Month: July 2014

  • Garden Club of the Back Bay Announces Grants

    The Annual Meeting of the Garden Club of the Back Bay took place May 19, and the membership voted to award the following grants for the fiscal year ending June 30.

    We are committed to the street trees of Back Bay. This year, in addition to budgeting $20,000 for tree care in the neighborhood, we will distribute the awards listed below, for a total of $48,000 in aid distributed in accordance with our mission statement.

    Our fundraising efforts allow us to award grants to other nonprofit groups who also work as advocates for Boston’s green spaces.  Thanks to your generosity we can continue to work on our mission to support neighborhood beautification projects and promote conservation throughout the City of Boston.  For fiscal year 2013/2014 the following organizations will receive:

     

    BLOSSOM FUND (Boston Committee of the Garden Club of America):   $500

    In support of the Boston Natural Areas Network Community Garden Project at Pope John Paul II Park

    CHARLES RIVER CLEANUP BOAT:   $ 2,000

    BOSTON NATURE CENTER/MASS AUDUBON:   $2,000

    In support of summer camp scholarships for children ages 5 – 14 from Mattapan, Roslindale and Jamaica Plain

    EMERALD NECKLACE CONSERVANCY:  $3,000

    In support of the restoration of Mother’s Rest at the corner of Boylston Street and The Fenway, amending the soil and planting for erosion control and slope stabilization.

    COMMONWEALTH AVENUE MALL COMMITTEE:  $ 5,000

    In support of tree, turf and soil restoration on the Charlesgate block.

    THE ESPLANADE ASSOCIATION:  $ 5,000

    In support of pruning the ornamental trees on the Esplanade.

    FRIENDS OF THE PUBLIC GARDEN:  $5,000

    In support of inoculation of elm trees against Dutch Elm Disease.

    FRIENDS OF THE PUBLIC GARDEN:  $3,000

    In addition to the grant above, an additional grant assisting with the repair of the fountain at the White Memorial on the corner of Beacon and Arlington Streets. The “Angel of the Waters” statue is by Daniel Chester French. See picture below.

    FRIENDS OF COPLEY SQUARE:  $1,500

    In support of treatment of trees for root stress, and application of fertilizer and fungicides.

    TOTAL GRANTS  $28,000

  • Sunday, July 13, 9:00 am – 2:00 pm – Blueberry Festival

    Blueberry lovers unite!  Celebrate this classic summer favorite at Weston Nurseries in Hopkinton on Sunday, July 13.  The schedule includes:
    9:00 am – 11:00 am Blueberry Pancake Festival, Hopkinton and Ashland Lions Fundraiser

    10:00 am – Tips on Growing Great Blueberries

    11:00 am – 1:00 pm Burgers and Dogs, Hopkinton and Ashland Lions Fundraiser

    11:30 am – 12:30 pm Live Music with “According to Nancy”

    12:00 pm – 1:00 pm Honey Tasting with The Best Bees Company

    1:00 pm – 2:00 pm Blueberry Pie Contest

    For directions visit www.westonnurseries.com.  Admission free.

  • Saturday, July 12, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Gloucester Garden Tour

    Saturday, July 12, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Gloucester Garden Tour

    This July 12 Gloucester Garden Tour of unique and fabulous properties on our picturesque Back Shore will take place from 10 – 4. Wander between small and large private properties, some professionally designed and others lovingly planted over many years by their owners. There is something for everyone. From a precious Japanese Garden with a very rare Mimosa tree, to grand old estate gardens with sweeping views of the ocean, the tour is sure to delight even the most experienced of garden tour goers. It is a self-guided tour with many volunteers drawn from all the Cape Ann garden clubs working as *garden sitters* and guides.  The tickets are $25.00 per person ($20.00 in advance online until July 9th, 2014 at www.gloucestergardentour.com.
    On the day of the tour pick up your ticket/booklet with maps and descriptions at the Rocky Neck Cultural Center, 6 Wonson Street, Gloucester, MA. The profits from this tour will benefit the new Plant Grant Circle Project. See www.PlantGrantCircle.org for details on that project.  For more information or to volunteer, please contact Susan Kelly:
    Susan@generousgardeners.org.

