May 27 2010

Reiman Gardens

Published by at 4:17 pm under Life,Logan,Mom,Photography,Teresa

I spent a good portion of Sunday wandering Reiman Garens with Mom, Grandma, Teresa and Logan.

Don’t believe me?

Here is photographic evidence:





















































I learned plenty about gnomes. I might just have to invest in a gnome someday, but the gigantic toad in the Reiman Gardens gift shop might be calling my name first.

5 responses so far

5 Responses to “Reiman Gardens”

  1. Teresaon 27 May 2010 at 5:51 pm

    I love the Reiman Garden pictures! It was a good day! We need to do those kinds of things more often!

    Let’s talk about that toad. There might be other options.

    Teresa

  2. Angieon 27 May 2010 at 6:31 pm

    I love that you went – this is yet another local landmark I’ve never had a chance to visit. I really wanted to see the butterfly garden (they always remind me of Maddie), but I think they took it down?

    The World’s Largest Gnome is admittedly pretty sweet.

  3. Bennetton 28 May 2010 at 9:57 am

    The only options to figure out is how I’m going to raise the extra $140 to buy that sweet toad.

    Once I get my fence up it will serve 3 functions:

    1. Keep a dog in.
    2. Keep grape thieves out.
    3. Keep sweet toad/frog/alligator yard decor thieves at bay.

    I put the alligator out last night. It has a home now.

    Angie,

    The butterfly exhibit is a permanent exhibit. It isn’t going anywhere, so you will have plenty of time to check it out after you are unprego. (That is a word I just invented.) Of course after you are unprego, you won’t have plenty of time, for an entirely different reason.

    There are gnome-haters out there that like to point out that there is a larger gnome in Europe, but that gnome is made out of fiberglass and therefore isn’t a gnome at all.

  4. Angieon 28 May 2010 at 5:56 pm

    That makes me feel way better about the butterfly exhibit – I was really afraid I missed it. I enjoy the term “unprego” – it sounds a little like the anti-pasta sauce, in addition to being a state of womanhood.

  5. Bennetton 02 Jun 2010 at 12:50 pm

    From the tour, they said that they rotate about 70 types of butterflies through the exhibit and in total they have several hundred types of butterflies. So there isn’t really a peak butterfly time either.