Each season I come to the Landscapes of Canada Gardens at the Canadian Museum of Nature. On the west side of the property, plants, shrubs, grasses, and trees of four distinct ecosystems are found here. I came on Canada Day, with ominous skies looming. We start with Boreal Forest, which covers a vast portion of the country.
The west entrances of the property include these bricks, usually from family members honouring other family.
Prairie Grassland is the next section, with grasses, flowers, and shrubs growing tall in summer.
Arctic Tundra features the plants of the far north, planted amid rocks, and doing quite well in the summer here.
An iceberg sculpture by the late artist and inventor William Lishman crosses the path.
I always try to get a shot from the west boundary of the property, with Arctic Tundra, the iceberg, and the Museum together.
The last ecosystem is Mammoth Steppe, planted around a statue family of Mammoths, consisting of plants that existed in their day and still thrive today. The Queens Lantern is seen beyond, with the Moon inside. The Museum was exceedingly busy; I stopped in for a drink and continued on my way.














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