High public demand for tickets to picnic on Buckingham Palace’s lawns and explore its garden has forced the Royal Collection Trust (RCT) to temporarily stop taking new bookings.

Thousands have logged onto the website of the charity, which organises the openings of a number of royal residences, hoping to book a ticket after the self-guided garden tours were launched on Wednesday.

But the RCT said “very high” interest meant it had suspended sales but hoped to reopen them as soon as possible with more tickets on offer.

The charity said in a statement: “There has been an overwhelmingly positive response to the launch of the new Buckingham Palace and garden visitor experiences.

“However, the current demand for tickets is very high and we have had to temporarily stop accepting new bookings. We apologise for any inconvenience caused and will reopen sales as soon as possible, with a greater number of tickets available.”

In a tweet posted late on Wednesday night, the RCT had said it was “overwhelmed with interest” in its tickets after they went on sale earlier that day.

The traditional summer opening of Buckingham Palace’s state rooms and themed exhibition, which normally welcomes thousands, has been cancelled for a second year due to the pandemic.

Buckingham Palace Summer Opening
The paying public will have the chance to wander through the Queen’s private 39-acre site (John Campbell/Royal Collection Trust/PA)

But self-guided garden tours have been announced from July to September, giving the paying public the chance to wander through the Queen’s private 39-acre site and discover the wildlife-rich oasis in the heart of London.

Its landscape dates back to the 1820s when George IV turned Buckingham House into a palace, and today it is home to a rich biodiverse habitat, with more than 1,000 trees and 320 different wildflowers and grasses.

The garden also houses the national collection of mulberry trees after Mark Lane, the palace’s head gardener, was given permission by the Queen to plant a definitive collection of the trees during 2000.

Visitors will be able to explore a route through the garden that takes in its 156-metre-long herbaceous border, plane trees planted by and named after Queen Victoria and Prince Albert and views of the island and its beehives across the 3.5-acre lake.

Buckingham Palace: A Royal Garden
The Queen greets guests during a garden party at Buckingham Palace (Dominic Lipinski/PA)

The unique opportunity to enjoy a picnic on one of the sweeping lawns will be part of the visit.

On weekends in April and May, guided tours of the garden will be available when the public can enjoy the open space during springtime, with its meadows carpeted with primroses and bluebells, and flowering magnolia and azalea shrubs and trees.

From May to September, small guided tours of the palace will begin, featuring many of its magnificent State Rooms, furnished with treasures of the Royal Collection, including paintings by Franz Xaver Winterhalter, Sevres porcelain and what is said to be some of the finest English and French furniture in the world.

From July, access to the garden will be included in the visit.