Month: March 2016

  • Thursday, March 31 – Sponsorship Deadline for Garden Club of the Back Bay’s Twilight Garden Party

    Thursday, March 31 – Sponsorship Deadline for Garden Club of the Back Bay’s Twilight Garden Party

    On Tuesday, June 7, we will host a spectacular party at the Massachusetts headquarters of the National Society of the Colonial Dames, and we invite you to join us as a sponsor of our annual fund raising event.

    sponsorship levels

    Please print the Twilight Garden Party 2016 Sponsorship Form and send your check no later than March 31, 2016 to meet the invitation-printing deadline. Sponsorships and event tickets may also be purchased in our Online Store!

     

    The Garden Club of the Back Bay, Inc. is a Massachusetts not-for-profit corporation
    under the provisions of section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.

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  • Sundays, March 13 – 27, 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm – I Go Forth Into My Garden: Early Spring Herb Gardening

    Celebrate spring and the installation of the Old Manse 19th century herb garden with talks and outdoor garden viewings. The series, sponsored by the Trustees of Reservations, will be held Sundays, March 13 – 27, from 2 – 3:30. Topics include: building a 19th century kitchen garden, cooking with herbs, herb vinegars, and the history of gardens at the Manse. TTOR members $10 per session, nonmembers $15. The Old Manse is located in Concord, Massachusetts. For more information, and to register, call 978-369-3909, or email tbeardsley@thetrustees.org.

  • Thursday, May 19, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Hidden Gardens of Beacon Hill

    Thursday, May 19, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Hidden Gardens of Beacon Hill

    The Beacon Hill Garden Club announces its 87th Annual Tour of the Hidden Gardens of Beacon Hill. The tour will take place Thursday, May 19 from 9 – 5. Tickets are now available for purchase online. 10 private gardens will open just for you, and Beacon Hill Garden Club members promise an exceptional tour with a few never-before-seen gardens.

    Their website, www.BeaconHillGardenClub.org, will help you plan a great day on Beacon Hill. The site is full of information and photographs, including

    Tour details and FAQs
    Ticket purchase information
    Photographs from past tours
    Restaurant and shopping guide

    Tickets: $45 in Advance – $55 Tour Day.  Tickets may be purchased on line and are also available at the following Beacon Hill shops:

    Blackstone’s of Beacon Hill – 46 Charles Street

    Cambridge Trust Company – 65 Beacon Street

    Charles Street Supply – 54 Charles Street

    good – 133 Charles Street

    Linens on the Hill – 52 Charles Street

    Rouvalis Flowers – 40 W. Cedar Street

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  • Saturday, March 19, 9:00 am – 3:00 pm – Apple Tree Grafting

    UMass Extension’s Fruit Program has announced its 2016 Seminars (visit http://ag.umass.edu/fruit/mass-aggie-seminars-2016 for full list) and today we highlight the March 19 hands on workshop on Apple Tree Grafting. Many people do not realize that all apple varieties are reproduced by grafting – they are not grown from seed. For horticultural enthusiasts, one of the most satisfying techniques to master is grafting. Wes Autio will present a hands-on workshop on ‘bench grafting’ and ‘cleft grafting’ of apple trees. Other grafting techniques will be discussed. Proper tools and sharpening will be included. All participants in the workshop will graft several of their own apples trees to take home. There will be a break for participants to enjoy a BYO lunch.The class will run from 9 – 3 at the UMass Cold Spring Orchard, 391 Sabin Street in Belchertown. Fee $100, and you may register online at the website above.

  • Wednesday, March 16, 10:00 am – A Visit to ‘Les Quatres Vents’: Frank Cabot’s Quebec Garden

    Wednesday, March 16, 10:00 am – A Visit to ‘Les Quatres Vents’: Frank Cabot’s Quebec Garden

    Frank Cabot, founder of the Garden Conservancy, was a plant collector of the first order. At the Garden Club of the Back Bay’s March meeting on March 16 at 10 am, Sally Muspratt will present an illustrated lecture of his showcase Quebec garden, which she revisited in May, 2015. The meeting will held at The College Club of Boston, 44 Commonwealth Avenue in Boston. Garden Club members will receive written notice of the meeting, which will be followed by an optional lunch.

    Sally McGuire Muspratt holds a Graduate Certificate in Landscape Design from Radcliffe College (1993), a certificate in Landscape Maintenance from UMass Extension (2002), an M.A. from Newnham College, Cambridge and a BA from Harvard. In 2010 she was accredited as an Organic Land Care Professional by the Northeast Organic Farming Association, and in 2011 as a Professional Landscape Designer by the APLD, the Association of Professional Landscape Designers (certification #344).

    Sally gardens in West Roxbury, MA and La Malbaie, Quebec. She serves on the Board of the Arboretum Park Conservancy and on the advisory committees of The Kelleher Rose Garden and the Park Overseers of the Emerald Necklace Conservancy. She is past President of the Board of Cogdesign, past Chairman of the Landscape Design Study Classes, the Landscape Design Council of the National Council of State Garden Clubs, and the Civic Development Committee for the Garden Club Federation of Massachusetts. If you are not a member but wish to attend please email info@bostonflora.com.

