Month: April 2014

  • Tuesday, April 22 – Deadline for NABB Green Challenge

    The Green Committee of The Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay invites you to make GREEN improvements in your life before Earth Day 2014. Join NABB’s GREEN Challenge and be entered in a drawing to win a Gift Card to Back Bay restaurants or other prizes!

    Fill out a quick Carbon Footprint form online and you’ll be on your way to saving money and potentially winning a great prize. Save energy and the planet with easy, no-cost sustainability actions. Do your part to honor Earth Week, our neighborhood, and Mother Earth!

    Check out the prizes you might win:
    GRAND PRIZE: One-night stay for two at The Lenox, an historic Boston landmark and
    an industry leader in environmental initiatives
    $50 Gift Card to ever-popular Papa Razzi Trattoria
    $50 Gift Card to Reflections on Newbury St. Boston’s “Best of the New” for great gifts, trendy home décor & tabletop store
    20% off lunch on your next visit to L’Espalier (limit 6 guests)
    Energy efficient Advanced Power strips to save wasted “vampire” power and $$ ($35 value)
    NSTAR Combo Box of Desk Lamp, LED Night Light, Incandescent style LEDs ($50 value)
    …and more coming

    Deadline to submit form online or by mail: Earth Day, Tuesday, April 22, 2014.

    Get started by clicking on http://www.nabbonline.com/committees/green_committee for more information.

    http://www.efcl.org/portals/0/Images/Green-Challenge-medium.jpg

  • Saturday, April 5, 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm – Amphibians After Dark

    Get excited for the “big night,” an outdoor amphib­ian adventure on Saturday, April 5 at Stony Brook Wildlife Sanctuary, 108 North Street in Norfolk, Massachusetts organized by the Massachusetts Audubon Society. Tour the lantern-lit trails with a guided group and encounter costumed characters waiting to teach you about amphibians through their stories and songs. Inside we’ll have live specimens from vernal pools, make crafts, and view a slide show about the animals that live in these “wicked big puddles.”

    Guided groups leave the nature center every fifteen minutes.

    Register online or by phone, 508-528-3140, to secure your time slot.
    Fee: Mass Audubon Member $7; Non-member $9; Children 3 and under free

    http://maineaudubon.org//srv/htdocs/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/L_grnfrog1.jpg

  • Thursday, April 3 – Wednesday, April 9 – COGdesign Online Auction “In the Garden”

    The Community Outreach Group for Landscape Design (COG) will hold its annual online auction Thursday, April 3 – Wednesday, April 9.  Visit www.cogdesign.org and get started. Looking for a private garden consultation? A specimen tree? Or maybe a classic teak bench to place in your garden? Then prepare to bid early and often at the 10th annual In the Garden online auction.

    All proceeds are used to build and improve neighborhood gardens and parks throughout greater Boston.  In the Garden offers specialty goods and services for the discerning gardener and attracts great interest and spirited bidding.

    Among the prized offerings this year are a winter-proof Lunaform planter, specialty seeds and tools, organic compost, and massage gift certificates for the achy gardener! Retail values for auction selections range from $30 to $1,000 — something for every budget.

    COGdesign is a non-profit service organization offering quality landscape design for community-based groups, meaningful professional experience for student and practicing landscape designers, and volunteer opportunities for those interested in strengthening communities by creating and improving neighborhood green spaces.

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  • Sunday, April 6, 2:00 pm – The Salisbury Gardens and Greenhouses

    Today, the 1772 Salisbury Mansion and the 1838 Salisbury House in Worcester are surrounded by a large parking lot. This was not always the case. Gardens and greenhouses once graced the grounds of Stephen Salisbury III’s house. James A. Welu, Director Emeritus of the Worcester Art Museum, will give us a glimpse of the house and his many unusual plants with an illustrated talk based on photographs taken by Salisbury’s gardener around 1900. The talk will take place on Sunday, April 6 beginning at 2 pm at Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive, Boylston, Massachusetts. Free with admission. Sponsored by the Worcester Garden Club, Preservation Worcester, and Tower Hill Botanic Garden as part of the Lost Gardens of Worcester County project. You may register in advance at www.towerhillbg.org.

    http://www.preservationworcester.org/pages/pageshistor/images/16salisburymansion.jpg

  • Tuesday, April 29, and Wednesday, April 30 (Rain Dates May 6 and 7) – New York City Garden Photography Workshops

    At the heart of any good photograph is a passion for the subject and the ability to capture it using one’s own unique vision. Rich Pomerantz’s upcoming workshops in NYC on April 29 and 30 (rain dates May 6 & 7) will help build your confidence to develop that vision. Rich’s programs are hands on, with some time allocated to downloading and reviewing work. So bring your digital camera, charged battery, storage cards and sense of adventure. Let’s take your photography to the next level!

