Search Results for: Botanical

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Garden: Birmingham Botanical Gardens

Birmingham Botanical Gardens is Alabama's largest living museum with more than 10,000 different plants in its living collections. The Gardens' 67.5 acres contains 25+ unique gardens, 30+ works of original outdoor sculpture and miles of serene paths. The Gardens features the largest public horticulture library in the U.S., conservatories, a wildflower garden, two rose gardens, the Southern Living garden, and Japanese Gardens with a traditionally crafted tea house. Education programs run year round and over 10,000 school children enjoy free science-curriculum based field trips annually. (Source: http://www.bbgardens.org)

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Garden: Toledo Botanical Garden

Toledo Botanical Garden is a botanical garden located in the city of Toledo, Ohio owned by the Metroparks of the Toledo Area. Originally consisting of 20 acres (81,000 m2) donated by George P. Crosby to the City of Toledo, Toledo Botanical Garden now encompasses more than 50 acres (200,000 m2). Notable events include the Crosby Festival of the Arts, held in late June; and Heralding the Holidays, a seasonal celebration showcasing the numerous resident artistic guilds. (Source: Wikipedia)

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Garden: New York Botanical Garden

The New York Botanical Garden is an amazing place with a ton of different gardens located within it. A trip to New York without a stop at NYBG is a wasted one.

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Garden: Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Garden

Built in 1893,Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Garden reveals the marvel and mysteries of plants to the people of Pittsburgh and beyond. They have an overwhelming variety of plants under its roof. It's definitely worth checking out.

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Garden: Rodef Shalom Biblical Botanical Garden

Rodef Shalom Biblical Botanical Garden is North America's largest biblical botanical garden, and is the only one with ongoing research and publication. They do a stunning job of recreating the world of the Bible. It was established in 1987.

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Garden: Fairchild Tropical Botanical Garden

Located in the city of Miami, Fairchild Tropical Botanical Garden has a mission: to save tropical plant diversity by exploring, explaining and conserving the world of tropical plants; fundamental to this task is inspiring a greater knowledge and love for plants and gardening so that all can enjoy the beauty and bounty of the tropical world.

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Garden: Miami Beach Botanical Garden

This 4.5 acre botanical garden is a showcase of orchids, tropical plants and trees, a Japanese Garden.

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Garden: Botanical Garden of Smith College

On Site of Smith College, this botanical garden has it all: rock garden, Japanese garden, woodland garden, capen garden, and president's garden.

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Garden: Harry P. Leu Gardens

Featuring America's largest collection of Camellias outside of California and three miles of paved scenic walkways, the Harry P. Leu Gardens is an amazing botanical garden. It also has the largest formal rose garden in all of Florida.

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Garden: Atlanta Botanical Garden

Starting as a proposal in 1973, the Atlanta Botanical Garden has gone a long way. Today, they display plant collections for education, research, and enjoyment. Both an Orchid collection and a Hydrangea collection are just a few.

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Garden: Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Gardens

The Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden has a large variety of gardens for your viewing pleasure. The DeGolyer garden, and the McCasland Sunken Garden are just a few. In the McCasland Sunken Gardens, you'll walk through a grove of towering Magnolia trees.

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Garden: Fort Worth Botanic Gardens

Fort Worth Botanic Gardens is the oldest botanical garden in Texas, holding within its walls thousands of both native and exotic species of plants. the Fort Worth Botanic Garden also contains a traditional Japanese garden.

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Garden: Desert Botanical Garden

The Desert Botanical Garden is an oasis in the middle of the torched outskirts of Phoenix, AZ. Here, you can stroll through its paths, exploring all the fascinating species of plants that thrive in a climate that will kill most. Explore and learn about cacti in this beautiful place.

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Garden: Kew Gardens (Royal Botanic Gardens)

The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, usually referred to simply as Kew Gardens, are extensive gardens and botanical glasshouses between Richmond and Kew in southwest London, England. Created in 1759, the gardens celebrated their 250th anniversary in 2009. The Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, is responsible for the world’s largest collection of living plants. The organisation employs more than 650 scientists and other staff. The living collections include more than 30,000 different kinds of plants, while the herbarium, which is the largest in the world, has over 7 million preserved plant specimens. (Source: Wikipedia.org)

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Garden: The Ruth Bancroft Garden