  • Through March 18 – Bulb Show

    Through March 18 – Bulb Show

    Come and get inspired for spring with the Bulb Show at the Berkshire Botanical Garden, now through March 18. The show, which is housed in the restored Fitzpatrick Greenhouse, is free to the public and open Monday through Friday from 9 am to 4 pm. It is also an ideal opportunity to order bulbs as part of the Garden’s annual Bulb Sale for planting the following fall.

  • Friday, March 11, 8:00 am – 4:00 pm – Swamp Things

    Friday, March 11, 8:00 am – 4:00 pm – Swamp Things

    The Soil and Water Conservation Society, Southern New England Chapter, will hold its 2016 Winter Conference on Friday, March 11, from 8 – 4 at the Publick House Historic Inn in Sturbridge, Massachusetts. Timber “swamp” mats have been used for decades by forestry and linear energy projects to facilitate low-impact, temporary equipment access across wetlands and waterways. Composite material products emerged more recently; installation methods and other project elements are changing in response. Meanwhile, federal, state and local regulations governing temporary wetland crossings in southern New England have evolved; and requirements for the same project may vary by location.

    SWAMP THINGS will bring together regional experts in the fields of energy transmission management, wetland crossing construction and the various levels of environmental regulation to describe how wetland crossings are designed, permitted, constructed and restored. Manufacturers and suppliers of timber and composite mat systems will exhibit and promote their products as solutions to access issues. The program will provide a forum for the exchange of ideas, concerns and hopefully solutions. SWCS members $50, nonmembers $65. Register at www.swcssnec.org/winter/.

  • CALL TO ACTION: Gas Leaks in Back Bay and Across the Commonwealth

    According to the Massachusetts Chapter of the Sierra Club, Massachusetts has one of the nation’s oldest natural gas pipeline systems, and it is showing its age. Gas pipes around the Commonwealth have more than 25,000 leaks, losing more than eight billion cubic feet of natural gas into the air every year – and possibly as much as nineteen billion cubic feet.

    Natural gas leaks kill trees by attracting bacteria to their roots, are harmful to human health, are an extraordinary potent greenhouse gas, waste a valuable fossil fuel that has been harvested through fracking, and can potentially cause explosions.

    In addition, utilities don’t pay for the gas that is wasted through leaks, but pass that cost onto ratepayers by factoring it into the price the pay. Nor are the utilities required to repair any leaks, unless a leak is considered potentially explosive. Leaks never get any better; they only get worse over time.

    In 2015, for the first time, utilities in Massachusetts reported on the location of natural gas leaks in their territories. A nonprofit group called the Home Energy Efficiency Team (HEET) has used those reports to create Google maps of the reported leaks, which you can see by clicking here. Using those maps, you can zoom in on your neighborhood to find out where there are local gas leaks (as reported by the utilities in March 2015).

    For example, downtown Boston (which includes Back Bay) was reported to have 246 unrepaired leaks as of February 26, 2015. Importantly, one of HEET’s solutions is for all of us to support state legislation that will help solve the problem. Two such legislative bills are currently pending in the Massachusetts Legislature:

    A Bill Protecting Consumers (H2870): This bill, if passed, would prohibit utility companies from passing the cost of wasted gas onto consumers, incentivizing them to fix the leaks as quickly and cost effectively as possible.

    A Bill Requiring Gas Leak Repairs During Road Projects (H2871): This bill, if passed, would require gas companies to check and repair all gas leaks whenever a street is already open for construction. Repairing leaks before repaving is not only cheaper for the utility companies, it also decreases the chance the street will need to get opened up soon afterward for pipeline repairs, reducing future street repaving needs (and costs) for the local municipality and disruption for nearby residents.

    We therefore urge you to contact your State Representative and State Senator to express your support for both of these important bills. If you live in the Back Bay, your State Representative is Jay Livingstone (Jay.Livingstone@mahouse.gov) or Byron Rushing (Byron.Rushing@mahouse.gov) and your State Senator is William Brownsberger (William.Brownsberger@masenate.gov). The more voters who speak out in favor of these bills, the better the chance is that they will be enacted into law.

  • Monday, March 7, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – The Director’s Lens on Plants

    Arboretum Director William (Ned) Friedman has an eye for detail and infectious enthusiasm when the subject matter is plants. For nearly two years, he has been regularly walking in the Arboretum’s living collections, intensively photographing and documenting these magnificent plants and their biological magic. In this Monday, March 7 evening session, Ned will share his images and stories of some of the most wonderful and ephemeral phenomema that he has had the good fortune to observe in the Arboretum. Join us for an interactive session on buzz pollination in the rhododendrons; the quest for the perfect picture of a young red larch cone; the incredible lightness of winged birch fruits; nectar guides (for insects) and the “Nedbud” redbud mutant; and magnolias in fruit. With spring nearly in sight, he will celebrate some of the extraordinary beauty of the Arboretum’s plants and whet your appetites for the year to come. Fee Free. Register at my.arboretum.harvard.edu or call 617-384-5277.

  • Thursday, March 10, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm – Swan Boats of the Public Garden: Pedaling Through Time in America’s First Public Garden

    The Friends of the Public Garden are sponsoring a talk on Thursday, March 10 from 6 – 8 at the Suffolk University Law School. Lyn Paget, the fourth-generation manager of the Swan Boats operation, will share personal anecdotes and historical images dating back to 1877, when her great-grandfather Robert Paget first launched the dual-pontoon boats in the Public Garden and a rich chapter of the Boston’s history began. $15. Tickets available online at www.friendsofthepublicgarden.org.