An Irishman’s Diary on the wonders of Tollymore forest

Gothic curios and astonishing views

Stepping stones at Tollymore. Photograph: Robert Mayne/Thinkstock
Stepping stones at Tollymore. Photograph: Robert Mayne/Thinkstock

Sir John Hunt, the leader of the team that conquered Mount Everest in 1953, once led an expedition in Tollymore forest in Co Down. Before his quest really got under way, the intrepid explorer slipped, and both of his feet plunged into the freezing waters of the Shimna river. He duly postponed his journey upriver.

This episode is not mentioned in any biography; I happen to know about it because he came to change his socks in our house. My mother also fed him and fellow mountaineers eggs and fried potatoes. It seems Sir John was in reflective mood throughout, perhaps thinking that if he could survive the Shimna, was there anything to stop him having a shot at the Himalayas?

Freezing water fresh off the Mountains of Mourne is one thing; evil beings another. At least Sir John didn’t have to contend with the malign spirit world of Tollymore – namely the Children of the Forest, a mysterious non-human race living hereabouts for 12,000 years; or the terrifying White Walkers lurking behind every tree.

Of course, these creatures are relatively new, first appearing in 2011. Even if you're not a Game of Thrones fan, you'll be interested to hear that dark, brooding parts of Tollymore were used as locations in HBO's medieval fantasy series.

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The Blue Lady is a home-grown ethereal being. Ghostspotters should hang out at the Hermitage, her normal beat. From the Hermitage – two stone chambers overlooking a deep salmon pool on the Shimna – steep steps lead into a dark, coniferous wood. It’s one of the oddest, spookiest follies in the forest, and not really a hermitage at all; but then the Blue Lady isn’t really a ghost. Probably. But just mind how you go.

The poet Edward Lear appreciated Tollymore’s curios. He found it “full of beautiful ruins and bridges and trees and hills and mills and lawns and laurels”, and was transfixed by its gothic outrages – doubtless with thoughts of owls and pussycats running wild in his mind. The placenames hereabouts would have impressed the wordsmith – Moneyscalp, Kilcoo, Trassey. But even Lear would have needed to be at the top of his game to crowbar Carrowmurwaghnemucklagh into a limerick.

Until the 1930s the estate was largely enjoyed by the Anglo-Irish landed gentry, and the odd writer. But by the 20th century hard times had arrived for the Raj in the Rain, and in 1941 Tollymore was bought by the Northern Ireland government. My father, Alfred Rogers, was head forester from 1950 until 1969. Tollymore was still a working forest when he arrived. Teams of Clydesdales would haul Sitka spruce out of the forest to be used as pit props in Welsh coal mines. Before that, Tollymore oak was involved in shipbuilding – the Grand Staircase on the Titanic was made of local wood.

In 1955 Tollymore was officially opened to the public, becoming Northern Ireland’s first state forest park. The need for pit props had lessened; demands for oaken staircases on luxury liners greatly reduced.

The forest’s main commercial timber duty dwindled to providing Belfast City Hall with its Christmas tree. However, Tollymore’s dramatic setting and extravagant beauty began to attract the public.

Some 400 years of hoeing, planting, pruning, collecting and in all probability thieving, bequeathed to Tollymore some of the world’s finest botanical A-listers, including the likes of dawn redwoods, black junipers, a cork oak, a dwarf Norway spruce.

The outré nature of the gothic curios also helped pull in the crowds: a 1780 bridge with an ornate stone sentry box at each corner; a stone chair engraved with Alexander Pope’s poetry; a barn dressed up as a church – in all likelihood the only barn in the world boasting a steeple, bell, clock and sundial.

Nearby, an arboretum, one of the oldest in Ireland, leads to the Azalea Walk, on which is a small, classical fountain. The water spouts from the mouth of a stone lion – according to local legend, this is Aslan. CS Lewis, a regular visitor, would walk this way towards the Horn Bridge. Its tiny turrets, crenellations and shamrock-shaped embrasures would have added to the feeling of other-wordliness, of Narnia.

The Easterly Drinn, the highest point in Tollymore, affords heart-stopping views of the forest below – sandwiched between the Mournes and Dundrum Bay. The Shimna, and its tributary the Spinkwee, babble towards the sea; the ornamental lake glitters in the distance; the pines below sough in the breeze. The whole place looks as if it could have tumbled out of a fairytale.

Or a Chronicle.