Hello all! It is Joseph your GPOD editor here, taking you along on a recent trip I took to Garfield Park Conservatory in Chicago. I’d not been there before and wasn’t sure what to expect. The stats on the website are impressive: 4.5 acres under glass, over a hundred years old, an exceptional collection of rare plants. The actual experience blew me away! I’ve visited conservatories in lots of cities, but this was one of the best. Not only does it contain beautiful plants, but they are arranged into a wonderful indoor landscape. I also love that admission is free and that the conservatory is easily accessible by train, so everyone in the city can enjoy the space. And given how long and cold Chicago winters are, having a space like this to visit has got to be almost essential.
The conservatory is divided up into a variety of different rooms, often with a specific theme. This is the aroid room, devoted to this one family of plants. It is amazing to see the incredible diversity within this one group.
A beautiful resident of the aroid house is Philodendron ‘Moonlight’.
The dry house is very cool, full of everything adapted to desert habitats.
I’ve seen crested euphorbia (Euphorbia lactea cristata ‘Variegata’) as a houseplant many times, but I never realized it could get so huge.
Maybe my favorite part was the fern room—no flowers, just lush, beautifully diverse foliage.
Every surface of the fern room is covered with rich green.
The water in the fern room had clouds of koi.
Maybe my favorite fern in the fern room was paper staghorn fern (Patycerium × elemaria).
What an incredible flower spike on this bromeliad (Neoregelia sp.)!
A beautiful bloom of a reed orchid (Sobralia decora)
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