Category: Cape Cod & Islands

  • Thursday, July 20, 5:30 pm – Unraveling the Mysteries Behind Plant Names

    Botanical names hold great power for gardeners; they offer insight for plant identification, cultural growing requirements, and botanical trivia, and allow a means for communicating with gardeners around the world. Still, Latin names can be intimidating to learn, understand, and pronounce. This July 20 talk by new Polly Hill Arboretum Curator Todd Rounsaville will help to simplify the challenging subject of plant names: where do they come from? What do they mean? Why do they change? The lecture will begin at 5:30 at the Arboretum, 809 State Road in West Tisbury. $10 / $5 for PHA members.

  • Tuesday, July 18, 7:30 pm – In Defense of Forests

    You are invited to a wine-and-cheese reception at the Polly Hill Arboretum, 809 State Road, West Tisbury, on Tuesday, July 18 at 7:30 pm, followed by a special lecture with director of Harvard Forest and PHA research associate David Foster. This talk will examine the history, ecology, and conservation of forests, broadly across New England and in detail on Martha’s Vineyard. It will advance the notion that as we call on populations across the globe to stop the deforestation and degradation of forests to aid humanity in combating climate change, those of us in one of the most heavily forested and densely populated parts of the richest country in the world should do the same. The talk will draw from the author’s recent book—A Meeting of Land and Sea: Nature and Future of Martha’s Vineyard, a forthcoming Wildlands and Woodlands report, and the botanical and ecological studies by the staff and members of the Polly Hill Arboretum.

    Tickets are $100, and include entry to the wine and cheese reception with Dr. Foster, admission to the lecture, and one copy of his book, A Meeting of Land and Sea. Advanced ticket sales only. No tickets will be sold at the door. To purchase, call 508-693-9426.

    What is it about forests? They can be sustainably managed for wood, food, and other values while delivering clean water and air, wildlife habitat, recreation, beauty and inspiration, and essential support for human lives in a changing environment. And yet, 24,000 acres of forests are cleared every year for housing, solar arrays, and other commercial ventures across New England. On the Vineyard forests have no special legal standing and are routinely cleared for all manner of reasons on private and public land. The forest on the Great Plain – one of the world’s best remaining example of sandplain ecosystem – has been whittled away by housing developments, a golf course, an airport, and commercial enterprises; two towns have recently considered clearing and developing forested water supply lands; and isolated megamansions and solar arrays have perforated woods from the south shore to Chappaquiddick.

    Forests are more critical than ever to support nature and society and yet they remain underappreciated and undervalued. Protecting forested landscapes and the benefits they provide are essential to ensure an environmentally and economically sound future for New England.

  • Saturday, July 15, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Three for Two: Historic Gardens, a Museum and Barn

    The Harwich Historical Society invites you to Three for Two: Historic Gardens, a Museum and Barn, on Saturday, July 15 from 10 – 4. Entry to the Brooks Academy Museum, Elmer Crowell Barn, and Harwich Historic Society gardens, plus a stroll through the private gardens at two antique Cape homes located just one block away, are offered for $10. The HHS is located at 80 Parallel Street in Harwich, and for more information visit http://harwichhistoricalsociety.org/

  • Friday, July 7 – Sunday, July 16 – Cape Cod Hydrangea Festival

    The Cape Cod Hydrangea Festival returns July 7 – 16, celebrating the iconic plant that makes Cape Cod so stunning in July. See the expanded North American Hydrangea Test Garden, participate in workshops and book signings, purchase plants, and tour Heritage Museums & Gardens, 67 Grove Street in Sandwich, which includes over 150 spectacular species and cultivars.

    All programs are free with Museum admission ($18 adults, $8 children 3 – 11). No advance registration required. For complete information visit http://heritagemuseums.org.

  • Sunday, July 16, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm – Provincetown Secret Garden Tour

    Sunday, July 16, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm – Provincetown Secret Garden Tour

    The Provincetown Art Association and Museum hopes you’ll join them for the 20th annual Secret Garden Tour, a self-guided journey through private residences with stunning gardens. PAAM volunteers shuttle guests between the parking lot, the gardens, and the Museum, to which ticket-holders receive free admission that day. The tour this year will be on Sunday, July 16 from 10 – 3, and tickets are $40 each. For more information on where to buy tickets, telephone 508-487-1750, or email info@paam.org.  Image from www.ptownevents.com.

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  • Tuesday, July 11, 12:00 noon – 5:00 pm, and Wednesday & Thursday, July 12 & 13, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm – Endless Summer

    The Garden Club Federation of Massachusetts Southeastern District presents Endless Summer, a NGC Standard Flower Show celebrating hydrangeas, at the Heritage Museums and Gardens, 67 Grove Street in Sandwich, on July 11 – 13.  Free with Museum Admission.  Hours are noon – 5 on Tuesday, July 11, and 10 – 5 on Wednesday and Thursday.

