tourism about gardening history
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Travel topics > Natural attractions > Botanical tourism

Botanical tourism is travel for the purposes of viewing the varied flora of a region, district or in the case of some species even a single plant!

Understand edit

Botanical tourism is travelling to see plants, either in their native environment or in managed botanical gardens and parks. Generally a greater variety of plants can be seen in the one place by visiting a botanical garden and no special preparation is needed, so gardens are a good introduction to the subject.

Parks and gardens have been created and managed over many centuries. Gardens are said to have been created in Mesopotamia around 3,000 years ago. Botanical gardens started to appear during the Renaissance in the sixteenth century, although there were some earlier physic gardens devoted to medical herbs. These gardens were used for research, often connected to universities, and received plants from returning explorers.

In the 18th century many botanical gardens were established, and parks for the general public (rather than a select few) to enjoy were built. In particular, the British established many botanical gardens modelled after the Royal Botanical Gardens in Kew throughout their vast colonial empire. Heated glasshouses (greenhouses) enabled gardens to grow and display plants from around the world.

Prepare edit

Know in advance, if there are any plants you want to see specially. Specialist guides like Wikispecies can help you get a detailed taxonomy, if you already have the technical name of a plant you are really interested in.

In addition, knowing seasons is essential in appreciating plants, especially flowers and colored leaves. Time of the day may be important, too – some species, such as Calonyction aculeatum (moon flower), bloom only in the night. Linné even made a clock based on the circadian rhythm of different flowering plants.

As a variation of botanical tourism, tourist farms offer experiences like harvesting and eating fruits in the best season.

Equip edit

This is in general up to the traveller, but should be picked appropriately for the region visited. If you are visiting wilderness areas to look at native plants, ensure that your equipment is thoroughly cleaned, so that you don't introduce seeds, diseases or pests from home. Some botanical gardens require you to clean your feet on entry.

See edit

 
Map of Botanical tourism

It is outside the scope of Wikivoyage to act as a detailed botanical guidebook to where individual species might be specifically found. The listings given below are either major tourist sites, or regions visited specifically because of their floral or botanical heritage.

Africa edit

See also: African wildlife
  • 1 Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden (Cape Town, South Africa). See the beautiful and highly diverse flowers and plants of the Cape in one of the most stunning botanical gardens in the world. Plants from every South African bioregion are displayed. These include a huge baobab tree, rare succulents from the Richtersveld, and fascinating medicinal species. The gardens are also home to the National Biodiversity Institute. The garden is special because it changes dramatically every season. You will see different birds, new flowers, etc.    
  • 2 Socotra. A isolated island of Yemen off the coast of Africa with very high biodiversity.    
  • 3 Namib-Naukluft National Park. A desert park close to the Atlantic with a notable amount of wildlife    

The wildlife of Madagascar has more than 10,000 endemic plant species.

Asia edit

See also: Eurasian wildlife, South Asian wildlife

China edit

See also: Chinese gardens
  • Classical Gardens of Suzhou
  • 4 China National Botanical Garden (国家植物园 Guójiā Zhíwù Yuán) (Haidian District, Beijing). Acres of greenery and flowers for those tired of urban smog and traffic noise. Sir Johnston, teacher of the last emperor Puyi, had a villa in Cherry Glen, a silent and beautiful retreat in the Gardens. In the spring, the gardens hosts special exhibits of tulips, peach and plum blossoms, peonies, and the like. Separated by the Fragrant Hill Road, the North garden is the former Beijing Botanical Garden, and the South garden is the former IBCAS Beijing Botanical Garden.    
  • 5 Qinling National Botanical Garden (秦岭国家植物园) (Xi'an). Covering an area of 639 square kilometers, the Qinling National Botanical Garden lays claim to being the largest botanical garden in the world.
  • 6 South China National Botanical Garden (华南国家植物园 Huá Nán Guójiā Zhíwù Yuán) (Tianhe District, Guangzhou). Large botanical garden affiliated with the Chinese Academy of Sciences.    
  • 7 Yuyuan Garden (豫园 Yù Yuán) (Shanghai, China). Beautiful traditional Chinese garden in the heart of Shanghai, next to the City God Temple.    

