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Apr-Sep: Tue-Fri, 8am-6pm; Sat-Sun, 10am-6pm; Mon, closed; Oct-Mar: Tue-Fri, 8am-4:30pm; Sat-Sun, 10am-4:30pm; Mon, closed
2, 3 at Eastern Parkway-Brooklyn Museum; B, Q, S at Prospect Park
$8, $4 students and seniors, free for children 12 and under; free on Sat, 10am-noon, and Tue
American Express, MasterCard, Visa
The Brooklyn Botanic Garden began as a 39-acre plot donated by the New York State legislature in 1897. Since then, it's grown to 52 acres of immaculate landscaping ripe with color; bluebells and daffodils carpet the hills and wooded areas, and in the Cranford Rose Garden (with more than 5,000 plants and 1,400 varieties), roses of every shape and size, in mauve, scarlet, or apricot hues, twist around latticework and creep across fifteen rectangular beds. The most dramatic display is the Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden, an idyllic, contemplative setting with the lake at its center and architectural element—rocks, bridges, and lanterns—throughout. Visitors can sniff out aromatic flowers and plants with scented leaves in the Fragrance Garden, admire bonsai trees in the Steinhardt Conservatory, or search the landscaped Herb Garden for medicinal and flavored herbs. Evolutionists-in-training can track the history of Plantae in the Plant Family Collection, which are organized according to when they appeared on Earth. (Ferns were first.) No matter what time of year, there's always something in bloom: lotus plants in August, beautyberries in November, flowering Oriental Cherry trees in spring
Steinhardt ConservatoryThis striking, pointed glass-domed conservatory encloses a Bonsai Museum.
Tours
Free guided tours take place Saturday and Sunday at 1 p.m.
Book Smarts
The library possesses a rare-book room as well as more general reference materials, botanical art, and resources for horticulturists and gardeners.
Weddings
The 52-acre Botanic Garden has numerous sites for ceremonies: the Japanese Hill
and Pond Garden, the Italian-style Osborne Garden, and the Cranford Rose Garden.
Charles, Sally & Charles are the exclusive caterers for receptions in the
Palm House on the Lily Terrace (which can host 400 guests for cocktails and 300
for a seated dinner) for a site fee of $2,000 to $5,000, plus $130 to $210 per
person. Much of the site fee goes toward the preservation of the garden.
Cass McCombs at Bowery Ballroom
The moody, humorous Baltimore-based singer-songwriter. More »
Peter Maass and Ed Kashi at Strand Bookstore
Two big-brained reporters in a conversation about oil. More »
John Turturro, Mary Gaitskill, Eric Bogosian and others read works from participants of PEN's Prison Writing Program. More »