Stop looking for love in all the wrong places! Visit the Shop at the Gardens to find that special gift for your Valentine. </h3> For Your Crush </h4> Let the cards express your feelings. Choose from Denver-based card company Idea Chic. These cards offer smooth designs with a pastel candy color palette to give to your sweetheart. The Shop also features Pagosa Springs watercolor artist June Jurcak whose artistry captures vibrant, passionate colors from a Colorado-inspired landscape – elegance in an envelope. Idea Chic</strong> $6 -$5 June Jurcak</strong> $5.50 </p> For Date Night </h4> Stay in for date night and draw a fizzy bath soak made from dead sea salts by Finchberry. Products are preservative free, vegan and handmade. Delight in scents like Darling, a tender fragrance of cherry blossoms, white lily, and violet petals; or bathe in Renegade Honey, a warm honey scent with flecks of gold swirled in a bouquet of amber and almonds. Check out our selection from Mixture, which specializes in small batch, handmade and environmentally friendly bath essentials. Scents like Lauren’s Lavender Garden or Salt and Sage are luxuriously relaxing and beautifully bottled like an aged wine. Light some candles to set the ambiance with Mixture’s 2 oz candles in scents like Blend de Noir – a complex mix of soft power, apple blossom, Anjou pear and lemon zest. Or go bold with Mixture’s black votive candle with notes of deep, woody amber kissed with lemon and lavender. Mixture also offers shave kits and beard groom kits to look and feel your handsomest when stepping out. Finchberry Fizzy Bath Soak</strong> $20 Mixture Bubble Bath</strong> $35 2 oz. votive</strong> $10.95 Mixture Shave Essentials</strong> $36 Beard Essentials</strong> $40 </p> Hello, Lover! </h4> Jewelry lover, that is! Explore our collection of jewelry with artists such as Jenny Walker, Left Hand Studios and Anabel Aram.</p> Anabel Aram’s collection of elegant gold-plated 18k brass jewelry has timeless beauty. Anabel Aram</strong> $65 - $345 Give a lasting reminder of the beautiful flowers at the Gardens. Walker uses vitreous enamel to create unique color variations found in nature. Jenny Walker</strong> $80 - $240 Longmont-based Left Hand Studios offers a variety of styles to fit your fancy, from cats in a widow to peacocks and the house plant parent. Left Hand Studio earrings</strong> $25 </p> Sweet Romance</h4> For your sweetheart with a sweet tooth. Delicious macarons look as pretty as a picture to present to your Valentine, with flavors like Lavender Lemonade, Red Velvet and Café Latte. And don’t forget, honey for your honey. The Shop carries Bee Squared and Highland Honey, both based in Colorado. With creamed honey to flavored honey, you’ll be sure to find a honey to top off tea for two. Finally, delight in Carbondale-based Pollinator Chocolate, whose bars come in delectable lavender or smooth dark cherry. Denver Macaron </strong>$9 (3 pack) - $18 (6 pack) Bee Squared</strong> $25 Honey Sticks </strong>Pack of 10 $5 Pollinator Chocolate</strong> $14</p> Gift Cards </h4> The Shop at the Gardens</a> has gift cards for your Valentine. Bring them to the Gardens for a romantic date where they can select what they love from the Shop, and then stroll the gardens, galleries and Orchid Showcase</a>.</p> Help support our core value of sustainability - bring your own tote or let us gift wrap your present with the purchase of a reusable bag. </p> Come celebrate Valentines Day with us! </strong>This gift guide was contributed by Melissa Silver</strong>, gift shop representative. Photos by Evan Wang</strong>, gift shop representative.</em></p>
</p>With over a dozen unique venue spaces, most of which can be booked in any season, Denver Botanic Gardens hosts hundreds of private events each year. Most of our venues are tucked in corners around our 23 acres, but one of the most versatile sits right at the heart of the Gardens: the UMB Amphitheater Tent</a>.</p>A vast canopy with a spacious interior, the UMB Amphitheater Tent is our largest single rental space, offering endless flexibility for hosting a variety of events. It is a beautiful venue for daytime or nighttime events and features twinkle lights across the ceiling and open-air sides that can be opened or closed as needed.</p>The tent has the ability to host groups of different sizes ranging from a seated reception for 600 guests, a ceremony or graduation for 1,200 guests, or a cocktail reception for 1,200 people. Smaller-scale events can also use the tent for multiple functions; clients can easily host both a wedding ceremony and a reception under the tent without resetting any furnishings between them.</p>Guests can mingle during a cocktail hour or can enjoy al fresco dining surrounded by views of the Gardens in their peak. Add in acoustic music, delicious food prepared by one of our preferred caterers and your own decorative touch, and this space will transform your event into a truly breathtaking experience for your guests. Whether you are hosting a wedding, a corporate event, a non-profit fundraiser or gala, the UMB Bank Amphitheater may just be the venue you are looking for.</p>Contact our Private Events team for more information at private.events@botanicgardens.org</a> or 720-865-3551.</p>
