Karen F.
Yelp
My friend and I went here early, on a weekday, and that definitely was a perfect time to come. We paid extra so we could see Ca'd'Zan (House of John), the castle/mansion built by John Ringling on the edge of the grounds.
We started with Ca'd'Zan, which was a nice little walk from the main entrance, and right on Sarasota Bay. They only do official tours a couple days a week, so we just self toured. Fortunately, there were a lot of Guards around that were able to answer any questions we had, and freely provided information they thought might be interesting to us. Since we weren't on the tour, we could only see the first level and the grounds.
Leaving here we walked to the left side so we could see the secret garden, and where the Ringlings were buried. Then we walked back towards the museums, wandering through Mabel Ringling's rose garden on the way.
The circus museum consists of two buildings, with random circus props, many interactive exhibits, and the extremely cool rail car that was used by John Ringling when he traveled with the circus. I would be remiss if I didn't mention the extraordinary 3/4-inch to the foot scale replica model of the entire Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus located in it's own room - make sure you see this.
We went from here, through the Dwarf Garden, which I loved, to the main museum of art. There was so much to see here! We used their QR code so we could listen to some of the descriptions of art through our phones/ear buds. The first part was all religious paintings, and then you wandered into other galleries with a wide variety of art. After a couple hours here, we were pretty arted-out. So we headed to the inner courtyard to look at the gimourmous statue of David, and all the interesting regular statues.
Leaving, we did a detour to the glass museum, which is near the entrance. Don't miss this! It was small, but had beautiful works of glass in it.
Final tips - be ready to walk, and plan on spending the day here. Fortunately they have a restaurant on site, so we were able to take a lunch break, and then get back to it. This place is definitely a Sarasota treasure.