Pay as they grow

Lucy Ryan is confident Hamilton Gardens will continue to be popular with King Country residents despite the city council’s decision to introduce an entry fee for out of towners.

The gardens’ director estimates about a third of the record 537,584 people who visited the enclosed gardens in the year ended June 30 were domestic visitors.

And anecdotally she knows a big percentage of those were from satellite towns like Ōtorohanga, Te Kūiti and her own hometown – Huntly.

Gatecrashing: This mother duck and her chicks make their way through the entrance card holders will use from September 18. Photo: Mary Anne Gill.

The cost – $20 to visit the enclosed gardens which accounts for only 10 per cent of the gardens themselves – is unlikely to put people off, she says.

She compares that with what visitors pay when they visit Kew Gardens in London or Hunter Valley Gardens in Australia.

The award-winning Hamilton Gardens – which regularly features in Tripadvisor’s list of top things to do in the world – are Kew’s equal after a $12 million investment.

The Te Parapara fertile land, where the gardens are, was covered in food crops and was confiscated during the Waikato Land Wars of the 1860s.

It went on to become a rifle range, a sand quarry, a dog dosing area, a go karts track and the city’s rubbish dump.

Landscaping in and around the new entry is almost complete. Photo: Mary Anne Gill.

Since the Rose Gardens opened in the 1970s, followed a decade later by the first enclosed gardens, Hamilton Gardens has become the most visited place in the city.

But it was Hamilton ratepayers who paid to develop and maintain the gardens and despite politicians repeatedly saying they wanted to introduce an entry fee, none of them were brave enough to take that final step.

Until two years ago, about the time Ryan took over from the long-serving Peter Sergel.

t costs around $6 million a year to run the 50 hectare site which includes the Indian Charbagh, Surrealist, Ancient Egyptian, Chinese Scholars’, and the Italian Renaissance gardens.

Under development are the Medieval, Pasifika and Baroque gardens.Lucy Ryan is confident Hamilton Gardens will continue to be popular with Waipā residents despite the city council’s decision to introduce an entry fee for out of towners.

The gardens’ director estimates about a third of the record 537,584 people who visited the enclosed gardens in the year ended June 30 were domestic visitors.

And anecdotally she knows a big percentage of those were from satellite towns like Cambridge, Te Awamutu, Morrinsville, Matamata, Ngāruawāhia, Ōtorohanga, Te Kūiti, Putāruru and her own hometown – Huntly.

The cost – $20 to visit the enclosed gardens which accounts for only 10 per cent of the gardens themselves – is unlikely to put people off, she says.

She compares that with what visitors pay when they visit Kew Gardens in London or Hunter Valley Gardens in Australia.

The award-winning Hamilton Gardens – which regularly features in Tripadvisor’s list of top things to do in the world – are Kew’s equal after a $12 million investment.

Huntly-born and Hamilton educated gardens director Lucy Ryan in the Japanese garden, her favourite spot. Photo: Mary Anne Gill.

Ryan knows Waipā well – she taught at St Patricks Catholic Primary School in Te Awamutu.

The Te Parapara fertile land, where the gardens are, was covered in food crops and was confiscated during the Waikato Land Wars of the 1860s.

It went on to become a rifle range, a sand quarry, a dog dosing area, a go karts track and the city’s rubbish dump.

Since the Rose Gardens opened in the 1970s, followed a decade later by the first enclosed gardens, Hamilton Gardens has become the most visited place in the city.

But it was Hamilton ratepayers who paid to develop and maintain the gardens and despite politicians repeatedly saying they wanted to introduce an entry fee, none of them were brave enough to take that final step.

Until two years ago, about the time Ryan took over from the long-serving Peter Sergel.

It costs around $6 million a year to run the 50 hectare site which includes the Indian Charbagh, Surrealist, Ancient Egyptian, Chinese Scholars’, and the Italian Renaissance gardens.

Under development are the Medieval, Pasifika and Baroque gardens.

This mother duck and her chicks get to know the gardens. Photo: Mary Anne Gill.

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