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Spain
Indigenous flowers of Spain
Spain is officially known as the Kingdom of Spain. This country is
mostly popular for its dance, flamenco music, bullfights, fantastic
beaches, flora and fauna, and sunshine. It is a developed country
having the eighth largest economy in world. Retailing, fishing
fleet, tourism, telecommunication, and banking all contribute to the
economic activity. The country has extraordinary artistic heritage.
As Spain has a wide variety of climatic conditions, it has a greater
variety of vegetation here. About 8,000 species of flowers are
cataloged.
Indigenous
Flowers of Nepal
The tiny country of Nepal is situated in the
Himalayan Mountain ranges and hence it has a lot of variety in flora
and fauna. One can find exquisite varieties of flowers in Nepal
which are not found anywhere else in the world. Nepal has a rich
biodiversity and many of its plants and flowers have demonstrated
medicinal properties that have been used by the local people for
years. In Nepal there are more than 6500 varieties of flowers along
with trees and bushes. The threat of rising environment hazard is
posing a great danger to the rare species of flowers and plants in
Nepal and hence the Nepalese government has initiated some
protective measures to ensure that the rare varieties of flowers in
Nepal do not go extinct.
Indigenous Flowers of France
The varied culture of France is incomplete without flowers and a
Frenchmen cannot imagine an important occasion without flowers. The
national flower of France is the Stylized Lily and tourists to
France can not only enjoy some of the scenes but also its flowers.
The indigenous flowers of France rank just next to the wine in being
the identity of France. The native flowers of France make for the
perfect scenery around for tourists in the country. In the rural
region of France one can find quite a few houses that do not grow
flowers in the open space around their homes. People also use
flowers to decorate their homes in France.
Indigenous Flowers
of Tibet
Tibet is been considered as one of the highest region in the world
as its average elevation is about 4,500 meters. Tibet is quite often
called as the Roof of the World because this country is located in
the Himalayas which is one of the highest peaks in the world. With
its excellent clear atmosphere, bright sunlight, natural beauty,
geographic features and metrologies and mysteries of Tibetan
culture. Tibet is also a great place for all the scientists,
adventures and nature lovers. Besides deserts and snowfields in the
region one can also find luxurious forests, bloomed meadows,
beautiful lichen on trees and rocks and also swamps with cranes.
Idaho grows many types of flowers. Numerous
orchid varieties grow in its forests, and other flowers such as the
violets and buttercups cover its mountain meadows.
Idaho’s climate varies widely. Similarly varied in their
climate preferences, Idaho’s indigenous flowers range in their
drought tolerance – from the extremely drought tolerant plants to
the water-loving types.
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Flowers online Style in Natures Brilliance

A Hawaii wedding
has 7 different islands to have a elegant ceremonies on. each island in Hawaii
has a unique flavor to bring to couples planning a wedding
A Hawaii wedding on the island of
Oahu and Maui is like heaven on earth.
Here are a few examples of weddings that have been
coordinated by our company in Honolulu Oahu and Maui
in Hawaii's paradise.
There are four botanical gardens on Oahu that have beautiful nature scenery
perfect for a
garden wedding or a waterfall wedding.
Creating beautiful Hawaii wedding on the island of
Oahu want to go to the forest
for a wedding how about a waterfall this is the place for you
"To exist as a nation, to prosper as a
state, and to live as a people, we must have trees"
- Thomas Jefferson
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Here is a Picture of a Hawaiian Banyan Tree
that grows in the rainforest of Hawaii
Wedding with flowers from the forest.
Here picture of a plumeria tree, the flowers are frequently
used for weddings and
flower leis in the islands of Hawaii. There are many different varieties that
bloom year round
though seldom in the rainy season during the months of Jan and Feb.
The flowers of plumeria come in pink, white, light red, yellow
and white and gorgeous pink white
The
Contemporary Museum Gardens
The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu
2411 Makiki Heights Drive
Honolulu, Hawai'i 96822
Telephone: (808) 526-1322; toll free (866) 991-2832
Fax: (808) 536-5973
Email: info@tcmhi.org
Drive toward the mountains on Punahou Street; turn left on Nehoa Street and
then right on Makiki Street. At the first intersection, turn left at the fork in
the road and go about a mile up the hill; the museum entrance will be on your
right.