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  • Saturday, July 19, 9:00 am – 3:00 pm – Wild and Scenic Bus to Boat Tour

    Renowned Geologist Richard Little leads a Wild & Scenic Bus to Boat Tour along the Deerfield & Connecticut Rivers on Saturday, July 19, from 9 – 3, sponsored by the Franklin Land Trust. Participants will meet at 9 am for a one-hour informative slide presentation at the Franklin Land Trust office on 5 Mechanic Street in Shelburne Falls. Over the morning hours, participants will be transported back in time via a bus and short hikes to local sites, exploring what was learned in the presentation.

    Bring a picnic lunch to enjoy at Barton’s Cove before embarking on a riverboat tour of the Connecticut River. The cruise will be filled with tales of drifting continents, earthquakes, dinosaurs, and Lake Hitchcock that are part of the creation of our idyllic valley.

    Professor Emeritus at Greenfield Community College, Little has published three editions of Dinosaurs, Dunes and Drifting Continents: The Geology of the Connecticut Valley and created videos about the rise and fall of glacial Lake Hitchcock and the 500 million year history of the Connecticut Valley. Professor Little continues his passion for educating about geology through field trips to internationally significant geologic areas like the Canadian Rockies and Iceland. RSVP by July 11 to Linda at 413.625.9151 or lalvord@verizon.net. $20 per person.

  • Wednesday, July 9, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Sandwich Garden Tour

    Visit a number of lovely private home gardens in Sandwich at your leisure between 10am and 4pm on Wednesday, July 9, sponsored by the Green Briar Nature Center, 6 Discovery Hill Road, East Sandwich, where the tour begins. Light refreshments will be served overlooking the Wildflower Garden at the Green Briar Nature Center. Tickets are $15 and contain a map and directions to each garden. They may be purchased in advance or on the day of the tour at Green Briar. All proceeds benefit the environmental education programs of the Thornton W. Burgess Society and its Green Briar Nature Center. Rain date is Friday, July 11. For more information visit www.thorntonburgess.org.

  • Tuesday, July 22, 9:30 am – 3:30 pm – Tablet Computers as a Tool

    The Friends of Wellesley Botanic Gardens have arranged for Elaine Searle to help you look objectively at the role of the iPad and similar devices as tools for the botanical artist, and to evaluate some of the most interesting apps available for reference and recording.  Discover the difference controlled lighting can make to your plant reference photography.  Elaine will also cover usage etiquette and the possible pitfalls of over-reliance on these devices.  While the focus will be on iPad usage, many of the concepts are easily transferrable to other tablets which have built-in cameras.  The class will take place at the Visitors Center of the Wellesley College Botanic Gardens on Tuesday, July 22, from 9:30 – 3:30.  Wellesley Friends – $85; non-members – $110.  Sign up by calling 781-283-3094 or email wcbgfriends@wellesley.edu.

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  • Wednesday, July 9, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Martha’s Vineyard Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy’s Open Days Program continues Wednesday, July 9 on the island of Martha’s Vineyard.  For complete information visit www.gardenconservancy.org.

