Our Latest News
March Brings Breezes Loud and Shrill, Stirs the Dancing Daffodil
March Brings Breezes Loud and Shrill, Stirs the Dancing Daffodil The first daffodils are always such a welcome sight, a flower of renewal and rebirth. They are impossible to ignore as the neon-yellow-ness of the bobbing flower pierces through any shrubbery, dreary garden or woodland as if to say “Spring is coming! Winter has gone - let’s party!” They are hardy flowers but if they bloom too soon in a cold spring they can become frozen and wilt. The bulbs need the cold of a winter chill to break...
Breaking News: Major National Funding Secures Emergency Works at Bannockburn House
The Rescue Begins Major National Funding Secures Emergency Works at Bannockburn House Good news really does come in threes! Bannockburn House Trust is delighted to announce that three major heritage funders have awarded a combined £325,432 to support urgent emergency works at Bannockburn House. It is critical first step in what is expected to become one of the largest community-led conservation and restoration programmes ever undertaken in Scotland. This support from The National...
Winter’s End & Spring’s Beginning
Winter’s End and Spring’s Beginning This seems to have been a long, dreary winter. For us here, in central Scotland, our photos record some snow and the there were some sunny, frosty days but it is hard to recall them as there has been such a long stretch of grey, damp dullness. But Winter is coming to an end and hopefully warmer days lie ahead. Of course, one of the first signs of the changing season is the lengthening days and lighter evenings and then with no fuss nor any sense of...
New Find in the Bed Linked to Bonnie Prince Charlie at Bannockburn House Deepens the Assassination Attempt Mystery
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT Bannockburn, Stirling - [4 February 2026] Researchers at Bannockburn House have identified new evidence in the suspected assassination attempt on Bonnie Prince Charlie during his stay in January 1746. A lead ball consistent with 18th century shot, believed to be from a second musket or pistol fired into the room, was discovered within a section of the bed traditionally associated with Prince Charles Edward Stuart. Adding evidence of a second shooter during the...
Possets, Princes, & A Proper Bannockburn House Night In…
Possets, Princes, & A Proper Bannockburn House Night In... Winter has always had a way of creeping into the bones. Long before central heating, antibiotics, or the luxury of staying home with a hot water bottle, people in the 17th and 18th centuries still battled the same seasonal miseries we know today. The coughs, chills, fatigue, and that unmistakable feeling of “I’m coming down with something” were as common then as they are today. In a world where medicine was limited and the...
Welcome to National Tree Week. – Ancient Lime Trees
Welcome to National Tree Week. - Ancient Lime Trees - by Margaret Pollock Next time you visit us, see if you can spot our two majestic rows of veteran Lime trees (Tilia x europaea). They create a wind break and originally marked out some of the boundaries of the Estate. We are blessed that 40 of these Ancient trees are still thriving and they are classed as an ‘Irreplaceable habitat’ for wildlife. There were probably planted about 340 years ago, as the House...
Welcome to National Tree Week. – News From Bannockburn House Gardens
Welcome to National Tree Week. The Bannockburn House Trust Garden Blog - by Margaret Pollock Trees are special. They store carbon, replenish oxygen and conserve our soil; they give us food and shade, building materials for our homes and irreplaceable habitats for innumerable species and without trees our water supply would dwindle. Yet, in many societies, we tend to see them as an obstruction to a development or something to be cut down and sold. Life without trees would be difficult and very...
Riches from the Garden – News From Bannockburn House Gardens
Riches from the Garden The Bannockburn House Trust Garden Blog - by Margaret Pollock Summer 2025 is proving to be a bumper year for all our crops. In June and July we had mountains of Blackcurrants. Our harvested onions are huge and now we are picking boxes of delicious, ripe tomatoes. We have grown six varieties this year: ‘Moneymaker’ and ‘Shirley’ are the biggest ones. ‘Gardener’s Delight’, ‘Sweet Million’, ‘Sungold’ and ‘Black Cherry’ are the scrumptious, small tomatoes. My personal...
Summertime and the Livin’ is Easy – News From Bannockburn House Gardens
Summertime and the Livin’ is Easy The Bannockburn House Trust Garden Blog - by Margaret Pollock After such a warm, sunny spring this year it has come as no surprise to us that we have a bumper blackcurrant crop this year. Our bushes were planted in the spring of 2020, just as we all went into ‘lockdown’ so this is their fifth year and whilst they have given us a great harvest every year since, this year has been incredible. We started picking them on June 25th and we are still picking this...
At last the rain has come – News From Bannockburn House Gardens
At last the rain has come The Bannockburn House Trust Garden Blog - by Margaret Pollock As I write this it is raining and it is a wonderful sound as it beats off the garden path outside the door after such a dry Spring. We have several newly planted trees and bushes so it has been quite stressful trying to keep them alive and watered as their leaves slowly unfurled. They say it is the driest Spring for over a century and whilst it has been wonderful to have such a long, sunny spell (over 650...