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Early Childhood Education

A new outdoor space connects kids to native plants in Claremont

In a large outdoor forest area, a small child with light skin tone sticks her hands into a tree stump.
The new playspace at the California Botanic Garden features a number of tactile experiences for children.
(
Courtesy Andy Torres from Ragano Photo & Video
)

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Listen 0:43
A new outdoor space connects kids to native plants in Claremont
California Botanic Garden opens Children’s Woodland, a free-form nature play space that emphasizes connections to native plants.

A sensory garden where you can sniff a plant that smells like maple syrup. Hammocks to enjoy the shade of the live coastal oak trees. Sanded chunks of wood to build forts.

The new Children’s Woodland at the California Botanic Garden in Claremont is an interactive playspace for children to connect with native landscapes and habitats. The garden, nestled in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, is home to more than 22,000 native plants.

“ We decided that we wanted the installations to be more sort of freeform and open-ended,” said Lauren Weintraub Stoebel, assistant director of visitor engagement at the California Botanic Garden. “We want kids to find creative ways to be in nature, to discover connections on their own without being too guided.”

A big green sign in the middle of a forested area says "The Children's Woodland at California Botanic Garden." It also bears an illustration of a tree.
The Children's Woodland is an interactive play space using natural materials at the California Botanic Garden.
(
Elly Yu
/
LAist
)

The children’s space has jumping logs, bubbling rock water fountains, and natural building materials so children can create their own structures. Unlike the rest of the garden, which features some rare and valuable native plants, kids can get hands-on with the plants and landscape here.

 ”It was really inspiring and fascinating to watch the different ways that the kids found to be in this space,” Stoebel said.

A small boy with medium skin tone and glasses sits by a boulder, placing rocks on top of it.
The freeform space allows children to be creative in the way they interact with nature.
(
Courtesy Andy Torres from Ragano Photo & Video
)
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The horticulture team at the garden built the space using logs and other natural materials from the rest of the 86-acre garden. They dug a log tunnel for kids to climb through out of an old oak that blew down in a windstorm.

Stoebel said the space was designed to also evolve with the seasons. The next installation will include a “living structure” — a dome that will have plants growing all around it.

Ashlee Armstrong, director of horticulture, said she hopes the new space allows children to learn to be curious about the nature around them, “inspiring kids to want to be in nature and make a connection with nature, so that we do have stewards for our natural environment in the future.”

How to visit the California Botanic Garden

Address: 1500 N. College Avenue, Claremont

Current garden hours: Tuesday to Sunday, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. (Varies throughout the year)

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Tickets: $15 adults, $11 seniors and students, $5 children 3-12, free for children under 3

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