Membership to the Gardens means free admission, discounts on classes and events and in our Gardenshop, reciprocal benefits at other gardens across the country, members-only hours at the Gardens, and more!
Gardenshop online has thousands of items to peruse as gifts for friends and family, and every purchase in our store is powerful: each sale directly supports our mission to inspire meaningful connections among people, plants, and nature.
Recognized nationally for commitment to outstanding displays, botanical diversity, education, environmental stewardship, and experiences that connect people to the natural world, the Garden is a top San Antonio attraction that serves as a museum of plants, a tranquil escape, a living classroom, a research and conservation facility, and entertainment venue where art, architecture, music, and theater experiences come to life.
Embrace your creative mind and connect with your inner voice through guided writing prompts and mindfulness practices. Engaging the creative mind provides therapeutic benefits such as feeling refreshed and rejuvenated. All levels of writing are welcome. Fee: $40 non-member; $32 ...
As a nonprofit botanical garden, our mission is to engage and enrich lives by displaying and conserving plants in harmony with our Northern California coastal ecosystems and to preserve public access to the coast.
Membership to the Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens gives you free admission to the Gardens for individuals or households (depending on membership level), free or discounted admission at more than 340 other public gardens (find participating gardens), discounted admission for guests of members, discounts on workshops, discounts in The Garden Store and Nursery, invitations to special member events, and more. CLICK HERE for full details.
The Gardens is a nonprofit, 501(c)(3) organization.
Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens is located on land purchased by the California Coastal Conservancy and owned by the Mendocino Coast Recreation and Park District.
Come enjoy blooms and a beverage with special summer evening hours! On the third Thursdays in June, July, and August 2024, the Garden will stay open until 8 p.m. for visitors to enjoy the golden hour and sunset amidst summer flowers and the USBG plant collection from around the world.
The U.S. Botanic Garden and American Public Gardens Association are awarding support to 26 public gardens and their community partners engaging in urban agriculture, food-growing, and related education work. The 26 awards total $445,600 in support for public garden partnerships across the U.S. that will foster public engagement and education in urban food growing and build capacity in urban agriculture programs.
Find picture perfect seasonal displays in the parterre, rose, vegetable and herb gardens as well as in the Welcome Plaza. Designed by students of the Niagara Parks School of Horticulture, these stunning displays feature over 80,000 annual plants grown in the on-site greenhouse. One hundred and fifty student-designed hanging baskets can also be spotted in the gardens throughout the growing seasons.
Since then, the school has been growing world leaders in horticulture through a unique post-secondary experience. Students, staff and alumni with a passion for the art, science and mystery of horticulture contribute to the groundskeeping of the Botanical Gardens to welcome visitors from around the world.
Members also receive reciprocal admissions to other gardens like the Santa Barbara Botanical Gardens. To learn more about which Gardens are covered in your membership: ahsgardening.org
With over 120,000 plants in the ground, the Gardens represent the five Mediterranean climate zones of the world; Chile, the Cape of South Africa, Australia, the Mediterranean Basin and California. These low water climate zones, like Ventura, allow for long-term sustainability and are designed to replicate plant communities as they occur in nature.
A flower pathway takes you past our olive trees and through our nursery where we have dedicated spaces to welcome students on field trips. Here we prepare and propagate plants before we add them to our collection.
As you enter the first walkway of the Chilean Gardens, you will see a Chilean Soapbark Tree on your right. The Soapbark Tree provides the adjuvant, a chemical compound affecting immunity, as a part of the shingles and COVID-19 vaccines.
Further along the way, you will note our large Chilean Wine Palms, part of our collection of endangered species. The work we do at the Gardens includes protecting and propagating endangered species and creating a library of plants and seeds.
As you continue toward the top, check out our cheerful ribbed barrel cactus or take a meditation moment at one of our sponsored benches and enjoy the brightly-colored cistanthe grandiflora along the way.
When you reach Rotary Plaza, shaded by old-growth Eucalyptus trees, notice the California Ramble to your left left and right. The Ramble, our largest garden, contains native species like ceanothus, lemonade berry and California oak, and in the springtime, colorful poppy and lupine blooms.
