Category: Volunteer Opportunity

  • The Herb and Medicinal Garden at Fenway Victory Gardens Honors Phyllis Hanes

    The Fenway Garden Society has created an Herb and Medicinal Garden at the entrance to The Fenway Victory Gardens, built on the former plot of the late Phyllis Hanes, a long time member of the Garden Club of the Back Bay, who passed away in 2014.  The not for profit organization has created a garden with a variety of plants for cooking (so appropriate, since Phyllis was for many years the chief food writer for the Christian Science Monitor) and for healing. Do visit the space and if you’d like to donate or volunteer to help, visit http://fenwayvictorygardens.org/

  • From the Archives: Hands-On Gardening

    In April, 1977, then-President Patsy Boyce called on members for a variety of tasks. Tickets for an upcoming neighborhood garden tour were sent out to be sold (you know the drill: sell them or buy them yourself), and a sign up sheet for hostessing during a tour shift was circulated. Everyone was to contribute 60 cookies (up from 50 the previous year) and a Library Courtyard planting was scheduled.  In addition, members were asked to contribute ten plants to the Garden Club table at the Neighborhood Street Fair  in June.  While these requests seem modest, we all know how difficult corralling volunteers can be. Currently, we have a brigade of “Dirty Girls” willing to step to the plate for hands-on projects in the neighborhood, from cleaning out window boxes at Hale House to planting around a statue on the Mall. Below is a picture of the Sarmiento statue, with our plants circling the base.  If you are not already on the Dirty Girls email distribution list but would like to be added, contact us at info@bostonflora.com. You don’t even have to be a Garden Club member, just a willing volunteer with access to a trowel or clippers (although even these can be provided.)

  • Sunday, September 18, 12:30 pm – 3:00 pm – Learn to Observe: Tree Spotters Citizen Science

    With nearly 4,000 different kinds of plants represented in the Arboretum’s living collections, every day presents rich opportunities to see something new. If you enjoy learning about plants and their unique characteristics, you can contribute to science as a participant in our Tree Spotters program. This citizen science project opens a window into the Arboretum’s phenology: the timing of natural events, such as the leafing out and flowering of trees in the spring and changing foliage colors in the fall. Your observations will assist Arboretum scientists in their studies of the effects of a changing climate on plants. Attend a free training session. All levels of experience are welcome.

    Presenters at this Sunday, September 18 workshop in the Weld Hill Building at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University will be Catherine Chamberlain, Suzanne Mrozak, and Danny Schissler.

    Once trained, Tree Spotters will participate in the program by visiting the Arboretum two or more times a month from March through November for a 1 to 2 hour tree-spotting session. You can do this on your own, with friends or family, or with other volunteers. You will enter your observations into your Nature’s Notebook Observation Deck (an online database created and supported by the US National Phenology Network) that allows you to see patterns across the season. Registered participants will receive an e-mail before the training with further information.  Free, but registration requested at http://my.arboretum.harvard.edu/Info.aspx?EventID=1

    If you cannot attend this training but are still interested in the program, please contact  TreeSpotters@fas.harvard.edu.

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  • Call for Volunteers – Grow Native Massachusetts

    Grow Native Massachusetts has begun construction of demonstration gardens at their new home at the Waltham Field Station.

    Grow Native Massachusetts is an organization rooted in community. As friends, neighbors, and citizens, they are inspired by the significance of gardens and green spaces that contribute to the integrity of our common ecosystem. They cultivate them for beauty and biodiversity, aspiring to create essential habitat for birds, butterflies and wildlife, and to better understand the delicate balance that weaves all life together. They recognize that native plants create the foundation for healthy ecological communities, and know that the world — both locally and globally — is threatened by a decrease in native plant populations and the proliferation of invasives.

    The organization is recruiting volunteers to help with garden installation as well as ongoing maintenance and invasive monitoring and control. Contact Meredith to offer your help: mgallogly@grownativemass.org.

  • WWOOFers in Ashfield

    An exciting new program exists in Ashfield, Massachusetts, at the Ashfield flower and vegetable farm Gloriosa. The opportunity to help area farmers and get a first taste of hands-on agricultural training  is part of the World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms.  An excellent article and video may be found at http://www.recorder.com/Area-farm-apprentices-learn-a-lot-more-than-farming-3328818.  For those who may be interested in applying for 2017, visit www.wwoof.net.  Volunteers usually live with their host and are expected to join in and cooperate with the day to day activities, and, if you have a farm, smallholding, garden, allotment, vineyard or woodland and follow organic or sustainability principles, you might consider opening your home to WWOOFers.

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  • Saturday, August 20, 9:00 am – Morning in Our Garden

    On Saturday, August 20, join a growing group of landscape volunteers in weeding and cultivating the garden beds at the Emily Dickinson Museum, 280 Main Street in Amherst, Massachusetts for the second session of “Mornings in our Garden.” Become a part of a new generation of caretakers for this precious piece of land in the heart of Amherst. You do not need to be an expert gardener for this “all levels” program. Interested individuals and groups can visit www.emilydickinsonmuseum.org to register. Please telephone 413-542-8161 to confirm times, or email info@emilydickinsonmuseum.org.

