Month: November 2014

  • Wednesday, December 10, 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm – Webinar: Creating Outdoor Magic – Designing Natural Play and Learning Spaces

    Research tells us that time in nature provides many benefits to children’s mental and physical health yet children today are spending less time outside than a generation ago. There is less freedom to roam and less access to wild spaces, so it falls to designers to create spaces that will provide the connection to nature that is essential to healthy human development.

    An experienced landscape designer and former teacher shares insights and inspiring images of earth-friendly, child-friendly natural playspaces in this Ecological Landscaping Alliance webinar on December 10 at 7:30 pm. Projects include natural climbing and digging spaces, a lush wetlands learning lab, a magical reading garden and more. Participants will learn how schools from preschool to high school have come together to design and build wonderful spaces while building community. The presenter has worked with dozens of public and private schools throughout the mid-Atlantic and beyond to create natural play and learning spaces. She has a well-developed design process that invites the involvement of the school community in the both the initial design process as well as in the implementation of the design. This process, as well as before and after photos of several projects will be highlighted in this session. Case studies will include: A cooperative preschool that partnered with Arlington County Department of Environmental Services to offer natural building workshops to the community. The workshops provided the labor to build a natural playspace that is a demonstration of natural building techniques including cob, straw bale construction and living roofs. A Title One Elementary School whose muddy problem space on the perimeter of their playground was transformed into The Wetlands Learning Lab—all with funds raised by students, parents and teachers. Volunteers planted more than 500 native plants in the space. The Wetlands was a pioneering project in in the County and is now a shining example of outdoor learning. A Title One Elementary building now provides a peaceful literacy-themed oasis for students, teachers, staff and parents at the school. The space includes a storytellers circle, a river of words, swinging benches, a vine covered bower, and native plants for every letter of the alphabet. Students planted every tree and plant in the space. A high school whose Greening the Grounds program inspired a dozen clubs, teams and classes to adopt a spot on the grounds. Students have built a dry stream, removed mountains of invasive plants and planted native plants throughout their campus. Learn about the signage that was the key to this success.

    Nancy Striniste, MLD, is a landscape designer and a former early childhood teacher. Her specialty is creating earth-friendly, child-friendly natural play and learning spaces. She holds a BS in Education from Wheelock College and a Masters in Sustainable Landscape Design from George Washington University. For more than three decades she’s been creating magical spaces for children and teaching teachers about the role of the environment in curriculum. Nancy serves on the board of NoVA Outside, an alliance of environmental educators, on the Maryland Natural Playspace Work Group, and is a member of the Community Built Association. She is passionate about connecting children to nature. Her thriving design practice includes the creation of sustainable natural play and learning spaces for early childhood programs, public and private schools, public parks, and private residences throughout the mid-Atlantic. She is committed to community involvement in her design process and often in implementing her designs. You can see her work at http://www.earlyspace.com or on EarlySpace’s Facebook page. Nancy lives with her husband of 30 years in a lovely empty nest in Arlington. Her son is a freshman at Bowdoin College in Maine, and her daughter is a grad student at the University of Texas in Austin. They each enjoy playing outside.
    – See more at: http://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/webinar-creating-outdoor-magic-designing-natural-play-and-learning-spaces/#sthash.TGqts6wa.dpuf.  Photo of one of Nancy’s projects below from www.almiraalvarez.com.

  • December, 2014 – A Holiday Garden at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

    Holidays are a special time to come to the Gardner, where the festive Courtyard, featuring dark forest greens and shades of red and silver, adds to the excitement of the season. This holiday tradition showcases masses of flowering jade trees, silver curry plant, and the white and dark red winter blooms of amaryllis, all of which brighten winter shadows.

    The jades (Crassula argentea) in the Courtyard have been raised in our greenhouse for many years. The largest, with trunks five to six inches in diameter, are over forty years old. Their small, starry, white flowers cover the large spreading branches that are over three feet high. The Latin word crassula means thick and fleshy, describing the jade’s leaves.

