I love that the entrance is so grand and has a small road fork of its own!

The entrance gate is actually crowned! Nice touch. :)

Is the green on this statue actually Copper patina or is it just green concrete/sculpting clay? I was in a hurry to rush all across the cemetery so didn't stop to read the inscriptions. Usually, I like to stop and read all of these random details and weave them into my own personal story versions. Hasty me. :/

There is something so soothing about walking on a bed of crackling yet soft leaves layered on grass...

Fall was out in all its glory at Forest Lawn!

The water-bodies across the cemetery are spell-binding. I could have easily believed that throwing coins in them and wishing like crazy might have made all my dreams come true! They were just that perfect! This is Jubilee spring - the first of the three.

Crystal Lake - as you can see it lives up to its name. Each leaf colour was reflected back in perfection!

A couple more view of that magical lake.


There were these morbid looking dark mushrooms all over the place.
(e:imk2), can Slawa tell whether these are edible?

The Bridge to the mythical geese kingdom. :)

The compass for lost souls.

There were sections of the cemetery that looked like you were looking through some virtual convex glasses, when in fact you weren't. Such a cool effect!

Creek Scajjy. ;-)

The ferocious guardian of the mythical kingdom of geese (otherwise known as the mirror lake).

The Geese Kingdom!


These geese actually posed for me. :)




From one of the mounds near Delaware avenue, you can see across the road on to distant plains and I think that is Delaware Park? (Not sure, though.) It was like one of the scenic moments described in a George Eliot novel.

The colours on the leaves were gorgeous!

There was this monument with angels and gargoyles that reminded me of churches in Prague.



These crosses were set off by a riot of colours in the background.




Not to be outdone by those below, some really delicate clouds were floating in the sky.

This monument somehow reminded me of a water tank and nuclear cloud all at once!

A flashback to Mt. Hope in Rochester that has Egyptian sphinxes as well!

I thought this Roman influenced priest had such a dramatic background!

I wasn't paying much attention to the inscriptions as I always do but these two picked me up ;-) The husband has measuring tools and a hammer on his side and the wife has humming birds (?) :)

And, having that name must have been hard at school...

It was a lovely afternoon! Forest Lawn is a real treasure. :)
Thank you for the beautiful tour!
Great looking pictures. Oh by the way I thought you could eat all mushrooms and the poisonous ones just got you super hight but not really sure about that.
Oh I love Mt. Hope too!!
Actually I had a great-grandmother with the name of Roach, but she spelled it Roche. She was Irish, and died in the fifties, so I've no idea if anyone ever made fun of her. (It's a French name, but I don't know if it means anything.)