  • Saturday, August 27 – Birding and Botanizing at the Hamilton Sanctuary, West Bath, Maine

    The New England Botanical Club has planned a Day field trip on Saturday, August 27 – please contact the group leader no later than August 19 if you would like to join the group.
    Gather for a fun-filled expedition to Maine Audubon’s Hamilton Sanctuary in beautiful mid-coast Maine. Together, we’ll help Maine Audubon by documenting the birds and plants of the sanctuary, using iNaturalist to compile and share our observations. Pack your smart phone or tablet, alongside your hand lens and binoculars – and we’ll have fun birding and botanizing in the digital age!  Level of Difficulty – 2.75 mile trail with easy to moderate walking.  Trip leader: Melissa Cullina (mcullina@mainegardens.org). Melissa will send meeting time, location and directions to those who register for the trip.

  • The Campaign for the Living Collections at the Arnold Arboretum

    In April, 2017, Arnold Arboretum Director William (Ned) Friedman will be the guest speaker at a joint meeting of The Garden Club of the Back Bay and The Beacon Hill Garden Club. We are pleased to highlight The Campaign for the Living Collections, described below, and encourage our readership to support this endeavor.

    The renowned collections of living trees, shrubs, and vines are fundamental to the Arnold Arboretum as a botanical and horticultural institution and as partner in the educational mission of Harvard University. Numbering some 15,000 accessioned trees, shrubs, and vines, the living collections support critical research, document natural history, sustain efforts for plant conservation, and provide the public with an invaluable resource for education and the appreciation of biodiversity. As the Arboretum approaches its sesquicentennial, The Campaign for the Living Collections reaffirms and reinvigorates the Arboretum’s commitment to collecting, preserving, and studying biodiversity in the face of habitat destruction and climate change.

    In fall 2015, the Arboretum officially launched this 10-year initiative with collecting expeditions in China and northern Idaho. The Campaign seeks to acquire approximately 400 species of plants from their native populations, representing new plants previously uncollected by the Arboretum, plants attempted unsuccessfully in the past, and plants not currently represented by wild-collected specimens. To advance these aspirations, the Arboretum seeks $5 million in funding for current and future plant collecting expeditions, enhanced propagation activities, and the planting and stewardship of new species in our landscape.

    The Campaign for the Living Collections will ensure that the Arnold Arboretum will continue to be a critical resource for understanding plants and their environments for centuries to come. Help strengthen and preserve this vital legacy.

  • National Garden Clubs Million Pollinator Garden Challenge

    Because of its renowned reputation, and the strength of its membership, National Garden Clubs has been invited to be an Inaugural Network Partner of the National Pollinator Garden Network, recently formed to help establish one million gardens to assist in restoring critical pollinator population recovery in the United States. Over the next two years, The Network will bring together the science and garden capabilities of industry with the outreach of nongovernmental organizations to empower a million private citizens and organizations to plant pollinator gardens nationwide.

    Federal agencies have been directed to take steps to protect and restore pollinator populations due to recent declines in the number and distribution of pollinating insects causing significant concern among ecologists and agricultural interests. These declines include our managed bee population used in agricultural, native bees, monarch butterflies (suffering a decline of more than 90% over the past two decades), and many others. In addition to being important to natural ecosystems across our country, pollinators are critical to one third of our food production. While there may be many reasons for pollinator decline, experts agree that the overall loss in the amount and distribution of habitat and food plants is a critical contributor.

    This is an unprecedented collaboration and members will be providing food and habitat for pollinators in our home gardens (can even be a container on a deck or a condo window planter), as well as through public garden projects, youth garden projects, nursing homes, botanical gardens, business areas, and government offices. Monetary awards will be available for member clubs, and the National Garden Clubs plan to coordinate grants to clubs that will plant pollinator gardens with our youth. It is SO important to teach our youth how to take care of our land, our wildlife, our food supply for the future. Who will teach them if we don’t?

    Register your pollinator habitat! Visit http://millionpollinatorgardens.org/ to buzz over to the Pollinator Partnership Website where you can create an account, register your pollinator site and see an interactive map of sites that have been registered. The registry is located at http://pollinator.org/mpgcmap/. It’s free and easy. Explore other pollinator friendly SHARE landscapes all over the globe. Be a part of the movement now.

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  • Monday, August 1 – Submission Deadline for National Garden Club 2016 International Photography Competition

    The National Garden Clubs, of which The Garden Club of the Back Bay is a member through the Garden Club Federation of Massachusetts, holds an annual International Photography Contest, and this year the contest will feature images from US National Parks. The official theme is “In Wildness is the preservation of the world” – Henry David Thoreau. Photos may be uploaded online, and there is a nominal entry fee for submission.  All details and instructions may be found at http://gardenclub.org/awards/ngc-2016-photo-contest.aspx