UW Farm Featured in Seattle Times
Check out the latest news about the farm! The Seattle Times wrote about us, spreading the word throughout the city. Read the full article through the link below.
http://seattletimes.com/html/pacificnw/2024193108_0817naturalgardenerxml.html
UW Farm opens produce stand on Fridays
Beginning Friday, August 29, the UW Farm will be partnering with UW Transportation Services to set up a weekly farm stand on the Burke Gilman trail on Fridays 3-5:30pm. The stand will be located just across the trail from the Husky Grind at the Mercer Court apartments.
Read moreWisteria Hall: New name, same beautiful venue
We have big news about the Graham Visitors Center in the Washington Park Arboretum. We bid a fond farewell to the very plain name of the Large Meeting Room and welcome Wisteria Hall to the UW Botanic Gardens family!
Read moreSummer curation internship: getting behind-the-scenes with plant records
Edmonds Community College student, Nichole Sheehan, reflects on her summer spent as a curation intern. “I really enjoyed the behind-the-scenes aspects such as reading historical plant condition notes and evaluating plants for health and maintenance using my pests and diseases classwork.”
Read moreA Day in the Life
you are outside. The sun is shining, illuminating the new growth on the western red cedars. It’s been a great growing season and the plants at Washington Park Arboretum are thriving. The backdrop of evergreen trees is a lovely frame to all of the native and non-native plants in the collection. Now, if they would just get here!
Just when you thought you couldn’t wait any longer, here comes the bus holding 60 scheduled school-aged children just bursting with energy and excitement to be out of school and outside on such a fine day as this.
Winter Garden Project: Remodeling the “Living Walls”
Arboretum Tree Removal Notification:
The week of 8/25/14, UWBG tree crew will embark on a project located in the Winter Garden (read about project below).
4 western red cedars will be removed due to negative impact to plant collections and garden encroachment.
All pedestrian path detours and other safety considerations will be handled by tree crew.
If possible, cedar logs will be salvaged for future park uses.
August Color Appears at the Washington Park Arboretum
1) Poliothyrsis sinensis
A rare and very attractive small flowering tree of upright, open habit.
Originally brought from China to the Arnold Arboretum by E.H. Wilson.
Big 6-8” mildly fragrant, creamy flower clusters (corymbose panicles) make a significant contribution to the August-September garden.
Located in grid 30-3E, near the south entrance to the Woodland Garden along Arboretum Drive.
2) Daphniphyllum macropodum
This dioecious plant (translation = “of two houses”) needs plants of both sexes to seed.
Read moreThe “Lost” Enkianthus Grove in Washington Park Arboretum
Does anyone reading this know where our arboretum’s “lost” Enkianthus grove is located? By “lost”, I mean extremely well-hidden under a dense canopy of western red cedars and other trees.
Enkianthus are shade-tolerant shrubs, but NOT “black-hole” shade tolerant. Like most living plants, they do need light to grow and thrive. It’s a bit embarrassing, but I can honestly say, during my 30 plus year tenure on the UWBG horticulture staff, I don’t recall ever working in the area for longer than maybe a day cleaning up after a storm or pruning a few of the bigger trees.
Where in the Arboretum? New interactive map answers that question.
Wonder if your favorite tree is growing in the Arboretum? Now anyone can search a map and learn all about plants in the collection.
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