The Gardens in San Diego’s Balboa Park

Share this:

Mauve and purple flowers in the gardens of Balboa Park

Balboa Park in San Diego, California contains several gardens for visitors to enjoy

San Diego’s Balboa Park contains museums, cultural centres, art, interesting architecture and walking paths. Beyond the beautiful landscaping and mature trees along pathways throughout the park are a number of distinct gardens.

Balboa Park was created in the late 1800s. The first landscaping began in 1892 when Kate Sessions, now known as the “Mother of Balboa Park” offered to plant 100 trees a year. The city worked on a master plan for the park in the early 1900s. Development of the park has continued over the years with two world fairs playing a significant role in what is in the park today. The 1915-16 Panama-California Exposition commemorated the opening of the Panama Canal. The California Pacific International Exposition was held in 1935-36 to boost the local economy during the Depression.

Old Cactus Garden

Cacti and stone fireplace in Old Cactus Garden in Balboa Park

The Old Cactus Garden was created for the 1935-36 California Pacific International Exposition under the direction of Kate Sessions. It contains cacti and succulents as well as exotic African and Australian Protea plants.

Old Cactus Garden in Balboa Park

Alcazar Garden

Formal hedges of Alcazar Garden in Balboa Park

The design of the Alcazar Garden is patterned after the gardens of Alcazar Castle in Seville, Spain. It is a formal garden with boxwood hedges, fountains, colourful tilework and a pergola. About 7,000 annuals are planted each year. The garden was originally created for the 1935-36 California Pacific International Exposition and has been reconstructed to replicate that design.

Tilework and pergola in Balboa Park Alcazar Garden

Inez Grant Parker Memorial Rose Garden

Rose garden overlooking canyon in Balboa Park

The Inez Grant Parker Rose Memorial Garden has about 1,600 roses of different varieties. The Balboa Park website states that the roses are in bloom from March through December with April and May being peak blooming months. I visited in mid-March. Only a scattering of roses were in bloom at that time.

Red roses in bloom at Balboa Park

Desert Garden

Balboa Park Desert Garden

The Desert Garden sits next to the rose garden and contains succulents and drought-resistant plants from around the world. Paths through the garden create a peaceful, quiet space, a space that invites lingering and sitting a while. The peak blooming period for this garden is January through March and I did find a few plants in bloom. However the shapes and varying shades of green in these plants would make this garden interesting at any time of year.

Cacti and trees in Balboa Park Desert Garden

Florida Canyon Native Plant Reserve

Both the rose garden and the desert garden overlook the Florida Canyon Native Plant Preserve. The view of the canyon contributes to the peaceful feeling in both of those gardens. The canyon creates a separation from the rest of the city. Its 150 acres and natural landscape contain many hiking and biking trails.

Florida Canyon Native Plant Preserve in San Diego

Japanese Friendship Garden

Japanese Friendship Garden in Balboa Park

The 12-acre Japanese Friendship Garden is an expression of friendship between San Diego and its sister city, Yokohama. The design is based on centuries-old Japanese techniques adapted to San Diego’s climate. Water, stones, hills and valleys, traditional elements of a Japanese garden, work with the plants to create a serene tranquility.

Light of Friendship lantern
Light of Friendship lantern

Wisteria on a pergola in the Japanese Friendship Garden
Wisteria on a pergola

Japanese Friendship Garden pond

Pathway in the Japanese Friendship Garden

The Garden offers a variety of educational programs, exhibits and festivals. A tea ceremony was underway when I visited.

Botanical Building and Lily Pond

Botanical Building at Balboa Park
Botanical Building

The Botanical Building and the adjacent Lily Pond and Lagoon were built for the 1915-16 Panama-California Exposition. The building is one of the largest lath structures in the world. Inside it contains over 2,000 plants including ferns, orchids and other tropical plants.

Lily Pond at Balboa Park
Lily Pond

Lush tropical vegetation inside the Balboa Park Botanical Building
Inside the Botanical Building

Orchids inside the Balboa Park Botanical Building
Orchids inside the Botanical Building

Other Gardens

I spent two afternoons exploring Balboa Park when I was in San Diego and didn’t make it to all of the gardens in the park. Other gardens include an Australian Garden containing many plants gifted to San Diego by the country of Australia for the United States Bicentennial in 1976, a drought-tolerant California Native Plant Garden, the formal English-Romantic-style Marston House Garden, Palm Canyon with more than 450 palm trees, and Zoro Garden, a sunken stone grotto butterfly garden originally designed as a nudist colony during the 1935 California-pacific Exposition.

All of the gardens, with the exception of the Japanese Friendship Garden which has an admission charge, are free to visit. Most are open daily year-round. Check the Balboa Park website for specific details on each garden. For information on other attractions in Balboa Park read my post Exploring San Diego’s Balboa Park.

Never miss a story. Sign up for Destinations Detours and Dreams free monthly e-newsletter and receive behind-the-scenes information and sneak peaks ahead.

Balboa Park in San Diego, California contains several gardens for visitors to enjoy #California #SanDiego #garden #park
Japanese Friendship Garden is one of several gardens in Balboa Park in San Diego, California for visitors to enjoy #California #SanDiego #garden #park

PIN IT

Balboa Park in San Diego, California contains several gardens for visitors to enjoy #California #SanDiego #garden #park
Gardens in Balboa Park: Balboa Park in San Diego, California has a number of beautiful gardens. Japanese garden, formal gardens, roses, desert plants, native preserve, lily pond, botanical building, orchids

Share this:

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply to Ken DowellCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

4 Comments

  1. Many beautiful gardens. I would particularly be drawn to the cactus garden and the desert garden. I’m always fascinated by desert vegetation and I love the colors of the desert.

    1. Ken, I too am fascinated by the desert vegetation and colours. I’d always imagined the desert landscape to be bland and monotone until I visited Arizona for the first time.

    1. Theresa, there is so much to see in Balboa Park it can be a bit intimidating at first, but great to wander through. Another place I really enjoyed in Sand Diego was Old Town. Enjoy your trip.