    The Courtyard features plants that are actively growing and constantly changing. Courtyard images include plants that are representative of each display, but plants will be added or replaced over the life of the display. For more information visit www.gardnermuseum.org.

  • Monday, December 15, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Climate Change and Plant Conservation: Is Managed Relocation an Option?

    Join Jesse Bellemare, PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Biological Sciences, Smith College, on Monday, December 15, from 7 – 8:30 pm at the Hunnewell Building of the Arnold Arboretum, as he discusses Climate Change and Plant Conservation: Is Managed Relocation an Option? Climate change is projected to be one of the top threats to biodiversity in coming decades. Species with small geographic ranges, often called “endemics”, may be at especially high risk of extinction because unsuitable climatic conditions could develop rapidly across the entirety of their ranges. If such species are unable to disperse long distances on their own to follow suitable climatic conditions, it has been proposed that human-assisted colonization or “managed relocation” might be an option of last resort to avoid extinctions. With this approach, climate-threatened species would be intentionally translocated to new regions as conditions deteriorated within their native ranges. Dr. Bellemare will speak about his research to better understand how the distribution and diversity of these rare species is related to past climate change, such as the Ice Ages, and to predict how the species might respond to the threat of modern anthropogenic climate change. Will managed relocation of species be a viable solution to prevent rare species extinction? Register at https://my.arboretum.harvard.edu/Info.aspx?DayPlanner=1386&DayPlannerDate=12/15/2014. $5 for Arboretum members, $10 for nonmembers.  Image of New England Blazing Star from www.nantucketconservation.org.

  • Friday, December 5, 9:00 am – 3:00 pm, and Saturday, December 6, 9:00 am – 1:00 pm – Framingham Garden Club Annual Greens Sale

    Framingham Garden Club Inc. is holding its Annual Greens Sale on December 5th, Friday, 9:00 to 3:00 and Dec. 6th, Saturday, 9:00 to 1:00 at the Cushing Maintenance Building at Cushing Memorial Park (formerly Tercentennial Park) in Framingham. Proceeds from this sale go toward the club’s scholarship fund and other civic beautification projects. Use Keefe Tech Entrance off Winter Street and Follow Signs. For more information visit www.framinghamgardenclub.org.

  • Garden Club of the Back Bay Holiday Wreaths – Black Friday Opportunity

    Garden Club of the Back Bay Holiday Wreaths – Black Friday Opportunity

    Today is the day to visit https://bostonflora.com/products-page/ for that last minute order.  We will be setting up at The First Lutheran Church of Boston, 299 Berkeley Street, on Sunday, and beginning our decorating first thing Monday morning.  Orders for fully decorated wreaths not received by noon tomorrow, November 29, cannot be fulfilled.  Feel free, however, to order plain wreaths or wreaths with bows either online (through December 1, when the online store closes) or at the Church Monday through Thursday, December 1 – 4. Remember, all proceeds benefit the trees of our city!

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  • Thursday, December 11, 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm – Festival of Trees Ornament Workshop

    As part of its Festival of Trees Celebration, the Massachusetts Horticultural Society is offering this hands-on workshop to create three different star ornaments to take home for the holiday season. Stars will be made of aluminum, straw and paper. It’s easier than you think, and lots of fun! Workshop is suitable for adults. They recommend an apron and clothes suitable for working with glue and paint. The workshop takes place Thursday, December 11, from 6:30 – 8:30 at Elm Bank, 900 Washington Street in Wellesley.

    Limited attendance: Registration required. Workshop Fee: Mass Hort Members $10, Non-Members $15. Register online at http://www.masshort.org/eventdetail/92/422|427|430|433/festival-of-trees-ornament-workshop?filter_reset=1.

