Buckingham Palace garden features in new Royal Collection Trust book

The Rose Garden at Buckingham Palace.Royal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. Buckingham Palace garden. Photographer John Campbell.

Royal Collection Trust’s latest publication follows a year in the life of the famous garden at Buckingham Palace, giving readers a rare glimpse into the behind-the-scenes management of this hidden oasis in the heart of London. The book is called Buckingham Palace: A Royal Garden and it will be available on 13 April 2021 from Royal Collection Trust shops and all good bookshops.

Written by garden writer Claire Masset, the book offers insights into the garden’s rich history and its use today as part of a working royal palace. Atmospheric images by the award-winning photographer John Campbell reveal how the garden changes and develops over the course of a year. Throughout the book, seasonal gardening tips are provided by Mark Lane, Head Gardener at Buckingham Palace.

The 39-acre garden at Buckingham Palace fulfils many roles. It is The Queen’s private London garden, but it also plays a key part in the busy calendar of royal events. The most famous of these events are The Queen’s Garden Parties, which is an average year sees around 24,000 guests from all walks of life welcomed into the garden each summer.

Buckingham garden’s waterfallRoyal Collection Trust / © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2021. Buckingham Palace garden. Photographer John Campbell.

The book takes readers on a tour of the garden’s main features, from its sweeping lawns. 156-metre Herbaceous Border and wildflower meadows to the Rose Garden and 3.5-acre lake, complete with a waterfall and a secluded island that provides a haven for the wildlife. Despite its urban location, the garden is home to a remarkable array of floral and fauna, including rare native plants seldom seen in London.

Readers will learn about the seasonal posies created for The Queen every Monday when she is in residence and will discover the stories behind the commemorative trees planted by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.

The book also explores how the gardeners balance the best horticultural practices with a nature-friendly, sustainable approach, ensuring that the garden will be enjoyed by generations to come.

Facts and figures

  • In 1762, Queen Charlotte established a menagerie in the garden. It included an elephant, monkeys and one of the first zebras ever seen in England.
  • Since 2000, the Buckingham Palace garden has held the National Collection of Mulberries. Mulberry trees were first planted in the garden by James I in 1608
  • Traditionally, The Queen hosts three Garden Parties a year at Buckingham Palace. Each is attended by 8,000 guests, who consume around 27,000 cups of tea, 20,000 sandwiches and 20,000 slices of cake.
  • Since 2008, the island in the lake has been home for five beehives, which produce around 160 jars of honey a year for use in the royal kitchens.
  • There are more than 1,000 trees in the garden, including 98 plane trees, 85 different species of oak and 40 different types of mulberry trees.
  • The Rose Garden contains 25 beds of roses. Each bed is planted with 60 rose bushes of a different variety, and no two adjacent beds are of a similar colour.
  • Royal Collection Trust’s ‘Buckingham Palace Gin’ is infused with botanicals from the garden, including lemon verbena, hawthorn berries, bay leaves and mulberry leaves.

For more information, please visit the Royal Collection Trust’s online shop.

Categories