???? ~ New Orleans Botanical Garden ~ ????
Hello Beautiful People!
I am so lucky to visit New Orleans this time of the year. It's warm and spring is in the air! The New Orleans Botanical Garden is a great place to visit this time of the year. Join me in this quick garden tour. I chose highlights as not to bore you :)
- Entrance Garden
- Azalea and Camelia collection
- Rose Gardens
- Shade Garden
- Enrique Alvarez sculpture garden
- Butterfly Garden
- Cold Frames
- Japanese Garden
Enjoy! Yuliya.
New Orleans Botanical Gardens at City Park
New Orleans Botanical Garden | New Orleans City Park
One more small video from New Orleans of the Botanical Gardens. Nice and peaceful getaway from the downtown area.
Song: Be Still The Earth - Afterglow
New Orleans Botanical Garden Visit
Edgar and I visited the New Orleans Botanical Garden in July 2010. This was our first trip to the garden so we're not sure how it looked pre-Katrina. We took the trolley there. This video has pictures of a cotton plant and the water lilies.
USDA Zone 8b
Top 14. Nature Attractions and Parks in New Orleans - Travel Louisiana
Top 14. Nature Attractions and Parks in New Orleans - Travel Louisiana: New Orleans City Park, Audubon Park, Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve, Audubon Zoo, Audubon Aquarium of the Americas, Old River Road Plantation Adventure, Louis Armstrong Park, Chalmette National Historical Park, Lake Pontchartrain, Longue Vue House and Gardens, Woldenberg Riverfront Park, Crescent Park, New Orleans Botanical Gardens, Washington Artillery Park
Visit New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.A.: Things to do in New Orleans - The Big Easy
Visit New Orleans - Top 10 Things which can be done in New Orleans. What you can visit in New Orleans - Most visited touristic attractions of New Orleans
French Quarter
Known as the Vieux Carré. The oldest neighborhood in the city. Founded in 1718 by Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville. Most of the present-day historic buildings were constructed during the late 18th century, during Spanish rule.
Audubon Zoo
A zoo which covers 58 acres (23 ha) and is home to 2,000 animals. Also home to two rare white alligators with blue eyes. Some of the exhibits include gorillas, orangutans, and the Louisiana swamp exhibit.
Jackson Square
A historic park in the French Quarter. Was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1960. In 2012 the American Planning Association designated Jackson Square as a one of America’s Great Public Spaces.
Audubon Butterfly Garden and Insectarium
An insectarium and entomology museum. More than 50 live exhibits and numerous multimedia elements. Tthe largest free-standing American museum dedicated to insects. Opened on June 13, 2008. Wwas awarded the Thea Award.
Mardi Gras World
The working warehouse where floats are made for Mardi Gras parades. Located on the Mississippi River next to the Morial Convention Center. Was created in 1984 as a tourist attraction to show a behind-the-scenes look at float building.
Aquarium of the Americas
One of the leading aquariums in the US. Opened in 1990. With 10,000 animals representing 530 species. Exhibits: Caribbean reef exhibit, Amazon exhibit, encased in a glass cylinder, Mississippi River gallery, Gulf of Mexico exhibit.
Carousel Gardens Amusement Park
A seasonally operated amusement park. Features many rides including an antique carousel, the Live Oak Ladybug Rollercoaster, and a miniature train that tours the park, a Ferris wheel and a drop tower called the Coney Tower.
City Park
A 1,300 acre (5.3 km²) public park. The 6th-largest and 7th-most-visited urban public park in the US. Holds the world's largest collection of mature live oak trees, some older than 600 years in age. One of the oldest parks in the country.
National World War II Museum
A museum formerly known as the National D-Day Museum. Focuses on the contribution made by the US to victory by the Allies in World War II, and the Battle of Normandy in particular. Opened on June 6, 2000, the 56th anniversary of D-Day.
New Orleans Botanical Garden
A botanical garden located in City Park. Made up of several different miniature gardens. Each garden room, or section of the garden, showcases unique species of flora. Popular display - the Train Garden, a 1/22nd size scale of the city.