    On April 29, you will be Photographing the High Line. On the 30th, you will be Capturing the Beauty of Trees at Central Park. Tuition for each class is $215, but if you register for both you will receive a 10% discount, with a total due of $385. Email rich@richpomerantz.com to register.  Transportation and lodging not included. Photo below of the High Line at night by Rich Pomerantz.

    http://www.richpomerantz.com/data/photos/250_1r20100721_HighLine_7.jpg

  • Tuesday, April 8, 7:30 pm – The American Natural History Tradition

    Tuesday, April 8, 7:30 pm – The American Natural History Tradition

    The April meeting of the Cambridge Entomological Club will be held Tuesday, April 8 at 7:30 pm in Room 101 of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Oxford Street, Cambridge. Professor William Leach will present a talk about the American Natural History Tradition.

    If we want to understand why Americans started to collect and study butterflies in the 19th century, we must first understand the evolution of natural history itself. Originating in Europe and England, natural history acted as a language of interpretation and as a way of understanding nature that opened it up. It revealed to Americans what butterflies were all about and why they mattered and were worthy of study and reflection. By the 1870s a brilliant group of American butterfly men had emerged, their ideas forged within the heart of this tradition. They made a profound contribution to natural history, bringing to it a radical Darwinian analysis and a passion for life histories perhaps unrivaled by any of their contemporaries. This talk will examine the character of natural history in America between 1865 and 1885 and the way men such as William Henry Edwards, Benjamin Walsh, (former CEC president) Samuel Scudder, Herman Strecker, Augustus Radcliffe Grote (pictured below,) and William Doherty transformed and enriched it.

    The meeting is free and open to the public. Snacks will be provided and you are also welcome to join us at 6:00 PM for an informal pre-meeting dinner at the Cambridge Common.

    Augustus_Radcliffe_Grote_entomologist

  • Thursday, April 10, 11:00 am – 2:00 pm – Harvard Forest: Reflecting on the Past, Researching for the Future

    Located in picturesque Petersham, Massachusetts, the Harvard Forest has served as Harvard University’s rural laboratory and classroom for ecology and conservation since 1907. The Forest is comprised of 3,750 acres of forests, ponds, streams, wetlands, and agricultural fields providing diverse natural ecosystems and cultural landscapes for study and enjoyment, and is one of the country’s oldest intensively researched landscapes.

    The Forest is protected from development and operates under a long-term management plan designating specific areas for active forest management, long-term scientific experiments, and reserves.  Since the Forest’s founding, its researchers have been pioneers in applying the lessons from human and natural history to the interpretation, conservation, and stewardship of landscapes.  Harvard Forest scholars collaborate with conservation organizations and state and federal agencies to protect land locally, regionally, and globally.  The Forest is home to the fisher Museum, which contains the world-renowned dioramas depicting the history of landscape changes in New England since colonial settlement.

    On Thursday, April 10, from 11 – 2, the Ecological Landscape Alliance will conduct a tour of the Harvard Forest.  After exploring the dioramas in the Fisher Museum, you will go on a 1.5 mile hike to explore mixed deciduous forests, a pre-colonial hemlock stand and black gum swamp, with nearly 300 years of well-documented human land-use.  You will see a long-term deer and moose browsing experiment in a recently harvested red pine plantation, hydrology weirs that monitor headwater streams leading to the Quabbin Reservoir, a 90′ research tower that continuously measures carbon exchange between the atmosphere and the Forest, a 20 year old soil warming experiment that shows how warming the soil by just 5 degrees greatly impacts the Forest ecosystem, and the “mega-plot,” an 85 acre plot within a global array of tropical and temperate forests in the Smithsonian Global Earth Observatory, in which every tree over 1cm in diameter is mapped, tagged, and measured at 5-year intervals.

    The tour will be led by Audrey Barker-Plotkin, licensed forester, and by Clarisse Hart, education manager.  Both guides are also ecologists by training.  $20 ELA members, $25 nonmembers.  Register online at https://www.eventville.com/catalog/eventregistration1.asp?eventid=1010955 or call 617-436-5838.

    http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-y7J_k9lMlZ0/TiSBeRkWWuI/AAAAAAAACQg/afZ_g9Wcte4/s1600/diorama.jpg

  • Saturday, April 12, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – Tomato Basics

    This Berkshire Botanical Garden presentation on Saturday, April 12, from 1 – 3, is designed to help you understand the various types of tomatoes, the best time to start them from seed and when to set them out. The pros and cons of different methods of growing will be discussed. In-season care, including mulching and pruning along with pest and disease control, will be described, as will harvesting and methods of preservation. Students will learn proper handling and transplanting of tomato seedlings via hands-on activities.

    Ron Kujawski, Ph.D. is the former Landscape and Nursery Specialist for UMass Cooperative Extension. He is a garden writer, educator and researcher in IPM, plant nutrition and soil science. He teaches for the horticultural industry throughout New England. BBG member price $30, non-members $35. Sign up at www.berkshirebotanical.org or call 413-298-3926 x 15.

    http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-GYAGsafmJ-0/UKGRUkWnCHI/AAAAAAAAAWY/niKOttw4kek/s320/CFRHeirloomtomatoes.jpg