Showing posts with label Canopy Walk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canopy Walk. Show all posts

Thursday, July 21, 2016

Atlanta's Spectacular "Chihuly in the Garden"

Part of its 40th anniversary celebration, the Atlanta Botanical Garden is home of a spectacular "Chihuly in the Garden" exhibition. This exhibition features 19 installations, three created just for this exhibition.


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

The above installation, Fire Amber Herons, is my personal favorite. It's located in the Ferst Fountain, where you will discover Lily, Lottie and Luna behind a waterfall, in the Perennial Garden.

A mere two years after President & CEO—and visionary—Mary Pat Matheson assumed leadership of the Atlanta Botanical Garden, she again put the Garden "on the map" with a Chihuly exhibition in 2004 that increased visitorship to record levels. She's continued to do so since.


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

Did you know that the Japanese Garden in the Atlanta Botanical Garden pre-dates its 1976 founding? Go on a guided tour of the Garden and you'll learn lots of fascinating facts and factoids about our "Oasis in the City".


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

The two immediately above photos are Turquoise Marlins and Floats, featured in the Japanese Garden.


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

Located in The Gardens in Storza Woods, opened only in recent years, you'll discover three groupings of Red Reeds. Red is my favorite color, so I found these particularly magnificent. They're strategically placed, so you may or may not see them as you come upon them, but you'll definitely see them! 


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

Sapphire Star, in Howell Fountain at the end of the Crepe Myrtle AllĂ©e and the top of the Great Lawn, is magnificent! You can't miss it and you won't be able to resist taking a photo of or with it. 


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

Immediately under the Canopy Walk (which opened only in 2010) is Green Hornets and Waterdrops. Its backdrop is another favorite...several "plantings" of Neodymium Reeds, the purple "stalks" that the sun makes sparkle during daytime and strategic lighting makes spectacular in the evening.


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

At the top of the relatively new Water Mirror in Storza Woods is the 30-foot tall Saffron Tower. I'm not convinced if it's more spectacular during the day or when fully illuminated—all its neon tubes—in the evening!


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

In the lobby of the Fuqua Orchid Center you'll be mesmerized by Sapphire Neon with Neodymium Reeds, Floats, and Logs. This installation features multiple techniques used by artist Dale Chihuly, set among natural elements.


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

I've seen this exhibition many times now, with friends Barry, Jacquetta, Luc and Saffold, all on separate visits, and the one installation that has grown on me the most is the Black and Green Striped Herons with Icicle Clusters, displayed in the Fuqua Orchid Center. It's truly magnificent and a favorite backdrop for visitor photos, group and individual.


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

Lining both sides of the Great Lawn, in front of the Fuqua Conservatory, you'll see the splendid and spectacular Carmel and Red Fiori. I love the movement of Chihuly's work...you can't help but be moved by it.


Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016
Chihuly in the Garden | Atlanta Botanical Garden | 2016

The above, Ikebana, is located in the Tropical Rotunda in the Fuqua Conservatory. Be sure to look around when in the Conservatory...there are multiple sculptures here, each unique and splendid.

Want a video sneak peek? Check out this video featuring Dale Chihuly himself exploring Chihuly in the Garden at the Atlanta Botanical Garden

This 40th anniversary exhibition will be on display through October 30, 2016. See it and be mesmerized! Then see it at night...see Chihuly Nights!

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Ice Goddess

Just when you thought only the plantings at the Atlanta Botanical Garden go through seasonal transitions, now so do the living sculptures. Enter...Ice Goddess.

Ice Goddess, Atlanta Botanical Garden
Ice Goddess, Atlanta Botanical Garden
If you saw Earth Goddess during Imaginary Worlds: Plants Larger than Life this past summer, you know how magnificent she was. She's since blossomed into Ice Goddess...I believe the most brilliant gem in Garden Lights, Holiday Nights exhibition.

So...you're wondering how a living sculpture is going to survive a frigid Atlanta winter? Not to worry. Garden engineers have introduced heating elements inside Ice Goddess's head and hand...it's quite remarkable, really. 

When you visit the Garden for Garden Lights, Holiday Nights, be sure to take a stroll along the Canopy Walk and stop to visit with Ice Goddess.

