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Landscape > arctangent  > Places - By Type > Arboretums and Botanical Gardens > Nichols Arboretum and Dow Prairie - Ann Arbor, Michigan
Nichols Arboretum (affectionately known as 'The Arb' by locals) is operated by the University of Michigan, which for administrative purposes considers it together with the Matthaei Botanical Gardens to comprise a single unit (MBGNA). The two lie several miles apart, and most visitors consider the two nature areas to be quite distinct in what they offer. Nichols Arboretum occupies some prime riverfront along the Huron River, starting just east of the Medical Center campus. Except for the very eastern part, where a tall grass prairie restoration is underway, Dow Prairie, the terrain is steep and mostly wooded. Along the margins of the woods and in the open areas (often referred to as valleys or glens) there are many trees labelled with common and binomial names. Trees both native to North America and imported from around the world can be found, many of them as large, mature specimens, dating to the 1920's - 1950's. Apart from various plantings of rhododenron and azaleas, and a few flower beds that surround them, the only flower garden in the Arboretum is a world class peony garden. Wildflowers abound in the woods and on the prairie, however. Hiking or jogging trails criss-cross both the wooded and open areas. There is no officially approved river access for boaters along the river in the Arboretum. Swans, geese, and ducks nest along it as a consequence.
For a nice map of the Arboretum in pdf form, see http://www.lsa.umich.edu/mbg/files/ArbGuide.pdf
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From the top of the Arb, at Geddes Ave., you can easily see across the intervening Huron River Valley to North Campus.  The strange looking tower in the distance is the 167 foot tall Ann and Robert H. Lurie Tower, which houses the newer of two grand carillons on the University of Michigan campuses.  The older is in Burton Tower on the central campus.

Nichols Arboretum, Ann Arbor
April 2, 2012
(nex-5)
D085-2012 Higan Weeping Cherry (Prunus subhirtella 'Pendula')
The blooming period had barely begun by this date this year, and now it's almost over.
It was quite a windy day, which made photographing this tree a bit challenging.

Nichols Arboretum at the northwest corner of Dow Prairie
March 26, 2012
Higan Weeping Cherry (Prunus subhirtella 'Pendula')
A jogger, oblivious to all the beauty she is passing by, at least adds size perspective.

Nichols Arboretum
March 26, 2012
Higan Weeping Cherry (Prunus subhirtella 'Pendula')
The blooming period had barely begun by this date this year.

Looking across the recent prescribed burn on Dow Prairie in a generally northwesterly direction.

Nichols Arboretum
March 26, 2012
Not all questions need to be answered.
What hands, those of a child or a child at heart perhaps, constructed this small 'offering'?  Was it done out of boredom, or born of some deeper purpose known only to the builder?  Was something hidden beneath its green pine needles?  I left that question unanswered, content with the minor mystery, and passed on.

Nichols Arboretum on or near the Dow Prairie
March 26, 2012
Black and tan.
Sections of Dow Prairie are burned each year in rotation.  It's done to encourage prairie plants that are adapted to fire, and discourage invasive species that aren't.  From the smell, this burn was just a few days old.  I suppose it must be done in spring before birds begin to nest, or in autumn after they've left.

Nichols Arboretum on or near the Dow Prairie
March 26, 2012
Some kind of cherry tree, possibly naturalized, but now part of the woodland.
Looking back along the shattered trunk toward Dow Prairie and the amazing display of blossoms considering the damage to the tree's vascular system.

Nichols Arboretum, Ann Arbor, Michigan
March 26, 2012
(nex-5)
Some kind of cherry (or possibly plum).
Incredibly, even though this tree had suffered a nearly complete rupture of the trunk, it managed to produce a full crop of blossoms.  If you look closely at the blossoms in the shade, you'll see that they are a pale shade of pink, not a bright white.

Nichols Arboretum, Ann Arbor, Michigan
March 26, 2012
(nex-5)
Some kind of cherry (or possibly plum).
The lighted spaces of Dow Prairie form a backdrop for the blossoms of this essentially woodland tree.

Nichols Arboretum, Ann Arbor, Michigan
March 26, 2012
(nex-5)
Some kind of cherry (or possibly plum).
Incredibly, even though this tree had suffered a nearly complete rupture of the trunk, it managed to produce a full crop of blossoms. If you look closely at the blossoms in the shade, you'll see that they are a pale shade of pink, not a bright white.

Nichols Arboretum, Ann Arbor, Michigan
March 26, 2012
(nex-5)
Some kind of cherry (or possibly plum).
Incredibly, even though this tree had suffered a nearly complete rupture of the trunk, it managed to produce a full crop of blossoms.  If you look closely at the blossoms in the shade, you'll see that they are a pale shade of pink, not a bright white.

Nichols Arboretum, Ann Arbor, Michigan
March 26, 2012
(nex-5)
Some kind of cherry (or possibly plum).
Incredibly, even though this tree had suffered a nearly complete rupture of the trunk, it managed to produce a full crop of blossoms. If you look closely at the blossoms in the shade, you'll see that they are a pale shade of pink, not a bright white.

Nichols Arboretum, Ann Arbor, Michigan
March 26, 2012
(nex-5)
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Keywords: spring flowers march broken trunk blossoms blooms flowering blooming damaged ann arbor wild cherry wind damage 2012 black cherry nichols arboretum dow prairie
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