The Ruth Bancroft Garden is an exceptional example of garden design and a collection of water-conserving plants. he Ruth Bancroft Garden 2.5 acres (10,000 m²) is a dry botanical garden containing more than 2,000 cactus, succulents, trees, and shrubs native to Africa, Australia, California, Chile, and Mexico. In 1989, it became the first garden in the United States to be preserved by the Garden Conservancy, and has been open to the public since 1992. The Garden began in the early 1950s as the private collection within Bancroft Farm, a 400-acre (1.6 km2) property bought by publisher Hubert Howe Bancroft as an orchard for pears and walnuts. In the 1950s, Ruth Bancroft brought home a single succulent, an aeonium grown by Ms. Glenn Davidson. By 1972, the collection had outgrown its location and was moved to its current site, then an orchard of dying walnut trees. Today the Garden is an outstanding landscape of xerophytes (dry-growing plants). Garden collections include: aeonium, aloes, agavaceae, Brachychiton rupestris, Brahea armata, bromeliaceae, Butia, dudleya, dyckia, echeverias, Echinocactus, hechtia, Jubaea chilensis, Puya berteroniana and P. chilensis, Xanthorrhoea preissii, and yuccas. (Source: Wikipedia)

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Garden: Des Moines Botanical Center

The Des Moines Botanical Center is focused on provided both recreational and educational pleasures to the thousands who visit it each year. Since its completion in 1979, the people and government have worked hand in hand to support their botanical center, donating both tax and private dollars. Their hard work has paid off--it's a wonderful place!

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Garden: Jardin des Plantes

The Jardin des Plantes is the main botanical garden in France. It is one of seven departments of the Muséum national d'histoire naturelle. It is situated in the 5ème arrondissement, Paris, on the left bank of the river Seine and covers 28 hectares (280,000 m²). The grounds of the Jardin des Plantes includes four galleries of the Muséum: the Grande Galerie de l'Évolution, the Mineralogy Museum, the Paleontology Museum and the Entomology Museum. In addition to the gardens there is also a small zoo, founded in 1795 by Bernardin de Saint-Pierre from animals of the royal menagerie at Versailles. The Jardin des Plantes maintains a botanical school, which trains botanists, constructs demonstration gardens, and exchanges seeds to maintain biotic diversity. About 4500 plants are arranged by family on a one hectare (10,000 m²) plot. Three hectares are devoted to horticultural displays of decorative plants. An Alpine garden has 3000 species with world-wide representation. Specialized buildings, such as a large Art Deco wintergarden, and Mexican and Australian hothouses display regional plants, not native to France. The Rose Garden, created in 1990, has hundreds of species of roses and rose trees. (Source: Wikipedia.org)

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Garden: Les Chemins de la Rose

Opened to the public in May 1999, Les Chemins de la Rose is a 4 hectares landscaped floral park in the heart of the Loire Valley. Its creation was motivated by the desire to respond to the expectations of visitors who came to Doué la Fontaine, the capital of rose production in France. Before the park's creation, visitors could only buy roses, not view them in a natural setting. The park is planted with more than 1 300 varieties of botanical, old, and modern roses. In all, there are more than 13 000 rose bushes. Trees, shrubs, perennials, clematis and its famous lotus accompany the collection and enrich the beauty of one's stroll through the garden. (Source: http://www.cheminsdelarose.fr/pages2/en-intro.htm )

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Garden: Singapore Botanic Gardens

Singapore Botanic Gardens is a 63.7-hectare (157-acre) botanical garden in Singapore. It is half the size of the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew or around one-fifth the size of Central Park in New York. It is the only botanic garden in the world that opens from 5 a.m. to 12 midnight every single day of the year, and does not charge an admission fee, except for the National Orchid Garden. The garden is bordered by Holland & Napier Road in the South, Cluny Road on the East, Tyersall Ave & Cluny Park Road on its West and Bukit Timah Road in the North. The linear distance between the Northern and Southern end is around 2.5 km (1.5 miles). (Source: Wikipedia)

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Garden: Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical Gardens

The Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical Gardens (HKZBG) is located on the northern slope of Victoria Peak with a highest point of 100 metres and a lowest point of 62 metres above sea level. HKZBG, occupies an area of 5.6 hectares was founded in 1871 as a Botanic Garden and renamed in 1975 as Botanical and Zoological Gardens to reflect the increased commitments to zoological exhibits. Construction works of the Garden started in 1860 and the first stage was opened to the public in 1864. There are more than 1,000 species in the Garden planted in such a way as to achieve natural beauty. Most of them are indigenous to tropical and sub-tropical regions. Although small, the botanical collection includes members of the major plant groups such as Conifer, Fig, Palm, Gum Trees, Magnolia, Camellia, Azalea, Philodendron of exotic origin as well as the native flora. The Dawn Red-wood, the local Ailanthus, Crapnell's Camellia, Grantham's Camellia and Yellow Camellia provide rarity. The Norfolk Island Pine, Travellers-tree, Royal Palm, Asoka Tree, Forest Grey Gum and the Elephant Apple provide distinctive features in form, leaf-shape, bark and fruit.