Upward in our Mediterranean Garden, there are 200 olive tree saplings. With 50 different cultivars, these plants will provide conservation and research opportunities for an agricultural resource that humans have developed over millennia. This grove will enable us to examine what cultivars do well in regional agriculture as our climate changes.
To your right and up the hill is the South African Fynbos Gardens, abundant with protea, ericas, bulbs and geraniums, a dry creek bed, and a charming bridge. Looking back toward the entrance, enjoy a spectacular view of the Channel Islands.
As a 40-year project, VBG will continue to grow and create new outdoor opportunities for training, research, and educational programs ranging from horticulture and botany to sustainability. Garden expansion will be ongoing for decades to come.
The foundation for all botanical gardens is to maintain a collection of plants for scientific research, display, education and conservation. We take this role to heart, protecting endangered and threatened species to insure their long term survival. Some of the plants under our stewardship include the Chilean Wine Palm, the California Tecate cypress, mariposa lilies, and numerous native wildflowers threatened by habitat.
Do you appreciate the beauty that nature has to offer? Then you're sure to flourish at Amarillo Botanical Gardens. Since 1968, our botanical garden has served the community by inspiring interaction with plants and the environment. We're keeping our mission alive through tours and exciting outdoor events.
Rotary Botanical Gardens offers a variety of educational programs and activities throughout the year for adults, families and youth. Please visit our Education page or Calendar of Events for a complete listing of programs, workshops, and symposia.
We offer a variety of rental spaces in a gorgeous and serene setting that features year-round beauty. Our gardens offer the perfect place for any special event rentals including weddings, meetings, corporate events, memorials and holiday celebrations.
Enjoy a wide variety of events throughout the year, including Plant Sales, Summer Concert Series, Cottage Garden Gallery Sales, Volunteer Socials, Community Appreciation Days, Holiday Light Show, Workshops, Educational Programs, and more!
Whether you are looking for a relaxing stroll through a beautiful setting, studying plants and want to learn more, or you are simply new to the area and wonder what variety of plants this climate can support, our gardens and staff are here to help.
For more information about visiting the Gardens, see: Directions and ParkingSusie HarwoodThe Susie Harwood Garden features native and non-native plants that grow well within the Carolina Piedmont to inspire your own garden at home. With new hardscaping and several different gardening styles featured, this garden offers a variety of approaches for a Carolina garden.
Dozens of themed and collection gardens, including hosta, daylilies, Asiatic lilies, iris, peonies, roses, dwarf conifers, ornamental grasses, native plants and more are grown and maintained by volunteer plant enthusiast organizations united under the Friends of the Garden. Tour the individual gardens here.
Enjoy the serenity of this 7.5-acre traditional Japanese garden, established in 1986 through a partnership with the Springfield Sister Cities Association and Springfield's sister city, Isesaki, Japan. Includes mature landscaping, winding paths, three small lakes, ceremonial teahouse, moon bridge and meditation garden. Restrooms and pavilion outside front gate. Admission: $5/Adults, $3/Children 3-11 years, Free/Members of Friends of the Garden, Springfield Sister Cities Association, American Horticulture Society and children 2 years and younger. Open April-October, check hours at 417-891-1515.
Includes an ornamental shrub and perennial border, themed herb beds, Missouri native plants, turf plots and a kitchen garden. Call the hotline for home garden questions: 417-881-8909 or in...@mggreene.org.
This 6-mile paved Greenway trail spans from McDaniel Park Trailhead to West Bypass/US 160, including a section in the park. Perfect for biking, running, walking, strollers and wheelchairs. Visit Ozark Greenways for information and maps.
Cleveland Botanical Garden offers reciprocal admission benefits to Over 345 participating gardens, arboreta & conservatories throughout North America (via the American Horticultural Society). Learn more.
For transit riders with disabilities, RTA offers special paratransit service that can be scheduled to bring one to the Botanical Garden. Visit their site to learn if you qualify and to reserve rides.
To reserve a bus rental to the Cleveland Botanical Garden, contact National Charter Bus Cleveland at 1-844-755-0510 or GOGO Charters Cleveland at 1-216-916-6616. Browse through their field trip bus rentals and group transportation services offered for your group trip or private event.
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