Thursday, October 14, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm – Frederick Law Olmsted Lecture: Jamaica Kincaid

Jamaica Kincaid is a widely acclaimed and fiercely original writer known for her novels, short stories, and essays, including writings on her life as a gardener. She was also staff writer for the New Yorker from 1973 to 1996 and has been a contributor for the Village Voice.

She is beloved by generations of readers who discovered her fiction, including Annie John and “Girl,” in high school and is admired by critics for her daring and unorthodox body of work. Answering claims that her fiction and essays are characterized by anger, Kincaid says, “The important thing isn’t whether I’m angry. The more important thing is, is it true? Do these things really happen? I think I’m saying something true. I’m not angry … The way I think of it is that I’m telling the truth.”

In the New York Review of Books, Darryl Pinckney wrote, “Kincaid’s rhythms and the circularity of her thought patterns in language bring Gertrude Stein to mind. She is an eccentric and altogether impressive descendant.”

Kincaid is the recipient of a Guggenheim grant and has been nominated for the National Book Award. She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2004 and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2009.

Kincaid was born in Antigua, British West Indies, in 1949, and arrived in the United States in 1965 to work as an au pair. In 1973, she changed her name from Elaine Cynthia Potter Richardson to Jamaica Kincaid, mostly to prevent her parents from finding out that she was writing. She’s now the mother of two grown children and is a professor in the African and African American Studies department at Harvard University.

This year’s Harvard Graduate School of Design Frederick Law Olmsted Lecture will take place October 14, online.

Click here to register for Frederick Law Olmsted Lecture: Jamaica Kincaid. The event will also be live streamed to the Harvard GSD YouTube page. Only viewers who are attending the lecture via Zoom will be able to submit questions for the Q+A. If you would like to submit questions for the speaker in advance of the event, please click here. Live captioning will be provided during this event. 

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Thursday, October 14, 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm – Envisioning Landscapes: The Transformative Landscapes of OJB, Online

Join James Burnett, FASLA, founding partner of OJB Landscape Architecture, as he shares selected projects from the firm’s first monograph, published by Monacelli. Winner of the 2020 National Design Award for Landscape Architecture from the Cooper-Hewitt, Smithsonian National Design Museum, OJB is known for work that affirms the public realm and its power to transform. This online program on October 14 at 2 is sponsored by The Garden Conservancy, and is $40. including a copy of the book, for nonmembers. Register at https://www.gardenconservancy.org/store/virtual-talk-book-10-14-21-envisioning-landscapes-the-transformative-environments-of-ojb

With compelling imagery, Jim Burnett will share how seminal projects from the firm’s practice have transformed their communities and continue to surprise and delight visitors.

Featured projects include:

  • Sunnylands Center and GardenA cultural destination in Southern California that celebrates its arid setting and expresses the surprising vibrancy of the California desert ecosystem.
  • Klyde Warren ParkCreated over one of the busiest freeways in Dallas, this park has restored connections between city districts and established a new public-private partnership model for transforming cities.
  • Hall WineryA blend of modern and traditional, the project transforms an industrial wine-making campus of outdated Butler buildings into a welcoming garden oasis.
  • Myriad Botanical Gardens: The renovation and expansion of this public park is part of a larger connected initiative to return open space to a revitalized, walkable downtown in Oklahoma City, OK.
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Wednesday, October 20, 10:30 am – 12:30 pm – Harvest Wreath

Celebrate the richness of the autumn season at Tower Hill Botanic Garden on October 20 from 10:30 – 12:30. Create a wreath rich in autumn colors and textures. We’ll use preserved fall leaves, green leaves, golden yarrow, various grains, miniature corn, pods and seasonal berries to create a 16” wreath suitable for a sheltered door, porch, interior wall or table decoration. Finish the wreath with colorful fall ribbons or raffia to coordinate with your home.

All materials are included in this program. If you register as a pair you will receive ONE SET of supplies.

