Month: July 2015

  • Thursday, July 30, 2:30 pm – 4:30 pm – Afternoon Tea at Beauport

    Bring friends and family on Thursday, July 30 from 2:30 – 4:30 to an elegant tea at Beauport, the Sleeper-McCann House, 75 Eastern Point Boulevard, on the terrace overlooking Gloucester Harbor. The tea includes scones, finger sandwiches, and sweets, and is accompanied by a classical guitarist playing in the background. A tour of the house is offered after tea. Sunhats are recommended. $25 Historic New England members, $35 nonmembers. Registration is required. Please call 978-283-0800 or buy online at http://shop.historicnewengland.org/BEA-TEA-7491/. Rain date August 6.

  • Wednesday, August 5, 11:00 am – 4:30 pm – 61st Annual Nantucket House and Garden Tour

    The Nantucket Garden Club’s 61st Annual House and Garden Tour will take place Wednesday, August 5, from 11 – 4:30, rain or shine, featuring homes and gardens in the Darling Street area. All proceeds support Nantucket conservation, scholarships, and community projects. Tickets are available August 1 to 4 on Main Street, Sconset Rotary, Bartlett’s Farm and G S Hill Gallery, Straight Wharf and at all homes the day of the tour. Tickets $60. For information contact Pam Wilton Ulm at Wilton777@aol.com or cell: 917-331-2252. Image from www.gardenconservancy.org.

  • Friday – Sunday, July 24 – 26, 2:00 pm – I Go Forth Into My Garden

    Experience the vegetable garden first planted for the Hawthornes in 1842 by neighbor Henry David Thoreau. On this guided walk, you’ll hear about 19th century gardens, the special meaning gardening held for the Hawthornes, and how today the Gaining Ground organization maintains the historic garden. Offered Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, at 2PM, or by advanced reservation. Call 978. 369. 3909. The garden is located at The Old Manse  on Monument Street in Concord, Massachusetts. For directions visit http://www.thetrustees.org/things-to-do/greater-boston/event-2795.html?. Image from www.gardentoursnewengland.com.

  • Friday, August 14, 8:30 am – 5:00 pm – Trip to Sakonnet Garden & Sakonnet Vineyard

    Travel to Little Compton, RI, for an owner-led tour of the unique Sakonnet Garden. Lunch will be at Carolyn’s Sakonnet Vineyard, followed by a winery tour and tastings of their award-winning wines.

    Sakonnet is a secret garden embedded within a native coastal fields landscape. At the diminutive scale of a cottage garden, it is conceived as an intimate place to explore, with multiple paths leading one onward to unexpected experiences. Each outdoor room reflects the owner’s ongoing experiments with lighting, space, color mixing, collecting and growing wonderful plants.

    Sakonnet Vineyard’s microclimate and soil conditions resemble the maritime climate of northern France, allowing for production of some of New England’s most popular and distinctive wines. The trip is sponsored by Tower Hill Botanic Garden, and you may register online at www.towerhillbg.org. THBG Member $125, Non-member $140, includes bus transportation, guided tour of garden, lunch, and winery tour and tastings.

  • Michael Dosmann Honored by the American Public Gardens Association

    In recognition of his outstanding leadership and advocacy for botanical collections and the public gardens community, Dr. Michael Dosmann has been awarded the Professional Citation Award by the American Public Gardens Association (APGA). The Curator of Living Collections at the Arnold Arboretum, Dosmann received the honor in late June at a ceremony during the APGA’s 39th Annual Conference in Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota.

    The Professional Citation Award recognizes individual achievements, skills, innovation, and potential in botany, horticulture, conservation, research, education, or administration. Indeed, as Curator of Living Collections—a post he accepted in 2007 after serving as Putnam Fellow at the Arboretum and receiving his doctorate in horticulture and ecology from Cornell University—Dosmann has made significant strides in each of these aspects of the Arnold Arboretum’s mission, and has collaborated extensively with colleagues around the world to enhance the breadth, value, and use of institutional collections for research, education, and conservation.

    As Curator, Dosmann has overseen the continuous development of the Arboretum’s collection of temperate woody plants and their associated documentation. A hallmark of this work has been his efforts to explore new strategies and tactics to improve collections management, including advancing novel field-checking and inventory protocols, improving the management of conservation-status plants, and enhancing access to historical and contemporary documentation. He has also played an important role in expanding and improving collections at the Arboretum and across North American botanical institutions, both through collecting expeditions and by assessing past exploration efforts to devise best practices for germplasm collection. The Garden Club of the Back Bay congratulates Dr. Dosmann on his achievement.