Indonesia edit

See also: Indonesian zoos and botanical gardens
  • 8 Bogor Botanical Gardens (Kebun Raya Bogor) (Bogor, Indonesia). The extensive botanical gardens were established in 1811. Today, the gardens stretch out over 87 hectares, including some carefully manicured gardens as well as areas that look and feel like wild jungle. Fountains, lakes, two rivers and hilly trails make for interesting walking. If you visit in January you may be able to spot a blooming giant arum (Amorphophallus titanum), the world's tallest inflorescence (flower cluster) which can reach an astounding 2.5 m and smells like rotting meat.    

India edit

See also: Indian zoos and botanical gardens

Iran edit

  • 9 National Botanical Garden of Iran, Tehran, Iran. Avariety of indigenous and non-native plants are cultivated outdoors and in greenhouses and plays an important role in a variety of research areas including plant and gardening science, public education and making people aware of the importance of plants and the need to protect them.    

Japan edit

As well as specific tourist sites, there are myriad examples of Japanese Gardens, ranging from the traditional to not so traditional.

Aside from gardens:

  • Japan's Top 100 Cherry Blossom Spotshanami, or looking at the cherry blossom, has been a Japanese tradition for centuries. A popular pastime all around the country (and nowadays in other parts of the world too), the Japan Cherry Blossom Association has compiled a list of 100 locations where a large number of cherry trees grow in historically important and naturally beautiful environments.
  • Saitama - bonsai captal of the world.

Malaysia edit

  • 10 Batu Pahat Botanical Park, Batu Pahat, Johor.  
  • 11 Perdana Botanical Gardens, Kuala Lumpur.    
  • 12 Melaka Botanical Garden, Ayer Keroh, Melaka.    
  • 13 National Botanical Garden Shah Alam, Shah Alam, Selangor.    
  • 14 Penang Botanic Gardens, George Town, Penang.    
  • 15 Putrajaya Botanical Garden, Putrajaya.    
  • 16 Rimba Ilmu Botanical Gardens, Kuala Lumpur.    
  • 17 Zaharah Botanic Gardens, Johor Bahru, Johor.  

Myanmar edit

  • 18 National Kandawgyi Gardens (Pyin U Lwin, Myanmar). Botanical gardens built by the British during the colonial period in this hill station, this today serves as a beautiful retreat for locals from Mandalay.    

Singapore edit

See also: Botanical tourism in Singapore
  • 19 Singapore Botanic Gardens, Bukit Timah Rd. This   UNESCO World Heritage Site was once considered among the finest botanical gardens in the British Empire, and it is still a firm favourite for visitors and locals alike. Features trees and plants from tropical climates around the world. Walking and jogging trails are throughout, and you can register for regular free guided tours highlighting different themes or areas such as the rainforest, and the healing garden. Outdoor sculptures dot the gardens. Look for the girl on the swing that appears to hang from an invisible chain in the air. Free.

Europe edit

See also: Eurasian wildlife
 
A palm house of the Kaisaniemi Botanic Garden in Helsinki

Austria edit

Belgium edit

Czech Republic edit

Gardens and Castle at Kroměříž, South Moravia

Finland edit

France edit

France has over 100 botanical gardens and arboretums. There are also many formal gardens around chateaux (castles) open to the public.

  • 23 Jardin botanique de Bordeaux (Bordeaux, France). Started as a garden of medicinal herbs in 1629, the present garden dates from 1858 and covers 0.5 ha. In 2003 an offshoot garden Jardin botanique de la Bastide was opened across the river on a 4-ha site.    
  • 24 Jardin des Plantes (Garden of Plants), ] (Paris, France). The Paris Botanical Garden, founded as the royal medicinal garden in 1626 by King Louis XIII's doctor, contains over 10,000 species. The garden covers 28ha and includes a zoo, and museums.    

Germany edit

Germany has the - perhaps somewhat baffling - tradition of the Bundesgartenschau ("Federal Gardening Exhibition") and in many of its states a Landesgartenschau ("State Gardening Exhibition") which usually takes the form of some former industrial brownfield site being turned into a park with the latest in gardening and landscape architecture being put on display. However, as early as the 1980s there were complaints that some of those Gartenschauen destroyed perfectly fine natural landscapes for the sake of "prettyfying" them and there has been a certain fatigue (akin to the anti-Olympics movement in many cities) which led to criticism of the concept or the awarding of a planned Gartenschau to a different city (as was the case with Erlangen 2023 which rejected the planned Landesgartenschau in a referendum)

