Month: October 2020

  • Monday, November 2 – Mass Audubon Fall Fest 2020 Bidding Deadline

    In addition to all the fun happening at Massachusetts Audubon Society properties October 25 – November 1, we’re kicking off the Fall Fest Silent Auction Fun-raiser. This virtual auction features amazing private behind-the-scenes experiences at our wildlife sanctuaries across the state. Visit the Mass Audubon bidding website by clicking HERE.

    Place your bids by November 2 for a chance to win:

    • Close-up encounters with animals, including a red fox, owls, and goats
    • Private Strawberry picking at Drumlin Farm in Lincoln
    • Night hike & overnight evening at Ipswich River in Topsfield
    • Owl prowls & birding trips
    • Working with bird & ecological researchers
    • Nature trivia night
    • Sunset hayride & dinner
    • Nature journaling workshop
    • Kayaking excursions
  • Sunday, November 1, 10:00 am – 11:00 am – Eustis Estate Landscape Tour

    Get a new perspective of the Eustis Estate as you enjoy the seasonal splendor walking through this beautiful property abutting the Blue Hills Reservation. This guided tour explores fields, woodland, and gardens as you learn about the landscape and history of the property. The tour also examines the exterior architecture of the house and other original buildings built between 1878 and 1902. 

    Bring comfortable walking shoes and be sure to dress appropriately for the weather.

    Tickets are available for the November 1 tour. Click here to register for this tour.

    Advance tickets required. Landscape tours do not include admission to the house. (Note that guided tours of the mansion require advance tickets. You can register for house tours here.)

    Masks are required and social distancing will be practiced. The address is 1424 Canton Avenue in Milton. Please call 617-994-6600 for more information. 

  • Wednesday, November 4, 12:00 noon – 1:00 pm – The Challenges and Complexities of Ecological Gardens – A 5-Year Journal of Discoveries Webinar

    Wednesday, November 4, 12:00 noon – 1:00 pm – The Challenges and Complexities of Ecological Gardens – A 5-Year Journal of Discoveries Webinar

    On November 4, online, take a five-year photographic journey through one of the largest ecological and bio-diverse built landscapes in Rhode Island: St. George’s School. This Ecological Landscape Alliance webinar features Lori Silvia. Ms. Silvia will share the process, challenges, and discoveries she has made while managing concept, design, installation, plants, and daily maintenance of the landscape. Broader philosophical questions regarding the landscapes’ evolution will also be considered. Ms. Silvia’s passion for and dedication to this project will be obvious and honest, and her photographs will reflect her intimate daily involvement throughout the entire process of developing St. George’s landscape.

    Lori Silvia has a BFA from Mass College of Art & Design and graduated from The Landscape Institute, Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University. A collaboration of art, landscape design, science, and intuition is part of her vision. She has been a landscape designer and gardener at St. George’s School since 2008, creating LEED-certified ecological designs for the newly-built Hill Library and Academic Center and renovating nearly every corner of the campus in some way. Ms. Silvia is dedicated to experiential learning and lectures to students and the greater community.

    ELA members free, $10 for nonmembers. Register at www.ecolandscaping.org

  • Friday, November 6, 10:30 am – 12:00 noon – Virtual Hydrangea Success Series: Winterizing Webinar

    Hydrangea macrophylla plants are the least cold-hardy of hydrangea species and bud hardiness is especially sensitive to harsh Cape Cod winters. In this Heritage Museums and Gardens online webinar on Friday, November 6 from 10:30 – noon, Heritage Hydrangea Curator, Mal Condon, will discuss the best techniques he has developed for protecting hydrangeas from the ravages of winter and will provide information on the necessary materials and their sources. The live webinar will feature a detailed slide presentation, and a chance for questions and answers with Mal. All program webinar registrants will receive a PDF of the slide presentation, via email, after the presentation. Advance registration is required and registration for this program ends at 6 am on Thursday, November 5.

    A lifelong gardener, Mal has been collecting, propagating, and growing hydrangeas for more than 40 years. He and his wife Mary Kay owned and operated Hydrangea Farm Nursery on Nantucket Island for many years. Early in 2014 they relocated to Yarmouth Port on Cape Cod and have been busy establishing a significant garden in their new location. Mal is known as “the hydrangea whisperer” at Heritage, and is committed to ongoing maintenance of all existing hydrangea plantings as well as to the continuing expansion of Heritage’s hydrangea gardens.

    Click here to register

    Fee:  $17 Heritage Members, $27 Non-Members

    FREE Benefit Package Program Passes may be used for this program. Add your discount code during check-out, or contact the Development Department at membership@heritagemuseums.org or call us at 508-888-3300 x119 or x159.

    Please note, if you are unable to join us for this live webinar, this program will be recorded and made available through our website later this season. Interested viewers will be able to “rent” this recorded webinar, for a fee, to watch on-demand.

