Ruth Bancroft Garden

It contains more than 2,000 cactus, succulents, trees, and shrubs native to California, Mexico, Chile, South Africa, and Australia.

[1][2] In the 1950s, Bancroft brought home a single succulent, an Aeonium grown by plant breeder Glenn Davidson.

[3] By 1972, the collection was moved to its current site, when the orchard was cut down and the land was rezoned.

[3] Today the Garden is an outstanding landscape of xerophytes (dry-growing plants).

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Trees, succulents, and other plants at the Garden.