    First up, the Norris Garden at 19 Blueberry Ridge Lane in Chilmark (PLEASE NOTE, this garden closes at 3 pm.) The garden is located on approximately four acres and was started in 2002, so many of the plantings are still young, with the largest, most mature rhododendron at close to eleven years old. It is located in a low area between two sets of hills to the north and south, crisscrossed by old stone walls. Although the plot was originally heavily wooded, and the soil is acidic, the high water table is a problem for growing rhododendrons. Native species to this area are highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum), cinnamon and royal fern (Osmunda cinnamomea and O. regalis), summersweet (Clethra alnifolia), swamp azalea (Rhododendron viscosum), holly and inkberry (Ilex opaca and I. glabra), sheep laurel (Kalmia angustifolia), and a “river” of skunk cabbage along the stream under a canopy of tall pitch pines (Pinus rigida), red and white oak, beetlebug or tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica), and swamp maples (Acer rubrum). The latter two have shallow root systems which compete with the plantings for moisture and nutrients. There are also spring ephemeral plantings which likely will have gone past (anemone, star flower). There are two man-made ponds with some surviving hardy waterlilies and white lotus, which are just beginning to show. The ponds suffer from muskrats, who love to feast on the lily tubers, but that’s a story for another time. Lots of frogs, turtles, and a stressed-out goldfish population (predation by otters, ospreys, herons). Main plant species collections include rhodies, Japanese maples, and hydrangeas with smaller groupings of mountain laurels (mostly from Broken Arrow Nursery), and tree peonies. In the fenced-in yard behind the house are two large herbaceous perennial beds (created and cared for by a local artist/gardener, Rick Hoffman), two mature apple trees, a small grouping of fruit trees, hydrangea row, Satsuki azaleas, mature yak hybrids, the kalmias, and several Stewartias. The main rhodie plantings extend away from the house along the driveway, a large area near the left of the lower pond and a smaller grouping on the other side of the pond. The “corral,” which was the first protected area, and several nurseries contain over 200 seedlings and plants from many sources. A grove of more than a dozen beetlebungs (Nyssa sylvatica) has been turned into a “damp garden” of ferns planted among stumps carried in from the woods, and other shade/moisture loving plants like arisaema (check out the Arisaema sikokianum with a pure white spathe and striped hood), trilliums, and epimedium. Please be careful of the many surface roots courtesy of the maples and beetlebungs. Some of the paths, especially in the seedling nurseries, are very narrow, and only one person at a time can pass. Suzy Zell, is the full-time head gardener and will also be available to answer questions. We really enjoy it when visitors come to see the collection so please don’t hesitate to ask. Admission: $7

    Directions: Three miles west (sign to Menemsha) of intersection of North Road and State Road. Go 0.25 mile past Tea Lane to Blueberry Ridge Lane on left. Garden entrance is 0.25 mile on right. Cars must park near deer gate, which will lower as car passes over it. Limited 10 cars at one time.

    Also in Chilmark, at 12 Middle Road, is Brookside Farm. For over thirty years, the gardens at Brookside Farm have been part of the magic of Martha’s Vineyard. Pond, pastures, and stone walls define the space in which trees and shrubs flourish as yearly hosts to the rich perennial garden. Spring flowers including lilacs, peonies, and poppies along the old walls lead out to fruit espaliers on the old milk house and garage. Summer plays out with the border of roses, phlox, gaura, and Joe pye weed. In the fall, the blue and white asters curtsey to the dahlias and rose mallows. The silent animals, horses, oxen, and an occasional barn cat contribute to the peace of nature’s best efforts.
    Admission: $7

    Directions: Brookside Farm is located about 2 miles west from center of West Tisbury via Music Street and Middle Road. Driveway is limited.

    In West Tisbury, visit The Folly at 57 Lamberts Cove Road (HOURS 10 – 2). “The Folly” carved into a boulder is the only indication that you’ve got a surprise in store. The stucco house, balustrades, finials covered with ivy, planted urns, and winding hedges evoke an Italian villa. The many different areas, varied grades and contours, curves and textures, the mix of native plants among non-native, the stonework, the views around every corner, are a successful mix of formality within an informal context. The blue and white theme inside the house is continued outside yet is not overdone and, combined with the greens of the foliage, makes for a very natural, cool, and relaxed atmosphere. There is a protected pool terrace with wisteria dripping off an arched pergola overlooking the border and Vineyard Sound beyond. There are very many planted urns. There are parterres, groundcovers, ferns, and flowers, in the shade and in the sun. There is something for everyone. Admission: $7  (pictured below)

    Directions: From Main Street in Vineyard Haven, turn right onto Cromwell Lane. Turn right onto Water Street, go several hundred feet and turn right again onto Beach Road. Go onto State Road. Go 1.5 miles and make slight right onto Lamberts Cove Road. Go 1.7 miles to #57.