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Garden: The Jerusalem Botanical Gardens

The Jerusalem Botanical Gardens comprises more than six thousand plant species, which were brought to Israel from all over the world and are being preserved for the benefit and enjoyment of the public. The plants are displayed in six sections, each designed to create a miniature landscape of the region of origin of the plants. The Gardens also boasts a tropical greenhouse in the name of Florence Dvorsky, which contains a wide variety of plants from tropical regions. The University Botanical Gardens operates enrichment programs for school children - from kindergarten to secondary school - on numerous and diverse subjects dealing with nature and preservation of the environment.

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Garden: Birmingham Botanical Gardens

The Birmingham Botanical Gardens & Glasshouses, in the United Kingdom, are a 15 acre oasis of delight. Designed by J. C. Loudon, a leading garden planner, horticultural journalist and publisher, they opened to subscribers in 1832. Today, you will find beauty, peace and also tranquility combined with excellent visitor facilities for all the family. We really look forward to welcoming you into our gardens and glasshouses where you can enjoy nature at its best and discover the importance of plants to people.

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Garden: Small Botanical with a Marzipan cottage

Mostly lawn. Two sour cherry and one apple tree. Framed with Juniperus and some evergreens.

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Garden: Jardín Botánico Nacional

This is the most important Botanical Garden in the region. I want to share with you some nice views! I come here to take nice photos and draw.

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Garden: Bonnie's Botanical Garden

The building of a perennial and herb garden

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Garden: McCrory Gardens

McCrory Gardens harbors a wide variety of flowers, trees, shrubs and grasses. The gardens comprise about 20 acres of floral botanical gardens and 45 acres of arboretum (a place for the scientific study and public exhibition of many species of trees and shrubs). Source: http://www3.sdstate.edu/Academics/CollegeOfAgricultureAndBiologicalSciences/HorticultureForestryLandscapeandParks/McCroryGardens/Index.cfm

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Garden: San Antonio Botanical Gardens

The formal beds are comprised of four large rectangular display areas which are changed seasonally to display a variety of fun colors and textures. Sometimes subdued, sometimes exuberant, sometimes humorous, these changing displays are always worth checking out. Reacquaint yourself with older flower varieties in the Old Fashioned Garden. Savor sweet fragrances in the Rose Garden. Engage your senses of touch and smell in the Sensory Garden (Garden for the Blind). Admire the unique Kumamoto En garden, a gift from our Sister City of Kumamoto, Japan, with its finely crafted structures and many symbolic features. Experience the beauty of the Sacred Garden, Shade Garden, Gertie’s Garden and other garden displays. Learn from the testing and evaluations being conducted in the Watersaver Lane and Ornamental Grass Garden. Source: http://www.sabot.org/?nd=home

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Garden: Missouri Botanical Gardens

The Missouri Botanical Garden was founded in 1859 by Henry Shaw and was, from its inception, a public botanical garden and a place to study and display plants. Within the walls of these 79 acres, magnificent gardens and rare collections of botanical, horticultural, and historical materials reside with architecturally significant buildings and inspirational fountains and statuary. Today, the Garden is a National Historic Landmark, the oldest botanical garden in the United States, and a world leader in botanical research. The grounds of the Missouri Botanical Garden feature gardens, modern and traditional, and living collections of major groups of ornamental and practical plants. Greenhouses and conservatories display plants native to lands far removed from St. Louis. Source: http://www.mobot.org/default.asp

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Garden: Huntsville Botanical Garden

