Month: October 2010

  • May 5 – May 14 – The Loire Valley and the Festival of the Domaine de Courson

    Explore the beautiful and storied Loire Valley in northwestern France in springtime, May 5 – 14, 2011. This exclusive American Horticultural Society tour will provide entree to some of the finest privately-owned historic chateaus and gardens, including Chateau de Cheverny (below, also called the Chateau of Tintin,)  Chateau de Chenonceau, and the inspirational ornamental potager at Villandry.  For the grand finale, you will enjoy the international “Journees des Plantes” festival at the Domaine de Courson, south of Paris.  For complete information, contact AHS travel planner MacNair Travel at 866-627-6621, or email ahs@macnairtravel.com.

  • July 2 – 9, 2011 – Hampton Court Rose Festival

    If you are interested in an English Garden tour to the Hampton Court Rose Festival, contact Travel Unlimited, www.travelunlimited.net, to book a July 2 – 9 trip, which will include a stay in Tunbridge Wells, tours of Wakehurst Place in West Sussex, Pashley Manor, Sissinghurst, Squerryes Court, Hatfield House, and a delightful day at the 2011 Hampton Court Palace Flower Show.  The per person cost is $2,899, double occupancy, with a New York departure. For complete information, call 800- 645-6969.

    http://www.thegardeningwebsite.co.uk/images/rhs_hampton_court_show_2007_logos_007_(small).jpg

  • Sunday, November 7, 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm – Annual Holiday Special with Laura Carlo

    Russell’s Garden Center, 397 Boston Post Road in Wayland, will host its 21st Annual Holiday Decor Presentation on Sunday, November 7, from 1 – 4 pm.  Laura Carlo, popular host on WGBH Classical radio 99.5 will be on hand for this festive afternoon of music, food sampling, and an in-person demonstration of beautiful holiday decorations crafted by Laura herself, with the help of Russell’s designers.  There is no fee for this event.  For directions and more information, log on to www.russellsgardencenter.com, or call 508-358-2283.

  • Wednesday, November 3, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Food Matters with Mark Bittman

    Please join members of The Museum of Science on Wednesday, November 3, from 7 – 9,  for this Reno Family Foundation Symposium, sponsored by Harvard Pilgrim Health Care and part of the Celebrity Science Series. Mark Bittman is known for his no-nonsense style and no-frills approach to cooking. Drawing links between diet, health, and climate change, the popular food writer shows us how our bodies and our planet are paying the price for overproduction and overconsumption of food. In Food Matters, Bittman takes the mystery out of what terms like “organic” and “agricultural sustainability” mean to focus on what small, but powerful things we can do to eat in an environmentally responsible and budget-friendly way. He explains how to eat more consciously and to become less reliant on animal products and nutritionally worthless food. By making simple adjustments to his diet, Bittman lost 35 pounds, improved his health, and reduced his carbon footprint. Join us for an evening that will make you rethink your relationship with food.  Purchase tickets ($28) in person at the Museum box office, by phone at 617-723-2500, or online at store.mos.org.

  • Sunday, October 31, 3:30 pm – 5:30 pm – Halloween at The Clarendon Street Playground

    Join the Playground Committee of the Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay on Sunday, October 31 from 3:30 – 5:30 at The Clarendon Street Playground on the corner of Clarendon and Commonwealth for a playground party with magic and juggling show (performance begins at 4:15), a hayride around the neighborhood, and a spooky good time.  Be sure to wear your favorite costume.  Pizza slices, drinks and glow necklaces will be on sale for $1 each.  If you can volunteer for a 30 minute shift, email playground@nabbonline.com, or call the NABB office at 617-247-3961.  Be advised that Marlborough Street between Berkeley and Fairfield Streets, as well as Dartmouth and Clarendon Streets between Commonwealth and Beacon Streets, will be closed to moving traffic from 5 – 9:30 pm to ensure safe trick or treating.  Parked cars may stay on those streets during this time but may not be moved.  Adorable picture from the Los Angeles blog meamommy.com.

