Fall at Denver Botanic Gardens: Entry and Water-Smart Garden

January 06, 2025

As much of the country, including Texas, tucks into flannels and wool socks to stay warm this week, let’s float back in time to the golden days of a Colorado autumn. In late September last year, I made two visits to Denver Botanic Gardens, one of my favorite public gardens in the U.S. Today I’m kicking off a 7-part virtual tour.

Denver is a pioneer in xeriscaping — Denver Water actually coined the word xeriscape back in 1981 — so it’s nice to see a dry garden of native and adapted plants upon arrival. Yuccas, grasses, and other low-water plants grow in a gravel garden between the street and sidewalk.

Entry garden

Closer to the entrance, hot-colored annuals and perennials take over in a sunset-hued bonanza.

This is a more typical botanical-garden display, not a xeriscape certainly, but it’s a crowd-pleaser.

I admired salvia…

…gomphrena and jewels-of-Opar…

…and luscious dahlias.

Dahlias and salvia

A red-leaf redbud echoes the rosy hues of gomphrena and coleus — so good!

Roads Water-Smart Garden

I bypassed the showy perennial walk near the entrance and made a beeline for the Roads Water-Smart Garden, my favorite area of DBG. Designed in the 1990s by Colorado plantswoman, designer, and author Lauren Springer (whose personal garden I visited later), the Water-Smart Garden “shows off the flower power of drought-tolerant plants and demonstrates ways to group plants with similar watering requirements. It brings together plants from Colorado and other semi-arid regions of North and South America, the Mediterranean, South Africa and Central Asia,” according to DBG’s website.

Combining spiky and soft texture, bold forms, and rich foliage and flower color, it’s always stunning.

Feast your eyes on these low-water beauties.

I swear I walked this gravel path for 30 minutes, taking in all the views.

I love muhly grasses in autumn.

Agave and cholla are good in any season.

Garlic chives remind me of home.

So does autumn sage (Salvia greggii).

So good, right?

Really, there’s no bad view here.

California fuchsia

All of those images were taken on the gravel path running though the Water-Smart Garden, which offers the best views. But you can also enjoy one side of it from the main walk, which sits a little below the sloping garden.

Lucky Denver gardeners to have this example for their own water-thrifty gardens!

Amphitheater

Directly across is a grassy amphitheater, where DBG hosts a summer concert series. Again, lucky Denverites!

Up next: The Steppe Garden, Ornamental Grasses Garden, and Woodland Mosaic Garden at Denver Botanic.

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Digging Deeper

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All material © 2024 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

10 responses to “Fall at Denver Botanic Gardens: Entry and Water-Smart Garden”

  1. Paula Stone says:

    Very inspirational combinations.

  2. Kris P says:

    It’s impressive! I deeply regret missing the opportunity to see it as part of the Denver Fling. I appreciate the opportunity to see it virtually through your eyes.

  3. James Robinson says:

    Every time we go to Denver, we go to DBG. It is so inspirational. Although the entire garden is wonderful, my favorite part is the water smart area. We were also there this Fall and got to spend a couple of days there. Thanks for the recap!

  4. I love that botanical garden! I’ve never been there in autumn, but I’m assuming it’s beautiful in all seasons. 🙂

  5. Great visit! My first (brief) interest in gardens was as a high schooler in the early 1980’s, visiting with my father. Last visit was with Susan Cohan, led by Panayoti a decade ago. Your images show plants filled in, plus Salvia greggii I had no clue could grow up there.

    • Pam/Digging says:

      A tour with Panayoti and Susan must have been quite special. And how cool that DBG was an early spark for your interest in gardens.

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