Category: New Hampshire

  • Saturday, June 25, 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm – An Artist’s Garden: A Living Tapestry

    The Garden Conservancy presents Digging Deeper on Saturday, June 25 from 4 – 6 in Peterborough, New Hampshire.

    In this intimate workshop, designer Maude Odgers will walk us through her renowned, deeply personal garden, revealing how her lifelong work as an artist has influenced her unique approach to garden design. A passionate plant collector with an eye for the unusual, Maude is drawn to plants, shrubs, and trees with interesting foliage and texture-elements which weave strong and subtle forms together creating living tapestries. Using her own evolving landscape as illustration, she’ll discuss her method of garden composition and highlight the subtle details that enhance a garden’s structure, theme, and impact, both visually and spiritually.   For more than 40 years Maude has worked and reworked this land that she and her husband cleared and planted, and upon which they built their home. Her gardens consist of many meandering mixed borders (influenced by English gardens), several woodland gardens, an herb garden, a garden with a pond, an orchard, and a small unique raised-bed vegetable garden. Her garden has been featured in numerous garden journals.

    Admittance to this garden’s Open Day on June 25 is included with a purchase of the corresponding Digging Deeper ticket. For more information, please contact the Garden Conservancy by telephone 845.424.6500, M-F, 9-5 Eastern, or email events@gardenconservancy.org.  $40. These Digging Deeper events sell out fast, so act quickly.

  • Armchair Diary: How Gardens are REALLY Made – The History of Nan Quick’s Raised Terrace Garden, Online

    Pull up a chair and enjoy an incredible photographic essay on Nan Quick’s four year process designing and executing a raised terrace garden at her home in Jaffrey, New Hampshire. Former Garden Club of the Back Bay President Margaret Pokorny, who lives in Jaffrey and has seen the garden in person, says that Nan also designs and fabricates much of the garden furniture you see in the pictures. The link to the essay is www.nanquick.com

  • Now Through November 14, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm Weekends and 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm Weekdays: Christmas at The Fells Holiday Showhouse and Boutique

    Tour The Fells Main House and get inspired! Professional interior designers, floral artists, decorators and talented volunteers have sprinkled their magic throughout to create this one-of-a-kind showhouse. Tickets are $25 at the door, $8 for children at all times. Dining Room Café open weekends. Our Holiday Gift Boutique features the finest regional artisans. Buy tickets online at www.thefells.org. The John Hay Estate at The Fells is located at 456 Rt. 103, Newbury, New Hampshire. Since it’s New Hampshire, masks are recommended but not required, but use common sense, people, and wear your masks indoors.

  • Friday, June 25, 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm, and Saturday, June 26, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Portsmouth Pocket Garden Tour

    Friday, June 25, 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm, and Saturday, June 26, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Portsmouth Pocket Garden Tour

    The annual Pocket Garden Tour is hosted by South Church in Portsmouth, NH. Each year a variety of lovely small gardens are open for viewing in a designated Portsmouth neighborhood. The beautiful Victorian Goodwin Garden is one of the 15 gardens featured in the Portsmouth Pocket Garden Tour. The event, which occurs on June 25 from 5 – 8 PM and Saturday, June 26 from 10 AM – 4 PM, begins at Strawbery Banke. On the Saturday of the event, Erik Wochholz, Curator of Historic Landscapes shares engaging lessons with tour participants on 19-century plants, historical garden planning and design, plant cultivation, and herbalism. Visitors can also take advantage of educational tours of Goodwin Garden and take complimentary heirloom seeds from the Museum’s seed-saving program. Covid-19 protocols will be followed. Tickets can be purchased by visiting www.southchurch-uu.org

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  • Sunday, October 28, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm – Pollinator Symposium

    On Sunday, October 28, at the Susan N. McLane Audubon Center in Concord, New Hampshire, attend a day-long symposium to discuss interactions between native plants and pollinators and learn how to combat the pollinator crisis through panels and workshops led by specialists in the field. The symposium addresses such topics as: researching and tracking different types of native pollinators, creating and growing gardens that support the region’s native pollinators, and selecting the most effective pollinator-friendly native plants for particular habitats and ecoregions. With an engaging keynote by Dr. Robert Gegear, creator of The Beecology Project, this symposium offers a fitting culmination to a summer of pollinator programs and a vision for next steps. Register and be part of the solution!  $75 for members of the sponsoring organizations, the New England Wild Flower Society, New Hampshire Audubon, and the New England Field Office of the US Fish and Wildlife Service, $90 for nonmembers. Photo from the Times Free Press. Register at http://www.newenglandwild.org/learn/our-programs/pollinator-symposium

