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History

History Kells Bay

The Plants That Grow in Billy's Garden

Seamus O’Brien, Master of the stunning planting at the National Botanic Gardens in Kilmacurragh Co Wicklow, is a loyal and long-term friend. Often, he has been my muse and expert guide on our myriad trips to the tree fern fields of Australia, New Zealand and South East Asia on which I have served as his willing wingman.

There is little Seamus does not know about the sometimes-strange world of plants in which we frequently find ourselves.

Some time ago, I boldly invited Seamus to conduct an audit of the plants in our growing collection in Kells Bay. Typical of Seamus, he readily agreed and, in keeping with his generous spirit and total enthusiasm, he not only catalogued the plants but provided an appraisal of their setting and context within the gardens.

So, what follows becomes more than a mere record of growth, it is an open invitation to increase your knowledge and improve your enjoyment of a visit to Kells Bay Gardens.

Thank you, Seamus, for these and for all your words of kindly wisdom. Read and enjoy.

The gardens at Kells Bay

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A description of the garden, its history and plant collection

The gardens at Kells Bay possess an important collection of rare and tender trees and shrubs originating mainly from the Southern Hemisphere, particularly the warm-temperate and temperate regions of the Antipodes (Australia and New Zealand), South Africa, Argentina, Chile and the Andean areas of Peru.

The Garden & Its History Kells Bay
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The early botanical collections at Kells

It was Rowland Blennerhassett (1780-1854), a member of the prominent Kerry family of merchants and businessmen, who bought the lands at Kells in 1837, thus beginning the history of today’s estate.

Botanical Kells Bay Co Kerry
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A Tour of the trees and shrubs. The Ladies Walled Garden

A stroll through the garden at Kells begins in the quaint Ladies Walled Garden, constructed by Sir Rowland Ponsonby Blennerhassett during the 1870s and named for his wife, Lady Mary Blennerhassett.
5 Ladies Walled Garden
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The Primeval Forest

The rather aptly-named primeval forest lies adjacent to the walled garden, from where, many years ago, the original plant of Dicksonia antarctica self-spored to create a rainforest-like scene.

9 Primeval Forest
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The Kells Bay Viewpoint

As you wander on, stop for a moment to admire the sweeping views from the gardens across Dingle Bay with Mount Brandon in the distance.

Kells Bay Viewpoint
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The Broad Walk

Our trail continues along the Broad Walk to the rear of the house past fine plants of the Chinese Rhododendron williamsianum. Discovered by the British plant hunter E. H. Wilson (1876-1930) on Wa-shan in western Sichuan in 1908, it is extremely rare in the wild, but has become a firm favourite in gardens and is perfectly lime tolerant.

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The Bamboo Glade

This open glade is a damp, sheltered strip of land containing a fine collection of bamboo species planted in recent times by the current owner Billy Alexander. Many have been selected for the colour of their culms, like the Himalayan Dendrocalamus hookeri (blue), Phyllostachys bambusoides ‘Castilloni’ (orange-yellow) or the jet-black Phyllostachys nigra ‘Othello’, for example.   

The Bamboo Glade Kells Bay
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Fossil Valley

This area of the garden is so-named because of the grove of Metasequoia glyptostroboides – the dawn redwood or fossil tree – planted in the 1980s, when the famous English plantsman, Roy Lancaster OBE VMH, advised on replanting the gardens at Kells.

Michael Herrmann Photography
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The Gunnera Pool

The Gunnera Pool, so named because of the expanse of Gunnera manicata, makes a bold and dramatic statement in this part of the garden. This species is cultivated on account of its gigantic handsome foliage.
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The River Ramble

Several ferns grow alongside this walk including the shuttlecock-like Blechnum magellanicum and the unaccountably rare Blechnum cycadifolium from Robinson Crusoe Island (part of the Juan Fernández Islands).

The Gunnera Pool
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The Cliff Walk

In contrast to the shade of the River Walk, the Cliff Walk is a warm, sunny, sheltered area of Kells, perched high up on riverside cliffs with fantastic views towards the cone-like Cnoc na dTobar, a lofty mountain that overshadows the Kells Bay area.
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Waterfall Way

Moving on, we arrive at the waterfall, an enormous cascade of water over one of Kells Bay many cliff faces. Plants here are afforded protection from the ever-present winds by a wood of oak, holly, larch, Scot’s pine and giant firs.

Kells bay waterfall
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The Bog Walk

From the waterfall, visitors continue their way onto the Big Walk where they meet a young King Billy pine, Athrotaxis selaginoides, a Tasmanian endemic named for William Lanne (also known as King Billy or William Laney), who was the last full-blooded Tasmanian aboriginal man.

The Bog Walk Kells Bay

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