Friday, September 23, 2016

Field Trip: Plantastic Seattle Afternoon

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Palm

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Door

One of my favorite spots from the 9+ years I lived in Seattle is the Volunteer Park Conservatory. Though it’s a smaller conservatory, VPC has five display houses, and a collection ranging from ferns, to bromeliads, palms, cacti and more. The building, a beautiful Victorian era glass house, was built in 1912, and contains over 3,400 panes of glass.

 

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Cactus-House

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Cacti

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Agave

Always a favorite, the cactus house always seems like total magic, since Seattle weather isn’t exactly cacti friendly. Stepping into this room immediately transports you to the desert, even on a cloudy day.

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Palm-House

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-anthurium-veitchii

The Palm House, with it’s extra high ceilings, contains some of the largest specimens in the conservatory’s collection. The Anthurium veitchii is kind of a current plant obsession- aren’t those wrinkly leaves so good?

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Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Fern-House

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Pitcher-Plant

The colorful and lush Fern House has a great range of plants with fancy foliage, as well as an impressive little carnivorous garden with patternful pitcher plants like the one above, cobra lillies, and venus fly traps.

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Corpse-Flower

It might be the wrong word to use, but if you’re lucky, you may even get to take in a Corpse Flower. Sadly (or maybe luckily?), it wasn’t in bloom quite yet so we didn’t get to experience it’s signature stench on this visit.

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Entrance

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Dahlias

Volunteer-Park-Conservatory-Dahlia-garden

Once you’ve explored the conservatory (which will probably only take an hour or so), checking out the rest of Volunteer Park is definitely worth the time. There’s even a museum- the Seattle Asian Art Museum– on the grounds, a historic water tower you can climb to the top of for a great view of Seattle, and if you’re there in the late summer/early fall, be sure to stop by the Dahlia garden.

 

Rachels-Ginger-beer-monstera-light

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After wandering the park, make one more plantastic stop in the Capitol Hill neighborhood- at Rachel’s Ginger Beer. Their ginger beer is fantastic- with a rotating menu of seasonal flavors (the caramelized pineapple is seriously bomb)- plus they offer ginger beer based cocktails and even floats with soft serve ice cream. Possibly just as good as the ginger beer though, are the living plant installations. A chandelier, made of living Monsteras and Philodendrons? Mind. Blown. (And now I’m craving a ginger beer float, or just a trip back to Seattle).

Have you been on your own field trip lately? Where do you head when you need a big dose of inspiration (or plants)?

All photos by Danae Horst

 



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