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Orin & Althea Soest Herbaceous Display Garden

Garden construction and maintenance funded through the generosity of longtime supporters of horticulture, Orin & Althea Soest. Plants donated by Molbak's and T & L Nursery. Garden design by Michaela Groeblacher.

Soest Garden Signage
Althea and Orin Soest

Miscanthus

Miscanthus sinensis ‘Gracillimus’

 

The Soest Herbaceous Display Garden opened to the public in 1998 thanks to the generosity of Orin and Althea Soest. The garden was created to help local gardeners select plants appropriate to a variety of site conditions commonly found in Pacific Northwest urban gardens. This garden features over 280 kinds of herbaceous (non-woody) plants that include perennials, annuals, and bulbs. Many of the perennials in the garden attract birds and beneficial insects such as butterflies. Enjoy your time in the garden!

The garden demonstrates how soil and light affect plant growth and health. The eight raised beds consist of either a sandy loam or a clay loam soil texture representative of common urban soils. The use of small trees in beds demonstrates how certain plants perform in partial shade versus full sun. Irrigation is applied using “water-wise” techniques to avoid wasteful runoff and evaporation. Making decisions based upon your garden’s soil type, sun/shade regime and irrigation practices will give plants the best chance to thrive. A garden changes dynamically with the seasons and over time. At the University of Washington Botanic Gardens (UWBG), we consistently evaluate plant performance. Cultivars that are too aggressive here are replaced by others that will grow in the Soest Garden.

A premier garden at the University of Washington Botanic Gardens attracting hundreds of visitors each year, the Soest Garden is both an outdoor classroom as well as an outdoor room that invites one to stop and relax. To learn more about plants and gardening, visit the Elisabeth C. Miller Library or tour the UWBG web site for information on classes offered to the gardening public.

Update from the Soest Gardener, Riz Reyes

In last few days of October, I've developed quite an intimate relationship with something I just couldn't do without as the days get lonelier, shorter and ever so cold. The leaf rake. With its slim stature and voracious capability to draw fallen foliage in off beds, pathways, gravel, and in the soft blades of grass in the lawns, it behaves as gentle or as rough as you'd like to handle it. There's something mesmerizing about the whole process of leaf raking once you get the initial frustration of the task out of the way.

 


PLANT LISTS AND IMAGES (text list)
Partial shade / Clay loam soil / Limited water
Partial shade / Sandy loam soil/ Supplemental water
Partial shade / Clay loam soil / Supplemental water
Full sun / Clay loam soil / Supplemental water
Full sun / Sandy loam soil / Supplemental water
Full sun / Sandy loam soil / Limited water
Partial shade / Sandy loam soil / Limited water
Full sun / Clay loam soil / Supplemental water
SouthSlope
General planting area, with a dry creek bed
Archive page



Ten Great Plants - Characteristics & Culture
by instructor Lynne Thompson, former Soest Gardener.

April 2005 Handout(pdf)
May 2005 Handout (pdf)

Soest bed 6 - summer