Moorten Botanical Garden

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130155

If you follow any lifestyle, fashion or beauty blogger, chances are you’ve seen some variation of the photo above.  For those who don’t keep up with influencers, the image is of the cactarium – aka cacti terrarium – at Moorten Botanical Garden in Palm Springs.  The structure has been documented on social media so frequently as of late that The Telegraph recently dubbed it “the most Instagrammed greenhouse in the world.”  I first learned about the garden in December 2015 while reading this article about the desert in Sunset magazine.  In the days that followed, I spotted pictures of the place pop up in the IG feeds of no less than three bloggers I follow.  Moorten it seemed was everywhere!  Considering I had called the Coachella Valley home for three years by that point, I thought it was a bit sacrilegious that I had never seen the idyll in person myself.  So I promptly dragged the Grim Cheaper right on over there a few weeks later – and was thrilled to learn upon doing so that the site is a filming location!

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Moorten Botanical Garden was established by railroad-worker-turned-actor Chester Moorten, who was best known for appearing in the Keystone Cops silent films.  Upon being diagnosed with Tuberculosis in the ‘30s, Chester left Los Angeles and headed east to Palm Springs with the hope that the desert air would provide him some relief.  A longtime green thumb, Moorten started cultivating and selling cacti and other desert foliage at a downtown Palm Springs shop/nursery that he opened in 1938 and quickly earned himself the nickname “Cactus Slim.”  Everyone from area locals to the actor’s celebrity friends were customers.

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130205

In 1940, Moorten married botanist Patricia Haliday.  Together the couple expanded Chester’s business to include landscape design and were soon hired by such luminaries as Walt Disney, Red Skelton, Jimmy Van Heusen, Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby and Lily Pons to create backyards at their desert homes.  Walt even tapped the duo to curate the foliage for Frontierland at his soon-to-be-built Disneyland Resort.

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The couple also expanded their nursery into a cactus museum of sorts, using it as a showcase for their growing landscape business.

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Cultivated from plants gathered during the couple’s many world travels, the site soon evolved into an area attraction.

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In its early days, such luminaries as Dwight Eisenhower, Mamie Eisenhower, and Ginger Rogers were all known to pop in.

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In 1955, Chester and Patricia moved the garden to its current home, a 1.5-acre plot of land at 1701 South Palm Canyon Drive complete with a sprawling Mediterranean-style estate that became their residence.

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Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130136

Dubbed “Cactus Castle,” the 1929 dwelling was originally commissioned by nature photographer Stephen Willard and his wife, Beatrice, who lived on the premises until 1947.

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Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130137

When Slim passed away in 1980, Patricia continued to live at the estate, but handed over the daily operation of the garden to the couple’s son, Clark, who shared his parents’ deep love of horticulture.

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  Clark then moved into Cactus Castle with his family upon Patricia’s passing in 2010.  He continues to run the garden to this day, carrying on his parents’ legacy with gusto.

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Currently, Moorten Botanical Garden, which is also known as Desertland, is comprised of 3,000 different varieties of plants organized into 9 geographical regions including California, Texas, Arizona, Baja California, Colorado, the Mojave Desert, the Sonoran Desert, South Africa, and South America.

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Woven landscapes greet visitors at every turn . . .

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. . . as do unique relics like the loveseat created from a cedar burl pictured below . . .

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. . . and vegetative curiosities such as the extraordinary S-shaped tree situated just outside of Cactus Castle’s front door, which was moved to the garden from Palm Canyon after being struck by lightning.

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The bolt caused the tree to burn and collapse to the side, but it survived and continued to grow in a curved position.

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130142

The Moortens propped it up on rocks after re-locating it and subsequently created a waterfall underneath (which was not turned on the day we were there).

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130144

Moorten Botanical Garden also boasts an array of crystals, rocks, fossils, antique mining tools, a gift shop/nursery, and a menagerie of desert animals.

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130107

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130191

Its biggest draw, though, is the cactarium.  An invention of Chester’s, the shutter-worthy structure was erected one day when Patricia happened to be out of town.

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130159

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130177

As Clark explained to The Telegraph, “Originally the cactarium had a wooden frame, and it was covered with double thickness window screen for shade.  My father wanted a more greenhouse-type of structure, so he bent all the pipes while mother was away for a week in around 1976 or 1977.”  Patricia was reportedly not at all happy with the result.  Little did she know the rounded shed would become one of the desert’s biggest draws some forty years later.  Though not much to look at from the outside . . .

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130178

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130179

. . . the cactarium’s interior is pretty spectacular.

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Filled with rare specimens of plants . . .

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. . . the structure is literally dripping with greenery.

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Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130158

Looking around Moorten Botanical Garden, it is not hard to see why so many are enchanted with the place and how Instagram has served to make it even more popular.

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The site is just that picturesque.

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True to form, I ran into a popular blogger, iPhone camera in hand and photographer husband trailing closely behind, while I was there.

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Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130169

Moorten Botanical Garden is not just an Instagram star, though.  The site has also popped up a couple of times onscreen.

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130188

Moorten Botanical Garden from Rescue 911-1130185

Back in 1995, the garden was featured in the 18th episode of the 6th season of Rescue 911 in the segment titled “Chance Encounter,” which covers the true tale of two young hikers both named Jennifer who were rescued after falling off a cliff in Palm Springs in 1994.  At the end of the bit, the real life Jennifers stroll through Moorten with their rescuers.  You can watch the segment here.

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In the Season 13 episode of Visiting . . . with Huell Howser titled “Moorten Botanical Garden,” which aired in 2005, the convivial host visits the site and conducts an extensive interview with Clark.  You can watch the full episode here.

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Moorten also makes an appearance in the 2017 horror film Valentine DayZ in a scene that is featured in the trailer, which is where the stills below came from.  I couldn’t actually find the flick available to stream anywhere, which the GC said is incredibly telling.  Winking smile

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If you happen to find yourself in the desert, I highly recommend a visit to Moorten Botanical Garden.

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The site can easily be traversed in about an hour and admittance is only $5.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It:  Moorten Botanical Garden is located at 1701 South Palm Canyon Drive in The Mesa neighborhood of Palm Springs.  You can visit the garden’s official website here.

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