Skip to main content

We can help you book your perfect break to Tresco. We all live here, so it's our specialist subject!

Call us on +44 (0)1720 422 849 or email us.

By Helicopter - Direct to Tresco

By Helicopter - Direct to Tresco

Fly direct to Tresco with Penzance Helicopters - making the flight to the Isles of Scilly as memorable as the destination

Before you Arrive

Before you Arrive

Our pre-arrival checklist - from letting us know your travel plans to ordering your wine and groceries

Tresco Islandshare

Tresco Islandshare

Own a piece of this unique island, with 40 years of holidays on Tresco as more than just a visitor. Discover Islandshares for sale...

Tresco Offers & Breaks

Tresco Offers & Breaks

From seasonal escapes to wellness and creative breaks and last-minute offers, discover our latest offers & breaks on Tresco Island

Eating

Eating

From beachfront dining to our cosy inn, get a taste for island-inspired dining with a Tresco twist

Grocery

Grocery

Place a pre-arrival grocery order and we'll deliver to your accommodation on your arrival

Events & Experiences

Events & Experiences

From the Low Tide Event to live music, Abbey Garden Theatre and more, discover extraordinary events on the Isles of Scilly

Day Trips to Tresco

Day Trips to Tresco

Whether you're coming from elsewhere on Scilly, or further afield in Devon or Cornwall, a day trip to Tresco is the perfect day out

Abbey Garden Diaries Jan 2025

Garden Student Alice Thompson on finding joy in January

January has a notoriously bad reputation; dark, dreary, and a reluctant return to the grind. The garden is at a stage of dormancy whilst we watch daily for signs of life from the twittering of birds, the evening light expanding incrementally and hints of bulbs pushing their way through the ground to remind us that spring is on its way.

Tresco Abbey Garden, however, is unlike most other gardens in the mainland UK. It’s plant range originates from the Mediterranean basin, boasting species from Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Southern Europe and South America. Although the weather may still be temperamental with rain and strong winds at any given moment, Tresco’s milder climate allows plants from these regions to thrive. Coming from gardens on the mainland, where the autumn and winter months mostly involve letting herbaceous perennials turn shades of brown, show off their seed heads and then die back to nothing, the swathe of evergreen plants at Tresco Abbey Gardens makes me feel like we have almost cheated winter. It isn’t peak season for floriferous plants in the garden here at Tresco, but as the longer days approach the garden is slowly becoming more and more full with colour.

It's hard to miss the cascading flower spikes of the Aloe arborescens at this time of the year. They cover most of the slanted walls and beds across the middle and top terraces of the garden, with their brightly coloured torch light flowers beaming out across the garden. It’s a magical sight, particularly to someone who has never had the chance to see Aloes flowering.

To add to the bright colours in the garden contrasting with an otherwise grey January, dotted throughout the top terrace is possibly my favourite Leucadendron - Leucadendron laureolum. It is a winter flowering shrub from South Africa providing interest with its bright golden foliage zinging in amongst the evergreen canopies. It also makes a lovely golden addition to a bouquet.

Aloe arborescens
Leucadendron laureolum

Before coming to Tresco, I was unaware of South African heathers and the vast number of species within this genus. So many of the Ericas growing here have been flowering since I arrived, but one I urge you to see now is Erica canaliculata. It is a large shrub scattered with sprays of small white flowers covering any inkling of green underneath. Along with the Leucadendrons, I’ve been using them in cut flower bouquets.

Moving away from the top and middle terraces down on to the crossways, I’ve been hypnotised by the white flowers of Drimys winteri. Every time I walk past, I end up taking another photo of the delicate little flowers, propped up on deep red stems. It is endemic to the temperate rainforests of Chile and Argentina and is known for being able to grow in a wider variety of locations including extreme drought and wetlands. This makes it an amazing plant for the ever-changing climate that we are experiencing, being able to subsist in extreme weather conditions.

Coleonema pulchellum is another shrub that I’m excited to see flowering. It’s known commonly as the South African Confetti Bush producing tiny white or pink flowers on the ends of lime green foliage. It’s a familiar plant in the garden working as an informal hedge along the bottom of Neptune’s steps, whilst also creating mound-like structures in borders contrasting with the more common darker foliage of surrounding plants.

Erica canaliculata
Drimys winteri
Coleonema pulchellum

It would be remiss of me not to include Clianthus puniceus, a sprawling shrub commonly known as Kākābeak (or parrot’s beak) endemic to New Zealand. Its flowers look like red chill peppers - or to some, a lobster’s claw - and dangle in clusters from its definitively Fabacaeae (pea family) foliage. When it first came up on one of our plant ident’s, I was sure it originated from Chile or somewhere in South America. My understanding of New Zealand plants has always been associated with shades of green and brown like Corokias, Pittosporums and Coprosma. It is now considered an endangered species very rarely found in the wild.

It's so hard to choose plants to write about because there are so many flowering now that provide winter interest. Chasmanthe aethopica, Aeonium arboreum ‘Atropurpureum’ and Roldana petasitis are quickly coming into bloom whilst the Camellias are winding down after a month of heavy flower production. I cannot forget to mention the magnificent Proteas in which some species seem to flower all year round, giving the red squirrels a sweet treat. There are even Narcissus ‘Scilly White’ flowering in front of the chicken’s coop, providing a homely comfort, amongst the subtropical flora I’m slowly coming to know and love.

Clianthus puniceus

Continue Reading

Stay on Tresco

Winter and Festive breaks are not always available to book online - for cottage stays or New Inn breaks over the winter months please go to Winter on Tresco or call 01720 422849.

Or call +44 (0)1720 422 849