Boston Flora


Friday, April 11, 6:00 pm – The Green & White

The Friends of the Public Garden’s major fundraising event, The Green & White, will take place this spring on Friday, April 11 at 6 pm at The Newbury Boston. Co-chairs are Gloria Coleman, Kenda Coleman, Don and Victoria Sullivan, and Jack Yeaton. Sponsorships and single tickets are now available. The Green & White brings together neighbors and friends to support the Boston Common, the Public Garden, and the Commonwealth Avenue Mall. This event is the single largest source of funding for the Friends’ annual parks care budget. Your support of the Green & White allows us to invest more than $2.6 million annually in the care of these iconic public parks in the heart of downtown Boston.  For details, and to reserve, visit https://friendsofthepublicgarden.org/events/green-white/


Wednesday, March 26, 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm Eastern – Insects of Early Spring, Online

Spring is an essential time for insects. After the harshness of winter, insects and other wildlife need plentiful food and resources to help them prepare for the new season ahead. Learn about some of the earliest-emerging insects and how you can plan, prep, and primp your garden to make it a haven for these harbingers of spring. Samantha Nestory is the engagement manager at Stoneleigh: A Natural Garden in Villanova, PA. She holds ecology and entomology degrees from the University of Delaware and is passionate about ecological gardening, native plants, and insect conservation.

This program takes place online on Wednesday, March 26, 2025. $25. Register at https://mtcubacenter.org/event/insects-of-early-spring-online-2/


Friday, March 28, 6:30 pm – Designing Biodiversity Through Pollinator-Plant Interactions

Join in a free conversation on March 28 at 6:30 at Clark University’s Jefferson Hall (Room 218) on Designing Biodiversity through Pollinator-Plant Interactions, applied science at the landscape sale, a collaboration between Worcester Native Plant Initiative, Clark University and City of Worcester Department of Sustainability and Resilience. We welcome Evan Abramson of Landscape Interactions @landscapeinteractions. Register through Eventbrite HERE


Wednesday, March 19 – Friday, August 15 – Online Access to Ecological Gardening Course with the American Horticultural Society

Over 114 million American households engage in gardening. From public green spaces to community gardens to private yards, gardening is a critical part of our country’s culture. A garden is a living ecosystem that impacts the health of people, plants, animals, and the environment. This online, self-paced course is designed to share ecologically sound gardening methods and practices that promote sustainability in your own gardens that will grow a greener future.

This American Horticultural Society course is constructed in seven modules, each with lessons that include AHS-produced text, videos, articles, activities, and resource recommendations. You are welcome to explore the materials at your own pace throughout the semester and to connect with other learners in the forum to discuss the course topics. The self paced course fee is $95 for AHS members, $120 for nonmembers. Register at www.ahsgardening.org. The modules and lesson topics are:


Tuesday, March 25, 6:00 am – 7:30 am (but recorded) – More Arts and Crafts Garden-Makers, Online

The Arts and Crafts Movement sought a return to vernacular traditions in the face of increasing industrialization. It thrived for two decades or so around the turn of the twentieth century, although its effect is still obvious today in many decorative arts. In the garden, the movement was most clearly articulated through the work of William Robinson (1838-1935) and Gertrude Jekyll (1843-1932). Their example was followed by a plethora of British architects and designers into the middle of the 20th century and beyond, and their influence spread to Europe, the US and further afield. What we today identify as Arts and Crafts gardens are perhaps typified by a geometric layout of compartments in close relationship with the house, alongside the use of architectural features in local materials and abundant, color-themed planting.

In this series, we will examine the origins of the Arts and Crafts garden, consider the work of Robinson and Jekyll in detail, and survey some of the many other British garden-makers who were influenced by the movement. The series will end with an international flavor, exploring the work of an American designer who was a life-long admirer of Robinson and Jekyll.

This ticket is for this individual talk (Click HERE) costs £8, and you may purchase tickets for other individual sessions, or you may purchase a ticket for the entire fifth series of 5 talks in our History of Gardens Course at £35 via the link here. (Gardens Trust members £6 each or all 5 for £26.25). Ticket holders can join each session live and/or view a recording for up to 2 weeks afterwards. Ticket sales close 4 hours before the talk.

Attendees will be sent a Zoom link 2 days prior to the start of the talk, and again a few hours before the talk (If you do not receive this link, please contact us). A link to the recorded session will be sent shortly after each session and will be available for 2 weeks.

