Eastwoodhill Arboretum

Eastwoodhill is the national arboretum of New Zealand. It covers 131 hectares (1.31 km2) and is located 35 km northwest of Gisborne, in the hill country of Ngatapa. It was founded in 1910 by William Douglas Cook. Cook's life work would become the creation of a giant collection of Northern Hemisphere temperate climate zone trees in New Zealand – a dream that would eventually cost him all his money – buying and importing thousands of trees from New Zealand and British nurseries.

When his health deteriorated in the 1960s, he sold his property to H. B. (Bill) Williams, who established the Eastwoodhill Trust Board in 1975 as a charitable trust, donating the arboretum to the trust to safeguard it for future generations.

Of all the arboreta of the Southern Hemisphere, Eastwoodhill Arboretum is said to have the largest collection of trees of the temperate climate zone of the Northern Hemisphere.[1] It includes some 4,000 different trees, shrubs and climbers, including 170 species currently on the IUCN world endangered species list.[2]

Eucalyptus growing near the entrance of Eastwoodhill Arboretum.

History

Founding

The history of Eastwoodhill Arboretum will remain permanently connected with the life of William Douglas Cook (1884–1967). Douglas Cook, Cookie to his close friends, was born 28 October 1884 at New Plymouth, New Zealand. In 1910, he established a farm of 250 hectares in the Ngatapa settlement, calling the property 'Eastwoodhill', after his mother's family home in Thornliebank near Glasgow.[3] The first foundations for the present arboretum were laid then. Douglas Cook started creating a garden immediately. He planted trees, but also roses, flowers, shrubs and vegetables.

During the first World War, Cook volunteered to serve in the army. In France, he lost the sight of his right eye and subsequently stayed in Scotland with his family to recover. He was inspired by the gardens and parks of England and also came in contact with Sir Arthur William Hill, who would later become director of Kew Gardens.[4]

In 1918, back at Eastwoodhill, Douglas Cook started planting thousands of Pinus radiata for wood production and for fire-wood. He also planted Eucalyptus viminalis and E. macarthurii. He also started creating parkland with, amongst others, Platanus orientalis, different kinds of Ulmus, Acer pseudoplatanus and A. platanoides. In this year the lombardy poplars were also planted alongside 'Poplar Avenue' up the later Main Entrance Drive. In 1919 he ordered 1,996 trees and shrubs and in 1920 a total of 3,387, of which some two and a half thousand trees and shrubs were intended for the garden.[5] The plantings included 'Cabbage Tree Avenue' (restored in 2006).
Planting was interrupted for journeys to England in 1922 and 1924 but in 1926 the garden was extended with thousands of tulips, hyacinths and peonies from The Netherlands.[6] "Then he got serious," said his biographer and former curator Garry Clapperton in an interview with John Mortimer. He started designing Corner Park, and continued with Cabin Park, the Long Road to Poland, Douglas Park and the Cathedral.[7]

Extension

In 1927, Bill Crooks started working at Eastwoodhill, eventually staying on for 47 years. He did most of the farming, so Cook had more time for his beloved trees. The planting of the 'parks' (parts of which are nowadays the arboretum) started around 1927. Around this time, the collecting of different tree species also began for Cook.[8] Through the years the number of plant specimen collected reached immense proportions, with about 5,000 different taxa at the maximum point, at large costs.[9]

Cook "continued to spend up large on plants in the 1930s, far more than the farm earned. In 1936, he spent £85 (about a working man's wages for half a year) at one New Plymouth nursery alone and, by the end of his life, he had spent on average £1000 annually on plants from overseas and New Zealand".[10]

In the 1920s, Cook could still finance the expansion of his property from his other income and funds, but in his mid-fifties, he had to sell 925 acres (3.74 km2) of his farmland to get further money for planting new trees in the 'Circus' park.[11] At the end of his life, Douglas Cook had effectively invested all his money in his arboretum. In 1965, he had a heart attack. He never fully recovered from that and died 27 April 1967.[12]

Trust established

Although Eastwoodhill in the 1960s was often praised for its important collection of plants, many people worried about the future of his unique park, especially after Cook got older and started having health problems. In 1965 Heathcote Beetham Williams (referred to as H. B. (Bill) Williams), an entrepreneur from Gisborne, bought the property off Cook with the intention to keep the collection in order, and to guarantee that everyone with interests in plants and trees will be able to visit the arboretum in the future.

