridges. It's lovely. Pack a picnic and a good
camera and head off on the 'Bath Skyline Walk', which can be accessed
from these gardens. There are no cars up here, so you will have to pick
up a bus in Bath, details of which should be in the above link.
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I have no experience of Stourton Garden. It's described as a 4.5 acre plants man's garden that includes lots of camellias and rhododendrons and magnolias. The profusion of wysteria, roses and delphiniums must be gorgeous. Hopefully, the link above will lead you to all you need to know to enable you to decide on whether to visit or not. |
Westonbirt ArboretumThe national treasure of Westonbirt Arboretum is but 30-40 minutes distance from Bradford on Avon by car. If you love trees you will be very at home among this collection of some 16,000 trees, some of them the UK's rarest. With 16 acres and over 17 miles of paths, you will need sturdy footwear. Spring is wonderful for the blossom and bluebells, summer great to retreat into the shade of the trees, when you can also enjoy hydrangeas. However, autumn is when Westonbirt is at its most spectacular, with the breathtaking colour of the maple leaves. There is a good restaurant at the arboretum, but the queues can get a
bit long around key events and seasons. If this is so you can easily
trip to the very pretty town of Sherston, where I have enjoyed very good
meals at the Rattlebone Inn, where I hope they still sell English fruit
wines, like rhubarb wine and damson wine, as they were delicious. Click here. |
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This
topiary garden at the small and reputedly beautiful Westwood Manor, in
the nearby village of Westwood is so close by it can be reached on foot
or by cycle. The Manor has fine furniture, antique musical instruments
and tapestries to provide further interest while visiting. This beautiful small manor house, built over three centuries, has late Gothic and Jacobean windows, decorative plasterwork and two important keyboard instruments. There is some fine period furniture, 17th- and 18th-century tapestries and a modern topiary garden. |
| Intimate Gardens
For more information on Bradford on Avon's secret gardens, click here.
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The big gardens are impressive in their scale and variety, but
smaller gardens that have been created with love and passion can also be
a joy. This is particularly evident for those gardens that participate
in the National Garden Scheme fundraiser, where private gardens are
opened to the public in aid of charity. Bradford does this in its
'Secret Gardens' event, which is on the last Sunday of May, June and
July. The above pictures are of Horton House garden in Bradford on Avon was one of the highlights of this. For more information on the National Gardens Scheme, click here. Look at Wiltshire, the country of Bradford on Avon. Look
also at Dorset and Somerset for gardens close to the Wiltshire border,
and these will also be highly accessible.
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