The Linn Gardens
The
Linn Gardens, open to the public, is a delightful place to spend a tranquil
hour or so. Enter by the garden gate, and you have an immediate taste
of what is to come; a narrow and shaded path, ferns overarching, bamboos,
the sound of water. There are paths which guide you through a variety
of garden scenes, including the glen with the rushing burn where exotic
rhodendrons abound, the bamboo garden, the old cultivated area of the
garden, the terrace with its splendid vista of loch and hills, past the
spikey bed, lily bed, down the cliff path to the bottom garden and ponds
with their gravity fed fountain.
History
The
name Linn relates to the swampy ground below the cliff once flooded by
the Meikle and Bogle Burns. In 1860 William Martin leased the land from
the Duke of Argyll and built the villa now standing above the Linn. The
architect was William Motherwell. The early garden was constructed on
the ground around the house. In 1971 Dr. James Taggart moved to the Linn
the redeveloped the garden extensively. His son, James Taggart, has now
taken over the development of the garden.
Visits
The
Linn Gardens are situated off Shore Road at Cove Bay. Entrance: Adults
£3.00, Students £2.00 Children under
12 free. Membership is available. Guided tours of the garden can be arranged
for organized parties. The Linn Nursey stocks many species of garden plants
at modest prices. Open daily 11:00am-5:00pm.
Phone 01436 842242
Read about the latest horticultural happenings at the Linn in Jim Taggart's Notes from the Garden.
The Friends of the Linn helps to support the work of the Linn Botanic Gardens through occasional fund-raising events.
