is to bring rain water harvesting, regenerative landscapes and Biophilia to your backyard and beyond. Read more about me here
Skip years of trial and error.
Save oodles of time, hundreds of dollars, lessen your carbon footprint and learn all about rainwater harvesting.
Join me as I walk around the Durango Botanic Gardens.
You’re sure to leave with inspiration and practical actions to take in your own landscape.
Abundant Earth Gardens was the name carefully chosen to represent this educational production. The goal was to express an idea that nature has abundant reserves and capacity, if only we learn how to work gracefully with it, and in our Mountain West region, it takes a special knowledge set, which has been produced here.
As a landscape consultant and designer in the high and dry southwest since 2005, I have been asked many probing questions. These 19 presentations by the most accomplished gardeners in our region answer all of them as well as provide a deeper understanding of our conditions here in the West.
Learn to garden with more grace, less effort, and results in which you will find joy and take pride.
I just wanted to thank you so much for the wonderful series of talks... I enjoyed them very much, learned lots, and even discussed them with other gardeners who also had listened to them.
Kate
Tom Heald's myth-busting presentation was wonderful. I loved the slide show too. I hope he writes a book with a chapter on this subject as so many could benefit from this information. A real eye-opener. I would buy several copies.
Julia Ossa
Just received this note: I am so happy I finally got to hear one of your talks since I missed the one in Fort Collins last spring. I love this concept that Eva Montane has come up with. I watch the replay at home on my computer. I particularly like her incorporating a slide presentation. I enjoyed your talk today and the selection of plants that you featured. Great talk!
Plant Select
First-thanks so much for putting this series together. It is WONDERFUL to finally have some support for some of the things I have found to be true in my gardening experience at 7500'! Thanks again for your work putting this together. It has energized my enthusiasm for finding solutions to the challenges we face!
Penny Bieber
These presentations are fantastic! I've been learning so much!!! Your choice of speakers is very inspirational.
Karen
I've been enjoying the series. There will be some practices I will be changing in my personal and professional gardening.
Mike Woods
Thanks so much! My husband and I are listening to the series, learning so much (we are novices for sure!) and enjoying! Thanks!
Belton
Just a note of appreciation to you for facilitating this series. I've thoroughly enjoyed it!! Awesome, competent speakers!!
Marge
Thank you for presenting such a wonderful teleconference. I'll never look at soil, organic matter or fertilizer the same way again. Your questions were right on target and led the discussion in a direction that I believe was helpful to most listeners. Thanks again.
Edith. Pueblo, CO
Fantastic presentation, you have done an exceptional job of these presentations. If you have another, please advise.
Janice Nicholl
What a marvelous contribution to horticulture you have made by creating this particular format for transmitting great information to a large number of people at one time. I look forward to more from Eva Montane in the future.
Joan Franson. Arvada, CO
We have seen the power of rain gardens to transform even the most challenging landscapes.
Our four core pillars serve as our compass for all we do and why we offer these educational resources.
Flourishing landscapes influence human beings. Gardening delivers peace and balance. When our environment is full of peace and balance we can experience that within ourselves. It’s all connected!
Regenerative Landscapes – Work WITH nature for the most successful results. Low maintenance landscapes that are beautiful and fit with the natural environment experience success.
The more we continue to learn the more capacity we have to thrive. These educational products are specialized and a result of two decades of training and real life application.
We support local businesses and partnerships in all we do. From partnerships with 4CORE to Plant Select in Denver, we cultivate our relationships and in turn, we share the benefits with our community.
Cheryl Moore-Gough was the Technical Editor for Horticulture for Zone 4 Magazine from it’s inception in 2008. She has also been an Adjunct Assistant Professor for Montana State University, and a prolific writer on many plant and garden related topics including vegetable growing, seed saving, and ornamental gardening.
Panayoti Kelaidis is Senior Curator and Director of Outreach at the Denver Botanic Gardens. He is a world-renowned plantsman and explorer who has revolutionized Rocky Mountain horticulture, with his countless introductions to horticulture and his avant garde approach to gardening in the West.
Chris Heiler is a green industry social media consultant. Chris regularly speaks at landscape industry events across the country, writes for industry publications, and also shares his social media expertise with hundreds of landscape professionals through his site at LandscapeLeadership.com.
Robert Littlepage APLD; RLA is a licensed landscape architect in both California and Louisiana. Since 1985 he has designed gardens throughout the western United States. He has also consulted on gardens in Louisiana, France and England. In addition to his architecture practice, he is the Founder/Director of the California School of Garden Design, former instructor of design and irrigation at Sierra College, and has an online course to explore.
Sheila Schultz is a celebrated garden designer with a zeal for containers. Recognized by Fine Gardening she has been the winner of their container contest for multiple years and she has been featured many other renowned publications. Sheila’s style is unique in that the textural beauty of the foliage – be it from a perennial, succulent, cactus or grass – takes center stage in her designs.
Mary Ann Newcomer, is a self-proclaimed “garden scribe, scout and speaker.” Garden junkie. Native Idahoan. High and dry in the Intermountain West. Two books: one for Timber Press – Vegetable Gardening in the Mountain States, & The Rocky Mountain Gardener’s Handbook. Encouraging gardeners to get down and dirty.
Robert Nold is an avid gardener constantly exploring how best to garden within the parameters he’s inherited living in the West. His conclusions and discoveries have been published in a host of noteworthy publications including several books he’s authored.
