About Me

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Canberra-based naturalist, conservationist, educator since 1980. I’m passionate about the natural world (especially the southern hemisphere), and trying to understand it and to share such understandings. To that aim I’ve written several books (most recently 'Birds in Their Habitats' and 'Australian Bird Names; origins and meanings'), and run tours all over Australia, and for 17 years to South and Central America. I've done a lot of ABC radio work, chaired a government environmental advisory committee and taught many adult education classes – and of course presented this blog, since 2012. I am a recipient of the Australian Natural History Medallion, the Australian Plants Award and most recently a Medal of the Order of Australia for ‘services to conservation and the environment’. I live happily in suburban Duffy with my partner Louise surrounded by a dense native garden and lots of birds.

Thursday, 30 May 2024

Celebrating Botanic Gardens Day#2; some animals of the gardens

In my most recent post, I celebrated Botanic Gardens Day, which this year fell on Sunday 26 May. There I introduced and celebrated a range of 18 mostly regional gardens (though briefly also touching on a couple of big city ones) across five states and territories. Today I'm going to wrap up this mini-series with a celebration of some of the animals we've enjoyed meeting in 14 different Australian botanic gardens. In this case Canberra's own Australian National Botanic Gardens (ANBG hereafter) features much more heavily, doubtless disproportionately so, but as a reflection of the fact that, over the decades, I've spent a lot more time there than in all the other featured gardens put together. I shall try to do better in other gardens in the future!

Male Satin Bowerbird Ptilonorhynchus violaceus snacking on Lilly Pilly berries
(Syzygium or Acmena sp.) in the ANBG.
I don't doubt that there have been bowers in the national gardens before but I've not seen them. Needless to say though these are not the only gardens with bowerbirds, and I have enjoyed the wonders of male bowerbirds displaying in their elaborately constructed and decorated performance stages in other gardens.
Male Satin Bowerbird standing proudly (and hopefully) in his bower, surrounded
by blue ornaments (all artificial in this case) at the entrance to the North Coast BG,
Coffs Harbour, north coast of NSW.

Western Bowerbird Chlamydera guttata in his impressive bower at the lovely
Olive Pink BG in Alice Springs, central Australia. This arid land bowerbird is
using traditional decorations, mostly white bones and stones, with some greenery.
I definitely wanted to show you the bower, but he deserves a better portrait too.

Alright, so he's shy about showing his face, but I especially wanted you
to see this gorgeous lilac crest, only visible when he's displaying.
That lovely soft fawn-spotted chocolate back is very attractive too.
Elsewhere in this garden, which is a particular favourite of ours, this White-plumed Honeyeater was attending the nest, just above the coffee-sippers (ie us on this occasion) at the outdoor cafe.
White-plumed Honeyeater Ptilotula penicillata with nest, Olive Pink BG, Alice Springs.
Like bowerbirds, honeyeaters arose in Australia, though both have extended into New Guinea and nearby islands. Honeyeaters make up something like 10% of Australia's breeding bird species, so it's inevitable that they'll pop up regularly in botanic gardens.
Far to the south of Alice Springs is another arid land gardens, in fact called the
Australian Arid Land Gardens Botanic Gardens, just outside Port Augusta
at the head of Spencer Gulf in South Australia. It features a bird hide facing
this bath/drinking trough, in the extensive natural area of saltbush and shrubs;
Singing Honeyeaters Gavicalis virescens, one of the commonest arid land
birds, are of course one of the major clients of this water supply.
(Here's a photo of the hide, as featured in last week's post.)

Rather more colourful, and a lot less common here than Singers are at Port Augusta,
was this exquisite male Scarlet Honeyeater Myzomela sanguinolenta in the ANBG
in Canberra feeding on an equally richly-coloured bottlebrush Callistemon sp..
The honeyeater is common enough at the coast, but infrequently makes
its way up the escarpment for a visit.
Flowers and berries are, as you might expect, good food sources for native birds in any garden. Here are a couple of different lorikeets getting stuck into nectar from two very different flowers in gardens in two different states.
Scaly-breasted Lorikeet Trichoglossus chlorolepidotus feeding on eucalypt blossom in
Goondiwindi BG, an excellent native garden on the Queensland-NSW border.
Rainbow Lorikeets Trichoglossus moluccanus are familiar urban birds everywhere
in eastern and south-eastern Australia, and are rapidly spreading inland.
This one is feeding on the numerous tiny blossoms of a flowering spike of grass-tree,
Xanthorrhoea sp., in the Wollongong BG south of Sydney.
Both these lorikeets are feeding (destructively) on both pollen and nectar.
        
