Thursday, May 23, 5:30 pm – 7:45 pm – Spring Greetings from Woodland Wildflowers

This Grow Native Massachusetts workshop on May 23 from 5:30 – 7:45 pm will be conducted entirely in the field.

Every spring in New England, we are greeted by a beautiful bouquet of flowers blooming throughout our woodlands. Many of these plants emerge early to soak up the sun before the forest canopy has fully leafed out, and quite a few species have co-evolved with early-emerging insect pollinators, resulting in unique, interdependent life cycles. Spring wildflowers are often delicate in appearance, belying their amazing toughness and adaptability. Join Meredith in a diverse and beautiful area of the Fells to get to know some of these flowers, and learn the best ways to incorporate them into a designed landscape.

Meredith Gallogly is the Manager of Programs at Grow Native Massachusetts. She is a skilled botanist, and much of her plant identification knowledge comes from her explorations of metro-Boston area parks and reservations. She holds a B.A. in Biology from Smith College.

https://connect.clickandpledge.com/w/Form/8ba7cfca-b5a9-4919-ae68-1ad2db248d21

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Thursday, May 23, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm – Seasonal Flower Arranging: Fill Your Home with Blooms, Branches, and Foraged Materials All Year Round

Meet Ariella Chezar, one of the most sought after and highly regarded floral designers in the world, and the author of the recently released book Seasonal Flower Arranging: Fill Your Home with Blooms, Branches, and Foraged Materials All Year Round. Published by Ten Speed Press, a division of Penguin Random House, this lavishly photographed book provides step-by-step instructions for 39 seasonal floral arrangements and projects that celebrate the splendor of flowers, the bounty of the changing seasons, and the wild beauty of nature in your home. This May 23 Berkshire Botanical Garden talk and book signing is co-presented with Berkshire Magazine.

Ariella Chezar is the author of The Flower Workshop and Flowers for the Table and a master floral designer who has appeared in numerous magazines, including O, Martha Stewart Living, and Real Simple. She is an instructor and artistic director at FlowerSchool New York, and has designed flower arrangements for the White House.

$10 for BBG members, $15 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/seasonal-flower-arranging-talk-and-book-signing-ariella-chezar$10 for BBG members, $15 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/seasonal-flower-arranging-talk-and-book-signing-ariella-chezar

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Thursday, July 11 – Saturday, July 13, 2019 – Blooms in Badgerland

The Wisconsin Daylily Society proudly invites you to the 2019 AHS National Convention in Madison, Wisconsin. The dates will be July 11-13, 2019.

Hotel: Marriott, Madison West. 1313 John Q Hammons Dr., Middleton WI 53562.  608-831-2000. There will be 7 tour gardens. Please mark your calendars and plan to enjoy. For complete information and registration material, visit http://oldsite.daylilies.org/AHSconv.html

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Saturdays, June 1 & 8, and Sundays, June 2 & 9, 1:00 pm – 2:15 pm and 5:00 pm – 6:15 pm – The Nature Plays

Tickets are on sale now for The Nature Plays, the first of two series of site-specific plays created by Mount Auburn Cemetery’s first Playwright Artist-in-Residence, Patrick Gabridge. Gabridge’s Mount Auburn plays will be presented in two sets of five unique plays each: The Nature Plays premiere June 1 – 9, highlighting stories inspired by the rich environment of Mount Auburn with topics such as spotted salamanders in Consecration Dell, birders at Auburn Lake, and historic debates between naturalists who are buried at the Cemetery. Audiences will experience the performances at various spots across the grounds, surrounded by the sights and sounds of the natural world. Each performance will be followed by a discussion.

The second series, The America Plays will run from September 14 – 22, bringing to life the drama, philosophies, and struggles shared by Mount Auburn founders Jacob Bigelow, sculptors Edmonia Lewis and Martin Milmore, and others whose personalities lie at the heart of America’s first large-scale designed landscape open to the public. Tickets for The America Plays will go on sale at a later date.

Approximate running time is 75 minutes. Total walking distance is 1.5 miles. The total walking distance includes some uneven terrain, unpaved paths, and steep inclines. Performances will take place twice each day, at 1 and 5, on June 1, June 2, June 8, and June 9. Tickets are $35 per person ($30 for Friends of Mount Auburn) and are available online at https://mountauburn.org/event/the-nature-plays-by-patrick-gabridge/

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Saturday, May 25, 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm – Color My World with Betsy Rogers-Knox

On May 25 from 1 – 4, at Hollister House Garden, 300 Nettleton Hollow Road in Washington, Connecticut, learn how to accurately mix watercolors to create a floral color wheel and explore a variety of hues found in plants. A basic understanding of color theory will enhance your paintings in any medium.

All levels welcome.

The watercolor workshops at Hollister House Garden are taught by Betsy Rogers-Knox. Betsy received a Certificate in Botanical Illustration from NYBG in 2006. Her work has been widely exhibited in the United States and at the Royal Horticultural Botanical Art Show in London where she was awarded the Silver Gilt Award.

