 The following is a production of New Mexico State University. We're at the Oak Creek Garden of Sally Berkshire southeast of Sedona. Sally, this is spectacular. Well, welcome Dr. Smith. So you're really not stuck with just cacti. You've really got roses here. I have the most wonderful roses, and it's amazing, even in this heat, how they bloom. Look at their just absolute bouquets. They're just beautiful. Arizona is an amazing place. Gosh. You've got a redbud tree here. It's going to shade the roses. That's right. This will grow about 30 feet high. It's a redbud. It's a hybrid. And this should give these little guys a little relief when it gets to be July and August. Look at this bouquet. Isn't this lovely? I wouldn't expect something like that in the heat here. So you've got a variety of gardens here. I certainly do. Now, what we need to do, I will show you the butterfly and hummingbird garden. Oh. Come on. I like your old man cactus here. Yes, and he's fun. I sometimes get a comb out. We're having a party and fluff him up a bit. These hairlike spines are really good because they shade the plant in this hot environment. Really? It keeps it from sun-burning. Oh, how interesting. And here I see sedum. Yes. Good choice. Yes, it's wonderful. And the heat here in Sedona, it blooms. It's just starting to bloom now. It's just fabulous. And the dusty millers, the Gillardias. Dusty millers, yes. A lot of butterflies in here, I would imagine. We have butterflies and hummingbirds love this area. So you have wildlife in your garden. We certainly do. Not the four-legged, just the flying kind. And you said you had even quail nesting here. We do. Twice a day. They come over here and drink. And they're a little family. We've watched them grow. It's quite lovely. And then the new petunia. These are wonderful. They grow so quickly. And it just spills over into this lovely, lovely look. Trying to keep it low. In your aurora, I like it here. It's like a natural spring. Yes. And you've got dry plants all around it. So it looks like it belongs right here. Right. Where does the water go? Well, actually this water flows down to the large pond below us. And in the aurora, it goes out that way. Should we have a monsoon effect? And so it all waters and feeds. It builds an aurora for the overflow. You bet. The preceding was a production of New Mexico State University. The views and opinions in this program are those of the author. And do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of the NMSU Board of Regents.