Saturday, November 3, 2012

It's a Beautiful Day

Fall Color at the Atlanta Botanical Garden
Fall Color at the Atlanta Botanical Garden
This weekend is one of the very few unstructured weekends I get in a year's time. I'm a very busy guy. I'd resigned myself to writing and editing photos today. And quite honestly, I could use the dedicated time to do some catching up.

Well, a colleague posted on Facebook early this morning the U2 song, "Beautiful Day". I shared it on my own Timeline and encouraged everyone to make the absolute most of the beautiful day. 

Well, to follow my own advice, I changed lunch plans (that had been made not too long before the Facebook postings) from a favorite comfort food restaurant to my absolute favorite place in the city—the Atlanta Botanical Garden.

I'm so glad I went! 

And the friend who went with me had not been in a number of years, so had not experienced the Hardin Visitor Center, the Canopy Walk, or the Edible Garden. Going with someone who is a newbie, whether to expansions or exhibitions, always makes visiting a little more special.


A blue Dyeing Poison Frog
A blue Dyeing Poison Frog
They've just finished up and are moving out "Independent Visions", a sculpture exhibition, and all the scarecrows from "Scarecrows in the Garden". AND they're in the middle of preparations for "Garden Lights, Holiday Nights". Talk about busy guys!

Surprisingly, there were a lot of people at the Garden today—including a wedding (there's quite a happy bride out there that the weather was absolutely gorgeous today!). I'm so glad that so many others were out enjoying the beautiful day, too.

It was such a delightful visit. 


Edible Garden at ABG
Edible Garden at ABG
We had lunch at MetroFresh in the Garden, which just had a renovation...it was delicious! We also saw a kid fall in a freezing cold fountain (while we were eating in the courtyard) where she'd been playing on the ledge for at least five minutes. Poor thing. Her family was a few steps away, but I think her beautiful day took another direction. I hope she was able to have some fun after she dried out.

Everything I've had there has been quite good and I love that they recycle and compost. The Garden's overall "Green" efforts are quite impressive and they host a number of organizations specifically interested in "Green" initiatives for special events.

We went through the Fuqua Conservatory, the Fuqua Orchid Center, the Edible Garden, the Conservation Garden, the Japanese Garden, the Southern Seasons Garden, and the Canopy Walk. I don't even have to tell you that the visit doubled as exercise!

Well, "Garden Lights, Holiday Nights" opens to the public two weeks from today! I can't tell you how excited I am! I went 10 times last year—six times to volunteer and four times with different groups of friends. And this year there will be a LOT more lights!

Head over to the wanderlust ATLANTA Facebook Page where you'll find a lot more photos from today's visit to the Atlanta Botanical Garden. Enjoy!


In the Fuqua Orchid Center
In the Fuqua Orchid Center

Friday, March 25, 2011

Atlanta Botanical Garden: Atlanta Blooms!

Atlanta Botanical Garden
Atlanta Botanical Garden
One of the reasons I love Atlanta so much is springtime. The first annual Atlanta Blooms! exhibition at the Atlanta Botanical Garden has added significantly to that love…the 200,000 bulbs and seemingly everything else in the Garden is in bloom!

When I arrived, the entrance to the Garden was buzzing with activity…a sign that the turnout was good. The weather was perfect for a day in the Garden.



Speaking of weather, I consider myself a "professional tourist," but in my haste to leave for the Garden, I neglected to apply sunscreen, which you really, really, really want to do, especially if you’re going to spend two hours exploring like I did on this visit.

Perennial Garden
Perennial Garden
Fortunately, the Gift Shop sells sunscreen…just in case you forget to apply as well.

Entry to the Garden went quickly. A stop by the "What's in Bloom" display in the Hardin Visitor Center showed me a unique tulip located near the Japanese Garden that I decided I had to see.

Did you know that there's a theatre in the Visitor Center? There is! It's on the left just before you enter the Garden. Currently running is a video about orchids, in association with the Orchid Daze exhibition on display through Sunday, April 10.

As you enter the Garden, you see several topiaries created just for Atlanta Blooms! as well as hundreds of blooming daffodils. There are several other topiaries throughout the Garden, so be on the lookout.

