The Outdoors · Hudson Valley
Stonecrop Gardens gives Cold Spring a planted Highlands layer
Stonecrop Gardens adds a planted public-garden layer to Cold Spring and the Hudson Highlands setting.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Stonecrop Gardens gives Cold Spring and Philipstown a planted Highlands layer beyond Main Street, river views, and trailheads. The garden began as Anne and Frank Cabot’s home, became public in 1992, and now covers about 15 acres at 1,100 feet in the Hudson Highlands. That setting changes the local picture: the Highlands are more than steep slopes and big views, but also careful beds, paths, and plant collections.
The official description is pleasantly specific. Stonecrop names woodland and water gardens, raised alpine stone beds, an enclosed English-style flower garden, and systematic order beds with more than 50 plant families. This is not a vague “pretty garden” stop; it is a small public place built around close looking.
The visitor rules are part of the experience. Open days are limited, weekend visits may need registration, pets are not allowed, and many paths are narrow, muddy, uneven, or difficult for strollers and wheelchairs.
Plan gently, wear the right shoes, and treat Stonecrop as a Highlands outing where beauty comes with a few very practical limits. That is part of its appeal: it feels close to Cold Spring’s trail-and-river world, but it asks you to slow down and look at plants, paths, and weather underfoot.