Berry Botanic Garden
A small garden in Portland, Oregon, that features a very special collection of rhododendrons, lilies, primroses, and other plants that grow well in the Pacific Northwest.
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A small garden in Portland, Oregon, that features a very special collection of rhododendrons, lilies, primroses, and other plants that grow well in the Pacific Northwest.
Berry Botanic Garden is a nonprofit botanical garden located at 11505 SW Summerville Avenue, Portland, Oregon. The garden is open during daylight hours seven days each week; an admission fee of $5 is charged for non-members. The site has a small parking lot, so asks that people call to advise they are coming.
The garden began in the 1930s as the personal collection of Rae Selling Berry (1881-1976), who obtained seeds from plant explorers including Frank Kingdon-Ward, Francis Ludlow and George Sherriff, and Joseph Rock. She also collected plants herself from the Western United States, British Columbia, and Alaska. Particular strengths of her garden were her species rhododendrons and primula collection. In 1938 she established the garden's current site, and the garden became a public, nonprofit organization in 1978.
The garden has continued to develop since it became a nonprofit organization. At present its major collections are as follows:
A major part of the Garden is the Conservation program, featuring a seedbank of over 14,000 accessions, or packages of seed, representing over 300 rare or endangered plants.
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![]() | Gardener's Dictionary. Taylor's Dictionary for Gardeners, by Frances Tenenbaum. Copyright © 1997 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
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