From Deseret News archives:
Arboretum a tribute to Bill Varga's vast knowledge
Ethnobotanist spent years helping Utahns grow better gardens
Finding the right tree for the right place is a frequent landscape challenge for gardeners. Finding that perfect tree became a little easier with the recent opening of the Varga Arboretum at the Utah Botanical Center.
This tree planting is a fitting way to honor a person who has spent his entire career helping Utahns become better gardeners.
Bill Varga, who recently retired, grew up raising plants in a family business in the East but came to Utah State University in 1966. After his graduation, he worked at the demonstration garden and farm in Farmington.
He eventually formed the Utah Botanical Center there, directing the trials and planting of many annuals, perennials, trees and shrubs. These gardens were a favorite destination for many Utah gardeners and nursery professionals.
When the gardens were scheduled to become a highway interchange, Varga oversaw the acquisition of additional acreage adjacent to the USU fruit research farm in Kaysville. To keep some favorite trees, he had 57 of them transplanted to the new site in 1999.
Jay Dee Gunnell, USU horticulture agent in Davis County, expanded the arboretum, making it more accessible and educational. He wanted to showcase the trees and shrubs suited to the dry mountains and valleys of Utah.
Gunnell, with the advice and assistance of master gardeners and nursery operators, added more than 100 additional specimens to the original plantings. His design arranged the plants in three different water zones to help visitors select the right plant for their conditions.
In the three water zones, the very low water-use plants require 1/2 inch to 1 inch of water each week during the growing season. The low water-use plants need 1 to 11/2 inches of water each week. The moderate water-use plants need 11/2 to 2 inches of water per week after they are established.
Varga shared his passion with all who would listen, and he searched the mountains and the nurseries for unusual plants that added to Utah's public and private landscapes.
He enjoyed being a mountain man, using his love of native plants to share his knowledge of ethnobotany, the combination of the study of culture and plants. Varga's specialty is native plants and how Native Americans and others used them.
Plantings in the arboretum bearing his name reflect some of these useful plants. For shrubs, the list includes ephedra or Mormon tea, skunkbush sumac, Fremont barberry, Apache plume, dwarf smooth sumac and cliffrose.
Among his favorite deciduous trees are the Utah serviceberry, bigtooth maple and Gambel oak. Among the evergreen trees are Utah and Rocky Mountain juniper, pinyon pine and bristlecone pine.