Instructor Betsy Williams teaches, lectures and writes about living with herbs and flowers. A lifelong gardener, herb grower and cook, Betsy trained as a florist in Boston and England. She combines her floral, gardening and cooking skills with an extensive knowledge of history, plant lore and seasonal celebrations. An entertaining lecturer, she weaves stories and legends throughout her informative talks and demonstrations. Her gardens, floral work and retail shop have been featured in many books, national magazines and newspapers, including The New York Times, The American Gardener, Victoria, Better Homes and Gardens, Country Living Gardner, Colonial Homes, the Herb Companion, and Traditional Homes.

$85 Member Adult; $100 Adult; $115 Adult Pair (Registration includes admission to the Garden) Register HERE

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Wednesday, October 20, 10:00 am – An Update on the Boston City Hall Project,Online

The Garden Club of the Back Bay’s October meeting will take place October 20 at 10:00 am online on Zoom. Kate Tooke, Associate Principal, ASLA, PLA, will discuss the Boston City Hall Plaza redesign and the next stages in the process. The City of Boston has a short video we recommend to bring you up to speed on the project before the meeting: https://www.boston.gov/departments/public-facilities/city-hall-plaza-renovation

Kate is a landscape architect at Sasaki. Her project leadership, strategic thinking, design eye, and technical skills have been instrumental in the success of diverse projects ranging from master planning to site-scale work. As a naturally interdisciplinary thinker, she excels at collaborating across disciplines to craft elegant, contextual solutions to complex design challenges.

Prior to discovering landscape architecture, Kate was a high school math and physics teacher in the Boston Public School system. Her passion for inspiring and empowering urban youth infuses her work as a landscape architect. She values engaging stakeholders in the design of their own urban public spaces through lively workshops, and is particularly interested civic open spaces that support the play and learning of city children. Kate pursues independent research on children’s outdoor environments, including schoolyards, playscapes, and outdoor classrooms.

Kate holds a master’s degree in landscape architecture from the University of Massachusetts, a master’s degree in education from Lesley University, and a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from Dartmouth College. She earned the 2011 National Olmsted Scholar award, the highest honor of the Landscape Architecture Foundation (LAF), for her work on urban schoolyards, and has since served on LAF’s board of directors. Kate remains active in the academic world through teaching appointments at the Rhode Island School of Design and University of Massachusetts Amherst as well as through volunteer work with local public schools.

Please note: As COVID and its variants create new challenges, we have decided to hold this presentation virtually on ZOOM. If you are a Garden Club member, you will receive a notice. If you are not a member and are interested in attending, click HERE and we will put you on the notification list.

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Wednesdays, October 13 & 20, 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm – Botanical Names for the Fearful, Online

In this two-session Berkshire Botanical course offered on Zoom on October 13 & 20 at 5:30 pm, led by Judith Summer, we will begin with a tour of the plant kingdom with attention to plant names and their history. We’ll explore the work of Linnaeus and the origin of botanical binomials — the naming system in place since 1753 — and decode the Latin and Greek roots that occur commonly in plant names. Illustrated lectures will weave botanical nomenclature with science, exploration, history, and the state of modern plant names, from the ancient Doctrine of Signatures to modern DNA analysis. We’ll also discuss why names sometimes change (Hint: not to vex gardeners!). Visuals will include both familiar plants and some that are quite rare, accompanied by explanation and decoding of their botanical names. An opportunity to gain confidence in dealing with scientific plant names, we will examine several techniques for learning names with ease, and the course will conclude with a collaborative “quiz” to pool our collective knowledge. Participants will receive two recent articles written by Judith Sumne on Linnaean history and the useful details of botanical nomenclature.

Judith Sumner is classically trained botanist and author who specializes in ethnobotany, flowering plants, plant adaptations and garden history. She is a graduate of Vassar College and completed her graduate studies in botany at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. She studied at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew; at the British Museum; the Jardin des Plantes; and did extensive field work in the Pacific region on the genus Pittosporum. In addition to writing, her projects include field studies in the Great Smoky Mountains and work with the United Nations developing petroleum-rich plants in the Caribbean. She served as a visiting scientist for several summers in the LEAP (Learning about Plants) program at Harvard for Boston school teachers and has volunteered as a National Public Radio Science mentor. Judith has been the scientist-in-residence at the Star Island Natural History Conference and a guest on the “Martha Stewart Living” TV show, the PBS program “Cultivating Life,” and various other PBS and educational programs. She lectures widely and is an award-winning writer including: The Natural History of Medicinal Plants (Timber Press); American Household Botany (Timber Press); and Plants Go to War: A Botanical History of World War II.

