Month: April 2010

  • Saturday, May 1, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Esplanade Spring Walk

    Put on your walking shoes Saturday, May 1, from 10 am – 12 noon, and join The Esplanade Association’s spring walk, guided by Karl Haglund, noted historian and author of Inventing the Charles River.  Mr. Haglund, who also serves as the Department of Conservation and Recreation’s Project Manager for the New Charles River Basin, will delight you with fun facts about the Esplanade as you take in the sights and sounds of the park.  Meet in front of the Hatch Shell, rain or shine.  You may contact Justin Burke at 617-227-0365 for more information, or log on to www.esplanadeassociation.org.

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  • Tuesday, April 27, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – “The Garden” Film Screening

    Whole Foods sponsors “Let’s Retake Our Plates” film series at the Boston Public Library, Tuesday, April 27, from 7 – 9 pm. When bulldozers threaten a 14 acre community garden in South Central Los Angeles, concerned citizens unite and fight for the country’s largest urban farm.  This 2008 film takes an unflinching look at the struggle between urban farmers and the city, and powerful developers.

    The Garden centers around a community’s struggle to hold onto a fourteen-acre garden in South Central Los Angeles. The community’s struggle received widespread attention in 2004-2006, when the farmers were fighting the city of Los Angeles and developer Ralph Horowitz to maintain control of the garden, ultimately working to raise funds to buy the land. The community garden was established on government property following the 1992 riots and was the largest of its kind in the U.S.

    The details of the story provide great footage: a wealthy developer engages in a shady real-estate deal with the city of Los Angeles to acquire the property, a city council member helps push through the secret deal, tensions between the Black and Latino communities complicate matters, while the impoverished Latino farmers at the heart of the story struggle not just for land but their livelihoods.

    The fourteen-acre garden was originally owned by developer Horowitz but the city acquired it under eminent domain, paying him $5 million. He sued the city unsuccessfully but ultimately struck a back-room deal to buy it back for $5 million, despite property values having skyrocketed in the intervening years. When the farmers are forced to consider buying the garden, Horowitz raises the price tag to $16.2 million.

    The film is moving and expertly captures the intricacies of the farmers’ struggle. Where another documentary filmmaker might have shied away from some of the nuance such as divisions between communities of color, filmmaker Scott Hamilton Kennedy delves into the tough subjects, highlighting complex racial and political dynamics. Free admission.

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  • Thursday, May 20, 2:00 – 4:00 pm – The Power and Purpose of Trees: A Walk with Diana Beresford-Kroeger

    The Arnold Arboretum proves the perfect classroom for renegade botanist Diana Beresford-Kroeger. She will lead you among trees from around the globe, describing their subtle and not so subtle qualities that contribute to the environment. Mixing lore and chemistry, fact and theory, Diana will broaden your understanding of the inherent importance of trees to the lives of all on this planet. The walk will take place Thursday, May 20, from 2 – 4, and you should meet at the Hunnewell Building at the Arnold Arboretum in Jamaica Plain. The program is co-sponsored by the Wellesley College Friends of Horticulture and the fee is $25 for Arboretum members and Wellesley College Friends of Horticulture, $30 for the general public. Sign up at www.arboretum.harvard.edu.

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  • Thursday, May 20, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Trees for Life: Planting the Global Forest

    Though schooled in classical botany, medical biochemistry, organic and radio-nuclear chemistry, as well as experimental surgery, Diana Beresford-Kroeger’s thoughts about trees are anything but classical. She has a collection of ideas, some radical, for how trees can be used to affect climate change as well as human health. According to Beresford-Kroeger, we have yet to fully understand the function and contribution of trees. In this lecture Diana will espouse the intrinsic values of particular trees, explain her hopes for reforesting the planet, and share some of the lore that fuels her passion to continue her research on trees. This lecture, taking place Thursday, May 20, from 7 – 8:30 pm in the Hunnewell Building of the Arnold Arboretum in Jamaica Plain, is co-sponsored with The Wellesley College Friends of Horticulture, and costs $15 for members of the sponsoring institutions, $20 for non-members. You may register at www.arboretum.harvard.edu.

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  • Sunday, May 2, 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm – Wood End: Evolving Through Time

    Tickets for the Friends of the Reading Public Library’s 17th Annual House Tour on Sunday, May 2, from 1 – 5 pm, are now on sale ($20 for Friends of the Reading Public Library members, $25 for general public. ) Proceeds help fund library programs and functions such as the Childrens’  Summer Reading Program, the Classical Music Series, and a variety of discounted museum passes.  This year, sponsors include Advancian Realty and the VNA of Middlesex East Visiting Nurse Hospice/ Sawtelle Family Hospice House.  Go to www.readingpl.org for more information, including ticket sales locations.

