Remarkable trees also grew in the park, with huge fir trees with a trunk circumference of more than eight meters (uprooted in 1954) and a massive lime tree, more than 300 years old (sawed in 1961), attracting the most attention. The biggest dendrological rarity is the mammoth sequoia, which is the only one of the park's greats to this day. At a height of 1.3 m, the circumference of the trunk is almost five meters and reaches a height of more than 45 meters. It was planted around 1860 and today, as the largest ornament of the park, it is a legally protected tree. On February 12, 1963, the park was recognized as historically valuable and excluded from the land fund.