The Contemporary Museum's gardens, part of a 3 1/2 acre complex, were created
between 1928 and 1941 by Reverend K. H. Inagaki, a Honolulu minister, as a
retreat in which to meditate and experience the harmony of nature. In 1979-1980
the gardens were restored under the supervision of Honolulu landscape architect
James C. Hubbard. Recently, Hawai'i garden designer Leland Miyano has updated
the plantings. The gardens provide a natural setting for works of art from the
permanent collection. The Museum is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. and Sunday from noon to 4 :00 p.m. It is closed on Mondays and
most major holidays. Museum entrance fee is $5.00 for adults and $3.00 for
seniors and students with valid identification. There is no charge for children
12 and under. Entrance to the Museum is free to the public on the third Thursday
of every month.
Dole Plantation Gardens
Dole Plantation
64-1550 Kamehameha Highway
Wahiawa, Hawai'i 96786
Telephone: (808) 621-8408
Fax: (888) 611-6747
Email: sales@dole-plantation.com
From Waikiki, take H1 West to H2 North. Continue to Kamehameha Highway
(Highway 99). Dole Plantation is approximately a forty minute drive from
Waikiki.
The Dole Plantation Garden Tour takes visitors through 8 mini-gardens: Life
on the Plantation, Native Species Garden, Irrigation, North Shore Agriculture,
Bromeliad Garden, Ti Leaf Garden, Lei Garden, and Hibiscus Garden. These gardens
total about 1 1/2 acres and the tour takes about 1 hour. Guided or self-guided
tours are available. The entrance fee is $3.50 for adults. The Plantation also
offers the Pineapple Garden Maze. The maze covers more than 2 acres with a 1.7
mile long hibiscus-lined path; in 2001, it was listed in the Guiness Book of
World Records as the world's largest maze. Admission charge is $5.00 for adults
and $3.00 for children. Also available at the Plantation is the Pineapple
Express - a 2 mile, 20-minute train tour with a narration covering the history
of pineapple and agriculture in Hawaii, the story of James Dole, and beautiful
views of the North Shore. Tickets are $7.50 for adults and $5.50 for children
ages 4 through 12. Children under 4 are free when accompanied by an adult. The
Dole Plantation is open from 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily.
Foster Botanical Garden (Honolulu
Botanical Gardens)
Administrative Office:
Honolulu Botanical Gardens
50 North Vineyard Boulevard
Honolulu, Hawai'i 96817
Telephone: (808) 522-7060
Located at 50 North Vineyard Boulevard, Honolulu, Hawai'i
Foster Botanical Garden is the oldest of the Honolulu Botanical Gardens and
contains trees that were planted in the 1850s by Dr. William Hillebrand. In
addition to these historic trees, this 14 acre garden features the Lyon Orchid
Garden, the Prehistoric Glen and a palm collectiona great spot for Hawaiian
style weddings . The garden is open daily from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. except for
Christmas Day and New Year's Day. Guided tours are available Monday through
Friday at 1:00 p.m. Other tours may be arranged upon request; call (808)
522-7060 for information. Entrance fee is $5.00 per person 13 years and older
($3.00 for Hawai'i residents with identification). The entrance fee for children
from 6 to 12 years old is $1.00; there is no charge for children 5 and under
accompanied by an adult.
Friendship Garden
Kokohaki Place
Kaneohe, Hawai'i 96744
Located opposite Kokokahi YWCA on Kaneohe Bay Drive at the mauka-most
(inland) curve of Kokokahi Place
The Friendship Garden is on the site of a 1920s church camp and was designed
in the 1930s by Honolulu landscape architect Richard Tongg. It has recently been
restored by Jack and Janet Gillmar with the help of Ted Talbott and community
volunteers. The garden's half mile loop trail starts with a flight of stone
stairs and continues across a bridge for a spectacular view of Kaneohe Bay. The
trail continues to an upper lookout with views of Makapuu and Molokai. The
garden entrance is in a residential neighborhood and parking is limited. Free
access during daylight hours.
The
Gallery and Gardens
47-754 Lamaula Road
Kaneohe, Hawai'i 96744
Telephone: (808) 239-8146
Fax: (808) 239-5022
Email: info@galleryandgardens.com
Located off of Kahekili Highway (Highway 83); after passing the Hygenic
Store, turn left onto Wailehua Road and go toward the mountains (mauka); take a
right turn at the first stop sign onto Lamaula Road
Created in the late 1960's by two artists, Richard Hart and Hiroshi Tagami,
as an environment for displaying their ceramics and paintings, The Gallery and
Gardens opened to the public in 1977. The 1 acre Japanese style garden features
over 30 varieties of daylilies as well as anthuriums, orchids, heliconia, ti,
ornamental gingers, and palms. Tours are self-guided and take from 1/2 to 1
hour. The Gallery and Gardens are open on Saturday, Sunday and Monday from 10:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. It is also open by appointment; call or email to make
arrangements. Admission is free.
