Daily Archives: September 16, 2022


Sunday, September 25, 10:30 am – 12:00 noon – Urban Wilds: Roslindale

Join the Native Plant Trust and landscape architects from award-winning Crowley Cottrell, LLC on September 25 for a landscape study of the recent improvements to the Roslindale Wetlands Urban Wild. Over the past two years, Crowley Cottrell has worked with the Boston Parks and Recreation Department to design and administer habitat restoration and new trail work. The project aims to improve visitor experience through a completed loop trail and renovated entrances and to support native habitat through invasive species management and selective earthwork. Learn about partnering with municipalities on capital improvement projects to support the long-term investment and management of the land by the city and community members. $23 for NPT members, $27 for nonmembers. Instructors are Michelle Crowley and Anna Curtis-Heald. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/urban-wilds-roslindale/


Thursday, September 22, 5:00 am – The 19th Century Garden: The Global Garden, Online

The Gardens Trust’s third set of lectures on the C19th garden takes us towards its heyday. As Britain’s empire expanded plant hunters scoured the world to bring home plants to fill the gardens and greenhouses not just of the rich but an ever-growing middle class. Gardening became a hobby, and indeed a passion for many in the working class too. As a result, gardening books and magazines flourished, and horticulture became big business. Garden design, like architecture became more and more eclectic. Labour was cheap so extravagance and display became commonplace in the private realm while public parks, often on a grand scale, were created all over the country, but especially in urban areas. Inevitably however there was a reaction against such artifice and excess, with a call for the return to more natural styles, and by the end of the century the cottage garden was vying with the lush herbaceous border to be the defining feature of the late Victorian garden.

On Thursday, September 22, David Marsh will speak on The Global Garden. The Victorian garden was a truly global space. The growth of empire went hand in hand with changes in technology and the development of commercial nurseries and plant hunting. This lecture will show how grand gardens such as Biddulph Grange and Alton Towers were designed around the arrival of a vast array of exotic plants, but also exotic architecture. Eclectism ruled… while Italianate and Gothic continued to be the predominant styles you could find Egyptian temples and Swiss chalets, as well as Himalayan valleys and American forests, while inside conservatories and glasshouses you could explore the flora of every corner of the world. And it wasn’t long before that was true of the gardens of suburban villas and terraced cottages as well.

After a career as a head teacher in Inner London, Dr David Marsh took very early retirement (the best thing he ever did) and returned to education on his own account. He was awarded a PhD in 2005 and now lectures about garden history anywhere that will listen to him. Recently appointed an honorary Senior Research Fellow by the University of Buckingham, he is a trustee of the Gardens Trust and chairs their Education Committee. He oversees their on-line program and writes a weekly garden history blog which you can find at https://thegardenstrust.blog. £5 each or all 6 for £30. Register HERE.


Fridays, September 23 & 30, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – Horticultural Techniques

Good horticultural practices form the backbone of any successful garden, and understanding how to apply these practices is the first step toward becoming a horticulturist. Learn how to select the right plant for the right place and how to plant and care for native plants. Together we study the proper techniques for transplanting, preparing soil, mulching, watering, and pruning as well as maintaining, winterizing, and preparing the garden for the next growing season. This Native Plant Trust course will take place on two successive Fridays, September 23 & 30, from 1 – 3 at Garden in the Woods in Framingham. $72 for NPT members, $88 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/horticultural-techniques/