  • Saturday, July 8, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – The Garden Conservancy’s Martha’s Vineyard Open Day

    Saturday, July 8, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – The Garden Conservancy’s Martha’s Vineyard Open Day

    Enjoy a full day of garden tours and activities on Martha’s Vineyard on Saturday, July 8, sponsored by The Garden Conservancy. Admission to each garden is $7 for Garden Conservancy members and advance purchase ticket holders.  Visit https://www.gardenconservancy.org/open-days/open-days-schedule/martha-s-vineyard-ma-open-day-2 to register.

    25 Osprey Lane in Chilmark: Nature sets the theme for this rolling oceanside garden. A natural meadow extends from the house to the water’s edge and subtle topography creates foreground views that compete for attention. Occasional glimpses of meandering inlets complete a compelling image of land meeting water. The garden, made up of layered masses of perennials, occupies the space immediately around the house and seems to flow naturally into the meadow. The plant palette was carefully selected for seaside conditions: plants are resistant to salt spray and heavy ocean winds. A mown grass path, invisible when viewed from the house, separates the perennial garden from the meadow, ensuring the meadow will not invade the garden and vice versa. Strategically placed boulders in the foreground tie the space visually to the ocean’s rocky shoreline. The garden is designed to gently transition through a series of views that progress with increasing simplicity: from the intricate perennial garden to the natural seaside meadow to the beach and ocean in the distance. Garden designed by Oehme van Sweden Landscape Architecture Firm.

    Jethro Athearn Homestead Garden (directions will be provided at additional gardens open on this date, or by calling 1-888-842-2442 weekedays 9 – 5): This garden features 1,000 square feet of terraced herbaceous borders in an agricultural setting. Ben and Susanne Clark designed and created their property beginning in 1992 on a wooded hillside overlooking a working farm. Ben, whose profession was architectural restoration and preservation, moved the circa 1730 house from another part of the island. Susanne designed the garden, which takes its inspiration from one designed by the English garden designer, Gertrude Jekyll in the 1920s. Highlights include the warm and cool borders, stone terraces, and a garden house. The plantings continue to evolve as Susanne moves, divides, and edits the plants each year. Please note that at 2:00 pm there will be a Digging Deeper:Inspired by Gertrude Jekyll talk at this garden. Susanne Clark, owner of the Jethro Athearn Homestead Garden, will share her twenty-plus years’ experience of creating a garden inspired by Gertrude Jekyll. She will cover the original plans for the herbaceous borders, design considerations in creating the overall setting for the beds, adapting to the climate, and extending the season of interest. This is an all-absorbing passion for Susanne, and she will talk about the unusual process she uses to continually refine the garden. A resource list will be provided, including favorite nurseries to order from, most used reference books, and frequently accessed websites, as well as a list of the plants (nearly 200 cultivars) now in the garden, indicating some of the plants that contribute the most to the garden’s long season of appeal. Part of the time will be spent in the garden and part of the time in her historic 1730 house. The Digging Deeper event is $30 for members of the Garden Conservancy, $35 for nonmembers, which includes admission to this garden.

    85 South Water Street in Edgartown: The original parts of this house are believed to date from the 1840s. More than fifty years ago a former owner and founder of the Marthas Vineyard Garden Club set out the sunken geometric garden in the shape of a Union Jack. In the late 1990s, the English garden designer Penelope Hobhouse added some important features to the garden, particularly the enclosure of the sunken flag garden to create an outdoor “room”. The garden contains some rare and unusual, as well as native, plants. Currently, the owners, who are hands-on gardeners from England, work closely with Leandro da Silva to implement further design changes.

    G.G. Ma’s Garden in Edgartown: G.G. Ma’s garden has been under the diligent gardening hands of Hope Whipple since the early 1950s, when she purchased the house at 114 North Water Street. Over the years, this garden has been a place of study and experimentation, with many unique varieties of trees, shrubs, perennials, and annuals. Ms. Whipple is an incredible plantswoman, traveling the world, including Europe, Africa, to build on her knowledge of plants. G.G. Ma’s gardening is a unique blend of cutting, woodland, and rose gardens, with the unique challenge of Martha’s Vineyard weather conditions – salt spray, high winds, humid summers. Ms. Whipple and her gardener, Sarah Monast, diligently tend to the garden together, with observational walks of the property several times a week.

