Tel: 01983 855397 info@botanic.co.uk

The Tunnel

Our regular Tunnel Tours are currently postponed. Please email foh@botanic.co.uk if you'd like to enquire about a private tour.

Ventnor Botanic Garden has many secrets, some dating back to the days of the Royal National Hospital that formerly stood on the site. Underground caverns, secret passageways and a tunnel through the cliff can be found by the visitors to the Garden.

A proposal to dig a tunnel from the gardens down to the shore was mooted in the late 1800s.  The Royal National Hospital annual report for 1875 states that “There can be no doubt that if the patients were able to obtain free access to the shore it would be very conducive alike to their recovery and their enjoyment.” Money for the tunnel at that time was not forthcoming and although it was built later, its function was by no means the rather romantic conception that has given rise to a good deal of speculation and comment; it was in fact used as a conduit for rubbish that was propelled through it and dumped into the sea. Steel tramlines are still visible on the floor. Exactly when the tunnel was built is unknown; possibly it was in relation to a new system of drainage and sewage disposal that was completed sometime in the 1880s. The tunnel was closed at both ends in 1940.

The 350 foot long vaulted roofed tunnel exits through the cliff midway down and is inaccessible. DO NOT attempt to locate the exit, or try to enter unless with one of our guides, as the cliff is extremely dangerous. Bolted gates are also in place for safety.

 

VBG Friends photography competition

The photographic competition “A Year in Ventnor Botanic Garden” announced in the last ventnorensis is happening from 1 April 2016, the closing date for entries is 31 March 2017. Photographs for the competition must be taken in Ventnor Botanic Garden, there are four...

A threat to our Geranium maderense

Chris has planted out several hundred plants of the tender Geranium maderense along the roadside outside of the Gardens. They have survived two winters and by May they should be putting on a spectacular  show of flowers. Nothing quite like this will have been seen in...

Magnolias at VBG

4Magnolias are well known as the earliest flowering trees each year at VBG and it is a definite sign that early spring is just around the corner! Magnolia campbellii subsp. mollicomata Our Magnolia campbellii Alba are from the western Himalaya, (Nepal to Assam) and...

Trialing Mediterranean orchids

The Olive Grove already contains some plants which are native to open ground along the Mediterranean coast and we are looking to expand the range of species. One group of plants which are particularly characteristic are the Ophrys group of orchids which are very much...

Limited Edition Botanic Pale Ale has arrived!

Our Original Botanic Ale has proven so popular this year that we have made the decision to develop a Limited Edition Pale Ale with our Friends Goddards Brewery here on the Isle of Wight. The beer is in the style of an American Pale Ale, brewed with our own handpicked...

Extraordinary weather continues

Weather Update Throuighout the land we've seen examples of extraordinary weather affecting the UK. We seeAs of 9th January 2016 we've not had a frost for nearly three years, the last recorded on 18th January 2013. A look at the remarkable weather for December 2015...

Weather Blog

A look at the remarkable weather for December 2015 from Chris Watts, VBG's weather recorder Here is a quick assessment of the extraordinary weather we experienced in December. The mean temperature,11.9C, was up by 5.4C over the 1921-50 average for the Hospital. Since...

Mirror Orchid flowers at VBG

Mirror Orchid Ophrys speculum flowers The unbelievably mild weather has brought forward many spring flowering plants at the Garden, but perhaps nothing more exquisite than the Mirror Orchid, Ophrys speculum. These are native to the Mediterranean where they love to...

New Years Day Flower Count

287 different plants in bloom on New Years Day! On New Year's Day we counted how many plants are in bloom at VBG and came to a record number of 287! This is a duty we carry out on an annual basis for fun, though recently we have seen trends linked to climate change....

2016 Annual Membership Passes

Visit more, save more and support the Garden   Here at VBG we encourage our visitors to come back again and again throughout the year. Whatever the season and whatever the weather, there is always something special to see at Britain’s hottest Garden where the...

First record of alien millipede at VBG

First scientific record for continental millipede at VBG. A visiting scientist, Tony Barber from the British Myriapod & Isopod Group, has discovered a millipede at Ventnor Botanic Garden, usually only found in Italy. This is the first definitive record from the...

Garden Blog

Having the Insula exhibition at VBG by Perdita Sinclair led to thoughts about seed dispersal by sea. Of all the strategies evolved by flowering plants to disperse their seed, the method with potential to spread furthest yet most treacherously, must be by sea.  The...

Dicksonia Tree Fern Regeneration

New young Dicksonia naturalise in Australian Section August 11th Dicksonia antarctica Tree Fern Regeneration Since we planted our Dicksonia antarctica in 2005 we've been keeping an eye open to see of we have any natural regeneration.  We had assessed the viability of...

Contact us

Refund Policy

Tel: 01983 855397  |  Ventnor Botanic Garden Community Company C.I.C  | Company Number: 07976468 | Registered Address: Undercliff Drive, Ventnor, Isle of Wight, PO38 1UL