Category: Meeting

  • Tuesday, November 9, 7:30 pm – Insect Signs

    Most of the signs insects leave are either overlooked or, when they are observed, seem difficult to decipher. Noah Charney and Charles Eiseman spent two years researching signs left by insects and how to read their tracks. The knowledge they gained is presented in their new book Tracks and Sign of Insects and Other Invertebrates. The authors will join the Cambridge Entomological Club for a presentation about insect signs and share interesting stories about their adventures gathering material for their unique book. Copies of the book will be available for purchase,
    and signing, after the talk.

    The meeting, on Tuesday, November 9 beginning at 7:30 in Room 101 of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 26 Oxford Street,  is free and open to the public. Snacks will be provided and you are also welcome to join us at 6:15 PM for an informal dinner meeting at Harkness Commons, in the law school cafeteria on the  second floor.

  • Monday, November 22, 9:30 am – Constructive Conversations on Food Politics

    We all care about food, right? Maybe we want to support farmers’ markets or we belong to a Community Shared Agriculture program. Maybe our kids eat school lunches. Maybe we want to make sure city dwellers have access to fresh food. Maybe we’re concerned about the future of farms. Maybe we want to improve the quality of our mealtime conversations. No matter what, we need to be able to talk to each other. In fact, to be the best advocates for whatever we believe in, we need to be able to understand people with whom we may disagree. In honor of U.N. World Food Day, Public Conversations and The Family Dinner Project are offering a free workshop to anyone who is invested in issues around access to healthy food. The workshop will introduce participants to dialogue as a tool for building better relationships and more effective communication, even across contentious issues. Join us on Monday, November 22, 9:30 am-noon at 51 Kondazian Street in Watertown for a free workshop.

    For 20 years, the Public Conversations Project has been helping groups divided by values, worldviews, or identities have critical discussions about what they care about most deeply, so that they can live or work together. The Family Dinner Project is a start-up grassroots movement of food, fun and conversation about things that matter. Families come together to share their experiences and insights to help each other realize the benefits of family dinners. For more information or to RSVP please contact Alison Streit Baron at: abaron@publicconversations.org.  Limited space available—please RSVP by November 3. This workshop will be held at 51 Kondazian Street, Watertown, which is accessible via bus 71 from Harvard Square. Free parking is available.

  • Saturday, November 20, 10:00 am – Roses for New England: A Guide to Sustainable Rose Gardening

    The New England Rose Society invites you to join its members on Saturday, November 20, at Tower Hill Botanic Garden, 11 French Drive, Boylston, Massachusetts, for the November meeting featuring Mike and Angie Chute, authors of Roses for New England: A Guide to Sustainable Rose Gardening.  Autographed books will be available for purchase at the lecture.  For more information, contact Tracy Peter, Secretary of the NERS, at 978-764-7101.

  • Friday, November 5, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm, and Saturday, November 6, 8:30 am – 5:30 pm – Human Health and Soil Health

    Jerry Brunetti went to see a doctor for an MRI, after back injuries from a car accident in the late 1990’s were plaguing him and causing him pain. Much to his surprise, after the MRI, Jerry learned that he had Non-Hodgkins Lymphona, a type of cancer that attacks the lymphatic system. Jerry had a tumor in his abdomen. The car accident, it turned out, saved his life.

    Brunetti is founder of Agri-Dynamics, of Martins Creek, in northern Pennsylvania (a company which provides consulting and holistic products for livestock and animal health, and soil consulting). Although he had many experiences in his childhood that he believes contributed to compromising his health, he did not feel sick when he received his diagnosis. He had already spent his adult career as a consultant, working with farmers to improve their soils so as to grow more nutritious forage, feed, and crops. By then, nutritious and healthy food had become an integral part of his personal and professional life.

    As a result of his Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma diagnosis, he was given six months to live. Jerry rejected the prescribed aggressive chemotherapy treatment in favor of a holistic approach. As Jerry explains – “Traditional chemotherapy is designed to shrink tumors. I wasn’t interested in shrinking my tumor. I was interested in my entire immune system. I wanted to live.” And so Brunetti embarked on a largely holistic approach, in keeping with his life-philosophy. Through Jerry’s alternative detoxification approach, coupled with his strict (and ongoing) regimen of complete nutrition (including nutrient dense foods and beneficial fats and proteins), Jerry was successful in curing himself of his lymphoma.

