Friday, December 7, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm Eastern – Site Preparation for Landscape Transformation, Online

Many people consider reducing lawns, converting hayfields, cleaning out weed patches, and otherwise transforming landscapes into pollinator gardens or meadows with native plants. Site preparation is critical, but it is often overlooked in the quest for a finished appearance. This American Horticultural Society online primer on December 7 at 1 pm covers planning, timelines, and online sources of site information. You will also learn some tips on how to do critical chores, including a comparison of weed removal methods. $30 for AHS members, $36 for nonmembers. Kathy Connolly is the instructor, and you may register online at https://ahsgardening.org/lifelong-learning/site-preparation-for-landscape-transformation/

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Wednesday, December 6 – Friday, December 8, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm – The Language of Flowers on Vellum

All flowers hold different meanings, often based on the flower type, the time of year in which they bloom, the flower’s color, or all of the above, but the same is true of the story that makes them so meaningful to us. This Berkshire Botanical Garden workshop, held December 6 through December 8, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., will work with seasonal plants such as tree nuts, winter berries, or mushrooms; since our substrate will be vellum (calf skin), our subjects need to be small. Dry brush is a watercolor painting technique used in traditional botanical illustration. The method involves a “skin” of dried paint on the palette and a small, slightly damp brush. We will also create botanical tints for the base layer, generating shape by adding a luminous shadow. Students will receive a photograph and an outline of the seasonal flora. This workshop will meet for three consecutive days, for five hours each session.

Anastasia Traina, is a writer and botanical artist. Her illustrations were published in the children’s book, BITSY and RAFF written by David Caudle, highlighting the power of friendship and inclusion. She is a member of the American Society of Botanical Art, the Tri-State Botanical Artists of NYBG, the Writer’s Guild of America and the Dramatists Guild of America. Her most recent exhibition, “Alchemy and Innocents” was on display at the BBG’s Leonhardt Galleries in 2023. Commissioned for the Berkshire Botanical Garden to create Lucy’s Garden, featuring topiary animals and other ‘live’ structures on paper. Donated by Lucy and Nat Day. $245 for BBG members, $265 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/language-flowers-vellum

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Tuesday, December 5, 10:00 am – 2:30 pm – Tree ID in Winter

Even without leaves most trees are easily recognizable in winter. Learn to ID about 15 native New England trees (plus non-native invasives) through branching patterns, bark, persistent fruits, growth forms, and habitats. Enjoy the trails at beautiful Wright-Locke Farm and surrounding conservation land on this informative journey. The Wright-Locke Farm class will take place December 5 from 10 – 2:30, with Boot Boutwell, in partnership with MACC. For more information visit www.WLFarm.org

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Sunday, December 17 or Tuesday, December 19 – Family Holiday Cookie Workshop

Share the joy of the holiday season with family and friends in the All Seasons Barn as it fills with the aroma of freshly baked cookies. This festive activity is sure to get you in the holiday spirit! There are various time lots available but they fill fast, so register at https://www.wlfarm.org/kitchen-education/#1638543694244-7c801f85-ac08 $60 per table – tables accommodate up to six people. You and your family will have your very own table set up to make Chef Kelcy’s Great-Grandmother’s Holiday Cookie recipe. She will walk you through the process. The chef will take your cookie dough to the back to wrap and chill for you to take home and bake later. You will receive a pre-made and chilled dough to roll out and decorate. As your cookies bake, you’ll enjoy holiday music, coloring, and hot mulled cider. You will leave with your chilled dough, as well as the cookies you all decorated in the workshop. There is an optional take-home WLF “Know Your Farmer” apron available for purchase. This is a family event, not a drop-off. Parents or guardians are required to stay and help make the cooki

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Holiday Wreaths 2023 – Black Friday

No, The Garden Club of the Back Bay isn’t holding a Black Friday sale. There is no place to line up or “score” a magnificent discount on wreaths. However, now that Thanksgiving is behind you, turn your attention to your holiday decor and order your wreath or wreaths today from https://gardenclubbackbay.org/shop/ Remember, all proceeds funnel directly to neighborhood beautification, and the November 30 order deadline for fully decorated wreaths is approaching.