Far to the north these Metallic Starlings Aplonis metallica are feeding on palm fruits
along the boardwalk between the Flecker Gardens and the Centenary Lakes in
the Cairns Botanic Gardens.

Another cafe bird (like the White-plumed Honeyeater above) is this male Superb Fairywren Malurus cyaneus which literally came to the table at the Eurobodalla Regional Botanic Gardens near Batemans Bay on the NSW south coast.

This was in March, and he was just finishing moulting out of his breeding finery
to be less conspicuous - and thus safer - for winter. Like the bowerbirds and honeyeaters,
he belongs to an endemic Australian family, with a couple of outliers in New Guinea.
This bird is one of the most familiar and beloved of south-eastern Australian birds.
Many other birds are, like the fairywren, drawn by the rich biota of invertebrates in a healthy garden.
Black Butcherbird Melloria quoyi, stalking the understorey of the Cairns BG,
for small reptiles as well as invertebrates.

Fan-tailed Cuckoo Cacomantis flabelliformis in Eurobodalla BG, looking not only
for insects, but also opportunities to parasitise the nests of smaller birds,
leaving eggs for the involuntary hosts to brood and then ultimately rear the chicks.
Here are two more birds availing themselves of the invertebrate food store of Eurobodalla.

Eastern Whipbird Psophodes olivaceus, briefly appearing in the open.

Jacky Winter Microeca fascinans waiting for lunch to fly by.
This is one of the Australian robins.
(I'm pretty sure this isn't its bower...)
Male Leaden Flycatcher Myiagra rubecula, nicely catching the sun in the ANBG.
Like the White-plumed Honeyeater above, many birds of course nest in botanic gardens which may provide some security, especially if cat control is undertaken.
White-winged Chough Corcorax melanorhamphos nest in the Australian Inland
Botanic Gardens, Buronga, south-west NSW. These belong in this list of
invertebrate-eating birds of botanic gardens, which continues below.

Papuan Frogmouth Podargus papuensis roosting in mangroves in the
Cairns Botanic Garden, beautifully camouflaged. At night they feed
mostly on large insects, usually on the ground.
More formidable predators, focussing on vertebrate prey, also inhabit gardens.

Powerful Owl Ninox strenua, which took up residence in the ANBG for some
weeks in autumn of 2007. It stayed until the supply of Sugar Gliders in particular
ran low, then moved on, but while there it was quite a celebrity. This top-order
predator elsewhere is known to prey on fruit bats, larger possums and domestic cats.
Brown Goshawk Accipiter fasciatus with an introduced Common Blackbird Turdus merula
in the Wagga Wagga Botanic Gardens. As I sat on a bench the bird flew right over my
head, with still-struggling lunch in its claws, then sought a more private spot to eat it.

A few gardens birds are omnivores, like this Australian Brush-turkey Alectura lathami in the
Cairns Botanic Gardens, though I'm surprised to discover how little we know about their diet.
He was tending a mound at the time.

Some eat seeds.
Double-barred Finch Stizoptera bichenovii, Wagga Wagga Botanic Gardens.
 
Common Bronzewing (Pigeon) Phaps chalcoptera, ANBG.
A familiar pigeon, found across virtually the entire continent, but always
a pleasure to encounter up close, especially with the sun bringing its iridescent
wing feathers to glittering life.
My last gardens bird for today is a special one for me, being the first Australian 'lifer' that I've come across in a botanic gardens (or at least for a very long time).

Spotted Whistling Duck Dendrocygna guttata, Centenary Lakes, Cairns Botanic Gardens.
They are found from the Philippines to New Guinea, and in the last couple of decades
have established a colony at Weipa up on Cape York Peninsula. However it was a real
surprise to find a small group in 2019 here, another 800k to the south-east.

Mammals are, unsurprisingly, much less frequently encountered in botanic gardens, but mostly because we're only there in the daytime. Additionally, large grazers like kangaroos and wallabies are understandably discouraged by garden managements. However, sometimes we get lucky.

