Daily Archives: April 20, 2022


Saturday, April 23, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Opening Day: Uprooted, Land Art by W. Gary Smith

This nature-inspired exhibition at The New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill imagined by author, artist, and landscape architect W. Gary Smith features stunning sculptures among the landscape of Tower Hill. Made from natural materials collected at the Garden, this exhibit celebrates the connections between people and nature, combining art and horticulture to explore ecological design and artistic abstraction. Join us throughout the year for events, tours, drop-in activities, and more as we explore different ways to connect with the land through art. The show runs through November 1, 2022.

Gary Smith’s mission is to connect people with nature in innovative and unconventional ways. An award-winning landscape architect, his garden design work has focused almost entirely on public botanical gardens including the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, the Daniel Stowe Botanical Garden, Longwood Gardens, and the Santa Fe Botanical Garden. Along with Ryan Associates of Waltham, MA, he designed The Ramble here at Tower Hill Botanic Garden. In addition to his award-winning work in landscape architecture, Gary is also well known as an environmental artist. His temporary installations, a form of Land Art, have been installed in many public gardens including the Pittsburgh Botanical Garden, Filoli Historic House and Garden, Garvan Woodland Garden, Ganna Walska Lotusland – and more locally, Garden in the Woods. 

Join us for the opening of Uprooted on Saturday, April 23, and see Tower Hill’s grounds transformed by unique, magical nature-inspired sculptures. Enjoy nature inspired sculptures, drop-in programs, the family exploration station, and guided tours. For more information about the exhibit, visit https://nebg.org This exhibition was postponed during the height of the pandemic, so Tower Hill is thrilled it can be safely rescheduled.


Sunday, May 15, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Garden Conservancy Open Day: The Garden of Pepe and John Maynard in Groton

The Open Days Gardens events are almost upon us, and locally, plan to visit the Garden of Pepe and John Maynard in Groton on May 15 from 10 – 4. Members $5 per person; General admission $10. Children 12 and under free. Visitors MUST pre-register at www.gardenconservancy.org. The owners describe their property as follows:

Our place, currently about 25 acres, was originally part of a much larger property, most of which was placed under conservation in 2006. We were attracted to it by the sweeping views to the west and the protection offered by hundreds of acres of surrounding fields and woodland, all protected from development. Starting in the nineteenth century, successive large country houses had been built on the site, surrounded by the formal, high-maintenance gardens of the day. The last of these rather grand houses was demolished in the 1960s. The succeeding generation of the previous owning family was more interested in breeding Black Angus than in horticulture. As a result the formal gardens had succumbed to neglect, bittersweet, and browsing deer by the time we purchased the property in 2007. At that time we had no interest in restoring formal gardens. Our first steps were to plant an allée of small sugar maples along the lane leading to our barn, and to fence a small nursery area where we could stockpile plants and grow them safe from deer. We dithered about building a deer fence around more of the property, fearing it would interfere with the view, but finally fenced about fifteen acres. The fence enabled us to begin planting to create informal, naturalistic grounds using native plant material as much as possible. While the nursery is now empty and the maples in the allée have reached eight inches diameter, all the plantings are still young and have only begun to mature. Nonetheless we believe the grounds have grown in enough to reward unhurried exploration with a wide variety of trees and shrubs, and, in the spring, extensive plantings of daffodils and other bulbs. The surrounding areas under conservation are open for walks, and a few remaining Black Angus add interest to the landscape. In the summer of 2020 an energetic couple working for us decided to clear out a small formal garden neglected for 25 years and overgrown to the point of invisibility. An exceptional stonemason rebuilt the dry stone walls over the winter and we began replanting in the early summer of 2021. An exceptionally wet summer helped to get new perennials established. We are hoping it will look presentable by 2022.