Month: January 2018

  • Tuesdays, February 6 and February 13, 8:30 am – 12:00 noon – Designing Gardens for Small Spaces

    Small gardens present the designer with the challenge of how to realize big ideas in tight quarters. Yet small sites don’t have to restrict garden interest and diversity. This New England Wild Flower Society hands-on design workshop with Cheryl Salatino on February 6 and 13 from 8:30 – noon at Garden in the Woods in Framingham tackles the garden as a composition by exploring enclosed space, light, plant characteristics, and personal expression. $120 for NEWFS members, $144 for nonmembers. Image from http://i.shelterness.com.  Register online at http://www.newfs.org/learn/our-programs/designing-gardens-for-small-spaces-1

  • Saturday, February 10, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – DCR Southeastern Massachusetts Adult Walking Club

    On Saturday, February 10, take a moderate walk over hilly terrain, approximately 3 miles, from Wolcott Pond to Wildcat Notch, and return via Five Corners Trail, in Milton, Massachusetts with the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation. Meet at Houghton’s Pond main parking lot at 840 Hillside Street in Milton. Wear sturdy footgear and consider bringing walking poles and ice cleats. Dress in layers and avoid cotton clothing. Carry drinking water. We will hike unless the weather creates unsafe conditions – if weather is questionable, call 508-866-2580, ext. 165. Free.  Image courtesy of www.bostonmagazine.com.

  • Saturday, February 3, 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm – Japanese Maple Grafting for Home Gardeners

    Come join Broken Arrow Nurseries grafting guru Adam Wheeler at Tower Hill Botanic Garden on Saturday, February 3 from 1 – 4 for a hands-on workshop that explores the world of grafting Japanese Maples. After a lecture that explores the methods and intricacies of this time-tested craft, participants will put their newfound knowledge to work by grafting a few specimens of their own. All materials included in the fee, which is $60 for THBG members and $75 for nonmembers..

    Adam Wheeler manages plant propagation, container production, mail order and the acquisition and development of new plants at Broken Arrow Nursery. He is a recent recipient of the Young Nursery Professional Award from the New England Nursery Association. He loves to share his passion for plants through photography and educational outreach. In his spare time he enjoys cultivating his eclectic collection of rare and unusual plants, rock climbing and competitive giant pumpkin growing. Image from www.japanesemaplelovers.com. Register at https://towerhillbg.thankyou4caring.org/pages/event-registration-form—japanese-maple-grafting-for-home-gardeners

  • Wednesdays, February 7 – February 21, 10:00 am – 1:30 pm – Understanding and Managing Soils

    Whether you are an experienced gardener or a novice, this New England Wild Flower Society class at Garden in the Woods will help you develop a better understanding of the importance of soil to your garden. Learn how to evaluate and improve your garden’s soil, how to choose the right plants for your soil conditions, and how to maintain soil health and fertility through organic practices. Bring a bag lunch. Mark Richardson leads this three session event, on Wednesdays, February 7, 14 and 21 from 10 – 1:30. $138 for NEWFS members, $163 for nonmembers. Image from www.ofrf.org. Register at http://www.newfs.org/learn/our-programs/understanding-and-managing-soils

  • Friday, February 2, 6:45 pm – Rare Vascular Plants in Massachusetts: Natural Heritage Maps the Mystery

    Dr. Bob Wernerehl, State Botanist, Massachusetts Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program, Division of Fisheries & Wildlife, Westboro, Massachusetts, will speak to the New England Botanical Club on Friday, February 2 beginning at 6:45 in the Haller Lecture Hall, Room 102, Geological Museum, 24 Oxford Street in Cambridge, on the topic of Rare Vascular Plants in Massachusetts: Natural Heritage Maps the Mystery. Bob protects 300 rare plant species through conservation measures, ecological planning and inventory survey work, and lends support to many other conservation organizations in New England. The meeting is free and open to the public. For more information visit http://rhodora.org

  • Friday, April 27 – Sunday, April 29 – Rim of the World Conifer Road Trip

    Save the Date! Please plan on joining The American Conifer Society for the Rim of the World Conifer Road Trip in the San Bernardino Mountains of Southern California. The three days at the Big Bear Lake Visitors Center in Big Bear, California is a no-cost event (lodging, meals and transportation not included) where you will see California native conifers, including Pinus contorta var. murryana, Sierra-Cascade lodgepole pine and many others. Easy access for all fitness levels. We have been doing these kinds of trips for a couple of years now and they are an absolute blast. More and more people from other regions are starting to join us. Get out and see the ancestors of some of your favorite cultivars. Oh yes, and take in spectacular scenery, too! Details at  http://conifersociety.org/events/event/rim-world-conifer-road-trip/ about lodging, transportation recommendations, etc. The closest town is Big Bear Lake, a ski resort in winter. It will change your view of the Los Angeles ‘suburbs’ forever!