Daffodils
Daffodils
The daffodil explosion continues in the woodlands of the Southern Seasons Garden, which you pass on the way to the Canopy Walk. While there are no blooms "on" the Canopy Walk itself, it offers some great views of lots of flower beds at that end of the Garden.

The Canopy Walk lets out the Cascades Garden, a great spot to sit and listen to the waterfalls and singing birds.

Tulips
Tulips
The tulip beds near Day Hall were continually occupied with shutterbugs and tulip enthusiasts…I stopped by several times myself. I used to be shy about asking other visitors to make a photo for me when I was touring on my own, but I've discovered that most people are more than willing to help you create memories.

I asked a fellow visitor to make a photo of me among the tulips and I got lucky…the person taking the photos for me just happened to be a professional photographer. She was teaching her boyfriend how to use a camera, about composition, and positioning for optimum lighting…a very good teacher from what I could tell in our brief encounter.

Levy Parterre
Levy Parterre
The Parterre Garden is a special place because of the Levy Parterre alone, but surrounded by ethereal cherry trees, tulips, crocus and excited tourists, makes being there an even more stupendous experience.

The Rose Garden has quite a few bulbs coming up including a lot of pink tulips. While making photos in the Rose Garden, I noticed quite a few rose buds, so I'm thinking that they'll be blooming soon.

There are bulbs around the Japanese Garden, but I didn't see any inside, not a surprise. However, leaves on the maples are well on their, here and other places in the Garden.

Overlooking the Great Lawn
Overlooking the Great Lawn
The Great Lawn is completely surrounded by blooms! The Perennial Border is bursting with tulips, daffodils, and other bulbs and is capped with a rather large purple tree…at least its thousands of tiny blossoms make it look like a purple tree. It's actually a Don Egolf Rosebud.

I'm very impressed that the Garden ensured that all parts of the Garden were included in the Atlanta Blooms! exhibition. Even by the Aquatic Plant Pond near the Fuqua Conservatory there are bulb plantings and some quite beautiful and peaceful sitting areas overlooking Piedmont Park and the Conservatory.

Tulips in the Perennial Garden
Tulips in the Perennial Garden
Over on the other side of the Conservatory, there are beds of tulips in the Edible Garden. There's also a rather tall gardener, rake in hand, standing atop one of the beds and she's covered with flowers. She would have remembered to wear sunscreen!

The Perennial Gardens were getting a lot of attention on this day. There are some very unique tulip species and a wide range of color. The wisteria is also coming in over the bench next to the fountain. The white tulips in this garden are my absolute favorite of the 70,000 throughout the Garden.

On the Flower Bridge
On the Flower Bridge
I wanted to see the entire Garden on this visit, to discover what was coming up where and what unique way our talented Garden designers decided to showcase the Atlanta Blooms! bulbs. Over the Flower Bridge I went where I discovered my second favorite tulip in the Garden. It's bright orange and yellow and its petals have feathered edges…very cool!

I love the architectural elements of the Trustees Garden. There is probably the least amount of bulbs in this garden, but you can see that a lot of the flowering vines will soon be in bloom. This is also a nice quite corner of the Garden if you need to escape from your escape.

In the Children's Garden
In the Children's Garden
While visiting kids are probably more interested in the slides, tree house, and water features in the Children’s Garden, it is also peppered with blubs and other blooms.

While strolling through, I heard a splash and turned to see two giant frogs swimming in one of the ponds. A mother and child were walking by a few moments later and I pointed out the frogs to the mother who pointed them out to her son who became wildly excited.

I have to say that I really admire all the educational activities the Garden offers children…and there are a lot to choose from.

Atlanta Botanical Garden
Atlanta Botanical Garden
A great place to finish up your visit to the Atlanta Botanical Garden is the Alston Overlook. At the highest point in the Garden, you have an incredible view of the Garden and the Atlanta skyline from either of the two bench swings.

Membership

Membership, membership, membership…if you're a local and have even the slightest interest in gardening, botany, or respites from the city, I highly recommend investing in a membership to the Atlanta Botanical Garden. In some cases, it pays for itself in only a couple of visits.

Perennial Border
Perennial Border
In the past seven months I've visited the Garden eight times…which translates into a significant savings for having purchased a membership.

