10 Beautiful Gardens You Must Visit

Walking in a beautiful garden surrounded by flowers adds a very special feeling and joy and calm to your life. Here are 10 beautiful gardens of the world that you must see;

***For more information : The Best Beautiful Gardens

1. Keukenhof, Lisse, Netherlands

Keukenhof, the most beautiful garden in the world, is one of the largest flower gardens in the world, with about 7 million flower bulbs planted each year in the park. The Keukenhof garden is only open in the spring, from late March to late May. During this time, millions of tulip flowers bloom fully in the garden. You can see bluebells, hyacinths and daffodils as well as tulip bulbs.

There are 15 km long walking paths to discover the beauty of the garden. The 45-minute boat tour also brings a magical view of the garden from another angle. There are also many art statues and fountains in the Keukenhof garden.

2. Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne, Australia

It is one of the fascinating gardens of Australia’s rare and beautiful plants, located on the banks of the Yarra river in Melbourne. It is one of the fascinating gardens of Australia’s rare and beautiful plants, located on the banks of the Yarra river in Melbourne. With its stunning views, tranquil lakes and various plant collections, gardens are a permanent spot of discovery and pleasure.

These beautiful gardens are home to amazing and diverse plant collections such as camellias, rainforest flora, succulents and cacti, roses, herbs, cycads.The Kids Garden has everything they could want to help children explore the natural world, with plant tunnels through which they can go, rocks to climb and a bamboo forest where they can hide.

3. Kirstenbosch, Cape Town, South Africa

Kirstenbosch is an important botanical garden located on the eastern skirt of Table Mountain in Cape Town. The Garden is one of ten National Botanical Gardens, covering five of South Africa’s six different biomes and managed by the South African National Biodiversity Institute.

Considered one of the most beautiful botanical gardens in the world, Kirstenbosch is a place that British South African politician and businessman Cecil John Rhodes inherited from the government. While it was an ordinary farm where pigs roamed at that time, a botanist named Harold Pearson turned it into an incredible garden in 1913. Today, you can see more than 7000 plants grown in South Africa here. The garden, which is 528 hectares, has managed to enter the UNESCO World Heritage List.

4. Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona, USA

The 140-acre Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix, Arizona has the world’s best collection of arid land plants from deserts around the world in a unique outdoor setting. The garden also offers various conferences and workshops on desert landscape and gardening, botanical art and illustration, nature art and photography, and health.

Desert Botanical Garden is a privately funded non-profit organization and acceptance depends on income from programs and sales of souvenirs, as well as contributions from individuals and businesses.

5. The Cosmic Speculation Garden – Scotland

It is a private garden built by Charles Jencks and his late wife Maggie at Portrack House, and is inspired by science and math with sculptures and landscaping on these themes such as Black Holes and Fractals.

Designed with inspiration from science and mathematics, the main inspiration for sculptures and landscape design in the garden has a wide range from black holes to fractals. Thanks to Jenck’s late wife Maggie Keswick, an expert in Asian gardening, it is also possible to see the eastern effects in the garden. It is open to the public within the scope of its order.

6. Tarot Garden, Tuscany, Italy

Creative sculptures of French artist Niki de Saint Phalle dazzle in the Capalbio Tarot Garden (Giardino dei Tarocchi), opposite the colorful Tuscan landscape.

Inspired by Gaudi’s Park Güell in Barcelona, Spain, de Saint Phalle wanted to create a “little paradise garden where people and nature meet.” All the gigantic garden in the garden, including works such as Empress, Tree of Life, Devil, Magician and Sun The sculptures were also designed by Saint Phalle and made with care.

Tarot Garden is open to visitors from April to October.

Visiting hours: 14:30 – 19:30

7. Longwood Gardens, Pennsylvania, USA

Longwood Gardens is an American botanical garden. Brandywine Creek Valley consists of 1,077 acres of gardens, forests and meadows at Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, United States. It is an example of the Longwood Gardens species, with over 11,000 plant species. It includes the Italian Water Garden, Flower Garden Walk, water display gardens and many more.

8. The Poison Garden, Northumberland, England

This is such a deadly garden that you are only allowed to enter with an authorized guide. The Poison Garden in the Annwick Garden is the personal project of the Northumberland Windfall. More than 100 plants with different deadly levels are on display in the Poison Garden. Special permission of the Ministry of Interior is required for most of the plants in the garden to be found here.

Among the many plants in the garden, Adam’s grass, which has a strong narcotic effect, is the deadly Wild Jasmine, where only three of its delicious grapes are sufficient, poppy and the Thimble Grass, which is all poisonous, used as a softener in the 16th century.

The garden can be visited every day in every 20 minutes until 17:15.

9. Nong Nooch Tropical Botanical Garden, Pattaya, Thailand

Nong Nooch Tropical Botanical Garden is a 163-kilometer 500-acre botanical garden and tourist attraction on Sukhumvit Road in Chonburi Province, Thailand.

Nong Nooch Tropical Garden welcomes more than 5,000 visitors every day.It is one of the world-class elegant tropical botanical gardens. It is also a large science center dedicated to sikads, with its own Cycad Gen Bank. In addition to the Botanical park, Nong Nooch Garden also offers daily shows in the Thai Culture Hall.

10. French Kiss in Akaroa, Christchurch, New Zealand

Ellerslie International Flower Fair, held every year in New Zealand towards the end of the summer season, attracts garden designers, garden lovers, gardening fashion and new products from all over the world.Established in Auckland in 1994, the fair moved to Hagley Park in Christchurch, known as the Garden City of New Zealand, in a more suitable place for itself in 2008.

In 2013, landscape designer Ben Hoyle won the 6th Gold Medal thanks to the sunken oasis design, which was the hall-shaped pit design, clad with pillows, which he called ”French Kiss in Akaroa”, where visitors were uniquely below the water level. The history of the French settlement in the town of Akaroa on the South Island has inspired this garden.

Kate Hillier, director of Ellerslie International Flower Fair, however, announced that a few more gardens were donated to the New Brighton suburb on the shores of Christchurch, which suffered great damage in the Christchurch earthquake in 2011.

“We aim to see the garden live and illuminate the days for the people of the region that has suffered such serious damage,” said Kate Hillier. He said.

 

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