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French Quarter & Tree of Life (New Orleans, LA)
Amanda & Mike join some friends for a birthday bash in NOLA, checking out the French Quarter (Jackson Square, Bourbon Street, Frenchmen Street, and Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop Bar [the oldest bar in the United States]) and Audobon park to see the Tree of Life (aka the Étienne de Boray Oak), a massive oak over hundreds of years old.
There's so much of New Orleans to explore and we couldn't capture everything, but we will be back!
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⁴ᴷ⁶⁰ Walking New Orleans : City Park in the Rain (Museum of Art, Cafe Du Monde, Storyland)
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A rainy walk in New Orleans, Louisiana through City Park, passing by the Museum of Art, Cafe Du Monde, Storyland, and the New Orleans Botanical Garden.
Filmed August 22, 2019
Timestamps
3:12 - Walking under a row of trees
6:50 - Walking towards some waterfowl
9:20 - Some more waterfowl and view of the Museum of Art
10:45 - New Orleans Museum of Art
12:50 - New Orleans Museum of Art Sculpture Garden
14:25 - Duelling Oak
15:35 - Cafe Du Mond
18:50 - Pavilion of the Two Sisters
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Comprehensive Guide to New Orleans with Kids (New Orleans Travel Guide 2019)
This video is a compilation of our Quick Escape and the New Orleans with Kids series.
Visiting New Orleans, Louisiana for the first time. We checked out the National WWII Museum, Louisiana Children's Museum, Hyatt House New Orleans, rode on the street cars, the Moonwalk, Cafe Du Monde, Jackson Square, St. Louis Cathedral, The Cabildo, The Presbytere, The Gumbo Shop, Historic New Orleans Collection, Insectarium, tour St. Louis Cemetery No. 1 with Save Our Cemeteries, New Orleans Botanical Garden, Storyland, New Orleans Museum of Art, Pitot House, New Orleans Historic Voodoo Museum, the New Orleans Jazz Museum, French Market, Beauregard-Keyes House, Old Ursuline Convent, Barataria Preserve, Audubon Zoo, and Mardi Gras World.
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New Orleans Botanical Garden
Abstract images and sounds from the New Orleans Botanical Garden
Places to see in ( New Orleans - USA ) New Orleans City Park
Places to see in ( New Orleans - USA ) New Orleans City Park
City Park, a 1,300-acre (5.3 km2) public park in New Orleans, Louisiana, is the 87th largest and 20th-most-visited urban public park in the United States. City Park is approximately 50% larger than Central Park in New York City, the municipal park recognized by Americans nationwide as the archetypal urban greenspace. Although it is an urban park whose land is owned by the City of New Orleans, it is administered by the City Park Improvement Association, an arm of state government, not by the New Orleans Parks and Parkways Department. City Park is very unusual in that it is a largely self-supporting public park, with most of its annual budget derived from self-generated revenue through user fees and donations.
In the wake of the enormous damage inflicted upon the park due to Hurricane Katrina, the Louisiana Department of Culture, Recreation and Tourism began to partially subsidize the park's operations. City Park holds the world's largest collection of mature live oak trees, some older than 600 years in age. The park was founded in 1854, making it the 48th oldest park in the country, and established as the City Park in 1891.
The park was originally a location used for dueling. In the 1800s, men would defend their pride and honor by dueling each other under the oaks at what is now City Park but then was a normally quiet spot secluded from the rest of the city. Originally, there were two dueling oaks, but one was lost in a hurricane in 1949. City Park was established in the mid-19th century on land fronting Metairie Road (now City Park Avenue), along the remains of Bayou Metairie, a former distributary of the Mississippi River.
City Park facilities :
City Park Cross Country Course
City Park Disc Golf Course
City Park Driving Range
City Park Golf Courses
City Park/Pepsi Tennis Center
City Park Practice Track
City Park Rugby Pitch
City Putt
Lagoon Soccer Fields
Matt Savoie Soccer Complex
Pan American Stadium
Quadruplex (Softball)
Rotary Baseball Field
Scout Island Athletic Fields (Lacrosse)
Tad Gormley Stadium
Bike and Boat Rentals
Carousel Gardens Amusement Park
Celebration in the Oaks
Christian Brothers School
City Park Birding Corridor
Couturie Forest: this 60-acre forest is made up of eight distinct ecosystems and is home to New Orleans’ highest point of elevation: Laborde Mountain. The entrance to the forest is on Harrison Avenue.
