"ln the cool of the garden" is a phrase with deep roots back into my childhood. Our family always had gardens to tend to and a dear elderly neighbor, Mrs. Ruth Bruerton, was a great source of a small income for a little boy, as she would pay me to take care of her flower gardens and yard.
So, I grew up with gardens.
There is just something I would suggest is deeply rooted in all of us, if we go back far enough, when it comes to gardens. This evening, I would like to present you with a brief look at the most amazing garden I have ever seen.
Actually, it is a park - Yampa River Botanic Park. And it is full of gardens.

Great! So, to get us started off, where exactly is this park? It is in north central Colorado, just south of the town of Steamboat Springs. And as you begin to get an idea of how impressive this park is, I'll let you know right up front there is no charge to see it. It is free to the public!
Oh, sure, probably funded with taxes from a pretty well-to-do "winter playground" for the "rich and famous" right? No! As you read on their website, the park receives no tax money.
Brief History and Location Details
On the park's website, you learn:
"The Park sits at an altitude of 6,880 ft in a cool valley at the foot of Mt Werner, the Steamboat Ski Mountain. In winter, cold air flows down the mountains into the Valley so that temperatures can reach as low as minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit (and Celsius). The Park gets an average of only 60 days a year without a killing frost."
How did this park get started, under such formidable conditions? The credit goes to a single couple - Bob & Audrey Enever - and their vision for what could be.
It all started with the town wanting to put a trail in along the Yampa River. In the early 1990s. There are some complicated details on their website, but the gist of it was this couple working together with the town and others in a partnership. The first gardens were planted in 1997. So, the park is over 20 years old.
What had once been a horse pasture and mobile home park became a combination of a soccer field for the town's youth (next to the park) and this great park!
Experiencing the Park
You barely get through the gate, when you are presented with this incredibly intricate rock garden, with a wonderful path flowing through it:



Given the rich diversity of all the plants in the park, here was a display talking about active research underway on plants under the Plant Select program:
"Plant Select® is the country’s leading brand of plants designed to thrive in high plains and intermountain regions, offering plants that provide more beauty with less work so gardeners of all levels can achieve smart, stunning and successful gardens using fewer resources and with a more positive environmental impact."
"Plant Select® is a nonprofit collaboration of Colorado State University, Denver Botanic Gardens and professional horticulturists. Our mission is to seek out and distribute the very best plants for landscapes and gardens from the intermountain region to the high plains and beyond."

"Peter"
"Sculptor: Hill Blackett, Jr."
" A gift to the Yampa River Botanic Park"
"1998"







Birdwatching
People aren't the only creatures which enjoy gardens. We noticed a number of people strolling carefully through the park with binoculars. Hoping for the sighting of some rare birds, as well as just enjoy seeing "old friends" again.


It takes a lot of work to be a professional birdwatcher. During my brief exposure to it, I learned about the challenges of needing to properly identify both the male and female, mature and immature, and then, as if that wasn't enough, their seasonal variations. And, after all that, as stated above, you may not see them at all, but need to be able to identify them by their calls ...
A special treat, if you are there at the right time of year, is a nesting pair of osprey, just outside the park, along the edge of the Yampa River. We didn't get to see them, but saw where they nest, once they return to this area.
The Garden List
Beyond what you've seen here, to give you an idea of how extensive the effort has been to make this wonderful place what it is to today, just "scroll down" through this listing of the various gardens inside this park:
- Blue Garden (Rainbow Neighborhood)
- The Crevice Garden (Hummingbird Neighborhood)
- Lily Garden (Sundial Neighborhood)
- The Medicinal Herb Garden (Wind Neighborhood)
- The Coreopsis Corner (Green Neighborhood)
- Garden for All Seasons (Wind Neighborhood)
- The Hidden Garden (Reflecting Neighborhood)
- Penstemon Garden (Reflecting Neighborhood)
- Jeff's Garden (Trillium Neighborhood)
- Carol Fox Garden (Trillium Neighborhood)
- Spring Bulbs Garden (Foliage Neighborhood)
- The Foliage Garden (Foliage Neighborhood)
- Sascha's Rock Garden (Kiosk Neighborhood)
- Annuals Garden (Pond Neighborhood)
- Fairy Garden (Kiosk Neighborhood)
- Rose Garden (Kiosk Neighborhood)
- The Members' Rock Garden (Members Neighborhood)
- Dorothy's Garden (Members Neighborhood)
- Doris' Arbor Garden (Sundial Neighborhood)
- The Stumpyland Fairy Garden (North Neighborhood)
Wow! That's quite the list @roleerob. Is that it? No! There are more than 50 gardens!
Hopefully, this post has helped you appreciate a truly unique gardening experience. Steamboat Springs is a pretty famous destination for vacationers - summer and winter. But to do what? Visit a garden park? Who knew?


For some of us, the story of man's origins begins in a garden - the Garden of Eden. Whether you may believe in this or not, I would like to think a visit to this delightful park gives us just a glimpse of what that might have been like.
In this fascinating time in our history, we are now linked together through our Steem blockchain. So, for my readers who maybe "on the other side of the world," perhaps you will never have the opportunity to see this garden for yourself. In that case, then, you at least have seen a bit of it through the eyes of one of your fellow Steemians.
Closing
If you have even the remotest interest in gardening, you definitely want to visit the Yampa River Botanic Park, if at all possible. It is truly an amazing place. The peace and tranquility you experience there will be with you for a long time.
Hope you have enjoyed this post. I'd love to hear from you!
Until next time, all the best to you for a better tomorrow, as we all work together to build our Steem Community! 👍 😊
Respectfully,
Steemian @roleerob
Posted using Busy.org and “immutably enshrined in the blockchain” on Thursday, 20 September 2018! Updated on the Hive blockchain on Saturday, 26 Oct 2024.



Source: Glowtext.com
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