  • Mainau — the "flower island" in Lake Constance is made up of several parks, including an Italian rose garden, an arboretum and a palm house with tropical plants.
  • 25 Palmengarten ("palm garden") (Frankfurt). The Palmengarten is Frankfurt's botanic garden. There are special exhibitions and events throughout the much of the year.
  • Würzburg Residence with the Court Gardens and Residence Square, Bavaria, Franconia
  • 1 Wörlitz Gardens (17 km to the east of Dessau, a good hour of cycling, or take the Wörlitzer Eisenbahn from the Dessau main station). Make a tour to the largest English landscaped park on the continent. Created in the 1770s, it shows finest garden architecture, animated by parks in England like Kew, Stourhead, Stowe. Vistas within the park and to surrounding landscape. Wörlitz Palace, Gothic House, Stein (with artificial volcano) have exhibitions.    

Ireland edit

Italy edit

  • 27 Medici Villas and Gardens, Tuscany.    
  • 28 Botanic Garden (Orto botanico di Padova), Padua. The world's oldest still operating botanic garden, operated by the University of Padua, and a   UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1997. It isn't a large garden, but subtly laid out to swallow groups of people and give the impression of solitude. Do not miss the carnivorous plants, or the wooded hill at the southeast corner mounted by a double helix pair of paths.    

Netherlands edit

  • Bulb fields can be found in the Bollenstreek, the region surrounding Lisse. This is also where Keukenhof tulip park, one of the county's most popular attractions, is located. But the Bollenstreek is not the only region in the Netherlands with these fields. If you're looking for more, try the area between Haarlem and Alkmaar in North Holland. While relatively unknown, the largest tulip fields can actually be found in the Noordoostpolder, and a signed bicycle route is set up every spring to give more prominence to the occasion.

Norway edit

  • 29 Arctic Alpine Botanic Garden (Tromsø, Norway). Northernmost botanical garden globally. The outdoor garden resides just a little walk from the university area. There is no fence surrounding the garden either. Free.    
  • 30 Dovrefjell. Due to its central placement and relatively mild climate the Dovrefjell fell area is considered a botanical hotspot. To get an overview visit the Alpine botanical garden at Kongsvoll. The area around Drivdalen, Snøhetta and Hjerkinn is of particular botanical interest. The three Knutshøene peaks are extremely rich in rare alpine plants, many of which were protected in 1905 and more in 1911. The Drivdalen valley consists of loose slate and limestone, also home to many rare plants. The Fokstumyrene moorland is first and foremost known for a unique bird life, but here also many different orchids as well.

Russia edit

  • Polar-Alpine Botanical Gardens in Kirovsk, Russia, previously the northernmost.

Sweden edit

See also: Carl Linnaeus tourism
  • Garden of and museum on Carl von Linné, Uppsala

United Kingdom edit

Many horticultural organisations in the UK, including the Royal Horticultural Society, hold annual shows or galas. The most prestigious show is held in the grounds of the Royal Hospital, Chelsea in London. During the late summer, there are countless local horticultural shows in many areas, so ask around, or check local media. You may be surprised at the efforts exhibited!

Floral or botanical displays in public parks are widespread. In many cities and towns, their design and upkeep are a matter of considerable civic pride.

