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Thursday, 25 June 2009

Dwarf Orchard Pictures


Have you noticed that there are virtually no pictures of the Dwarf Orchard? I don't just mean on the internet, I mean full-stop. I've ploughed through books old and new and - zilch. Not even old photos or drawings of how it would have been in its heyday.

I'm not saying there aren't any - just that I can't find them. I think I found two online. When that little flurry of work that started back in the spring began (which, if any of the organisers are reading, many of us couldn't make because it was on a weekday, not because we didn't care...) I had hoped for a few in the local papers.

Now admittedly I don't get the local papers, so I have to either look at other people's or go to the library, and, hands up, I don't always bother (I know, I know, I'm missing thrills and excitement beyond imagination...) but the only pics I saw were closeups of the people doing the clearing, which is nice, but...
Maybe there isn't much to see, maybe it looks exactly the same as every other bit of abandoned formal garden gone back to nature (the best of those, BTW, is the fabulous Warley Place in Essex, about a 25 minute drive away near Brentwood - where wild flowers and creepers have almost entirely consumed the crumbling mansion, leaving tantalising, ferny caves, mosaic-ed floors, sunken rooms and my favourite walled garden ever - seventy/thirty wild/formal.) But I still want to know what's behind those walls.

I'm sure I was once sent some plans of what they intend for the place - but I can't find them. One thing I read was that it was going back, as far as possible, to being formal, another that it was being turned into the dreaded 'community garden.' Anyone who's ever been to Warley might make the argument to more or less leave it as it is, controlled chaos.

Julia lives opposite, and promised to send me some pics, taken from pretty much literally over the wall. We have her to thank for these first images of what's inside what has to be Greenwich Park's most secret area.


For the moment, these are the best we'll get. There's definitely been some clearing; I don't know if it's still going on or it's stalled (hope not...) I would like to know if there's anything of the original left - bits of masonry - very old fruit trees - formal plants gone wild - hard to see from these pics, lovely as they are.

Did anyone join in with the volunteers in the Spring? I'd love to know what's there, what's planned, what's happening...

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6 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

It's always been a very secret spot. Doesn't it have the historic mulberry? I wonder if it is earmarked as the communications centre, so not much of a high profile wanted at the moment.

25 June 2009 14:11  
Anonymous Sarah said...

I saw something about an orchard being planted in the Greenwich Council planning info on the web.

25 June 2009 21:41  
Anonymous scared of chives said...

Pine is horrible

26 June 2009 08:58  
Anonymous Stephen said...

Having been going to Greenwich Park since before I was born I thought I knew almost every inch of the place, but have to admit I had never heard of the Dwarf orchard.

26 June 2009 09:45  
Blogger JeffR said...

I spent a couple of days helping out in the Dwarf Orchard (following your blog posting about help wanted) and cut back a lot of brambles and dug out the roots with a garden fork (no power tools were used).
There is one original fruit tree remaining, a mulberry. I didn't see any others but am no expert in these matters.
I took some pictures which I could send to you if interested.
Geoff

27 June 2009 19:51  
Blogger The Greenwich Phantom said...

Geoff - I'd LOVE to see some pics. Glad they're not using power tools - in a place so congested with perennial weeds, all power tools do is divide the roots and act as mini propogators...

28 June 2009 10:12  

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