It looks like some sort of alien spacecraft lurking on the horizon but it is actually the Great Glasshouse at the National Botanic Garden of Wales. I have been trying to visit this garden for about 5 years but being a 2.5 hour drive from home whenever I have thought of visiting the drive has put me off. However, this week we have a family holiday to the Gower only about 30 minutes away from the gardens so there was no way I wasn’t going. In fact we went on the first day just so I would stop going on about it.
Whilst the gardens cover 500 acres of grounds the greenhouse is the real focus point. It is the largest single span glasshouse in the world and was designed Norman Foster. What immediately grabs you is the vastness of the glasshouse and the airiness of it. The planting is in the centre area and is divided into different climatic regions: California, Western & South Australia, Central Chile, Western Cape of South Africa and the Mediterranean. The guide books says that whilst these regions together cover less than 1% of the Earth’s surface they contain more than 20% of the world’s flowering plant species – food for thought.
Senecio candidans
For me the highlight were the Proteas from South Africa, the Kangaroo Paws from Australia and the Bottle Brush bushes. We had all been to the Eden Project and I think it is fair to say that we all preferred this greenhouse to the one at the Eden Project. The atmosphere was more conducive than the humid atmosphere of the Eden Project. Personally, I have dabbled in the exotic plants and have come to the conclusion that they aren’t really for me and having seen the plants in this greenhouse they are more to my taste.