$30 for BBG members, $45 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/botanical-names-fearful

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Wednesday, October 6, 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm – Prepping Garden Beds for Winter, Online

As tired as gardeners are by autumn there are still a few tasks to accomplish before both the gardeners and their gardens can take a break over winter. In this October 6 Tower Hill Botanic Garden webinar Philip Bauerle will discuss all of the ways to prep your garden for the cold season. These tasks will ensure you have a good start next spring. Get prepped now as you get the last few weeks of autumn!

Philip Bauerle studied Biology at the College of Wooster (Ohio, not Mass.). Philip became a Penn State Master Gardener in 2012 and then Master Gardener Coordinator in 2013. After 5 years with the Master Gardeners Philip went to private industry as a plant health care technician.

$10 Member Adult; $15 Adult Register at www.towerhillbg.org

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Wednesdays, October 6 – October 27, 1:00 pm – 2:30 pm – Unforgettable Gardens: Surrey, Online

The Gardens Trust, in partnership with Surrey Gardens Trust, will sponsor a series of four online talks on Wednesdays, October 6 – October 27, from 1 – 2:30 Eastern Time.

This ticket costs £16 for the entire course of 4 sessions or you may purchase a ticket for individual sessions, costing £5 via the links below.

Attendees will be sent a Zoom link 2 days prior to the start of the talk, and again a few hours before the talk. A link to the recorded session (available for 1 week) will be sent shortly afterwards.

Surrey Gardens Trust are delighted to share some very special and unforgettable gardens from their rich legacy of historic parks and gardens

Week 1. 6 Oct. Sutton Place: Part of a series of 4 online lectures, £5 each or all 4 for £16.

Sutton Place is a Grade I Tudor mansion with a Grade II Registered Garden, four miles north of Guildford, on rising ground in the crook of the River Wey. It is an exquisite confection of brick, stone and terracotta and was the home of Sir Richard Weston, friend and courtier of Henry VIII. To the west of the house, a walled garden and small octagonal pavilion survive. Sometime before 1700, a double lime avenue was planted leading northwards. Little was added to the garden. But in the early twentieth century, Lord and Lady Northcliffe created a fashionable wild garden, rose gardens, and a small water garden with some input from Gertrude Jekyll. Later owners were the Duke and Duchess of Sutherland. They entertained lavishly, hosting influential visitors, including the Duke of Windsor and Winston Churchill.

In 1959, American millionaire J. Paul Getty bought the property, who lived there surrounded by his art collection until his death in 1976. The next owner, Stanley Seeger, commissioned Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe to design new gardens in 1980. This immense project, inspired by psychology, symbolism and Renaissance and Modern Art, was only partially implemented, but Jellicoe’s surviving plans and writing are evidence of his imaginative and exciting ideas. He saw the design as an allegory of Creation, Life and Aspiration. Although Sutton Place is closed to visitors, it remains an important Surrey Garden. Those who have experienced it have found it truly unforgettable.

Presenter Cherrill Sands is a garden historian with an MA in the Conservation of Gardens, Landscapes & Parks from the Architectural Association, London. She is the Historical Consultant for Painshill in Surrey and teaches and presents garden history and theatre talks. Cherrill has been a member of Surrey Gardens Trust for over twenty-five years and is a former Chair and member of Council. She remains part of their Research and Recording team.

Week 2. 13 Oct. Munstead Wood: Part of a series of 4 online lectures, £5 each or all 4 for £16.

As anyone with an interest in garden history will know, the garden at Munstead Wood was the creation of Gertrude Jekyll, who lived there from the early 1880s until her death in 1932.

