Founded in 1936, the Niagara Parks Botanical Gardens offer visitors 99 acres of beautifully landscaped gardens, including perennials, rhododendrons, azaleas, a formal parterre garden, herb and vegetable plantations, and our world-famous rose garden with over 2,400 rose gardens. This park section also houses the Niagara Parks School of Horticulture, a facility that offers hobby students on the grounds of the Botanical Gardens a unique hands-on education.
"As the Niagara River Corridor's natural heritage manager, Niagara Parks is constantly taking steps to reduce the collective environmental impact, such as with our new refillable water bottle stations at the nearby Butterfly Conservatory and Butterfly Café. This pilot project aims to reduce the environmental impact of plastic waste caused by discarded water bottles.
So please come to us to protect our environment. Enjoy the free and refreshing drinking water in Ontario - one of the cleanest in the world - and spend a nice day exploring eco-friendly Niagara Parks to help.
I do not have a bottle Visit the Butterfly Conservatory Shop and the Cafe for special Niagara Park bottles! "
The 250-acre Arid Lands Botanical Garden on the coast in Port Augusta (three hours' drive north of Adelaide) was a wonderful visit. Not only is it free, but there is also a cafe that serves great fresh food and fantastic Australian wine. The gardens invite you to hike with lots of bird life, amphibians and lizards, and ideas on how to make a colorful garden with as little water as possible. There are six specialty gardens, overlooking the Flinders Range and gray mangroves, emu and turkey bushes, as well as very rare plants. It's amazing how beautiful the edge of the outback can be.
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