Hampton Court Park

From Wikishire
Jump to: navigation, search
Home Park
Hampton Court, from the park

Hampton Court Park, adjacent to Hampton Court Palace and Gardens in Middlesex, is a royal park managed by the Historic Royal Palaces.[1] In 2014, part of it was designated a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest together with Bushy Park and Hampton Court Golf Course.[2][3][4]

It is a walled deer park of around 700 acres, with a herd of fallow deer,[5] and has been open to the public since 1894. The A308 road and the River Thames form its boundaries. North of the A308 is Bushy Park. The Royal Mews still graze some of their horses on the park in the summer.

The Long Water runs roughly eastward from the back of Hampton Court Palace and at the eastern end is the Golden Jubilee Fountain.

Flower Show

The annual Hampton Court Flower Show is held in 25 acres of the Home Park. It is organised by the Royal Horticultural Society and began in 1990. Many prefer it to the better known Chelsea Flower Show because there is more space, and plants and equipment can be bought at the show. As it is the world's most popular event of this type extensive traffic jams can build up. The show has sometimes been criticised for risking damage to historic features in the park.

The Mediæval Oak

The Mediæval Oak – said to be 750 years old

A tree, called the Mediæval Oak (or Methuselah's Oak), in one of the tees for the golf course in the southern part of the park, is said to be 750 years old.

References

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Hampton Court Park)
Flag of Middlesex.svg
 This Middlesex article is a stub: help to improve Wikishire by building it up.