England edit
  • 31 Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (London). A   UNESCO World Heritage Site, these extensive, historic and beautiful gardens feature elements illustrating significant periods of garden and landscape art from the 18th to the 20th centuries, as well as a plant collection second to none in the world. Since their creation as a royal estate in 1759, Kew Gardens (as they are commonly known) have made a significant and uninterrupted contribution to the study of plant diversity and economic botany. The gardens cover 120 hectares (300 acres) and are over 1.5 km long. They contain several major glasshouse complexes, not least the famous Palm House opened in 1848, together with a museum and several follies.    
  • 32 Chelsea Physic Garden (London). Garden founded by apothecaries in the 17th century to the medicinal properties of plants. It was only opened to the public in the 1980s when it became a charity. The heat-sink caused by its thick walls, combined with the general waste heat of London itself, keeps the garden much warmer than it would otherwise be at this latitude. Due to this, the garden contains the world's most northerly example of a grapefruit outside of a greenhouse, and the largest fruiting olive tree in the country. The collection contains thousands of different plant species.    
  • 33 Pavilion Garden (Buxton). Landscape garden and lakes; Also noted is a "Conservatory" or Winter Garden next to Buxton Opera House.
  • 34 RHS Garden Wisley (Wisley, near Guildford). The Royal Horticultural Society's (RHS) flagship garden is one of the world's great horticultural gardens, with thousands of plants from every continent across dozens of themed areas including formal gardens, borders, arboreta, rockeries, orchards and glasshouses.    
  • 35 Hever Castle (Hever, near Sevenoaks). Well-maintained landscaped Italian-style garden restored by William Waldorf Astor in the early 1900s.    
  • 36 The Eden Project. Dubbed by many as The Eighth Wonder of the World, Eden is well worth a visit if you don't mind the theme park atmosphere. A fabulous collection of flora from all over the planet housed in two 'space age' transparent domes.    
  • Compton Acres (Poole).
  • 37 The Poison Garden (Alnwick). One of the gardens at Alnwick Castle is dedicated to poisonous plants. By tour only. The tour discusses the lore behind many plants, which if not respected may be fatal! Not suitable for small children or those with a nervous disposition.    
  • 38 Alton Towers. Although better known for the modern amusement park, Alton Towers was a resort long before this, and the Grade 1 listed gardens of a former Earl of Shewsbury are a relaxed delight overlooked by many visitors.    
Northern Ireland edit
  • 39 Botanical Gardens, Belfast. The Palm House contains local and interesting plants, such as carnivorous plants. Beside it is the Tropical Ravine, unique to the British Isles, where visitors walk around a raised balcony observing tropical flora and fauna. With large lawns and well maintained planting, the park is a popular destination in the summer.    
Scotland edit
  • 40 Royal Botanic Garden (Edinburgh). Very impressive gardens with a collection of interesting plants. Great place to wander around on a sunny day, or to sit and have a picnic. Highlights include the Rock Garden; the 165-m-long herbaceous border, backed by a huge, century old beech hedge (a hedge may not sound too exciting but this one has to be seen to be believed!); and the Victorian Temperate Palm House, which is the tallest of its kind in the UK.    
  • 41 Logan Botanic Garden (Port Logan). Impressive gardens with a wide variety of subtropical plants.    
  • 42 Benmore Botanic Gardens (Dunoon, Argyll). Site of one of the finest collections of conifers as well as rhododendrons in the world, Benmore Botanic Gardens, managed by the Royal Botanic Gardens in Edinburgh, offers a 130 acre estate filled with trees and plants from around the world.    
  • 43 Glasgow Botanic Gardens (Glasgow). The Botanic Gardens contains extensive tropical and temperate plant collections from around the world. Glasgow has several other good parks. Free.    
Wales edit

North America edit

See also: North American wildlife

Canada edit

 
Western Wood Lily, Kananaskis
 
Central Experimental Farms
  • 45 Bow Valley Provincial Park (Kananaskis Country, British Columbia). In June lots of opportunities to see alpine meadow plants and wet land plants in their natural environment including orchids.    
  • 46 Central Experimental Farms (Ottawa, Ontario). 188 hectares in the middle of Canada’s capital city, the Central Experimental Farm has been around for more than a century. Grain-filled fields, barnyard animals, botanical gardens and an arboretum right in the heart of Ottawa. Used as a centre for agricultural research, the Central Experimental Farm is a working farm. It is a National Historic Site and a cultural heritage landscape. free.    
  • 47 Royal Botanical Gardens (Burlington, Ontario). Canada's largest botanical garden comprises a mix of five landscaped gardens and various wild natural areas spread out over 900 hectares (2,250 acres) and intertwined with a number of scenic trails including a segment of the Bruce Trail. 1,100 plants are represented among the collection, including many, such as the Bashful Bulrush and the red mulberry tree, that grow nowhere else in Canada. As well, the Ontario Garden Show each spring is the second-largest in Canada.    
  • 48 Stanley Park, Vancouver, British Columbia. North America's third-largest park draws eight million visitors per year, many of whom may skate or walk past you on the Seawall, a scenic, 5.5-mile path running along the water on the park's perimeter. It's just one of many trails among the park's 1,000 acres, which also house an aquarium, nature center and other recreational facilities. free.  

Costa Rica edit

  • 49 Lankester Botanical Gardens, Cartago. East of downtown Cartago, this garden hosts the largest collection of orchids and epiphytes in Central America, they also have collections in open air of bromeliads, cacti, succulents, heliconians, bamboos, palms, ferns, a secondary growth forest and a Japanese garden donated by the Japanese Embassy.    