When Miss Jekyll bought the 15 acres (6 ha) of acid heathland across the lane from her mother’s house, Munstead House, in 1882, most of the triangular plot had been logged of its pines and had developed a secondary growth of oak, sweet chestnut and pine with an understorey of holly. From an unprepossessing start, Miss Jekyll created a garden that achieved international renown. Her efforts were described in her books Wood and Garden (1899), Home and Garden (1900) and especially in Colour in the Flower Garden (1908), later published as Colour Schemes for the Flower Garden.

The enormous success of this last book leaves many people with the impression that Miss Jekyll cared only for colour, but in the closing remarks in the book, she wrote, ‘If in the foregoing chapters I have dwelt rather insistently on matters of colour, it is not that I under-rate the equal importance of form and proportion, but that I think that the question of colour, as regards its more careful use, is either more commonly neglected or has had fewer exponents.’

In his talk, Richard Bisgrove will outline the full range of Gertrude Jekyll’s gardening interests at Munstead Wood and comment on the challenges of caring for the garden in the 21st century.…..

Richard Bisgrove gained a First-Class Honours degree in Horticultural Science at Reading (1965), a Master’s in Landscape Architecture at the University of Michigan (1969), and then worked briefly as a landscape architect in Florida before returning to the University of Reading to lecture in Amenity Horticulture. In 1986, at Reading, he introduced Britain’s first-degree course in Landscape Management, retiring as its Director in 2009.Richard was for many years a member of the Council and Conservation Committee of the Garden History Society. He served for nineteen years on the Gardens Panel of the National Trust. He has lectured internationally and written eight books on aspects of garden design and garden history, including The National Trust Book of the English Garden (Viking 1990; Penguin 1992), The Gardens of Gertrude Jekyll (Frances Lincoln 1992; University of California Press 2000) and William Robinson: the wild gardener (Frances Lincoln 2008). Richard has been awarded the Veitch Memorial Medal by the Royal Horticultural Society, the Peter Youngman Award by the President of the Landscape Institute and Honorary Fellowship of the Kew Guild.

Week 3. 20 Oct. Muslim Memorial Peace Garden: Part of a series of 4 online lectures, £5 each or all 4 for £16.

This unique Grade II listed site is situated on the southeast corner of Horsell Common. Established in 1917, it was the original resting place for the 24 wounded Muslim soldiers who died at hospitals in England after serving our country during World War I and II. In the 1960s, the site was vandalised regularly, and the bodies were moved to the Military Cemetery at Brookwood.

During the summer of 2013, work began to restore the empty interior of the Muslim Burial Ground’s structure to create a garden of peace and reminiscence. The garden is now a significant site and a truly contemplative garden space which provides a focal point for acts of commemoration and remembrance, dedicated to all the Muslim soldiers of the British Indian Army who died during both wars.

Elizabeth Cuttle has a degree in Environment and Landscape studies and later studied horticulture at Merrist Wood and Nescot.She is a long-term member of Surrey Gardens Trust and served on Council for four years. She has been a Trustee of Horsell Common Preservation Society, who own Horsell Common in Woking and the Muslim Burial Ground, for twelve years. She was appointed to work with Dr Zafar Iqbal of Woking Borough Council on the project to restore the Muslim Burial Ground. For personal reasons, she knew how much memorials to fallen soldiers mean and felt privileged to be involved in the project.

Week 4. 27Oct. Albury Park: Part of a series of 4 online lectures, £5 each or all 4 for £16.