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Wednesday, December 6, 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm Eastern – Holidays at the White House, Online

Join the American Horticultural Society and Laura Dowling, former White House Chief Floral Designer, on December 6 at 7 pm Eastern for a virtual talk on Holidays at the White House.

As Chief Floral Designer during the Obama administration, Laura Dowling was responsible for the dazzling floral pieces that made the holiday season so memorable. Join her for a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the innovative plant-centered decorations, including intricate hydrangea-covered archways, gilded maple leaf rosette panels, and sugar paste floral vases. In addition to her White House experiences, Dowling will share tips and techniques for planning holiday displays at home, including suggestions for re-creating some of the most popular and original White House holiday designs.

Laura Dowling served as Chief Floral Design at the White House from 2009 to 2015, where she managed White House floral design for thousands of officials, private events, and large-scale installations including the iconic White House Christmas. She has authored four books and her work is featured across the country, from flower shows to design magazines to HGTV to U.S. postal stamps. Dowling is an AHS board member as well as an AHS Great American Gardener Award recipient and a Royal Horticultural Society Distinguished Flower Ambassador.  $10 for AHS members, $15 for nonmembers. Register at https://ahsgardening.org/lifelong-learning/holidays-at-the-white-house/

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Thursday, November 30 – Holiday Lights on the Mall

The Friends is excited to once again steward the annual Holiday Lights on the Mall. For the first time, the Holiday Lights will extend all the way to Kenmore Square! Join us at the Mayors lighting ceremony on the first block of the Mall on November 30, beginning immediately after the Boston Common Tree Lighting.

The iconic holiday light display along the Commonwealth Avenue Mall was the vision of Parks Commissioner Justine Liff and philanthropists Joan and Ted Bernard Cutler, inspired by the illuminated tree-lined boulevards of Paris. Their sense of civic pride inspired others in the neighborhood to support the cause and the all-volunteer Committee to Light the Commonwealth Avenue Mall was born.

In 2022, the Committee joined with the Friends, creating a new committee to work with the Friends staff to raise the funds necessary to make this annual light display possible and to support the ongoing care of the park. 

The Friends is proud to be stewards of this special holiday tradition and excited to work with our community to increase support for the Mall year round.

Today, the lights illuminate the park from early December to April each year and, beginning in 2023, stretch from Arlington Street to Kenmore Square. To donate, and for more information on times, visit https://friendsofthepublicgarden.org/holiday-lights/

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Tuesday, November 28, 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm – The Olmsted in All of Us

This past year marked the bicentennial of Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr.’s birth. Although many still do not know that there is no “A” in his name, and that there were actually three Olmsteds (news flash: he didn’t live from 1822-1957), generally speaking, his impact on the profession – and the public – from coast-to-coast – is still only superficially understood. Olmsted-designed landscapes are more than picturesque scenery and public grounds for society’s use and enjoyment.

This November 28 Friends of Fairsted presentation by Charles A. Birnbaum draws on forty years of professional practice – incorporating big ideas and anecdotes, and aims to lift the veil on those in Olmsted’s practice and his successor firms from 1857-1979 (beyond those named Olmsted). Additionally, the presentation will address how the Olmsted practice served as the definer and proselytizer of the professional discipline that Sr. named, how the firm came to define what a corporate practice should look like and how it should function (including support for the “grand tour,” the idea of preparing multiple alternatives to sell your ideas, leveraging one’s position as both a practitioner and an academic to cultivate and import the best and brightest students, the need to nurture and cultivate patrons, the critical nature of well-organized archives and dedicated staff for collections management), and how landscape architects need to seize the opportunity to lead and orchestrate from the planning of cities and campuses to getting involved early and siting the building architecture.

