26 May 2011

Missouri Botanical Garden or Mobot or MBG, St. Louis


Before I share a few more of my observations on life in the US, I'd like to talk about my visits to some places in and around St. Louis. My daughter and son-in-law have been the perfect hosts and are trying their best to make my stay as memorable as possible. Out of the places visited so far, I'd first like to write about the Missouri Botanical Garden as I am dying to share its photos that I took with my new camera ( I have bought a new camera with some upgraded  features).

The Missouri Botanical garden was founded by Henry shaw in 1859 and  has since been a public garden (never closed) and a major research centre. The garden is magnificent and has a rare collection of plants  and some architecturally beautiful buildings. It is a national historical garden and one of the world leaders in botanical research.

I am lucky to be here in St. Louis this year which has been declared the International Year of Forests by the UN. What better way to celebrate this than  visiting such a significant garden ?

The whole place is divided into many sections which have different small theme gardens depending on the collection of the flora and fauna grown there. A summarised list is-

 1. Magnolia Grove

2. Gladney Rose garden

3. Ottoman Garden ; Predominantly with water features like fountains and decorative taps etc.

4. Sensory Garden

5. Hosta Garden

6. Bulb garden

7. Iris Garden

8. Dry Streambed Garden

9. Daylily Garden

10.Victorian garden

11.Strassenfest German Garden

12. Pfautch Bavarian Garden

13. English Woodland

14. Japanese Garden or Seiwa-en: This is a wet path strolling garden with lawns and paths surrounding a lake stylled Japanese way with lots of Bonsai plantation.

15. Carver Garden

16. Boxwood Garden: The house of slow-growing evergreen shrubs and small trees.

17. Lehmann Rose Garden

18. Chinese Garden

19. Dwarf Conifer Garden

20. Rock garden

21. Azalea-Rhododendron Garden

Besides these gardens, there are other structures whch are worth seeing-

1. Linnean house: The oldest, continually operating greenhouse largely houses Camellias.

2. Spink Garden

3. Mausoleum

4. Tower Grove House: This house and the herb garden are Shaw's Victorian country house in Italian style.

5. Observatory

6. Maze

7. Koi fish Feeding

8. Center for Home Gardening

9. Children's Garden

10. Climatron and the Reflecting pools: It is the world's first geodesic greenhouse.

11. Temperate House

12. Gardenland tram

 I recommend a minimum of three hours  for a complete tour inside. Be sure to make enquiries at the office on the recommended sections as these vary from season to season. This way, one can avoid spending time in areas where the plants are not in full bloom.

Information is available at the Ridgway Visitor Center. One can collect a map here and follow it to see the garden, or, there are guided walking tours and narrated tram tours. Besides, various weekend activities and festivities are on with music, food and fun. Festivals, exhibits and presentations are included with garden admission; some programs like canopy tree-climbing , great green adventures etc. have separate fees.

Please allow me to take you on a tour to this massive garden-place through my photo album.










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14 May 2011

My trip to the US of A - Part I


After much resistance to the invitation from my children to visit USA, I was gradually convinced to consent to the offer. My reasons for hesitation were multi-fold; the top-most being the thought of long flying hours which I feared could aggravate my back problems. Another fear was leaving home for so long; I knew that I will face a huge pile of accumulated work once I go back. Last but not the least I would miss my routine and social circle.

The fact that I would see my children and meet them and would get to spend time with them, weighed heavier against the reasons for my not coming.

Once I set off, I completed my journey comfortably as I found the hospitality level of Lufthansa airlines quite high. The staff (ground as well as on-board) was very polite, courteous and helpful. The food served was good and offered various choices. The airline though, should seriously consider updating its air-crafts - the seats were too congested, reading lights were very dim and fell somewhere else. There should be individual TV screens for the passenger’s entertainment as common screens are a thing of the past now. Moreover, their programmes lacked variety. Showing satellite pictures of the position of your plane for hours together is too much on the nerves of already tired passengers. Apart from these inconveniences, it was a hassle-free journey and I landed in one piece at St. Louis.

I was out of jet-lag soon (which I think I never really suffered from as my sleep pattern in India was quite erratic or Americanized as I am a late sleeper and late riser there). Here it has become an `early to bed and early to rise’ kind of a thing which suits me very well.

My children have already started taking me around and I am surprised to see these places which I was not expecting in and around a small town-place like St. Louis.

I want to share a few interesting observations about America compared to back home in India -


People are trustworthy here. The whole establishment runs on mutual trust and honesty. You can do shopping from choosing stuff to billing and paying yourself without any checking on you and nobody takes advantage of that.


If you have ordered something by mail and if you are not at home when the delivery arrives, the parcel will be dropped at your door-step and you will find it safely lying there when you return home. The parcel may contain an article worth 10 dollars or worth a thousand dollars!


 The staff on duty at tourist sites is very polite and most of these places may not charge you any entry fee but sometimes there is a request for a humble donation for the upkeep of the place, that too in a very dignified way.  


People wait with patience in queues and there is no elbowing and pushing to `get in/out first’. India and Indians........this happens only in amrika?


Americans, I observe, have no concept of saving, conservation and preservation of personal, public or natural resources. Everything is produced on mass scale to use and throw. I find it quite disturbing when I see there are a few electric lights in porch driveway/street etc which are switched on 24/7 and that is mandatory and residents have no control on switching on/off of these lights! Telling of global warming to the whole world?   


 Every food package comes with the accurate calorie count (speaks of a very health-conscience state); on the contrary, I feel Americans indulge too much in eating and people are mostly over-weight, plump or obese here. This means no one is bothered about what is written on the food packet. This is another case of preaching and not practicing.   


I fail to understand why the size of a dime (10c) is smaller than that of a five pence coin?...strange. Why the cost of the metal of one penny is more than one penny…..and no one is melting it unlike in India when people had started melting the 20-paise coin to sell the metal for more than 20 paise .   


Wal-Mart is India’s Big Bazaar….ditto. `Isse sasta aur achchha aur kahin nahi’.


I had heard that the weather forecast is quite correct and dependable in the US. This is right also, but….I have noticed that the forecast announced for a day in advance of 4-5 days is changed according to the changing weather before somebody can say you said so. In other words it means that you look out of the window, see some dark clouds and announce possibility of it raining. i.e., what you see, you get!

 I   I have seen a very interesting thing here. Parents tie a small, soft toy at the waist of their small kid and this toy has a long belt, like a leash, which is held by the parent when the child is walking along on the road. And I have also seen people walking their dogs in prams. This is just the opposite of what we do back home- we walk our pets tied to a leash and carry small kids in prams!

         Motorcycles are allowed to emanate any decibels of noise!

        I saw this friendly discrimination at a local store for the benefit of the Asian community living here – whole of the Indian Sub-continent clubbed together in one aisle – yes we are so alike!!