Explore the Gardens

The NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens are located at the corner of 12th Ave. N. and 18th St. N. in Fargo ND.

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Garden Areas

These raised beds are designed for gardeners who may be wheelchair-bound or otherwise unable to bend or garden in ground-level beds.

Directly off the small parking area, these raised beds are designed for gardeners who may be wheelchair-bound or otherwise unable to bend or garden in ground-level beds. They are surrounded by concrete for accessibility and are planted with different types of annual flowers and ornamental grasses.

Accessible garden beds at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens.

These beds are an official display garden of All-America Selections and contain 200-300 cultivars of sun-loving annuals.

Located in the southeast corner of the area, these beds contain 200-300 cultivars of sun-loving annuals. These beds are an official display garden of All-America Selections and contain some of the newest annuals available while still showcasing old favorites. The best time to view the bedding plant trials is July through the first hard freeze.

Garden beds used for the Bedding Plant Trials at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens

All-America Selections winners from the current year plus the previous five years are planted here in a landscape setting.

All-America Selections cultivars are planted in a separate bed west of the bedding plant trials. Winners from the current year plus the previous five years are planted here in a landscape setting.

Garden beds showcase All-America Selections winners at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens.

This is an official display garden of the American Daylily Society and contains almost 2000 daylily cultivars and species.

These are the farthest west gardens and contain almost 2000 daylily cultivars and species. This is an official display garden of the American Daylily Society and was the first official public historic daylily display garden for that organization. Daylily cultivars are considered historic if they are registered with the Society prior to 1990. Some cultivars bloom as early as May and others as late as September, but the peak time to view these beds is mid-July through early August.

North Dakota State University Daylily Cultivars

NDSU Historic Daylily Display Garden Facebook Page

Flowers in the Daylily Display Gardens at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens

This dry, shady area under a stand of poplar and pine trees contains shade-tolerant perennials and annuals.

The area is unofficially named Kiesling Grove after the Plant Pathology Department Chair who had this area planted. Perennials planted here include Hosta, Bergenia, Filipendula, and Astilbe cultivars. There is also a small area for shade-tolerant annuals.

Plants in the Shade Area at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens

This area receives both sun and shade and includes perennials that are tolerant of different light conditions. Some genera here, such as Hosta cultivars, are also planted in the full shade area for comparison.

Plants from an area that receives both sun and shade at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens

This full sun area consists of plants that are low-maintenance and require less water once they are established.

Perovskia (Russian Sage), Echinacea, Nepeta (Catmint), and Baptisia (False Indigo) are some of the genera planted here.

Various plants from the Xeric Planting area at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens

This area consists of grasses and forbs native to the prairies of the upper Midwest.

Grasses include Schizachyrium scoparium (Little Bluestem), Sporobolus heterolepis (Prairie Dropseed), Stipa viridula (Green Needlegrass), and Bouteloua gracilis (Blue Grama). Forbs include Dalea purpurea (Prairie Clover), Echinacea, and Symphyotrichum (Aster).

Plants in the Meadow Garden at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens

This bed contains perennials that have been named ‘Perennial Plant of the Year’ by the Perennial Plant Association.

Perennials named ‘Perennial Plant of the Year’ bloom in a bed at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens.

Native and non-native perennial grasses are located here.

Genera include Miscanthus (Silvergrass), Andropogon (Big Bluestem), Festuca (Fescue), Calamagrostis (Reed Grass), and Molina (Purple Moor Grass).

Ornamental grasses planted in a perennial bed at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens

These gardens are dedicated to plants specifically geared toward attracting pollinators such as birds, butterflies, bees, and wasps.

Genera found in these areas include Asclepias (Milkweed or Butterfly flower), Symphyotrichum (Aster), Monarda (Bee Balm), Salvia, Liatris, and Eupatorium (Joe Pye Weed).

Plants that attract pollinators in a bed at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens

Additional garden areas to explore.

Other areas to explore are the Darwin Perennials hardiness trials, a small collection of German bearded iris, and other perennials used in the upper Midwest.

Plant beds at the NDSU Horticulture Research & Demonstration Gardens