GUEST BLOG: Gardens along the Circulator’s National Mall Route

Here is a guest blog from the most well known gardening blogger in DC, Susan Harris. This is just a wonderful blog post, filled with great pictures (click to enlarge) and extremely useful information. Use the blog as your guide to the great gardens on and around DC's National Mall, use the Circulator to get around to them (I have made the circuit), its just a fun way to spend a few hours reminding yourself why DC is so special.

My very special thanks to Susan for such an outstanding posting.
                                                                                                        

This guest blog by Susan Harris is a review of the new Circulator route around the National Mall, with photos of the gardens and garden-style memorials along the route.
The Circulator Experience
DC has had Circulator buses for 10 years now but it wasn’t until last week, with the opening of its long-awaited National Mall route, that I finally rode one. I discovered my new favorite way to see the biggest collection of sights in all of D.C. Easy, relaxing, and super-cheap.
I arrived at the Mall from the subway, where I’d paid with a SmartTrip, so when I jumped on the Circulator it cost me an amazing nothing for a 2-hour window. Even if you don’t transfer, the fare’s just a buck for adults, 50 cents for seniors, and free for students.

All the info you need is here on their website. Speaking of which, it’s terrific. Same goes for the one-page flyer available on the bus. I give them both a solid A, and I’m picky.

All 11 buses on this route are brand new and equipped with charging stations for phones and iPads and whatnot.
Driver Amat Ballard told me that this is a great gig for him, with friendly passengers and a route that avoids heavy traffic most of the way. So far, his passengers have been mostly tourists, plus a few locals getting to work
Along the National Mall Route
The National Mall route has 15 stops, and you can get on or off at any of them. The buses run at roughly 10-minute intervals and riding the whole route takes about an hour and 20 minutes.
The new route is especially useful for getting us to the sites farthest from the Metro, like the Jefferson, FDR and MLK, no matter our physical capabilities or level of endurance.
So let’s get right to the gorgeous plants and gardens you can see along the route. They’re listed by stop number and name.
 

And remember, you lucky Washingtonians, they’re all free to visit.

3. National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden

This sculpture garden combines art, plants and a fountain for cooling off now and skating on in the winter. In the summer there are free Jazz in the Garden concerts on Friday nights. Very popular.
 The Smithsonian’s Butterfly Habitat Garden runs along 9th Street between Constitution and the Mall. It’s a complex and stunning garden for all pollinators, not just butterflies, and succeeds in a very tough spot.

4. National Museum of American History / National Museum of Natural History
Here you can visit the Victory Garden at the Museum of American History, and beautiful tropical plantings along the Constitution Avenue side of the museums.

6. Holocaust Memorial Museum / Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Between these two attractions and the Tidal Basin is a “Tulip Museum” in the spring and beds of drought-tolerant perennials in the summer.

8. Martin Luther King Memorial / Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial
The MLK Memorial opened in 2011, so its trees and smaller plants are still filling out but already, its cherry blossom show is impressive.
Just next door is the FDR Memorial, a favorite of local gardeners. Designed by the world renown landscape architect Lawrence Halprin, it’s a series of water-filled garden rooms.

9. Lincoln Memorial / Korean War Veterans Memorial
The Korean and nearby Vietnam Veterans Memorial memorials are great examples of the new landscape-style memorials that are winning design competitions and converts to a new style.

11. World War II Memorial / Constitution Gardens
Coming in a few years – a totally new Constitution Gardens designed by landscape “starchitect” Peter Walker. It’ll include new attractions like dining and entertainment, and I can hardly wait.

13. Smithsonian Visitors Center
There are terrific Smithsonian Gardens at this stop, including the entrance gardens at the Castle and Freer, a rose garden near the Castle, and the serpentine Ripley Garden just east of the Castle – another big favorite among local gardeners.
Across the street from the Smithsonian Metro entrance is a vegetable garden, one of the USDA’s many People’s Gardens. Next door to it is the USDA’s Farmer’s Market, open Fridays May-October.

14. National Air and Space Museum / Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Gardens on the Mall side of the Air and Space Museums are appreciated for their flowering cherry and magnolia trees in the spring and the stunning bark of their river birches in the winter. 
The Hirshhorn’s Sculpture Garden includes this very cool “Lunar Bird” by Jean Miro in a bed of grasses.

15. United States Capitol / National Museum of the American Indian

The Native Landscape at the American Indian Museum is carefully curated and cared for, and just fascinating.
Leave lots of time to see the U.S. Botanic Garden, at the foot of the Capitol. Its acres of outdoor and indoor gardens have made it the second-most visited botanic garden in the U.S.
Finally, the Disabled Veterans for Life Memorial just opened in November of 2014 and immediately drew raves. It’s beautiful and moving.

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