Home

Category: News Items


Art can begin with a chain saw: A preview of the upcoming Forces of Nature art exhibit.

charles dickson carvingArtist Charles Dickson recently was at the Arboretum demonstrating how he uses a chain saw as a first step to creating a sculpture.

He is one of the 130 artists and artisans who were invited to create sculptures, furniture, woodturning and other pieces out of wood salvaged from the trees downed by last December's windstorm.

His creation as well the work of the others will be shown at the art exhibit, Forces of Nature, from November 30 to December 2, at the Arboretum. Mark your calendar so you'll be able to view all the beautiful objects that will give new life to the 235 downed trees.

 


What’s blooming?  Red silk-cotton trees

bombax entire treeText and photos by Donald R. Hodel, Environmental Horticulture Advisor, University of California Cooperative Extension

Bombax ceiba, commonly known as the red silk-cotton tree, is a large, briefly deciduous tree occurring in warm monsoon forests in southern Asia. The Arboretum has the only two flowering specimens in the U. S. outside of Florida and Hawaii. The tree is famous for its large, showy, six-inch flowers with thick, waxy, red petals that densely clothe leafless branch tips in late winter and early spring. Widely planted and highly revered from India to southern China, it is unusually handsome and ornamental and has many uses. Known as the semal tree in India, a gummy secretion is obtained from the bark and sold as semal gum for medicinal use. The cottony fibers in the fruits are a substitute for kapok and used to stuff mattresses, pillows and cushions. The fleshy sepals of young flowers are cooked and eaten as a vegetable. The soft wood has been employed for matches and tea boxes while the fibrous inner bark makes suitable cordage. The tree is so highly revered that, according to Chinese historical records, the King of NamYuet, Chiu To, gave one to the emperor of the Han Dynasty in the 2nd century BC. The Arboretum’s two specimens put on their colorful, show-stopping display from February to April.

 


« First  <  4 5 6 7 8 >  Last »