The main reason we went to Victoria was to see the Butchart Gardens. It had been recommended by a few people and it did not disappoint! We have many pictures from our visit there but the pictures don't give it justice. This place is amazing! I have never seen anything like it and probably never will. We were there for about 3 hours and I don't think we saw one patch of dirt. It is just covered with flowers everywhere. Big, blooming flowers like this:The smell was so intoxicating. I would have loved to be able to bottle up the smell and bring it home with me!The Gardens consists of 5 smaller gardens, a few ponds, some restaurants, and a gift shop (can't leave that out!). The first garden we visited was called the Sunken Garden. We were just nonchalantly walking along the path when, BOOM, out of nowhere we come across this view:We were seriously blown away by the beauty. We snuck into this little old cabin to snap a few pictures.There were stairs everywhere in this garden leading up the lookout, down into the gardens, up once again to get a view of the Ross Fountain. The paths wound around-we kept going back to made sure we hadn't missed anything! We were amazed at the lily pads-I don't know if you can tell, but they are even placed in a certain way.Even the garbage cans had blooming flowers on the top of them! At the end of the gardens, you walk up another set of winding stairs and you see this view of Ross Fountain-pretty cool, eh? The next garden that we came upon was the Rose Garden. Although smaller than the very large Sunken Garden, it is no less beautiful or impressive. It was filled with thousands of roses.All along the path were these cool arches that were covered in roses.I didn't know that there was such a variety of roses! Each type of rose was named as well as when it was inducted into the American Rose Society. I had fun reading all the names and laughing at a few!(Sorry about all the pictures of me! Justin kept saying he didn't want to ruin the beauty of the roses. As if!)
At the end of the Rose Garden was the Sturgeon Fountain. What's a sturgeon? The bronze for this statue was cast in Italy...Just a little FYI.The next garden we came to was the Japanese Gardens. This garden was just green, green, green everywhere. To get there we had to walk down these cool steps:Justin especially enjoyed these gardens because of his affinity to Asian things. We couldn't figure out what the ground cover was but it smelled delicious! Like you could use it in cooking. I'm not sure what Justin's running away from?The back of the Japanese Garden borders Butchart Cove. We found the tiniest little hole in the bushes that looked out on the water.The Japanese Garden was full of little streams and ponds with either stepping stones or bridges that we walked across. The next garden was the Italian Garden. The scent here was so good! I think it was more pungent because it was a more enclosed space. We walked through a wall of bushes and found this statueand then continued on to the flowers. It was small but pretty nonetheless. After the Italian Garden was the Mediterranean Garden. This mostly consisted of a big open area of grass with benches. I think it was intended as a rest place more than anything.
Wow, this place was definitely worth getting up at 5:00 to catch the ferry to Canada! We would recommend that everyone tries to get here once in their life! You'll be blown away, just like we were.
At the end of the Rose Garden was the Sturgeon Fountain. What's a sturgeon? The bronze for this statue was cast in Italy...Just a little FYI.The next garden we came to was the Japanese Gardens. This garden was just green, green, green everywhere. To get there we had to walk down these cool steps:Justin especially enjoyed these gardens because of his affinity to Asian things. We couldn't figure out what the ground cover was but it smelled delicious! Like you could use it in cooking. I'm not sure what Justin's running away from?The back of the Japanese Garden borders Butchart Cove. We found the tiniest little hole in the bushes that looked out on the water.The Japanese Garden was full of little streams and ponds with either stepping stones or bridges that we walked across. The next garden was the Italian Garden. The scent here was so good! I think it was more pungent because it was a more enclosed space. We walked through a wall of bushes and found this statueand then continued on to the flowers. It was small but pretty nonetheless. After the Italian Garden was the Mediterranean Garden. This mostly consisted of a big open area of grass with benches. I think it was intended as a rest place more than anything.
Wow, this place was definitely worth getting up at 5:00 to catch the ferry to Canada! We would recommend that everyone tries to get here once in their life! You'll be blown away, just like we were.
3 comments:
Wow this place is gorgeous! Looks like you guys had a nice LONG vacation! No wonder you missed Molly so much!
I'm totally jealous. I LONG to go there. Did you know it used to be a quarry?
Your trip looks like so much fun - you will be so happy you documented it all so you don't forget about it. Ross and I went to Seattle and Vancouver, Canada a few years back and we wanted to go to the gardens but didn't get a chance. After looking at your post I am way sad we missed it. Also, the little bed and breakfast you stayed in sounds amazing and so does twilight - both the book and the sunset ;) haha. Speaking of, I would have totally wanted to drag Ross to Forks.
When you got home did you just stare at our mountains and think - wow! They really ARE rocky. All I could think about while we were there is that everything was so green and lush! And that parking anywhere was ridiculously expensive! LOL.
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