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Ornamental cherries in Vancouver

Ornamental cherries in Vancouver book cover Douglas Justice of the University of British Columbia Botanical Garden is the author of “Ornamental Cherries in Vancouver”. Published by the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival, this excellent guide celebrates a rich collection of urban flowering cherries, some 40,000 trees as of the 125th anniversary of the city in 2011.

Ornamental cherries are a major component of the Washington Park Arboretum, especially along Azalea Way. This book’s photographs include close-ups of flowers and an example of the tree in a landscape. Leaves are described as they emerge, in the full leaf of summer, and as they color in the fall. Sadly, this book is hard to obtain (we are still hoping to add the 2014 edition to the Miller Library) and is not available to borrow and take with you strolling in the Arboretum next spring.

However, there is much to learn from a visit to the library. For example, the Yoshino cherry (Prunus x yedoensis ‘Somei-yoshino’) is of uncertain origin, but is famous for the Hanami (cherry viewing) festivals in Japan. This is also the cherry of the Tidal Basin in Washington, D. C. and at “The Quad” on the University of Washington campus. Another widely planted selection is the Kanzan or Kwanzan cherry (Prunus Sato-zakura Group ‘Kanzan’), perhaps because the “apparent good health of this cultivar often borders on the miraculous.”

Excerpted from the Fall 2018 Arboretum Bulletin.