Hollister House Garden members $50, nonmembers $65. Register at https://hollisterhousegarden.org/events/color-my-world-with-betsy-rogers-knox/

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Friday, May 31, 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm – Opening Reception: Shimmering Flowers

Berkshire Botanical Garden warmly welcomes Nancy Lorenz on Friday, May 31, 5 – 7 p.m. for an opening reception of its ART/GARDEN exhibition Shimmering Flowers: Nancy Lorenz’s Lacquer and Bronze Landscapes. The reception will include a demonstration presented by floral designer and ikebana master Kan Asakura.  

A New York City based artist, Nancy Lorenz incorporates techniques from traditional Asian crafts, drawing on her years spent living in Japan and a thirty-five-year career as a noted contemporary abstract painter. For Shimmering Flowers, Ms. Lorenz has created gilt and mother-of-pearl paintings that complement the Garden’s collection of flora and will also present table-top landscape vessels in cast bronze, creating a dialogue with the galleries and their surrounding gardens. Throughout the summer, these vessels will display arrangements created by a rotating group of talented floral designers whose interpretations of the art are reflected in unique displays of flowers and other natural materials.

Gallery hours June 1 – September 30:  Daily, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Free with Garden admission.
 

Shimmering Flowers is made possible through the generous assistance of the Dorothea L Leonhardt Foundation, Inc.

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Saturday, May 25, 10:00 am – 11:30 am – A New Perspective on Container Gardening

Jenna O’Brien, founder and owner of Viridissima Horticulture and Design, uses containers in the landscape to enhance and extend seasonal beauty, produce food and help create an authentic sense of place. In this May 25 Hollister House Garden illustrated presentation at 300 Nettleton Hollow Road in Washington, Connecticut, you will learn how Jenna carries out her container designs. Beginning with a discussion on functional and conceptual design she will talk about pot, plant and soil selection. The presentation will be followed by a hands-on demonstration and a lucky attendee will win the completed container.

Hollister House Garden members $25, non-members $35. Register at https://hollisterhousegarden.org/events/a-new-perspective-on-container-gardening/

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Saturday, May 25, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Blueberry Ridge Garden

The Garden Conservancy’s Martha’s Vineyard Open Day season begins May 25 from 10 – 3 at Blueberry Ridge Garden, 19 Blueberry Ridge Lane in Chilmark.

The garden is located on approximately 4.5 acres and was started in 2002, so many of the plantings are still relatively young. The largest, most mature rhodies are close to sixteen years old. It is located in a low area between two sets of hills to the north and south, crisscrossed by old stone walls. Although the plot was originally heavily wooded, and the soil is acidic, the high water table is a problem for growing rhododendrons. Native species to this area are highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum), cinnamon and royal fern (Osmunda cinnamomea and O. regalis), summersweet (Clethra alnifolia), swamp azalea (Rhododendron viscosum), holly and inkberry (Ilex opaca and I. glabra), sheep laurel (Kalmia angustifolia), and a “river” of skunk cabbage along the stream under a canopy of tall pitch pines (Pinus rigida), red and white oak, beetlebung or tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica) and swamp maples (Acer rubrum). The latter two have shallow root systems that compete with the plantings for moisture and nutrients. This area is dominated by a 60-foot-tall Metasequoia.

There are also spring ephemeral plantings, which likely will have gone past (anemone, star flower). There are two man-made ponds with water lilies and water hyacinth. There are lots of frogs, turtles, and a stressed-out goldfish population (predation by otters, ospreys, herons). Main plant species collections include rhodies, Japanese maples, and hydrangeas, with smaller groupings of mountain laurels (mostly from Broken Arrow Nursery) and tree peonies.

The owners have a substantial number of Dexter rhodies, bred for the maritime Cape Cod climate, many of which are fragrant! In the fencedin yard behind the house are two large herbaceous perennial beds, two mature apple trees, a small grouping of fruit trees, hydrangea row, Satsuki azaleas, mature yak hybrids, Kalmia, and several Stewartia. The main rhodie plantings total over 1,400 hybrids and species. They extend away from the house along the driveway, a large area near the left of the lower pond, and a smaller grouping on the other side of the pond. The two nurseries contain over 300 seedlings and plants from many sources. A grove of more than a dozen beetlebungs (Nyssa sylvatica) has been turned into a “damp garden” of ferns planted among stumps carried in from the woods, and other shade/moisture-loving plants like Arisaema (check out the Arisaema sikokianum with a pure white spathe and striped hood), Trillium, and Epimedium. Please be careful of the many surface roots, courtesy of the maples and beetlebungs. Some of the paths, especially in the seedling nurseries, are very narrow, and only one person at a time can pass. The owners really enjoy answering questions about the garden. $10 per person admission. Visit www.gardenconservancy.org for more information and directions.

Read more here about Garden Host Peter Norris and his rhododendron obsession via Martha’s Vineyard magazine!

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Friday, May 31, 11:00 am – 12:00 noon – Radcliffe Sunken Garden

Join the Native Plant Trust and the Boston Society of Landscape Architects on May 31 from 11 – 12 for a landscape study of the award-winning Sunken Garden at the Harvard Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, led by its landscape architects. Stimson Associates carefully balanced preserving the site’s historic character with accounting for contemporary needs and values, all while incorporating swaths of shade-loving native plants. This is a unique opportunity to learn about Harvard’s largest garden from the people who brought it back to its glory! $12 for members of NPT, $14 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/radcliffe-sunken-garden/

The Sunken Garden by Radcliffe Yard at Harvard University Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
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