Image: Joe Rey Photography / Shutterstock.
Image: Joe Rey Photography / Shutterstock.

King Charles: first recipient of Sycamore Gap seedling

3 min


Future sapling to be planted in Windsor Great Park

The first successful seedling nurtured from seeds collected from the Sycamore Gap Tree was presented to His Majesty The King by the National Trust. The gift was in honour of this year’s Celebration Day.

Celebration Day is an annual day which aims to encourage everyone to take time out of their day to remember and celebrate the lives of those no longer here.

The 15 metre tall sycamore was previously a much-loved feature in the landscape, which stood proudly on Hadrian’s Wall in Northumberland.

The King, who is Patron of the conservation charity and a long-time environmentalist, also confirmed that the seedling will be planted when it has matured into a sapling in Windsor Great Park.

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The charity says that it’s envisaged visitors to the Park ‘will see it as a symbol of the hope and beauty that can come from loss.’

The hope is that once the tree has established that in time the wind will help ensure its seeds are even more widely distributed with its roots being from the past but where it can flourishing in the present and be carried forward into the future.

Director of Gardens and Parklands at the National Trust, Andy Jasper, with the first Sycamore Gap seedling at the Chelsea Flower Show last week. Image: Ann-Marie Powell.

New tree to be seen by ‘many thousands each year’

‘It is wonderful news that His Majesty will one day have the very first sapling grown from this iconic tree,’ says Hilary McGrady, Director General of the National Trust.

‘The new tree will be seen by many thousands each year and will be the first of many Sycamore Gap saplings planted at different places, in Northumberland and beyond.’ 

‘The swell of emotion we saw after the sycamore was felled goes to show how personally connected we all are to our natural heritage.’

‘These new green shoots are keeping the story of the Sycamore Gap alive, and are serving as a reminder of the simple, and much-needed hope, joy and respite that nature can bring.’ 

The seedling is one of a collection of small seedlings and buds propagated at the conservation charity’s Plant Conservation Centre in Devon. 

So far, charity experts have successfully propagated more than 100 seedlings and more than 40 cuttings from the felled tree.

The public received a first glimpse of the first Sycamore Gap seedling in the National Trust show garden at the Chelsea Flower Show.

Public reaction to first seedling to successfully germinate

‘It was quite overwhelming and incredibly humbling to see the public’s reaction to the very first seedling to successfully germinate and grow at our special plant conservation centre, on display at the Chelsea Flower Show,’ says Andy Jasper, Director of Gardens and Parklands at the National Trust.

‘Personally, it gave me so much joy to tell its story to the thousands of visitors to the stand – and to witness and to feel the outpouring of emotions first-hand of what this tiny sapling means to so many across the country.’

The seedling will continue to be cared for by expert horticulturists until it is ready for planting. Planting plans for the other surviving seedlings will be announced by the charity later this year including in Northumberland.

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