Announcement: The garden will NOT be open during May 2019. It will be open during April, and from June through September.
This is a restored habitat where you can see and learn about American ginseng in a natural environment.
A few decades ago this land was logged but not clear-cut. Then it was unoccupied for a number of years. Between being unoccupied (which made the land a sort of “free for all”) and the ecosystem destruction that comes with logging, most of the wild ginseng was here was wiped out.
Still, some pockets survived. Microhabitats that provided the perfect environment for ginseng persisted because they existed in spots too difficult to reach for loggers.
The ethical diggers who frequented these hills protected patches they found by pulling off the leaves of plants they didn’t dig. They made a point to not dig all they found in a habitat. They did this so they could come back year after year to harvest without taking too large a toll on the population.
It helped that this all occurred and then we came along to occupy the land before the frenzy caused by the popular television shows romanticizing the pillage of American ginseng.
In the area I’m using for the public garden there was no ginseng left and very few of the companions because of the logging that happened long ago. Now the trees have grown back and although the transition from pioneer cedars to mixed hardwood is still underway, the area is once again suitable for plants that enjoy the deep shade, like ginseng, goldenseal, ferns, bloodroot and cohoshes.
I’ve made trails, planted “virtually wild” ginseng, transplanted companion plants, and labeled or marked everything (this will be ongoing). Many thanks to my friend Layne Sleeth and her husband Brian for the help with labor and donation of maidenhair ferns!
I don’t know if there’s anything else like it in the country. If so, it hasn’t shown up in my internet searches to find one. If you know of any public ginseng gardens in natural habitats, please let me know so I can link to it here. We can create a “ginseng trail” for ginseng lovers like the wine trails from cellar to cellar enjoyed by wine lovers. It would be interesting to travel from habitat to habitat in other areas to note the differences between them all.
CALL OR EMAIL AHEAD use the contact information (click here or see menu) to get in touch and I’ll mail the address and directions.
There is NO CELLPHONE SIGNAL in this area, so make sure to call before you leave Kingston or Huntsville to make sure I’m here if you haven’t emailed ahead of time to set an appointment. You will need a truck or car without low profile tires. If it has rained a lot recently, the bridges could be flooded. See below about “About the Road to get Here” for details about the drive here.
Usually we’re open from May through September. For 2019 we will not be open during the month of May. It is by appointment only. If the response to this project is great, I’ll set regular hours and days. I’ll always make the best effort I can to accommodate visitors, especially those who are travelling from a distance and are on tight schedules. CALL OR EMAIL AHEAD use the contact information (click here or see menu) to get in touch and I’ll mail the address and directions.
How Much does it Cost?
Free. I will have a donation can handy for those who are willing and able to support the garden.
$20/car for the optional escorted “Herb Drive” (see below)
About the Road to get Here
In the town of Kingston there are places to eat and other things to see. Kingston is only 12 miles away, but it takes about 40 minutes to get there from here if you drive slow on the dirt road. Driving fast gets you there faster, but increases the odds of punctured tires and developing new rattles in your vehicle 🙂
Visit the Wild Ozark Ginseng Garden & Nursery
Eventually I want to have a little storefront here, but for now it’s just a little spot across the creek where ginseng and companions are growing. Here’s a little schematic of the plan:
You also can see American ginseng growing at the Compton Gardens in Bentonville, AR. Wild Ozark received a grant from United Plant Savers to install a sanctuary garden there. It’s still immature and will be for a few more years, but the little recreated habitat will fill out over the years. Each spring, we’ll bring new plants to replace the ones that don’t survive the squirrels or whatever other hazards might befall the plants in a tended garden.
There might also still be one specimen plant at the Ozark Folk Center’s Herb Garden in Mountainview, AR. It’s been many years since I’ve visited there, though, so can’t say for sure.
The garden here is a natural setting, it’s not a park in an urban environment just growing a few ginseng plants. Wild Ozark’s Ginseng Garden is a true habitat and demonstration of the ecosystem that supports wild American ginseng.
This morning I walked through the nursery area to fulfill the last of the 2024…
This year started out with low inventory because I didn't get a chance to plant…
The ginseng is beginning to unfurl. Some are already unfurled, mostly the yearlings. Goldenseal in…
The woods are still wrapped in the relative peace of winter around here at Wild…
PARCHED. If I wanted to dig any roots right now, I'd have a heckuva time…
The weather forecast calls for possible tennis ball hail tonight, so I figured I'd better…
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Very cool, Madison. The blog is doing that index thing again and the post isn't formatted correctly when I arrive. But I did get it read and perhaps one day we'll be there to visit and see all the amazing work you've done.
janet
So when I clicked on the Reader link/s, I got the index thing and the weird blog. Once I submitted a comment, I was taken to the real page with the correct blog format. Hmmmmm.
Would love to see you out here, Janet! Thanks for mucking through it for me, lol! I wish I knew why it was doing that, but I can't get it to show me on my end what it's doing. I may try disabling my index to see if that's the problem. Got the coffee roasted today, btw ;)
(If anyone else is having this issue, please let me know. Maybe I'll get enough clues to figure out the problem. In the meantime, my apologies.)