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Keukenhof Gardens
The most colorful garden in the world, Keukenhof is a glorious array of tulips and other flowers situated just outside of Amsterdam in Holland. Under acres of soaring trees, footpaths of flowering ground covers undulate among tulips and daffodils. There are whisper boat tours if your feet get tired, and there's plenty to see and do, including windmills.
Garden of Cosmic Speculation
Plan your trip well because this abstract garden in Scotland is open only one day a year! The garden is the masterpiece of a cultural theorist. He sculpted the earth to represent fractals, black holes, and more, accented by art sculptures and water features. It's a mind-blowing experience you just can't miss!
Butchart Gardens
Described as the world's most beautiful garden, Butchart in British Columbia has a little of everything in a big place. You'll see English country and Japanese gardens, the tulips of Holland, magical mountain hollows filled with Wonderland-like scenery, and even a tropical paradise. It's the gardens of the world all in one place!
Levens Hall
If you're looking for magic and mystery in a garden, the haunted grounds of Levens Hall is for you. This sixteenth-century English manor house features a whimsical, fantastical topiary garden with yew houses, an ancient flowering orchard, giant spires of delphiniums, and a ha-ha wall. You'll continually wonder if the White Rabbit is around the next bend.
Gardens by the Bay
If you're over the antique rose and want to visit the garden of the future, this wonder in Singapore is more than you could ever ask for. It's like something out of 'The Jetsons.' The Cloud Forest is an enormous, domed, glass building that houses a mountain of waterfalls and, literally, clouds. The Supertree Grove contains towering man-made vertical gardens that look like trees. They light up at night for an amazing show. This and so much more at the world's most futuristic garden!
Claude Monet's Garden at Giverny, France
You've been looking at it on canvas your entire life, but why not see it in person? It's just as, if not more so, beautiful as it was in Monet's day. The best part is that Monet himself built this garden, so when you're there, you're inside his art. Don't settle for just having seen the garden in museums--experience the sights, scents, and sounds in person.