Conejo Valley Botanic Garden


Conejo Valley Botanic Garden is located in Thousand Oaks, California, and consists of a peak with vista views along with fifteen hillside botanical gardens. It lies next to Conejo Valley Community Garden and immediately across the street from Tarantula Hill, the highest point in Thousand Oaks. It provides a teaching laboratory for what flora works and what does not work in the Conejo Valley.
The 33-acre site consists of a vast variety of endemic plants, water-conserving plants, oak trees, as well as indigenous wildlife. A children’s garden area was added in March 2003, known as Kids’ Adventure Garden. Although the garden itself keeps open most days, Kids’ Adventure Garden and nursery plant sales are only open on Sundays. Admission to the garden is free.
Although its main entrance is found at 400 West Gainsborough Road, it is also accessible from Conejo Community Park, located at the intersection of Hendrix- and Dover Avenues.
The property was first acquired in 1973, while the first parts of the botanical gardens began to emerge in 1976. It is operated by the non-profit Gregor Medel Foundation.

Overview

It consists of a plant sanctuary on a hill overlooking the Conejo Valley. The hill contains 15 unique, hillside specialty gardens. It is home to a variety of hiking trails, which interconnect with other paths leading to various overlook points from the hill. The garden’s many hill paths lead past fruit trees, sections of desert, native plants, Mediterranean plants, herbs, and a butterfly garden. The 1-mile Nature Trail follows a creek which descends into a forested, willow- and oak-filled canyon. It is also home of a bird habitat which is a conservation effort to provide sustenance and sheltering environments for birds and other fauna.

Management

A fifty-year lease agreement between the Conejo Valley Botanic Garden Inc. and Conejo Recreation & Park District was signed on October 18, 1973, with gardeners paying $1 annually in rent. A term of the lease requires the garden to not charge for entry. The organization receives no funding from public agencies and remains exclusively dependent on donations.

Specialty gardens

Its botanical gardens include an Australian garden, a bird habitat, a butterfly garden, an oak tree grove, rare fruit orchard, extensive salvia collections, and more.
Its botanical gardens consist of 15 unique hillside gardens:
Furthermore, Trail of Trees exhibits a total of 72 trees, including 50 different tree species. Each tree is labeled with its family-, botanic- and common name, along with country of origin and planting date. Represented are the Golden Trumpet Tree, the national tree of Brazil, as well as Chinese pistache, Tulip tree, Prunus serrulata 'Kanzan', Cockspur coral, American storax, Shoestring acacia, and others.
Garden Trails are found throughout the gardens. Little Loop Trail leads above the creek through Chaparral and around a meadow. The longer 1-mile Nature Trail follows the creek and descends into a shady, oak-canopied canyon just below the hill with the botanical gardens. After 1/4 mile, steep wooden steps brings the path down into the canyon. After exploring the creek-bed for 1/2 mile, the trail climbs out of the ravine and returns to the main garden area.