Dahlia 🏵️
Volunteer Park, Seattle, Washington
photo by Steve Spanoudis from the collections at https://theotherpages.org
While my visit was early in the season, the Dahlia Garden already had some beautiful blooms. Maintained by volunteers.
seen from Canada
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seen from United States
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seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from Canada
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seen from Japan
seen from United States
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seen from United States
Dahlia 🏵️
Volunteer Park, Seattle, Washington
photo by Steve Spanoudis from the collections at https://theotherpages.org
While my visit was early in the season, the Dahlia Garden already had some beautiful blooms. Maintained by volunteers.
At the end of a busy day in Bali, often involving far more walking in the heat than one initially intended, returning to a peaceful, quiet and well maintained garden is a godsend. A beautiful garden has become a prerequisite when choosing accommodation in Bali, especially when visiting Ubud.
Entrance to the pool in Honeymoon Two.
Unfortunately, Ubud has been loved to death. A private courtyard garden blocks out the pandemonium, the snarl of traffic, the fumes of motor bikes and the endless stream of slow walking tourists hunting for gewgaws, monkeys and food. This is my farewell tribute one of Ubud’s most delightful gardens. Aging and velvet mossed Buddhist and Hindu statues, inviting seating platforms, beautifully carved and painted doors, screening plants and tropical flowers, archways and entrances and stands of bamboo, evoke a traditional Bali midst a heavily urbanised town. The daily noiseless tending of tropical plants by gardeners and the morning placement of fresh hibiscus flowers and canang sari on all the statues and family temple have called me back to the charming Honeymoon Guesthouse year after year. Situated in Jalan Bisma, development and congested traffic has finally overwhelmed this once tranquil street. I cannot return. My love of Ubud now dwells in the past. I can revisit her there.
Things become old very quickly in Ubud’s tropical environment.
A big suksma ( Balinese for thankyou, best said with hands in prayer position) to all the gardeners of Bali. Without these steady, quiet and humble workers, Bali would not be so inviting.
The following collage is a media file. Tour the garden by opening the first photo and following the arrows.
Pool. Honeymoon 1.
Lotus position. Honeymoon 1. Ubud
Statue envy
Raised platforms
Carefully positioned seating areas
Statues and tropical plants.
Lush planting and screening
Mossed statues, Ubud
Another inviting doorway
Lush plants, Honeymoon Guesthouse, Ubud.OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Fresh Hibiscus flowers are replaced daily at Honeymoon.
Mr T. Honemoorn guesthouse 1.
garden statues
My friend Ganesha
Pool area. Honeymoorn guesthouse, Ubud
In a Balinese Garden. Ubud At the end of a busy day in Bali, often involving far more walking in the heat than one initially intended, returning to a peaceful, quiet and well maintained garden is a godsend.