Monday, October 21, 2013

Learn basic woodturning skills at Cambo Estate with Jon Warnes We will be working in the new woodturning workshop and using timber grown on the estate. Students will be introduced to wood selection and preparation, methods of work holding on the lathe, safe use and selection of tools and a range of sharpening techniques. Students will be able to have a go at a range of simple projects and take home completed items. No previous experience is needed but hurry to book as places are very limited. Sessions run from 10.30 am to 12.30 and 1.30 – 3.30 pm every Thursday. Call 01333 450054 to book

Tutor Jon Warnes has been working with wood for over 20 years. He is particularly interested in working with “green” (recently cut) wood as it is beautiful to turn and produces minimal dust. He has been making indoor and outdoor furniture to commission and also carves spoons. jon.warnes@zen.co.uk

Carpentry at Cambo

Would you like to learn basic carpentry skills? 
Using hand tools we will work on different projects starting with Adirondack chairs. These comfortable and stylish chairs look great and are easy to make. If we have time, we will move on to other projects such as bench making, carving and shed making. No previous experience is needed and you will be introduced to hand skills such as sawing, measuring and sharpening which you can use at home on your own projects. We will be working in the Joiner’s Shop at the old Sawmill with its recently installed solar lighting. There is no charge for this course. We meet every Tuesday 10am. 
To book a place call 01333 450054. 

Tutor Jon Warnes has been working with wood for over 20 years. He is particularly interested in working with “green” (recently cut) wood as it is beautiful to turn and produces minimal dust. He has been making indoor and outdoor furniture to commission and also carves spoons. jon.warnes@zen.co.uk

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Glingbobs and Tootflints

What a great day out for our guests from Homestart and Families First.  Everyone looks like they had great fun joining in with storytelling, crafty workshops, marshmallow toasting, exploring the woods and searching for new homes for all the Glingbobs and Tootflints.


Created with flickr slideshow.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

The Cambo Canter

Sunday 29 September
The Cambo Canter - our first Fun run!
What a great day. The sun even shone for the 60 runners that participated. Well done everyone.  Not forgetting all the supporters and helpers who turned up to cheer everyone on.
Keep an eye on our events list for more fun things to do.
Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run

Cambo Fun Run



Wednesday, August 28, 2013

The Cambo Canter

Exciting, Scenic, Multi-terrain Fun Run for all the Family


Cambo Institute, with some advice and help from Fife AC members, have organised a Fun Run for all the Family on Sunday 29 September.  The 2k and 5k routes will take runners on a ‘scenic, multi-terrain’ route round Cambo Estate taking in little known curiosities such as the ‘iron-spring’, a unique water feature in the rocks, and the ‘bundle beech’ (a tree which seemingly grows out of the rock), both to be seen from the new disabled access path alongside the burn, the Skyrian foals, who may want to join in the race, the Cambo pigs, woodlands, gardens and even a glimpse of the sea.  Covering the estate, the course will be a real multi-terrain challenge taking in traditional woodland paths, tracks and field.


The races are open to all, providing the opportunity for all the family to take part.  Entry for adults will be £3.00 and for children (under 16) £1.50.  Registration will take place on the day at Cambo House from 10.00am to 10.50am, with the 2k race starting at 11.00am and the 5k at 11.30am.  Both races will finish at Cambo Stables where refreshments will be served.

Friday, August 23, 2013

Great Review In The Telegraph

Scotland's most magical walled gardens

Gardens north of the border are just reaching their peak. Vanessa Berridge scouts five of Scotland's walled gardens and finds a wealth of beauty and history.

