Arboretum

Northern Arboretum

Sweden Umeå Municipality
Northern Arboretum
Northern Arboretum · Wikipedia

About

Arboretum Norr (English: Northern Arboretum) is an arboretum in Baggböle, Sweden, on the Ume River, about eight kilometers west of Umeå city centre.

History: The arboretum is in Baggböle, a settlement known for its water-powered sawmill. So infamous were the sawmill owners' methods that a new word in Swedish was derived from the name of "Baggböle". The Swedish word baggböleri is a derogative term for the idea of deforestation. The mansion that still stands was designed by Johan Anders Linder and built in 1846.

Description: Arboretum Norr covers an area of about 20 acres, with more than 1,600 plants from about 280 species, planted since 1981. The plants are mostly from Scandinavian countries. One of the arboretum's three functions is to see which species thrive and survive at far northerly latitudes, which may in turn lead to a greater variety of climate-adapted shrubs and trees in northern Scandinavia. The mansion at the centre of the park used to be the headquarters of a business that felled trees as part of a sawmill business in the nineteenth century. The other two objectives of the arboretum are to support the study of trees and shrubs (Dendrology) and to supply a visitor...