Anglesey Abbey - Reviews from across the web
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Anglesey Abbey - Cambridge - Reviews of Anglesey Abbey - TripAdvisor Anglesey Abbey has a fantastic collection of snowdrops. Apparently because of hybridization there are strains here found nowhere else. When I visited the gardens two years ago we co... tripadvisor.com
Anglesey Abbey Garden - a Gardens Guide review : A twentieth century garden made in the grounds of an Augustinian priory. Lanning Roper gave advice but the garden is best seen as a late example of the Mixed Style. It has a Monks Garden, a Temple Lawn, a Daffodil Walk, a herbaceous garden, an arboretum, a watermill and a very fine collection of g... gardenvisit.com
Gastronomy Domine: Anglesey Abbey gardens, Lode, Cambridge The gardens at Anglesey Abbey are planned beautifully. After a winding walk through flowering winter shrubs and red-twigged cornus, you'll come around a corner into a stand of silver birch trees like something straight out of Chekov. The silver birch is an amazingly versatile plant; in Prague last y... gastronomydomine.com
Anglesey Abbey, Gardens and Lode Mill, an Attraction in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire. Search for Cambridgeshire Attractions. The Museum Collection presents a collection of replicas, cards and gifts from some of the leading museums and galleries in Britain as well as many overseas. Most items are produced by or with the museums themselves, so your purchases will help the respecti... information-britain.co.uk
Anglesey Abbey, Gardens & Lode Mill, Quy Road, Lode, Cambridge, CB25 9EJ - www.statelyhomes.com It is surrounded by 39ha (98 acres) of landscape garden and arboretum with over 100 pieces of sculpture. There is all-year-round floral interest in the garden with the Winter Walk and extensive snowdrop collection in January and February; hyacinth displays in the spring, herbaceous borders and dahli... statelyhomes.com
Anglesey Abbey (Cambridgeshire) - © Gardens-Guide.com - OPEN GARDENS UK & Ireland - Features, Admission, Maps, History, and Local Amenities The Abbey was formerly an Augustinian priory and the garden was originally laid out in the 1860s by the Rev. John Hailstone, with some fine trees, including the cedars and Weeping Lime dating from that time. Huttleston Broughton, the 1st Lord Fairhaven, bought the property in 1926 and greatly expand... gardens-guide.com
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