Mexico edit

  • 50 Jardín Botánico de UNAM (UNAM Botanical Garden) (Mexico City (Coyoacán)). Large botanical garden showcasing thousands of plant species from across Mexico's many different ecosystems, including dry deserts, rocky mountain ranges, tropical and sub-tropical rainforests, and coastal wetlands. The gardens include an extensive collection of cacti. Visitors may be surprised at the extent of the collection (and Mexico's astounding biodiversity --- the country is home to more plant and animal species than both the United States and Canada combined).
  • 51 Jardín Etnobotánico (Oaxaca Botanical Garden) ( Oaxaca city). A former army base, converted to a large botanical garden in 1993. The garden, designed by Oaxacan artist Francisco Toledo who led the project to create it, has the largest collection of living cacti and agave plants in Oaxaca. Paths take visitors though the constantly growing collections that show the rich biodiversity of Oaxacan plant life. Entrance to the garden is through guided tours only. Sign up in advance at the entrance.    
  • 52 El Charco del Ingenio Jardín Botánico (San Miguel de Allende). Unique park above the town with an enormous collection of cacti. Go early to avoid heat and see more wildlife. Guided tours are offered.
  • 53 Jardin Botanico Vallarta (Vallarta Botanical Gardens) (Puerto Vallarta). Private non-profit garden established in 2004. Known for their orchid and vanilla collections.

United States of America edit

 
Alpine flora Logan Pass, Glacier National Park
 
Fungus on a tree stump, New York Botanical Garden
  • Cholla Cactus Garden (Joshua Tree National Park). A short walk leads through a thick stand of cholla cactus, noted for its especially prickly exterior.
  • 54 Dow Gardens ( Midland, Michigan). Landscaped botanical garden.    
  • 55 Denver Botanic Gardens (Denver, Colorado). A 23-acre garden with an array of flowers and plants from around the world. Above the gardens' bistro, you'll find Denver's first public green roof.    
  • 56 International Rose Test Gardens (Portland, Oregon). The largest rose test garden in U.S., perched on a hill overlooking downtown Portland, with thousands of roses planted in every possible way: rows, bushes and vines. Best to come between May and July, when it gets fragrant as everything's in bloom.    
  • 57 Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens (Fort Bragg, California). One of only a handful of public gardens with ocean frontage. These 47 acres encompass manicured gardens, fern-ringed ponds, intimate pocket gardens, coastal pine forests, and wildflower-strewn bluffs at ocean’s edge. The mild maritime climate of the Mendocino Coast offers ideal growing conditions for rhododendrons, heaths and heathers, dahlias, heritage roses, succulents, conifers, and many other plants.    
  • 58 National Garden Festival (Buffalo, New York). This "five-week-long garden party" in July and August is the largest festival of its kind in the U.S. The centerpiece is the five-mile-long Garden Walk Buffalo, but there are also about a dozen smaller garden walks passing through different neighborhoods of Buffalo and its suburbs, with over a thousand gardens participating overall. You can also take a bus tour of area urban farms, nurseries, and community gardens, take a weekday tour of one of the Open Gardens, attend your choice of symposia on various garden topics — and of course, the Buffalo & Erie County Botanical Gardens, Delaware Park's Rose Garden and Japanese Garden, and many of the local farmers' markets get in on the act too.
  • 59 New York Botanical Garden (The Bronx, New York City). This garden is a welcome respite from the hustle and bustle of Manhattan.    
  • 60 Longwood Gardens (Kennett Square, Pennsylvania). A thousand acres of beautiful gardens, woodlands, and meadows in the Brandywine Creek Valley, created in the 1700s. The spectacular Italian-style fountains are a particular draw. During the holidays, they decorate the property with different themed lights. Overall, a must-see for plant lovers.    

South America edit

See also: Central and South American wildlife

Argentina edit

  • 61 Buenos Aires Botanical Garden (Jardín Botánico Carlos Thays). The trees and other plants, organized by part of the world, fill the park densely enough that you may almost forget you're in the middle of a city. The 7 hectare garden is located in the Palermo section of the city. The quintessential "cat" garden is also filled with many flowers and a 19th-century glass house.    

Brazil edit

  • 62 Botanical Garden (Jardim Botânico), Jardim Botânico, Rio de Janeiro ( Rio de Janeiro Zona Sul). Planted in the 1800s, it is both a park and a scientific laboratory. It contains a huge collection of plants from all over the world, not only tropical ones. If you take the bus note that Jardim Botanico is also the name of a neighborhood and the road on which it is found so make sure you go all the way to the entrance. The gardens are well kept and very lush. Not far from the cafe, you are likely to hear swooshing sounds. Look up and you can see small monkeys swinging from tree to tree.    
  • 63 Inhotim, Rua B, 20 Fazenda Inhotim (Brumadinho, Minas Gerais). Combination contemporary art museum and botanical garden, and among the biggest and best of Latin America in both categories. The botanical garden has more than 5,000 species including over 1,300 palms.    

