Museum Sokolov Arboretum
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Museum info
About the museum
After the end of the World War II, by the decision of the Executive Committee of the Kexholm (Priozersk) District Council of Worker's Deputies dated March 30, 1946, the territory of the former Finnish villages of Mattila, Khakana, Larjava, Mahoinen and Hiekkavalkana with a total area of 56 hectares was transferred to the V. L. Komarov Botanical Institute of the USSR Academy of Sciences for establishing scientific and experimental station. The Station was named 'Otradnoye'. In 1947 the arboretum was established in order to study acclimatization of plants. The Mahoinen manor house was then converted to a dormitory for the researchers...
About the museum
After the end of the World War II, by the decision of the Executive Committee of the Kexholm (Priozersk) District Council of Worker's Deputies dated March 30, 1946, the territory of the former Finnish villages of Mattila, Khakana, Larjava, Mahoinen and Hiekkavalkana with a total area of 56 hectares was transferred to the V. L. Komarov Botanical Institute of the USSR Academy of Sciences for establishing scientific and experimental station. The Station was named 'Otradnoye'. In 1947 the arboretum was established in order to study acclimatization of plants. The Mahoinen manor house was then converted to a dormitory for the researchers.
The arboretum park of the Otradnoye station comprises a collection of 2,500 taxa of trees from all over the Northern Hemisphere. There are plants from North America, Europe and Asia, endemic plants of the Far East and the Caucasus, rare and exotic species. The arboretum was named after Sergey Yakovlevich Sokolov, who carried out selection studies at the station.
Now Otradnoye arboretum is undergoing a process of obtaining a status of the nature conservation area. The plants of the arboretum are equipped with QR labels. By scanning the QR code, you can learn new and interesting facts about each plant.
Exhibits
Exhibits featured with audio
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White birch
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Blue spruce
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Siberian pine
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Kamchatka fir
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Tiеn Shan mountain ash
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Whitebeam
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Sargent cherry
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Northern white cedar
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Large-leaved linden
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Persian walnut
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European aspen
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Crack-willow
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Redbud crabapple
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Siberian spruce
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Serbian spruce
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White spruce
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Fraser fir
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Jack pine
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Rhodora
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Amur maackia
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Dahurian rhododendron
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Macedonian pine
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Dahurian Larch
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Smirnow rhododendron
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Pinkshell azalea
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Fori rhododendron
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Korean spruce
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Albrecht rhododendron
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Japanese azalea
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Common juniper
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Megrelian birch
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Korean pine
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Japanese larch
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Red-bud maple
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Caucasian oak
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Pin cherry
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Tatarian dogwood
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Amur grape
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Manchurian pipevine
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Siberian mountain-ash
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White fir
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European beech
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Northern red oak
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Ussurian pear
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Amur barberry
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Hiba arborvitae
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Saskatoon serviceberry
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Hazelnut
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Chinese magnolia-vine
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Amur corktree
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Villous lilac
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Northern white cedar ‘Lutea’
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Dwarf Siberian pine
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Sawara cypress 'Squarrosa'
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Corkbark fir
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Needle fir
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Douglas fir
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Niedzwetzky's apple
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Korean fir
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Royal azalea
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Catawba rhododendron
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Rhododendron sichotense
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Longpole pine
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Pontic azalea
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Cranston spruce
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Canadian hemlock
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Manchurian walnut
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English yew
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Siberian fir
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Sakhalin spruce
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Silver fir
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Alpine currant
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Gorodkov rowan
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Staghorn sumac
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Redhaw hawthorn
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Pacific rhododendron
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