Black-tailed Wallaby (or often Swamp Wallaby, though it's a misleading name) Wallabia bicolor
in the ANBG. They are browsers on shrubs, so could be a problem, but there are very few
in the gardens so unlikely to be very damaging.
Also in the ANBG, this Echidna Tachyglossus aculeata was definitely no threat to
the plants, though the ants and termites are distinctly unsafe.
Grey-headed Fruit Bat (or Flying Fox if you like, but really?) Pteropus poliocephalus,
Sydney Botanic Gardens, part of a large daytime roosting colony. This was in 2009, and
they've since been moved on. I understand the dilemma - in large numbers they can be
quite destructive to the canopy of roost trees - but they are also a nationally listed
threatened species (and were at the time of the removal). Personally they provided
one my strongest motivations to visit the gardens, but I wouldn't want to have
to make decisions on the issue either.
Reptiles live in any botanic gardens, I feel safe in asserting, albeit without actual comprehensive proof! I'm thinking especially of the numerous small skinks...
Rainbow Skink Carlia sp. (I think C. pectoralis, but am happy to be corrected),
Cooktown Botanic Gardens.
Red-throated Rainbow Skink Carlia rubrigularis, Cairns BG.
I'm a little more confident about this one...
Dragons are more conspicuous, especially the larger ones. In fact they are one of the highlights of the ANBG.
Australian Water Dragon Intellagama lesueurii, ANBG. There is a thriving population
throughout the lower part of the gardens where there is permanent water.
They regularly lurk under the restaurant tables.
They're not the only dragons here though.
Eastern Bearded Dragon Pogona barbata absorbing as much of the early spring
sun in the ANBG as it can. It has flattened its body and tilted it towards the sun
to maximise exposure to the sun, and cells containing melanin have turned its
flanks almost black for greater heat absorption.
And here's another (though not closely related) water dragon,
the Northern Water Dragon Tropicagama temporalis in the Darwin BG.
Not all gardens reptiles are lizards though, of course.

Krefft's Turtle Emydura kreftii, Centenary Lakes, Cairns BG.
This turtle is found along almost the full length of the Queensland
Pacific Coast, but not south of there.

Green Tree Snake Dendrelaphis punctulatus, in the big lush conservatory, Cairns BG.
Perhaps not a great name, as it is as much at home on the ground as in trees, and isn't always green!
Common Tree Snake is another name that reflects this aspect of it. I don't know if this
one had just popped in for some reconnaissance, or if it was finding enough frogs and
skinks here to make a permanent living. A lovely encounter anyway.
And this time I'm giving the invertebrates the honour of closing the show. As you might imagine I could have offered many more photos than these, but hopefully these can satisfy. I have just noticed that a disproportionate number of these photos feature butterflies (not really apology-worthy) and were taken either in the ANBG (because that's where I spend most time) or Cairns (because it's Cairns?).
Shining Oak-blue Arhopala micale, Cairns BG. Like other blues, its
caterpillars are attended and protected by ants while they feed. It is found in
Queensland, New Guinea and throughout Melanesia to Fiji.

Red Lacewing Cethosia cydippe, Cairns BG. We can just see the distinctive big red patch
on its upper wing. This tropical butterfly is found from north Queensland to Indonesia.
Male Cruiser Vindula arsinoe, Cairns BG, with a similar distribution to
the Red Lacewing. Both these butterflies were in the steamy green and extensive
conservatory; I suspect that they were introduced there (though maybe not) but
in either case they are local species.

Imperial Jezebel Delias harpalyce, ANBG. I find it interesting that the upperside
(not visible here) is a somewhat dingy black and white. This is a common butterfly throughout
the southeast mainland. (Just noting in passing that people - English blokes? - who gave
butterflies English names seemed somewhat preoccupied with human women,
often with derogatory connotations. Keep your eye out, though now that I think
about it, it's probably not as common in Australia as elsewhere.)

Male Common Brown Heteronympha merope, ANBG. This is always a common
butterfly, but in the summer of 2022-23 (when this was taken) they were
extraordinarily abundant, literally everywhere!
Orchard Swallowtails Papilio aegeus, ANBG. Here two males (left and right) are
attending - harassing?! - a female with intent. These were in the Tasmanian
rainforest gully by the footbridge, before the gully was severely damaged
by the devastating hailstorm of January 2020.
Australian Painted Lady Vanessa kershawi on Xerochrysum sp., ANBG.
Its proboscis, clearly visible, is probing the numerous tiny florets for nectar,
without having to burn energy in moving. See previous comment re butterfly names...
Staying in the ANBG, but moving on from butterflies though staying largely with daisies!
Common Flatwing Austroargiolestes icteromelas, ANBG, a very
common eastern Australian damselfly.

Flower spider Diaea sp., waiting on a daisy for a pollinator to alight in the ANBG.
Isn't it a beautiful camouflage?

Fly, Family Acroceridae, pollinating a daisy.

Native bee (best I can do, sorry!) collecting pollen from a paper daisy, Xerochrysum sp.

And finally, an insect from a different botanic garden, before the rumbles about local bias become too overwhelming!

