Dunedin, NZ Botanical Garden

December 4, 1993

We got an early start on the drive from Christchurch to Dunedin on the morning of December 3. The drive took us most of the day, and we had only the morning of December 4 to tour the city before starting off for Te Anau in the southwest. We had some rain along the way from Christchurch, but by the time we arrived in Dunedin the sky had cleared and this morning we awoke to bright sunlight and somewhat warmer temperatures.

Dunedin is a "U" shaped city built on the hillsides overlooking the end of a long bay. The approaches to the city are quite hilly but although our rental Ford struggled up some of them, they were a welcome relief after the relatively uninteresting road north of Christchurch. The garden described below is perched on a hillside high enough to overlook the bay and quite close to the downtown area.

Again most of the images are from my hi-8 video, but Jennifer took the brighter and sharper 35 mm photographs.


Skip down to border, duck pond, rock garden, river, hillside, Aviary, meconopsis or the end.

This view is looking back toward the main entrance to the gardens. The white in the border on the left is a Crambe in full bloom. There were also delphinium, foxglove, campanula, and asters blooming all at the same time along that edge. The rosey glow at the far end are Rhododendron.
A closer look at the Crambe which was standing about four feet tall.
A clump of some sort of pink-lavender aster was also in bloom.
The centerpiece of the lower garden was a duck pond complete with a number of hungry ducks. captured during a feeding frenzy on this 35 mm photograph.
Little byways of rocks and plants surrounded the walks and a couple of public buildings that shared the lower garden.
Jennifer took this 35 mm photo of me checking out a plant label in the rock garden. The lower garden is to the right in this image and is separated from this banked rock garden by a river that was spanned by two foot bridges at either end of the garden. The left side of this image shows the beginning of a major hill that rose over a hundred feet to various overlooks, shade gardens, and an Aviary.
This view shows a substantial gray leaved succulent that was covered with small white buds.
A closer view of the succulent.
Here's a somewhat blurry view of the river from the bridge on the west end, but it nicely shows the steep hill extending up to the right behind the path and rock garden.
Various primula were blooming merrily in little nooks of the rock garden.
This was a large flowered daisy of a kind I had not seen before.
And a sort of hen and chickens succulent that was adorned with orange flowers.
White daisies on plants with thick gray leaves, low plants covered in small white flowers, and large orange plumes in one image captures something of the variety that was growing in the rock garden.
This view is looking back down the hill from about half way up the path that wound back and forth across the bank behind the rock garden. The duck pond is just off the image to the right.
We were brought up short at one point along the hillside path by a huge shrub covered in yellow blossems.
A close up of the yellow flowers on the shrub.
The sign promises additional wonders just a little further up the hill.
The final path leading to the Aviary was puncuated at the top by a large mound of lavender that added its scent to that of the clean sea air at the top of this hill.
The first thing we saw was a peacock in full display. Unfortunately it was on the other side of a chain link fence.
He dropped his tail as we approached but stayed around to glare at us while I poked the video lens through one of the fence openings.
Another particularly bright bird was watching us closely.
From the top of the hill we had a nice view of a part of the Dunedin harbor and town.
The difficult to grow Meconopsis daisies were every where in the open patches along the upper part of the hillside.
Their brillant sky blue is like a beacon but they were so plentiful as to seem ordinary.
Large hybrid Rhododendron bushes were scattered about the hillside and added flashes of interesting colors as we wandered back down the hillside by another route.
Finally we emerged from forest on the hillside to a view of the east side of the lower garden. It takes a little stamina to see the upper part of this hillside garden but once again New Zealand served up a varied and unusual public garden filled with hundreds of blooming perennials and shrubs.


Back up to border, duck pond, rock garden, river, hillside, Aviary, meconopsis or the top.

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© 1996-1999 L.R. Fortney