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  • Friday, July 13, 8:00 am – 5:00 pm – Trip to Bedrock Gardens and Fuller Gardens in New Hampshire

    Join Tower Hill Botanic Garden on Friday, July 13 and travel to Bedrock Gardens (pictured below) in Lee, New Hampshire to enjoy a garden tour followed by a picnic lunch and time to explore on your own. In the afternoon, visit Fuller Gardens in North Hampton, New Hampshire. The group will leave Tower Hill at 8 am and return at 5 pm.

    Bedrock Gardens is a unique garden oasis. A former dairy farm in rural NH has been transformed over the past 30 years into a stunning landscape of diverse plant collection, varied landscape design, hardscaping, and extensive sculpture collection made from repurposed farm equipment. The garden includes many structural elements such as paths, an espaliered fence, an arborvitae hedge, architecturally interesting rocks, pergola, and garden art. The beds have exceptional plant varieties, often started as seedlings, including many unusual specimens of perennials, trees and shrubs.

    Fuller Gardens is a public botanical garden that was once part of the summer estate of Alvan T. Fuller on the Seacoast of New Hampshire. It’s a delightful oasis situated a stone’s throw from the ocean. The gardens feature horticulture at the highest level, with thousands of rose bushes and hundreds of varieties that bloom all season long. Formal English perennial borders, a Japanese Garden and a tropical conservatory are all framed by sculpted hedges.

    Tower Hill Member $150, Non-member $175; includes transportation, admissions to Bedrock Gardens and Fuller Gardens, guided tour of Bedrock Gardens, and box lunch. To register, visit www.towerhillbg.org. If you wish to travel to the gardens on your own, call 508-869-6111 to coordinate meeting times.

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  • Saturday, June 16, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Monadnock Area Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy’s Open Day program moves to the Monadnock Area of New Hampshire on Saturday, June 16 from 10 – 4. Admission to each garden is $7 for members and nonmembers without tickets purchased in advance.

    The Robertson Garden is located at 162 Gerry Road in Dublin, New Hampshire. The inspiration to create the garden came during a visit to southeastern England in 1986. The geometric design of the perennial bed was drawn on an American Airline’s napkin during the return flight. Upon entering the property, visitors are met with some 12,000 daffodils during the month of May. The garden itself is bounded by fruit trees, a vegetable garden, a pergola, and a large barn. A fairly productive bluebird trail ambles through peripheral meadows. Among the specimen trees on our property are horse chestnuts, seven sons (Heptacodium miconioides), a variegated Japanese red pine (‘Dragon’s Eye’), and a Tennessee yellowwood tree. Recent additions are several Japanese maple species and Slovenian beehives. Although a difficult struggle, it is very rewarding to induce some color from the granite that serves as “top soil”.

    The Thoron Gardens are in Jaffrey, New Hampshire, and the exact address, as well as the address of the Eleanor Briggs’ Garden in Hancock, New Hampshire described below, will be divulged at additional gardens open on this date, or by calling 1-888-842-2442 on weekdays, 9 – 5. The property includes a 230-year-old cottage/farmhouse, renovated and surrounded by gardens, a view of Mount Monadnock, an eleven-acre wetland with beavers, an old/new orchard, mowed fields, and stone walls. Help was given from garden designers Gordon Hayward and Kristian Fenderson, who put up with owner’s strong ideas and vision, 2006 to present, intermittently. Additional features include sixteen different gardens covering two acres: wetland, woodland, a formal/informal vegetable/cutting garden above a forty-foot perennial bed, roadside and driveway perennial borders, two formal boxwood gardens, a grove of river birch, eighty-five garden pots, climbing roses on the fence and trellis of the house, perennial curved lawn gardens, tall perennials adjacent to barn, a brick walkway, plus four small gardens and a kitchen garden adjacent to house.

