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Botanical
Gardens
Jamaica's
ecosystem embraces tropical, sub-tropical and
temperate plants and a large proportion of its flora and
fauna are unique to the island. Research has indicated
that although the native vegetation of the island was almost all
forest, with some marshland interspersed, today Jamaica has more than
3,000 different kinds of native flowering plants, of which 1,000 are
endemic and with over 200 different species of orchids. For
this reason, Jamaica is considered a horticultural paradise.
To summarize, in the words of Christopher Columbus, when describing the
island Quen Isabella, the island, although lacking in gold, was
"otherwise a paradise and worth more than gold."
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| Bath Botanical Garden |
The Bath
Botanical Gardens was the second botanical gardens to be developed in
the western hemisphere (the oldest is on St. Vincent). Located in St.
Thomas, this 1-hectare property was specifically put aside when the
town of Bath was laid out. It was under the care of Dr. Thomas Clarke,
a botanist who was also in charge of the Bath hospital. The garden was
stocked with Chinese and Japanese herbs and exotic fruit trees,
including the breadfruit, ackee and Otaheite apple brought by Capt.
Bligh. The croton, jacaranda and bougainvillea were also fist planted
at Bath. Frequent flooding in the 19th century by the Sulphur River
wreaked
havoc on the gardens and that along with the realization that the soil
was not as nutrient rich as had been hoped caused its relocation to
Castleton in 1862. Bath Gardens is still maintained for its historical
value.
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Castleton Gardens
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Castleton
Gardens in St. Mary lies on 10 hectares of land through which the Wag
Water River runs. Located on both sides of the Junction main road, at
one time these gardens boasted the best collection of plants on the
island, including over 400 specimens from Kew Gardens. The Poinciana
(1869) and Bombay mango (1869) tree were first planted at Castleton, as
were the navel orange and tangerine (1870).
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Cinchona Gardens
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St.
Andrew's Cinchona Gardens, located on 7 hectares of a 10-acre property
more than 5,000 ft above sea level, were established in 1868. Named
after the Cinchona plant brought to Jamaica from Peru by the Spanish,
these gardens offer spectacular views of the Blue Mountain Ridge and
parts of Kingston. Quinine, an extract of this plant, was used to treat
malaria. The Spanish learned about this medicinal property by observing
the Peruvian Indians and the plant came to be known as Jesuit's Bark
before being renamed for the Countess of Cinchona, the wife of the
Spanish viceroy of Peru, who benefited from treatment. When Cinchona
was first planted, it fetched a high price on the world market and a
good return on the funds invested realized. However, due to poor roads,
a lack of general transport in the area and labour costs, this project
could not compete competitively on the world market. It eventually
failed in 1899. A second section of the land was planted out in tea but
Jamaica never could compete with tea from India. A third section, which
is all that remains, was known as a 'European Garden' with the cinchona
tree, mulberry, camphor, cork oak, juniper and rubber trees as well as
garden flowers that thrive in northern climates.
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| Hope Gardens |
Hope
Gardens, or the Royal Botanical Gardens, Hope, were formerly part of
major Richard Hope's Estate. One of the English officers who helped
capture Jamaica from the Spanish in 1655, Hope was granted a huge
parcel of land as a reward. At one time Hope Estate extended from the
sea to the hills in Newcastle. In the 17th and 18th centuries Hope was
a sugar estate one of the first where water (from the Hope River)
was used to turn estate mills. The Hope Aqueduct (which can still be
seen at Hope Gardens, Mona Heights and Mona Road) was built for that
purpose. In 1766 Richard Elletson Hope arranged for Kingston to be
supplied with
water from his estate, but after his death, his wife remarried a
British Duke and cancelled the water concession. Kingston lost its
water supply. In the 1840s the duke's son sold the city of Kingston 234
acres of the estate bordering on the Hope River. Kingston's water was
eventually drawn from this land as part of a publicly owned system.
The
200 acres of Hope Estate land that eventually became Hope Gardens (and
one of Jamaica's few public parks) in the late 1870s-early 1880s
includes a Palm Avenue where sago palms are among the oldest living
trees, a cacti garden, a bougainvillea walk, a maze, a forest and lily
pond. Other attractions include a zoo, a lake, a fountain, military
band concerts and even a poet's corner. There is also what remains of
Coconut Park. When Queen Elizabeth II came to Jamaica in 1953, the
gardens were officially renamed the Royal Botanical Gardens. The
Gardens have been undergoing repairs since 1996.
These
gardens, along with Fern Gully in St. Ann and Holland Bamboo Grove in
St. Elizabeth, are maintained by the Ministry of Agriculture's Public
Gardens Division (927-1257). They are used regularly in photo shoots
and to provide educational programmes designed to expose students to
general gardening practice. Crop management and botanical information
can be obtained on request and some plants are also available for
commercial sale.
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