Saturday 13 August 2016

Elmdon Park - Walled Park Nature Reserve

As I am no longer working in Birmingham, I will plunder last year's photos to continue my journal.

St Nicholas - 28 July 2015
In 1908 Edith mentioned three visits to Elmdon Park in May, June and October. 109 years later, I visited Elmdon too. After work, I checked into the Holiday Inn, dumped my luggage and walked briskly through the Nature Park that I visited in June this year and past St Nicholas.  According to William Dargue's page on Elmdon, the church that I saw was built in 1781, replacing the dilapidated one that previously stood on the site. It was rebuilt by Abraham Spooner, the owner of the long since demolished Elmdon Hall.

Old walls - 28 July 2015
My aim was to visit Elmdon Hall's old walled garden, which forms part of the Warwickshire Wildlife Trust's Elmdon Manor nature reserve. Dargue's page on Elmdon tells us that "Measuring a hectare in area, the walled garden was reputedly in its day the largest in the country. Some of the walls and the ruins of greenhouses survive." Just before I reached the wall, there was a tangle of wild plants including delicious wild raspberries.


Ferns and mosses on brickwork - 28 July 2015 

Yellow loosestrife - 28 July 2016
In Edith's time, it's likely that the garden would have been immaculately kept and extremely productive. As I followed the footsteps of long-dead gardeners, I found ferns growing out of the steps and a mixture of wild and garden plants spilling over the paths.
Apples - 28 July 2015
Someone has clearly been hard at work here. There are fairly young fruit trees to remind us of the garden's former purpose, which was to produce fruit and vegetables for the big house. 

Campanula - 28 July 2015
According to the SEAG community blog:

The head and under gardeners had cottages close by at Elmdon Farm with as many as 20 men and boys working in the kitchen and pleasure gardens. The walled garden was intersected by wide grass paths with neat box hedges, and after the removal of the glass tax in 1845, extensive greenhouses and cold frames. Around the walls espalier and fan shaped apple trees with the more tender fruits such as nectarines and apricots occupying the south facing walls.

Sadly many of the gardeners who would have been tending the gardens in 1908 are likely to have left Elmdon for the First World War. Also the house changed hands a number of times and went into decline. Now long grass and wildflowers catch the low evening sun and provide a feast for insects and other wildlife.

Airport buildings seen over crops - 28 July 2015
Having explored the garden, I looked round the rest of the nature reserve. There is a lake and trees including old Yews.  Intrigued by glimpses of gold, I peered out from between the trees. I was greeted by the rather surreal sight of airport buildings and hotels beyond ripening crops. The golden evening sun had been replaced by sulky clouds.

Holiday Inn Hotel with rainbow - 28 July 2015
As I walked back to the hotel, the inevitable drizzle started. As I got back to the hotel, the sun came out again and I captured a rainbow.

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