Crevice garden at the Denver Botanic Gardens Photo: Denver Botanic Gardens |
I recently attended a crevice garden building workshop put on by Plant Select® and hosted by CSU. Plant Select is a non-profit collaboration of Colorado State University, Denver Botanic Gardens, and professional horticulturists (https://plantselect.org/.) The workshop was part of a two-day Plant Select conference specifically for landscape professionals. Landscape companies are increasingly using plants from the Plant Select collection because they flourish with less water and are tough and resilient in challenging climates such as our Rocky Mountain region. They told me they also have been getting more requests from their clients to build crevice gardens. CSU supplied the large bare expanse of an ugly eyesore outside the doors of the Colorado State University Horticulture Center.
"Before" photo of planting area outside of Colorado State University Horticulture Center Photo: Google Maps |
Within just five hours, the workshop participants built seven crevice gardens with different types of materials such as red flagstone, rip rap and even the remnants of someone’s concrete driveway. Plant Select arranged to have tons of a soil mixture called “Goldilocks” that consisted of sand, breeze and a small amount of compost (10 %.) Note that it is a very porous and gravely mix unlike the soil in our yards.
Team building a crevice garden from flagstone. Photo: Nancy Shepard |
While I won’t try to summarize all the steps in building a
crevice garden (see more resources below,) I’ll share a few key take-always for
me:
Recycled dyed
concrete
Recycled dyed concrete. Photo: Nancy Shepard |
Kenton talking about the recycled concrete crevice garden built by workshop participants. Photo: Nancy Shepard |
Bare root planting
Kenton demonstrating bare root planting. Photo: Nancy Shepard |
Photo: Denver Botanic Gardens |
In the crevice garden, a wide range of plants can be offered a variety of positions for both their tops and roots. Illustration by Kenton Seth |
It's Ok to break the rules
Several times during our day long workshop, Kenton would remind us that it is Ok to break the rules. If you see crevice building instructions that have specific rock alignment or specific size gaps between rocks, that doesn't mean you have to do yours like that. He encouraged us to experiment because building crevice gardens is a creative process that evolves as it progresses.
Team building a crevice garden out of rip rap stone. Photo: Nancy Shepard |
Kenton is a Colorado-based garden designer specializing in crevice gardens, xeric native and meadows. Kenton worked in public horticulture at a local botanic garden for ten years and then in the nursery trade for several more before starting his design/build company, Paintbrush Gardens in 2013. He writes for a variety of local, national, and international magazines and travels to lecture, from across town to across the seas. For more information see his blog: https://kentonjseth.blogspot.com/
Resources to learn more about crevice garden building
https://arapahoe.extension.colostate.edu/2024/05/02/gardening-in-the-cracks/
https://ucanr.edu/blogs/blogcore/postdetail.cfm?postnum=55202
https://extension.psu.edu/crevice-gardens-life-between-the-cracks
https://gardens.duke.edu/garden-talk-060123
https://www.fortlewis.edu/fort-lewis-college-news/news-detail/where-the-orostachys-iwarenge-grow
The Crevice Garden: How to make the perfect home for plants from rocky places by Paul Spriggs and Kenton Seth
https://www.filbertpress.com/our-books/the-crevice-garden