• Find a Venue
    • Find a Venue
    • Venue Finder
    • Collections
    • Late Availability
    • Open Events
    Venue Finder
    Your perfect venue awaits!
    Collections
    Need inspiration? Browse our edit.
  • Planning Advice
    • Planning Advice
    • Venue Search Tips
    • Wedding Planning Tips
    • Wedding Dresses
    • Suppliers
    Venue Search Tips
    A series of tips and key questions.
    Wedding Planning Tips
    Essential advice from the experts.
  • Inspiration
    • Inspiration
    • Latest
    • Venues
    • Inspire
    • Plan
    • Suppliers
    Inspiration
    Love stories and editorials.
    Planning
    Latest articles from the experts.
  • About
    • About
    • Join Us
    • Our Story
    • Submissions
    • Contact
    Join Us
    Want to be a member? Find out more.
    Submissions
    Feature your weddings and editorials with us.
  • Favourites

New Shoots of Hope for Wedding Couples at Boconnoc

by Emma Hla
Image by Nick Walker Photography.
This year has been a year of challenges and changes for everyone.

A year of frustration and patience, togetherness and isolation. A year of old plans unmade, and new plans made, only to be unmade again. At Boconnoc, and like many of our venues, they really felt for all their couples who needed to postpone or change their weddings because of the pandemic, and they wanted to do something positive and meaningful for them.

Keep reading for a really beautiful story, it certainly brought tears to my eyes and I hope you’ll love it just as much. Boconnoc is the epitome of everything we look for in a wedding venue, and this sweet gesture only cements our love for them.

Notes from Boconnoc

At times this year, it has been easy to feel as if time is standing still. A sense of helpless waiting; ‘limbo’ or ‘hibernation’, as we wait to see family, wait for a vaccine, wait for a wedding.

But as every couple knows, love doesn’t really hibernate, nor does it wait. In fact, just like planting an acorn, over time, it grows a root system of its own, making its foundations stronger and deeper, feeling its way bravely through darkness.

As the old adage says, mighty oaks from little acorns grow.

This year, we decided to pot an acorn for every couple whose wedding had to be postponed or changed, a small gesture, but one which we thought would bring new shoots of hope.

As spring arrives in 2021, the acorns will have started to sprout, and in two years’ time the young trees will be ready to take root in the ground. When our couples return to Boconnoc to celebrate in 2021, they will be given their own potted acorn, which they can plant and enjoy for themselves.

Last month we had a wonderful day ruffling through Boconnoc’s autumn leaves, looking for ripe, plump, nutty brown acorns and then carefully potting them into their own containers before nestling them into a sheltered spot in the kitchen garden– ready to work their magic and germinate over winter.

In addition to supporting our couples, planting acorns ensures that more oak trees (and of course more acorns) can grow to support wildlife in future years. Mice, squirrels, badgers and jays are all searching for acorns in the autumn months – and most acorns get munched up before they have a chance to germinate.

How to plant your own acorns this winter:

Ideally, acorns should be collected and planted from mid-September through to the end of December.

Try to choose large, fat, ripe looking acorns, which are a warm brown in colour. Avoid the unripe green ones, or the really dark ones, which may have started to rot a little.

Loosely fill the pot with compost leaving around a 2.5cm (1in) gap between the compost and the top of the pot. (a yoghurt pot with small drainage holes in the bottom can be used).

Plant up to 4 acorns in each pot. Gently cover the acorns with compost.

Water the pot and place it outside, you may need to protect the acorns from animals and birds.

Leave your acorns over the winter to germinate.

The seedlings can be kept in this pot until the roots begin to emerge out of the drainage holes, when it can be potted on to a slightly larger pot. Tall pots are better than squat ones, to allow the roots to elongate. Repeat this as often as necessary.

The saplings may be kept in pots for two or three years, but if you find that it becomes too much to keep putting them in bigger pots, you can plant them in the ground when they are 12 to 15 inches high. Common oaks are suited to most conditions except marshy, very light or chalky soils.