Albury Park in Surrey lies in the sheltered valley formed by the little stream the Tillingbourne. Within the park’s pleasure grounds remain much of the gardens designed by John Evelyn in the 1660s for his friend Henry Howard, 2nd Earl of Arundel. The original two 390m metre long immaculately grassed terraces, each 12 metres deep, dominate the rising ground to the north and are both backed by high walls. At the centre of the top terrace is an exedra with 13 niches, to the front of which is a semi-circular pool and fountain dated 1666. The central niche contains the entrance to the 150-metre tunnel or crypta under Silver Hill – a reference to the Grotto at Posilippo near Naples with its illusions to Virgil. The lower terrace has a Bath House at its centre. The brick-vaulted room has three rounded niches on three sides with the original showerheads over each. This private garden contains many superb specimen trees planted in the early eighteenth century, which are still being added to by the present owner, the Duke of Northumberland. Evelyn perhaps created the gardens as a memory theatre to Italy and the memory of the 1st Earl of Arundel in whose circle Evelyn spent his early years. In the 1630s, Arundel had created a somewhat similar garden on the same spot as Evelyn’s. A series of drawings by Wenceslaus Hollar survive.

Following retirement from Brooklands College, Presenter Jan Clark joined Painshill in 2001 after enjoying an extramural course on garden history while at the University of Surrey. Since then, she has been at Painshill as a volunteer guide, speaker, and researcher. She has written articles in the Garden History Journal, the Folly Fellowship, and Surrey Garden Trust. She has been a member since the early 2000s.

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Saturday, October 8, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm – Protecting Specimen Trees and Standing Forests from Asiatic Bittersweet

Bittersweet, the tree-killing vine, can undo a century of forest succession in a generation by strangling, encapsulating, and collapsing trees, resulting in dramatic reduction of carbon sequestration and eco-system services. Learn how land trusts, parks and campuses are efficiently and effectively defeating invasive vines and shrubs, maintaining trails and restoring inherent beauty and balance to natural areas. This Berkshire Botanical Garden talk will take place October 8 from 11 – 1 at the Garden in West Stockbridge.

Tom Zetterstrom’s photographic record reveals a changing landscape impacted by species decline, alien plant invasion and forest collapse. In these talks he will describe projects in Connecticut and Massachusetts that have protected trees in natural and community forests. In 1999 he co-founded Elm Watch. Tom received the 2011 Public Awareness of Trees award from the National Arbor Day Foundation and the 2013 Connecticut Urban Forest Council’s meritorious service award for efforts “to educate and promote positive change regarding trees and plants.” He is recognized for his Portraits of America Trees exhibition and his photographs are in the collections of 43 museums nationally.

$10 for BBG members, $15 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/protecting-specimen-trees-and-standing-forests-asiatic-bittersweet

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Thursday, October 7, 1:00 pm – 3:30 pm – Gel Plate Fall Leaves Collage

Join artist and teacher Suzanne Hauerstein on October 7 from 1 – 3:30 at Tower Hill Botanic Garden for an all levels crafting class. In this workshop you will create dozens of botanical and abstract prints using acrylic paints and a commercially made gelatin plate. You will use those prints and other vintage ephemera to create an artwork collage piece ready for framing to hang on your wall! All materials will be provided for this workshop.

Suzanne Hauerstein is a professional teaching artist and the Coordinator of Volunteer & Intern Services at Tower Hill. She has over 25 years of experience designing and facilitating art-based programs for informal learning environments. Suzanne is committed to creating programs that are accessible, positive, and enjoyable learning experiences for students of all ages and abilities.

$40 Member Adult; $55 Adult (Registration includes admission to the Garden) Register HERE.

Additional Program Information

  1. All materials will be provided for this workshop.
  2. Please note, there is currently construction happening at Tower Hill, which may result in altered or obstructed walkways, parking lots, or parking spaces, in addition to some noise.
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Thursdays, October 7, 21, & November 4, 10:30 am – 1:30 pm – Seed Conservation

Seed banking, or ex situ conservation, is an effective method of conserving our rare and endangered flora for future generations. Join Michael Piantedosi at Garden in the Woods in Framingham on Thursdays, October 7, 21, and November 4 at 10:30 am as we explore the process of procuring, cleaning, and accessioning seeds in a seed bank. We will focus on this process in three parts: seed collection (part 1), seed cleaning and processing (part 2), and seed storage for indefinite freezing at 0°F (part 3). This course is suitable for professional conservationists as well as those interested in peeking behind the curtain at Native Plant Trust’s regional seed bank. $ 162 for Native Plant Trust members, $198 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/seed-conservation/

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