  • Saturday, November 6, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Crazy, Mixed-up Border

    This kitchen sink approach to garden making welcomes representatives from every realm of the plant kingdom including trees, shrubs, annuals, tropicals, edibles and perennials. No leaf is left unturned in this search for the best and brightest of forms, foliage and flowers, which are then combined to create garden vignettes whose beauty lasts from spring through fall. The crazy, mixed up border also relies on artful garden framework, inspiration in geometry, contributions of thoughtful hardscape and consideration of a well kept edge. This is a gardening style that celebrates change and experimentation.  Enjoy this Berkshire Botanical Garden lecture on Saturday, November 6, from 10 am – 12 noon.  The cost is $20 for BBG members and $25 for non-members.  You may register at www.berkshirebotanical.org, or call 413-298-3926.

    Steve Silk is an award-winning photographer and writer. He has worked for at the Hartford Courant, and Fine Gardening magazine. His photography has garnered two Garden Writers of America awards for best portfolio. He collaborated with Sydney Eddison on several projects, is past President of the Connecticut Hardy Plant Society and is the President of the Connecticut Horticultural Society.

  • Friday, November 5, 6:30 – 9:30 pm – 2010 Urban Barn Dance & Harvest Supper

    The Federation of Mass Farmers Markets will hold its 2010 Annual Urban Barn Dance & Harvest Festival on Friday, November 5, from 6:30 – 9:30 pm at the Dante Alighieri Italian Cultural Center, 41 Hampshire St., Cambridge (Kendall Square).  Proceeds of the evening will benefit FMFM, and tickets cost $50. Guests will toast the hard work of their favorite farmers with a hearty locally grown supper, and then continue the celebration with live music and dancing. Music will be provided again this year by Sean Smith and Friends, and contra caller David Titus returns to lead us in dances that new and experienced dancers will enjoy. . Chef Bob Sargent of flora restaurant is once again generously donating his time to create mouth-watering pork dishes as well as hearty sides to accompany them. There should be plenty of food for hungry vegetarians as well! Guests will also enjoy a silent auction with prizes donated by local businesses. Libations will be available at the Dante Alighieri Center’s cash bar.Call 781-893-8222 to reserve, or log on to www.massfarmersmarkets.org.

  • Friday, November 5, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, and Saturday, November 6, 8:30 am – 5:30 pm – Human Health and Soil Health

    Jerry Brunetti went to see a doctor for an MRI, after back injuries from a car accident in the late 1990’s were plaguing him and causing him pain. Much to his surprise, after the MRI, Jerry learned that he had Non-Hodgkins Lymphona, a type of cancer that attacks the lymphatic system. Jerry had a tumor in his abdomen. The car accident, it turned out, saved his life.

    Brunetti is founder of Agri-Dynamics, of Martins Creek, in northern Pennsylvania (a company which provides consulting and holistic products for livestock and animal health, and soil consulting). Although he had many experiences in his childhood that he believes contributed to compromising his health, he did not feel sick when he received his diagnosis. He had already spent his adult career as a consultant, working with farmers to improve their soils so as to grow more nutritious forage, feed, and crops. By then, nutritious and healthy food had become an integral part of his personal and professional life.

    As a result of his Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma diagnosis, he was given six months to live. Jerry rejected the prescribed aggressive chemotherapy treatment in favor of a holistic approach. As Jerry explains – “Traditional chemotherapy is designed to shrink tumors. I wasn’t interested in shrinking my tumor. I was interested in my entire immune system. I wanted to live.” And so Brunetti embarked on a largely holistic approach, in keeping with his life-philosophy. Through Jerry’s alternative detoxification approach, coupled with his strict (and ongoing) regimen of complete nutrition (including nutrient dense foods and beneficial fats and proteins), Jerry was successful in curing himself of his lymphoma.

    It is now 11 years since Jerry was first diagnosed. Jerry’s bout with cancer solidified his belief in nutrient dense foods as the solution to curing and managing chronic diseases which plague our society. He believes farms should be treated as our “FARMacies,” and that folks should start viewing diet as a critical disease-management component of a healthy lifestyle. “This is not hippie, tree-hugger, granola-crunchy stuff that I’m talking about,” Brunetti asserts. “It’s all in the conventional medical literature. Doctors just don’t always know where to look for it.”

