Kaldenkirchen Sequoia Farm

Kaldenkirchen Sequoia Farm
(Sequoiafarm Kaldenkirchen)

Entrance to the Sequoia Farm
Type Arboretum
Location Nettetal, Germany
Area 3.5 hectares
Created 1950 (1950)
Operated by Society Sequoiafarm e.V.
Open April to October on Sundays and holidays
Website Sequoiafarm
60-year-old stock of Sequoiadendron giganteum in a test site (2010)
58-year-old group of Sequoia sempervirens within the Sequoiafarm (2010)
Sequoiadendron giganteum in the Sequoiafarm
Visiting the dawn redwoods

The Kaldenkirchen Sequoia Farm (German: Sequoiafarm Kaldenkirchen) is a German arboretum that has been used as a biological institute for many years. Part of the protected area in the city of Nettetal, it is situated in the "Kaldenkirchen Grenzwald" (forest bordering Germany and the Netherlands). Nettetal lies in the Lower Rhine region of Germany.

History and use

In 1946, Illa Martin and Ernst J. Martin, both dentists and dendrologists in Kaldenkirchen, founded an arboretum close to the Dutch border. There, and in a nearby laboratory-plantation several acres wide from 1952 on, they cultivated 1,500 giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum) seedlings from seeds of US origin from Martin's nephew Albert A. Martin of Santa Barbara, CA.[1] The seeds were collected in Sequoia National Forest at different elevations, wrapped in burlap to preserve them and sent to Germany. They wanted to find out if the giant sequoia, which had existed in Germany before the ice age, could be introduced to German forestry.[2][3] There was on the one hand an area of purely giant sequoia, on the other an experimental arboretum with trees such as Abies grandis, Abies concolor var. lowiana and Coast Douglas-firs. The project was financially supported by the German Research Foundation and met with great interest from dendrological circles, particularly in Great Britain and in the USA.[4] Part of the field exclusively planted with giant sequoia was reserved for obtaining results of productivity by the "Ecology and Forestry Department" of North-Rhine-Westphalia (NRW).[5]

The two dendrologists made further experiments growing seedlings of coast redwood,[6] dawn redwood and numerous kinds of southern beeches[7] and pine trees. More than 13,000 were handed over to forestry officers, to scientists and to plant nurseries. As time went by, the park known as the "Sequoia Farm" became bigger and bigger, developing into a highly respected arboretum. It has more than 400 varieties of trees and interesting ground flora and is part of the "Protected area of Maas-Schwalm-Nette", so-called after the three rivers that run through the area.[8]

After the death of Ernst J. Martin in 1967, North-Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) took over the farm. At first, the teacher-training institute of NRW, later on the University of Cologne, and, between 1987 and 2007, the University of Duisburg-Essen made it a centre of dendrological studies.[9] Since 2013 the arboretum has been in possession of the registered society "Sequoiafarm e.V.".[10] From April to October it is open to the public on Sundays and holidays.

Notable trees (selection)

Binomial nomenclature English name Country of Origin
Acer runifere Redvein Maple, Honshū Maple Japan
Abies concolor Sierra Nevada White Fir Western North America
Abies grandis Grand Fir, Giant Fir Western North America
Ailanthus altissima Tree of heaven China, Taiwan
Calocedrus decurrens California incense cedar Western North America
Cercidiphyllum japonicum Katsura China, Japan
Gunnera manicata Gunnera manicata South Brasilia
Magnolia kobus Kobushi Magnolia Japan
Nothofagus obliqua (the largest specimen in Germany)[11] Roble beech Chile, Argentina
Parrotia persica Persian ironwood Northern Iran
Pinus ayacahuite (the largest specimen in Germany)[12]Mexican White Pine Mexico, Central America
Pinus parviflora 'Glauca' Japanese white pine Japan
Sequoia sempervirens Coast redwood Western North America
Sequoiadendron giganteum Giant sequoia California
Thuja plicata Western redcedar British Columbia
Tsuga sieboldii Southern Japanese Hemlock Japan
Wollemia nobilis Wollemia Australia
Zanthoxylum piperitum Japanese pepper Japan
Ernst J. Martin (19001967), founder of the farm
Illa Martin (19001988), co-founder of the farm

References

Notes

  1. Herbert Hubatsch: Ernst Martin. In: Der Niederrhein. Krefeld. No. 3, 1967
  2. Arthur Lange: Wissenschaft als Steckenpferd. Laienforscher – ihre Leistungen und ihre Wissenschaft. Holsten. Hamburg 1967
  3. Ernst J. Martin: Mammutbäume in der deutschen Forstwirtschaft? In: „Die Umschau in Wissenschaft und Technik“. Frankfurt 1954. ISSN 0041-6347
  4. Hans Huth: Sequoias in Germany. In: Journal of Forest History, Vol. 3, July 1976. Durham (USA), ISSN 0094-5080
  5. Illa Martin: Die Wiedereinführung des Mammutbaumes (Sequoiadendron giganteum) in die deutsche Forstwirtschaft. In: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Dendrologischen Gesellschaft. Vol. 75, pp. 5775. Ulmer. Stuttgart 1984. ISBN 3-8001-8308-0
  6. Illa Martin: Der Küstenmammutbaum (Sequoia sempervirens) und seine Anzucht in Deutschland. In: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Dendrologischen Gesellschaft. Vol. 77, pp. 57104. Ulmer. Stuttgart 1987. ISBN 3-8001-8310-2
  7. Illa Martin: Anzucht und Anbau von Nothofagus in Deutschland. In: Mitteilungen der Deutschen Dendrologischen Gesellschaft. Vol. 70, pp. 147166. Ulmer. Stuttgart 1978. ISBN 3-8001-8302-1
  8. Herbert Hubatsch: Von der Sequoiafarm zur Biologischen Station. In: Heimatbuch des Kreises Kempen-Krefeld, Kempen 1973
  9. Manfred Krause: Mammutbaumfarm am Niederrhein wird zum Eldorado für Wissenschaftler der Essener Uni. In: WAZ vom 30. Juli 1988
  10. http://sequoiafarm-kaldenkirchen.de
  11. http://www.championtrees.de/liste-deutschland/deutschland-l-p/index.html
  12. http://www.championtrees.de/5403879d900fef223/5403879d9c0fe7a01/index.html
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Coordinates: 51°18′32″N 6°10′20″E / 51.30889°N 6.17222°E / 51.30889; 6.17222

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