Trees and PlantsBorde Hill is an English
garden in the finest romantic tradition, created at the end of the nineteenth
century by Colonel Stephenson Clarke who sponsored expeditions to the Andes,
China, Burma, Assam, Tasmania and North Africa by the great plant hunters
Wilson, Forrest, Kingdon Ward and Rock.
The garden contains an immense
diversity of species that are listed by the Tree Register of the British Isles as
champions. These
range from Acer to Quercus, Picea and Sorbus. It is also renowned for its
award winning collection of over 1000 rhododendrons, numerous azaleas and
magnolias, its collection of nerine lilies, and for being the creator of the
Camellia x Williamsii "Donation" and Camellia "Salutation".
One of the features of the garden is its dells and discrete corners.
Each has its own micro climate and the result ranges from the Chusan
palms and many varieties of lilies in the Round Dell, to the Azalea ring
with Chinese Tea plants - Camellia sinensis, and the Chilean fire trees
- Embrothrium coccineum and Chinese tulip tree - Liriodendron chinese in
the Garden of Allah.
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