In this dynamic young garden you will find inviting woodland paths, stunning floral collections and exhibits to delight visitors of all ages. Paths meander through the shady woodlands of the Dogwood Trail and the lush fern glade, while native wildflowers quietly populate the Nature Trail. Daylily and herb gardens rival or surpass those of older, more mature botanical gardens. The demonstration vegetable garden showcases varieties of produce and inspires home gardeners. The 5-acre Central Corridor Gardens, featuring aquatic, perennial, and annual displays are ablaze with color from early spring through fall. The Garden of Hope celebrates life and affords a place for quiet contemplation and observation of nature. Source: http://www.hsvbg.org/index.htm

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Garden: Botanischer Garten München-Nymphenburg

The Botanischer Garten München-Nymphenburg (22 hectares) is a botanical garden and arboretum located at Menzinger Straße 65, Munich, Bavaria, Germany. Munich's first botanical garden, now called the "old botanical garden", was established in 1809 to designs by Friedrich Ludwig von Sckell near Karlsplatzes, where its remains are still visible. Today the garden cultivates about 14,000 species on approximately 18 hectares, and serves to educate the public and train students of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University, as well as preserve rare plants and European bee species. Major areas include an alpine garden, arboretum, collection of moor and steppe plants, rhododendrons, rose garden, and systematic garden. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botanischer_Garten_M%C3%BCnchen-Nymphenburg

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Garden: Botanischer Garten Frankfurt am Main

The Botanischer Garten der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main (7 hectares), also known as the Botanischer Garten Frankfurt am Main, is a botanical garden and arboretum maintained by the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt am Main. It is located at Siesmayerstraße 72, Frankfurt am Main, Hesse, Germany, and open daily in the warmer months. Today the garden contains about 5,000 species, with special collections of Rubus (45 species) and indigenous plants of central Europe. It is organized into two major areas as follows. The geobotanical area contains an alpine garden, arboretum, meadows, steppes, marsh, and pond, as well as collections of plants from the Canary Islands, Caucasus, East Asia, Mediterranean, and North America. Source: http://www.botanischergarten.uni-frankfurt.de/

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Garden: Ringve Botanical Garden

The Garden surrounds the beautiful buildings of Ringve Museum. Nature and Culture is united in a very special manor through this combination of plants and music. The Garden was established in 1973 and covers 35 acres. It's situated beautifully with a great view of the Trondheim fjord. The garden has nearly 2000 different plants and five main sections. Source: http://www.ringve.no/English/Botanical_Garden/

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Garden: Bergian Garden

The Bergianska trädgården, the Bergian Garden or Hortus Bergianus, is a botanical garden located in the Frescati area on the outskirts of Stockholm, close to the Swedish Museum of Natural History and the main campus of Stockholm University. The Garden was founded through a donation in 1791 from the historian and antiquarian Bengt Bergius and his brother Peter Jonas Bergius, a physician and scientist, to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, and was originally located to their mansion and its adjacent garden on the road Karlbergsvägen, in what is now the Vasastaden district in central Stockholm but at the time still had a largely rural character. The garden was moved to its current location in 1885. Source: http://www.bergianska.se/

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Garden: Honolulu Botanical Gardens

Foster Botanical Garden is the oldest of the Honolulu Botanical Gardens and contains trees that were planted in the 1850s by Dr. William Hillebrand. In addition to these historic trees, this 14 acre garden features the Lyon Orchid Garden, the Prehistoric Glen, the Economic Garden, and a palm collection. Twenty-four of O'ahu's Exceptional Trees can be found in this garden. It is open daily from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. except for Christmas Day and New Year's Day. Guided tours are available Monday through Saturday at 1:00 p.m. A reservation is suggested as tours are based on availability of volunteer docents. Please call 808-522-7066 to make a reservation, or to request a special tour. Entrance fee is $5.00 per person 13 years and older ($3.00 for Hawai'i residents with identification). The entrance fee for children from 6 to 12 years old is $1.00; there is no charge for children 5 and under accompanied by an adult.

