Download scavenger hunt - Atlanta Botanical Garden

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Charles Wesley Powell wikipedia , lookup

Indigenous horticulture wikipedia , lookup

Cultivated plant taxonomy wikipedia , lookup

History of gardening wikipedia , lookup

Plant physiology wikipedia , lookup

Botanical garden wikipedia , lookup

Plant morphology wikipedia , lookup

Community gardening wikipedia , lookup

History of botany wikipedia , lookup

Garden design wikipedia , lookup

Gardening wikipedia , lookup

Ornamental bulbous plant wikipedia , lookup

Sustainable landscaping wikipedia , lookup

Glossary of plant morphology wikipedia , lookup

Venus flytrap wikipedia , lookup

Japanese rock garden wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
scavenger hunt
Make a game of your visit to the Atlanta Botanical Garden with this scavenger
hunt.
•
Find enough different colors in the garden to make a rainbow: red, orange, yellow, green, blue and purple. Look at flowers and at leaves to find the colors.
•
Find a statue called “Frog Baby.” Can you see any real frogs in her pond?
•
In the Japanese Garden, find the “three old friends” that are common to all
Japanese Gardens: water, stone and bamboo.
•
In the Desert House, find the lithops. Lithops are difficult to see because they
look like rocks. Camouflaged as rocks, Lithops “hide” from animals that might
want to eat them.
•
In the Tropical Conservatory, find the cacao tree. Chocolate is made from the
seeds of the cacao plant.
•
In the Tropical High Elevation House, find moss growing on rocks or leaves.
The Tropical High Elevation House is like a cloud forest. The cool, misty air
creates perfect growing conditions for mosses.
•
In the Orchid Display House, find a vanilla vine. Vanilla flavoring comes from
the seedpod of this orchid plant.
•
Find at least two different species of carnivorous plants. Look for pitcher
plants, Venus flytraps, sundews and butterworts, among others. The Atlanta
Botanical Garden has the largest public collection of carnivorous plants in the
U.S.