Month: April 2010

  • Wednesday, May 5, 10:00 am – 12:30 pm – Signs of Spring at Will’s Woods

    Travel to The Garden in the Woods on Wednesday, May 5, for a walking tour beginning at 10 am, wrapping up around 12:30 pm (Garden Club of the Back Bay members, please remember this is the same time as our May meeting!).  Spring is back.  Leaf buds are beginning to open and early flowering species are in bloom.  You will leave the beaten track and explore parts of Garden in the Woods’ natural areas, about two-thirds of its 45 acres. You’ll appreciate why Will Curtis fell in love in the 1930’s with this glacially formed property as you identify a diversity of trees, shrubs, and some herbaceous species. You’ll encounter such interesting species as American hornbeam (Carpinus caroliniana), spicebush (Lindera benzoin), and, pictured below, marsh marigold (Caltha palustris), while focusing on easily observable identification characteristics and natural history. Bring a hand lens if you have one, and a favorite field guide or two.  The walk will be led by Roland “Boot” Boutwell, and the fee to attend is $24 for members of NEWFS, and $27  for nonmembers.  Limited to 15, so register early at www.newfs.org.

    http://www.cheshirewildlifetrust.co.uk/IMAGES/marsh_marigold.jpg

  • Tuesday, April 27, 7:30 pm – Between Earth and Sky: Our Intimate Connection with Trees

    The UMass Amherst Environmental Lecture Series continues with a free lecture on Tuesday, April 27,  at 7:30 pm in the Bowker Auditorium with Nalini Nadkarni, Professor, Evergreen State College and National Geographic Speaker.  For information and directions, log on to http://www.umass.edu/tei/TEI/LectureSeries.html.

    Nalini Nadkarni has been called “the queen of forest canopy research,” a field that relates directly to three of the most pressing environmental issues of our time: the maintenance of biodiversity, the stability of world climate, and the sustainability of forests.

    She has spent more than two decades climbing the tall trees of Costa Rica, Papua New Guinea, the Amazon, and the Pacific Northwest. In 1994 she realized that there was no central database for storing and analyzing the research she was gathering, so she invented one. This state-of-the-art repository, called the Big Canopy Database, is credited with speeding cross-disciplinary collaboration just as a common database revolutionized the mapping of the human genome.

    Nadkarni is known for using nontraditional pathways to raise awareness of nature’s importance, working with prisoners, artists, dancers, musicians, and even loggers. Her work has been featured in Glamour, National Geographic, on TV, and in a giant-screen film, as well as in traditional science publications.

    In 1994, she co-founded and is President of the International Canopy Network, a non-profit organization that fosters communication among researchers, educators, and conservationists concerned with forest canopies. She spends a great deal of energy on public outreach to the general public, children, and policy-makers on matters concerning forest canopies and forest conservation. She has appeared in numerous television documentaries, and was most recently featured as a canopy scientist in the National Geographic television special on tropical forest canopies, titled “Heroes of the High Frontier”, which won the Emmy Award for Best Documentary Film of 2001. A new project she initiated involves the creation of a multi-disciplinary Forest Canopy Walkway project on The Evergreen State College campus. In 2001, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship to pursue her interests in communication of forest canopy research results to non-scientists with collaborations of artists, musicians, physicians, sports figures, and religious leaders.

    http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_Ms2x2NGB824/SZzdfa_L9yI/AAAAAAAAAHY/HI4jA6v3Ajs/s320/nalini+Nadkarni+photo+in+trees.jpg

  • Friday, April 9 – Sunday, April 11, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Spring Orchid Sale

    Hundreds of orchid plants are for sale at the Lyman Estate Greenhouses, Waltham, Massachusetts, including many hard to find varieties.  Among the varieties on display and for sale: cattleyas, laelias, paphiopedilums, and phalaenopsis. Both species and hybrid plants are available in bud or blooming. Free admission.  Call 781-891-1985  for more information and directions, or log on to www.historicnewengland.org.

    http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3233/3151864019_598d8aa933.jpg?v=0

  • Saturday, May 1, 9:30 am – 12:30 pm – Low Maintenance Design with Native Plants

    Lower your garden maintenance by using native plants and designing carefully. Learn how to design a unique garden space with strong connections to our spectacular New England landscape. In this interactive format, you are encouraged to bring your ideas, along with photographs, plans, or sketches of your own property. Landscape designer Owen Wormser helps you create enjoyable, low maintenance, and sustainable garden spaces while discovering important functional and aesthetic aspects of native plants.  The May 1 morning course is co-sponsored by The New England Wild Flower Society and the Hitchcock Center for the Environment and will take place at Nasami Farm Nursery in Whately, Massachusetts.  The fee is $33 for NEWFS members, $39 for nonmembers. To register, log on to www.newfs.org.

    http://i.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/01063/gardening-graphics_1063950a.jpg

  • Tuesday, May 4, 7:00 pm – Garden: An Act of Faith

    The Fifth Lecture in Trinity Church’s Gardens and Spirit Series takes place Tuesday, May 4 beginning at 7 pm at Trinity Church, co-sponsored by the Arnold Arboretum.  Topher Delaney is a visionary and internationally celebrated artist and landscape designer who was diagnosed with breast cancer with lymph node involvement. Ms. Delaney made a pact with God. If she survived, she vowed she would devote her practice to helping others heal. Over the past twenty two years, Ms. Delaney has focused on creating designs of healing gardens for hospitals and sanctuaries for both residential and business clients. She creates highly individualized private gardens, conceived as places of retreat and healing. She believes “gardens are sanctuaries, hallowed places of personal retreat.”

