When I think of Coombe Wood I think of the times I visited as a young boy with my parents.
We would go there in the old days when there used to be an old Chinese couple there. The old man furiously calculated everything with an abacus. The enclosed courtyard outside was all a bit gloomy at that time and I remeber the walls having been grown over with ivy and other plants , that partialy covered a massive square tank suspended at the top of the wall. Of which may or may not have at one time have contained water or even oil for heating.
Years ago the Park wardens stabled their horses on the site in Stables that were purpose build. They are now store rooms I would guess , along the arcade leading up to the on site Cafe.
The cafe there changed hands on and off , and laterly was known as the Pond Cafe and then at this present moment in time called the Coach House Cafe.
Croydon council appear to have had their hand in the Coombe Wood cafe. Prices of food are reasonable to just into the short of slightly steep.
The Cafe seems to have become the victim of it's own popularity in more recent years. There is still only one till and customers tend to backlog into a short que , waiting to order coffee , cakes or food. Also it seems that the boss himself spends most of his time behind the till itself , which frankly in my mind is unheard of.
Tables are often reserved but empty and tables that are used are often not cleared away any where near fast enough , to make room for next prospective customers to sit down to eat.
Despite that , food and drink is of V good level.
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Little has changed in recent years as far as the gardens are concerned. Coombe Gardens seems to be the same old familiar , which is good for people to remanisce , but the future has yet to impact on the site.
The quality of planting in the rockery by the pond in recent years seems to have seen some improvement , which is good. The small cottage by the rockery now has something to do with the BTCV ( conservation group ) .
I recently took a walk around pretty much the whole of the site with my cousin . Walking up and down the anchient pebbles that once used to be an anchient seabed in millenia gone by. Pine trees , Larch , Birch, Beech and a group of Sweet chestnuts nestling in one of the small valleys on the Coombe Wood site , might be worth a look each year around Late October and Early November.
I also noticed leaves from ornimental japanese maples in the lower woodlands at the end of the formal borders. I had not realised these were there. If I had been there on previous visits in my youth , I had missed them or not been there at the time of year when they had been if change of colour.
I noticed that in parts of the Coombe Wood site that area's of Rhodedendron had been cut down to encourage new rejuvination of future more compact flowering bushes. At the far end of the Coombe Wood site I noticed that at the other side of the fence. That Rhodedendrons were running rampant and were huge and unmanaged. And very little lives under the canopy of dense Rhodie growth.
Personaly I can recomend visiting the site in winter months after several nights of frost that has'nt entirely melted. If frost is lingering on your neighbours roof in Croydon and is added to the next night/morning for a few days. Rush off down to Coombe Wood to see the many millions of Ice Crystals that cover the rockery , shrubs , formal borders, outhouse roofs and Rose gardens.
Due to The topography of the site and the low posistion of the sun in winter months. The site is a bit of a frost pocket. So take your kids and a Macro Lens camera and show the lttle ones the beatiful seasonal show of shiny clear bar like growth crystals , or sometimes white Dog tooth shaped formations. The crystals depend on the moisture in the air , atmospheric conditions and the severity of the cold.
For me 2001 was a good year. I also visited again in 2007 and now 2012.
Also if you can catch the frost covering everything and the light right in the rose garden , the sun shines colour through the old fashioned Pampas grasses.
Also if your lucky you might see one of the nearby houses many Black cats. I saw one the other day and he was glancingly friendly.
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Regds
Jonathan Moore
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Ex Postie rider Jon
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expostieriderjon@yahoo.co.uk read more