    At the Eleanor Briggs Garden, plantings surround the Town of Hancock’s first house, built in 1776 by the town clerk, Jonathan Bennett. Since it is a farmhouse, the plantings are informal and blend into surrounding fields and woods. On each side of the “front” door are raised beds reminiscent of Colonial gardens. The real front door (never used) is flanked by plantings of old roses and Nepeta. Behind the 1970 kitchen wing is a forty-eight-foot-long koi pond designed by landscape architect Diane McGuire and planted with lotuses, irises, and water lilies. McGuire also laid out the perennial bed and woodland border. The AIA-award-winning screened porch was designed by Dan Scully. Sculptures in the terraced vegetable garden are by Noel Grenier, and a pair of 200-year-old granite Korean rams graze on the back lawn. I followed McGuire’s brilliant layout of the parallel borders but deepened the perennial bed to make a bit more room to “paint” with annuals and perennials. The woodland border is planted with witch hazel, azaleas, snakeroot, and Rodgersia. Walking beyond the borders, one comes to a new bog garden surrounded by marsh marigolds, skunk cabbage, and sedges. A trail of cardinal flowers brightens the wetland beyond.

    Also in Hancock, at 191 Depot Road, are the May Place Gardens of Bill and Eileen Elliott (pictured). Two compulsive plant collectors have been making gardens on a wooded hillside clearing for thirty-seven years. They continue to do all of the planning, landscaping, planting, and maintenance themselves. Gardening offers ample challenges and satisfaction as the garden continues to expand, change, die back, thrive, disappoint, and exhilarate. Within the green wall of mature woodland is a two-acre clearing, which contains a mix of trees, shrubs, perennials, biennials, annuals, herbs, and vegetables. The garden features mixed borders, an ornamental vegetable garden, and a formal peony/clematis garden. A path leads to the shade gardens by the house.

    Finally, there is the garden of Michael and Betsy Gordon, at 14 High Street in Peterborough. This small garden in the village was designed by a plantsman to be an extension of the house. The house and garden are situated on a hill, and the garden is terraced on three levels. The upper level was intended to be enjoyed from the street. The middle level is laid out formally, using yew hedges and a century-old granite wall foundation to create a garden room. The lowest level, an informal woodland garden, has shade-loving plants from North America and Asia. The garden was planted with a mixture of unusual trees, shrubs, perennials, grasses, annuals, and bulbs. Plants were selected primarily for interesting form, foliage, and texture. The garden is chronicled in the blog, http://thegardenerseye.blogspot.com.

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  • Saturday, June 16, 4:00 pm – Digging Deeper: Succession Planting for Mere Mortals

    Join Michael B. Gordon on Saturday, June 16 at 4 pm for a walking tour of his garden (14 High Street, Peterborough, NH) where he will reveal how he has incorporated a simplified version of the succession planting concepts used by the late Christopher Lloyd and Fergus Garrett at Great Dixter, England, in his small private garden. Michael will explain how he uses combinations of woody and herbaceous plants to extend the season as long as he possibly can in New Hampshire. The talk will be of interest to the plantsman as well as the designer. Refreshments will be served. Michael B. Gordon is an optometrist by profession but a gardener by obsession. He has designed public gardens in Peterborough for nearly two decades. He has a passion for visiting gardens in the United States and abroad. Each year, he leads a tour of English Gardens and brings back ideas for his own garden.

    Registration is required and space is limited. This Garden Conservancy program is $30 for Conservancy members, $35 for nonembers.  Your registration includes Open Days admission to this garden destination—a $7 value. The Garden of Michael & Betsy Gordon will be open to general Open Days visitors on this date from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

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  • Saturday, May 12, 9:30 am – Heather Pruning

    Learn about gardening with hardy and beautiful heather as you join members of the Northeast Heather Society while tending The Fells Heather Bed on Saturday, May 12 at 9:30 am. Bring lightweight hedge trimmers (if you have them), dress in layers and wear gloves. Free to all. Advance registration requested. Meets at the Heather Bed, beyond the Rock Garden. The Fells is located on the eastern shore of Lake Sunapee at 456 Route 103A in Newbury, NH.

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  • Friday, February 9 – Sunday, February 11 – New Hampshire Orchid Society Show

    New Hampshire Orchid Society Show is being held February 9 – 11, 2018 at the Courtyard by Marriott, 2200 Southwood Drive, Nashua, NH. Judging is being held on February 9, 2018 at 8:30 AM. For complete information contact Brenda Campbell at bbcampbell139@comcast.net.