University of California, Davis Arboretum
University of California, Davis Arboretum | |
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University of California Davis | |
Status | Open year round |
The University of California, Davis Arboretum (UC Davis Arboretum) is an approximately 100-acre (0.40 km2)
The arboretum was founded in 1936.[1] It is free to visit and the gardens are open 24 hours a day every day of the year; visitor parking is free Saturdays and Sundays and $10 per car every other day.[1] The Arboretum contains 3.5 miles (5.6 km) paved path loop for pedestrians, joggers, and cyclists.[2] The collection includes some "22,000 trees and plants adapted to a Mediterranean climate."[1] The collection may be searched through the Arbortetum's online database,[3] which includes detailed information about the plants and geographic information system data linked to plant records.[4] The Arboretum is an important source of information on horticulture in California's Central Valley.[1]
The arboretum is used for research both by UC Davis faculty and students and by others.[4] The arboretum also supports teaching at UC Davis, with courses in many different disciplines using the arboretum each year.[5]
Collection
The arboretum has 17 gardens and collections:
- Arboretum Terrace Garden and Lois Crowe Patio - Mediterranean-style terrace garden with pergola, featuring plants typical of California's Central Valley.[6]
- Australian Collection - features eucalyptus and other Australian plants.[6]
- California Foothill Collection - features California foothills plants, including "200-year-old Valley oaks, pines, ceanothus, and several species of native currants and gooseberries."[6]
- Carolee Shields White Flower Garden and Gazebo - a "theme garden based on medieval moon-viewing gardens of India and Japan."[6]
- Conifer Collection - features various conifers, including pines, cedars, firs, junipers, and cypresses.[6]
- Desert Collection - features
- East Asian Collection - an East Asian garden with a view of Lake Spafford and an open lawn; features cherry blossoms and daphne (prominent in winter and spring) and ginkgo, zelkova, and ornamental grasses (prominent in fall).[6]
- Eric E. Conn Acacia Grove - features more than 50 acacia species.[6]
- Mary Wattis Brown Garden of California Native Plants - features various California native plants and native meadow.[6]
- Mediterranean Collection - features various Mediterranean Basin plants on a hillside around lagoon; includes collection of herbs.[6]
- North Coast Collection - features various
- Peter J. Shields Oak Grove - features more than 80 types of rare species.[6]
- Ruth Risdon Storer Garden - features various "flowering perennials and small shrubs that are especially well suited to Central Valley gardens" intended for sustainable gardening.[6]
- South American Collection - a small collection of mostly Argentinean and Chilean plants, including groundcovers and vines as well as cacti and cannas.[6]
- Southwest U.S.A. and Mexican Collection - features various plants of Mexico and the American Southwest; the Montezuma bald cypress in this collection was grown from seed from the largest specimen in Mexico.[6]
- T. Elliot Weier Redwood Grove - a coast redwood grove that is "one of the largest collections of redwood trees outside their native range." In addition to the trees, the grove also features understory plants.[6]
- Warren G. Roberts Redbud Collection - a Western redbud grove.[6]
See also
Notes
External links
- Official website
- UC Davis Arboretum on the Davis Wiki