Arnoldia

Arnoldia The Nature of Trees | The Quarterly Magazine of Harvard's Arnold Arboretum

Common smoketree (Cotinus coggyria) greeting the dawn. This tree with its rosy blooms came to the Arnold from a 1980 exp...
06/06/2022

Common smoketree (Cotinus coggyria) greeting the dawn. This tree with its rosy blooms came to the Arnold from a 1980 expedition to Russia; its neighbor, a vast, labyrinthine smoketree with hazy green blossoms, moved here from the Harvard Botanical Garden in Cambridge when the Arnold was founded in 1876. That tree is featured on the cover of the latest issue of Arnoldia, in a photo by Jim Harrison—an image to get lost in. For your copy, follow the in-bio link to join the Arnold Arboretum today!

A great beach read, too!Where do you read Arnoldia? We’d love to see your pictures of Arnoldia readers in the world.—via...
03/15/2022

A great beach read, too!

Where do you read Arnoldia? We’d love to see your pictures of Arnoldia readers in the world.

—via director of development, Tanya Holton

03/14/2022

D. Allen reads their poem, "Decomposition Hymn," from the Spring issue of . Allen is the author of A BONY FRAMEWORK FOR THE TANGIBLE UNIVERSE (2019), a finalist for the Minnesota Book Awards. This poem was written about the H. J. Andrews Experimental Forest, with special thanks to Fred Swanson.

Decomposition Song
by D. Allen

Close your eyes. Before lockdown, before the Holiday Farm fire,
before you used a cane or shopped online
for wheelchairs, before half your life was winter
and the other half
a recovery from winter–
you hiked the narrow path
into a green cathedral
high in the Cascades wilderness, pressed yourself
into the knotted roots of a douglas fir,
and listened. It was eight years ago, and only once,
but that day made a door inside you. On one side, time
pulls your body deeper into the earth, fires sweep the forest,
you mourn the living and tend the dead. On the other side, a waiting convocation
of pacific silver firs, douglas firs, western red cedars, incense cedars, and hemlocks
growing or fallen, bark and branches draped in moss
as if the whole place just rose from an age in deep water.
Up here, the research station is a half-remembered dream.
You are the only human among migrating roughskin newts, douglas squirrels,
three woodpeckers who tap out their rounds unseen.
Beside your seat of fir needles and loam, a once-upright trunk
learns its new role as food, home, shelter, witness. A barred owl’s call
electrifies the silence, and soon another answers from down the ridge
until the whole forest vibrates in you. Syrinx to sapwood to spine.
Remember how it felt to fill your lungs so deeply
that your only sound was song?

Recent books arriving in the Arnoldia office: TREELINE, by Ben Rawlence, about our longtime entanglements in the boreal ...
03/02/2022

Recent books arriving in the Arnoldia office: TREELINE, by Ben Rawlence, about our longtime entanglements in the boreal forest, now in flight from climate change; poet Colin Cheney’s collection, HERE BE MONSTERS; the lovely TRUNKS OF THE GUNKS, with its portraits of the wild trees of the Shawangunk Mtns.; and ACCIDENTAL WILDERNESS, which details the fascinating emergence of Toronto’s great lakeside urban wild. And oh my, there’s your editor’s own TREE, too!

10/26/2021
Today, on the first day of fall, we're dreaming about this incredible valley in Azerbaijan that is filled with Persian i...
09/22/2021

Today, on the first day of fall, we're dreaming about this incredible valley in Azerbaijan that is filled with Persian ironwood (Parrotia persica)—what a kaleidoscopic display! Read about a botanical expedition into the valley in a recent article by Phillip Douglas and Henrik Sjöman: https://bit.ly/2Zbam8r

Photo by Phillip Douglas.

In 2007, Gretchen Coffman became the first researcher to document the critically endangered Asian swamp cypress (Glyptos...
08/20/2021

In 2007, Gretchen Coffman became the first researcher to document the critically endangered Asian swamp cypress (Glyptostrobus pensilis) growing in Laos. This remarkable population included enormous old-growth trees, even one with a trunk diameter of more than eleven feet. Still, their conservation is far from guaranteed. Learn more about the discovery and the ongoing conservation efforts in Coffman's recent article.

In early April 2007, less than three weeks after submitting my dissertation and receiving my doctorate at the University of California, Los Angeles, I got on a plane headed for Laos. It took four flights and more than twenty hours of flying time to get to the capital city of Vientiane. From there, I...

Congratulations to Carter Wilkie, whose Arnoldia article on horticulturist Henry F. du Pont was awarded a gold prize for...
08/17/2021

Congratulations to Carter Wilkie, whose Arnoldia article on horticulturist Henry F. du Pont was awarded a gold prize for magazine writing by GardenComm.

In his article, Wilkie narrates how du Pont created an enduring masterpiece at Winterthur Museum and Gardens, "acquiring plants with the zeal of an obsessive-compulsive collector on an unlimited budget."

In 1924, the Arnold Arboretum’s first director, Charles Sprague Sargent, named a new hybrid buckeye, Aesculus × dupontii, in the Journal of the Arnold Arboretum and praised the tree’s namesake, the du Ponts, for making the vicinity of Wilmington, Delaware, “one of the chief centers of horticu...

The plants and insects of California inspired Peter Raven's legendary career as a botanist and environmentalist. In high...
02/09/2021

The plants and insects of California inspired Peter Raven's legendary career as a botanist and environmentalist. In high school, he documented a plant that proved to be a new species near San Francisco. Ultimately, as director of the Missouri Botanical Garden, he led global research and conservation efforts, including the Flora of China project. Read his personal essay in a recent issue of Arnoldia.

While I was lying in bed in the spring of 1944, recovering from measles at the age of seven, my mother entered my bedroom and handed me a bright orange book: Six Feet by Ruth Cooper Whitney. Once I had taken a look, I couldn’t put the book down. It presented simple stories, illustrations, and […...

Collaboration is key, now and always.In the latest issue of Arnoldia, thirteen horticulturists at public gardens around ...
09/03/2020

Collaboration is key, now and always.

In the latest issue of Arnoldia, thirteen horticulturists at public gardens around the country write about caring for their plants and landscapes in the early months of the pandemic, when uncertainty abounded.

Also, Peter Raven, president emeritus of Missouri Botanical Garden, writes about building international collaboration to document the Earth’s biodiversity. This research has only become more urgent as we have come to recognize the magnitude of extinction threats.

That and much more:

https://arboretum.harvard.edu/arnoldia/arnoldia-current-issue/

08/18/2020

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