Conservation Zone
It is probably accurate enough to say that the whole of Wakehurst
Place is a conservation zone. Not just the 73 hectares (180 acres)
of the most-visited gardens, woodland walks and Millennium Seed
Bank, but also the 60 hectares (149 acres) of the Loder Valley Nature
Reserve, plus what few visitors know about, the 55 hectares (136
acres) of outlying parkland and woodland which is managed to conserve
it as what English Heritage list it as - Grade II historic house
and parkland.
Much of Wakehurst Place is a Site of Special Scientific Interest
(SSSI), designated as such for the valuable communities of filmy
ferns, mosses, liverworts on lichens, (collectively known as cryptogams),
growing on the the sandstone outcrops of the Wakehurst and Chiddingly
Woods. This is reflected in the founding of the Francis Rose Reserve,
probably the first nature reserve in Europe to be dedicated to
these cryptogams.
Within the public grounds, 'conservation' also embraces the Pinetum,
Westwood Valley, the Himalayan Glade, Westwood Lake and the Wetland
Conservation Area, while the Field Study Centre demonstrates conservation
in action for parties of enthusiastic pupils from local schools.
Find out more
Pinetum
Francis
Rose Reserve
Himalayan
Glade
Westwood
Valley
Field
Study Centre
Wetland
Conservation Area and Westwood Lake
Continue the tour
Back
up to: Wakehurst Zones
Carry
on to: Woodland Zone
|