Native Gardens in St. Louis, Missouri
Classes Show How to Grow Plants From Your Native State
By Walt Crocker, published Feb 14, 2006
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I used to live in a rural area on Highway 100 near Pacific, Missouri. Highway 100 used to be part of the old historic Route 66. A few miles up the road from where I lived is one of my favorite places; the Shaw Nature Reserve. For many years it was called the Shaw Arboreum, but that was changed in 2000. The world-famous Missouri Botanical Garden, (formerly Shaw’s Garden after its founder Henry Shaw,) sits up in the city of St. Louis, not all that far from downtown. In 1925, the air pollution in the city was having an adverse effect on the garden’s orchid and exotic plant collection. The Garden decided to buy five working farms, a total of some 1,300 acres, and move the exotic plants out to the country where the air was cleaner. The Nature Reserve wasn’t open to the public until 1940, when Route 66 was built right in front of it. Since the 1970’s, the Reserve has expanded to 2,500 acres.When I lived in Pacific I would walk the trails there two, sometimes three times a week. I would usually start in the Whitmire Flower Garden. I would get there real early in the morning, just as the sun was coming up and before anyone else arrived. There was a quiet little meditation spot underneath an oak tree and right next to a frog pond. I would spend about an hour there, listening to the occasional croak, sometimes reading my book. Then I would usually spend a couple of minutes sitting on a bench next to Mary before I took off on the trails. Mary was buried in the garden, or more likely the garden was built around her. Then it was off across the prairie grass to a lake ringed with Cypress trees, then on to a wooded area filled with deer. The great thing about the Reserve is the diversity of plants there. Every single habitat that is native to the central part of the country is found there, from the prairie to oak-hickory forests to wetlands to limestone bluffs.

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Takeaways
- The school is held at the Whitmire Flower Garden at the Shaw Nature Reserve.
- Classes cover a wide variety of topics related to growing native plants.
- A growing manual will soon be available on their website.
Did You Know?
Henry Shaw was a wealthy merchant who brought plants from all over the world.Comments
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