You also have the option of visiting and making your decision on your way out of the Garden. On a same-day visit, you can have the price of your admission applied toward the purchase of a membership.

Guided Tours

Guided group tours are available for groups of 10-50 for a modest amount above regular admission price. Box lunches are available for groups (order 48 hours in advance) through MetroFresh in the Garden.

Atlanta Botanical Garden
Atlanta Botanical Garden
Exhibition tours are available every morning at 10:00 a.m. The current exhibition tour is Orchid Daze: Liquid Landscapes, available through Saturday, April 9, 2011. These tours are free with admission and begin in the Hardin Visitor Center.

Every Tuesday and Thursday at 1:30 p.m., docent-led Garden tours begin in the admissions area and are free with admission.


Cascades Garden
Cascades Garden
 And the piece de resistance of tours is the Gardens for Connoisseurs Tour. It takes place on the Garden's busiest day of the year, Mother's Day. Tour-takers visit eight amazing private gardens around Atlanta and finish with a visit to the Atlanta Botanical Garden.

The Return

You already know the answer to the question of will I return to the Atlanta Botanical Garden…it's of course "Yes!" I'm a city person, but I also love nature, so the Atlanta Botanical Garden has become a favorite place in the city…I have others, of course, but even after visiting for 24 years, this Garden remains a special place for me.

Touring Atlanta Blooms!

Date toured: Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Location: 1345 Piedmont Avenue, NE (directions and map)
Parking: Onsite, price depends duration; limited street parking nearby
Cost: Adults $18.95; Children (3-12) $12.95; Children under 3 admitted free
Hours: 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (November-March); (9:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. April-October); Closed Mondays
Website: http://www.atlantabotanicalgarden.org

One of Many Frogs
One of Many Frogs

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

ATLANTApix: Levy Parterre

Levy Parterre at the Atlanta Botanical Garden
What is a parterre, you ask? In all honesty, before discovering the two currently on display at the Atlanta Botanical Garden, I had never heard the word parterre. If the Fuqua Conservatory or Canopy Walk aren't quite enough the tip the scales of decision toward visiting the Garden, then maybe the Dale Chihuly-created parterres will.

While I love the Nepenthes Chandelier hanging in the atrium of the Hardin Visitor Center (Its bright greenness is actually the wallpaper on my laptop), the Levy Parterre (photo) nestled between the Rose Garden and the Alston Overlook is just as remarkable.

Starting on February 5, 2011, the 2011 annual "Orchid Daze" will feature thousands of blooms coupled with an array of water features in an exhibition titled "Liquid Landscapes." Or if you're looking for a romantic idea for Valentines Day, consider "Valentines in the Garden: Romance Blooms!" on Saturday, February 12, 2011.

ATLANTApix of the tourATLANTA blog features a "photo-of-the-day" of Atlanta. Come back tomorrow for a new one!

Monday, January 10, 2011

ATLANTApix: 600-foot Canopy Walk

Canopy Walk at the Atlanta Botanical Garden
Canopy Walk at the
Atlanta Botanical Garden
Yes, Atlanta is covered in snow and that means I'm having dreams of spring! Just last night I was talking with a friend about how beautiful Atlanta is in the spring (while awaiting the impending snow storm)...and the Atlanta Botanical Garden is one of the most beautiful places in the city, especially in the spring.

This photo is part of the suspension system that makes up the new Canopy Walk in the Atlanta Botanical Garden. When you drive by on Piedmont Avenue, you get a glimpse of the Canopy Walk but that doesn't compare to the view of the Garden from atop the 600-foot suspension bridge.

I also find myself looking forward to "Orchid Daze: Liquid Landscapes"...there are no frozen forms of water that I'm aware of in the exhibit. It opens in a few short weeks on Saturday, February 5, 2011.

ATLANTApix of the tourATLANTA blog features a "photo-of-the-day" of Atlanta. Come back tomorrow for a new one!

Friday, September 10, 2010

Atlanta Botanical Garden: "Cocktails in the Garden"

Cocktails in the Garden, Levy Parterre
Cocktails in the Garden
"Cocktails in the Garden" is a weekly event for members of the Atlanta Botanical Garden—one of the many events—as well as the general public (including my beloved fellow tourists). It's one of the most beautiful ways to spend an evening in a city that boasts frequent sunsets of gold, bright pinks and orange.

