| The new arboretum at Castle Howard
represents one of the most exciting new developments
in horticulture and botany for the new millennium.
When planting began in 1975, the late Lord Howard
and James Russell, VMH, shared a vision to create
one of the most comprehensive collections of hardy
woody plants in Europe.
Because of the botanical importance of the extensive
collections of woody plants held in both the arboretum
and in the woodland garden in Ray Wood, a joint
charitable trust has been formed between Castle
Howard and the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, to
safeguard the future of the collections.
These remarkable collections, comprising some
6,500 different taxa (identifiably different types
of plant) were planted from 1968, when the valuable
historic collection formed at the Sunningdale
Nursery in Surrey was transported to Ray Wood.
This 40-acre area of woodland had been clear-felled
and reforested with hardwoods in 1948, but was
first surveyed in 1563 and much of the extant
ground flora is characteristic of secondary ancient
woodland. Ray Wood today boasts a wonderful collection
of rhododendrons, some 500 species and 300 important
hybrids, along with many other rare shrubs and
trees, among them other members of the family
Ericaceae, such as Vaccinium and Gaultheria, and
considerable collections of genera such as Sorbus,
Magnolia, Rosa and Acer.
In the arboretum, a native flora of species-rich
grassland, dotted with orchids, king cups and
bog bean, nestles beneath exotic trees gathered
from around the temperate world, providing a landscape
that is unique in both style and substance.
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