Plenty to enjoy in the upper garden

The alpine scree garden at Dunedin Botanic Garden. Photo: Supplied
The alpine scree garden at Dunedin Botanic Garden. Photo: Supplied
Dunedin's flat lower botanic garden is a much-loved destination. The duck pond has provided hours of fun for generations and the winter garden glasshouse has been a hit for more than 100 years. But most of the botanic garden is elsewhere.

By the cafe, a bridge across Lindsay Creek invites visitors to the upper botanic garden. The first thing you'll meet is the Mediterranean Garden, a formal Italianate garden with a sun-trap terrace looking towards Flagstaff. Nearby, the Cedars of Lebanon Grove's flat lawn is a good place to admire the view before exploring the semi-wilderness of the arboretum.

Up the top, the Rhododendron Dell mixes native bush with exotic plants to create a traditional woodland garden with a New Zealand forest flavour. Even though rhododendron blooms peak in spring, bark and foliage are like living art all year.

The aviary is beside the upper garden car park, facing north for maximum sunlight. More than 400 birds live in the collection and most are exotic.

Next door is the geographic plant collection, a living library of plants from every continent except the Antarctic. Plants are displayed according to region, for example, the North American borders. Nearly all are species that evolved in nature, rather than cultivars.

The New Zealand native plant collection runs along the hilltop plateau and even has a flat lawn with views. Striking plant forms and quirky features remind us how lucky we are to live at the bottom of the world in Godzone.

Garden Life is produced by Dunedin Botanic Garden. For further information contact Clare Fraser.

 

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