    Garden Club of the Back Bay speaker Judith Tankard, with her husband John, welcome you to their garden at 16 School Street in Edgartown. This is a new garden planted in 2006 to complement the historic house built around 1730 and fully renovated by the owners, an architect and a garden writer. The garden was designed by Nan Blake Sinton and is composed mainly of hardy shrubs and ornamental trees. Pale pink ‘New Dawn’ roses climb on the fence surrounding the garden, and the roof of the garden shed is covered in ‘White Eden’ and ‘Abraham Darby’ roses as well as a Clematis montana rubens. There are two crabapples (Malus ‘Donald Wyman’) and a large Viburnum sieboldii in the main garden. An espalier, created from Viburnum plicatum mariesii, on the wall of the house and a hedge of clipped Philadelphus coronarius in the parking area provide a bit of formality. There are small flower beds with astilbes, lavender, nepeta, salvia, and other perennials. A small brick patio is planted with lacecap hydrangeas and Hydrangea macrophylla ‘Enziadom.’ At the front of the house, there are American hollies, English boxwood, Ilex glabra ‘Nigra,’ and a large viburnum. One of the outstanding features of the garden is a large, old sycamore maple on the lane at the corner of the property, a survivor from earlier days.  Admission: $7

    Directions: The house is located 1 block from Main Street at corner of School Street and Pent Lane. Garden entrance is on Pent Lane. No parking available.

    Continue on to the Helman Garden. This walled garden was designed to be protected from the elements and not to compete with the natural beauty of the property, a private garden with formal bones. Square and rectangle beds are for flowers, some for herbs, some for vegetables, and some are mixed. It is a very personal place that ebbs and flows each year. There are four stone semi-circles that the owners call “ectetras.” The garden was designed by Diane McGuire.  Admission: $7

    Directions: At the request of the Garden Host, directions to this garden are provided through the Open Days Directory, at other gardens open on this date, or by calling the Garden Conservancy office toll-free weekdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., 1-888-842-2442.

    The final garden is at 85 South Water Street, Edgartown. The original parts of this house are believed to date from the 1840’s. More than fifty years ago a former owner and founder of the Martha’s Vineyard Garden Club set out the sunken geometric garden in the shape of a Union Jack. In the late 1990s, the English garden designer Penelope Hobhouse added some important features to the garden, particularly the enclosure of the sunken flag garden to create an outdoor “room.” The garden contains some rare and unusual, as well as native, plants. Currently, the owners, who are hands-on gardeners from England, work closely with Leandro da Silva to implement further design changes.  Admission: $7

    Directions: At the request of the Garden Host, directions to this garden are provided through the Open Days Directory, at other gardens open on this date, or by calling the Garden Conservancy office toll-free weekdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., 1-888-842-2442.

  • Thursday, July 17, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Twin Maples Country Estate: Designing a Garden to Complement The House

    Join horticulturist Deb Munson on July 17 for an in-depth tour behind the gardening scenes at Twin Maples, a beautiful estate garden located in Salisbury, Connecticut, the town where Garden Club of the Back Bay Co-President Jackie Blombach gardens. This Berkshire Botanical Garden field study will give participants insights into the design and maintenance of the formal gardens and container plantings surrounding this Georgian home. Deb will share her gardening expertise, tips and techniques for designing a formal garden of any size. Her talk will focus on the long border, herb garden, terrace and green garden. Follow the transition from these formal gardens to the adjoining naturalistic woodland garden, 40-acre meadow and wonderful shrub borders. Enjoy spectacular views of the Litchfield Hills of Connecticut, a 40-minute drive from Berkshire Botanical Garden. This is an extraordinary garden and a wonderful place to spend a summer morning.

    Deb Munson is a horticulturist working in the northwest corner of Connecticut. In addition to designing and maintaining her clients’ amazing gardens, she has created with her husband, Brian, her own mountaintop refuge in Falls Village. She gardens with a strongly environmental and sustainable ethic.

    Bring a bag lunch and dress for the weather. Participants can choose to carpool or drive separately. Those joining the carpool should meet in the parking lot at Berkshire Botanical Garden for a 9:15 am departure. Carpool will return at approximately 1:30 pm. (Program time in Salisbury, CT, is 10am – noon.)  BBG member price $50, non-member $60.  Register at http://www.berkshirebotanical.org/ai1ec_event/twin-maples-country-estate-designing-a-garden-to-complement-the-house/?instance_id=2617.

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