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Garden: Kula Botanical Gardens

Established in 1968 by Warren and Helen McCord as a display garden for Warren's landscape architecture business, the garden has evolved into a tourist destination that draws thousands of visitors every year. We continue to be an entirely family owned and operated business and take pride in sharing our garden with you. The garden is located on the slopes of Haleakala and encompasses 8 acres of colorful and unique plants, amazing rock formations, a covered bridge, waterfalls, koi pond, aviary and new attractions including the carved tiki exhibit. We have hundreds of varieties of plants for you to enjoy and photograph. Plants are labeled with their botanical name, common name, and country of origin. Included in the garden is a collection of native Hawaiian plants. Source: http://kulabotanicalgarden.com/

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Garden: UC Botanical Garden at Berkeley

The UC Botanical Garden is a non-profit research garden and museum for the University of California at Berkeley, having a notably diverse plant collection including many rare and endangered plants. Established in 1890, the Garden, which is open to the public year round, has over 13,000 different kinds of plants from around the world, cultivated by region in naturalistic landscapes over its 34 acres. Source: http://botanicalgarden.berkeley.edu/

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Garden: Norfolk Botanical Garden

A 155-acre garden filled with thousands of plants. More than thirty themed gardens are spread across site. Some gardens focus on a single plant (camellias, hydrangeas, roses), others look at a plant from a specific region (Japan, Virginia), while others provide homeowners with great ideas and or new plants to use in their own garden. Source: http://www.norfolkbotanicalgarden.org/home

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Garden: Amarillo Botanical Gardens

The Amarillo Botanical Gardens features a recently constructed tropical conservatory which showcases a flourishing indoor collection of exotic plants. Open year round, the conservatory creates a spectacular backdrop to the surrounding four acres of seasonal landscape. Explore the diverse natural beauty of numerous outdoor themed plantings which include Japanese, fragrance, xeric and butterfly gardens. Source: http://www.amarillobotanicalgardens.org/index.php

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Garden: Prague Botanical Gardens (Prazska Botanicka Z

Japanese Garden is considered to be the most attractive section of the Prague Botanical Gardens' Open Air Exhibitions. This part of the botanical garden invites all visitors to quiet down and relax. Selection of plants and their placement has been adjusted to emphasize the grace of evergreen shrubs, conifers and deciduous trees; the changes of scenery during the year are envisaged. This garden is divided into two subsections. The first one represents the “landscape with mountains, trees, stream and lake”. Its dominant is the lake with a turtle-shaped islet, where the turtle is the symbol of longevity. Grouping of stones between the bank and the islet is symbolizing ships, heading to the islet and therefore is called “stones of night expectation”. Source: http://www.botanicka.cz/hlavni-stranka/obecne-informace-en.html?page_id=1186

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Garden: Grasagardur Botanical Garden (Iceland)

The Grasagardur Botanical Garden, in the Laugar Valley in Reykjavík, is the perfect place to see a vast selection of Iceland's delicate flora. The gardens include some plants that are difficult to spot out in the island's volcanic wilderness. Displaying many plants that are indigenous or unique to Iceland, Grasagardur Botanical Garden's pleasant grounds offer a compact overview of the startling biodiversity to be found throughout the country. Enjoy the walking trails and water features, at their best in the summer months, and take the children to the zoo to see native animals. Source: http://www.whatsonwhen.com/sisp/index.htm?fx=event&event_id=155165

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Garden: Orchids

I love Orchids and have about 30 different ones. A few different species too. I volunteer at the Royal Botanical Gardens in there orchid greenhouse. There is about 1500 plants in the collection. I love going there about 2 times a week and looking after things. There is a Thursday group that consists of about 10 people that meet about 9:30 am and we stay to about noon. We always stop for "tea" about 11am. On Saturdays I head up a group that needs more volunteers. The Orchid Society of RBG meets once a month , usually the 3rd Sunday of the month in the central building.

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Garden: Soekershof; Private Mazes & Botanical Gardens

Soekershof offers a.o. an Interactive Exploration in the gardens with an outdoor collection of >2500 different registered succulent species (subspecies, etc.). "Best Garden in Western Cape" (The Independent, UK, January 2010) Certified by Fair Trade in Tourism in South Africa since 2006

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Garden: Iturraran Botanical Garden

Iturraran Botanical Garden is in the middle of Pagoeta Natural Park, in the municipal term of Aia, Gipuzkoa, Basque Country, Northern Coastal Spain. It has a surface of 20 hectares, from which 15 are gardened. It is owned by Gipuzkoa's Council and it's open to the public (free access) all year round. It has representative collections of Quercus, Acer, Magnolia, Cornus. But also many other plants, from trees to hardy perennials, up to 5000 different taxa, including species and cultivars. The local weather is quite balmy, Z9, we are not far from the sea, which means not too severe winters: the drawback is all the wind, which sometimes can be quite troublesome!. With only 3 gardeners as permanent staff, our garden style has to be quite wild!. When you visit, please bring the machete and forgive us the brambles! :)

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Garden: zymurgy

zen like stylings

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Garden: lara's garden

Predominatly native intermixed with flowering perinnals for colour and picking in beds around spacious lawn areas. Lots of bio-diamanically grown vege gardens, citrus, combined with many areas of reclaimed unused council land now accomodating a large range of heritage and compainon edibles. Every space is used to provide unsprayed healthy free food that is also pleasing to the eye and most importantly generates a sense of satisfaction in our children.