    Soil, Brunetti believes, is at the core of his nutrient-dense diet crusade. Developing farms that produce wide varieties of produce rich in vitamins and minerals is a crucial step to curing what ails us. Jerry hopes that farmers and consumers across the nation will begin looking at whole organ-ism agriculture, starting in the soil.

    The Northeast Organic Farming Association, Massachusetts Chapter is proud to introduce Jerry as its Fall Advanced Growers Seminar speaker. This two-part seminar, to be held on Friday and Saturday, November 5th and 6th at the Barre Congregational Church, presents a practical and integrated approach for improving human health through improving the health of our soils. Friday evening’s talk from 7:00pm to 9:00pm, “The Medicine that Starts in the Soil,” will emphasize what people can do through diet to improve health. Saturday’s full day seminar from 8:30am to 5:30pm, “Soil as a Super Organism,” will illustrate practical techniques that farmers and gardeners can employ to realize Hippocrates’ directive, “Let food be your medicine.”

    The seminar is applicable to growers, nutritionists, medical practitioners, and health-conscious consumers. The registration cost for the seminar is $30 for Friday and $100 for Saturday. Members of any NOFA chapter or MOFGA also receive a discount of $5 for Friday and $10 for Saturday. Registration information and further details at: http://www.nofamass.org/seminars/fallseminar.php.

    For more information about the NOFA/Mass Advanced Growers Fall Seminar with Jerry Brunetti, please contact Ben Grosscup, NOFA/Mass Extension Events Coordinator at ben.grosscup@nofamass.org, or call (413) 658-5374.

  • Eugenie Beal Honored by The Trustees of Reservations

    The Trustees of Reservations, the nation’s oldest regional land trust and non-profit conservation organization, recently honored retiring Board Member Eugenie Beal at the organization’s annual meeting and dinner held on September 25th at the Boys & Girls Club in Leominster.

    Eugenie “Genie” Beal has served on The Trustees of Reservations’ (The Trustees) Board of Directors since 2006. She received The Charles Eliot Award from The Trustees in 2007 in recognition for championing the cause of conservation in Boston for more than 30 years. As chair of the Board of Boston Natural Areas Network (BNAN), her leadership was pivotal in crafting the affiliation of BNAN with The Trustees of Reservations. She was the first chairwoman of the Boston Conservation Commission in the 1970s, founding Director of the Boston Environment Department, Special Assistant to the Massachusetts Secretary of Environmental Affairs, and a founder of Boston Natural Areas Fund (now BNAN) in 1977. Under Ms. Beal’s leadership, the mission of BNAN also embraced community gardens and greenways and became one of the leading urban open space organizations in the country. She was also founder of both the Emerald Necklace Conservancy and the Arboretum Park Conservancy and served as chairwoman of the Common Committee for the Friends of the Public Garden. The American Society of Landscape Architects also honored Beal’s extensive dedication and contributions to the Boston landscape at their centennial in 1999.

    The Garden Club of the Back Bay sends its congratulations to Ms. Beal, who is a shining example of the power of the individual volunteer. The terrific photo below is by Peter Vanderwarker.

  • Thursday, October 28, 11:30 am – 6:30 pm – Fall Harvest Fun and Greenway Halloween Maze

    The hay is being harvested, the pumpkins are being picked, and the DJ is thumbing through the tunes all in preparation for next week’s Fall Harvest Fun and Greenway Halloween Maze at Dewey Square Park.

    You don’t want to miss Fall Harvest Fun at the Boston Public Market on Thursday, October 28 from 11:30 – 6:30! Enjoy the bounty of the market, lose yourself in the Greenway Halloween Maze, paint a pumpkin, and try Halloween-inspired treats from Clover and Beantown Franks n’ Spuds. Special treats to those in costume!

    The Halloween Maze, a 50′ by 50′ maze made of salt marsh hay (yes, it’s sustainable), will remain open through Sunday, October 31 and is free to all. This free event is made possible with generous support from Liberty Bay Credit Union. Visit www.rosekennedygreenway.org/boo for more information.  Pictured below is the Fahley Farms straw bale maze in Yale, Michigan, just to give you an idea.