A spider wasp (ie she hunts large spiders to paralyse and lay eggs on, to feed her babies),
Family Pompilidae, in the Inland Botanic Gardens, Buronga.

And that's the end of this celebration of botanic gardens, though I don't doubt there'll be more in the future. My thanks if you're still reading, I appreciate that.

In a just over a week we're planning to head off for four weeks in south-west Queensland, where we're hoping that the wet seasons of the past year or so will have relented enough for us to get to places, but left them full of flowers and breeding birds! We'll see, but whatever we find will be rewarding, and will doubtless provide material for future blog posts. The point here though is that there will a hiatus in Ian Fraser Talking Naturally, until Thursday 18 July. In the meantime you can always find more to read in past posts that you might have missed. See you then!

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Thursday, 23 May 2024

Celebrating Botanic Gardens Day #1

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.)

Even lusher are the very green tropical Darwin Botanic Gardens (more formally the George
Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens), covering 42ha and opening in 1886. (Brown worked at the
gardens as a curator from 1969 to 1990 and led the recovery effort after Cyclone Tracy.)
At the other end of the country and the other extreme of conditions is the splendid Australian Arid Lands Botanic Garden (AALBG) just outside of Port Augusta at the head of Spencer Gulf in South Australia.

Looking across the site (in a very dry year) towards the visitor centre and plantings.
It looks a bit scrappy from this perspective but it really is a gem, focussing solely on
native dryland plants; for this purpose the arid lands which are home to the garden's plants
comprise that (huge) part of Australia which receives less than 300mm per annum.
The AALBG covers over 250ha and was opened in 1996.
This photo introduces a significant aspect of many regional gardens, especially the newer ones - it is common to find important elements of the original vegetation within the gardens, both as reserved sections in their own right and as complements to the plantings. As time goes on and plantings develop, the line between the two areas begins to blur. In the Arid Lands Botanic Garden my own experience there tells me that the undeveloped section is considerably larger than the area of plantings, though I can't find figures on that. Much of this comprises chenopod shrublands (saltbush and bluebush) with old Western Myalls Acacia papyrocarpa.

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 aren't necessarily a feature of most botanic gardens but we know of a couple of others - both on the east coast - which showcase their mangroves.

This boardwalk is on the edge of the North Coast Regional Botanic Garden at Coffs Harbour
on the north coast (obviously!) of NSW. More than a place to stroll, the boardwalk features good
information on this crucial habitat. (This superb modern regional garden opened in 1988 and
has an area of 20ha, more than half of which comprises original vegetation.)
Mangroves along a boardwalk at Puckey's Estate, a coastal annexe of the
Wollongong Botanic Gardens mentioned (and linked) above.
An associated watery habitat at Puckey's Estate is this coastal saltmarsh.
Here the soil is impregnated with salt and the plants are regularly inundated by salt water.
Much further north, the Cairns Botanic Gardens has a wetland area with boardwalk too. (Some people regard the relatively small and formal Flecker Botanic Gardens as 'the' Cairns Gardens, but officially the much bigger surrounding area of some 38ha, which includes the Centenary Lakes, is all part of it.)
Swampy palm forest with huge paperbarks Melaleuca leucodendra, along the path
between the Flecker Gardens and the Centenary Lakes in Cairns Botanic Gardens.
Original vegetation may range from rainforest...
Rainforest remnants along the creek line, Wollongong Botanic Gardens.
Boardwalk through vine forest (a drier more open rainforest that occurs in high rainfall
areas which also have a well-defined dry season) in Cooktown Botanic Gardens.
(This 62ha garden began to be established in 1878 but it was an ongoing process.
It fell into disuse and disrepair in 1917 and was only restored and reopened in 1984,
featuring the original layout of the gardens. Now it's a delight, one of my favourite
parts of it being a garden featuring plant species collected there by Banks and Solander
during their enforced stay in the area in 1770 while repairs were made to
the Endeavour following its unfortunate encounter with the reef.)
... to eucalypt forest...
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).
Large eucalypts (which I'm afraid I can't identify from this photo) in the Eurobodalla
Regional Botanic Gardens just south of Batemans Bay on the south coast of NSW.
Some of the foreground trees are probably planted, but significant areas of forest are found
within the grounds. (This 42 garden was largely community-driven and volunteers play
a major role, as they do in all regional gardens. It opened in 2001, but has been
plagued by bad luck, with a bushfire destroying all buildings in 1994 before it even
opened, damaging storms and then the devastating fires of the last day of 2019
which destroyed many plantings and much infrastructure. Each time it has
been restored and this alone deserves our support, but it has always been
a most delightful destination, for plants, animals, peace and even good food and coffee!)
Drier eucalypt forest in the Wollongong Botanic Gardens; I'm not sure about
the gums, but the rough-stockinged eucalypt is Blackbutt E. pilularis.
... to dry woodland...
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.
...to mallee...
Mallee remnants in the Inland Botanic Gardens at Buronga (in NSW across
the river Murray from the larger Victorian town of Mildura).
This is an interesting garden, community- and science-driven, which opened
in 1992 in 250ha of land. A lot of this is original mallee and woodland. It's hard
to find a 'vision statement', but the emphasis is on semi-arid land flora, much of
it from other continents. (Not easy to see where the very extensive rose garden
fits in, but I guess that in such a venture compromise is necessary.) When we were
there a lot of the bushland was closed due to the very wet season, but we found
plenty to enjoy and we aim to return.
In some gardens, especially smaller ones, individual old trees feature.
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.
And in some lucky places the original vegetation doesn't have to persist only as trees or even shrubs. One such place is the famous Kings Park in central Perth, on a raised site above the River Swan. It covers an enormous 400ha, two thirds of which is bushland (though last time I was there, there was a serious weed problem that they were grappling with). It was opened in 1895.

