Daily Archives: July 23, 2017


Saturday, September 9, 8:00 am – 6:00 pm – Garden Study Weekend VII Symposium: The Exuberant Garden

Be inspired by a day long symposium on Saturday, September 9 at the Hollister House Garden, 300 Nettleton Hollow Road in Washington, Connecticut,
featuring:

Jacqueline van der Kloet – The celebrated Dutch landscape designer will talk about Magical Mixes in the garden. She is known world wide for her innovative designs and her artful combinations of perennials and bulbs in the garden, She has worked on projects ranging from private gardens and city parks to national and international flower exhibitions. She is also the author of nine books, including Colour Your Garden. In this talk Jacqueline will show us her own garden in Weesp as well as her many international projects.

Tom Coward – Tom will speak on leading the restoration of William Robinson’s legendary gardens at Gravetye Manor, where he has been the head gardener in Sussex, England since 2010. Previously he was assistant head gardener at Great Dixter, working under Fergus Garrett. The gardens at Gravetye Manor were first developed in the 1880’s by the legendary gardener William Robinson, who wrote some of the most influential gardening books of his generation, and used the landscape at Gravetye to put his ideas into practice. Over the past seven years Coward has led a team working to restore the historical detail of the site, renovating the garden to its former glory while attempting to move it forward into the modern age.

Andrew Bunting – Andrew Bunting, Assistant Director and Director of Collections at Chicago Botanic Garden, is an expert on woody plants and author on Plant Lover’s Guide to Magnolias. Prior to coming to Chicago, he was curator at the Scott Arboretum at Swarthmore College, and is past President of the Magnolia Society International. Andrew will describe the many and diverse magnolias that can be cultivated in the Northeast.

Jane Garmey– Jane is a noted author and passionate gardener, author of Private Gardens of the Hudson Valley, and Private Gardens of Connecticut. She will speak on A Sense of Place: Challenges, Approaches and Solutions to Creating Gardens. She has also written about gardens for The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. Her newest book, City Green, will be published next year. In this talk she will give us an inside look at a wide variety of private gardens and will focus on the challenges facing those who set out to make their own gardens and show how inventive and individual their solutions can be.

The symposium is moderated by Todd Forrest, Arthur Ross Vice President for Horticulture and Living Collections at New York Botanical Garden.

Each reservation includes continental breakfast and lunch at the symposium and cocktails and preview buying at the Sale of Rare and Unusual Plants at Hollister House Garden. The Heritage Hotel has reserved a block of rooms for symposium attendees ($129 + tax) per night. To reserve please call 203-264-8200 and mention Hollister House Garden to secure this special rate.

Patron $500 – includes invitation to the speaker dinner on Friday evening at Hollister House Garden and reserved seating at the symposium. ($200 of this ticket is tax deductible)
Friend $185 – HHG and Garden Conservancy members
Non-members $200
No cancellations after August 1. To register, visit https://app.etapestry.com/onlineforms/HollisterHouseGardenInc/symposium.html


Saturday, July 29, 11:00 am – 3:00 pm – Iris Society Plant Sale

The Iris Society of Massachusetts is holding its biennial plant sale offering an extensive array of named irises at great low prices. You can find both bearded and Siberian irises. All the irises are grown in New England and appropriate for local gardens. Members of the society will be on hand to help and provide information on the planting and care of irises. Iris Silverado pictured below from www.whiteflowerfarm.com.

Come early for the best selection! The event will take place Saturday, July 29, from 11 – 3 at Verrill Farm, 11 Wheeler Road in Concord. Free.


Sunday, July 30, 10:30 am – 12:00 noon – What’s Buggin’ Me?

Join Massachusetts Horticultural Society on Sunday, July 30 at 10:30 am for a stroll through the vegetable gardens at Elm Bank, 900 Washington Street in Wellesley, with Sue Scheufele from the UMass Extension Vegetable Program. We will learn to identify common insect and disease pests, and the damage they can cause to vegetable and herb plants. We will discuss organic management strategies that are available to home gardeners including use of mulches, row covers, bio-based pesticides and more.

Hannah Traggis manages Mass Hort’s edible gardens throughout The Gardens at Elm Bank. She oversees the Seed to Table vegetable garden which produces more than 4,000 pounds of produce each year to support our educational mission and local food pantries. Mass Hort Members: $20 General Admission: $30. Register online at www.masshort.org.


Saturday, August 5, 10:00 am – 3:30 pm – Old Growth Forests Walk, Talk, and Book-Signing

On Saturday, August 5, join Mass Audubon’s Joe Choiniere, Old-Growth Forest Specialist Bob Leverett, and Old Growth Forest Network Director and Author Dr. Joan  Maloof for a morning walk at Wachusett Mountain along the trails that pass through the old growth forest area. In the afternoon, we will gather back at Tower Hill Botanic Garden in Boylston for an afternoon presentation by Dr. Joan Maloof followed by discussion and book signing. Joan is the author of Nature’s Temples: The Complex World of Old-Growth Forests. Co-sponsored with Mass Audubon.

For the walk, meet at Tower Hill in Boylston at 9:15 am and van and car pool to Wachusett Mountain or meet at Wachusett Mountain State Reservation Visitor Center on Mountain Rd in Princeton at 9:45 am. For the talk and book-signing, meet at Tower Hill Botanic Garden in Boylston at 2:00 pm. You may register for either the talk and book-signing only, or for the walk, talk and book signing, at https://towerhillbg.thankyou4caring.org/pages/event-registration-form—old-growth-forests-walk-talk–book-signing