Children's Garden

1. Kid's Amphitheater and Solstice Stones

The Kid's Amphitheater is located in the Children's Garden. It serves as an outdoor classroom for our Children's Programs and Summer Lecture Series and a gathering space for both children and adults. The surrounding garden is representative of the natural landscape adjacent to Gore Creek in Vail Village. The Solstice Stones frame sunrise and sunset at summer and winter solstice.


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2. Hike up the Gore Creek- Children's Garden

This garden simulates a climb alongside Gore Creek from 8,200 feet - the elevation of Betty Ford Alpine Gardens - to the summit of the Gore Range at 13,000 feet. Beginning in the Kid's Amphitheater, interpretive signs lead visitors through the different life zones up to the alpine zone in the heart of the Gore Mountains. This impressive mountain range forms the backdrop of the gardens themselves and the focal point for this adventure.

Starting in the narrowleaf cottonwood trees surrounding the amphitheater, a winding path follows up through aspen woodlands and past the pond and wetland. Once past the pond the path splits to simulate the ecosystems of the south facing slopes in comparison with north facing slopes. This difference in microclimate is readily apparent looking at the mountain slopes rising above and around the Garden themselves. The left fork follows up through the region known as the 'krummholz' zone where grotesquely stunted aspens reveal the hardships of the climate and give way quickly to the alpine zone where a few stunted spruce and fir are the only break in the landscape.

Following back down from the alpine zone the path dips down through a limestone 'gorge' where ferns and other cliff dwelling plants thrive in the cool damp air. Lodgepole pine and Douglas fir dominate this side of the garden until the path reaches the pond where children can follow stepping-stones across the pond to look more closely at the wetland plantings.

Throughout the garden, footprints of local mammals criss-cross the path in their own habitat from the lowland fox to the mountain lion chasing a mule deer up to the high realm of the pine marten. A relief map of the local river watershed at the entrance to the garden reveals to children how the small mountain creeks interconnect in the different mountain valleys and come together in the main valleys. Near the alpine zone is the 'Tree Ring Council'. At the top of the alpine zone view the Gore Range through the viewing scopes.