- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
Honey bees were all over the Japanese anemone (Anemone hupehensis) on Monday, Oct. 19 at the Luther Burbank Home and Gardens, Santa Rosa.
They just could not get enough of the colorful flower, also known as a windflower or thimbleweed. Thought to be a native of central China, the hupehensis is distinguished by its five rounded, evenly spaced petals. However, the wind and rain earlier knocked off a few petals, adding to their character and charisma.
Robert Fortune (1812-1880) introduced the Chinese plant to Europe in 1844. He apparently discovered it in a Shanghai cemetery while he was running around the tombstones.
Now the "windflower" is just one of the flowers that graces the Luther Burbank Gardens.
On our visit to the gardens, we could almost see Luther Burbank puttering around. Born on a farm in Lancaster, Mass. in 1849, the 13th of 15th children, he moved to Santa Rosa in 1875 and built a nursery and greenhouse to pursue his work as a botanist, horticulturist and pioneer in agricultural science. He also maintained a working farm, The Gold Ridge Farm, in nearby Sebastopol. Both are open to the public.
Over his 55-year career, Burbank developed more than 800 strains and varieties of plants, including varied fruits, flowers, grains, grasses, and vegetables.
If you haven't been to the Luther Burbank Home and Gardens or to the Gold Ridge Farm, you should go--and see what he developed, from the Shasta daisy to the Russet Burbank potato to the Santa Rosa plum.
And check out the honey bees foraging on the flowers...
- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
Take one honey bee and one Japanese anemone. Then add one jumping spider.
The results don't always turn out so well.
But today in the East Asian Collection Garden of the UC Davis Arboretum, everything turned out well--for the honey bee.
The bee foraged on the golden stamens of the Japanese anemone without becoming prey, despite the spider camouflage with an anther.
The East Asian Collection Garden is just one of 17 gardens or collections in the 100-acre UC Davis Arboretum.
Located near Mrak Hall, the "East Asian Collection is a popular place for picnics with open lawns and lovely views of Lake Spafford," according to the Arboretum website. "Cherry blossoms and daphne are standouts in winter and spring, while gingko and zelkova trees and ornamental grasses provide beautiful fall color."
Arboretum officials say the plants represent "a living museum."
Indeed they do. The gardens are also a good place for students, staff, faculty, flowers, insects and spiders to interact.
The beauty of the Arboretum defines the UC Davis campus.