Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Magnolia Plantation & Gardens - Charleston, SC


Tuesday the 29th we visited Magnolia Plantation & Gardens. It used to be a lucrative Rice Fields Plantation. 

From their website: “Magnolia Plantation has been selected as one of "America's Most Beautiful Gardens" (Travel + Leisure Magazine), and is the only garden honored with this distinction in the State of South Carolina.

Founded in 1676 by the Drayton family, Magnolia Plantation has survived the centuries and witnessed the history of our nation unfold before it from the American Revolution through the Civil War and beyond. It is the oldest public tourist site in the Lowcountry, and the oldest public gardens in America, opening its doors to visitors in 1870 to view the thousands of beautiful flowers and plants in its famous gardens. So join us here at Magnolia Plantation to experience the beauty of its gardens and its rich history today.”

It is a very large and beautiful Plantation, but of course this time of year is not the height of seeing tons of things blooming. Spring would be optimal viewing.

We started out with the Nature Train (about 45 minutes) to get a nice overview of the grounds. There was only one other couple on the train. We saw a few gators and some Wood Ducks. There were tons of Peacocks everywhere. We went by the old slave cabins and the smokehouse where they cured the meat. We learned that the green stuff on the ponds is Duckweed. They don't try to get rid of it because the ducks love it. The Alligators however, are annoyed by it and often can be seen trying to shake it off. 
 peacock by the ticket booth
 views from the train ride
 Wood Ducks
 slave cabins - 2 families per cabin



 smokehouse where they cured the meats
 large Oak Tree 
 white peacock
 this is Bubbette - we didn't see her mate Bubba


The train left us at the Magnolia House. We walked around the back and walked to the Nature Boat tour (also 45 minutes) We were the only 2 on the tour. We saw a ton of birds and gators on the tour. The guide was interesting, but he talked non-stop and we were more interested in looking for critters. We did see 2 Bald Eagles, lots of Great Blue Herons, Ibis, Great White Egrets, Little Blue Herons, Green Herons, a Least Bittern, Anhingas, Pied-billed Grebes, a Kingfisher, Snowy Egrets and lots of families of Common Gallinules. (nothing new, but always fun to see them)
 Magnolia Plantation House


 front stairs 
 gardens out front




 lots of peacocks on the verandas



back of the house
 boat dock
 Captain Dick

 Anhinga
 Great Blue Heron
 Egrets
 Great Blue Heron
 Anhinga

 Great Blue Heron


 Egrets

 Great Blue Heron
 Anhinga
 gator

 Least Bittern

 Bald Eagles








After the boat tour, we walked around some of the gardens and climbed the observation tower.











We saw some Wood Ducks. Finally! (one male and 2 females)
 Wood Ducks



 Wood Ducks and a Gallinule

 gator on the left & 3 Wood Ducks (easier to see in a larger photo)



 Observation Tower




 Tri-colored Heron



 Carolina Wren




 me on the bridge


 Bamboo Garden
 Greg

 Greg on the bridge next to the tree growing up through it



me




 Little Blue Heron


Then, it was time for lunch at the Peacock Café. I had a tasty Chicken Cordon Bleu wrap and Greg had a Chicken Caesar Wrap and we shared a brownie.
 Peacock Cafe

 ponies and a mule by the Cafe


 Peacock in the garden
 Then, we walked the many trails through the gardens and up and over pretty bridges and along ponds.


















 reproduction of the Rice Barge that took products to Charleston




 Greenhouses



 Great-crested Flycatcher
 Great-crested Flycatcher
 Great-crested Flycatcher

 Great-crested Flycatcher
 Nature Train
Our last stop was at the Audubon Boardwalk on the other side of the Plantation. We drove and parked over by it and spent the rest of the afternoon there. The water level was pretty high with all the rain we got yesterday. There were areas where it was almost as high as the boardwalk. We heard and saw a lot birds in this area. We also came across a small cemetery where some of the slaves were buried.



 Music of the Swamp - sculptures

 nesting boxes for Wood Ducks
 boardwalk












 Common Gallinule





 path between the boardwalks
 Greg on the trail



 White Ibis
White Ibis
 mushrooms

 Cypress knees



 Pied-billed Grebe


 large alligator sunning on the ramp

 small alligator & turtle sunning together

 immature Little Blue Heron

















 Downy Woodpecker
 Downy Woodpecker
 Eastern Kingbirds



 Black-capped Chickadee


You can tour about 10 rooms in the Plantation House, but we opted not to do that. (30 – 45 minute tour). They also offer another tour - From Slavery to Freedom: The Magnolia Cabin Project Tour (45 minutes) It’s a tour of the 5 slave cabins & history of slaves from different time periods.

What was once called the Old African American Cabin is now the Gilliard Garden Center. The center is named for Tena Gilliard. She lived in this structure and acted as the official "greeter" for Magnolia up until the 1940's. She was born shortly after the Civil War ended. C.N. Hastie named a beautiful camellia for her, which is registered in the American Camellia Society and the International Camellia Society, and can be seen on a path near the Plantation House. There were plants for sale here.

As we were walking around the grounds we noticed that the trains and the boat tours were now running full. We were lucky we started early in the day. It was cool out this morning and still a bit “drippy” and misty on and off and I think it deterred people from going out earlier. We didn’t leave until after 3:00 and if we had done all there was to do there it would have been another 2 or 3 hours.

It was a very nice day out and about communing with nature.

Tomorrow, we head out to Columbia, SC. We are leaving the Lowcountry and now headed Upcountry.
Savannah and Charlestown bookend the Lowcountry. The Low Country & Antebellum (pre-Civil War) area is around a 200-mile stretch of coastal South Carolina and Georgia. We have seen wide, flat expanses of marsh grass, live oak trees layered with “Spanish Moss” and lot of bodies of water—tidal marshes, rivers, estuaries, and the Atlantic Ocean. Now to see what Upcountry has to offer!
The northwest corner of SC, in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains is considered Upcountry. (midway between Charlotte, NC and Atlanta, GA.)

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