Red and Green Kangaroo Paw Anigozanthos manglesii, the state floral emblem of course.
Carousel Spider Orchid Caladenia (or Arachnorchis) arenicola, a common
spider orchid - but still...
Large Pansy Orchid Diuris magnifica.
More expected in a botanic gardens are plantings, and of course I can't do much justice to the range of such plantings today, but here's a taster. 
 
Some plantings feature local species...
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...

Wallangarra White Gum E. scoparia (I'm fairly sure), from a small
area of New England, here in the Wagga Wagga BG.
These gardens cover 20ha on the lower slopes of
Willans Hill, and have more than doubled in size since opening in
1969. The native section is much smaller than that, but well worth a visit.

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.

 
Kentia Palm Howea forsteriana, which is endemic to Lord Howe Island, here at
Shoalhaven Heads BG.
The National Botanic Gardens (whose staff I sometimes suspect of having access to white magic) have created entire habitats which are seemingly at odds with a setting with frosty winters and an annual rainfall of just 600mm a year, plus notoriously clayey soils.

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.
Of course there are nearly always some form of buildings and structures in a botanic gardens, often attractive and productive in their own right, including conservatories and glasshouses...
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.
... visitor centres, which often include a cafe ....
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.)

... most gardens have various shelters and seating for picnics...
Emerald Botanic Gardens.

Actually this one at Goondiwindi Botanic Gardens is more like a bandstand!
... and some of the more enlightened gardens even have bird hides!

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.
Some gardens feature nature-themed art, either as permanent fixtures or temporary exhibits. Here are a few examples; lizards are popular!
Dubbo Botanic Gardens, central-western NSW.
Unfortunately there is only the sketchiest on-line information about these gardens,
which opened early this century. They are reasonably extensive, though not all the
area comprises native plantings. However what there is, is certainly worth visiting.
Shoalhaven Botanic Gardens

Goanna in stones, Inland Botanic Gardens, Buronga.

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.
This is the only time the venerable Sydney Botanic Gardens will appear today, noting
my emphasis on regional gardens, but these fabulous 'living' sculptures (click to enlarge the
photo to see the plants that comprise the Echidna's quills and fur) are too
good to omit. There were several more that I could have shown you,
but these two give you the idea. When we were there recently, the sculptures had gone.
And finally just some general scenes from some of the gardens we've visited today, which might hopefully give you more of a feeling for them. Ponds - or even a lake or a river! - are always welcome.
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.
And open spaces can give some context to plantings, as well as providing space to relax and perhaps share a picnic.
Looking down from a viewing platform, Darwin BG.

Goondiwindi BG.

Wagga Wagga BG.
Succulent hill, Wollongong BG.

Cooktown BG.

And that's the end of our botanic gardens odyssey for today; I hope you've enjoyed them, and even found somewhere you might like to visit some day. You won't regret it, whichever of these you choose. As we discover more, I'll be adding more posts on individual gardens - meantime you might like to follow some of the links in this post for more information on some of the gardens.

I'm breaking my usual practice to post again next week, on animals of the gardens. This is partly to 'bracket' Botanic Gardens Day with a post on the two surrounding Thursdays, and partly because we're planning to be away in outback Queensland for much of June and I wanted to finish this mini-series before that. More on that (ie the coming hiatus in my blog posts) next week.

NEXT POSTING THURSDAY 30 MAY
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