On Sunday 26 May (ie just after this posting) we will be celebrating Botanic Gardens Day. I'd love to offer you a potted history of the day but that appears to be a tightly guarded secret. After considerable and largely fruitless research I have established that it was initiated by Botanic Gardens Australia and New Zealand (BGANZ) in 2015, but that's about as much as they're prepared to divulge. It's not celebrated on the same date every year, but on the last Sunday in May. BGANZ itself (not the most elegant acronym I've ever met, but you can only work with what you've got!) was founded in 2004 and is the peak body for some 90 botanic gardens across the two countries. The idea of the day is to be an 'annual day of celebration to shed light on the role of plants in our lives and the important work botanic gardens undertake every day to conserve them for future generations', (according at least to one member garden - hello Mackay!).
And with that I'll give up on trying to find out more about the day's origins and just get on with doing some celebrating! When we travel in regional Australia we always keep an eye out for botanic gardens (though clearly we've got a lot more to find yet!), and especially those that have an emphasis on native plants, which we find is increasingly the case as new gardens are developed.
Here are some welcomes to visitors in regional botanic gardens across three states; in each case I'll introduce the gardens properly in due course. Overall I'll be using photos from 18 gardens today and next week, nearly all of them regional.
North Coast Regional Botanic Gardens, Coffs Harbour, north coast NSW |
Australian Arid Lands Botanic Gardens, Port Augusta, at the arid head of Spencer Gulf, South Australia. |
Entrance to the Australian section, Wagga Wagga Botanic Gardens, central southern NSW. |
Shoalhaven Heads Native Botanic Gardens, south coast NSW. |
Botanic Garden of Western Woodlands, Goondiwindi, central southern Queensland |
Inevitably the range and diversity of these gardens are huge; here are some settings and scenes from three very different gardens in very different parts of the country.
Wollongong Botanic Gardens, looking up to Mount Keira on the coastal escarpment south of Sydney. (Covers 30ha, opened 1971. More on it here in a post I wrote earlier this year.) |
Old wind-bent Western Myall over a diverse understorey of chenopods. But this isn't the only habitat preserved with the AABG grounds. |
Looking out from Red Cliff Lookout across the head of Spencer Gulf to the Flinders Range beyond. In the foreground are Grey Mangroves Avicennia marina which are within the garden management area. |
Mangroves along a boardwalk at Puckey's Estate, a coastal annexe of the Wollongong Botanic Gardens mentioned (and linked) above. |
Here the soil is impregnated with salt and the plants are regularly inundated by salt water. |
Swampy palm forest with huge paperbarks Melaleuca leucodendra, along the path between the Flecker Gardens and the Centenary Lakes in Cairns Botanic Gardens. |
Rainforest remnants along the creek line, Wollongong Botanic Gardens. |
A scribbly gum (there are several of that name) Eucalyptus signata in original wet forest in the North Coast Regional Botanic Garden at Coffs Harbour (see earlier in this post). |
Drier eucalypt forest in the Wollongong Botanic Gardens; I'm not sure about the gums, but the rough-stockinged eucalypt is Blackbutt E. pilularis. |
Woodland remnant in Goondiwindi Botanic Gardens. This 25ha gardens is a delightful surprise (unless you've done your homework of course!) featuring plants native to the Upper Darling River catchment; it opened in 1988. Here's a link to an post on both these gardens, and those at Emerald which we'll get to soon. |
Old Bangalay E. botryoides, Shoalhaven Heads Native Botanic Gardens in the village of Shoalhaven Heads at the mouth of the Shoalhaven River, south coast of NSW. At the beginning of the project, this was the only native plant visible on the site! This remarkable little garden is squeezed into just one hectare of land, and is entirely the work of park care volunteers. Excellent plantings are enjoyed from a very cleverly designed set of winding tracks which make the place seem bigger than it is! The plantings comprise species that range north to tropical Queensland and across to the south-west of WA. I posted about it here, back when I first discovered it. |
Old Brittle Gum E. mannifera, Australian National Botanic Gardens, Canberra. Such trees are scattered throughout this, surely Australia's premier native plant botanic garden - as of course it should be! There are also areas of undeveloped original forest on the fringes. I'll be featuring it again, especially in a further post of the wildlife of the gardens, but I wrote about it long, long ago here and here. Because of those postings, and today's emphasis on regional gardens, I won't be giving this gem among our national institutions the coverage that it deserves. |
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Red and Green Kangaroo Paw Anigozanthos manglesii, the state floral emblem of course. |
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Carousel Spider Orchid Caladenia (or Arachnorchis) arenicola, a common spider orchid - but still... |
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Large Pansy Orchid Diuris magnifica. |
Youthful Baobabs Adansonia gregorii, Darwin Botanic Gardens. |
Ferns, especially Cyathea spp., North Coast Regional Botanic Gardens, Coffs Harbour. |
Sturt's Desert Peas Swainsona formosa, Arid Lands BG, Port Augusta. |
Central Australian plantings in the lovely Olive Pink BG, Alice Springs. This 16ha garden of central Australian plants was founded in 1956. For more about it, including the remarkable eponymous Olive Pink, see an old post of mine here. |
... other plantings are from further afield...
Palms (which I don't think are local, though most of the plantings are from the region), Emerald Botanic Gardens, central Queensland. These are lovely gardens on the banks of the Nogoa River, founded in 1987 and covering 42ha. Here's link to an post I did on these gardens, plus the ones at Goondiwindi. |
The new (2023) cycad collection, featuring threatened species though not all Australian, Wollongong Botanic Gardens. More on this here. |
Rainforest gully, an extensive and extraordinary achievement. |
Red Centre garden; this was taken just a year after its opening in 2013. Since then it has developed well, then began to struggle in recent years, sadly. This may be due to some very wet La Niña years, though there are also always issues with chronic underfunding. More on this ambitious project here. |
Conservatory in Cairns Botanic Gardens, a magnificent space which supports an array of animals (see more next week). |
Cactus collection in the Sir Joseph Banks Glasshouse, Wollongong BG. |
The approach from the carpark to the visitor centre and cafe, Eurobodalla Regional Botanic Gardens. |
Visitor centre and cafe, Cooktown Botanic Gardens. Below is a view of the very attractive cafe deck. |
Some of the more informal cafe seating at the delightful Olive Pink Botanic Gardens, Alice Springs. (This is a very nice cafe with more formal seating too; see next photo.) |
Emerald Botanic Gardens. |
Actually this one at Goondiwindi Botanic Gardens is more like a bandstand! |
This hide at the Arid Lands Botanic Gardens at Port Augusta looks into a small artificial pool surrounded by protective bushes (below). |
The view to a small lake from the hide at Eurobodalla Regional Botanic Gardens. |
Shoalhaven Botanic Gardens |
Goanna in stones, Inland Botanic Gardens, Buronga. |
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This magnificent wooden python in Cooktown BG is probably 5 metres long (though I confess it's been a while - too long in fact - since I saw it). |
Gate detail, Darwin BG; Rufous Owls apparently often roost in the gardens, though we've never managed to find them. |
One of the Centenary Lakes, Cairns Botanic Gardens. |
Goondiwindi Botanic Gardens; this is a converted quarry. |
At the entrance to the North Coast Regional BG, Coffs Harbour. |
Nogoa River, Emerald BG. |
Looking down from a viewing platform, Darwin BG. |
Goondiwindi BG. |
Wagga Wagga BG. |
Succulent hill, Wollongong BG. |
Cooktown BG. |
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