Bonsai bandits prompt razor wire at botanical gardens

The Des Moines Botanical Gardens’ rotating bonsai collection is kept under lock, surveillance cameras and razor wire when individual plants are not on display — little-known security measures put in place after a historic heist more than 20 years ago.

Why it matters: The plants serve as a living record of centuries-old art, international tradition and local heritage, providing Iowans with a tangible way to connect to global cultural history in their community.

  • Bonsai bandits have struck again in other cities recently.

Catch up quick: Bonsai is the art of cultivating miniature trees in containers, with origins going back thousands of years to ancient China.

  • Des Moines’ collection was donated in 1979 and originated from the private collection of Audrey Hirsch, one of the garden’s first board presidents.

Startling stat: Some of the world’s oldest bonsai can fetch hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Flashback: Three DSM bonsai were stolen in 2004, and investigators believe the thefts may have been carried out by someone scaling a roof and dropping into its courtyard. The plants weren’t recovered.

  • Another was stolen in 1997 and recovered by two men who said they bought it at a local tavern for $300, according to local newspaper reports at the time.

State of play: Both incidents occurred more than a decade before the attractions’ reorganization, when the Gardens were known as the “DSM Botanical Center” and operated by DSM Water Works.

  • Many aspects of the facility have been updated and improved in recent years, with more in the works, Botanical Gardens spokesperson Delaney Lynch tells Axios.

The latest: There were bonsai thefts in New Orleans in December and in Minnesota last month…

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