  • Happy Thanksgiving from The Garden Club of the Back Bay

    Happy Thanksgiving from The Garden Club of the Back Bay

    We wish all of you a very Happy Thanksgiving, filled with good deeds, good food, family and friends, and perhaps a football victory for your favorite team.

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  • Saturday, December 13, 12:00 noon – 2:30 pm – Salt and Clay Baths

    A warm bath can be healing and relaxing after a long day, and bath salts can make it feel even more luxurious. Would you like to learn an easy recipe for making your own salts? In this Brookline Adult Education course, taking place Saturday, December 13 at 12 noon at Brookline High School, you’ll learn how to make special bath blends made with essential oils that help detoxify the skin and heal ailments. Carrot seed, celery seed, and juniper berry essential oils can help detoxify and reduce excess water weight. Lavender and mandarin are used for prevention of scars and stretch marks, while geranium soothes cuts and acne. Ingredients we will use include Epsom salts, green clay, and essential oils. The cost of each treatment is $2.50, and is payable to the instructor, Cher Kore, in class. Class fee is $34 – register online at https://aded.brooklinema.gov/detail.php?id=546391.

  • Tuesday, December 9, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – The Bee: A Natural History

    Bees pollinate more than 130 fruit, vegetable, and seed crops that we rely on to survive. Bees are crucial to the reproduction and diversity of flowering plants, and the economic contributions of these irreplaceable insects measure in the tens of billions of dollars each year. Yet bees are dying at an alarming rate, threatening food supplies and ecosystems around the world. In this natural history talk at the Arnold Arboretum on Tuesday, December 9, from 7 – 8:30 pm, Noah Wilson-Rich, PhD, Founder and Chief Scientific Officer of The Best Bees Company, will provide a window into the vitally important role that bees play in the life of our planet. He will speak about the human–bee relationship through time; explain a bit about bee evolution, ecology, and physiology; and share his holistic approach to bee health and how you can help bee populations. His book, The Bee: A Natural History, will be available for sale and signing.  Fee $5 Arboretum member, $10 nonmember.  Register at https://my.arboretum.harvard.edu/Info.aspx?DayPlanner=1385&DayPlannerDate=12/9/2014.

  • Monday, December 8, 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm – Webinar: The Magical Appeal of Moss Landscape Designs

    Moss landscapes offer a magical appeal with verdant expanses that seem to encapsulate our spirits with a sense of serenity. Yet, the environmental advantages of eco-friendly mosses add another element of magic through the creation of outdoor living spaces that complement natural ecosystems. As Planet Earth’s oldest living land plants (450 million years old), bryophytes – mosses and their cousins, liverworts and hornworts – are native to all parts of the world. Mosses not only survive but actually thrive in climates and conditions considered inhospitable to most other plants. The year-round green of mosses makes them excellent horticultural choices in gardens for all seasons, including the winter. Even when covered in snow, mosses will continue reproductive processes. When the snow melts, young colorful sporophytes (equivalent of flowers) can be present and the vivid greens of new growth will delight you. On Monday, December 8, at 7:30 pm, join Ecological Landscaping Alliance webinar host Annie Martin to learn more about the benefits of designing with mosses from the aesthetic to the practical, such as erosion control considerations. Annie will also discuss moss cultivation, harvesting regulations, and more.

    Annie Martin, known as Mossin’ Annie, is the owner of Mountain Moss. Her mossery is located in the mountains of western North Carolina. To learn more about mosses, please visit: www.mountainmoss.com. Live mosses for your projects (container trays, pre-vegetated moss mats, and lightweight panels for living moss walls or moss green roofs) are available through the online Moss Shop. As experts in moss-scapes, Mountain Moss offers consultation/design/installation services as well as educational lectures/workshops so that others can experience their own moss magic. Martin will be sharing her passion for moss gardening in her upcoming book (Timber Press, spring 2015).
    – See more at: http://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/webinar-the-magical-appeal-of-moss-landscape-designs/#sthash.NJ2SOeRv.dpuf. Image from www.appvoices.org.