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Garden: Low maintanance garden

Shady Pretoria garden Chalky water ph 7. Temp. between -7 and 36 cent

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Garden: from pasture to bushland

it took near 10 years to turn pasture land into a native garden

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Garden: ARBOR ESSENCE

Set at the end of a mist belt, this north-facing sub-tropical garden is established with indigenous, mostly endemic trees, shrubs and soft plants. Started in 1997, some trees have grown at a rate exceeding 1 metre/year, so most of the garden is in dappled shade. There are about 500 different plant species, 300 of which are trees. 2 rivers are present - 1 bisects the 4000m2 property, while 1 runs along the bottom boundary. Snakes and bush-babies are common visitors, and we have a good collection of web-weaving spiders. A lot of life is resident on the adjacent Krantzkloof Nature Reserve, and we benefit from the large assortment of birdlife found there. Temperatures range from 5'C to 35'C, and rainfall approx. 1000mm/year.

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Garden: Haven Garden

Fynbos garden with challenges of wind (cold north-westerly, from briney lagoon; chill south-easterly), extreme heat in summer and mole rat problem.

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Garden: Sue's Heaven

My garden is constantly evolving - depending on the season and the rainfall. It is my Utopia

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Garden: Castello di Galeazza

Acres of woodland, a kitchen garden, formal flower gardens, and over 400 species of plants from around the world. Totally Organic: No chemical pesticides, fungicides, or herbicides. More information and photos on www.galeazza.com

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Garden: Merritt College Arboretum

The Merritt College Landscape Horticulture Arboretum supports an educational program designed to prepare students for careers in all the major horticultural disciplines, including landscape design and construction, nursery and greenhouse management, sustainable urban agriculture, floral production and design, turf management and arboriculture and aesthetic pruning. Of special interest are the Permaculture Demonstration Garden with more than 100 fruit trees, perennial and annual plants for food production, companion plantings and herb collection; a collection of more than 500 Mediterranean, South African and Australian specimen plants as well as a large collection of California Natives. For additional information see: http://www.merrittlandhort.com/

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Garden: Denver Botanic Gardens Park

Denver Botanic Gardens at York Street presents a wide range of gardens and collections that illustrate an ever-widening diversity of plants from all corners of the world. Distinctive gardens define and celebrate our Western identity and a unique high altitude climate and geography. Many of our innovative gardens are models of drought-tolerance and showcase native and adapted plants that thrive in Western gardens. Throughout Denver Botanic Gardens, the time honored traditions of European horticulture merge with a dynamic diversity of plants and design that represent the best in horticultural achievement. Denver Botanic Gardens has opened the city's first publicly accessible green roof, located above our new Offshoots at the Gardens bistro. The green roof is the first of its kind on a city-owned building in Denver, and is a highly visible demonstration of the many benefits of green roofs for communities and for building owners. Source: http://www.botanicgardens.org/content/our-gardens-york-street

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Garden: Denver Botanic Gardens at Chatfield

Denver Botanic Gardens at Chatfield is a picturesque nature preserve among the grasslands, ponds and cottonwood banks of Deer Creek. Facilities include nature trails, a wildlife observation area, display gardens, educational exhibits, a historical farm, a 19th century one-room schoolhouse, working beehives and picnic areas. Check out our new Deer Creek Discovery children’s area, which includes a whimsical tree house and a water feature. Don't forget to bring your binoculars for some exceptional bird watching! Walk along the scenic trails any time of year -- you will find the landscape is always changing. Source: http://www.botanicgardens.org/content/our-gardens-chatfield-location

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Garden: US Botanic Garden in Washington, DC

