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Urquhart Bay Woods
Photograph: Matthew Slowe/Pixabay

The 15 best places to see bluebells across the UK

From surreal Scottish landscapes to rugged clifftops in Wales, here are the best places to see bluebells in the UK

Written by
Alexandra Sims
&
Lucy Lovell
Contributor
Liv Kelly
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British springtime always serves up some dazzling floral treats. From elegant branches of lilac wisteria to heavenly scented lavender fields, there are plenty of flowers worth seeking out across these shores. And one of the country’s favourites wild blooms? The bluebell. 

Every April sees a gorgeous carpet of cobalt emerge across Britain. It takes several years for the bulbs of this protected species to start to bloom and the flowers generally only last a few weeks, but that just makes it all the more magical. Ancient monastic land in Devon, woodland clearings in London, surreal Scottish landscapes and Welsh coastal cliffs all become homes to the elusive wildflower. So, ready to track down some of the beautiful flowers? Here are the best places to see bluebells in the UK.

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Where to see bluebells in the UK

Isabella Plantation, London
Photograph: Laura Nolte/Flickr

1. Isabella Plantation, London

While Richmond Park’s roads can get clogged up with lines of 4x4s, the park’s traffic-free woodland garden, Isabella Plantation, is a real oasis. Planted in the 1830s and opened to the public in 1953, the ornamental woodland garden is full of leafy clearings, ponds and streams and planted with ferns, exotic trees and shrubs. It’s particularly striking when the Bluebell Walk comes to life alongside colourful crops of rhododendrons and magnolias.

📍 Discover the best things to do in London

Blickling Estate, Norfolk
Photograph: Shutterstock

2. Blickling Estate, Norfolk

There are three top spots to see bluebells in the parkland of this bombastic Jacobean mansion. Explore the ancient Great Wood, famous for its jaw-slackening swathes of blue; head to the plane trees in the formal gardens where clusters of the flowers grow, framed by sweeping views of the house and the lake; or stroll down the elegant Temple Walk where, in the 1930s, thousands of bluebell bulbs were taken from the Great Wood and planted along the path.

📍 Discover the best things to do in Norfolk

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Highgate Woods, London
Photograph: Shutterstock

3. Highgate Woods, London

In 1916 the Natural History Society said bluebells were almost extinct in this ancient wood. But it turns out they weren’t giving up without a fight; today they carpet it in a deep blue mass. Enter through the Cranley Gate or Bridge Gate at the north corner of the park to admire the blue blooms before heading down one of the winding trails beneath the hornbeams. You’ll soon forget you’re still in Zone 3 of the metropolis.

Clent Hills, Worcestershire
Photograph: Shutterstock

4. Clent Hills, Worcestershire

This scenic set of hills in the West Midlands, with stunning panoramas over the Cotswolds, Shropshire Hills and Welsh borders, has plenty of top spots to see bluebells. The valley behind the historic monument, the Four Stones, is covered in them come April, as is the aptly named Bluebell Valley near the Nimmings Wood car park. Walton Hill is off the beaten track, but if you do manage to get to it you’ll find open grassland packed with bluebell patches.

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Buckland Abbey, Devon
Photograph: Shutterstock

5. Buckland Abbey, Devon

Built 700 years ago by Cistercian monks, this ancient abbey in Devon’s Tavy Valley is now a museum and house filled with treasures linked to Francis Drake and Rembrandt. But it’s out in the Great North Wood where you’ll find the real riches. Swathes of sapphire blue blooms pop up beneath the trees every spring and there’s intriguing folklore surrounding them. Locals who frequented the woods back in the monks’ time believed that if you could turn a bluebell inside out without tearing it, you would find your true love. Please don’t test it for yourself – it’s strictly no picking.

📍 Discover the best things to do in Devon

Roseberry Topping, Yorkshire
Photograph: Shutterstock

6. Roseberry Topping, Yorkshire

The North York Moors have a lot of rolling green hills, but you can’t miss Roseberry Topping. Sometimes known as Yorkshire’s Matterhorn, it’s spottable a mile off thanks to its distinctive half-cone shape and jagged cliff edge. Come spring, a purple haze of thousands of bluebells coats the undulating ground rolling down from the peak. If you’re looking for the picture-perfect spot, this is it.

