Category: Cape Cod & Islands

  • Thursday, June 20, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Nantucket Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy’s Open Days Program continues on Thursday, June 20 in Nantucket.  They are proud to partner with Sustainable Nantucket to present this Open Day featuring six beautiful gardens between 10 – 4.  Begin at East Brick Garden at 93 Main Street, in town.  This garden is an explosion of playful color year round, featuring massive displays including hollyhocks, Casablanca lilies, and all sorts of annuals overflowing from every bed.  Lindsay Mohr is the garden designer, and she installs spectacular displays of perennials, annuals, and bulbs that delight the senses.  Stay on Main Street and visit the garden of Meredith Marshall, 141 Main Street. Enjoy the simple elegance of an historical town garden with climbing roses, picket fences, and beautiful open spaces.  Tucked away behind the historical George C. Gardner house on upper Main, you will find a beautiful herbaceous border with informal boxwood groupings accompanied by summer flowering perennials and bulbs.  The garden is a pleasure to view as you meander on the grass path that guides you around the back of the garden.  The private pool garden is protected by a wisteria covered pergola and flowering vines galore.  Here you can also enjoy collections of potted plants.

    The White Garden, 12 Coffin Street, is the former Quaker Meeting House, moved sometime after the turn of the century from the Sherburne area to its present location by Elmer Greene, a famous American portrait painter, whose passion was gardening.  In 1967 the property was purchased by David Halberstam, the Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and bestselling author.  David and his wife Jean made many notable additions to the garden over the years, including a koi pond and the sublime raised perennial garden.  The raised white garden is a beautiful collection of white flowers and complimentary textures.  The garden has just been renovated to increase sustainability and emphasize the garden ornaments collected by the owners.

    The history of the plantings at the Sussek Garden, 85 Main Street, is unknown.  What is known is that the first structure on the property, a workshop, was erected c. 1725. Eventually, a small house was built and, by 1795, was enlarged to the house it is today.  Thus it seems appropriate for the garden design to be of the ‘cottage style.’ By definition, a cottage garden is a place for the cultivation of flowers, vegetables, and small plants in the limited space provided by a small cottage.  In the heart of the historic district, this garden exhibits a profusion of plantings that typify that genre.  The plantings are not pretentious, but rather collections of beloved plants grown for their beauty and practical uses.  You will see heirloom white foxgloves grown from seeds from Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello, peonies, roses and herbs, all in a palate associated with historic New England cottage gardens.  On the opposite side of the garage there is a small garden with a brick path leading to a garden bench.  These plantings are more suitable for shade, with hosta and astilbe, all executed by garden designer Kristina Wixted.

    The final two gardens are Hillary Hedges Rayport’s Garden at 89 Main Street, featuring an informal parterre planted in quadrants with assorted heather, and a rose-covered garden house with views of the garden from the rear of the yard, and the Maclean Garden at 2 Spring Street, uniquely situated at the edge of the historic district and Consue Springs.  For maps and complete parking details, visit http://www.gardenconservancy.org/opendays/open-days-schedule/openday/725-nantucket-open-day. $5 per garden, children under 12 free.

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  • Wednesday, June 5, 10:30 am – 12:30 pm – Natural Swimming Ponds: Behind the Scenes

    The Ecological Landscaping Association will hold a seminar in Sandwich, on Cape Cod, on Wednesday, June 5 from 10:30 am – 12:30 pm with Trevor Smith, Landscape Designer and LEED Green Associate, on Natural Swimming Ponds: Behind the Scenes, Designing, Building and Maintaining. Environmentally friendly, chemical-free, natural swimming ponds have low ongoing maintenance costs and are healthy alternatives to conventional pools.  The design options are varied and can range from formal to natural.  With careful planning and installation, a natural swimming pond provides a beautiful and relaxing place for swimming, an ecological landscape feature, and a wildlife sanctuary all in one.  $20 ELA member, $25 Nonmember.  Registrations are limited.  Register on line at https://www.eventville.com/catalog/eventregistration1.asp?eventid=1010426.

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  • Monday, May 20, 3:00 pm – 5:30 pm – From the White House to Your House

    Ruth Loiseau is a national recognized master floral designer and owner of Ruth L. Ms. Loiseau is an experienced lecturer in the Art of Floral Design, and has an extensive list of clients throughout the United States. Most recently, Ruth was the keynote speaker at the 2010 Bouquets to Art event at The de Young Museum in San Francisco, California. Ruth has worked at the White House as an SBA since the Reagan Administration and was presented the Certification of Appreciation by Mrs. Hillary Clinton in 1998.  She continues to assist with special events during the current administration.  Ruth will appear on Monday, May 20 in The Ballroom at Southport Village Center in Mashpee, and give a floral demonstration.  The event is free but you must register at www.ruthl.com.