Dog Park
Festival Grounds
Fishing
Gift Shop and Welcome Center
Gondola Rides
Goldring/Woldenberg Great Lawn
Helis Foundation Enrique Alférez Sculpture Garden
Historic Structures
Horse Stables
Louisiana Children's Museum
New Orleans Botanical Garden
New Orleans Museum of Art, considered one of the finest art museums in the South
Storyland
Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden
Trails: Zemurray Trail, Couturie Trail, Scout Island Trail, and bike paths
Water Park
Weddings & Catering
Wildflower fields
Ralph's on the Park
Morning Call Restaurant
Parker’s Café
Parker’s Pizza
( New Orleans - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting New Orleans . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in New Orleans - USA
Join us for more :
Places to see in ( New Orleans - USA )
Places to see in ( New Orleans - USA )
New Orleans is a Louisiana city on the Mississippi River, near the Gulf of Mexico. Nicknamed the Big Easy, it's known for its round-the-clock nightlife, vibrant live-music scene and spicy, singular cuisine reflecting its history as a melting pot of French, African and American cultures. Embodying its festive spirit is Mardi Gras, the late-winter carnival famed for raucous costumed parades and street parties.
The things that make life worth living – eating, drinking and the making of merriment – are the air that New Orleans breathes. We hope you’re not reading this at home. We hope you’re in New Orleans, because you’re about to eat better than most others. When it comes to food, New Orleans does not fool around. Well, OK, it does: its playful attitude to ingredients and recipes mixes (for example) alligator sausage and cheesecake into a dessert fit for the gods. This sense of gastronomic play is rooted in both deep traditions – truly, this city has one of the few indigenous cuisines in the country – and, increasingly, a willingness to accommodate outside influences, both in terms of technique and ethnicity.
We're not exaggerating when we say there is either a festival or a parade every week of the year in New Orleans. Sometimes, such as during Mardi Gras or Jazz Fest, it feels like there’s a new party for every hour of the day. At almost any celebration in town, people engage in masking – donning a new appearance via some form of costuming – while acting out the satyric side of human behavior. But the celebrations and rituals of New Orleans are as much about history as hedonism, and every dance is as much an expression of tradition and community spirit as it is of joy.
The Crescent City has suffered plagues, wars, imperial regime changes and devastating floods. Yet, it always wakes up with a smile on its face. This may be because its inhabitants step to an easy beat first laid down three centuries ago. Moving at this relaxed pace, visitors are delighted by the French Creole elegance of the Vieux Carre (French Quarter) or the opulence discovered in a streetcar ride through the Garden District and Uptown.
Anytime of year find live music, amazing Creole and Cajun cuisine, fresh seafood, farmers markets, shopping, nightlife and more. During Mardi Gras season, the city becomes the world’s center. Downtown transforms into an adult playground, while parades in residential areas provide children thrilling entertainment. Each spring, the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival moves the focus to the charming Gentilly area and the Fair Grounds Race Course. But no matter the time of year, New Orleans' calendar overflows in celebration.
A lot to see in New Orleans such as :
Bourbon Street
Jackson Square
Garden District
Cafe Du Monde
Frenchmen Street
St. Louis Cathedral
Royal Street, New Orleans
The National WWII Museum
Audubon Aquarium of the Americas
City Park
Audubon Zoo
French Market - Shops of the Colonnade
Faubourg Marigny
Preservation Hall
Tremé
Saint Louis Cemetery No. 2
Lake Pontchartrain
Magazine Street
Audubon Zoo
Audubon Butterfly Garden and Insectarium
The Cabildo
St. Louis Cemetery No. 1
Louis Armstrong Park
Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve
Harrah's Casino New Orleans
New Orleans Museum of Art
Mercedes-Benz Superdome
Canal Street, New Orleans
Mardi Gras World
Esplanade Avenue, New Orleans
Algiers Point
The Presbytère
Lafayette Cemetery No. 1
New Orleans Historic Voodoo Museum
Woldenberg Park
Louisiana Children's Museum
Carousel Gardens Amusement Park
The Historic New Orleans Collection
Bayou Segnette State Park
Old Ursuline Convent Museum
Bayou St. John
Ogden Museum of Southern Art
Warehouse District
Central Grocery and Deli
New Orleans Pharmacy Museum
Congo Square
Lalaurie Mansion
New Orleans Original Cocktail Walking Tour
New Orleans Botanical Garden
( New Orleans - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting New Orleans . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in New Orleans - USA
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New Orleans City Park: The Train Garden
Today we take a ride along one of City Parks hidden gems, the Train Garden.
