When collecting your pre-booked carer ticket or when purchasing one for the day, you will need to present one of the listed supporting documents for the disabled visitor at The Savill Garden Visitor Centre:

  • A valid Access Card - information on how to get an Access Card
  • A valid photocopy or photo of a Blue Badge with the expiry date clearly visible. The original Blue Badge should remain in your vehicle - information about a Blue Badge and how to apply
  • Proof of Disability Living Allowance (DLA) or Personal Independence Payment (PIP)
  • A letter of award for Attendance Allowance
  • An Incapacity Benefit book or letter confirming that the recipient has been awarded Incapacity Benefit or Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
  • A BD8 or Certificate of Visual Impairment

If you are not able to present any of the supporting documents, the carer will be charged for a full price adult ticket.

A canopy of magnolia blowers beneath a blue sky.

4 min read

Magnificent Magnolia – Guided walk of The Valley Gardens

Sarah Scott, Team Coordinator, Property.

Published by

Windsor Great Park

Jun 4 2024

On a Saturday morning in March, 50 Friends and guests assembled outside The Savill Garden Visitor Centre. The road diversions due to the M25 closure hadn’t prevented anyone arriving and the sun was out after a wet week.

Friends divided into five groups, led by our garden guides Barbara, Brenda, Robbie, Susan, and Sian, walked in a staggered start to The Valley Gardens. Each guide varied the route slightly.

Obelisk Pond

The first stop on my walk was by the Obelisk Pond, where several cherry trees have been planted as part of the Sakura Cherry Tree Project.

This initiative celebrates 150 years of Japan-UK friendship and highlights the ongoing cooperation between our two nations. 

Cherry trees with blossom on a bank of grass with water behind.

Cherry trees

Launched by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and then Prime Minister Theresa May in 2017, the project involves planting over six thousand cherry trees throughout the UK, starting in 2020. The cherry blossom (Sakura), which is Japan’s national flower, symbolises the enduring bond between our countries.

We also discussed the evolving landscape of trees around the pond, noting the changes brought about by the seasons and the new additions.

The landscape has undergone significant changes with the removal of Betula pendula and Rhododendron ponticum due to severe dieback caused by the droughts from 2018-2022. To enhance the autumn scenery, these have been replaced with trees known for their vibrant autumn colours.

Key additions include:

  • Liquidambar styraciflua ‘Royal Lodge’: Known for its spectacular autumn hues
  • Nyssa sylvatica: Several named clones grafted by the propagation team using scion material from the National Collection at Exbury Gardens, Hampshire
  • Liriodendron tulipifera (Tulip Tree): Grafted from the best-coloured specimens found near Carters Bar

These new plantings are expected to create stunning reflections in the water during the autumn season.

The Valley Gardens

As we reached The Valley Gardens, we paused to learn about the history of magnolias.

The first Himalayan magnolia, Magnolia campbellii, was discovered in 1855 and subsequently introduced into cultivation in Ireland in 1865. It took 20-30 years before it first flowered, finally blooming in 1884.

On this walk, we were particularly interested in the deciduous Asiatic magnolias, which typically display their flowers from February to April, usually before the leaves emerge. There are two National Collection holders for these magnolias: Windsor Great Park and Caerhays in Cornwall.

We then made our way through the Heather Garden, up and down the Valleys admiring the many magnificent specimens.

Some of the highlights were seeing the Magnolia ‘David Clulow’ with large white cup shaped flowers, and a very special Magnolia sprengeri diva planted in 1968 by Queen Elizabeth II which has pink flowers and is lightly scented.

The specimen stands proud on the edge of the Winter Garden below the Heather Garden.

A canopy of pink magnolia flowers beneath a blue sky.

Magnolia ‘David Clulow

A close up of a large pink magnolia flower.

Magnolia sprengeri diva

Magnolia campbellii ‘Charles Raffill’ which has spectacular large rose purple tepals which appear white on the inside, is one of the original seedlings raised by Charles Raffill at The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew in 1946.

Magnolia ‘Aurora’ is a small upright tree with deep pink flowers and blooms can appear from an early age.

a close up of a large pale pink magnolia flower.

Magnolia campbellii ‘Charles Raffill

A close up of a large pink magnolia flower.

Magnolia ‘Aurora’

We returned to the Visitor Centre for a well-earned coffee and made it just before the rain returned. Many thanks to the guides for sharing their knowledge and producing an interesting walk.

Written by Maggie Elkin, Joint Event Coordinator

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