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> Our Publications > New Zealand Outlook > 2003 > September South's
gardens a real pleasure GLORIOUS
gardens abound throughout Southland, both those on public
display and those hidden away. Southland's climate, soils
and light combine to create growing conditions like no
other for a huge variety of plants. A rainbow of colours
covers the paddocks during tulip time while the rich
plushness of the grass creates a palette of brilliance.
Several varieties of flowers and bulbs, including tulips
and peony roses, are exported from the province around
the world.
In late October and in February the beauty of Southland's
public and private gardens is celebrated in the
province's Festival of Gardens. From October to November
and in February more than 35 gardens are open to the
public to peruse, admire and fall in love with.
Hours of loving labour have gone into creating oases of
peace, beauty and tranquillity.
The festival celebrates spring and summer by giving the
public a chance to see these magnificent properties,
often only open by arrangement.
A wide variety of types of gardens, from the formal to
the cottage to the native, are included in the festival
and there is something for everyone, even those not
particularly interested in gardening themselves.
Southland also has many public parks and gardens and one
of the jewels is Queens Park, found in Invercargill and
covering 80 hectares.
Even in midwinter, people can be found strolling through
the well laid-out park, wandering through the Winter
Garden, with its tropical and flowering plants, or even
swinging in the playground, dreaming of their childhood.
Queens Park is a child's heaven, with a playground with
all kinds of swings and roundabouts, an aviary where one
can stand among the birds and animal enclosures with
deer, rabbits, llama and more. There are also the statues
to climb on or even hidden away in a corner, a magical
castle to play knights and ladies.
And in the spring and summer the park is alive with
colour and perfume in the rose gardens, the rhododendron
dell, the azalea garden or the Japanese garden to
celebrate Invercargill's sister city, Kumagaya.
Invercargill also is home to Anderson Park where a
Georgian-style mansion, now an art gallery, sits among
sculptured lawns and rose gardens. The park covers 24
hectares and features flower gardens bursting with
colour, tall trees and native bush, along with a
traditional carved Maori house, duck pond and children's
playground. The park was gifted to the city in 1951.
A smaller yet very central green area in the centre of
Invercargill is the Otepuni Gardens, spilling either side
of the Otepuni Stream. Walkways lead through gardens of
annuals, shrubs, mature trees and lush grass.
Further north, the town of Gore also has its public
gardens, part of the Gore Green Belt, set aside in 1874.
Large mature trees line the garden, which has been
carefully planted to provide interest year-round. It
includes many unusual trees and shrubs.
The gardens are awash with colour from the rhododendron
in spring through to the roses in summer and the maples
in autumn.
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