Month: March 2013

  • Wednesday, April 10, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Urban Beekeeping

    Noah Wilson-Rich, Ph.D., founder of Best Bees Company in South Boston, will discuss raising bees in the rural, suburban, and urban habitats of eastern Massachusetts. Wilson-Rich does research to improve honey bee health and also sets up hives in schools for educational purposes. This lecture is the centerpiece of the Somerville Garden Club April meeting, to be held Wednesday, April 10 from 7 – 9 at the Tufts Administration Building, 167 Holland Street in Somerville. All SGC meetings are free and the public is invited to attend. Meetings include club announcements, a horticultural question and answer segment, and a raffle of donated plants and garden-related items. Parking is available, and the building is a short walk from the Davis Square Redline T station. Meetings are on the second floor, wheelchair accessible. For more information visit www.somervillegardenclub.org.

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  • Thursday, April 18, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm – Land vs. Landscape

    “Things are because we see them, and what we see, and how we see it, depends on the Arts that have influenced us. One does not see anything until one sees its beauty.” In this way Oscar Wilde explains in The Decay of Lying that the fogs above the Thames were first seen only when Turner painted them. Similarly, a “land” becomes a “landscape” only through an artistic process. Land can be considered the zero degree state of a landscape that is waiting to be discovered. With a background in civil engineering, architecture and landscape architecture, Bas Smets, Principal of Bureau Bas Smets in Brussels, has developed a specific approach to representation that enables him to reveal an unseen landscape, starting from a very precise reading of the existing land. His projects range from the conception of territorial strategies to the construction of public spaces. In addition to these public missions, he creates one private garden a year.

    This Sylvester Baxter Lecture of the Harvard Graduate School of Design will take place in the Piper Auditorium, Gund Hall, 48 Quincy Street in Cambridge on Thursday, April 18 from 6:30 – 8 and is free and open to the public.

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  • Saturday, April 20, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Ginkgo Fest: A Symposium About Ginkgo biloba

    On April 20, three prominent biologists will join forces to share all they know about the unique tree species, Ginkgo biloba.  Ginkgo is a plant species that has existed since the Jurassic period with few evolutionary changes and continues to thrive today. This special symposium includes a series of lectures, a tour of the Arboretum’s Ginkgo biloba collection, and lunch with a tasting of ginkgo nuts. Ginkgo artifacts and illustrations from the Harvard Libraries and collected paraphernalia will also be on display. So don your best ginkgo outfit (we know you have at least one article of clothing with a ginkgo leaf on it) and immerse yourself in the history and biology of this relict species.

    Peter Crane, Carl W. Knobloch, Jr. Dean of the School of Forestry & Environmental Studies and Professor of Botany, Yale University, and co- author of the just published book, Ginkgo: The Tree that Time Forgot, Yale University Press,  William “Ned” Friedman, Director, Arnold Arboretum and Arnold Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, and expert in the reproductive biology of early seed plants, including Ginkgo biloba, and Peter Del Tredici, Senior Research Scientist, Arnold Arboretum and Adjunct Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture, Graduate School of Design, Harvard University, a botanist who has studied ginkgo for more than 20 years and searched for and located remnant wild stands of ginkgo on the slopes of mountains in southwest China, will be the three luminaries speaking at the symposium.

    WHEN: Saturday, April 20, 2013, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. View details and registration at https://my.arboretum.harvard.edu/Info.aspx?DayPlanner=1165&DayPlannerDate=4/20/2013

    WHERE: The Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, Weld Hill Research Building, 1300 Centre Street, Roslindale, MA. http://arboretum.harvard.edu/visit/weld-hill-directions/

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  • Thursday, April 18, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Spring Ephemerals

    The Natick Garden Club welcomes Joan Butler and Jana Milbocker on Thursday, April 18, beginning at 7 at the Natick Community Senior Center, 117 East Central Street in Natick, in the Great Room on the first floor. Joan Butler and Jana Milbocker of Enchanted Gardens Landscape Design in Holliston are garden designers, writer and lecturers. They will introduce us to the joys of Spring Ephemerals, those wonderful wildflowers that bloom in early spring, then disappear for the rest of the year. They have authored weekly gardening articles for the Holliston Reporter, Holliston Tab and Gatehouse Media, Inc., which have been published nationally.  Image from www.hoosiergardener.com. Open to the public for a $5 fee.