Talk Four will take place March 25 with Jill Sinclair. Gertrude Jekyll described herself as working with a small band of contemporaries on ‘the revival of the right principles of garden design in England.’ So popular did these principles become that the small band became a multitude, seeking to emulate Jekyll’s approach and to create gardens in what is now often known as an Arts and Crafts style.

This talk will survey some of the most successful of these professional designers – from those early contemporaries of Jekyll such as H. Avray Tipping and Harold Peto – through to later figures including Norah Lindsay and Kitty Lloyd Jones. We’ll also examine the work of homeowners who poured a lifetime’s amateur devotion into a single plot. The talk will include gardens from across the UK and further afield, starting with those created in the 1880s and running into the 1950s. We’ll consider how far the chosen garden-makers followed the original precepts of the Arts and Crafts movement and why the appeal of this style of garden-making endures so strongly even today.

Jill Sinclair is a US-trained garden historian. She teaches garden history for Oxford University and is a trustee of the Gardens Trust, managing its extensive education and training program. Based in Sheffield, Jill is working with a local charity to restore an Arts and Crafts garden designed by Percy Cane in the 1920s.

Image: Easton Lodge, designed by Harold Peto, from Gardens Old and New (1900), Wikimedia Commons, public domain


Tuesday, March 25, 7:00 pm – 8:15 pm Eastern – The New UMass Extension Pollinator Program: An Introduction, Online

Nicole Bell of UMass Amherst Extension will lead a special free event with Grow Native Massachusetts and Mass Pollinator Network on March 25 at 7 pm. Nicole will introduce the new pollinator program through UMass Extension, as well as talk about future goals. She is open to any and all ideas for future projects and collaborations! In addition, she’ll discuss some of her prior research on wild bees, and briefly discuss provisioning habitat for specialized pollinators. Sign up at https://grownativemass.org/Our-Programs/calendar


Saturday, March 22, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm – Gardeners Gathering

Celebrate the start of the gardening season! The 49th Annual Gardeners’ Gathering brings Boston-area growers of all kinds together for a free day full of informative workshops, engaging exhibitors, networking, and inspiration.

¡Celebre el inicio de la temporada de jardinería! La 49º Reunión Anual de Jardineros reúne a productores de todo tipo del área de Boston para un día gratuito lleno de talleres informativos, expositores atractivos, networking e inspiración.

If you are interested in tabling at this event, click here.

If you are interested in having an ad in the program, or sponsoring the event, click here.

If you are interested in volunteering, click here.

If you are interested in presenting a workshop, fill out this form.

The program is sponsored by The Trustees and is free and open to all. The event takes place in Shillman Hall at Northeastern University.


Through March 23, 9:00 am – 4:00 pm – The Bulb Show

The Berkshire Botanical Garden’s Annual Bulb Show returns to the Fitzpatrick Greenhouse now through March 23, from 9 – 4. See an evolving collection of traditional New England favorites such as narcissus, tulips and grape hyacinths together with hardy varieties new to the show: a striking, dark purple tulip with fringed petals named ‘Vincent Van Gogh’; a diminutive, pink-orange tulip called ‘Salmon Gem’; a trio of new daffodils; and two exquisite dwarf irises, ‘Harmony’ and ‘Pauline,’ with flowers of brilliant blue and deep purple, respectively. But the star of the show might just be the enchanting Fritillaria meleagris or Guinea Hen Flower in a mix of colors. Its nodding, bell-shaped flowers vary from reddish purple checkered to black, to faintly checkered green, to pure white. Unsurprisingly, preparing the Bulb Show — creating the magic that hundreds of visitors enjoy during the Bulb Show’s few short weeks in late winter — is labor- and time-intensive. The preparation includes choosing and ordering seeds, sterilizing containers and making a written record of each bulb’s cold storage requirements, which can vary from seven to nine weeks for dwarf irises to 16-18 weeks for tulips, with most other bulbs falling somewhere between these extremes.Free and open to the public. For more information visit https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/


Thursday, March 27, 10:00 am – Creating Pollinator Habitats Anywhere

The Garden Club of the Back Bay welcomes Master Gardener Denise Guerin on March 27 at 10 am at The Chilton Club on Commonwealth Avenue. She will discuss successful pollinator habitats created in places as different as suburban gardens to apartment decks, small urban yards and patios to parking lot “hell strips”. This is a members only meeting, but it’s never too late to join at https://gardenclubbackbay.org/.

Denise Guerin is a gardening expert with the Massachusetts Master Gardeners Association and volunteer with the Ohrenberger School Pollinator Garden. Her primary focus is on growing native plants and creating habitats for native bees, birds and insect pollinators.