Cornell Plantations

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The Cornell Plantations (80 ha / 200 acres) are botanical gardens, including the F.R. Newman Arboretum, located adjacent to the Cornell University campus, Ithaca, New York. They are open daily without charge.

The arboretum (60 ha / 150 acres) contains fine collections of chestnuts, conifers, flowering crabapples, maples, oaks, urban trees, and walnuts. See "F.R. Newman Arboretum" for further details.

The botanical gardens (20 ha / 50 acres) contain a wide variety of ornamental, useful, and native plants, arranged into gardens as follows:

  • Herb Garden - 17 beds of herbs, arranged as follows: Ornamental Herbs; Herbs of the Ancients; Herbs in Literature; Bee Herbs; Salads and Potherbs; Edible flowers; Herbs of the Native Americans; Medicinal Herbs; Culinary Herbs; Economic Herbs; Dye Herbs; Tea Herbs; Fragrant Herbs; Sacred Herbs; Scented Geraniums; Savory Seed Herbs; and Tussie-Mussies and Nosegays.
  • International Crop and Weed Garden - crop plants and economically important plants from around the world, including bananas, sugar cane, coffee, tea, sorghum, cotton, grasses, and forbs (non-grass plants eaten by livestock); also a collection of weeds arranged in an attractive agricultural setting.
  • Peony and Sun Perennial Garden - over 90 cultivars of peonies, as well as a display of recent perennial cultivars suitable for sunny locations.
  • Woodland Streamside Garden - a boardwalk through a boggy areas including royal ferns, blue and yellow flag iris, and Japanese primrose.

Cornell Plantations also manages an additional 1400 ha (3500 acres) of biologically diverse natural areas including bogs, fens, gorges, glens, meadows, and woodlands.

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