
In fact we were very lucky to complete our visit to the garden (which was open to the public as part of the National Garden Scheme) in the dry. We really enjoyed the vegetable garden, the wild meadows, the wild flower garden and the old English roses as well as the butterflies and insects.




Meadow brown butterfly

As well as the lovely refreshments (coffee and home made cakes) there were stands from the Hawk and Owl Trust and Owl Occasions although the few owls on display looked very nervous and, to me, sad.

Great grey owl
Barn owl
Acton Court’s website (https://www.actoncourt.com/) says the following of the history of the manor house:
“In 1535, one of England’s most colourful kings, Henry VIII, came to stay at Acton Court with his second wife, Anne Boleyn, while on his summer Progress around the West Country. The owner of Acton Court, Nicholas Poyntz, wanted to impress his sovereign, so for Henry’s pleasure, he built a magnificent new East Wing on to the existing moated manor house. The new wing was a splendid testament to Nicholas Poyntz’s loyalty to his King. He went to immense trouble and expense to impress Henry, decorating the state apartments lavishly and fashionably. He was well rewarded as it is thought he was knighted during the royal visit.
Today, the East Wing which was built in just nine months comprises most of what remains at Acton Court. It offers a rare example of 16th century royal state apartments and some decorations which are said to be the finest of their kind in England.”

Acton Court is open to the public for three National Garden Scheme Days in June, and three Heritage Open Days in September.





Great white egret flying in
Bad hair day for the great white egret
Great white egret checking its hair
Great white egret fishing for his lunch
Close up of GWE
GWE and mute swan



Mute swans
Shelduck
Canada geese
Canada geese
These last two photos were my best efforts at digiscoping


The grey heron flew in as I arrived
A whitethroat made a lot of noise above the pond





Flowers of so many colours
Insects too
Canada geese



Moorhens young and old
Swallows
Mallards



And the grey heron kept moving around the pond in search of his supper







The beautiful meadows and reed beds on the edges of the Severn Estuary
A distant curlew
Adult pied wagtail
Juvenile pied wagtail
Linnet
Oystercatcher
Avocet
Shelduck with ducklings
Shelduck
Common crane
Barnacle geese
Greylag goose
Mute swan
Gadwall






Great Spotted Woodpecker with chick



Great White Egret
Great Crested Grebe with chicks (on her back)



Female pochard


Marsh harrier
Little egret




Mottisfont
Riverside walk along the River Test
Fish were easy to spot in the shallow river bed
The shepherd’s hut among some of the splendid trees (by all accounts there are more than 35 species of trees).


Some of the roses in the walled garden

Irises are a main feature at this time of the year.
It’s not all roses
Still room for birds (which I found difficult to photograph with a wide angle lens)
Mottisfont in the spring sunshine
Corfe Castle
Part of the heathland walk
Stonechat
Stonechat
A very noisy chiffchaff
Great spotted woodpecker
Dunnock in the car park
Goldfinch in the car park




Oystercatcher


Black-headed gull
Windsor Great Park with Windsor Castle in the background
The start of the tour













European robin
Family of Egyptian geese
Pheasant
Jackdaw
Jackdaw
Female blackbird
A very out-of-focus photo of red kite (which surprised me as it flew very close overhead)
Parakeet (now quite common in London)
The modern visitors’ centre























Whitethroat
Rock pipit
Rock pipit
Stonechat
Stonechat
Stonechat
Stonechat
Shelduck
Guillemots
Stonechat
Sedge warbler
Grey heron
Little egret
Grey heron
Grey heron
Dunnock
House sparrrow