Month: June 2014

  • Saturday, June 28, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Grow and Preserve Herbs

    The Boston Natural Areas Network, an affiliate of the Trustees of Reservations, will hold a class on Saturday, June 28 from 10 – noon at City Natives, 30 Edgewater Drive in Mattapan, entitled Grow and Preserve Herbs. Herbs are easy to grow and provide instant flavor to any meal. Learn how to grow some of the most popular herbs and preserve them through freezing, drying or steeping in vinegars and oils. Registration required by contacting 617-542-7696 or info@bostonnatural.org.  Image from University of California Sonoma County Extension.

  • Saturday, June 21, 10:00 am – 2:00 pm – Great Meadows Family Fishing Day

    Join the fun at the Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge, 73 Weir Hill Road Sudbury, from 10:00 AM– 2:00 PM on Saturday, June 21.

    Did you know that when you buy a freshwater fishing license, you are supporting fish and wildlife work in Massachusetts? License and permit fees directly support freshwater fish management programs, fishing access improvements, conservation education programs, and other fish and wildlife efforts. Go to www.mass.gov/massfishhunt for license purchasing information or visit a local license vendor or MassWildlife office.

  • Friday, September 19 – Sunday, September 21 – 2014 Northeast Region American Conifer Society Annual Meeting

    The American Conifer Society’s Northeast Region Annual Meeting will take place at the Holiday Inn Rochester Airport, Rochester, New York, on Friday through Sunday, September 19 – 21. Rochester was the host city for 2004 Regional Meeting and several new conifer gardens have emerged to welcome attendees. Co-chairs Elmer Dustman and Jerry Kral are planning an event that they promise will showcase over 600 conifer cultivars including dozens of unusual ginkgos in the gardens to be visited. Program details will follow at  http://northeast.conifersociety.org/events/event/2014-ner-annual-meeting/ but save the date for a fall visit to Rochester when the ACS transforms the Flower City into Conifer City. Registration forms and meeting brochure will be published on the above website when available.  The Highland Park Pinetum will be visited, but for a picture filled preview of the itinerary, which will include a number of Olmsted designed parks, link to http://northeast.conifersociety.org//srv/htdocs/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2013/08/Preview-of-Rochester-Meeting.pdf.

    http://www.conifersociety.org//srv/htdocs/wp-content/uploads/Tex_CircleOak_20120425_0959.jpg

  • Garden Club of the Back Bay’s Twilight Garden Party, 2014

    Garden Club of the Back Bay’s Twilight Garden Party, 2014

    The Twilight Garden Party fundraiser hosted by our Club on June 4 at the American Meteorological Society was a success on all fronts.  Retired Boston Parks Commissioner Toni Pollak received our Magnolia Award for her years of service to the community, funds were raised allowing us to continue our financial support of the trees of the Back Bay, as well as other worthy horticultural causes, which we will highlight in future posts, and guests were delighted with the food and ambiance of the evening.  As pictures become available they will be posted on our site and on Facebook, but here is an early shot of an arrangement created by Club member Donna Morrissey:

    Donna Morrissey's arrangement

  • Thursday, June 26, 10:00 am – 12:30 pm – Native Plant Gardens: For Beauty and Bounty

    The Ecological Landscaping Association will sponsor a program on Thursday, June 26, from 10 – 12:30 on Native Plant Gardens: For Beauty and Bounty, featuring three gardens designed by Nanette Masi in Amesbury, Massachusetts.

    The gardens feature native plants, natural garden design, and beauty for humans, as well as bounty that attracts a variety of birds, butterflies and other wildlife.  Once established, native plant gardens require fewer inputs (fertilizer or water) which benefit the environment while saving on maintenance costs.

    Nanette’s private gardens were overrun with invasives when the property was purchased in 1994.  Nanette was hooked by the  natural setting: a freshwater tidal marsh, a stream, and a view of the Merrimac River.  The reclamation started with small foundation plantings, when native plants were scarce.  Now there are small shade gardens, a sunny meadow-based garden, a vegetable garden with grape-covered pergola, and a steep front hillside of clay where invasives continue to taunt.

    The second garden you will see was Nanette’s first residential design for a narrow condominium backyard.  The property was transformed from a struggling, uneven lawn to a pleasing garden with a bubbling stream, mini pond, and visiting frogs.  Along with many native perennials, a dwarf, flowing Japanese maple was included in the design, at the owners’ request.  To add depth and a sense of enclosure, trellises were attached to the fences on either side.