Small Wedding Package

Midweek and weekend availability 2021

Experience the timeless magic at Boconnoc with 2021 wedding options now available for 15, 30 or 50 guests.

Nestled in acres of parkland, there’s a spectacular choice of settings to marry. Choose from the 700-year old on-site church, the spacious and beautiful Smoking Room, the rustic Stable Yard, sunken Georgian Bath House or the scenic Dorothy Garden.

Enjoy exclusive use of the immaculately restored Boconnoc House, with its elegant frontage and welcoming reception rooms.

With accommodation for up to 40, design your own special day – however large or small, for 2021.

Tags: Boconnoc, Coco Collection, Cornwall, Coronavirus and Your Wedding, Country House, Eco, Micro Weddings, Sustainable Weddings, Wedding Venues in Cornwall
Browse all articles
Share This Page
Boconnoc Estate
Boconnoc Estate
Boconnoc Estate
Boconnoc Estate
Boconnoc Estate
Boconnoc Estate
Saved Save
Boconnoc Estate
From £18,075

Based on a weekend wedding in March. Includes 2-night venue hire and accommodation.

Boconnoc is one of the most beautiful private hire estates in the South West. It offers luxuriously appointed guest accommodation, multiple ceremony...
Meet the author
Emma Hla
Emma is the founder & curator of these award-winning pages. Passionate about venues, interiors and a good Whiskey Sour. You'll also find Emma working as a Creative Director consulting for wedding venues around the UK.
More by author
Related Venues
Regions
Cornwall wedding venues
Wedding venues in South West
Types
Church wedding venues
Country house wedding venues
Garden wedding venues
Glamping wedding venues
Historical wedding venues
Wedding venues with land
Multi-day / weekend hire wedding venues
Woodland wedding venues
Features
Accommodation onsite
Allows ceremonial fire
Allows external caterers
Allows fireworks
Allows street food vendors
Changing room
Dry hire option
Late license
No corkage
Outdoor ceremony
Parking
Pet friendly
Supplier flexibility
Wifi
Styles
Boho wedding venues
Classic wedding venues
Vintage wedding venues
Rustic wedding venues
Capacities
Elopement and micro wedding venues
Big capacity wedding venues
Intimate wedding venues
Party wedding venues
Simple wedding venues
More to Explore
View All
Venues
A New Look for Millbridge Court in 2026
Venues
Homme House: A Sustainable Wedding Venue in the...
Venues
The Ultimate UK Beach Wedding Venues
Venues
Kin House: The Ultimate Poolside Experience
Venues
15 of the Best Barn Wedding Venues
Venues
Howsham Hall: A Grade I Jacobean House in...
Venues
Coombe End Manor: A Festive Escape to the...
Venues
The Beacon: A Beautiful Country House in Kent
Venues
The Barn at Redcoats: An Exclusive Look at this...
You'll also Love
Discover our Venues
Refine your wedding venue search by location, capacity, type, and style.
Visit Venue Finder
Be Inspired
Planning advice, real wedding stories, and venue showcases to inspire you.
Read Journal
Collections
Just getting started? Browse our most popular wedding venue categories.
Browse Collections
We're the UK's original style-focused wedding venue directory and an award-winning blog, serving up inspirational wedding venues, helpful articles, and indispensable planning advice.
For Couples
  • Venue Finder
  • Collections
  • Inspiration
  • Venue Search Tips
  • Planning Tips
For Venues
  • Join Us
  • Member Login
  • Submissions
  • Our Story
  • Marketing Advice
  • Featured Badges
For Suppliers
  • Our Story
  • Submissions
  • Featured Badges
Terms & Conditions
Privacy & Cookies
Diversity
Sustainability
Photography Credits
© 2025 Coco Wedding Collective Ltd All Rights Reserved.