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  • Thursday, May 6, 6:00 pm – Saturday, May 8, 4:30 pm – Landscapes for Living: Post War Years in Texas

    Another interesting trip is planned May 6 – May 8 by The Cultural Landscape Foundation (www.tclf.org), this time with a focus on the unique Post War legacy of public and private landscapes in Texas, during what is now thought to be an optimistic time of innovation and experimentation.  Nationally recognized speakers from the public and private sectors and the academic community, including Charles Birnbaum, W. Mark Gunderson, and Ben Koush,  will provide rare insight and analysis of this unprecedented era of design.  The conference , to be held at the Dallas Museum of Art, will look both back and ahead, as the symposium culminates in a panel discussion which explores what this design legacy and Modern design means in the 21st century.  Fees (not including transportation and lodging) $125 for members of the TCLF, $150 for nonmembers, $75 students.  Co-sponsored by Historic Fort Worth, Inc. For more information, log on to the TCLF web site or email andrea@tclf.org.  Heritage Park, Fort Worth,  designed by Lawrence Halprin, is pictured below.

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  • Wednesday, April 21 – Friday, July 2 – HGTV Green Home Charity Tour

    HGTV has built its third annual “green” home in The Pinehills, an innovative master-planned community located at 33 Summerhouse Drive in Plymouth, Massachusetts. The 2010 HGTV Green Home, just eight miles north of Cape Cod, will be a custom-built, shingle-style cottage with approximately 2,100 square feet of living space. It will feature construction and design elements that are known to contribute to an energy efficient, cleaner and healthier living environment. Scheduled 60 minute tours of the HGTV Green Home at The Pinehills are available from April 21 – July 2. All proceeds benefit The Pinehills Affordable Housing Charitable Trust, a 501c (3) not for profit organization, established to assist the affordable housing efforts in the town of Plymouth. Viewers can also enter for a chance to win the HGTV Green Home Giveaway grand prize package during the entry period from April 16 – June 4, 2010. Visit  www.hgtv.com for information on how to enter to win.  For more information, log on to www.pinehills.com, or call 508-209-2000.

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  • Wednesday, May 19, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm – Pollinator Friendly Landscaping

    As New England’s landscape becomes increasingly developed, backyards are becoming a “final frontier” in providing essential habitat for at-risk pollinator species that play an integral role in the health of our environment.  Garden coach and habitat naturalist Ellen Sousa explains how to help sustain and restore pollinator populations in your own backyard, regardless of its size or location.  Learn to choose the best plants to help feed and shelter pollinators, and some best practices for encouraging biodiversity in your backyard.  A tour of appropriate plants at The Garden in the Woods follows the morning’s lecture.  The date for this event is Wednesday, May 19,  from 10 am – 1 pm, and the fee for NEWFS members is $33, $49 for nonmembers.  To register, or for more information, log on to www.newfs.org.

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  • Saturday, May 8, 9:00 am – 1:00 pm – Garden Heritage & Herb Plant Sale

    Over three hundred varieties of herbs will be featured in a sale at Elm Bank, 900 Washington Street in Wellesley, on Saturday, May 8, from 9 am – 1 pm.  Culinary herbs, fragrance herbs, tea herbs, herbal remedies, heirloom specialties and heirloom vegetables will be available, plus many native plants from the gardens of members of the sponsor, the New England Unit of the Herb Society.  Free admission and  parking.  For more information, email cindyherrick@earthlink.net, and log on to www.neuhsa.org.

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  • Thursday, May 20, 7:30 am – 6:30 pm – Day Trip to The High Line & Wave Hill Gardens

    Join the staff of the Berkshire Botanical Garden for a guided tour of the cutting edge gardens of The High Line, New York City’s newest park. Recently completed, the High Line is built on an elevated 1930’s freight rail structure on Manhattan’s West Side. These extensive gardens echo the wild, self-seeded landscape that grew up on the structure after the trains stopped running. The landscape is designed by James Corner Field Operations and Diller Scofidio + Renfro, with the consultation of Holland’s champion of New Wave gardening, Piet Oudolf. From the High Line travel to the gardens at Wave Hill in the Bronx and enjoy a guided tour of this 28 acre estate, the vision of famed horticulturist Marco Polo Stefano. Tour these remarkable gardens, including the conservatory, alpine house, and special collections. This guided garden tour is for plant lovers with an interest in both the old and new.

    The cost of this guided tour is $85 for BBG members, $95 for non-members.  Reservations are essential (www.berkshirebotanical.org). Dress for the weather, because this is a rain or shine event.  Please also bring a bagged lunch.

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