Showing posts with label Alcatraz Gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alcatraz Gardens. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 2, 2022


Botanical Gardens Around San Francisco





The Bay Area is in bloom all year round.  So any time you come to San Francisco
you will be able to admire nature's best flowers and shrubs. 

Alcatraz Prison Gardens


Surprisingly beautiful gardens, grown by prisoners and staff in an unexpected setting.  You will find beautiful blooms and desert plants even around the famous Alcatraz prison gardens on an island tour.  The best weather is usually from March to June - after that it gets foggy.  







To get there, book any of the numerous Alcatraz Tours, starting at the San Francisco Harbor.

https://Alcatrazgardens.org








Golden Gate Park & Botanical Gardens

I once spent several months in the Silicon Valley and explored Sand Francisco and the Bay Area, and most of all the wonderful botanical gardens.  For days I was walking with my dog through all the parts of this huge park, larger than Central Park in New York City. The gold rush of the 1850s brought enormous wealth to San Francisco and the city's fathers wanted to show off the prosperity of their new metropolis.
A 12,000 ft Victorian glasshouse was brought over from Europe.  A sturdy structure that even survived the 1906 earthquake.  Japanese gardens, waterfalls, even a small bison herd can be found here too.  Most flowers bloom from February to June.

Among many other plants and blooms, you will be smitten by California Poppies, Tulips, Fuchsias, Dogwoods, Azaleas, and Rhododendrons in Spring.  Summer finds an abundance of Roses, Hydrangeas, and Dahlias.  Autumn colors are by Liquid Ambers, Swamp Cypress, and Gingkoes, and in Winter Camellias, Native Ceanothus (California Lilacs), Tulips, Lavender, Grevillea, Protea, Leucadendrons, and Strelitzia show their beauty.  And I am even not mentioning the various succulents and cacti that thrive here too.

https://GoldenGatePark.com










Palo Alto's Elizabeth Gamble Garden 

South of San Francisco, it is somewhat hidden, and I discovered it only when I walked my dog in the neighborhood and saw a small sign. Officially dogs are not allowed, but the two friendly gardeners who I asked, gave me permission as on this early morning no other visitors were around. 

A vine-covered gazebo and a posh cottage can be seen, as well as the mansion of Ms. Gamble that can be visited during the week. Especially the rose garden and the wisteria garden are the highlight of this botanical jewel.

https://GambleGarden.org










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Hakone Japanese Garden, Saratoga

It is recognized as one of the oldest Japanese-style residential gardens in the Western Hemisphere.  Located on a steep hill, it is not as strong 'Japanese' as some others, but more an 'English Garden Style' in a Japanese setting and with Japanese plants.  Similar to the one in Hayward on the east side of the Bay.  But the buildings, bridges, and the pond with its Koi fish are typical Japanese.

https://Hakone.com







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Ruth Bancroft Gardens

The perfect showcase for Californians to ditch their ugly lawns and go xeriscaping! I doubt if these plants ever saw a garden water hose or can, after all the palms, cacti, yuccas, agaves, and other succulents can thrive on the occasional rain or fog.  This little paradise of dry plants is located among residential areas in Walnut Creek, east of San Francisco.

Wandering through the beautifully arranged plant areas, you may want to totally change your own garden setting - if you live in the southern states.  In fact, you can purchase some of the plants, raised in this water-wise, low-maintenance' dry garden'.

https://RuthBancroftGarden.org











Find inspiration in the many gardens in and around San Francisco and the Bay Area.  Don't forget to hike through any of the 75 parks in the East Bay Regional Park District, to admire the colorful wildflowers, such as poppies, silver lupine, pacific pea, periwinkle, and larkspur - especially after a generous spring rain.





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Sunday, October 21, 2018


Gardens of Alcatraz




Once home to some of America's most notorious criminals, and famous all over the world, Alcatraz island is now a tourist attraction in the San Francisco Bay. The first lighthouse on the Pacific Coast, the former prison cells and most of all the historic gardens are luring visitors. 
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As early as 1869, military inmates began tending the Gardens of Alcatraz.  Many of these inmate gardeners had no horticulture experience, but with vocational training and donated plants, they were able to transform the barren rock into extensively planted terraces, including a rose garden and cutting gardens overflowing with brightly colored flowers.  Alcatraz gardeners/inmates needed tough plants that could survive with little water or care.  Today, visitors to Alcatraz find a landscape alive with fragrant old roses, fig trees, bulbs, and colorful succulents.
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The work was a privilege: not only did it allow inmates to be out of their cells and away from the tension of the prison, but it also offered them a chance to create beauty in a forbidding environment.
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Getting to the Island
The island is open to visitors every day year-round except for Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day.  Although there is not an entrance fee, there is a charge for the ferry service, supplied by a private company under contract to the National Park Service, from Pier 33 in San Francisco.  For additional information on schedules, prices, parking, and to purchase tickets in advance (tickets are made available about 90 days in advance) please visit the Alcatraz Cruises website.  Alcatraz frequently sells out, as much as a week in advance, in summer and near holidays.  In early March a round trip ticket is $30.  The best time to visit the Gardens of Alcatraz is from January to September, and especially in the spring from January to March.


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A Visitor to the Gardens Gives this Advice:
“Because Alcatraz is surrounded by water whose temperature rarely goes below 50F, the island is literally in a temperature zone warmer than its landlocked neighbors.  January is the most pleasant month to visit because the summer fogs are absent and winds are mild because the temperature differential between the coast and valley are minimal.  And the birds are mostly gone so their droppings are gone too. It's been up in the high 60's on the island while SF is low 60's on the same day.”
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And Here a bit Alcatraz Garden History:
Once home to some of America's most notorious criminals, the federal penitentiary that operated here from 1934 to 1963 brought a dark mystique to the Rock.  The presence of infamous inmates like Al "Scarface" Capone and the "Birdman" Robert Stroud helped to establish the island's notoriety.  To this day, Alcatraz is best known as one of the world's most legendary prisons.  In the 1920s, hundreds of trees and shrubs were planted as part of a general beautification project.
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The most significant phase of garden construction began in the mid-1930s when Fred Reichel, the secretary to the warden, convinced the warden to allow prisoners to work in the gardens.  At the same time, he sought the advice of the California Horticultural Society and plant breeders on which plants might thrive on Alcatraz and was able to obtain a large variety of Mediterranean-climate plants.  The offspring of many of these plants continue to be found in today’s gardens.

In 1941, prisoner Elliott Michener began a nine-year stint as the head gardener.  He built a greenhouse and was allowed to order large amounts of seeds and bulbs.  His labor helped shaped the terraced gardens on the east side.




After the prison closed in 1963, the gardens were abandoned and fell into disrepair together with everything else on the island.  Plants that required irrigation for survival died while those that were able to make do with natural rainfall and moisture from the frequent fog—mostly succulents—survived.

In 2003, the Garden Conservancy, Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy, and the National Park Service launched a cooperative project to restore the island’s gardens.  With the help of countless volunteers, horticulturists propagated new material from the surviving plants and brought in new introductions appropriate for the harsh climate.
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Enjoy this unusual garden trip to the Alcatraz prison island!

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