Mount Stuart’s formal style
Top spot: Mount Stuart’s formal style Photo: Andrea Jones
Now is a good time to see many Scottish gardens at their best, when many more southerly plots are looking frazzled. Most Scottish gardeners contend with bracing weather, and need protecting walls. Within these enclosures, however, is immense variety in layout and planting, as shown by these historic gardens.
Edzell Castle in Angus
PIC: ANDREA JONES
I visited the walled garden at Edzell Castle in Angus on a day of horizontal rain. Nevertheless, it was hard not to be compelled by the garden's strong, simple outlines and its powerful symbolism. The castle, a craggy ruin for more than 250 years, stands amid farmland, sheltered behind wooded slopes. By some miracle, the mottled sandstone walls survived and Historic Scotland now runs both the garden and castle.
These walls are all that remain of a garden conceived in 1604 by Sir David Lindsay, to demonstrate to Westminster the intellectual sophistication of the Scottish aristocracy after James VI of Scotland's accession to the English throne. Figures carved into the walls personify the liberal arts and the cardinal virtues, while the universe is shown with the Earth at its centre. Family history is celebrated in niches planted with yellow tagetes and blue and white lobelia, the Lindsay colours.
Lindsay's garden had disappeared beneath 19th-century borders, so Historic Scotland reconstructed a 17th-century parterre, framed by knee-high hedges of box. The mottoes of Sir David Lindsay and his wife are spelt out in box around four wedge-shaped beds planted with roses. Chequerboards of box reflect the pattern of the walls, while in triangular corner beds, dwarf box is clipped into two thistles, a rose and a fleur-de-lis to represent the Union of the Crowns in 1603.
Edzell Castle, Edzell, Angus (01356 648631; historic-scotland.gov.uk). Open every day, April 1 to September 30, 9.30am-5.30pm.
Kellie Castle in Fife
PIC: ANDREA JONES
The Firth of Forth can be glimpsed from Kellie Castle in Fife, a splash of blue beyond its stone walls. The Scottish architect Sir Robert Lorimer spent his childhood here, his late-19th-century restoration of castle and garden inspiring his subsequent work at Earlshall, Hill of Tarvit and Formakin. To a 17th-century framework he added a central walkway, a summer house and corner gardens, creating a compactly pretty Arts and Crafts garden.
On a central lawn, encircled by a seat, stands an ancient apple tree. From there paths of grass and gravel lead out, flanked by lichened fruit trees and vegetable beds interplanted with flowers. Structure is given by box edging, by yew enclosing a stone bowl carved by Hew Lorimer, by cordons of pears and fan-trained apples, and by kiwis, figs and peaches on the south-facing walls.
Kellie Castle, Pittenweem, Fife (0844 493 2184; nts.org.uk). Garden open all year, 9.30am-6pm (or dusk if earlier).
  • Mount Stuart, Isle of Bute (main pic, top)
On the other side of Scotland, Mount Stuart, ancestral home of the Bute family, stands on the Isle of Bute, its 18th-century landscape garden and lime tree avenue sloping down to the Clyde. The kitchen garden was built in the 1870s, at the same time as the red sandstone Gothic palace that replaced a Georgian mansion destroyed by fire. Along its south-facing wall are trained plums and damsons above a border of lavenders and sage. It is enclosed on the other three sides by beech hedges; these green walls shelter planting that thrives in the gravelly peat.
The remodelling of the Victorian garden by Rosemary Verey in 1990 was triggered by the 6th Marquess's purchase of a large glass pavilion from the 1988 Glasgow Garden Festival. She surrounded it with box beds to echo the pattern of the paths through the adjacent pinetum, with vegetables laid out within in parallel lines. Above the pavilion are two fruit cages in beech hedge compartments, while below are an orchard of apples, pears and cherries, and a simple grass labyrinth.
Tender plants from around the world are grown inside the glass pavilion.
In 2000, James Alexander-Sinclair sensibly softened the garden's harder edges by turning several vegetable beds into herbaceous borders for a bravura August display of chrysanthemums, dahlias, grasses and foliage.
Mount Stuart, Isle of Bute (01700 503877; mountstuart.com). Open from April to October 31, 10am-6pm.
Cambo Gardens, Fife
PIC: ANDREA JONES
By contrast with Mount Stuart's strict geometry, the two-and-a-half-acre walled garden at Cambo in the East Neuk of Fife is a place of mystery, with winding paths and hidden seats. It is given rare charm by its burn, which tumbles headlong to the sea, jumping over waterfalls and beneath the Georgian, rose-clad, wrought-iron bridges that predate the early-1800s garden. The Erskines have owned the estate since 1668, although the house was rebuilt after a fire in 1878. House and garden are separated by woodland, carpeted in February by the snowdrops for which Cambo is famous.
Sir Peter Erskine came to the helm in 1976, and his wife, Catherine, has developed the snowdrop business and transformed the walled garden. Instead of serried rows of dahlias, bedding plants, fruit and vegetables, Catherine and head gardener Elliott Forsyth have created a garden for all seasons, mastering the art of successive flowering, yet with a climax in August and September. Relaxed and naturalistic planting combines the best of modern design with an underlying sense of tradition. A nepeta walk slices through the garden, with alliums, hardy geraniums and roses scrambling over old apple trees. The dazzling ornamental potager is laid out in a flowing mix of vegetables, annuals and perennials.
A new Prairie Garden, with North American species grown at Cambo from seed, links the walled garden to the Georgian stables, soon to be restored with Heritage Lottery funding.
Cambo, St Andrews, Fife (01333 450054; camboestate.com). Open daily, 10am-5pm. Free tours every Tuesday, March to October.
Castle of Mey, Caithness
PIC: ALAMY
This garden, on the tip of the mainland, faces due north over the Pentland Firth. Salt winds whip in from the sea, yet there is a warm microclimate in this two-acre garden that would not exist were it not shielded by a 15ft wall and tucked into the lee of the castle.
When the late Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother bought Mey in 1952, the garden was a wilderness, which she reclaimed, paying her last visit only five months before her death. Her favourite place was a south-facing bench in the Shell Garden overlooking rose beds and nasturtiums, growing up like a hedge of colour. She knew the name and place of every plant, and changes were made at the gardeners' peril.
Morning and Chilean glory are trained up inside the greenhouse, while outside a ledge is filled with tubs of trailing lobelia, petunias and helichrysum, and annuals are planted beneath in summer. Honeysuckle, clematis and buddleia clamber over arches, and wall-backed beds are a mass of herbaceous perennials.
Working rather than merely ornamental vegetable beds are rotated on a three to four-yearly basis, and fruit cages are filled with raspberries, strawberries, gooseberries and currants. The down-to-earth practicality of this garden belies its royal ownership.
Castle of Mey, Thurso, Caithness (01847 851473; castleofmey.org.uk). Open from May 1 to September 30, 10am-5pm.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Songs and Plays of Noel Coward