Colombia edit

  • 64 Jardín Botánico José Celestino Mutis (Jardin Botanico de Bogota) (Bogotá (Salitre city)). Colombia's largest botanical garden places an emphasis on Andean and Páramo ecosystems, but features plants from every region, altitude, and ecosystem in Colombia. The garden was founded in 1955.
  • 65 Jardín Botánico Medellín (Botanical Gardens) (Medellín). Mid-size gardens with a vast collection of orchids and many tropical flowers, plants and trees and a beautiful lake. Unfortunately no information is provided on the plants except for their name - thus, bring a smartphone for lookup up information on wikipedia if you are botanically curious. The covered area for display of flowers is an architectural marvel. The annual orchid exhibit every August is world class.
  • 66 Amacayacu National Park (take a boat from Leticia). National park in southern Colombia, by the Amazon River.    

Ecuador edit

  • 67 Quito Botanical Gardens (Jardin Botanico) (Quito). It's a wonderful escape from the city, with all of Ecuador's ecosystems represented with a wide variety of flora. You can take a guided tour or just wander. The highlight for many people are the two glassed-in orchidariums.
  • 68Galapagos Islands.    

Oceania edit

See also: Australasian wildlife

Australia edit

  • Royal Exhibition Building and Carlton Gardens, Melbourne/Inner north
  • 69 Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne CBD. Recognised as one of the world’s finest botanic gardens, with over 10,000 species and 50,000 individual plants in the 38 hectare gardens. Free.    
  • 70 Royal Botanical Gardens. The Royal Botanical Gardens in Central Sydney near the Opera House is possibly the best place to see Australian flora in central Sydney.    
  • 71 Kings Park. The most popular tourist attraction in Perth, Western Australia, comprising of native bushland, botanical gardens and grassed parkland.    
  • 72 Australian National Botanic Gardens, Acton, Canberra. Contains a piece of flora from nearly every corner of Australia.    

New Zealand edit

  • The mild temperate coastal climate, and relative remoteness has resulted in New Zealand retaining many areas of temperate rain forest, which can be explored when walking (tramping) in the country.
  • There are many good parks and several botanical gardens. Of particular note are the botanical gardens in Christchurch, Wellington and Dunedin, and the parks in Hamilton and New Plymouth.

Eat edit

In conservation areas you should take care that the food that you bring with does not cause biosecurity breaches. Check your bags for any pests that may be trying to hitch a lift. Avoid bringing any food with you which would grow if accidentally dropped - you may need to leave fresh fruit and nuts behind, although cooked fruit may be fine.

Many botanic gardens have cafes which provide a pleasant setting to eat in, but the cafe may open for shorter hours than the garden and be closed on some days.

Drink edit

Buy edit

Many botanical gardens have shops, selling guidebooks and souvenirs and often gardening tools and plants. On long summer days, the shop may close earlier than the garden.

The purchase of cut-flowers, which are not easy to transport, and perish easily should be considered very carefully. In Europe commercial cut flowers are often a nice thank-you, but be aware of any cultural meanings attached; sending lilies, chrysanthemums or roses for example; certain colours; or an even number of flowers, may well be mis-read in some areas.

It should also be borne in mind that nearly all plants (including their seeds and bulbs) are subject to tight import controls regardless of jurisdiction, in order to prevent the spread of plant pests and to protect native ecosystems from non-native invasive species. If buying plants to take home check the regulations carefully. It is often much easier to buy seeds or plants once you have returned home, and the varieties which you buy are more likely to be suitable for your climate.

Stay safe edit

A number of plants are toxic or act as irritants; see Dangerous plants for some with which contact should be avoided.

Pollen allergies should also be borne in mind.

Respect edit

Plants look their best when in a natural environment, so resist the temptation to remove even "just one" specimen. If visiting a formally arranged garden, collecting "specimens" is also going to get you ejected, without discussion. In some regions, you may also find that owing to a highly specific ecology, you are unable to get very close to some flora, this is done for protective reasons as the cumulative effect of many visitors could destroy the very flora that visitors come to see!

See also edit


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List of botanical gardens