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Holden Village Historic Iris

HoldenVillage historic iris cover One of the most unique books in the Elisabeth C. Miller Library collections is “Holden Village Historic Iris,” the accounting of the surviving garden iris from the village of a mining camp that operated near the upper end of Lake Chelan from 1937 – 1957. Now established at a nearby Lutheran ministry known as Holden Village, these irises are a living history. Grown by the wives of the miners, many survived untended for more than 40 years in abandoned gardens.

Newer varieties were added after the village was established in the early 1960’s, but like the older varieties, the “real” names are mostly unknown. Instead, authors Roxanne Grinstad and Larry Howard (the latter a garden volunteer at the Center for Urban Horticulture) share the local names that reflect the flowers’ place in the community, evocative of both the present day and the history of the area.

Excerpted from the Fall 2008 Arboretum Bulletin.

Wild Lilies, Irises, and Grasses: Gardening with California Monocots

Wild Lilies cover A who’s who of experts collaborated on “Wild Lilies, Irises, and Grasses: Gardening with California Monocots.” You ask, is nothing safe from invading Californians? Perhaps not, but many of these showy plants already have Pacific Northwest residency. Our collection includes this title and others from the Golden State with relevancy for our part of the coast.

Excerpted from the Spring 2007 Arboretum Bulletin.