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We can help you book your perfect break to Tresco. We all live here, so it's our specialist subject!

Call us on +44 (0)1720 422 849 or email us.

By Helicopter - Direct to Tresco

By Helicopter - Direct to Tresco

The fastest way to reach Tresco? Fly direct with Penzance Helicopters - a spectacular 15-minute hop from Cornwall to our island paradise.

Before you Arrive

Before you Arrive

Our pre-arrival checklist - from letting us know your travel plans to ordering your wine and groceries

Tresco Islandshare

Tresco Islandshare

Own a piece of this unique island, with 40 years of holidays on Tresco as more than just a visitor. Discover Islandshares for sale...

Tresco Offers & Breaks

Tresco Offers & Breaks

From seasonal escapes to wellness and creative breaks and last-minute offers, discover our latest offers & breaks on Tresco Island

Eating

Eating

From beachfront dining to our cosy inn, get a taste for island-inspired dining with a Tresco twist

Grocery

Grocery

Place a pre-arrival grocery order and we'll deliver to your accommodation on your arrival

Events & Experiences

Events & Experiences

From the Low Tide Event to live music, Abbey Garden Theatre and more, discover extraordinary events on the Isles of Scilly

Day Trips to Tresco

Day Trips to Tresco

Whether you're coming from elsewhere on Scilly, or further afield in Devon or Cornwall, a day trip to Tresco is the perfect day out

Rare tree lands on Tresco

This week, a rare and critically endangered Mulanje cedar tree was flown to Tresco

On Monday 16th March, a rare and critically endangered Mulanje cedar tree (Widdringtonia whytei) was flown to Tresco by Penzance Helicopters alongside Dan Luscombe from Forestry England's Bedgebury National Pinetum, marking an important step in both international plant conservation and our island-wide replanting programme following Storm Goretti.

The young tree - grown in the nursery at Bedgebury National Pinetum - was then planted on Tresco by Dan Luscombe together with our garden team - including the island’s Head of Estate Alasdair Moore and Head Gardener Andrew Lawson - and High Sheriff of Cornwall Geraint Richards: Head Forester to the King. The planting forms part of a wider effort to restore trees across the island and represents a hopeful beginning to the new season of planting and regeneration.

Because the Mulanje cedar tree is sensitive to frost and cannot tolerate prolonged cold, most parts of the UK are unsuitable for its cultivation. Tresco’s mild maritime climate, however, offers one of the few locations in Britain where it is hoped that the species could successfully grow outdoors.

Native to Mount Mulanje in Malawi, the Mulanje cedar is a remarkable but tragic example of how overexploitation can drive a species to the brink. Once prized for its durable and fragrant timber, decades of unsustainable harvesting- combined with illegal logging, fires and land pressure have devastated the trees populations. The species became the first tree in Africa to be declared commercially extinct in 2018.

Today, there are no known mature, seed-producing Mulanje cedars remaining in the wild.

However, conservationists were able to preserve a small quantity of seed in seed banks in Malawi and the UK. The young trees being distributed today have been grown from this stored seed as part of Forestry England’s ex situ conifer conservation work at Bedgebury National Pinetum. The programme focuses on improving germination and propagation techniques while establishing genetically viable backup populations of threatened conifers.

Dan Luscombe, Curator at Forestry England - Bedgebury National Pinetum - said, "The Mulanje cedar is a remarkable and tragic example of how overexploitation can push a species to the brink. The trees being planted originate from preserved seed and represent an important effort to safeguard living genetic material for the future.”

Alasdair Moore, Head of Estate on Tresco, added “This is a wonderful opportunity for Tresco to work with Forestry England to help conserve a critically endangered tree, given the unique nature of our island’s plant collection. It’s also a joyful and positive moment for us all on Tresco to focus on planting trees in the wake of Storm Goretti and restoring our woodland.”

The tree was planted in Tresco Abbey Garden and we will be eagerly watching and waiting to see if it thrives on the island. If successful, the planting could help safeguard living genetic material of this critically endangered tree while raising awareness of global plant conservation efforts. Keep an eye out for it during your next wander about the garden...

Stay on Tresco

Winter and festive breaks cannot be booked online; please call us on 01720 422849 or visit our Winter on Tresco page.

Or call +44 (0)1720 422 849