On Sunday, June 23, the Garibaldi-Meucci Museum will host a bus trip to the New York Botanacal Garden's Italian Renaissance Garden exhibit "Wild Medicine and Healing Plants Around the World."
New York Botanical Garden's Italian Renaissance Garden is inspired by Europe's first botanical garden, created in 1545 at the University of Padua, in the Venetian Republic. A lush landscape of Mediterranean flowers, including exotic varieties, endangered species and medicinal plants, this special exhibition is classically composed to evoke the original design that remains at Padua to this day."Healing Plants Around the World" features the research of some of New York Botanical Garden's leading experts in science, medicine, and ethnobotany. You will learn about plants such as the cinchona tree, the source of quinine that treats malaria, and white willow, whose bark leads to the production of aspirin. More than 500 species of medicinal plants are showcased, most of them grown in the Garden's glasshouses, making this one of the largest exhibitions of medicinal plants ever mounted.Videos