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The 139-year old Singapore
Botanic Gardens is a star visitor attraction
for foreign tourists as well as the local resident.
The Gardens possesses an array of botanical and horticultural
attractions with a rich history and a wonderful plant
collection of world-wide significance. The Gardens is
only a stone throw from the hassle and bustle heart
of the city centre.
The Singapore Botanic Gardens
is divided in a 3-Core Concept. The
Tanglin core is the heritage or historical
core retaining some of the charms of old favourites.
The Central core is the tourist belt
of the Gardens. Bukit Timah is the
educational and recreational zone. Each Core offers
an exciting array of attractions. The Tanglin Core has
the Bandstand, the Sculptures, Sun Rockery, our national
orchid Vanda Miss Joaqium, Swan Lake, the Marsh Gardens,
the Plant House and the Rain Forest Central core has
the National Orchid Garden, Palm Valley, Symphony Lake,
the Visitor Centre and Heliconia Walk. Whereas the Bukit
Timah core comprises the Ecolake and Economic Garden
where one can examine the various herbs and spice, medicinal
plants as well as nuts and beverage crops and fruit
trees.
The Rain Forest is
one of the original jungle left on the island and it
contains over 300 plant species in a mere 6 hectares
fragment. Some of Singapore’s tallest trees like
the kempas and meranti can still be found here.
The Gardens provides a learning ground
for the novice birdwatcher and naturalist. Almost all
the garden birds are found there. Other interesting
birds are the wild Lesser Whistling Duck at the Symphony
pond, the Oriental Magpie Robin hipping on the lawn,
Long-tailed Parakeet at the Oil Palms near the Visitors’
Centre and the Rare Reg-legged Crake hiding the under
bushes. There were recorded of several hornbill species
at the Gardens that supposed to have escaped from some
private gardens around the vicinities.
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