More than ten different species of oak, such as the Hungarian oak, the golden oak, the imperial oak, the red oak and the Turkey oak have found a place in this tree park around the mill. Many other woods, exotic for the area, such as the amber tree, purple birch, silver fir, trumpet tree, primeval sequoia, curly ash, dogwood, thousand-blossom tree, incense cedar, chestnut and the tree of the gods also thrive here. But the wild service tree is also a special tree, valued for centuries as excellent furniture and construction wood, and therefore mercilessly felled. A handkerchief tree, grown from a fruit by the owner himself, keeps the service tree company, along with a Japanese sickle fir, a Leyland bastard cypress, and a European wild service tree.
The devil's back vine, also called Japanese aralia, stands out because it looks more like a large shrub. It has few thick branches with gray bark and prickly twigs. The slash-leaved vinegar tree next door has seeded itself. The cinnamon maple a few feet away can be recognized by its trunk with rough bark that looks like a thick cinnamon stick.
Visiting possible by appointment!