The cocktail social also frequently features special events, music via DJ, cooking demonstrations in the outdoor kitchen, and specialty cocktails that visitors can carry with them while exploring the Garden's splendor and mingling with other garden enthusiasts.

Tonight wasn't my first time visiting the Garden, but it was my first time attending the Cocktails in the Garden event. I was amazed at the number of bars set up throughout the Garden…no lines to wait in! The variety of beverages (cash bars) was also impressive. They offer wine, cocktails, beer and currently is offering frozen "mudslides" in celebration of their current exhibit "Chocolate: Seed to Sweet," as well as non-alcoholic beverages.

Cooking Demonstration an Tasting presented by Goin' Coastal Restaurant
Goin' Coastal Cooking Demonstration
Popular restaurants, a different one every week, offers tastings from their menus which they prepare in the outdoor kitchen adjacent to the Edible Garden—a well-attended diversion from cocktails . This week, "Goin' Coastal," a "sustainable seafood joint," was offering bites including a savory “She Crab Soup,” and perfectly seasoned "Jumbo Lump Crab Cakes." Goin' Coastal has two locations—Virginia Highland and Canton.

The Garden had considerably more guests than I expected for cocktails, but not so many that it was crowded. Navigating the sunset soaked gardens was pleasant, relaxing and vibrant, depending on which part of the Garden one found oneself in. The largest gatherings were on the Canopy Walk and the Levy Parterre Garden.

It turned out that the friend I visited the Garden with this evening is a friend of one of the Garden’s managers who told us about upcoming special events at the other September "Cocktails in the Garden" socials, including:
Glass Art Pumpkins
Special events at the Atlanta Botanical Garden are some of the city's best kept secrets…secrets that should spread a thousand times as wide as the Garden grounds themselves, which is of considerably size! Check out their website for details about future "Cocktails in the Garden," black tie events, children's programs, cooking demonstrations, concerts, volunteer opportunities and gardening tips.

Will I have another round of Cocktails in the Garden? Absolutely. With so many attractions during the month, every Thursday in September is now blocked on my calendar. I was also told that October is the Garden's busiest month of the year and that they have quite a few special events lined up, including the popular "Scarecrows in the Garden." One learns very quickly that there's no excuse for being bored in this city!

Visiting Cocktails in the Garden

Date toured: Thursday, September 9, 2010
Hours: 6 p.m. – 10 p.m. Thursdays in September (returns in spring 2011)
Location: 1345 Piedmont Avenue, NE (map and directions)
Cost: Members free, Guests $15 (cash bars)
Parking:
  • Drop-off (0-15 minutes) free
  • 16-30 minutes ($0.75)
  • Each additional 30 minutes ($1.00)
  • Multi-visit parking passes available at the Gift Shop
Website: http://www.atlantabotanicalgarden.org/

Atlanta Botanical Garden at Sunset
Sunset at the Garden

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Atlanta Botanical Garden: Oasis in the City

Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly in the Atlanta Botanical Garden
Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly
I had been a member and frequent visitor of the Atlanta Botanical Garden from1987, when I moved to Atlanta (the first time), through 2001 (when I moved to DC) and vividly remember the opening of the Fuqua Conservatory in 1989, as well as other visits. My recent visit was the first time to the Garden in more than a decade. All I can say is, "Wow!"

Alright, that's not all I have to say. Since returning to Atlanta (three weeks now) following an 8.5 year life in Washington, D.C., I've driven by the Garden numerous times and it kept calling to me—it was determined to be at the top of my list of places to tour in the near term. I am so glad I went.

The Garden is vastly different from what I remember. There's a new entrance, and many new gardens and vistas, including a Canopy Walk, an Edible Garden and Outdoor Kitchen, Cascades Garden and a new visitor center—all breathtaking.

On this particular visit, knowing that there had been some changes, I decided to attend one of the tours—offered Tuesdays and Thursdays at 1:30 p.m. Our tour guide, Angie, a native of London, greeted us enthusiastically and it was quickly obvious that she knows what she's talking about.

