Where You Garden

Use the Rainfall Map to find your amount

(Click to View Larger Map)

Use the Zone Finder to determine your temperature zone.

Our primary goal at High Country Gardens has always been to provide the newest and best plants, products and information for planting low-maintenance, waterwise landscapes in the western U.S.

All plants have been garden-tested here in Santa Fe, NM. Our high desert climate is harsh and our soils are poor. At our altitude (7,000 ft.), the sun is intense, the air has very low humidity and summer highs range in the low 90° Fs. Winters are cold (USDA zone 6) and precipitation is scant (13" in a good year).

New customers in the East have also become interested in our plants. Here is our advice on how to choose what works best in different parts of the U.S.

  • The plants in the catalog are well adapted to difficult growing conditions and will thrive throughout most of the western states.
  • Read below for regional information and recommendations.
  • Plants marked with the cowboy hat symbol are only suitable for drier western climates.
  • Plants without the cowboy hat symbol are suitable for most areas of the country depending on their cold hardiness (see Cold Hardiness Zones).
  • The Rainfall Map gives a fascinating glimpse of how precipitation distributes itself across our vast continent.

To determine if a plant is sufficiently cold hardy, the USDA created numbered zones indicating winter low temperatures; the lower the zone number the colder the winter.

Use the Symbols to fine tune your choice

"Xeric" (waterwise) Rabbit Resistant
Very "Xeric" Deer Resistant
Sun all day Attracts Hummingbirds
Morning Sun Attracts Butterflies
All day shade Best in Western US

Growing High Country Garden's plants Across the US

The Intermountain West

Coastal California, OR and WA

The Desert Southwest

(Defined as areas in USDA zones 7,8,9 and 10 with mild winters and very hot summers such as inland CA, southern NV, southern UT, most of AZ, southern NM and southwest TX.)

Regions with very Hot, Humid Summer Climates (USDA zones 6-9)

The same suggestions apply as above with the “Desert Southwest.”

Non-Western States (east of the Mississippi)