All Gardens
Beautiful gardens to visit in Scotland
- Save to ListThis wonderful coastal garden forms a horticultural tour around the temperate world with a collection of rhododendrons, azaleas, magnolias, Blue Tibetan poppies, giant Himalayan lilies and Chatham Island forget-me-nots Read more...
- Save to ListStarted by Baron Schroder in the late 19th century, hill paths meander through 20 acres of conifers and rhododendrons. Read more...
- Save to ListTwo acres of magnificent garden, set on the side of Kinnoull Hill overlooking Perth. Branklyn holds an impressive collection of rare and unusual plants Read more...
- Save to ListRight in the heart of Kirkcudbright, a pretty artists’ colony on the Solway Firth, this 18th-century Georgian house is the former home of Scottish painter E A Hornel. Read more...
- Save to ListA traditional Scottish family garden combining herbaceous plants, shrubs, annuals and fruit. Fine specimen trees. Small picnic area. Special arrangements possible for groups to view Georgian house. Read more...
- Save to ListNear the banks of Loch Fyne, on the west coast, immerse yourself in Britain’s finest example of an exotic Himalayan-style woodland garden Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +The remains of the former Abbey of Deer is located on the raised banks of the River Ugie in a wide valley, which features fields, rough pasture and plantations of coniferous trees. The abbey complex is contained within a later large, walled enclosure with the former walled garden of Deer House alongside to the east. It would appear the abbey Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +01250 881 400Dirnanean is a 1.5 hectare garden with 7 hectares of recently replanted and restored Policies and over a mile of Burn Walk undergoing restoration; rising into the magnificent surrounding hill scenery at 1,000 feet above sea level. Read more...
- Save to ListOn passing into the inner courtyard and attaining the top of the terracing the full extent and majesty of the garden is suddenly revealed. The dominant feature of the parterre design is a St Andrew’s Cross with the multiplex 17th century sundial at its centre. Read more...
- Save to ListDunninald is a family home, completed in 1824 by the architect James Gillespie Graham in the Gothic Revival Style. Guided tours explain the collections of furniture, paintings and displays of fine needlework, photographs and memorabilia. In May extensive bluebells carpet the woodlands. Set away from the house within a planned landscape and at the end of a beech avenue the Read more...