Jan 25, 2022 / Washington Park Arboretum, Horticulture, News / UWBG Horticulturist, Ryan Garrison

Champion Trees of the Washington Park Arboretum

Photo of Western Crabapple

A champion tree is the largest tree of a species. These trees are measured using the American Forests points (AF points) which is calculated based on the trunk circumference, the height, and the average crown spread to give a point value.  The Arboretum has many champion trees which were identified by Robert Van Pelt in his 2003 book, “Champion Trees of Washington State”.  

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Jan 11, 2022 / Washington Park Arboretum, Horticulture, News / UWBG Horticulturist, Roy Farrow

Winners of the 2021 Snow Trials!

Photo of Chinese Red Birch

1)  Betula albosinensis var. septentrionalis                           Chinese Red Birch

These beautiful birches show off the delicate pink, cream, and copper colors of their peeling bark in the Witt Winter Garden.
The delicate twigs of the birch shed snow, while the trunk bark glows in comparison to the white.
“Septentrionalis” generally means “northern” and refers to the seven oxen which make up the Ursa Major constellation in the northern sky. 

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Babbling Brook of Rhododendron Glen

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Enjoy this 50 sec video capturing rare footage of Rhododendron Glen’s creek in full grandeur after recent snow melt and heavy rains. Filmed by Ron Schmaltz, UWBG horticulturist assigned to Rhododendron Glen restoration project. 

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Dec 21, 2021 / Plant Profiles, News / Thuy Luu, AMERICORPS ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS STEWARD

Queer Botany: The Sapphic Violet

Plants enrich our lives in many ways and each one tells a story. The red rose is known to be the symbol of romance. The 4-leaf clover for good luck.

For the violet, its story and importance to the queer community can be traced back to Ancient Greece and the poetess, Sappho (c. 600 BCE).

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Dec 17, 2021 / UW Farm, Special Feature, News / Thuy Luu, AMERICORPS ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS STEWARD

UW Farm x 2050 Project Video Series

The UW Farm is teaming up with 2050 Project, a nonprofit organization that specializes in environmental communication to bring you a 6-part video series about sustainable food systems and urban farming!

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Dec 17, 2021 / News / Dannette Lombert, UW Farm AmeriCorps Member 

UW Farm Weekly Dirt: Wrapping Up the Season

Like most farms around this time, the UW Farm is officially wrapping up the growing season! We are entering a time of Rest, Reflect, and Refresh.

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Dec 16, 2021 / Washington Park Arboretum, Horticulture, News / UWBG Arborist, Shea Cope

A Berry Colorful Winter Beginning

Photo of Adirondack Crabapple

1)   Malus  ‘Adirondack’                                                                  Adirondack Crabapple

A small deciduous, sun-loving tree with multi-seasonal interest.
Mass amounts of dark pink buds open to form large fragrant white blossoms in late spring as new foliage emerges.
After flowering, it becomes heavily laden with seemingly glowing, pink, cherry-like fruit which last well into winter.
Rightfully so, this stunning little tree has received the “Award of Garden Merit” from the Royal Horticultural Society. 

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The Weekly Dirt 12.16.21

12.16.21

Around The Farm

by Dannette Lombert, UW Farm AmeriCorps Member
Wrapping Up the Season

Like most farms around this time, the UW Farm is officially wrapping up the growing season! We are entering a time of Rest, Reflect, and Refresh, meaning that:

Most of our beds are cover cropped – inputting nutrients back into the soil, improving water percolation, feeding micro-organisms, and reducing soil erosion
We are looking back to see what has worked for the farm and what we can improve on, programmatically and production-wise
We will be completing the crop plan and ordering all our seeds for next year
We have no volunteer shifts until January 17th (MLK Day), and then continue regular volunteer shifts in February
The Weekly Dirt becomes the Monthly Dirt

We want to use this portion of the newsletter to thank all of our supporters, CSA members, volunteers, interns, staff members, and anyone who has come in contact with the farm in their own way! 

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Dec 10, 2021 / News / Christina Owen

2021 Year in Review

We invite you to review this summary of our many achievements over the past year.

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The Weekly Dirt 12.8.21

12.8.21

Around The Farm

by Kove Janeski, UW Farm Student Staff
Seed Saving Season
As the growing season wraps up in the PNW, the UW Farm team is hard at work threshing, collecting, counting, and storing seeds for the future. Seed saving is an important task for many farms and gardens that aim to be more sustainable and cost-effective.
At the farm, we collect seeds from the most productive open-pollinated and self-pollinated plants throughout the growing season to pass on genes that are more likely to be regionally adapted to the microclimate at UW. 

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