Newsletter No. 75 June 2026 — Surrey Gardens Trust
Introduction
The Surrey Gardens Trust has published Newsletter No. 75 for June 2026, rounding up the activities of the educational charity so far this year. The update covers School Awards allocations, the spring and early-summer round of Gateway garden visits, a well-attended trip to the Savill Garden and a Vanbrugh-themed study morning at Claremont. Members can also look ahead to a full programme of summer and autumn events.
What This Means for UK Gardeners
Surrey sits at the heart of one of England's richest concentrations of designed landscapes, and the Trust's work touches gardeners across the South East and beyond. The School Awards help fund school gardening projects, giving children hands-on experience of sowing, growing and caring for plants. The Gateway scheme opens privately owned historic gardens to visitors on set days, offering rare access to designed landscapes that rarely appear on the tourist trail, while study mornings and group visits give enthusiasts a deeper understanding of plant collections, design history and conservation.
For home gardeners, the newsletter is a useful reminder that historic gardens are not just pretty places to wander. They are working libraries of planting combinations, structural techniques and plant introductions that filter down into mainstream horticulture over decades. Looking closely at how the professionals manage mature trees, mixed borders and wildflower meadows can sharpen the eye and inspire small-space adaptations at home.
Key Points
- School Awards allocations have been confirmed, directing funding to a fresh round of school gardening projects across Surrey.
- The spring and early-summer Gateway garden visits have taken place, opening several privately owned designed landscapes to members.
- A group visit to the Savill Garden in Windsor Great Park was a highlight, drawing strong feedback from attendees.
- A Vanbrugh-focused study morning at Claremont explored the architectural and landscape legacy of the eighteenth-century designer.
- A full programme of further lectures, visits and conservation events is lined up for the rest of the year.
Further Reading
For related background on the gardens and designers mentioned, browse GardenWizz's plant encyclopedia entries for woodland and mixed-border planting, as well as guides to historic garden styles and the work of English landscape designers.
IMAGE_SCENE: a group of garden visitors walking through a lush English woodland border at a historic Surrey estate on a sunny summer morning
Source: https://www.surreygardenstrust.org.uk/newsletters/2026/6/12/newsletter-no-75-june-2026
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