Restoration and Renewal in the Goodfellow Grove
It’s spring and time for a full on revival in the Center for Urban Horticulture’s Goodfellow Grove!
Read moreMay Dispatch from the Forest Grove
Who doesn’t love spring? It’s the earth’s bright green answer to winter’s dreary grey; when all the world begins to grow anew. If autumn is a time for introductions and winter for exploration, then spring is the season for culmination. In autumn we ground the students in the important, fundamental lessons of the forest grove: clearly identifying the boundaries (both figurative and literal) of the classroom; teaching an awareness of self, social expectations, and emotional responses; guiding newfound interest in the natural world.
Read moreGlimpse into the past – Mrs. Sawyer’s Bench
Today’s visitors to the Washington Park Arboretum walk past historical artifacts not knowing why they might be there. One of those is the Memorial Fountain dedicated to the late Mrs. W.W. Sawyer, along Arboretum Drive E. opposite Rhododendron Glen.
Read moreMay 2015 Plant Profile: Paeonia suffruticosa subsp. rockii
Striking tree peony in Pacific Connections China Entry Garden in full, fragrant bloom this month
Read moreComprehensive Audit of Hyde Herbarium Now Complete
Thanks to dedicated volunteers, over 22,000 pressed plant specimens have been reviewed and documented.
Read moreWeeding Strategies from a Professional
April showers bring May weeds! How do professional gardeners manage weeds? Kathleen DeMaria, Botanic Gardens Horticulturist, shares her favorite tool and strategies.
Read moreThe Boys and Girls and Their Boats
Opening Day crew races through the Montlake Cut, and the 1936 USA Olympic gold in rowing may never have happened without these following trees:
1) Thuja plicata Western Red Cedar
UW’s world-renowned boat maker, George Pocock followed the lead of Native Americans and used this Pacific Northwest giant for the hulls of his Pocock Classics.
The skin is made from a single plank of 3/32″ thick cedar and offers a combination of stiffness and springiness that eliminates the need for the extra weight of a hull.
Runoff Now Feeds Prairie Rain Garden at Center for Urban Horticulture
What to do about muddy puddles caused by rain runoff in the middle of a trail used by hundreds of people every day? Could a garden solve the problem?
Read moreApril Color Appears at the Washington Park Arboretum
1) Acer cissifolium Vine-leaf Maple
A three-leaf maple native to Japan.
The extraordinary racemes of tiny flowers give the tree a cloud-like appearance.
Located in the Asiatic Maple Collection.
2) Acer rubrum Red Maple
This popular street tree is native to eastern North America.
On this sample the petals have fallen, leaving the elongating peduncles and their tiny, immature samaras.
Located in grid 3-5E on Arboretum Drive.
Another collection stunner blooming now
Along Azalea Way this time of year, as many of you know, the Rhododendron cultivars, Redbuds & Dogwood Trees are putting on their show of stunning blossoms. Amongst all these flowering shrubs and trees it is sometimes hard to discern any individual plants, but its always worth it for me to stop at the group of Rhododendron occidentale at the North end of Azalea Way.
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