Horticulturist provides rare glimpse inside the jewel of Tacoma’s Wright Park

Thousands of species of plants stretch for sunlight inside an elaborate glass Victorian conservatory in Tacoma’s Wright Park. For nearly 120 years the W. W. Seymour Botanical Conservatory has offered Pierce County residents a special place to look at rare and beautiful plants regardless of the weather.

As its head horticulturist prepares to unveil its new spring display on Feb. 25, The News Tribune got an inside look of what it takes to maintain the only free public conservatory in the county. Additional maintenance will mean the conservatory will be closed to the public next week, from Feb. 16 to Feb. 24, staff said.

Now is the best time to see a variety of beautiful orchids in bloom, said Joseph Gabbamonte, whose job is to care for the plants inside. He spends his days carefully watering, pruning, fertilizing and organizing the elaborate flower displays, in addition to feeding the resident koi fish (Mystique, Oliver and Eldora) and two yellow poison dart frogs. Occasionally Mr. BW, a black and white stray cat, will stop by, he said.

The plants inside the conservatory are from all over the world, including South Africa and South America, Gabbamonte said. Caring for them requires special knowledge of their watering needs and careful pest maintenance, he said. The closest comparable conservatory is the Volunteer Park Conservatory in Seattle, Gabbamonte said.

Few people know that most of the flower displays at the W. W. Seymour Botanical Conservatory are grown from seed elsewhere by Parks Tacoma. Several greenhouses The News Tribune saw Tuesday house not only plants destined for the conservatory but other annuals that will soon fill flower beds in Point Defiance Park, along Ruston Way and in Wapato, Titlow, Norpoint and Dash Point parks…

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