To provide you with additional information about how we collect and use your personal data, we’ve recently updated our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. Please review these pages now, as they apply to your continued use of our website.
Walk into the 50-acre Glacier Gardens in Alaska and you’ll behold a strange sight. Dozens of hemlock and spruce trees with their tops driven into the ground, and roots hanging in the air. Unlike the Baobab, the upside-down trees at Glacier Gardens are not natural but the result of landscaping by Steve and Cindy Bowhay, the owners of Glacier Garden.