The Architect of the Capitol and the U.S. Botanic Garden (USBG) welcome you to the newly renovated Conservatory. We are proud to offer the citizens of Washington and visitors from across the nation a beautiful and fascinating living plant museum here on our Nation's Mall at the foot of the U.S. Capitol. We invite you to return again and again, to watch us grow and to see our ever-changing exhibits. The United States Botanic Garden (USBG) is a botanic garden run by the Congress of the United States. It is located in Washington, D.C., on the U.S. Capitol Grounds campus near Garfield Circle. The building itself, which includes a large Lord & Burnham greenhouse, is divided into separate rooms, each one simulating a different habitat. Source: http://www.usbg.gov/

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Garden: Cheyenne Botanic Gardens

Outside spread over eight acres are many gardens featuring perennials, annuals, wildflowers, roses, herbs, and cacti. Some specialty areas include a nationally recognized inspirational Peace Garden, rose garden, herb garden, cacti garden, two community vegetable gardens, lily pond, sensory garden, and the Discovery Pond and educational wetland area. Connecting many gardens is the Western Walkway featuring 170 livestock brands set into the concrete walk. The walkway connects the Cheyenne Botanic Gardens grounds to the Old West Museum, where the vitality, drama and romance of life in the West comes alive. Along the Western Walkway is a unique series of three landscaped plazas known as the Rotary Century Plazas. Each plaza interprets life in southeast Wyoming over the past three centuries (1700’s, 1800’s and 1900’s). Each plaza includes sculpted benches, historic plants and other interpretations explaining life in each century. The Rotary Century Plazas also include Wyoming’s oldest locomotive that is surrounded by a historic folk art fence. Adjacent to the 1900’s plaza is a restored 1928 FarmAll tractor and an educational shelterbelt planting. Source: http://www.botanic.org/More_Details.asp

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Garden: Montana Arboretum and Gardens

Small arboretum on campus includes native plants from north Rocky Mountain region. Many established large specimens. Xeriscape garden. Many native plants from plains and drier areas of the state.

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Garden: Mynelle Gardens

Former private property and gardens opened to public in 1973. Includes an island, bridged to the grounds, and two houses from original landowners. Wildlife sanctuary and songbird haven. Mynelle Gardens began as a private garden created by Mynelle Westbrook Hayward and was acquired by the City of Jackson in 1973. It is a seven acre collage of several distinct gardens, with winding pathways, cascading pools, and distinctive bridges which lead you across the pond to an island oasis. It typifies the southern garden with features worth emulating in our own backyards. Source: http://city.jackson.ms.us/Visitors/mynelle.htm

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Garden: West Virginia Botanic Gardens

Imagine beautifully landscaped gardens reflecting on a shimmering pond. Trails weave from bright flowering meadows into a cool, shaded woodland. Streams sparkle beneath stately hemlocks. Some visitors stand silently, resting in the splendor of the vista; others energetically explore this wonderful community resource this wonderful community resource, the West Virginia Botanic Garden. Begun as only a dream in 2000, the WVBG is on its way to becoming a reality on the 82-acre former Tibbs Run Reservoir property off the Tyrone Road in Monongalia County, WV. The former 15-acre basin will be transformed into two smaller pools with islands and aquatic plant displays. The old water works, still present, will stand as a link to the past. The WVBG will feature a large variety of plants appropriate to the region's climate and soils in both designed and natural settings. Visitors will learn from these gardens in every season of the year. Source: http://www.wvbg.org/mission.html

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Garden: Chicago Botanic Gardens

The mission of the Chicago Botanic Garden is to promote the enjoyment, understanding, and conservation of plants and the natural world. The Garden continues to strive to meet the lofty goals set more than a century ago. The Chicago Botanic Garden, with its world-renowned plant collections and displays, is one of the country's most visited public gardens and a preeminent center for learning and scientific research. The 385-acre Garden features 24 display gardens and three native habitats, uniquely situated on nine islands surrounded by lakes. Source: http://www.chicagobotanic.org/

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Garden: Memphis Botanic Garden

Memphis Botanic Garden strives to enhance lives by connecting people with plants and by increasing awareness and appreciation of our environment. Our 96-acre property includes 23 specialty gardens, which provide an in-depth look into various families of plants, flowers, and trees. Source: http://www.memphisbotanicgarden.com/index.cfm

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Garden: The Botanic Garden Berlin-Dahlem

