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History of the Centre  

 

 

 

1. Garden of all the trees
2. The Birch garden
3. The Willow garden
4. The Poplar garden
5. The Oak garden
6. The Ash garden
The Interpretive Centre
 
 
 

Gwefan Gymraeg
Welsh Website

      

 

 The Ash Garden

The Laws of Property. This is the furthest and the last in the series of gardens. It was the designer’s intention that the peace and tranquility of this garden would enable the visitor to meditate and reflect on what he/she had already learnt. The flexibility, straightness and grain of the Ash makes it ideal for tools and implements and it has been chosen to represent the laws of property.

 Each animal had its value and compensation had to be paid if it did not come up to standard e.g. The qualities of a mare are to pull a sledge up hill and down hill, and to  carry a load, and to bear foals; if she is not so, if she has been sold  let one-third of her value be returned.

A cat was worth a penny when it was born, two pence when it opened its eyes and four pence when it proved it could kill mice.

The other two plaques refer to the rights regarding taking wood from the forests.

 

 

                             

Title of the ash garden on slate plaque

plaque referring to the value of animals    A quiet and colourful corner near the water pump on the former cattle mart site
 

  One of the plaques regarding the rights of taking wood from the forest

 

 

 

 
interpretive centre from the entrance to the garden

 


St.Mary's Street, Whitland
Carmarthenshire
SA34 0PY
Tel: (01994) 240867
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