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  • Saturday, May 18 – Sunday, May 26 – Rhododendron Festival

    Thousands of rhododendrons in more than 100 varieties cover Heritage Museum & Gardens’ 100 acres with spectacular blooms during this week-long event.  Enjoy a peaceful walk surrounded by walls of flowers, learn more about these gorgeous plants from horticultural experts, explore Heritage’s connection to noted rhododendron hybridizers Charles Dexter and Jack Cowles, challenge yourself to a rhododendron scavenger hunt, and participate in other family activities, Saturday, May 18 through Sunday, May 26, in Sandwich, Massachusetts.  On Saturday, May 18 from 9 – 1, Paul Blackmore will lead a Rhododendron Photography Workshop (additional fee and advance registration required.) Also, on Sunday, May 19, there will be a rhododendron propagation workshop from 10 – 11:30 at the Heald Center, and from 2 – 3, a panel discussion, outdoors, weather permitting.  For complete information visit www.heritagemuseumandgardens.org.

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  • Friday, May 17 – Sunday, May 19, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – 32nd Annual Herb & Plant Festival

    The Thornton W. Burgess Society will hold its 32nd Annual Herb & Plant Festival Friday, May 17 through Sunday, May 19, from 10 – 4, at the Green Briar Nature Center, 6 Discovery Hill Road in East Sandwich.  Enjoy an extensive plant sale, an herb luncheon, garden lectures, children’s programs, wildflower garden walks, and browse the gift shop.  Reservations are required for the delightful Friday luncheon.  Call 508-888-6870, or visit www.thorntonburgess.org.

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  • Sundays, April 28 and May 5, 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm – The New American Garden

    Heritage Museum and Gardens in Sandwich will host author C.L. Fornari on two successive Sundays, April 28 and May 5, from 2 – 3, for a horticultural workshop entitled The New American Garden.  Advance registration is required, and there will be an additional fee for the class.  For directions and registration information visit www.heritagemuseumandgardens.org.

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  • Every Fourth Wednesday, April through October, 11:00 am – 12:00 noon – Mornings in the Garden at Heritage Museums & Gardens

    Take a monthly walk with Heritage Museums & Gardens Director of Horticulture Les Lutz, from 11 – 12, free with admission to the gardens.  On April 24, spotlight flowering trees with Spring in the Garden.  May 22 will feature Heritage’s Rhododendron Legacy.  On June 26, walk the nature trails and explore areas less commonly visited during Off the Beaten Path.  July 24’s Windmill Garden program will discuss the replanting and design on the Windmill Garden.  On August 28 there will be an informative walk highlighting wild mushrooms on the property, entitled Fun with Fungi.  September 25 brings Pest Management, when you will learn about pests and IPM (Integrated Pest Management) and how Heritage is beginning to use a managed, less invasive, more sustainable approach to controlling some of its pest problems.  Finally, on October 23, Fall Color will spotlight the Arbor Bowl.  For complete information, directions, and entrance fees, visit www.heritagemuseumsandgardens.org.

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  • Thursday, April 18, 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm – Discover the Sprouting Grass Moon

    The Polly Hill Arboretum in West Tisbury welcomes back volunteer and amateur astronomer Barbara Caseau for another evening of astronomy. Come learn about the object in the sky that most of us take for granted – the moon. Discover April’s “Sprouting Grass Moon” through the telescope and hear Barbara’s moon stories and legends. If you have your own binoculars or telescopes you are invited to bring them along to class. A flashlight is also suggested. Thursday April 18, 7:30-9:00pm. No Fee, “Cloud date”, April 19.  Image from www.ancientcloth.files.wordpress.com.

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  • Friday, April 26 – Sunday, April 28 – Nantucket’s 39th Annual Daffodil Festival

    Celebrate spring on Nantucket when the island’s three million daffodils are in full bloom. Everyone is invited to enjoy the festivities, which include the Nantucket Garden Club’s Annual Daffodil show, both a dog and a children’s daffodil parade, a Daffy Hat Pageant, and a vintage car parade featuring more than 100 daffodil-decorated automobiles. Visit www.nantucketchamber.org for a complete list of all events, or telephone 508-228-1700.

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  • Saturday, April 13, 10:00 am – Camellias on Parade

    Every year the camellias at the Polly Hill Arboretum on Martha’s Vineyard put on an incredible floral display in April.  Join the Arboretum staff on Saturday, April 13, beginning at 10 am, to learn more about these wonderful plants and how Polly’s persistence in obtaining hardy specimens resulted in the display we enjoy today.  Don’t miss this walk, a sight for winter weary eyes.  $5 public fee, free for PHA members.  For directions, visit www.pollyhillarboretum.org.

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