  • Wednesday, July 29, 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm – Out of Control: Chemical-free Strategies for Invasive Plant Control

    Invasive non-native plant species surround us: along roadsides, deep in forests, and in our own backyards. After decades using synthetic herbicides to control invasives, the invasive species remain out of control and growing environmental concerns are driving landscape professionals and the public to consider alternative control methods. Join the Ecological Landscape Alliance (ELA) at the Garden in the Woods for an afternoon workshop from 1 – 5 on Wednesday, July 29 to explore chemical-free options for invasive species control.This workshop will feature six concise and information-packed presentations plus a powerhouse panel discussion. Topics will include:

    Chemical-free Riparian Restoration
    Invasive Control in Closed-loop Systems
    Comparing Control Options
    Mobilizing Volunteers for Invasive Plant Removal
    Invasive Species Management Realities
    “Goatscaping” – A 4-Legged Approach to Invasive Control
    Chemical-free Controls – Get Your Questions Answered by the Panel of Experts

    ELA members price $30, nonmembers $40. Register today at www.ecolandscaping.org. Image from www.landscapeonline.com.

  • Saturday, August 1, 12:30 pm – 2:00 pm – The Art of Bonsai

    Watch Michael Levin create a finished specimen bonsai from raw nursery stock while sharing his tips on sculpting, pruning, wiring, repotting and more. This Saturday, August 1 class will take place at Tower Hill Botanic Garden. Learn about bonsai care and maintenance from A to Z, with plenty of time for Q & A. Michael Levin is a principal of Bonsai West, and the fee is $15 for THBG members, $25 for nonmembers. Register online at www.towerhillbg.org.

  • From the Archives – Front Yards Project and Snacking Students

    Throughout the early years of the Garden Club of the Back Bay, much effort was expended attempting to encourage building owners to beautify their front yards.  In conjunction with the Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay, Block Captains were appointed to contact owners and suggest solutions.  One exceptionally diplomatic letter was sent by Mrs. Hazel P. Chapin to a local school President and is excerpted below:

    “We are making an effort to contact all building owners or key personnel of the various schools in this area. It seems an unrelenting task to keep the Back Bay area an attractive place in which to reside, or for tourists to visit. We are appealing to you … to see if it wouldn’t be possible to motivate your students to take a collective pride in the outside appearance of their dormitories and classrooms …

    We realize it is difficult, with so many young people, with a propensity for snacking, not to become inundated with trash carelessly thrown about. However, if you could imbue them with an idea of some civic pride, I am sure the end result would not only be a more attractive block but also elevate the prestige of the school. “

    Today the need to take property owners to task is less urgent, since more front yards are meticulously maintained.  We do wonder if Mrs. Chapin ever received a reply, or if the students in question were ever asked to curtail their littering.  Image from www.upcity.com.

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  • Saturday, July 25, 11:00 am – 4:00 pm – Iris Society Plant Sale

    Looking for some beautiful irises to add to your garden? Then come to the iris plant sale sponsored by the Iris Society of Massachusetts on Saturday, July 25, from 11 – 4 at Verrill Farm, 11 Wheeler Road in Concord. You will find a wide selection of bearded and Siberian named irises — all at low prices. All the irises are donated by members of the society and grow well in New England. Society members will be on hand to help you make selections and provide information about planting and care. Free event. For more information visit www.massirises.org.

  • Saturday, July 25, 1:00 pm – 4:30 pm – Nature Photography Workshop

    Improve your photographs of nature in this half-day workshop on Saturday, July 25 from 1 – 4:30 in the Hunnewell Building at the Arnold Arboretum, a talk followed by hands-on experience. Learn about composition, color, light, depth of field, and focus. Bring your camera and manual and familiarize yourself with the operation of your camera prior to the workshop. Level: beginner/advanced beginner. Class size: approximately 10. Rain date Sunday, July 25. Fee $60. The instructor is freelance photographer Erik Gehring, and on line registration may be found at http://www.arboretum.harvard.edu/education/adult-education/ Photo copyright Erik Gehring.