    It is now 11 years since Jerry was first diagnosed. Jerry’s bout with cancer solidified his belief in nutrient dense foods as the solution to curing and managing chronic diseases which plague our society. He believes farms should be treated as our “FARMacies,” and that folks should start viewing diet as a critical disease-management component of a healthy lifestyle. “This is not hippie, tree-hugger, granola-crunchy stuff that I’m talking about,” Brunetti asserts. “It’s all in the conventional medical literature. Doctors just don’t always know where to look for it.”

    Soil, Brunetti believes, is at the core of his nutrient-dense diet crusade. Developing farms that produce wide varieties of produce rich in vitamins and minerals is a crucial step to curing what ails us. Jerry hopes that farmers and consumers across the nation will begin looking at whole organ-ism agriculture, starting in the soil.

    The Northeast Organic Farming Association, Massachusetts Chapter is proud to introduce Jerry as its Fall Advanced Growers Seminar speaker. This two-part seminar, to be held on Friday and Saturday, November 5th and 6th at the Barre Congregational Church, presents a practical and integrated approach for improving human health through improving the health of our soils. Friday evening’s talk from 7:00pm to 9:00pm, “The Medicine that Starts in the Soil,” will emphasize what people can do through diet to improve health. Saturday’s full day seminar from 8:30am to 5:30pm, “Soil as a Super Organism,” will illustrate practical techniques that farmers and gardeners can employ to realize Hippocrates’ directive, “Let food be your medicine.”

    The seminar is applicable to growers, nutritionists, medical practitioners, and health-conscious consumers. The registration cost for the seminar is $30 for Friday and $100 for Saturday. Members of any NOFA chapter or MOFGA also receive a discount of $5 for Friday and $10 for Saturday. Registration information and further details at: http://www.nofamass.org/seminars/fallseminar.php.

    For more information about the NOFA/Mass Advanced Growers Fall Seminar with Jerry Brunetti, please contact Ben Grosscup, NOFA/Mass Extension Events Coordinator at ben.grosscup@nofamass.org, or call (413) 658-5374.

  • Thursday, November 18, 11:00 am – Annual Meeting and Fall Luncheon of The Boston Committee of the GCA

    The Annual Meeting and Fall Luncheon of The Boston Committee of the GCA will take place Thursday, November 18 at The Country Club, 191 Clyde Street, Brookline. Registration will begin at 10:30 am, with the meeting and lecture beginning at 11:00 am, followed by luncheon in the dining room.

    This year’s guest speaker is Dominique Browning. For over a decade, Dominique Browning brought gardening expertise to readers around the country as editor-in-chief of House & Garden magazine. But one Monday morning in 2007, the magazine folded and she was told to pack up her office. She also packed up the house where she had raised two children and had lovingly tended her own garden. After losing the job that defined her and the garden that inspired her, Browning started to cultivate a new garden, beginning a journey of self-discovery and reinvention. Join Browning, author of Slow Love: How I Lost My Job, Put on My Pajamas, and Found Happiness, as she shares how the spirit of a new garden helped her to love the unexpected, unanticipated life.  The book will be available for purchase for $23 by pre-order only, with proceeds benefiting The Blossom Fund.  Lecture and Luncheon: $45, Lecture only: $20.  To register, make checks payable to The Boston Committee of the GCA and mail to Mrs. William U. Shipley, 40 Dunster Road, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 no later than November 12.  Reservations will be held at the door.  Please indicate the name of your Garden Club on your check.

  • Wednesday, October 27, 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm – Community Meeting re: Carousel on the Greenway

    Join The Rose Kennedy Greenway Conservancy on Wednesday, October 27  from 5-7 PM for the second community meeting to learn more about the Conservancy’s feasibility study for a custom-designed children’s Carousel on the Greenway. You’ll discuss the location and site layout of the Carousel, share feedback and designs from the Children’s Workshops, and talk about ideas for the Carousel theme and characters.

