Canandaigua Botanical Society

Canandaigua Botanical Society We are proud to be the second oldest Botanical Society in the USA. Many of our members are active in related nature and conservation oriented organizations.

The Canandaigua Botanical Society is the second oldest botanical society in continuous existence in the United States, dating back to 1874! The early group was composed of avid botanists who sought out and studied all types of plants growing in the local area. An extensive collection of pressed specimens was prepared by the club, most of which are currently housed in the Finger Lakes Herbarium at

the local community college. Today the society is made up of individuals who, while having a wide range of knowledge from novice to expert, share a love of nature. Interests range from wildflower enthusiasts to wild plant connoisseurs, from fern fanciers to mushroom aficionados. Members enjoy leisurely paced hikes which allow time to see what is underfoot, overhead and all around us when we really look.

The June updates email was just sent out. Images to the Huckleberry Bog page on our weblog happening next:
06/01/2026

The June updates email was just sent out. Images to the Huckleberry Bog page on our weblog happening next:

Our Summer 2026 Vasculum Newsletter is published.  Look for it in local libraries early June.
05/24/2026

Our Summer 2026 Vasculum Newsletter is published. Look for it in local libraries early June.

The Canandaigua City Tree Advisory Board hopes to help educate our community to eliminate volcano mulching.     Volcano ...
05/12/2026

The Canandaigua City Tree Advisory Board hopes to help educate our community to eliminate volcano mulching.

Volcano mulching is the most visible tree care mistake in America and the hardest to stop — because every landscaping crew does it, every neighbor copies it, and the mulch companies sell it by the cubic yard to pile up higher.

The cone of mulch banked against a tree trunk is not protecting anything. It is trapping moisture against bark that evolved to stay dry. Tree bark is the tree's skin — it breathes, it sheds water, and it serves as the first defense against pathogens and boring insects. Burying it under six to twelve inches of wet decomposing mulch rots the bark, invites fungal infection into the cambium layer, and creates an entry point for decay that can hollow the trunk from the inside.

The damage happens underground too. Mulch piled against the trunk encourages circling roots that grow around the base instead of spreading outward. Over years, these girdling roots tighten like a belt around the trunk, slowly strangling the tree's own vascular system. By the time symptoms appear above ground — thinning canopy, early leaf drop, bark cracking — the girdling is often too advanced to correct.

The correct mulch application looks underwhelming by comparison. A flat ring of mulch two to four inches deep extending out to the drip line — with a six-inch gap of bare soil around the trunk exposing the root flare — is what every university extension and certified arborist recommends. The root flare is the widening at the base where trunk becomes root. If you cannot see the flare, the tree is buried too deep or mulched too high.

The irony is that mulch itself is excellent for trees. It retains soil moisture, moderates root zone temperature, suppresses weeds, and adds organic matter as it decomposes. The material is not the problem. The placement is. Three inches of mulch in a wide ring with a clear trunk gap does everything a volcano promises and nothing it threatens.

If your trees currently have mulch volcanoes, pull the mulch back to expose the trunk and root flare. Redistribute it in a flat ring. The bark underneath may already show discoloration, softness, or fungal growth — clearing the mulch now stops the process before it reaches the cambium.

The tree that looks least cared for at the curb is often the healthiest one on the block

WONDERFUL WET WALK this morning!  More pictures to be posted on our weblog soon...
04/25/2026

WONDERFUL WET WALK this morning! More pictures to be posted on our weblog soon...

04/17/2026

Mid-April email sent out today.
LOTS of Spring ephemeral events next week!

03/24/2026

Lesser Celandine Dig at Mertensia Park in Farmington will begin at noon on Thursday, March 26. All are welcome!

A mid March email was sent out yesterday, March 21st.  Check out upcoming events on our weblog:
03/22/2026

A mid March email was sent out yesterday, March 21st. Check out upcoming events on our weblog:

Dedicated to advancing knowledge & enjoyment of plants found in the Finger Lakes Region since 1874

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Canandaigua, NY
14424

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