January 12, 2025
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With orange spines on its leaves and bright purple flowers, porcupine tomato (Solanum pyracanthos) looks like it’s from another planet. I spotted this one at Denver Botanic Gardens. This is Part 7 and my final post from my visit last September.
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Crossroads Garden
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Let’s start near DBG’s entrance, at the Crossroads Garden, where potted aloes and other Dr. Seussian plants cluster under hail-damaged light globes.
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Shaggy-trunked yuccas stand upright like meerkats amid sunflowers and other fall-blooming perennials. Behind them, juniper hedges as tall as tsunami waves border a long, showy perennial garden.
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Yucca starbursts
O’Fallon Perennial Walk
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Sunflowers glowed like tiny suns during my morning visit.
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The bees were pleased.
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The raunchily named hairy balls plant was growing nearby.
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You can see where it gets the name.
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Looking back at the tropical conservatory’s diamond-patterned roof
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Grasses catching the light
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Artemisia (I think), feathery and touchable
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A gorgeous combo: yellow sunflowers and ‘Black Lace’ elderberry against a shaggy juniper hedge
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Sunflowers and melon-colored agastache look pretty together too.
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Rosy inflorescence of an ornamental grass
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Agastache and verbascum
El Pomar Waterway
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The El Pomar Waterway is a long channel of water lined with flowering grasses.
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A sage-green wall follows the waterway, which is punctuated by cobalt pots of cacti and succulents — a surprising sight. How do they keep these dry-loving plants from getting soggy feet? They must sit high up in the pots, separated from the water.
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The plants’ unique forms are shown off against the stucco wall.
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The grassy ribbon leads to a blue-tiled water wall…
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…where orange cannas smolder.
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Shazam!
Romantic Gardens
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Nearby, the Romantic Gardens offer roses and other “romantic” plants in beds accented with Little-and-Lewis-style columns.
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Asters in full bloom
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The columns give a Mediterranean vibe.
The Ellipse
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The formal Ellipse garden features an elliptical raised pond. Bristling in the center is a glass sculpture by Dale Chihuly called Colorado.
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And that wraps up my 7-part series on Denver Botanic Gardens! I hope you enjoyed the fall tour through their beautiful gardens. For a look back at DBG’s Monet Pool, Japanese Garden, and bonsai display, click here.
You can also find posts I’ve written about Denver Botanic from earlier years on my Must-See Gardens page.
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