For me, most days in this new year have felt heavy so far. At times it has been hard to bear the many things that are coming at us all the time. On top of that, it is also late winter here in Colorado, which means we have fewer hours of sunshine and can have colder temperatures in late February – yet the snowpack is terribly low so far.</p> I acknowledge that these difficult feelings are valid and real, and at the same time I make it a practice to look for the beautiful things that continue to exist in our world—and they are everywhere! Making time to reconnect with the good things is crucial to staying well and strong, both mentally and physically. A simple walk in a natural area can give us the space to meet again with beauty and joy, to stretch muscles, engage with curiosity and to regulate our nervous systems. Open spaces are known for their ability to boost the immune system, lower blood pressure and lift the mood, so getting outside into a natural landscape can help us feel better. </p> Evolutionary Influences</h4> For most of human history (100,000+ generations) we have been directly bonded to our local ecosystems for survival. Our innate attraction to certain landscapes is linked to our ancestor’s survival instincts. They were driven to find places that provided food, water, shelter and relative safety. The presence of water, signs of animal life, healthy vegetation and pockets of open space can signal enhanced conditions for survival. Consequently, these environmental preferences are still hardwired in us. They speak to us subconsciously about sustenance and safety. Feelings of security help regulate the nervous system, can enhance creativity and improve sleep quality, heart rate, digestion and immune function.</p> Go for a Winter Walk at Chatfield Farms</h4> Chatfield Farms is a 700-acre native plant refuge and birding hotspot with 2.5 miles of nature trails, and over 15 curated gardens with various themes. The south side of Chatfield Farms offers a unique and unexpected respite from its urban surroundings, featuring a wetlands area, places to see animals and signs of their presence, hear birds sing and watch them fly, and see a variety of plants. </p> To begin your winter well-being walk, make your way from the Robert & Judi Newman Welcome Center to the Green Farm Barn. </p> Here is a map of Chatfield Farms</a>. </p> Green Farm Barn</h4> You will know you are at the Green Farm Barn when you see the silo and a red barn. Now, wait a moment: The Green Farm Barn is red? Yes! It is named for the Green family, who lived and worked here around 1918. </p> Before them, the Ute, Arapahoe, Comanche, Puebloan and other Nations lived or travelled through here because this area is an abundant crossroads between the plains and the mountains.</p> Take some time to explore the gardens near the silo and you will find plants like Echinacea sp</em>.(coneflower), Bouteloua gracilis</em> (blue gramma) and Anaphalis margaritacea</em> (pearly everlasting). These plants provide winter interest for human visitors and a source of food and cover for many birds and small mammals. All three of these plants are native to this area and have medicinal properties.</p> Deer Creek Natural Area</h4> Turning your attention to the east, you will see the majestic forms of Populus deltoides</em> (cottonwoods) lining Deer Creek. Venture down the wide dirt trail (the Dora & Pauline Robert Riparian Trail (#31 on the map) on the south side of the creek. Notice the abundance of birds as you approach the ponds and look at the creek to spot evidence of beaver activity. If you continue, the trail bends north. Here you will see a prairie dog colony. If you are lucky, you could also spot a coyote, bobcat, hawk, eagle or deer. Following the north side of the creek will lead you back toward the Welcome Center.</p> Note: The Dora & Pauline Robert Natural Trail can be accessible for sturdy wheelchairs but is not plowed for snow in winter. </p> Please visit us in all seasons to experience the ever-changing beauty here and make a connection to your local ecosystem! </p>