PhotosLocation


ʻeneʻio+botanical+garden Latitude and Longitude:

18°38′29″S 173°54′49″W / 18.6414°S 173.9137°W / -18.6414; -173.9137
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The ‘Ene’io Botanical Garden (EBG) is a botanical garden in Tonga and is the first of its kind there. It has the largest and most varied plant collection in the Kingdom of Tonga.

The botanical garden is located in Vava'u, 10 minutes from Neiafu. It consists of 22 acres (89,000 m2) of privately owned gardens and was developed in 1972 by Haniteli Fa’anunu, retired Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries. As an agronomist with 38 years of agricultural experience (18 as the Director of Agriculture and Food within the Tongan government), Fa’anunu offers visitors a personalized tour through gardens containing over 100 plant families and 500 plant species, both native and exotic. The garden also has ocean access at ‘Ene’io Beach, a private beach with a camping area.

The garden opened to the public in 2006, and also acts as an unofficial bird sanctuary. [1]

References

  1. ^ Paskal, C. (Aug 14, 2010). "Garden at the end of the world: One man's passion for nature creates a sight to behold in tonga". Toronto Star. ProQuest  748916962. Retrieved December 28, 2022.

External links

18°38′29″S 173°54′49″W / 18.6414°S 173.9137°W / -18.6414; -173.9137



ʻeneʻio+botanical+garden Latitude and Longitude:

18°38′29″S 173°54′49″W / 18.6414°S 173.9137°W / -18.6414; -173.9137
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The ‘Ene’io Botanical Garden (EBG) is a botanical garden in Tonga and is the first of its kind there. It has the largest and most varied plant collection in the Kingdom of Tonga.

The botanical garden is located in Vava'u, 10 minutes from Neiafu. It consists of 22 acres (89,000 m2) of privately owned gardens and was developed in 1972 by Haniteli Fa’anunu, retired Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries. As an agronomist with 38 years of agricultural experience (18 as the Director of Agriculture and Food within the Tongan government), Fa’anunu offers visitors a personalized tour through gardens containing over 100 plant families and 500 plant species, both native and exotic. The garden also has ocean access at ‘Ene’io Beach, a private beach with a camping area.

The garden opened to the public in 2006, and also acts as an unofficial bird sanctuary. [1]

References

  1. ^ Paskal, C. (Aug 14, 2010). "Garden at the end of the world: One man's passion for nature creates a sight to behold in tonga". Toronto Star. ProQuest  748916962. Retrieved December 28, 2022.

External links

18°38′29″S 173°54′49″W / 18.6414°S 173.9137°W / -18.6414; -173.9137



Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook