Mercury (Hobart) - Magazine

ROYAL SOIL

This year marks the bicentenar­y of the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens in Hobart, with a series of events planned to celebrate the milestone

- WORDS JENNIFER STACKHOUSE

Prince Edward and horticultu­ral royalty Peter Cundall celebrate the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens’ bicentenar­y

T here are banners fluttering along the main roads into Hobart and there’s a buzz in the air as one of Tasmania’s favourite gardens dresses up for its birthday. All the flags and fuss are because the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens is marking its 200th birthday this year and the celebratio­ns start with a bang over the weeks ahead.

What was once known as Hangan’s Farm, where wheat, barley and potatoes were grown, is now a world-class botanic garden. The land grant was made to John and Jane Hangan in 1805 and encompasse­d 20ha beside the River Derwent between Macquarie Point and New Town. By 1818, the Hangans had moved their farm further upriver and the original grant area was fenced off as the Government Gardens and Grounds. The appointmen­t of J Faber as superinten­dent of the land is taken as the date the Gardens was establishe­d.

Two hundred years on there’s a lot to celebrate. Not only is this land now a beautifull­y planted, well-matured and highly maintained green space on the city’s edge, it is an important place of environmen­tal education and for the preservati­on and study of Tasmania’s native flora. The Gardens is also a place to gather and celebrate, and has been cherished by generation­s. It is Australia’s second-oldest botanic gardens (Sydney pipped us by two years).

This month, in quick succession to mark the bicentenar­y, the Gardens is hosting a royal visit, celebratin­g gardening royalty and hosting the premiere of a new and confrontin­g play.

ROYAL VISIT AND BICENTENNI­AL LAUNCH

The royal visitor is His Royal Highness Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex. He will open a new addition to the Gardens that was commission­ed for the bicentenar­y, and unveil a plaque. A tier of three beautifull­y balanced circular timber platforms has been built over the edge of the Gardens’ much-loved Lily Ponds. Known as the Lily Pads and designed by Hobart-based Edwina Hughes of Inspiring Place, these platforms offer an improved

view of the pond with its water lilies and birds, as well as the surroundin­g gardens which include many plants from China and Japan. This new addition to the Gardens is sure to become very popular for events and celebratio­ns.

Prince Edward is visiting on Tuesday for a walk in the Gardens as well as to undertake his official duties. Formal proceeding­s begin at 11am and conclude when the Prince unveils a plaque beside the Lily Pads to mark the bicentenar­y. As his Gardens visit is his only official public event in Tasmania, the community is invited to come along to celebrate and catch a glimpse of the Queen’s youngest son.

Tory Ross, business enterprise and marketing manager for the Gardens, urges anyone who wants to see the Prince and join in on the Gardens’ bicentenni­al launch to arrive early to get a good vantage point. Head towards the Lily Ponds to catch all the action from 10am, she advises.

Prince Edward will be following in the footsteps of other royal visitors to the Gardens including his mother, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, who, when visiting in 1967, planted a tree and proclaimed the Gardens as ‘Royal’. His older brother, Prince Charles, has also visited the Gardens.

SPECIAL SEEDS

Gardening royalty, in the form of veteran Tassie gardener and media personalit­y Peter Cundall, will arrive for more birthday celebratio­ns on Sunday, April 15, with ABC radio broadcaste­r Chris Wisbey, who is presenting a special outdoor broadcast from 10am until noon. It will be held at the newly refurbishe­d ‘Pod’ building in the Community Vegetable Garden (long known as “Pete’s Patch”) where there will also be a special free exhibition in the Pod to celebrate 80 years of ABC Radio Hobart.

Making this broadcast extra special is the launch of a Peter Cundall-endorsed seed range chosen as a practical way for gardeners to commemorat­e the bicentenar­y. Seeds and plants will be available for sale on the day as part of the Winter Plant Sale. Food vans on site will add to the festivitie­s.

If you can’t make it to any of the formal celebratio­ns this month there’s more ahead throughout the year, all overseen by the large numerals that proclaim 200. This temporary sculptural addition to the Gardens can be seen illuminate­d at night from many of the surroundin­g roads. To see what else is coming up, visit the Gardens’ website

– but don’t wait for a special event, stage your own bicentenni­al picnic at the Gardens any time this year and share a picture on social media with the hashtag #RTBG200. There’s a special spot in the Gardens set up for bicentenni­al smart phone photograph­s. Now that’s something that couldn’t have been envisaged 200 years ago when the Gardens began to grow.

MORE INFORMATIO­N

The Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens is at Lower Domain Rd in Hobart. Drop into The Hub, the new informatio­n booth just inside the main entrance, for informatio­n about what’s happening in the Gardens. Visit the Gardens Shop to pick up a bottle of Bicentenni­al Release Gin flavoured with botanicals distilled from plants collected in the Gardens, or to get a copy of the recently released book The Gardens, which celebrates the 200-year history of the RTBG and includes historical photograph­s, maps and stories from the archives, as well as many photos and anecdotes sourced from the community. Clockwise from main: The Lily Pads are a new addition to the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens; Marcus Tatton’s Corruption is one of many sculptures at the Gardens; Prince Edward, son of Queen Elizabeth II (who bestowed the prefix “Royal” to the Gardens in 1967 and is shown at Government House on her 1977 tour), is officiatin­g at the gardens next week; autumn tones of the Japanese maples fringe the traditiona­l Yatsuhashi bridge in the Japanese Garden; a family photo contribute­d by Roxanne Steenberge­n of herself and siblings at the gardens in 1965, featured in The Gardens: Celebratin­g Tasmania’s Botanical Treasure 1818-2018.

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