Alpine Rock Garden
Part 5

29. Aspen Grove
One of the most common and beautiful trees in Colorado is the aspen, Populus tremuloides. Aspens are in the willow family and are closely related to cottonwood, birch and poplar trees. They are aggressive species that find their foothold in recently burned landscapes. Fire is essential to the proliferation of aspen in the wild. Aspen grow very quickly and form tremendous colonies of trees off of a single root system that can spread for miles. A grove in Utah is believed to be one of if not the largest living organism on the earth. In the understory of aspen groves, one can find a tremendous variety of plants including columbines, Aquilegia spp. lupines, Lupinus spp. and ferns.


Campanula rotundifolia

Planted in the Alpine Rock Garden Aspen Grove are five species of columbine, including Aquilegia barnebyi, wild parsley, Conioselinum scopulorum, and the common harebell, Campanula rotundifolia. The Aspen Grove also features a striking boulder formation that was painstakingly disassembled and removed from its natural location, transported to Betty Ford Alpine Gardens and reassembled precisely as it existed in nature.

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30. Log Cabin
The log cabin near the north entrance to the Alpine Gardens was constructed to resemble historic mountain cabins and acts as a tool shed and workshop for the garden staff. Plants in the surrounding garden include thimbleberry, Rubus parviflorus and red-berried elder, Sambucus pubens.

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