Hershey Children’s Garden Cool Plants
(#4 in a new series of 10)
For Fun Seeds and Fruit:
Red Horse Chestnut (Aesculus pavia)
Some adults bring their children to Hershey Children’s Garden and become engrossed in exciting adventures and programs — and possibly miss some of the horticultural nuances of this great garden space. Hershey Children’s Garden is a sophisticated and — now in its 10th anniversary season — mature garden with many plantings that any adult gardener or garden enthusiast would love to have in their personal greenspace. Who can blame them?
Here is the fourth plant in our series of 10 of our staff’s favorite Hershey Children’s Garden plants, along with their special and unusual properties to appreciate with a child.

If you take your child’s hand and head to the back corner of Hershey Children’s Garden. you will find the Bird Blind area. Any staff member or docent will be happy to show you the way. This small section of the garden is a sanctuary for birds, providing all the necessary ingredients for attracting birds to your backyard habitat. Birds need a source of food, shelter, water, places to perch and the all important sense of security. Birds like thickets, dense shrub formations. We have accommodated their instinctual request by growing a series of food supplying as well as aesthetically pleasing shrubs around the blind.
One of the largest shrubs is Red Horse chestnut. This is a truly attractive shrub with it’s typical buckeye shaped leaves and red flowers in late April/ early May. Large, smooth fruit replace fading candle-like flowers, splitting open in the fall. The entire family can have fun observing this clementine-sized fruit and holding the two large round hard seeds.
Tags: Birds, buckeye, children's gardens, cleveland, cleveland botanical garden, gardens and birds, plants for kids, red buckeye, shrubs for birds
This entry was posted
on Thursday, May 7th, 2009 at 8:44 am and is filed under Josh Steffen, Trees and Shrubs, Youth Gardening.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.