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VOLUME 8, ISSUE 8 | August 2021
Virtual exhibit: Northwest Nikkei by Michelle Kumata
Richard Iwao Yamasaki / Black Pine by Michelle Kumata
This virtual exhibition of the works of Michelle Kumata features the highlights from her Northwest Nikkei collection celebrating the Seattle Japanese Garden and our local Nikkei community of 1960, the year the garden officially opened to the public.

'Richard Iwao Yamasaki / Black Pine' is shown here. Richard Yamasaki was one of the local Japanese American team who assisted Juki Iida in the installation of the Garden. Yamasaki gifted a prized black pine tree to the Seattle Japanese Garden in 1989. The pine represents endurance, adaptability and a bright future. The monarch butterfly represents rebirth and transformation.

An in-garden exhibit at the Seattle Japanese Garden is planned for Aug. 10 through Oct. 31, 2021. The entire collection will be on display there. For more information, see the calendar at www.seattlejapanesegarden.org.
Scholars can browse the shelves remotely
New topics include alternative agriculture and food systems

shelf browse image of book coversAnyone looking for resources on urban farming, food systems and alternative agriculture can now browse a curated selection of books on those topics from our website. From the shelf browse tool, click a book cover image to learn more about that title and log in to place a hold.

If you need to establish or renew your borrower record, send us an email at hortlib@uw.edu.
The Kinfolk Garden edited by John Burns
Reviewed by Brian Thompson
Kinfolk Garden coverWhen I first picked up The Kinfolk Garden, I was impressed with the breadth of photographs capturing the many ways people engage with plants in diverse settings of gardens and in homes. Supplementing these photographic essays is text that is brief, but I found effective in capturing the individual and collective passions of those profiled.

Kinfolk.com describes itself as “a leading lifestyle authority.” Founded in Portland, Oregon ten years ago, it is now based in Copenhagen and publishes a quarterly magazine, social media posts, art prints, and several books including The Kinfolk Garden.

Aside from a few short sections, this is not a how-to book, nor is it about the plants to be found by trekking into nature. Instead, it gave me insights into the human drive to use plants for nurturing in ways both casual and immersive. This is a passion that spans all cultures, all climates and all peoples.

An example is Ron Finley, who is described as a community garden activist in poorer communities of Los Angeles. He sees gardening as a way to foster self-sufficiency that “can also positively disrupt the social and political systems that perpetuate self-defeating cycles in low-income communities.”

Umberto Pasti, an Italian novelist, has embraced the plants and people of northern Morocco, developing a garden near Tangiers that rescues endangered native flora. He has discovered this also helps the native people who, like the plants, are endangered by industrialization. More on Pasti and his work can be found in the book Eden Revisited.

The subtitle of The Kinfolk Garden is “how to live with nature.” I think a more complete description would be “how to bring nature, specifically plants, into everyday life.” Sometimes, the separation between human life and plants in nature is not very wide. Eduardo “Roth” Neira designed and built a hotel and museum near Tulum, Mexico and yet avoided chopping down trees in the dense rain forest setting. How to do this? “Build around them.”
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Digital resources
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The native pollinator habitat restoration guide : best management practices for the Puget Sound lowlands / Matthew B.
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