    The third garden is a recent design.  The property is carved out of a steep knoll with close to a 1:1 slope within 10 – 15 feet of the side of the house.  The rear of the property slopes down steeply to a series of granite terraces featuring wide granite walkways with curves and beach stone ribs as spaces.  Creative stonework was installed by the talented mason Adam Bennett of Colonial Stoneworks.

    $20 for ELA members, $25 for non-members.  Register at https://www.eventville.com/catalog/eventregistration1.asp?eventid=1010985.

  • Tuesday,  July 15 – Thursday, July 17, 9:30 am – 3:30 pm – WCBG Florilegium: Wildflowers

    Tuesday, July 15 – Thursday, July 17, 9:30 am – 3:30 pm – WCBG Florilegium: Wildflowers

    The Friends of Wellesley Botanic Gardens invite you to head outside with Carol Govan and Sarah Roche for three days, July 15 – 17, to observe botany in action in the College’s meadows and then record the flowering plants that you see using pencil and pen sketches and dry brush watercolor.  The class will be held from 9:30 – 3:30 and the registration fee is $225 for Friends of Wellesley Botanic Gardens and $275 for non-members.  Call 781-283-3094, or email wcbgfriends@wellesley.edu.

    Roche_WorkshopImage_web

  • Sunday, June 22, 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm – The Constant Garden: Two Thousand Years of Botanical Art

    Join the Arts & Culture Exchange on Sunday, June 22, 4:30 – 6:30, for an enthralling viewing of exquisite botanical images.  Artist and independent lecturer Jennie Summerall will lead a thought-provoking presentation on the myriad ways in which botanical forms have influenced visual and material culture.  Jennie will show us how artists ranging from muralists of ancient Rome to installation artists of today have drawn inspiration from nature.  Chef Ruth-Anne Adams will prepare light refreshments of a botanical nature.  $25 fee.  The Arts & Culture Exchange is located at The Maugus Club, 40 Abbott Road in Wellesley.  For more information, and tickets, visit www.artsandcultureexchange.com, or email Robin@artsandcultureexchange.com.

  • Thursday, June 26, 10:00 am – 2:00 pm – Exploring Wetland Shrubs

    With so many wetland habitats, and a pond, stream, and bog, Garden in the Woods is an excellent field site to examine shrubs that grow in and around wetlands. On Thursday, June 26, from 10 – 2, you will be introduced to 15-20 New England shrubs as well as a handful of shrubs that grow in higher and drier habitats. Please bring lunch, and a hand lens and shrub field guide, if you have them. Roland “Boot” Boutwell, naturalist, will lead this class co-sponsored by the Massachusetts Association of Conservation Commissioners. Fee $53 for members of the sponsoring organizations, $64 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.newfs.org/learn/catalog/wet3019. (Sambucus canadensis, below.)

  • Saturday, June 21, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon and 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm – Organic Garden Maintenance

    The Boston Natural Areas Network, an affiliate of The Trustees of Reservations, will offer a workshop on Saturday, June 21 in two locations.  From 10 – noon, the class will take place at the East Boston Branch Library, 365 Bremen Street, East Boston, and from 2 – 4 at the Mattapan Branch Library, 1350 Blue Hill Avenue in Mattapan.  Learn to plant in succession, manage weeds and pests, water wisely, and plan for saving your own seed.  Program is free.  Registration required by calling 617-542-7696 or emailing info@bostonnatural.org.

  • Monday, June 23, 7:00 pm – The Manor: Three Centuries at a Slave Plantation on Long Island

    In 1984, the landscape historian Mac Griswold was rowing along a Long Island creek when she came upon Sylvester Manor, a stately mansion guarded by hulking boxwoods. When Griswold went inside, she encountered a house full of revelations, including a letter from Thomas Jefferson and—most remarkable and disturbing—what the aged owner, Andrew Fiske, casually called the “slave staircase.”

    This staircase would reveal the extensive but little-known story of Northern slavery, and in 1997 Griswold returned with a team of archaeologists, uncovering a landscape filled with stories. Based on years of research—and voyages that took her as far as West Africa—Griswold has given us both the biography of a place that has witnessed war and reversals in fortune, and the riveting story of the family that has occupied it for three centuries. A fine-grained account and a sweeping drama, The Manor captures American history in all its richness and contradictions.

    The author will speak at Porter Square Books, 25 White Street in Cambridge, on Monday, June 23 at 7 pm.  Her book, in paperback, will be available for purchase and signing.  For additional information email info@portersquarebooks.com, or call 617-491-2220.