Hidden Botanical Garden

Hike & Picnic at Sonoma Botanical Garden in Sonoma Valley

{NOTE: February 2025. After the recent storm, please be sure to check ahead on the Sonoma Botanical Garden website for any updates on trail conditions and the gardens.}

Forget a dozen roses. Give your love a botanical garden, and rare magnolia's at peak bloom for the next two weeks. Sonoma Botanical Garden, hidden in the western slope of Sonoma Valley’s Mayacamas Mountains, has one of the Bay Area’s best displays of Asian flora—and it’s a beautiful place for a quiet picnic. You’re allowed to bring in food and drinks; just pack it all out and don’t make a mess. The 25 acres of gardens wind up into the hillside via a variety of trails and among flowering shrubs, exotic shade trees, tranquil ponds, and even two waterfalls.

Grab a map from the visitor center and pay the entry fee, then stroll the 2 miles of winding gravel paths, getting up close to rare and endangered species from Asia. The entire garden has been grown from seeds collected from the wilds of China, Tibet, and other parts of the Himalayas. A katsura tree (#19 on the park map) gives off a cotton-candy scent on warm days. You’ll also find the beautiful Dawn Redwood, giving shade to picnic tables by the upper pond. Thought to be extinct, these redwoods were found in a remote part of China. The map indicates several picnic tables quietly set throughout the space, including one near a charming bridge leading to a gazebo that gets bathed in afternoon sunlight. But they’re all pretty good!

For the best view, walk up to the Himalayan prayer flags on the eastern edge of the park, where a bench makes an ideal perch for looking out across Sonoma Valley and its acres of vineyards as the prayer flags rustle in the wind.

Wine Down Bonus: You’ll be very close to several wineries coming and going from Sonoma Botanical Garden on Sonoma Highway. A couple we like: Muscardini Cellars and Imagery Estate Winery.

Trending Stories NorCal

View all Stories
  1. Sequoia Re-opens Crystal Cave

    Step inside Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Park's hidden world by visiting the newly re-opened Crystal Cave—the only cave in the parks open to the public. Closed for four years, this rare marble karst cavern is welcoming visitors once again, but only through the summer season!

    View
  2. Afternoon on the Island

    What is it about tiny islands in the middle of lakes? There’s something that just draws you in. It’s even more fun when getting there is half the adventure because you have to reach it by canoe, kayak, paddleboat, or a ranger-guided boat tour!

    View
  3. Easiest Best Hike in the World

    Choose the easiest and most view-rewarding hike in Yosemite. Okay, we’ll go first: the combination of hiking to Sentinel Dome and Taft Point. Both of these lookouts are within a couple miles of each other on Glacier Point Road

    View
  4. Hiker in the forest at Mount Sutro in San Francisco

    San Francisco's Middle Earth

    No need to travel to New Zealand to visit Middle Earth. San Francisco’s Mount Sutro Open Space is practically Hobbiton—a hidden “shire” in the middle of the city. Okay, maybe not quite as magical, but still an incredible place to take a hike in city limits.

    View

Trending Stories SoCal

View all Stories
  1. Locals' Feature: Jim Litchfield, Owner of Reno Fly Shop

    If there's a river, you're likely to find Jim Litchfield there. As the owner of Reno Fly Shop, Nevada's premier fly fishing outfitter and shop, Jim's passion for rivers knows no bounds: he's fished in places near and far, including Alaska, Bolivia and Christmas Island. But home is beautiful Reno, where he has been running Reno Fly Shop and leading tailored river float and fly fishing adventures (including beginner-friendly options) for over a decade.

    View
  2. Can't Top This

    San Francisco’s Presidio was already a fantastic place to hang out for the afternoon, a beautiful site within the largest urban national park in the United States (the Golden Gate National Recreation Area). And Presidio Tunnel Tops is like a cherry on top. Make that two cherries on top, with the newly opened (July 2025) Outpost Meadow, a 1.5-acre green space located at Old Mason Street across from the Crissy Field Marsh in the Presidio.

    View
  3. Volcanic Activity

    Northern California is home to one of the most unique ecosystems in the country: Lassen Volcanic National Park. The region features geothermal areas, including the largest dome volcano in the world, Lassen Peak. Hike to the top of this active volcano on a 5-mile out-and-back.  

    View
  4. Oh Ryan

    Sure, it’s those whimsical trees that give Joshua Tree National Park its marquee billing; but this beautiful landscape also has surrounding mountains and its night sky—one of the darkest in Southern California and designated an International Dark Sky Park. Joshua Tree has four allowable stargazing parking lots, and a newly opened haven for spending the night nearby...

    View