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  • Thursday, May 16, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Hidden Gardens of Beacon Hill

    The Beacon Hill Garden Club has donated more than $1 million in its eighty-five history. The Beacon Hill Garden Club’s contributions to over 200 local, state and national horticultural and conservation organizations have improved the urban landscape of Boston and beyond. This non-profit organization comprised of fewer than 100 members has raised money through its Annual Tour of the Hidden Gardens and through the publication of four Hidden Gardens of Beacon Hill books. On Thursday May 16th, the Beacon Hill Garden Club will host its 84th annual tour of the Hidden Gardens with a first ever President’s Luncheon at the Hampshire House and release its new book, The Hidden Gardens of Beacon Hill: Creating Green Spaces in Urban Places. This year’s tour combined with the President’s Luncheon and the sale of the new book are expected to reinvigorate the tour and raise significant money for charitable grants.

    This year’s tour on Thursday, May 16th will open the gates to twelve hidden gardens and four “ribbon” gardens that are viewed from the street. It is a self-guided tour and takes place rain or shine from 9:00am-5:00pm. Tour tickets ($35) and VIP Tickets ($75 includes tour ticket, President’s Luncheon and gift) are available for purchase online at www.beaconhillgardenclub.org. Tour tickets can also be purchased at select Charles Street stores and on the day of the tour for $40 at the Hostess Booths on Charles Street. Advance reservations are required for the President’s luncheon where tour guests will enjoy a sumptuous spring buffet while overlooking Boston’s beautiful Public Garden. All tour guests are invited to enjoy complimentary tea and refreshments at the Church of the Advent and shop the Tour Boutique. The Beacon Hill Garden Club will be using Square technology so that customers can conveniently pay for tickets, gifts and books with their credit card on Tour Day.

    Since the Beacon Hill Garden Club released its last book eleven years ago, urban gardening has taken root in today’s urban culture playing a much larger role as city dwellers look to bring “green” into their daily lives and beautify their outdoor spaces, however small and limiting. It is with this sensibility that the Beacon Hill Garden Club Book Committee created its fifth edition, The Hidden Gardens of Beacon Hill: Creating Green Spaces in Urban Places (88-page, full-color, hard bound book, 111 color photographs, $35). This edition unlocks the secrets and shared wisdom of club members through the photography of Peter Vanderwarker and Thomas Lingner/The Able Lens. It is a primer for all urban gardeners who want to learn more about how character, walls, paving, levels, gates and doors, ornaments, furniture, light, color and plants can elevate any outdoor space into an urban oasis. The book will be released in May and available for purchase on Tour Day and through the organization’s website.

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  • Monday, April 8, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – Invasive Species Training Webinar

    The Invasive Plant Atlas of New England (IPANE) is the New England data entry portal for the Early Detection & Distribution Mapping System (EDDMapS), a web-based mapping system for documenting invasive plant distribution and management efforts. The Massachusetts Invasive Plant Advisory Group (MIPAG) encourages citizens and land managers to enter invasive plant data into IPANE, and “Early Detection” priority species listed by MA Invasive Plant Advisory Group in particular, so that we can get a better understanding of the distribution of invasive species and be more strategic in our management efforts. The IPANE data entry form can be found at the IPANE or EDDMapS websites or data can also be entered by using one of two smart phone apps: the IPANE app or the Outsmart Invasives app. On April 8th, IPANE and MIPAG are holding a training webinar from 1:00-2:00pm. Click to register. If you need more information, email ipane.uconn@gmail.com.

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  • Sunday, April 28 – Wednesday, May 1 – 21st Annual Newport Symposium: Hidden Treasures

    The 21st annual Newport Symposium, April 28 to May 1, 2013, will explore the rarest and finest objects from all corners of the globe, with lectures that examine the most remote, hard-to-see historic sites, and the remarkable stories of art treasures that have been lost and then reclaimed.

    Admission to the Symposium is $500 for Preservation Society members; $550 for non-members; and $150 for students (student price valid for lectures only & requires proof of enrollment). Scholarships are available for museum professionals and graduate students. For complete information log on to www.newportmansions.org.

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  • Saturday, April 13, 9:00 am – 2:00 pm – New England Wild Flower Society’s Northern Garden Symposium

    Three dynamic speakers explore natural gardening practices, landscaping with native plants and the use of wild plants to promote healthy living for generations to come, at the Northern Garden Symposium on Saturday, April 13, from 9 – 2 at The Fells Historic Estate & Gardens in Newbury, New Hampshire. Co-sponsored with Friends of the Hort Farm, Hardy Plant Club, The Fells and Master Gardeners.

    Mark Richardson explores natural gardening practices using Garden in the Woods as an example — discussing how home gardeners can follow suit, in his presentation of Gardening with Nature. In 1931 Will C. Curtis bought the land that would become Garden in the Woods and almost immediately began building a “big wild garden and finding out why wild flowers will grow here and not there.” The gardens he created were ahead of their time–emphasizing native plants, promoting a sense of place, respecting landforms and growing plants in their “natural environments.” Nearly 50 years after Curtis left his treasured Garden to the New England Wild Flower Society, we’re still learning how best to garden with nature, rather than fight against it.

