Out and About in the Arboretum

The most recent blog post is on the home page. Click on an entry below to view the full post.

Click here for an index to all the Out and About posts.

Japanese Maple

September 13, 2019 – Japanese maple

For a lovely show of the early fall season, you may want to stop by Court 16 on the Medford Campus to enjoy a woodlands garden as it sets its color for fall. The Japanese maple (Acer palmatum) is particularly attractive at this time. Worthy of a visit for sure.

Read More »
Autumn clematis

September 6, 2019 – Autumn Clematis

September brings a lovely treat, as the air is filled with the scent of sweet Autumn Clematis, Clematis paniculata. Courtyard Garden 10 on the Medford Campus is alive with the fragrance and beauty of this prolific bloomer. Small white flowers emerge to display themselves, and as fall approaches the flowers become a silvery mass of fluffy seed heads. This vine is quite at home located on the pergola in this garden.

Read More »
Sweeet bay magnolia

August 30, 2019 – Sweet Bay

Magnolia virginiana, commonly called Sweet Bay magnolia, is native to the southeastern United States north along the Atlantic coast to New York. It typically grows as a shorter, suckering, open, multi-stemmed shrub. The tree features cup-shaped, sweetly fragrant creamy white flowers, in mid-spring. In late summer, cone-like fruits with bright red are maturing. Fun to see a bit of bright red at this time of the year.

Read More »
Old White Pines

August 23, 2019 – Old pines

Oh my, the trees – they surely do grow… who would have thought when the white pines were planted many years ago that they would cause some residents and staff challenges today? Over the next week or so you may notice that we will take down eleven trees on the Medford Campus that are impacting folks who park their cars near these trees. Over the years the trees have have been pruned to mitigate sap damage, but the time has come that no more pruning will eliminate this issue

Read More »
Monarch caterpillars

August 15, 2019 – Monarchs

Check out Court 28 on the Medford Campus to see a living laboratory of monarch butterflies as they emerge from their chrysalis. This court is home to a number of native milkweed plants which attract the monarch butterflies. As the eggs on the milkweed plants hatch, they form caterpillars, who have a very busy time eating the milkweed and growing very quickly. The caterpillars then form their chrysalises, which protect them. Shortly before emerging, the chrysalis will appear transparent and sometimes you can clearly see the distinctive patterns of the wings.

Read More »
Panicle hydrangea

Aug. 9, 2019 – Hydrangea paniculata

A flowering ornamental that can stand up to the dog days of August is the Hydrangea paniculata, commonly called panicle hydrangea. The white blooms will carry us into the early fall season. This vigorous, upright shrub is native to China and Japan. You can find it in full bloom on the Medford Campus in the Atrium, to the left as you enter the Community Building.

Read More »