Halawa Xeriscape Garden
99-1268 Iwaena Street
'Aiea, Hawai'i 96701
Telephone: (808) 748-5041
This 3 acre demonstration garden in Halawa Valley is a project of the
Honolulu Board of Water Supply. It features numerous water conserving plants,
water saving irrigation systems, mulches, and other water saving landscape
ideas. The garden is open to the public from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. on Wednesdays
and Saturdays. There is no admission charge.
Honolulu Academy
of Arts
Honolulu Academy of Arts
900 S. Beretania Street
Honolulu, Hawai'i 96814
Telephone: (808) 532-8700
Fax: (808 532-8787
Email: info@honoluluacademy.org
Located on Beretania Street between Ward Avenue and Victoria Street
The Honolulu Academy of Arts building contains several garden courtyards: the
Luce Pavilion Garden, the Central Court, the Asian Courtyard, and the
Mediterranean Courtyard. The Asian and Mediterranean Courtyards were originally
designed by Catherine Thompson in 1927. In 1983, the Mediterranean Courtyard was
renovated by the Garden Club of Honolulu and landscape architect David Woolsey.
The Mediterranean Courtyard was renovated in 1997 under the direction of
Honolulu landscape architect Randal Fijumoto. The Luce Pavilion Garden was added
in the recent Academy renovation. Designed by Julie Kimura, it was inspired by
early kama'aina family gardens and features tropical ornamentals. The Academy is
open Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Sunday from 1:00
p.m. to 5:00 p.m. The Museum is closed on Mondays, New Year's Day, Martin Luther
King Day, Fourth of July, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas. The admission
fee is $7.00 for adults and $4.00 for seniors, students, and military personnel.
There is no charge for members or forchildren 12 and under. Free admission to
the public on the first Wednesday of every month.
Ho'omaluhia Botanical Garden (Honolulu
Botanical Gardens)
Administrative Office:
Honolulu Botanical Gardens
50 North Vineyard Boulevard
Honolulu, Hawai'i 96817
Telephone: (808) 522-7060
Located at the end of Luluku Road (45-680 Luluku Road), Kane'ohe, Hawai'i
96744; (808) 233-7323
Ho'omaluhia features geographical groupings of plantings from the major
tropical regions around the world with a special emphasis on native Hawaiian
plants. This 400 acre garden also includes a heliconia, aroid, and tropical tree
collections, ethnobotanical exhibits, and picnic and camping grounds (permit
required). The garden is open daily from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. except for
Christmas Day and New Year's Day. No entrance fee. Guided nature hikes are
offered at 10:00 a.m. on Saturdays and 1:00 p.m. on Sundays. Please call (808)
233-7323 to register for the hikes.
Kapiolani Community College Cactus Garden
Kapiolani Community College
Kekaulike Information & Service Center
'Ilima 101
4303 Diamond Head Road
Honolulu, Hawai'i 96816
Telephone: (808) 734-9448
Email: kapinfo@hawaii.edu
Parking Lot C off of Diamond Head Road near the Chapel is very close to the
gardens
This cactus garden was created by student/volunteer Moriso Teraoka in the
late 1980s. The landscaped hillside contains an impressive assortment of cacti
donated by members of the Cactus and Succulent Society. No admission charge.
Koko Crater Botanical Gardern (Honolulu
Botanical Gardens)
Administrative Office:
Honolulu Botanical Gardens
50 North Vineyard Boulevard
Honolulu, Hawai'i 96817
Telephone: (808) 522-7060
Located inside Koko Crater past Koko Crater Stables
Koko Crater Botanical Garden covers a hot, dry 60 acre site inside of the
Crater and the collections highlight drought-tolerant plants that are adaptable
to this environment and to water conservation techniques (xeriscape). These
collections include African plants, cacti, aloes, euphorbias, sansevierias,
adeniums, native erythrinas (wiliwili), dryland palms, and bougainvillea. The
Dean Conklin Plumeria Grove, a collection of plumeria cultivars, lines the
road into the main crater. Koko Crater Botanical Garden is still under
development; restroom facilities, drinking fountains and other visitor
accommodations have not yet been constructed. The garden is open daily from 9:00
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. except for Christmas Day and New Year's Day. No entrance fee.
Guided group tours may be arranged; call (808) 522-7060 to make an appointment.