#Historical #train #garden #new orleans
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Model train - New Orleans Botanical Garden
March 23, 2014
I-10 Cable Barriers Proposed For New Orleans East
State Representative Austin Badon has asked the DOTD to install cable barriers in New Orleans East to help prevent vehicles from crossing the median and causing major accidents.
NOLA with the Family Day 1 - 8.9.18
We took our vacation later in the summer because everyone's schedules were so busy. I'm glad we got to get together to enjoy our flight.
We went to New Orleans, Louisiana. This place won my heart in a couple hours.
Olde NOLA Cookery is a fantastic place to start your NOLA adventure. 205 Bourbon St, New Orleans, LA 70130
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New Orleans City Park
City Park is distinguished by its large menu of sports and recreational activities, attractions for children, and its natural beauty. City Park has a special place in the hearts of generations of New Orleanians and is a must visit for visitors to the city. As a popular place to picnic, play a favorite sport, wander through its gardens or take a boat ride- the Park receives millions of visitors each year. It is located in the heart of the city and is the largest recreation area for the entire metropolitan area. Attractions include: City Putt, New Orleans Botanical Garden, Storyland fairytale playground, the Carousel Gardens Amusement Park, and numerous athletic venues. The 1,300 acres of parkland provide enjoyment for young children playing on our playgrounds and walkers, joggers, and bicyclists winding through the Park's streets and trails.
New Orleans Parks and Green Spaces
Crescent Park is one of the city’s newest public green space additions. It is a 1.4 mile, 20 acre park on the banks of the Mississippi River just outside the French Quarter. It spans Elysian Fields to Mazant Street in Bywater and is the first part of Reinventing the Crescent – an aggressive plan to reintroduce New Orleans citizens and visitors to the mighty Mississippi River. Crescent Park offers vistas of the city and the river that have never been accessible before. The intention of Reinventing the Crescent, and this park, is to rekindle the relationship between our citizens and visitors with the River – the reason for New Orleans’ founding 287 years ago. The Lafitte Greenway is the newest green space in the city. It is currently under construction and will be completed by the end of 2015. The Lafitte Greenway is a 2.5 mile, $9 million linear park with bicycle and pedestrian trails creating a recreational corridor that connects neighborhoods from Armstrong Park, on the edge of the French Quarter, to Mid-City. The Lafitte Greenway intersects historic neighborhoods like Treme and Faubourg St. John and will press into use a former railroad right-of-way that has sat vacant since the mid-twentieth century. City Park is one of the nation’s oldest and largest urban parks at more than 150 years old. This is a one-mile-wide, three-mile-long, 1,300 acre block of natural beauty stretching from Mid-City to Lake Pontchartrain. The park is filled with moss-draped live oaks that are hundreds of years old, lagoons, fountains, walking and biking trails, festival grounds, football and soccer stadiums and fields, horseback riding, golf, miniature golf and disc golf, paddling, playgrounds, an amusement park, botanical gardens, a 24 hour Coffee and beignets shop, an award winning sculpture garden and the New Orleans Museum of Art. This park is larger than Central Park. When Katrina struck, it lost roughly 2,000 trees. Since then, City Park, through the help of many volunteers, has replanted more than 6,000 trees and continues to add attractions and amenities each year. The next additions will be a water park and Children’s Museum.
Get a small-sized tour of New Orleans at this train garden
Within New Orleans' City Park lies this miniature train set that shows off the layout and history of the Crescent City.
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2019 Storyland New Orleans LA
Sky’s trip to Storyland in City Park New Orleans LA. Sky loved the storybook section but the rides had his attention for most of the afternoon. He rated this a “Must See” when you are visiting NOLA.