Marin Independent Journal

Green therapy

4 spectacula­r Bay Area public gardens to explore close to home

- By Jackie Burrell

Y1

ou don’t have to hit the backcountr­y — or the smoke-choked Sierra or currently closed national forests — to get a dose of nature. There are gorgeous parks and public greens tucked among the skyscraper­s and asphalt of Bay Area cities, from a rooftop park in San Francisco to a historic garden in Palo Alto and botanical wonders in the Berkeley hills. Here’s just a sampling of beautiful spots for sauntering close to

home — including one that sets pianos among the plants.

An urban sky walk in San Francisco

bus, Park’s train heaths Tower 5.4 Rolling acres and amid opened Muni of lawns, green the station its San redwood lushness SoMa Francisco with transit and an include urban skyscraper­s? bamboo center, rolling park. groves it Today, topped hills, When and a Salesforce Salesforce desert-inspired its lavender grand and palm garden, trees. a The wetland trail that garden winds and around groves the of redwoods, four-block bamboo park includes 13 mini botanical gardens. There’s a children’s play area. And a 1,200-foot “Bus Fountain” art installati­on sends 247 tiny fountains into a gushing frenzy every time a bus pulls into the transit station.

In non-pandemic times, the park amphitheat­er hosted concerts and other events, and a gondola carried you skyward from street level. But even now, this rooftop park is a great place to take a stroll, enjoy the gardens and picnic on the grass. The escalator may not be as grand as a glass gondola, but it will get you there just fine.

DETAILS » The Salesforce Transit Center’s rooftop park is open from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. through October and until 8 p.m. November through April. Masks are required in the Transit Center, but not the park. The park is bordered by Mission, Howard, Beale and Second streets (look up!). Find more details, including details on bird walks, tree tours and yoga classes, at salesforce­transitcen­ter.com.

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Gamble Garden in Palo Alto

Everyone knows about Filoli, the historic Georgian Revival estate and gardens in Woodside. But the Bay Area brims with other historic gardens, too, including the Elizabeth F. Gamble Garden built in 1902 for the Gamble family of Procter & Gamble fame. Elizabeth Gamble, who had a passion for gardening, bequeathed the 2.5-acre property, its home and expansive formal gardens to the city of Palo Alto when she died in 1981. For the last 30-plus years, the property has been a public garden, restored to its former glory and preserved by its nonprofit horticultu­ral foundation and a small army of volunteers.

Stop by anytime and you, too, can stroll its paths, enjoy the extensive camellia collection, the irises and roses, and survey the cutting, formal herb and Mediterran­ean gardens. Wander on your own or join a Gamble Garden docent for a themed tour that includes the main house and different areas of the gardens. The hourlong tour on Sept. 21, for example, focuses on the estate’s edible gardens.

DETAILS » Gamble Garden is open daily during daylight hours. Admission is always free. Tours are $5 and require reservatio­ns. Find the estate at 1431 Waverley St. in Palo Alto; www. gamblegard­en.org.

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Flower Piano at Golden Gate Park

The 55-acre San Francisco Botanical Garden is a treat at any time of year. But Flower Piano, the annual five-day musical celebratio­n, transforms these gardens into an alfresco concert venue. From Friday to Sept. 21, music of every variety — jazz, classical, pop, soul, folk, cross-genre and genres we’ve never even heard of — will flow from pianos set on the Great Meadow, the Garden of Fragrance and 10 other botanical sites.

Among the fun options: A Twelve Piano Extravagan­za on Saturday that will see a dozen hourlong piano concerts unfolding at 12 different sites at noon, another dozen at 1 p.m. and still another set at 2 p.m. So you can catch Dawn Oberg’s “Amusing 21st-Century Yacht Rock for Piano” in the Redwood Grove, for example, “Earth, Wind and Flowers” in the Garden of Fragrance and a Beatles singalong on the Great Meadow.

Also, a family-friendly Rabbit Hole Theater Magical Scavenger Hunt for fairies, fortune tellers and more on Sept. 19, and an all-day community art project with Messy Art Lab.

DETAILS >> Flower Piano runs from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday-Sept. 21 at the San Francisco Botanical Garden, 1199 Ninth Ave. The botanical garden opens daily to the public at 7:30 a.m., with closing hours that vary by season. Tickets range from $3 to $10, with a family pass available for $21; advance purchase is strongly recommende­d. Masks are required in all indoor spaces. Find more informatio­n at www.sfbotanica­lgarden.org and www. sf botanicalg­arden.org/flowerpian­o.

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A botanical garden in the Berkeley hills

The University of California’s gorgeous botanical garden stretches across 34 acres in Strawberry Canyon on the Berkeley campus, offering bay views along with more than 12,000 plants from around the world. With nine gardens representi­ng geographic areas, you can journey — botanicall­y — from Australasi­a to South Africa, the Mediterran­ean and the Americas.

Stroll the gardens and explore its wonders for yourself or take the garden’s selfguided contemplat­ive tour, which includes quiet spots to meditate or read — near the Japanese pool, perhaps, or the Circle of Redwoods — complete with poetry and literature excerpts.

Prefer to roam from home? Take one of the garden’s virtual tours: walk-through videos that immerse you in the agaves, cactuses and succulents of the Deserts of the Americas, say, or the winding paths of the Asia garden. Or sign up for one of the Botanical Garden’s Zoom experience­s, which range from a virtual butterfly walk today and Oct. 3 with “caterpilla­r lady” Sal Levinson and “butterfly guy” Sarab Seth, to a botanical illustrati­on class on acorns and oak leaves on Oct. 8.

DETAILS >> The University of California Botanical Garden at Berkeley is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily (but closed on the first and third Tuesdays of the month beginning in October) at 200 Centennial Drive. Reservatio­ns are a must; book your ticket ($7-$15) online before you go. Masks are required in all indoor spaces. Note: On Cal football game days, you’ll want to approach Centennial Drive from Grizzly Peak Boulevard, not the Berkeley campus, to avoid game-related closures. Find more informatio­n and download the contemplat­ive tour guide at botanicalg­arden. berkeley.edu/visit.

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Bay Area News Group KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? The fourblock-long Salesforce Rooftop
Park in San Francisco offers a blast of nature in the heart of the city.
» Bay Area News Group KARL MONDON — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP The fourblock-long Salesforce Rooftop Park in San Francisco offers a blast of nature in the heart of the city.
 ?? COURTESY OF SAN FRANCISCO BOTANICAL GARDEN ?? Flower Piano, a five-day musical collaborat­ion, transforms the San Francisco Botanical Garden into the city’s own alfresco concert hall where everyone is invited to play and listen.
COURTESY OF SAN FRANCISCO BOTANICAL GARDEN Flower Piano, a five-day musical collaborat­ion, transforms the San Francisco Botanical Garden into the city’s own alfresco concert hall where everyone is invited to play and listen.
 ?? BANG ARCHIVES ?? The gardens at the Elizabeth F. Gamble Garden estate are open to the public daily during daylight hours.
BANG ARCHIVES The gardens at the Elizabeth F. Gamble Garden estate are open to the public daily during daylight hours.
 ?? ARIC CRABB — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Students on a field trip look over the Japanese
Pool at the University of California Botanical Garden at Berkeley on March 5, 2020 in Berkeley.
ARIC CRABB — STAFF ARCHIVES Students on a field trip look over the Japanese Pool at the University of California Botanical Garden at Berkeley on March 5, 2020 in Berkeley.

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