Leeward Community College Native Plant
Gardens and Shade House Propagation Center
Leeward Community College
96-045 Ala Ike
Pearl City, Hawai'i 96782-3393
Telephone: (808) 455-0477
Email: pmillen@hawaii.edu
Take Kamehameha Highway to Pearl City. Just past the Waimano Home Road
intersection, there is a sign; turn left just past the overpassand follow the
access road to LCC. Park towards the end of the access road and to the back of
the campus for the shade house and dryland gardens.
The native plant gardens were started in the early 1990's by Bruce Koebele
and Priscilla Millen; they contain over 70 native plant taxa, mostly dryland
species. The conservation and education shade house propagation center was
completed in spring 2003. There are three garden areas: dryland and coastal
plants by the air conditioning complex at the edge of the parking lot; mesic
forest and Polynesian gardens in the courtyard between BS and MS buildings; and,
the large dryland garden and shade house between the tennis courts and telescope
complex. The gardens are open to the public during most daylight hours and there
is no admission charge. Leeward Community College has 24 hour security, so
please identify yourself when viewing the gardens. Contact
Priscilla Millen, Professor of Botany,
or call 808-455-0285 for forther information and volunteer opportunities. For
native and herbal plant workshops, contact the college's OCET office at
808-455-0477.
Lili'uokalani Botanical Garden (Honolulu
Botanical Gardens)
Administrative Office:
Honolulu Botanical Gardens
50 North Vineyard Boulevard
Honolulu, Hawai'i 96817
Telephone: (808) 522-7060
Located across from 114 North Kuakini Street, Honolulu, Hawai'i
This 7 1/2 acre garden is under development and is devoted to native Hawaiian
plants. The garden is open daily from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. except for
Christmas Day and New Year's Day. No entrance fee.
Lo'i Kalo Mini Park
1243 Loi Kalo Place
Honolulu, Hawai'i 96819
Located off School Street between Pohaku and Houghtailing Streets a few
blocks from Bishop Museum
This small park contains a Hawaiian garden created in the early 1970s by Paul
Weissich, then the Director of the Honolulu Botanical Gardens. The garden has
springs and mature plantings of ethnobotanical Hawaiian plants that are in good
condition despite a period of neglect. The garden is currently being cared for
by local residents and is used for educational purposes. No restroom facilities.
Harold L.
Lyon Arboretum
3860 Manoa Road
Honolulu, Hawai'i 96822-1180
Telephone: (808) 988-0456
Fax: (808) 988-0462
Email: lyonarb@hawaii.edu
Located at the upper (mauka) end of Manoa Valley at the end of Manoa Road
A part of the University of Hawai'i at Manoa, the Arboretum is an active
research facility and academic resource as well as a public tropical garden. Its
primary functions are research, instruction, and community service. This 194
acre garden in scenic Manoa Valley features a Hawaiian native garden, the
Beatrice H. Krauss Hawaiian Ethnobotanical Garden, an herb garden and
collections of palms, aroids, bromeliads, cordylines and Zingiberales. Its state
of the art tissue culture facility is a nationally recognized center for the
propagation of rare and endangered Hawaiian plants and selected ornamentals. The
arboretum is open to the public daily from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.; closed
Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas. Admission is $7.00 for adults, $5.00 for
kama'aina and students, $4.00 for seniors, and $3.00 for children 12 and under.
No charge for Lyon Arboretum Association members. Register at the Reception
Center and pick up a free self-guided tour map. Guided tours of the Arboretum
take about 1 1/2 hours and are offered on Tuesdays at 10:00 a.m. and Saturdays
at 1:00 p.m. Call (808) 988-0456 to make reservations. Bring mosquito repellant,
rain gear, and sturdy walking shoes.
Mala La'au: A
Garden of Hawaiian Healing Plants
Hawaii Medical Library
1221 Punchbowl Street
Honolulu, Hawai'i 96813
Telephone: (808) 536-9302
Fax: (808) 524-6956
Mala La'au was created in go 1994 to provide a living illustration of the
utilization of healing plants in Hawaiian culture. This small courtyard garden
includes 10 plant species which are important in traditional Hawaiian healing.
The garden can only be viewed from inside the Library. Before visiting, call the
Library or visit their home page to confirm their
hours.
Queen Kapiolani Garden
Located in Waikiki near Kapiolani Park on Monsarrat Avenue between Paki
Avenue and Leahi Avenue; the entrance to the parking area is off Leahi Avenue
This small garden at the edge of Waikiki is maintained by the City and County
of Honolulu Department of Parks and Recreation. It features tropical
ornamentals, hibiscus cultivars, and a small collection of
native Hawaiian
plants. There are a few covered picnic tables and restrooms. Open 24 hours a
day; no entrance fee.

Hawaii Vacation Information
Resource Center
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