The Botanic Garden Berlin-Dahlem comprises an area of 126 acres and hence is one of the world´s largest and most important gardens. About 22,000 different species of plants are cultivated here. In the 39 acres of the plant-geography section - one of the biggest of its kind in the world - you can travel all the way around the Northern Hemisphere, and in the 42 acre Arboretum and taxonomy section you can get an insight into the relationship among woody and herbaceous plants. The greenhouse complex consists of 16 houses open to the public and offers the possibility to travel through tropical and subtropical vegetation. These living collections, along with the preserved collections, form the basis for the continued expansion of scientific study within the plant kingdom, with the goal to deepen the knowledge necessary for the utilization and protection of plant diversity on earth. Source: http://www.bgbm.org/BGBM/garden/default_e.htm

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Garden: Independence Park Botanic Gardens

Public gardens dedicated to horticultural education, recreation and nature studies are located in BREC's Independence Park. Special programming and hands-on gardening activities for children are offered to provide recreational activities which will build an appreciation of our Southern environment. The Botanic Gardens contain displays of blooming woody ornamental plants, perennials, annuals, ground covers and wetland plants. These include the Rose Garden, the Crape Myrtle Garden, Sensory Garden, Children's Forest and the Louisiana Iris Garden. Visitors can walk 1.8 miles of walking trails and fully experience the beauty of theBotanic Gardens. Much of the effort in planting and maintaining these gardens has been accomplished by volunteers. Get involved and volunteer today--become a member of the Friends of the Botanic Gardens! Source: http://www.brec.org

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Garden: philiopole

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Garden: Santa Barbara Botanic Gardens

The Santa Barbara Botanic Garden is an educational and scientific institution fostering stewardship of the natural world through inspired learning, rigorous scholarship, and premier displays. With an emphasis on plants native to California, the Garden advances the knowledge and understanding of plant life and provides a rewarding experience for visitors. Source: http://www.sbbg.org/

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Garden: Tizer Botanic Garden and Arboretum

The best raspberry and strawberry patches in the county are right here in the gardens and if you are lucky enough you might even get to taste them. Vegetables of every kind can be found growing even in this harsh environment that usually gets less than 60 consecutive frost free days. The Rose Garden was developed in 2003 for the purpose of testing roses for Weeks Roses of California. Today, the Rose Garden is home to mostly Canadian roses. Perennial as well as annual herbs are abundant in herb garden. Medicinal, edible and tea herbs happily intermingle. Source: http://www.tizergardens.com/index.html

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Garden: peaceful retreat

lots of bush and shrubs i have no idea what most of them are . we also have rose and a couple of small lemon trees. not really a gardener and have a lot to learn

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Garden: Mons Garden

ferns, Jasmine, Creeping white Tea Rose, Bamboo

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Garden: Veikko's home garden

In my small garden I grow flowers. Some fruits I have too.

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Merv CORMIER

I HAVE BEEN A GARDENER FOR OVER TWENTY YEARS, SO I COULD BE CONSIDERED A "MASTER GARDEBER". I fell in love with hostas in Montreal in 1976 while visiting the Montreal Botanical Gardens, I'm still crazy about them. They are always prettier when the're mature and left alone onlyto be divided when absolutely necessary.


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Susumu Sano

I live near Lake Biwa-ko (The biggest lake in Japan) of Shiga,Japan where left Kyoto by car for 30 minutes. There are a lot of Japanese gardens ( Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines) and botanical garden in and around Kyoto. And here is the area where nature is left. The climate is warm, and we have the four seasons. I enjoy the making of Japanese vegetables in the backyard that is not so large. The compost (organic fertilizer) is made from garbage and dead leaf at home. From this year, I came to perform gardening to see a TV program of the vegetables gardening even during the winter. I enjoy fishing at sea, trip, the breeding of the dog, the tropical fish and the bell cricket other than gardening. I hope to make friends abroad and want to share information about gardening and the culture. Please contact me if you like.


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Geraldine Mac Kinnon

Artist, art teacher and botanical artist from Chile. I moved to the beach a few months ago, and everything grows nice though it's necesary to take care of the sun and wind, mostly when plants are young. I love to watch and draw plants and birds. I am also a surfer so my spot is perfect!


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Jose Almandoz

Head gardener of Iturraran Botanical Garden for the last 15 years


Garden Photo:

Royal Botanical Gardens - Volunteering Saturdays!

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Shots that look like Botanical Drawings :)

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Encyclia macrochilum Royal Botanical Gardens Orchids

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This is part of a display at Royal Botanical Gardens in Burlington Ontario. It contains some orchids and other plants that might be found in central Americal. I volunteer with the Garden's orchids 2 times a week.