Canopy Walk
Canopy Walk
We'd arrived a little early and had already explored the Canopy Walk, which opened in May of this year (2010). The 600 foot long Walk takes visitors 40 feet above the floor of the Storza Woods forest. The Walk itself is recognized as the only reverse-suspension forest canopy in the United States. The views from the Walk and from the forest floor are quite 'lifting,' in spirit and sight.

Angie started with a brief history of the relatively recent additions and upgrade projects in the Garden, including a background discussion of the bright green, pitcher plant-inspired parterre hanging in the two-story Hardon Visitor Center. The parterre once hung in the carnivorous plant rotunda of the Fuqua Conservatory, but was moved to the Visitor Center when it opened in 2008 so more visitors could enjoy its beauty.

Levy Parterre
Levy Parterre
The first stop on this particular tour, tailored for the tourists in our group (five of us, all Atlantans), was the Levy Parterre, centered between the Alston Overlook, Day Hall, the Rose Garden and Mershon Hall. The garden hosting the Levy Parterre is one of the two best spaces in the Garden to catch a glimpse of Atlanta’s Midtown skyline. Parallel to the Levy Parterre garden is a walkway, leading to the Great Lawn, which is lined with towering Crape Myrtles…I'd never seen this species reach such heights!

Next, we visited the tranquil Japanese Garden, which we entered by passing through a Chinese Moon Gate. Remember to make a wish when you pass through the Moon Gate! Angie told us that one of the stone Japanese lanterns (near another entrance to this particular garden) was a gift from Atlanta's sister city in Japan and is more than 300 years old.

The Edible Garden has a design that I found particularly fascinating and amusing. Crop Circles! Although there was nothing "alien" in this section of the Garden (or any other section for that matter), it was amazingly well-designed and mature compared to many other fruit and vegetable gardens I've seen in other public botanical spaces. The Outdoor Kitchen, occupying one of the circles, is a fully-functional kitchen and is used for cooking demonstrations, mostly on the weekends and during special events. It even has an outdoor fireplace with a sitting area, presumably used in the fall and early spring.

Fuqua Conservatory and the Great Lawn
Fuqua Conservatory
Next, and one of the most popular destinations within the Garden, was the Fuqua Conservatory, home to more than 2,000 species of orchids, desert plants and approximately 800 species of palm trees. I'm not sure how they got 800 species of palms in a relatively small space, but it's as dense as a tropical rainforest, so I shouldn't be surprised.

One of the Garden's conservation projects includes the preservation of frogs. Currently, frog life around the world is threatened, and in some cases endangered, and the Atlanta Botanical Garden, home to frogs for more than two decades (that I know of, maybe longer), is actively supporting the effort to return frogs to their native habitats. The bright yellow, blue frogs and the leaf frogs are particularly fascinating.

Vine Arbor
Vine Arbor
Our tour wrapped up with a visit to the Aquatic Plant Pond, a discussion on the creation of the Atlanta Botanical Garden relative to Piedmont Park and a walk around the Great Lawn through the Vine Arbor, where live music is regularly enjoyed by Garden visitors and tourists.

Is the Atlanta Botanical Garden on my visit-again list? I'll let the fact that I purchased a new membership speak for itself. There’s a lot more to see and do than what I’ve mentioned here, including classes, a Children's Garden, the Garden Cafe and special events. So be sure to ask for a garden map at the visitor center and plan ample time to see all the points of interest that pique your curiosity.

Visiting the Atlanta Botanical Garden

Date toured: Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Hours:
Tuesday-Sunday
April - October, 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.
November - March, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Thursdays, May - October, 9 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Closed Mondays except for Monday holidays such as Labor Day and Memorial Day. Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day.

Location: 1345 Piedmont Avenue, NE (map and directions)

Cost:
- Members admitted free
- Children (under three) free
- Children (3-17) $12
- Adults (18-64) $15
- Seniors (65 and over) $12

Parking:
Drop-off (0-15 minutes) free
16-30 minutes ($0.75)
Each additional 30 minutes ($1.00)
Multi-visit parking passes available at the Gift Shop

Website: http://www.atlantabotanicalgarden.org/