Useful Information
Peony Valley
Peony Valley is open throughout June each year during normal Plant Centre opening hours. We have a good selection of plants available to purchase in the Plant Centre or you can order online.
We would like to suggest visiting peony valley between the 4th - 20th June to view the most number of blooms.
We always suggest phoning first if travelling some distance, as heavy rain can sometimes temporarily lessen the display.
The area is not easily accessible by wheelchair, although in dry weather you may drive down to the collection (by arrangement).
One of the original features of the nursery which we have been very keen to reinstate is "Peony Valley", a 10 acre field gently sloping on each side to its middle through which runs a brook. This field had held a representative selection of the best of Kelways peonies since the 1880's. The London to Penzance railway line crosses the end of the valley and in the nursery's heyday a temporary station called "Peony Valley Halt" was erected every June. Trains would stop there and Ladies and Gentlemen would stroll through the lines of flowers taking in the scent, maybe purchasing tins of 'Peony Valley Talcum Powder and Beauty Products' before boarding the train again.
The present collection of 320 varieties was planted in 1995. We hope to add more varieties during 2009. The bulk of the collection consist of extremely rare historic varieties unique to Kelways.
In 2000 Peony Valley was recognized as a National Collection by the NCCPG. We spent many days at flowering time checking the flowers against their descriptions in James Kelways copperplate handwriting in the enormous 9kg tome entitled Kelways "Peony Bible". This has proved a mammoth task as inevitably some rogues were found and some varieties appeared different to their original description especially in colour. Sometimes only one plant was left of a particular variety. Other times pleasant surprises were made. We thought "Kelways' White Lady", had been lost forever, but she turned up in a bed with 'King Arthur'! We began a friendly correspondence with Margaret Baber who holds a national collection of Peonies in Gloucester, about discrepancies with different varieties. The problem we both have with the older Victorian varieties of peonies is that there are few surviving written descriptions, even fewer photographs, and of course no surviving Kelways' to help!
We are also endeavoring to find the biographical information behind the names of the varieties. Some are very straightforward, others more taxing. For example, who were 'Mrs Beerbohm Tree', and 'Lottie Dawson Rea', and how did they come to have peonies named for them?
We also maintain a third rather more private peony collection as caretakers of the Kelway family memorial in our local churchyard. There are two underground vaults where approximately 25 family members are buried with a 12ft high needle-like monolith in gleaming white marble beside the main road through Langport. We have planted the ground above the vaults with 40 of James Kelway's most supreme peonies, and have included where possible peonies named for the people buried here. Reading the inscriptions, particularly of those who died tragically young, it has been quite poignant reuniting some of these special plants with the family, to whom those of us at Kelways today, owe so much.
