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February is a time for planning…a garden visit

This time of year, I find myself planning a lot – the year ahead, the garden, and travel, among other things. When planning travels, it’s easy to incorporate a garden or two (or several… travel companions willing) into your plans and is easy to start if you haven’t before. Or, you may be a pro at this and already do plan your travel around gardens you want to visit.  

There are lots of ways to discover gardens to visit. For travel throughout North America, you can visit the American Public Gardens Association website or the American Horticultural Society website to see a map of member gardens. Traveling to Maine? See if you can squeeze in a visit to the Coastal Maine Botanic Gardens. Anchorage? Check out the Alaska Botanical Garden!

Searching for public gardens in Colorado on the American Public Gardens Association website. 
Searching for public gardens in Colorado on the American Public Gardens Association website. 

Closer afield, we have over ten APGA-member gardens right here in Colorado, and more within a half-day’s drive of our borders. If you are member of a local garden you may even have reciprocal membership privileges or be able to enjoy discounted entry to other gardens.  

Many CSU Extension offices also have gardens to visit. Of course there are also other, often smaller gardens that can be just as worthwhile to seek out–and you don’t have to wait. There’s plenty to see in the “off-season” too. You can even do some armchair travel using these resources. 

The Chinle Cactus and Succulent Society Garden at the CSU Extension Tri-River Area office in Grand Junction. 
The Chinle Cactus and Succulent Society Garden at the CSU Extension Tri-River Area office in Grand Junction. 

Visiting gardens as a kid with my family made a big impression on me and made some of the most long-lasting memories I have of those family trips. During many a winter or spring break, we would visit my grandmother who lived in California. We would often visit local botanic gardens with her and I remember many visits to the Alta Vista Botanical Gardens in Vista, CA. It was one of my first western botanical garden experiences and I can still vividly remember walking through the gardens with my grandmother, seeing plants I’d never seen before, and being surprised when a lizard ran across our path on a warm December day. A lizard!  

Visiting the garden was an activity that everyone enjoyed and, importantly, could do. It was accessible, with lots of benches for sitting, and had exhibits geared toward kids too. It was an easy way to see the local flora, some pretty far-flung plants too, and spend quality time with family. 

We had other botanical adventures as well, including some well-known places like the San Diego Zoo (though the plants were not the primary reason for our visit), the Montreal Botanical Garden, and some lesser-known places like the Landis Arboretum in Esperance, NY.

Closer to where I grew up, we would frequent several local gardens and arboreta. There was always something new to see, something new to learn about a place, and TONS of inspiration. 

Terracotta pot with a plant in it and other foliage around it. There are two engaging, educational signs. One is hanging from the pot and reads 'I grow from a bulb' and the other is placed in front and says 'Notice my rhizomes'. This was to engage visitors at an exhibit at the U.S. Botanical Garden in Washington, D.C.
Engaging visitors at an exhibit at the U.S. Botanical Garden, Washington, D.C. 
Rudbeckia at the Montreal Botanical Garden, from a trip with my parents. In the background is the Olympic Tower from the 1976 Olympics.
Rudbeckia at the Montreal Botanical Garden, from a trip with my parents. In the background is the Olympic Tower from the 1976 Olympics.

Visiting gardens in different parts of Colorado has been a great way to get to know the state (last year I visited quite a few!) and I look forward to more botanical adventures this year.

Betty Ford Alpine Gardens in Vail featuring a colorful array of flowers and lush greenery on a rocky hillside with trees in the background and a wooden bench partially showing on the right (June 2022).
From a trip to the Betty Ford Alpine Gardens in Vail in June 2022. 
Terraced garden with various plants and rocks in front of a multi-story building with balconies at the Durango Botanical Gardens (May 2022).
Visiting the Durango Botanical Gardens for the first time in May 2022.

What are your favorite gardens to visit?