Category: Uncategorized

  • January 17 – March 15 – New England Wild Flower Society Seed Sale

    With more than 275 varieties of seeds and spores for sale, gardeners of all interests will find a wide selection of wildflowers that will both beautify their gardens and help sustain the biodiversity of New England. The seeds of native woody plants, perennials, and fern spores were collected and prepared by the Society’s Seed Ecologist Dr. Tristram Seidler, staff, and volunteers at Garden in the Woods in Framingham, MA, and at Nasami Farm in Whately, MA. The selection includes natives for woodlands, wetlands, and meadow gardens.  To view the entire catalog and place your order, visit www.newfs.org.

  • February 5 – 8 – Flora in Winter

    The annual floral artistic collaboration between Tower Hill Botanic Garden and the Worcester Art Museum will take place Thursday through Sunday, February 5 – 8, at both venues. Enjoy stunning floral interpretations of international destinations and events remembered for their romantic connections.  Flora in Winter will be a celebration of life through art, music, and the attempt to express love through the language of flowers. Romance may be interpreted as an intense feeling for another person, place, or time, in literature or music, from anywhere around the world. Talented floral designers will reach the heights of artistic expression in this one of a kind show.  For more information and a detailed description of the many special programs and lectures, log on to www.towerhillbg.org.

  • Tuesday, January 27, 3-5 pm – Tea at the Mandarin Oriental

    We again celebrate the successful completion of our holiday wreath project with a sumptuous January winter tea, this year with our newest hotel neighbor, the luxurious Mandarin Oriental, in the lovely Bangkok Room.  After a brief business meeting updating the membership on the Club’s projects and progress to date, we will enjoy the opportunity to socialize with each other.

    Executive Chef Nicolas Boutin will bring world-class credentials and culinary artistry to the Mandarin Oriental, Boston.  He has most recently been part of The Landmark, Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong team, earning high praise and glowing reviews for its inspired fare.  Boutin also credits much of his talent to having honed his culinary skills under the tutelage of numerous award-winning chefs, including the acclaimed Chef Pierre and Michel Troisgros, one of the longest-rated, three-star Michelin chefs in France. The sumptuous menu will include a variety of tea sandwiches – smoked salmon on wheat bread with caviar, chicken curry with grapes on walnut bread,  foie gras with fig preserve and cracked black pepper on brioche, Vermont cheddar quiche, plus raisin scones with Devonshire cream, lemon madeleines, raspberry-pistachio financier, honey & ginger pain d’epices, fruit tartlet, and blueberry cheese cake. Did we mention the 64% chocolate and mandarin, and the 70% chocolate and praline, and the individual pots of select loose teas? $40 per person for members, $50 per person for guests.  For more information, call Francine Crawford at 617-859-8865.

  • Tuesdays, Feb. 3 – March 3: Climate Change Workshop

    You hear the terms climate change, global warming, and going green in the daily news, but what does it all mean? This workshop with Cristin Ashmankas, currently completing her Ph.D. in Oceanography, will explore the science of climate change and its causes and effects. Topics of discussion include the main controls on global climate and how those controls change, the science about which there’s agreement, and the implications of the current climate changes on both the regional and global scale. Readings will accompany lectures and discussions.  Tuesday evenings, 6:45 – 8:45 pm at Lesley University Hall, 1815 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge (the old Sears Building next to Porter Square T stop).  $130 for the series, parking behind the building for $2. For more information, go to www.lesley.edu/ce/spring, email jwadling@lesley.edu, or call Joyce Wadlington at 617-349-8609.

  • Wednesday, Dec. 10, 6:30 – 8 pm – Environmental & Energy Forum

    You are invited to join James Hunt, Chief of Environmental and Energy Services for the City of Boston as he discusses innovative programs and policies that the City of Boston is implementing to protect the environment, reduce energy use and control greenhouse gas emissions. The program will take place at the Arlington Street Church, 351 Boylston Street, and is free and open to the public. The mission of the City of Boston’s Environmental and Energy Services Department is to preserve and enhance the resources of the city’s built and natural environment; and to promote safe, reliable, affordable and efficient energy systems. Finding solutions to environmental issues, energy issues, and climate change are of the highest priority to Mayor Menino.

  • Saturday, November 15, 10am – 3pm – Orchid Growing Clinic

    Lyman Estate Greenhouses, Waltham, Mass.; $10 for up to three orchids.
    Bring up to three orchid plants for evaluation by experienced horticulturists. Get advice on maintaining healthy blooming plants. Other services offered include repotting and educational hand-outs about orchids. Books, pots, and growing supplies are for sale. For more information, call 781-891-4882, ext. 244;

  • 2 ways to order wreaths online

    Download and print the 2008 Holiday Wreath Order Form here .

    Order your Garden Club Holiday Wreaths and poinsettia plants online !

    *(Orders for 2008 Holiday Wreaths are no longer accepted)

  • Monday, October 20, 6-8 – Urban Forests: The Future of Boston’s Trees

    The Ellis South End Neighborhood Association’s Green Committee hosts a panel from Boston’s Urban Forest Coalition to discuss “Urban Forests: The Future of Boston’s Trees” on Monday, October 20th from 6 – 8:00 pm at the Lyric Stage located at 140 Clarendon St. in the South End. Thanks to the generosity of the Lyric Stage Company of Boston, admission is free.

    Panelists include representatives from the Urban Ecology Institute, the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation, and the City of Boston Park’s Department. Topics to be discussed are: the results of the Urban Ecology Institute’s Street Tree Inventory, particularly what it reveals about the South End, Back Bay, and Beacon Hill; the impending threat posed to maple trees by the introduced pest, the Asian Longhorn Beetle, which has been discovered as close as Worcester; and Grow Boston Greener Campaign, a collaboration between the City of Boston and its partner Boston’s Urban Forest Coalition to plant 100,000 trees in Boston by the year 2020.

    The Ellis South End Neighborhood Association, founded over 50 years ago, is a non-profit membership organization dedicated to preserving the historic South End as well as ensuring that it remains a diverse, vibrant and safe community for residents and visitors. For more information, please visit www.ellisneighborhood.org.

  • Saturday, October 25, 1:30 pm – Great Garden Cities of Persia

    Revisiting Paradise: Landscape Journeys from South Asia to the Mediterranean. Persian literary and graphic sources in combination with historic accounts of European travelers provide new insights into Safavid gardens and garden cities. The diversity of private, public, and royal spaces is revealed in the vibrant illustrations created by guest speaker, architect Mahvash Alemi. Alemi is a Garden and Landscape Studies Fellow for 2008-2009, Dumbarton Oaks Washington DC. Tickets $15, $12 Seniors, $5 Members of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. For more information call 617-566-1401, or log on to www.gardnermuseum.org.

  • Saturday, October 25, 11 am – 1 pm – Pruning 101

    Join members of the Wollaston Garden Club at Quincy House in Quincy, Massachusetts for a hands-on workshop on how to identify and prune plantings. After the workshop, enjoy free tours of the house and discover how the landscape has changed since 1770. Free admission. For more information, call 617-227-3957, ext. 256.