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Enys, Cornwall
Photograph: Shutterstock

7. Enys, Cornwall

The ancient gardens at Enys are among the oldest in Cornwall, and they're famed for their spectacular show of bluebells. Highlights include the open meadow where the expanse of blue petals is breathtaking, the orchard with rare Cornish apple trees and a towering Ginkgo biloba which they say is the second tallest in the UK (after the one at Kew). Check out their calendar for family-friendly events and, of course, their annual Bluebell Festival.   

Fairy Glen Falls, Scotland
Photograph: Shutterstock

8. Fairy Glen Falls, Scotland

The Black Isle – a sea-scuffed peninsula deep in the Scottish Highlands – is a fairytale place. Not only is it surrounded by dolphins, lined with pink-tinged beaches and peppered with mysterious Clootie Wells where people hang up rags as part of an ancient Celtic tradition, it’s even home to a Fairy Glen. Hidden away in a pretty woodland filled with rickety wooden bridges, riverside paths and leafy glades, you’ll find the twin waterfalls with water trickling down in a glittering plunge pool. Look out for bluebells that sprout up around them along with primrose, wood sorrel and anemone.

📍 Discover the best things to do in Scotland

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Lanhydrock Estate, Cornwall
Photograph: Shutterstock

9. Lanhydrock Estate, Cornwall

If you go down to the woods on this Cornish country estate, you’re in for a blue surprise. The ancient Great Wood here is filled with bluebells as soon as spring arrives. Hire a bike and ride along the Victorian estate’s famous off-road cycle trails to take in the full crop.

📍 Discover the best things to do in Cornwall

Muncaster Castle and Gardens, Cumbria
Photograph: whitelance100/Flickr

10. Muncaster Castle and Gardens, Cumbria

John Ruskin, the big-dog art critic of the Victorian era, once named the view across the gardens of this thirteenth-century castle the ‘Gateway to Paradise’ – and in the spring it’s not hard to see why. The grassy verges leading up to the ancient stone pile sprout with bluebells in the spring, while the high woodlands on the castle’s 77 acres of ground become a sea of purple-blue.

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Urquhart Bay Woods, Scotland
Photograph: Matthew Slowe/Pixabay

11. Urquhart Bay Woods, Scotland

Squeezed between the Enrick and Coiltie rivers, the whole of this woodland gets completely flooded after heavy rain. It’s one of the best examples of surviving ancient wet woodland in Europe and the soggy ground makes an excellent home for bluebells, which carpet the ground in spring. If the waters are low (and you’re feeling brave enough) you can cross the Coiltie to get to Loch Ness.

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Coed Cefn, Wales
Photograph: Shutterstock

12. Coed Cefn, Wales

As soon as spring hits, thousands of drooping blue beauties take over this enchanting woodland in Wales’ Brecon Beacons. Perched on a hill above the friendly town of Crickhowell, this ancient wood has a canopy of oak and beech trees and a lovely circular walk with views over the Welsh hills. It’s said that if you pick a bluebell, you’ll be led astray by fairies and will wander lost for ever. You may also be fined up to £5,000, so keep those hands to yourself.

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Penderi Cliffs, Wales
Photograph: Jaxbartram/Pixabay

13. Penderi Cliffs, Wales

The sea isn’t the only stretch of blue you’ll find at this pretty coastal spot. In spring, hundreds of bluebells bloom in the oak woodland that clings to the mile-long stretch of cliff between Llanrhystud and Monk’s Cave. Not only is it a unique sight, it’s also a nature reserve: look out for buzzards, kestrels and peregrines circling above the sandy coves. You might even see young grey seals, which are occasionally born at the reserve in spring.

Hole Park, Kent
Photograph: Hole Park Gardens

14. Hole Park, Kent

Bluebell hunters will love Hole Park’s handy ‘bluebell barometer’ which is updated throughout April during its ‘Bluebell Spectacular’ to let visitors know when the flowers are at their best. Once you’ve Instagrammed the heck out of the bluebells, explore the 16 acres of gardens for camellias, wisteria and magnolia, or pop into the tearoom for homemade cake and cream teas.  

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Downhill Demesne, Northern Ireland
Photograph: Derek Lynn/Unsplash

15. Downhill Demesne, Northern Ireland

There’s a haunting beauty to Downhill Demesne, where the ruins of an eighteenth-century mansion lie on a rugged headland looking out onto the North Sea. Once you’ve strolled along the magnificent clifftop walks and explored the sandy beach below, head to the gardens, which (unlike the dilapidated mansion) are full of life. Every spring, snowdrops give way to daffodils which eventually die back to reveal swathes of bluebells. You can see even more in the woodlands behind.

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