Eastwoodhill Trust

In 1975, the "Eastwoodhill Trust Act" passed parliament and the Eastwoodhill Trust Board could be founded. Next, H. B. Williams donated Eastwoodhill to the Board. Williams agreed to the vesting of the property in a Board to be established under a private act, "in the belief that a body so constituted offers the best prospect for the maintenance and development of the arboretum".[13] In 1994, the Act was slightly adapted.

Trust Board

The Trust Board currently has 6 members who represent the following institutions:[14]

Objectives

The objectives of the Trust Board are, according to the Act:[15]

Management

Friends of Eastwoodhill

Shortly after the establishment of the Eastwoodhill Trust, a group of volunteers started to make contributions to the development and maintenance of the arboretum. From 1984, a garden group began caring for the Homestead Garden. In 1985 an organisation was formed to sustain visitors' interest, to build support, to gain donations and to provide information for visitors. The organisation is called the Friends of Eastwoodhill.[16] The 'Friends' publish a newsletter four times a year.[17]

Buildings

The Douglas Cook Centre for Education was opened in 1992 as a venue for seminars.[18] An herbarium was established in 1994. In 1998, an accommodation wing was ready to cater for student groups, botanists and dendrologist and the plant loving public. In 2003, a new visitor centre was opened.

Layout

Trees in Eastwoodhill Arboretum

The arboretum is divided into a number of 'parks'. Each of these parks has its own style and name.

The flatter sections are in:

Steep hills and valley sections are found in:

Collection

Douglas Cook brought a total number of about 5,000 different species and cultivars of trees, shrubs and climbers to Eastwoodhill. A lot of them were imported from well-known English nurseries like Hillier's, Veitch's and Slococks. He also bought many from nurseries in New Zealand like Duncan and Davies in New Plymouth and Harrison's in Palmerston North.

The main focus of the collection is still the trees, shrubs and climbers from the Northern Hemisphere, but nowadays Eastwoodhill has a large collection of native trees, too.

First catalogues

In the beginning of the 1970s, the first catalogue of trees, shrubs and climbers were prepared by Bob Berry. It contained 3,000 different taxa.[19] After the first version of 1972, the catalogue remained the responsibility of Bob Berry until 1986.[20] Nowadays the catalogue is fully computerised, and the responsibility of the curator.

Specializations

The most important genera at Eastwoodhill are:

The "most dramatic time to visit Eastwoodhill is in autumn, when over 100 oaks, nearly as many maples, liquidambars, ash (Fraxinus), ginkgo, and other deciduous trees are in their full glory, contrasting with conifers and almost 300 camellias."[18]

Homestead garden

Close to the entrance of the Arboretum the Homestead Garden is found. It dates from 1910, it covers 1 hectare (0.010 km2), and is maintained by volunteers since 1984.[16] "An ongoing project, the garden provides a fitting introduction to the arboretum and is full of interesting plantings aesthetically combined in a unique setting".[2]

Awards and merits

Footnotes

  1. About Eastwoodhill on the official website of the Arboretum
  2. 1 2 3 Collier 2008, p. 12
  3. Berry 1997, p. 7
  4. Berry 1997, p. 12
  5. Berry 1997, p. 14/15
  6. Berry 1997, p. 16
  7. Mortimer 1997, p. 47
  8. Berry 1997, p. 21
  9. Clapperton 1992, p. 4
  10. Gundry, Sheridan – The colourful story of Eastwoodhill. In: An. 2007, p. 9
  11. Gundry, Sheridan – The colourful story of Eastwoodhill, in: An 2007, p. 10
  12. Berry 1997, p. 57
  13. An. 1975/1994, Preamble
  14. An. 1975/1994, section 4
  15. An. 1975/1994, section 12
  16. 1 2 3 Gundry, Sheridan – The colourful story of Eastwoodhill, in: An 2007, p. 11
  17. Information about the 'Friends of Eastwoodhill' on the official website of the Arboretum; including link to the most recent Newsletter
  18. 1 2 Friar 1996, p. 108
  19. Berry 1972
  20. Berry 1976, Berry 1978, Berry 1980, Berry 1982
  21. Clapperton 1998, p. 39/41
  22. Berry 1997, p. 115

Literature

Catalogues of Eastwoodhill Arboretum, made by Bob Berry

Coordinates: 38°33′51″S 177°43′04″E / 38.564165°S 177.717837°E / -38.564165; 177.717837

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