Marcia Tatroe is author of Cutting Edge Gardening in the Intermountain West, described as the first complete gardening book to cover the hot, dry, desert and plains areas of Colorado, Utah, New Mexico and Wyoming, Idaho, Montana. It features how to create your own regional aesthetic, as well as hundreds of practical suggestions to overcome the challenges of gardening in the Intermountain West. Marcia is also a regular contributor to Fine Gardening and a columnist for Denver Post, and Sunset.
Lauren Springer Ogden worked in public gardens on both sides of the Atlantic before receiving her master’s degree in horticulture. At Denver Botanic Gardens, she designed the Watersmart and Romantic Gardens. An award-winning writer and photographer, she is author of The Undaunted Garden, named one of the 75 best American gardening books of the last century by the American Horticultural Society. Lauren and her work have been featured on television and in many publications and books. She is a popular speaker in the United States and Canada.
Mike Bone, plant propagator extraordinaire for the Denver Botanic Gardens, he also is their Curator of Steppe Collection where he has focused his work on seed collection and the study of steppe plants and ecology. Most of his work is done in Western North America but he has traveled to Central Asia to study plants from the steppes and mountains there. He is also actively involved in the Plant Select program as well as the IPPS (International Plant Propagators’ Society).
Tom Heald is the managing partner for the Wyoming Plant Company, specializing in hardy native and adapted plants for local conditions. Previously, Tom was a Wyoming Horticultural Extension Educator where he worked with thousands of homeowners who struggled to grow plants in the challenging Wyoming environment. Many times it was not the homeowner at fault, but the fact that retail outlets were offering inappropriate plant choices for the environment.
Pat Hayward served many years as the Executive Director of Plant Select®, a collaboration of Colorado State University, Denver Botanic Gardens, and regional horticulturists seeking out and distributing the best plants for western gardens. Pat has worked in all facets of Rocky Mountain regional horticulture since 1979. A lecturer, writer and photographer, she has written for numerous national publications, co-authored two books, and her gardens have been featured in regional and national publications.
Eva Montane got her start in ornamental horticulture doing fine perennial maintenance with Genevieve Schmidt of northcoastgardening.com blogging fame. Eva holds a certificate from the California School of Garden Design, is a designer, writer, and educator, and has been published in Colorado Gardener and Zone 4 among other publications. She served as her local Colorado Native Plant Society chapter’s VP for 3 years and guided for the Crested Butte Wildflower Festival 10 years, running. Eva has been running Columbine Landscapes Co in Durango, Colorado since 2015.
Bill Adams owns and operates Sunscapes Rare Plant Nursery, a small specialty nursery growing choice rock garden, hardy native and unusual dryland plants from around the world. He is a leader in the current effort to promote Western Water Wise Landscaping in the City of Pueblo, where he has been instrumental in the designing, planting and maintenance of numerous Water Wise gardens.
Mike Kintgen, Senior Horticulturist at Denver Botanic Gardens. Mike is a remarkable horticulturist who began volunteering at Denver Botanic Gardens when he was just 11 years old and has been there ever since minus a three year hiatus from DBG to intern at Chicago Botanic Garden. Mike holds a degree in Landscape Horticulture from Colorado State University. Mike has since taken over charge of the rock gardens at DBG from Panayoti Kelaidis. Mike’s passion for his subject is clear when seeing him in his garden surrounded by a unique and lovely diversity of plants from around the world; many of which came from his own collecting trips.
Kathy Settevendemie is the Owner-Operator of Blackfoot Native Plant Nursery, a wholesale nursery selling Montana native plants since 2003. She is a board member of the Montana Native Plant Society and conducts workshops on landscaping with native plants throughout western Montana in addition to providing consultations to landowners. Madeline Mazurski will be joining her.
Bob Pennington. Together with his family, Bob bought and revived a defunct plant nursery in 1975, knowing very little about business or growing plants commercially when they started (probably a key to their success he says). Agua Fria Nursery continues to thrive today. Bob is a past president of the American Penstemon Society (APSDEV.org), a founding member and past president of the Santa Fe Botanical Garden, a current board member of the Eriogonum Society (Eriogonum.org), a plant geek, with no formal plant education, and a husband, father, and grandfather.
Jane Shellenberger is the publisher and editor of the independent newsmagazine, Colorado Gardener, “A Thinking Gardener’s Companion”, which she founded in 1996. An eclectic gardener she learned about plants from her botanist mother. She is also the author of the new book Organic Gardener’s Companion, Growing Vegetables in the West.
Joan Franson served as President of Denver Rose Society; Rocky Mountain District Director. She was awarded the Rocky Mountain District Silver Honor Medal in 1978 and the Denver Rose Society Bronze Medal in 2000. A long standing Master Rosarian (Rocky Mountain District Outstanding Consulting Rosarian in 2001), Joan frequently wrote lively and entertaining articles and educational material on roses. At any given time, she grew about 125 roses of all types at home – Hybrid Teas, Grandifloras, Floribundas, Polyanthas, Miniatures, Climbers, Old Garden Roses, Canadian Hardy roses, English or Austin roses, Shrubs and Species. It is even more precious to hear Joan’s wisdom, shared in her own voice here, since she is now departed. Read Joan’s article about miniature roses here.