Red Wine Productions Present
Summer Revue - A Talent to AmuseA fantastic first night.  If you missed it you can still get tickets for Wednesday!














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Friday, July 5, 2013

Heritage Lottery Fund awards £1.2m Funding for Cambo Stables Project


Cambo Institute in Fife has been awarded £1.2m by Heritage Lottery Fund towards the creation of an education and training centre at Cambo Estate.The centre will be based at the restored Georgian Stables, and the Glasshouses in the walled garden, giving the buildings a new lease of life and a sustainable future.

The Institute has already embarked on the major task of raising the £1.9m additional funding required to match the grant from Heritage Lottery Fund and to date has pledges and donations for £850,000 from trusts, foundations, legacies, donations from Friends of Cambo and fundraising events.

Established in 1998, the Institute now provides a host of learning and volunteering opportunities in heritage, the environment, arts, culture and horticulture.

The renowned gardens and snowdrop woods, now with a worldwide reputation, are increasingly used to introduce a wide range of art forms to visitors and will host an exciting European premiere of Inuksuit in partnership with East Neuk Festival on Saturday 6 July.

Sir Peter Erskine, Chairman of Cambo Institute, who was delighted to hear of Heritage Lottery Fund’s support for their exciting plans said:

“Our aim at Cambo is not only to enhance the visitor’s experience with arts activities but also to ‘turn the clock back’ on the estate and recreate the opportunities that would have been available to local people in the community 100 years ago, providing training, apprenticeships and supported employment.

The Cambo Stables Project will create an education and visitor hub with the facilities to expand current activities, safeguard public access and involvement for the future and provide an income to ensure its sustainable future”

Colin McLean, Head of the Heritage Lottery Fund in Scotland, said:
“Our heritage offers a rich resource for skills and education so HLF is delighted to support Cambo Estate where it is being used in such an innovative way. The gardens provide powerful and memorable experiences for young people, making learning fun and opening their eyes to the natural heritage which surrounds them. We applaud the commitment of the team at Cambo and are delighted that even more people will now benefit from the work being done.”

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

East Neuk Festival




East Neuk Festival Family Day at Cambo Estate – Saturday 6th July.
www.eastneukfestival.com
Cambo opens its doors to East Neuk Festival on Saturday 6th July with fun packed events for all the family. Everything from face-painting, colouring in to building a giant nest and stories from celebrated children’s authors, Vivian French and David Campbell. Mara Artisan Seaweeds will be leading a workshop and show you where to find nature’s wild bounty and other intriguing delicacies.
And for the adults, Cambo House will host a range of literary events with some of the UK’s leading nature writers. We also have two cutting edge music concerts by John Luther Adams. The UK premiere of Inuksuit with 30 percussionists in the walled garden and his highly acclaimed songbirdsongs over at Cambo Barn. Where else could you get all that?