  • Support American Horticultural Society

    The American Horticultural Society is pleased to announce FabulousFlorals.com has agreed to donate 5% of their sales, up to $5,000, back to AHS now through August 30, 2021. Fabulous Florals is committed to providing the finest fresh-cut wholesale flowers by the bunch, in assortments, in wedding flower packages, and by individual varieties. It even offers a variety of DIY packages to customize special occasions. Your order can be shipped in single bunches and bulk flowers to anywhere in the United States and Canada. Use code AHSFF so that 5% of your purchase will automatically be given to AHS. Enter this code in the coupon code field, or in the order notes field during checkout. Please note this will not discount your order, but ensures 5% of your product purchase goes back to AHS to support its educational programs. The American Horticultural Society was reportedly considering a merger with The American Public Gardens Association and sadly must sell its River Farm property in these unusual times. All support is welcome.

  • First Lutheran Church of Boston Side Garden Redesign

    We are proud to share pictures of the Garden Club of the Back Bay’s installation of a new garden at The First Lutheran Church of Boston. As you may be aware, out annual Holiday Wreath Project has been hosted by the Church for many years, and we have held various flower arranging classes there as well. Volunteer Members created a design, acquired materials, and put in many days of digging in the rock hard earth. We are extremely proud of the results. Projects like this are paid for in part through membership dues and through generous donations to our Club. The shade loving perennials will fill out over the years to create a textured, appealing, and low maintenance garden.

  • Thursday, November 5 and November 12, 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm – Nature Writing 2, Online

    The Massachusetts Audubon Society will offer a two session course in Nature Writing beginning Thursday, November 12 at 6:30 pm. Mass Audubon member price $50, nonmembers $60. Register at https://www.massaudubon.org/program-catalog/results/all-audiences/adults/(keywords)/online

  • Wednesday, November 4, 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm – Native Shrubs: Colorful Throughout the Year Webinar

    Shrubs are an important part of the New England landscape. Learn about a variety of native shrubs and where they will thrive that provide nice fall color, interesting fruits, or unusual growth habits. Most of these shrubs are also important landscape components for our migratory songbirds and other wildlife. This Tower Hill Botanic Garden program will be held virtually. Once you register you will receive a Zoom link in the confirmation. This November 4 webinar from 6:30 – 7:30 will also be RECORDED and available for 2 months to all registrants. $10 for Tower Hill members, $15 for nonmembers. Register at www.towerhillbg.org.

    Leslie Duthie, the instructor, is the horticulturist/plant propagator at Norcross Wildlife Sanctuary in Wales, Massachusetts, where she gardens for wildlife and habitat types. She has 40 years of experience in native plant gardens.

  • Friday, October 30, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm – Halloween Date Night at Bradley

    Get a jump on Halloween with a date night at the Bradley Estate in Canton, Massachusetts, on October 30 at 6 pm.

    Come enjoy the Bradley’s lush grounds. Bring a picnic or pre-order dinner through us at registration. If a picnic blanket is not your speed, reserve a table and even flowers (additional fees apply). Feeling behind in your Halloween planning? Join us for pumpkin carving. BYOP (bring your own pumpkin) or we’ll sell you one to carve and decorate. Feeling judgemental? Together we’ll award insignificant prizes for any number of jack-o-lantern categories.

    Not happy with your creative efforts? We’ll have pumpkin destroying options available as well.to close out the evening. It’s been a tough year, maybe you just need to smash a pumpkin to let it all out.

    Pricing ($20 for Trustees members, $25 for nonmembers) is per person, space is limited. Costumes are encouraged!

    Take a walk around the pond on the Pumpkin Walk around the pond (weather permitting).

    COVID-19 Update: Pre-registration is required. Walk-ins cannot be accepted due to current state mandates on outdoor group sizes. Masks are mandatory for everyone from the age of 2 and up, social distancing will be strictly enforced. Register at https://thetrustees.org/event/57741/

  • Through May, 2021 – Wind Sculptures (SG) V, 2019

    The Rose Kennedy Greenway Conservancy’s public art program has paved the way for The Greenway to become a premier destination to see contemporary works of art in downtown Boston. The public art vision is to bring innovative and contemporary art to Boston through free, temporary exhibitions, engaging people in meaningful experiences, interactions and dialogue with art and each other. The Conservancy gives artists unique opportunities to exhibit bold, new work that considers the possibilities of 21st century Boston.

    Now through May, 2021, see Yinka Shonibare’s Wind Sculptures (SG) V, 2019.

    Wind Sculptures (SG) V explores the notion of harnessing the wind, and freezing it in a moment of time. Painted in a Dutch wax textile pattern, the work manifests as a large three-dimensional piece of fabric that appears to be blowing in reaction to the natural elements of the surrounding environment. 

    The fabric itself is a metaphor for the movement of people, trade routes and global relationships. Batik fabric originated in Indonesia, and Dutch colonizers used the technique to mass-produce fabrics that were sold to Britain’s West African colonies, where they were embraced and are now considered in the world’s eyes as authentic African products.

    The piece reminds us that our contemporary cultures, like the batik fabric, are the result of centuries of cross-cultural exchange. By referencing both this hybrid fabric and the powerful yet invisible nature of wind, the work suggests that identity is always a richly layered and dynamic set of relationships, while evoking a sense of freedom and possibility.

    Yinka Shonibare CBE’s interdisciplinary practice explores colonialism and post-colonialism within the context of globalization. Through examining race, class and the construction of cultural identity, Shonibare’s works comment on the tangled interrelationship between Africa and Europe, and their respective economic and political histories.