    Can’t make the meeting? The Conservancy wants to hear from families and children of all ages. Please send your thoughts to carousel@rosekennedygreenway.org. Need inspiration? The current Greenway Carousel closes at the end of this month and won’t come back until the bulbs are blooming.

    Where: Wharf District Parks across from Faneuil Hall Marketplace
    When: The Carousel is open 12-8PM Sunday – Thursday; 11AM-8PM Friday and Saturday except during extreme inclement weather.
    Cost: $3/ride

  • Thursday, November 18, 9:00 am – 4:00 pm – 13th Annual Trees in the Urban Landscape Symposium: Diversity in the Urban Landscape, A Planned Invasion

    The 13th Annual Trees in the Urban Landscape Symposium will take place this year on Thursday, November 18, from 9 – 4 at Tower Hill Botanic Garden in Boylston, Massachusetts.  The theme for 2010 is Diversity in the Urban Landscape: A Planned Invasion.  Keynote Speaker will be Peter del Tredici, Senior Research Scientist, Arnold Arboretum.  The Symposium is co-sponsored by Tower Hill and by the Nathaniel Wheeler Trust/Bank of America.  For complete details, call 508-869-6111, ext. 124.  The complete schedule will be published soon at www.towerhillbg.org.

  • Wednesday, November 3, 10:00 am – Bog Gardens

    Instructor Priscilla Purinton of the New England Carnivorous Plant Society will speak at The Garden Club of the Back Bay’s monthly meeting on Wednesday, November 3, beginning at 10 am at The College Club, 44 Commonwealth Avenue. Learn to create a  bog habitat for your garden or patio with rare and interesting plants.  Bogs are unique habitats saturated with acidic, low nutrient water that would spell death for most plants.  However, they support a surprising diversity of unique flora that can grow nowhere else.  You will learn how to create a good soil mix, what plants do well (and why) in bog situations, and will also learn how to keep your bog flourishing for years.  The program is free, but reservations are required – email info@bostonflora.com.  An optional lunch will follow the meeting ($20 members of GCBB, $25 for non-members), for which reservations must be made no later than October 29.  Garden Club of the Back Bay members will receive written notice of this meeting.

    http://www.mykoipondshop.com/sites/LMack/_files/Image//pitcher%20plant.jpg

  • Friday, November 5, 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm, Saturday & Sunday, November 6-7, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm – Massachusetts Orchid Society Annual Show and Sale

    ‘Seasoned’ orchid growers and new orchid enthusiasts eagerly anticipate the Massachusetts Orchid Society’s Annual Show and Sales,  Trident’s Treasures: In Memory of Dr. Wilford B. Neptune , at Tower Hill Botanic Garden in Boylston on Friday, November 5 through Sunday,  November 7,  is no exception.  This orchid extravaganza, featuring gorgeous displays of blooming orchids with more than 12 commercial growers selling orchid plants and supplies, plus clinics on basic orchid care, tours of the show, and more, will be held  Friday  1 – 5, Saturday and Sunday 10 – 5.  For more information, log on to www.show.massorchid.org, or email MOSOrchidShow@comcast.net.  For directions to Tower Hill, 11 French Drive, Boylston, Massachusetts, log on to www.towerhillbg.org.

  • Monday, November 8, 8:00 am – 4:30 pm – Season’s End Summit: Taking Stock and Looking Forward

    Join Ecological Landscaping Association on Monday, November 8, from 8 am – 4 pm for a full day of “Taking Stock and Looking Forward.” The day will include morning and afternoon panel discussions with industry leaders in sustainable landscaping practices. Lunch is included and will feature Keynote speaker Laura Solano, from Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, with over twenty years of designing, building, and restoring award-winning landscapes for for public, private, and corporate clients.  The seminar will be held at the Habitat Wildlife Sanctuary, 10 Juniper Road, Belmont (sumac field pictured below,)  and you may register for $55 if an ELA member, or $75 if a non-member.  For more information, log on to www.ecolandscaping.org.