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Bush's Pasture Park (90.5 acres) is a public park and botanical garden in Salem, Oregon, United States. It is the site of the Asahel Bush House, which was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974, [2] and is now operated as the Bush House Museum.
Bush’s Pasture Park is a 90.5 acre city park located in the heart of Salem, Oregon. Bush’s Pasture Park is famous for its groves of Oregon White Oaks and fields of camas flowers. These plants were actively managed by Native Americans living in the Willamette Valley and provided vital food sources.
In the middle of the city sits the 90-acre Bush's Pasture Park, with trails for jogging, walking or biking, picnic areas and playgrounds, Oregon's oldest greenhouse conservatory and the historic Bush House Museum, a Victorian home with original wallpaper and furnishings.
Bush’s Pasture Park is a lush 90.5 acres of walking/running paths, wooded areas, and open meadows near downtown Salem. The park has many historical features and recreational amenities.
Bush’s Pasture Park. 600 Mission Street SE, Salem, Oregon 97302. Once the farmstead of Salem’s Bush family, on the ancestral lands of the Kalapuya people, the park retains groves of native Oregon White Oak trees sheltering seasonal camas fields and wildflowers.
Bush’s Pasture Park is home to a wide variety of very special places; from gardens and fields of wildflowers to enjoy, to places to relax or explore, to historic structures to visit. Please come and discover Salem’s gem of an urban park.
Often called Salem’s “gem,” Bush’s Pasture Park and Deepwood Estate Gardens encompass 96 acres of significant historic properties, ornamental and formal gardens, and impressive natural resources that include stands of Oregon white oak, camas fields, and Pringle Creek.