Olmsted introduced new typologies (parkway, park system), he recognized that landscape was infrastructure and that a thorough understanding of soils and water (from watersheds and hydrology to soil remediation) was essential. He understood landscapes and cities to be dynamic, possessing intertwined systems that could be guided and shaped, and the idea of managing change.

Finally, the presentation concludes with reflections of how we can steward Olmsted’s ideas and built works today – from a deeper and broader cultural context (e.g. race, gender) to supporting and collaborating with individuals and organizations who are working in their communities to engage with Olmsted and his legacy. The talk will take place at Hawes Hall, 43 Hawes Street in Brookline. Register at https://www.tclf.org/olmsted-all-us-friends-fairsted

Charles A. Birnbaum, FASLA, FAAR, is President & CEO of The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF). Prior to creating TCLF, he spent fifteen years as Coordinator, National Park Service Historic Landscape Initiative and a decade in private practice in NYC with a focus on cultural landscapes and urban design. In 2023, TCLF was awared The Olmsted Medal from the American Society of Landscape Architects.

Birnbaum has authored/co-edited numerous publications including Modern Landscapes: Transition and Transformation (Princeton Press), Shaping the American Landscape (UVA Press), Design with Culture (UVA Press), Preserving Modern Landscape Architecture (Spacemaker Press), and Experiencing Olmsted (Timber Press). Birnbaum was a Loeb Fellow at Harvard’s GSD, and a Rome Prize recipient. He was awarded ASLA’s LaGasse Medal in 2008, President’s Medal in 2009, and the ASLA Medal (The Society’s highest honor in 2018). He serves as a Lecturer in Landscape Architecture at Harvard’s GSD (2020-); served as a Visiting Professor, Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture (2011-16); and Glimcher Distinguished Professor, Ohio State University (2007). From 2010-18 he was a frequent contributor to The Huffington Post. In 2021, TCLF unveiled the Cornelia Hahn Oberlander International Landscape Architecture Prize, a permanently endowed prize that includes a $100,000 (USD) award.

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Friday, December 1, 7:00 pm – 11:00 pm – Benefit Dance at Wright-Locke Farm

On Friday, December 1, support local nonprofits at a lively dance party is being hosted by Covering New England at Wright-Locke Farm’s All Seasons Barn in Winchester. The event will raise money for local nonprofits. Of course, the farm would love it if you picked Wright-Locke Farm from the list at checkout.

Your ticket will cover food and two free drinks. There will be cash prizes for Best Disco/Funk Outfit, Best Dance Couple, and Best Individual Dancer. PLUS… 20% of the event ticket is donated to the nonprofit 501(c)(3) of your choice.  For tickets visit https://covering-new-england.ticketleap.com/booty-vortex/

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Saturday, December 2, 6:00 pm – Boston Bhangra Competition 2023

You may wonder what this event has to do with horticulture, but in the winter, we gardeners need to get a little exercise, and this dance competition is inspirational. Teams from all over North America & Canada have deemed Boston Bhangra Competition “one of the best bhangra competitions” in the country, and the organization looks forward to living up to that title again this year. This year’s competition will be taking place on Saturday, December 2nd, 2023 @ the historic Strand Theatre in Boston. This theater is bigger and better than ever before. If you have any questions, please contact info@bostonbhangra.com. Miss Pooja as the featured artist this year. She is an artist of legendary status with over 4,000 songs to her name. In 2008, Miss Pooja was awarded the Best Female Vocalist award at the PTC Punjabi Music Awards for her song “”Akh Da Nishana””. In the same year, she was also awarded the Best Duet Vocalist along with Gurdas Maan for their song “”Tappe””. She has also won several other awards for her contribution to the Punjabi music industry. Buy tickets at https://bostonbhangra.com/bbc2023/?BostonTravel

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