    Helman Garden in Edgartown (pictured): This walled garden was designed to be protected from the elements and not to compete with the natural beauty of the property. I wanted a private garden with formal bones. We designed square and rectangle beds to use as I wished. Some are just for flowers, some for herbs, some for vegetables, and some are mixed. It is a very personal place that ebbs and flows each year. There are four stone semi-circles that we call “ectetras” [sic]. The garden was designed by Daisy Helman and Diane McGuire. (Again, directions will be provided on day of tour at other gardens, or by calling the number above.) Also at the Helman Garden, at 9:30 am, Garden Collage girls will be making flower crowns with children in our new cutting garden. We will have fun lemonades made with herbs and flowers from the garden and recipes cards to take home along with their crowns. This program will be sponsored and staffed by Garden Collage, a new lifestyle magazine, founded by Daisy Helman, that celebrates a modern approach to nature. Our stories cover the global intersection of contemporary life and the natural world. Gardens, beauty, politics, farm-to-table, apothecary, culture, and design. Adults must stay with the children in their care at all times.

  • Tuesday, June 20, 12:30 pm – What’s Your Tick IQ?

    The Cape Cod Museum of Natural History will present Tick Training and Lyme Disease Prevention with the Cape Cod Medical Reserve Corps on Tuesday, June 20 at 12:30 pm at the Museum, 869 Main Street in Brewster. Those of us who live on Cape Cod are probably familiar with the high incidence of Lyme disease in our area; however, people who visit in the summer as vacationers, campers or camp counselors may know very little about this problem. It is essential that they understand about Lyme disease, prevention of tick bites and monitoring and dealing with tick bites.

    The Museum is pleased to offer this one hour program to our visitors, volunteers and staff. This program is taught by Medical Reserve Corps volunteers who have extensive training in Tick borne Illness.

    Free with Museum Admission. For directions and more information visit www.ccmnh.org.

  • Saturday, June 24 and Saturday, August 12, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – Celebrate Native Plants Tour

    From paths, to ponds, to pocket gardens – from borders, to backyards, to botanical gardens, native plant gardens are a growing trend! Join the Ecological Landscape Alliance (ELA) as we Celebrate Native Plants at designer-guided, homeowner-guided, or self-guided tours of private and public gardens that celebrate the beauty and ecosystem value of native plants and ecological practices.

    These two ELA Eco-tours (June 24 and August 12, from noon – 4) will:

    Feature gardens designed entirely or primarily with native plants.
    Educate attendees about the increasing options and applications for native plants.
    Demonstrate that native plant gardens can be beautiful as well as functional.
    Share insights into native plant combinations and gardening techniques.
    Discuss strategies for transforming sections of lawn into a biodiverse landscape.
    Promote native plant gardens as a safe haven for birds, butterflies, and native pollinators.
    Answer questions about native plants and habitat restoration.

    Thanks to generous homeowners, landscape designers, and area organizations, ELA invites you to join us for inspiration and education on these special tours to native plant gardens. The tours are free, but pre-registration to each garden is required. Some gardens have limited access, so register early. Free. For details on the gardens, which are located in Dennis, Andover, Newton, Framingham, Melrose, Concord, Lincoln, Wayland, Amesbury, Needham, Boston and more, and to register, go to http://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/celebrating-native-plants/2017-06-24/#sthash.yBiKt21P.dpuf

  • Saturday, June 24, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – The Healing Garden

    Since the dawn of history, humans and animals have sought healing from plants. Although many of today’s most popular remedies are compounded in laboratories, there are still vast numbers of commercial cures whose major medicinal ingredients are derived from green herbs, trees, and shrubs. In this illustrated presentation at The Cape Cod Museum of Natural History in Brewster on Saturday, June 24 at 1 pm, Cindy Sauers will share with you her garden journey collaborating with the plants, the soil, wind, sun, cold, heat, rain… and all of nature for food and medicine for the body and soul. You will be able to gently and easily begin your own healing garden or, if you don’t have a space for your own garden you will have new insight to how plants, trees and weeds throughout Cape Cod provide us with healing food and medicine. Cindy will help you identify our wild natural Cape Cod plants and she will share with you easy ways to make remedies to relieve many of our everyday discomforts and fortify our bodies and our minds.

    Cindy Sauers is an artist, shepherd, gardener and herbalist who works in collaboration with her ‘medium’. As a gardener, she collaborates with nature; shaping and adding elements while observing how nature responds and what nature adds or subtracts from the garden. As an herbalist, she has been using plants as healing remedies, scented gifts, and food since 1973. Cindy and her garden, along with her husband and the sheep, the Baa Boys, were recently featured in Country Gardens Spring 2017 magazine. Cindy can’t imagine anything more rewarding than sharing the joy she gets from these sweet plants with you.

    Free with admission. For more information please call: 508-896-3867, ext. 133.