LocationEngland
East Sussex
Forest Row
N side of: footpath
Distance (S) from Greenwich
OS map detailsOS Explorer: 135
OS grid refTQ 40085.33378
(540085,133378)
WGS84 lat/long51.082626, -0.001420
TypeTree | Plaque (tree)
Marking date1984
AccessUnrestricted
Greenwich Meridian Marker; England; East Sussex; Forest Row
North
North

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South
South

Currently viewing images from 26 Jan 2010
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25 Apr 2017
10 Jul 2011
26 Jan 2010

When in the spring of 1984, Epping District Council announced it intention to plant western red cedars along the Meridian to mark its ‘centenary’, it also urged other local authorities to do likewise. Of the seven who said they would, Wealden District Council is the only one that appears to have actually done so. They planted specimens of sequoiadendron giganteums – a tree also known as wellingtonia, but more commonly as the giant redwood. In time, they will tower over their neighbours, reaching perhaps a height of 50–85 m. The variety is long lived – the oldest known specimen being about 3,500 years old. Of the four planting sites identified, three (of which this is one) are spaced at roughly 0.5 mile intervals in the Ashdown Forest. The other is a couple of miles further south at Furner's Green.