    “Everything I do, whether for a hospital, a business, or a residence, is about comfort, healing, and faith,” said Delaney. “When I was beginning my career, landscape design appealed to me as a form of sculpture and as a way of showing my commitment to the environment. It seemed to be the perfect combination of art and civic responsibility. What I have realized along the way is the tremendous power gardens can have on people’s psyches.”

    Her practice, SEAM Studio, has evolved from a traditional landscape architectural practice to an atelier, which serves as a venue for the investigation of cultural, social and artistic narratives “seamed” together to form dynamic physical installations. Sites range in scale from intimate to expansive, from private residences and sanctuary gardens for medical facilities to corporate rooftop gardens and large-scale public art installations, including the Isaac Espinoza Memorial garden, a tribute to the San Francisco policeman and a “nave of light” installation at the University of San Francisco entrance plaza. Gardens specially created for the Marin Cancer Center and the San Diego Childrens Hospital demonstrate the palpably healing character of her creations. Delaney has received numerous awards and honors for her achievements in the realms of both landscape design and public art. Her work focusing on the garden as sanctuary has been published in the New York Times, Gardens Illustrated, Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Metropolitan Home and Design Quarterly. She is currently featured in Paradise Transformed: Gardens of the 21st Century.

    Tickets are $25 each, $20 for members of Trinity/Arboretum, and may be purchased at The Shop at Trinity, 206 Clarendon Street in Boston, by telephone at 617-536-0944, x 217, or online at www.arboretum.harvard.edu.  For more information, contact kathy Acerbo-Bachmann at the above telephone number or by email at kacerbobachman@trinitychurchboston.org.

    http://www.socketsite.com/2848%20Union%20Yard.jpg

  • Sunday, April 11, 1:30 – 4:00 pm – All About Seed Dispersal

    This free family exploration of seeds of all sorts and how they move away from the mother plant will take place Sunday afternoon, from 1:30 – 4 pm, on April 11, at the Wellesley College Botanic Garden in Wellesley, and will be taught by Katie Griffith, Wellesley College Visiting Scholar, a naturalist and environmental scientist with a strong interest in family education.  Dress appropriately for going outdoors.  Pre-registration is required, and space is limited.  Please call 781-283-3094, or email horticulture@wellesley.edu.

    http://www.yallaroo.com.au/images/Seed_dispersal.JPG

  • Friday, April 23, 7:45 pm – Birding Program: Inspired by Bowerbirds

    Artist-naturalist Mary Jo McConnell has traveled to a remote region of Papua New Guinea every year since 1992 to paint a group of bowers constructed by Vogelkop bowerbirds (Amblyornis inornata).  Watch a brief PBS Frontline documentary about McConnell’s remarkable odyssey to her field site, view examples of her striking bower paintings and listen as McConnell shares her observations of individual bower-makers that convinced her these birds are true artists.  The event takes place in the Phillips Library Auditorium of the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem on Friday, April 23, beginning at 7:45, and is free.  Co-sponsored by the Essex County Ornithological Club, the E.C.O.C. meeting will be held from 7:30 – 7:45.  For more information, and directions to the museum, log on to www.pem.org.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/images/episode/b00js8cz_640_360.jpg

  • Tuesday, April 13, 5:15 pm – Cold Comfort: The Biogeography of Northern British America

    The Massachusetts Historical Society annually sponsors the Boston Environmental History Seminar, an academic forum for scholars as well as interested members of the public, to discuss aspects of American environmental history.  On Tuesday, April 13, beginning at 5:15 pm, Anya Zilberstein of Concordia University in Montreal will speak on “Cold Comfort: The Biogeography of Northern British America.”  Brian Donahue of Brandeis University will also comment.  The Massachusetts Historical Society is located at  1154 Boylston Street in Boston.  For information on the 2009-2010 series, and to register, log on to www.masshist.org, or call 617-536-1608.  If you wish to receive a copy of the paper in advance, you may subscribe on-line for the modest fee of $15, or you may receive the paper by mail for $25.

    http://jackiewhiting.net/HonorsUS/images/DelawareCross.jpg

  • Saturday, April 10, 12:30 pm – Bog Rebuild

    New England Carnivorous Plant Society members will be rebuilding the two carnivorous plant bogs in the greenhouse at Roger Williams Park Botanical Center (www.providenceri.com/botanical-center/ on Saturday, April 10, beginning at 12:30 pm.  Visitors are most welcome – find out how simple and fun it is to set up and maintain a carnivorous plant bog.  The workshop will run for approximately three hours, and is free and open to the public.

    http://www.balboapark.com/blog//srv/htdocs/wp-content/uploads/2008/06/carnivorous-plant-bog-pitcher-plant.jpg

  • Saturday, April 24 – Sunday, April 25, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm – 51st Annual Spring African Violet Show and Plant Sale

    This Spring marks the Baystate African Violet Society’s 50th Anniversary. They will sponsor an AVSA-approved African violet show and plant sale at Tower Hill Botanic Garden in Boylston, Massachusetts on Saturday, April 24 and Sunday, April 25, from 10 am – 5 pm each day.  The show gives people an opportunity to enter their plants and floral designs for judging to win ribbons and prizes.  You can also attend workshops on AV care. At the sale, commercially grown plants and supplies are sold, along with plants grown by Society members. There is an $10 entrance fee to Tower Hill. For more information, log on to www.baystateafricanviolet.org.

    http://www.gardening123.com/images/articles/20061115/LjsAfViolet250.jpg