Ariel W.
Yelp
Marie Selby Botanical Gardens is located on the shores of Sarasota Bay. It is a center for education, research, and conservation. Selby gardens is the legacy of Marie Selby who was born in 1885 in West Virginia. She and her husband Bill moved to Sarasota in the 1920's. Marie was passionate about horticulture and she was a charter member of Sarasota's first Garden Club. The couple lived here for more than 50 years in a modest home they built even though Bill had a family fortune from Selby Gas and Oil that merged with Texaco in the 1940's. The couple established the William and Marie Selby Foundation in 1955 to educate youth and children and offer programs for all ages.
Marie passed away in 1971 leaving her property to the Sarasota community. The garden was founded in 1973 and officially opened to the public on July 7, 1975. After Marie's death it was decided that the property would be used to study epiphytes otherwise known as air plants. They are plants that grow on other plants. Today there are more than 92,000 epiphytes in their herbarium collections.
Research is still a core mission of the garden today. Eventually the original seven acres expanded north and west and now the garden is 15 acres. On the property are research buildings, display gardens, and the Museum of Botany and the Arts in the Payne Mansion. You can still see today the bamboo along the bay and the banyan trees in front of her house that Marie planted. Selby Gardens is still known as a leader in the research of epiphytes which include African violets, orchids, ferns, and bromeliads. Each year Selby Gardens visits the tropics of the America to identify new plants for science. The garden is noted for a collection of more than 6,000 orchids.
As you explore the garden you walk on paved trails that meander beneath tall stands of bamboo and past collections of palms until you reach ten display gardens. Along the way you will see some of the best views of the Sarasota Bay that exist in the city. Gardens include a banyan grove, butterfly garden, edible garden, fragrance garden, bamboo forest, mangrove walkway, native Florida tidal lagoon, and a desert succulent garden.
The newest attraction at Selby Gardens is the Anne Goldman children's garden. It has a waterfall, huts, swinging bridges, and a treetop camp set up in the towering ficus trees. I love how this was included in the garden to appeal to children who might otherwise find a botanical garden boring.
The historic 1934 mansion owned by Christy Pyne is now the Museum of Botany and the Arts. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on September 25, 1998. The museum offers rotating exhibits and it was closed during my visit because it was being set up for the upcoming orchid show. The Selby House Cafe in the restored house where Marie Selby used to live is a great place to grab a quick sandwich or pastry which you can eat while enjoying the beautiful view of gardens. The conservatory is a premier greenhouse where international plants are showcased but unfortunately it too was closed for the orchid show. They did discount the normal $20 admission to $15 to compensate for the closed parts of the garden. On your way out you can stop by the garden shop for botanically inspired souvenirs.
I really enjoyed my visit to Selby Gardens. It is a true Sarasota Jewel. I saw plants I knew about and some I have never seen anywhere else. Depending on how in-depth you want to make it a visit, it can take as little as an hour or last all day. If I was local I would definitely attend the orchid show which is $25. If you are a Bank of America card holder you can get into the garden free the first weekend of the month but special events are extra so for the orchid show you would have to pay $5 surcharge. I hope to make it back someday to see the parts I missed. If you are in the Sarasota stop by and visit the home and gardens Marie Selby so loved.