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Rose Festival

Roses, roses, roses.... Yes our Rose Festival starts this weekend. Be sure to pop along.
The gardens are looking amazing now and we still have lots of free tulips available for our Friends of Cambo Season Ticket holders.

Don't worry if you don't have a ticket you can still collect tulips for a small donation to our charity - Cambo Institute.  See www.camboinstitute.org.uk for more informtion.
Festival dates : 21 June to 7 July 10am to 5pm every day

Tips from the locals

Tips from the locals: Fife
A great deal of information about Fife in one blog.  Oh yes, and we are featured too.

Friday, June 7, 2013

Swimming out of the Frame by Pauline Castaing

New Exhibition in Cambo House   4 -14 June 2013

Pauline has been living, and working, in St Andrews for the past  few months and the work she has done is in itself an allegory of her own ‘adventurous escape’ from the big city to the ‘nature’ of Scotland.  Previously her sculptural work has always dealt with the various traps man makes for himself in life.  However the long constrained characters she represents are now breaking the boundaries, literally swimming out of the borders of the frames in her new wall sculptures and watercolour paintings which depict travellers struggling their way out towards the sea……

Pauline will be returning to Paris after the exhibition to prepare for a major exhibition in Paris in September.




Exhibition Launch goes well.  Even the weather turned up!






Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Friends of Cambo Season Ticket Special Offer

Don't miss out. Free coffee and cake for everyone who becomes a Friend of Cambo Season Ticket holder this week.  It's only £15 for a single ticket and £25 for a double (admits you and a guest).
As a ticket holder you will have entry into the gardens as often as you wish (until expiry date), 5% off at plant sales and even more discount on event tickets. BUY YOURS NOW

List of events

Updated list of events for everyone.  Give us a call to book your space or you can book some of our events online here.

21 June to 7 JulyRose FestivalHistoric Rose Collection - Over 100 climbers and ramblers scramble through trees, over ropes, along bridges etc
Daily 10am to 5pm

Monday 8 July - Monday 22 July -Monday 5 August
Summer Woodland ClubFor more information and to book your childs place contact Chris Childe
01337 830621 or 07587 893190 chris.childe_education@yahoo.co.uk

Sunday 28 July
Effective Theming and Plant SelectionTalk and tour of the garden with Head Gardener Elliott Forsyth
Tickets: £15.00 (RHS members and Friends of Cambo Gardens £12.50)
2.00pm to 4pm

Sunday 25 August
Low Maintenance Gardening
An indepth look at key aspects of low maintenance gardening with Head Gardener Elliott Forsyth
Tickets: £15.00 (RHS members and Friends of Cambo Gardens £12.50)
2.00pm to 4pm
7 to 28 September
Learn from an Expert - 
Practical Basic Gardening Course with Alan Graham (former Head Gardener at Craigtoun and Chelsea Gold Medallist)
Four part course Saturdays 2 to 23 September
10 am to 12pm
Cost of Course £48.00
Just bring your gardening gloves and boots!

14 & 15 September 

Dry Stone Walling
For more information and to book visit www.dswa.org.uk

Friday 27 September‘So many plants, so little space’ with Bob Brown an entertaining and down-to-earth gardener guaranteed to inspire any gardener. An RHS Growing for Success Talk
Tickets: £18.00 includes wine and nibbles and access to the Walled Garden (RHS members and Friends of Cambo Gardens £15.00)
6.30 for 7pm (gardens open from 5.00pm)

Sunday 13 October
Woodfair & Octoberfest

Workshops, activities and stalls for all the family including DSWA taster sessions.  12 to 4pm

November – every Wednesday
Cambo House Uncovered
In support of Cambo Institute
Tour of Cambo House with a member of the family.
Tickets £9.50 and includes coffee and shortbread.

9 November
Cambolicious
Craft Beer Festival
Music – Food – Delicious Beer!

Sunday 17 November (11 to 4pm)
Christmas Food and Craft Fair
Local crafts and delicacies
Seasonal music and entertainment