Elisabeth C Miller Library

Elisabeth C Miller Library The library offers an extensive collection of horticultural books and journals and welcomes the public.

May 2026 sampler of Plant Answer Line questions:• What is this pink-flowering tree near the corner of Dayton Ave N and N...
05/27/2026

May 2026 sampler of Plant Answer Line questions:

• What is this pink-flowering tree near the corner of Dayton Ave N and N 83rd Street? Could it be Judas tree?

After checking OSU’s landscape plant database and our encyclopedia of trees, we believe this is a Judas tree (Cercis siliquastrum) as you mentioned.

• What is wrong with my twenty-year-old doublefile viburnum? Parts have just died, and the main stems are bumpy.

These have a limited lifespan. One of the images that you shared also has heavy markings of what looks like viburnum crown borer damage. These borers attack stressed plants. Here is a description of the damage from the Morton Arboretum: “The larva of the viburnum crown borer is the damaging stage. The larvae tunnel under the bark of the main trunks and roots and may be found anywhere from a few inches below the soil line up to 18 inches above the soil line. The first symptom noticed is dieback of entire branches. Other symptoms include swellings, cracks and emergence holes at the base of the plants.”

• Can you help me determine if this is poison hemlock? It does not have purple splotches on it anywhere.

Because of the relatively small size and the lack of purple/red splotches on the leaves, we don't believe this is poison hemlock (Conium maculatum). Instead, it looks like either Queen Anne's lace (Daucus carota) or bur chervil (Anthriscus caucalis). Without seeing the flowers, these two can be hard to distinguish. Both have hairy multi-compound leaves and are Eurasian species. Queen Anne's lace is taller (up to 4 feet) with large umbels of white flowers. Bur chervil is approximately 3 feet tall with small greenish flowers in clusters. In answering this question, we used Weeds of the Pacific Northwest by Mark Turner and Sami Gray, published in 2024.

• These peonies from the florist didn’t open normally. Are the brownish green stamens caused by mold?
If you're in King County, please send your photo to the Master Gardeners at [email protected] for evaluation. Peony growers are frustrated by "bud blast," an umbrella term for failure to flower once buds set:
https://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/gardens-gardening/your-garden/help-for-the-home-gardener/advice-tips-resources/insects-pests-and-problems/environmental/bud-blast
• What are these trees on UW’s Seattle campus? I’m pretty sure they are a crabapple of some kind.

According to the UW tree inventory, these trees are Malus tschonoskii (Tschonoskii crabapple).

• Is Parrotia persica a shallow-rooted tree?

The Selectree database (https://selectree.calpoly.edu/tree-detail/987) lists this tree as having low potential for root damage. A Mount Vernon wholesale grower says they are shallow-rooted, in his experience, which calls for extra care in siting them: https://urbanforestnursery.com/inventory/tree-profiles/persian-ironwood/

• Please recommend some recent books in your collection for professional landscapers and designers.

Sure: here is a list of ten favorites:
https://hortlib.kohacatalog.com/cgi-bin/koha/opac-shelves.pl?op=view&shelfnumber=493&sortfield=author

• I’m curious about Fragaria ‘Lila Diamond.’ Do the berries attract pests?.

The fruits of Fragaria 'Lila Diamond' are edible, but we haven’t heard of them attracting pests. They are considered good for wildlife, as they attract bees and butterflies with their flowers.

• What is this hairy black dime-sized spider with a face-like white pattern on the back of its abdomen?

You’ve just met the bold jumping spider, Phidippus audax—a harmless garden friend to humans.

The main character in this picture book by Sarthak Sinha is crazy about mangoes. But what else can a mango tree offer?
05/16/2026

The main character in this picture book by Sarthak Sinha is crazy about mangoes. But what else can a mango tree offer?

Farah Loves Mangos story time from the Miller Library

Are you headed to the farmers market this weekend? We are, with Spring is for Strawberries story time.https://youtu.be/l...
05/08/2026

Are you headed to the farmers market this weekend? We are, with Spring is for Strawberries story time.
https://youtu.be/lZ--tPEIA2o
This books follows the seasons of a farmers market--come along for a fabulous feast!

Spring is for Strawberries story time from the Miller Library

The Miller Library is excited to welcome artists Martha Makosky and Katy Gilmore to exhibit their artwork in the joint e...
05/06/2026

The Miller Library is excited to welcome artists Martha Makosky and Katy Gilmore to exhibit their artwork in the joint exhibition, “Plant Practice.” The library will host a Meet the Artists event on Saturday, May 9th 1-3pm.

Martha Makosky is a visual artist whose work is shaped by a childhood spent in tropical Southeast Asia—and an appreciation for the region's nature, art, and textiles—followed by three decades living in the temperate Puget Sound. The mixed-media works presented in Plant Practice begin with collage papers hand-printed using stencil, transfer, and relief techniques. Botanical forms are drawn over this ground. Martha then paints over the collage or paints the forms, sometimes sanding and layering again, to build combinations of backgrounds with ghosted textures and focal features, bridging observed nature and abstract surface.

For her third exhibition at the Miller Library, Katy Gilmore presents her project tracing a Northwest year using the Japanese concept of 72 micro-seasons a year, rather than just four. With a page of words and images recording each five-day season, she forms large accordion fold books to display. Gilmore will also offer monoprints of individual flowers, and “Flower Pages” – flower images painted on deaccessioned gardening encyclopedia pages.

This exhibition will be open to the public during library hours May 2-27.

05/04/2026

Garden Lovers' Book Sale: all remaining books are now free!

Visit while they last.

When a birthday gift isn't what you hoped for, maybe it can turn out better than you thought. We begin our May celebrati...
05/01/2026

When a birthday gift isn't what you hoped for, maybe it can turn out better than you thought. We begin our May celebration of fruit with When Grandma Gives You a Lemon Tree by Jamie L. B. Deenihan and Lorraine Rocha.
https://youtu.be/UBh_om4lVUk

04/30/2026

Our banner photo this month features the work of Martha Makosky and Katy Gilbert, whose joint exhibition "Plant Practice" begins Saturday, May 2. Meet the artists Saturday, May 9 beginning at 1 pm. The library is open 9-3 Saturdays.

04/30/2026

The Arboretum Foundation and are joining forces this year to become Seattle Botanic Gardens, creating a stronger hub for nature education and connection in our region.

Grow with us!

We currently have several , including:

DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS: This position will play a critical role in the creation and design of the new organization, its workflows, and culture.

EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT: Supporting the Chief Executive Officer, this position will facilitate effective communication and coordination with our Board of Directors.

EVENT LEAD: Will serve as the primary on-site representative for rental and public events at the Arboretum and Center for Urban Horticulture.

FULL DETAILS & APPLICATION: https://arboretumfoundation.org/about-us/our-team-partners/job-opportunities/

📷 The flowering cherry Prunus ‘Royal Burgundy’ along Azalea Way, near the Woodland Garden.

Address

3501 NE 41st Street
Seattle, WA
98105

Opening Hours

Monday 12pm - 8pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 3pm

Telephone

+12065430415

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