  • Native Plants for New England Gardens

    Native Plants for New England Gardens, by New England Wild Flower Society horticulture gurus Mark Richardson and Dan Jaffe, will help anyone create lovely, hardy gardens that will tolerate drought, resist disease, and strengthen biodiversity. This handy, gorgeously illustrated guide selects 100 great native garden plants–flowers, ground covers, shrubs, ferns, and grasses–that will thrive in this region’s gardens because they evolved in our local conditions. The authors share their deep knowledge and broad experience about the best place to plant each species and how to care for it.

    Slated for March 2018 release from the Society and Globe Pequot Press, Native Plants for New England Gardens will be out in time for spring gardening. But you can reserve your copy now, at a discount! Though priced at $19.95 for standard retailers, NEWFS is selling it at just $18.50 for nonmembers and $16.50 for members! Pre-order your discounted copies now through the Garden Shop: 508-877-7630 x3601; or email gardennatives@newenglandwild.org.

  • Tuesdays, February 6 – March 20, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm – Residential Landscape Design

    This New England Wild Flower Society multisession course, appropriate for beginners, tackles the different aspects of the landscape design process. Workshop sessions will focus on design methods using site analysis techniques and schematic design tools. You will consult with the instructor and work on a project of your own choosing. Discussions about plants and habitats will be interspersed with lectures on design principles, including criteria for making plant choices and determining placement in the landscape. The class will take place at Garden in the Woods in Framingham beginning Tuesday, February 6 from 6 – 8 and continue each Tuesday evening through March 20. The class will be taught by Karen Sebastian. $215 for NEWFS members, $254 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.newfs.org/learn/our-programs/residential-landscape-design-2

  • Thursday, February 1, 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm – Landscape Maintenance Practices for Native Bees

    Pollinators (including honey bees, native bees, birds, bats, butterflies, and other species) are essential to healthy ecosystems. Pollinators support the success and vigor of flowering plants, making ecosystems stronger, more resilient, and enhancing the environment for human populations. Decades of stressors (including the loss, degradation, and fragmentation of habitat, reduction in the number and quality of food sources, reduction in the availability of sites for breeding, nesting, and roosting, and improper use of pesticides and herbicides) have severely and adversely altered the health and numbers of pollinator populations.

    Landscaping can be a powerful tool to help our pollinators. Equally important to creating pollinator habitat is the maintenance that follows. Pollinator habitats require a maintenance approach that may differ from conventional landscape efforts. Maintenance practices should be carefully considered in order to support the needs of the pollinators. To avoid potential conflicts between the needs of the pollinators and conventional aesthetic, education is key to setting expectations. For example, plants in a garden or habitat designed to promote pollinator health and food for caterpillars and other larvae are expected (and encouraged) to tolerate insect damage to plant leaves. In this Ecological Landscape Alliance webinar on Thursday, February 1 at 4 pm, Sam Droege will discuss pollinator-friendly maintenance strategies including proper timing for garden clean-up, cut-backs, and pruning, protecting pollinator habitats from disturbances and stressors such as pesticide use, establishing appropriate mowing practices, and more.

    Sam Droege is a Wildlife Biologist at the U.S. Geological Survey Patuxent Wildlife Research Center. He has been spent most of his career at the USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center. He has coordinated the North American Breeding Bird Survey Program, developed the North American Amphibian Monitoring Program, the BioBlitz, Cricket Crawl, and FrogwatchUSA programs and worked on the design and evaluation of monitoring programs. Currently he is developing an inventory and monitoring program for native bees, online identification guides for North American bees at http://www.discoverlife.org, and with Jessica Zelt reviving the North American Bird Phenology Program. His group maintains high resolution photographs of insects an other macro natural history objects at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/usgsbiml/. Sam is also the author of Bees: An Up-Close Look at Pollinators Around the World. He holds a B.S. from University of Maryland and an M.S. from State University of New York – Syracuse.  Free for ELA members, $10 for nonmembers. Sign up at http://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/landscape-maintenance-practices-native-bees/

  • Thursday, April 19 – Sunday, April 22 – Gateway to Bonsai

    The American Bonsai Society and the Bonsai Society of Greater St. Louis present Gateway to Bonsai April 19 – 22. In addition to exhibit trees and ikebana displays, there will be 37 workshops and seminars and top vendors from across the country.  Guest artists include Marc Noelanders, Bjorn Bjorholm, and Matt Reel. The juried exhibit awards a $1,000 cash prize for Best in Show. Register at http://absbonsai.org, email absconvention@frontier.com, or call 812-922-5481. Accommodations at Doubletree Hotel Collinsville, Hampton Inn, Super 8 Motel, Fairfield Inn, and Drury Inn, all providing discounts for participants. MAKE YOUR HOTEL REGISTRATION before 3/19/2018.
    Make sure they know that it is for the ABS/St Louis Bonsai Show to receive a discount. More detailed information, map of location, and hotel amenities will be posted on the ABS website, www.absbonsai.org
    Best to call in reservation, rather than on-line registration, to receive the discount. For complete details, go to http://woocommerce-124030-354800.cloudwaysapps.com//srv/htdocs/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/ConventionRegistration10-9.pdf