Photo gallery Spring splendor
Little can compare to spring in the UW Arboretum — especially when that spring was slow to show its face. In the Longenecker Horticultural Gardens, the blossoming trees, buzzing bees and strutting turkeys celebrate the return of warm weather in Madison. Alongside, people take pictures of the transient blooms and each other, or simply relax with loved ones in the peaceful space full of fragrance. The 35-acre Longenecker Gardens have more than 2,500 species and boast impressive collections of lilacs and crabapples. Though spring is especially charming in the gardens, the plants and animals put on a show year-round.
Photos by Jeff Miller
Text by Eric Hamilton and Bill Graf
The splendor of the Arboretum often provides a backdrop for moments of irresistible cuteness. Thea Graper, age 1, smiles for photographer Tiffany Bekx and mother Cierra Graper.
A flowering crabapple tree, having withstood winter as well as April's false spring, waited for exactly the right moment to bloom.
A passing bicyclist takes a detour from a popular Arboretum path to photograph magnolia blossoms.
Snow-white petals (if you don't mind one last reference to winter) adorn a blossoming crabapple tree.
A turkey trots.
Someday, Vanessa Flores will look at the picture her godsister Ashley Vences took and remember her youthful romp through the Arboretum.
All through the Longenecker Horticultural Gardens are brilliant splashes of spring color.
"They'll never find us here," UW–Madison alumnus Dom Lark is probably telling son Donovan during a family game of hide-and-seek.
There's no place a bumblebee would rather be than pollinating the flowers of a buckeye tree.
Kelli Miner, left, and Micah Buffat embrace the moment in one of the Arboretum's inviting open spaces.
Passing clouds put the flowering crabapple trees in a whole new light.
Thomas Grist, professor of radiology in the UW School of Medicine and Public Health, treats his parents, Franklin and Mary Grist, to an outing that included a photogenic moment in front of a blossoming crabapple tree.
This magnificent crabapple tree, a Donald Wyman variety, is a memorial in honor of Jacob and Leona Munz.
A magnolia tree marks another of its lifetime of springtimes by leafing out in the Longenecker Gardens.
The delicate pattern of a Norway maple's young leaves rivals the splendor of the many flowering trees.
The next warm breeze will do the bidding of these dandelions gone to seed.
A tree swallow wonders if this might be a good place to spend the night.
Flowers with fragrance, like this lilac, are a bonus among the gardens' sensory delights.
The Troia Arch seems to have emerged organically from among the trees as evening in the Arboretum approaches.