This is the second in an irregular series on botanic gardenswhich I regard as special.
The National Botanic Gardens in Canberra have been an important part of my life for over 30 years, from when they and I were young. I’ve been a regular visitor for that time, though it was easier when I lived just 20 minutes walk away. In my bad times (a long time ago now) it was a haven. I’ve celebrated friends there – by way of a wedding, birthdays, many picnics and two memorial services for friends who, in life, loved the place as much as I do.
It is, I’m sure, one of the few national botanic gardens in the world to focus exclusively on the native plants of the country; I’d be fascinated to hear of others. Sixty years ago the site, on the lower slopes of Black Mountain, comprised degraded dairy farms on what had originally been dry eucalypt forest; some remnant trees remained, and can still be seen in the gardens, along with extensive areas of regenerated forest.
Old Brittle Gum Eucalyptus mannifera among the plantings. Although older than the gardens, it seems that it was coppiced by the lessees, perhaps for firewood or fence posts. |
In the 1950s the locally legendary Lindsay Pryor, forester and Canberra’s Superintendent of Parks and Gardens, oversaw the resumption of the land and the beginning of its development. It was not until 1967 that the gardens opened to the public, and 1970 before its official opening. At this stage it was still the Canberra Botanic Gardens; not until 1978 was its national role formalised.
Now there are over 70,000 cultivated plants in the 90 hectare site (less than half of which is yet developed), representing more than 5,000 species from the entire country, a remarkable tribute to horticultural skill and wizardry, given our location on a cold, dry plateau. There must be ten of kilometres of walking paths; you couldn’t see it all in a day. In addition to its important research function – as part of which it hosts the National Herbarium – it contains Canberra’s best natural history bookshop, an education centre and lecture theatre, public reference herbarium, and a café which, on a good day, can be quite good. A vital and passionate Friends group performs many voluntary roles, the most visible of which involves free guided walking tours, twice a day (or on request) all year round.
The layout is largely based on taxonomic groupings – massed plantings representing the major Australian plant families – though sections representing ecological regions are important, and seemingly becoming more of a focus. The best known and loved of these is doubtless the remarkable rainforest gully, which 40 years ago was still dry and open.
Ephemeral gully above the rainforest gully; this is how the scenes below looked prior to development. |
Careful sequential planting, soil preparation and aerial misting have produced an environment which supports plants from the cool temperate forests of Tasmania to the tropical tangles of north Queensland. It’s a wonderful – and sought-after – venue on a hot day.
Walking tracks follow both the rim and floor of the gully. |
Ferns, palms and epiphytes outside in Canberra (where winter nights can be -10 degrees)? A form of botanical alchemy. |
Another is the rockery, an extensive area of raised beds which supports plants from habitats as diverse as the dry Western Australian heaths and alpine bogs. This is an extraordinary venture, including a stream which culminates in a rock wall, waterfall and plunge pool.
The waterfall is in the dark section of rock just to the right of centre of the photo. The rockery itself (featured in the next photos) is behind the rock wall. |
It was commenced in December 1979, a couple of weeks before I arrived here. I clearly remember the piles of huge boulders, some weighing over 20 tonnes. I remember too being told by one of the rangers at the time that a consultant spent days wandering round looking at the rocks – and at the end of the time knew exactly which went where.
Other habitat- and regional-themed areas include mallee (from both western and eastern Australia), Sydney sandstone, grasslands and Tasmania.
Edge of the Sydney sandstone gully; new plantings featuring Flannel Flowers Actinotus helianthi in the foreground. |
The latest, and an exciting, development is a central Australian section, featuring the red sandstone of the Centre.
Central Australian section under construction, February 2013; due for opening in spring 2013. For scale, see the full-sized rare Central Australian Cabbage Palm Livistone mariae, on the far left. |
There is, as one would expect, an emphasis on threatened plant species too.
And all this is to say nothing of the prolific wildlife of the gardens; I’ll dedicate a posting to that next week.
Meantime, I’ll be back on Sunday to celebrate some birthdays from Australia’s biological history.