    (Mark earned a degree in Urban Horticulture at University of Rhode Island and a Master of Science in Public Horticulture from the Longwood Graduate Program. He ran Longwood Gardens’ undergraduate programs for five years before going to Brookside Gardens, in Montgomery County, Maryland where he managed the education program and developed a strategic garden technology plan. In 2012, Mark accepted the position of Director of Horticulture at the New England Wild Flower Society.)

    Justin Nichols, horticulturist at Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens since in 2008, will focus on effective, ecologically sound garden design and maintenance; soil health; trail making; and control of pests, pathogens and invasive plants. He will discuss landscaping with native woody plants and the use of natives at Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens; soil preparation; and maintenance techniques.

    (Justin has a master’s degree in education and has taught many classes including pruning, vegetable gardening, and landscape maintenance. He is an NOFA Accredited Organic Land Care Professional. He is the gardener for CMBG’s Alfond Children’s Garden and has started youth gardening and community supported agriculture programs. You may have read his plant profiles in Fine Gardening Magazine. )

    Arthur Haines, in a talk entitled Preserving Native Plant Knowledge for Their Future, explores interesting examples of wild food and medicine that grow here in New England; shares stories from the pages of history; and demonstrates how wild plants can promote healthy living for generations to come. He discusses how useful knowledge of plants is passing from this culture due to the absence of a meaningful connection to nature and how botanical gardens, museums, land trusts, and similar institutions are attempting to re-establish an interest in local flora. Discussion of beauty, rarity, and interesting natural history is not enough to engage all people in becoming active in local ecology, but wild food and medicine do offer a real way to connect people with the importance of land conservation. These topics have been relegated to the fringe of our society, but nutritional, anthropological, and medical studies show that people cannot live a healthy life without them.

    (Arthur Haines, Research Botanist, New England Wild Flower Society, is author of Flora Novae Angliae,  Ancestral Plants and several other books and peer reviewed articles. Haines is presently working with the Society on Go Botany, an online botany education site using Flora Novae Angliae as a resource. In addition to his work with New England Wild Flower Society, Haines owns and manages the Delta Institute of Natural History in Canton, Maine, a school for small group instruction on a diversity of natural history topics with focus on plant taxonomy and primitive technologies. Haines is also Vice President of the Josselyn Botanical Society. He grew up in the western mountains of Maine, a rural area where he began his independent study of foraging, taxonomy, and survival techniques.)to New England Wild Flower Society, 180 Hemenway Rd, Framingham, MA 01701. For more information see www.newenglandwild.org/learn or call 508- 877-7630 X 3303.

    The symposium will be held in room 102, Conant Hall at Vermont Technical College in Randolph Center, VT. For directions see http://www.vtc.edu/right.php/pid/34/sid/492. Members of co-sponsoring organizations $47, nonmembers $53—includes lunch, symposium packet, and parking. Send name, address, telephone number, organization name and e-mail address along with payment to New England Wild Flower Society, 180 Hemenway Rd, Framingham, MA 01701. For more information see www.newenglandwild.org/learn or call 508- 877-7630 X 3303.

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  • Thursday, April 11, 10:00 am – Fabulous Gardens That Inspired Floral Designs

    The Metro District Annual Meeting will be held on Thursday, April 11 at 10:00 AM. at Elm Bank in the Hunnewell Carriage House. Elm Bank is located at 900 Washington Street, (Route 16), Wellesley, Massachusetts.  Our featured speaker, Thelma Shoneman, a nationally accredited Master Flower Show Judge, will be presenting a program, Fabulous Gardens that Inspired Floral Designs. Thelma recently visited six fabulous gardens in Oregon, Nebraska, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Maine. Thelma will speak about each garden and the unique attraction that inspired the “floral souvenir”! Each arrangement that she creates will include a different leaf manipulation, which she will demonstrate. These arrangements will be raffled at the end of the program.
    The luncheon will be catered by Baker’s Best of Newton and the charge for the luncheon is $25 per person. Checks should be made out to GCFM. For each attendee please list their name, email address, and their choice of lunch sandwich: chicken salad, roasted vegetable or turkey. Tell us if an attendee has special dietary restrictions. Guests are welcome. You may mail a check to Babs Moss, 43 Fairfax Road, Needham, MA 02492.  Image below is of Thelma’s floral interpretation at the Worcester Art Museum’s Flora in Winter:

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  • Friday, April 5 – Sunday, April 7, 9:30 am – 4:00 pm – Spring Orchid Sale

    Historic New England’s Spring Orchid Sale at the Lyman Estate Greenhouses in Waltham is a much anticipated annual event.  This year’s sale will take place Friday, April 5 through Sunday, April 7, from 9:30 am – 4:00 pm.  Free admission.

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