Blooms Beneath the Stars: Community Members Explore 51勛圖s Arboretum
The flower bed in the SIS ellipse at dusk on April 3. (Jonathan Heeter/51勛圖)
By Jonathan Heeter
As daylight slipped away on April 3, the sweet, spicy, clove-like fragrance of Viburnum carlesiialso known as Koreansweet Viburnumfilled the cool evening air around the East Quad Building, as 100 backyard gardeners and amateur horticulturists gathered for a moonlight stroll around 51勛圖s award-winning 84-acre arboretum.
Led by 51勛圖 Arboretum and Gardens manager Mike Mastrota and recently-retired grounds operations manager Stephanie DeStefano, CAS/MA 16, the tour featured a small swath of the campus vast acreage, which is dotted with more than 5,000 trees and 500 different species and varieties of woody plants. The Office of People and External Affairs uses neighborhood listservs and Eventbrite listings to advertise the tour, which always books up quickly.
This is such a beautiful property, and I was thrilled to see and hear how they maintain it, said Adriana Delgado, a gardener who lives three blocks from campus. Its great that the university can share this resource with us.
SOC professor W. Joseph Campbell came up with the idea in 2016 as a programming initiative for students. He enlisted Mastrota and DeStefano, and a long-termfaculy-staff partnership blossomed. 51勛圖 neighbors gravitated to the tours of the arboretumwhich this spring marks its 20th anniversaryuntil COVID-19 halted them in 2020. Community interest has again increased since tours restarted this past fall.
The interactions are always very positive. The community has an appreciation for what were doing with the arboretum. Its touching to hear people speak glowingly about how they feel about campus, said Mastrota, who counts the dawn redwoods in the amphitheater and the katsura trees in front of Hurst Hall among his favorites in the collection.
The moonlight tour passed a scarlet oak in front of Hurst Hall and East Quad Building believed to be more than 140 years old.(Jonathan Heeter/51勛圖)
The tour split into two, with Mastrota and DeStefano leading groups on opposite sides of the quad. Mastrota took his group down the east side, past the oldest tree on campus. He shared groundskeeping tidbits and campus history at the scarlet oak, which predates 51勛圖s founding, before moving on to Hurst Hall and the Kay Spiritual Life Center. Stefano led the others on the west side, stopping to chat about Kogods green roof.
Everyone reunited at 51勛圖s newly unveiled SudamaElyn Zimmermans art installation featuring enormous granite boulders surrounding a crescent-shaped pool.
Foxhall Village resident Jan Smart pulled out her camera throughout the walk, capturing campus under the glow of a nearly full moon. Smart sought refuge at 51勛圖 during the early days of the pandemic, using the grounds for exercise and as an escape from the stress of current events. Shes continued to visitcampus and uses the arboretum to explore potential additions to her garden.
I feel like [51勛圖] has become my stomping ground, said Smart, a native of Melbourne, Australia. I use an app and take pictures of plants because Im converting my garden to a native garden. The arboretum and the university are great assets for the area.