Saturday, April 27, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm – Transplanting Shrubs and Planting Small Ornamental Trees

Learn by doing in this April 27 Berkshire Botanical Garden hands-on shrub and tree planting/transplanting workshop led by arborist Ken Gooch. All aspects of successful planting will be demonstrated, and participants will assist in transplanting a multi-stem shrub and planting a small tree. Learn how to successfully transplant shrubs through correct timing,placement, and techniques designed to create minimal disturbance and ensure smooth transition to a new site. Consider the differences between bare-root, container-grown, or balled-and-burlapped trees, and understand the importance of siting.

Participants should dress warmly and bring pruners and work gloves; dress for the weather.  $15 for BBG members, $25 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/transplanting-shrubs-and-planting-small-ornamental-trees-0

Ken Gooch is the Forest Health Program Director for the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and a Massachusetts Certified Arborist. He is a long-time instructor for the Berkshire Botanical Garden.

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Saturday, May 4 – Derby Day at Linden Place

Linden Place Mansion is an historic property in nearby Bristol, Rhode Island, visited by four US Presidents. Tour highlights include tales of DeWolf family exploits, from their privateering and slave trading to their financial ruin and triumphant return to prosperity during Victorian times. Docents introduce visitors to family members Pomeroy Colt, founder of United States Rubber, now Uniroyal, his mother Theodora DeWolf Colt, who as Madam Colt ran Bristol Society from Linden Place as if she was Queen Victoria, and the great actress Ethel Barrymore who married into this most prominent of American families. Visitors are welcome to stroll the sculpture-filled gardens where they will find Greek bronzes and an 18th Century gazebo. Don’t miss the recently opened Bristol Art Museum in Linden Place’s 19th Century Barn.

Can’t make it to Churchill Downs this May 4th? You can still get in on the Derby action because Linden Place Mansion is off to the races! Dig out your derby hat and bring out the seersucker jackets as Linden Place brings the spirit of the Kentucky Derby to Bristol, Rhode Island. The ultimate derby watching experience, Linden Place celebrates Kentucky Derby Day in true Colt family fashion with mint juleps, live music, great food, live streaming of the 145th annual Kentucky Derby, live and silent auction & more. With prizes for best dressed, biggest hat, best dressed couple and more this fundraiser for Linden Place Mansion is not to be missed!

The Derby Day Party will take place on Saturday, May 4, 2019. Tickets are available at https://lindenplace.org/derby-day-2019/. All proceeds benefit the ongoing restoration and preservation for work of Linden Place Mansion.

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Saturday, April 13, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Mushroom Cultivation Workshop

Growing edible mushrooms on oak logs is an easy and environmentally friendly method. Join Polly Hill Arboretum Horticulturist Oliver Osnoss on April 13 from 10 – 12 for a hands-on workshop inoculating locally sourced oak logs with shiitake (Lentinula edodes) mushroom spawn. Learn about the biology and process of mushroom cultivation for each of these two species. Bring home your own inoculated log and instructions for caring for your crop. Pack a lunch.

$65/$50 for PHA members. Pre-registration is required. Call 508-693-9426 to sign up.

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Tuesday, April 9, 7:30 pm – Strangers in the Night: Has Light Pollution Led to Firefly Declines

The Cambridge Entomological Club’s April meeting will take place Tuesday, April 9 at 7:30 pm in Room 101 of the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology on Oxford Street in Cambridge.

Why do fireflies flash? Because they want to be seen! But their unique bioluminescent courtship signals can be obscured by street lamps, house lights, and other sources of nighttime light pollution — and if we’re not careful, our lights might extinguish theirs forever. Learn more about the total impact of light pollution on firefly reproduction, and methods whereby fireflies, moths, and other essential members of the nocturnal ecosystem can continue to coexist with humans on this increasingly urbanized planet.

Avalon Owens is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Biology at Tufts University, where she studies the impact of light pollution on North American fireflies. She earned her Masters degree in Entomology from National Taiwan University, and hosts a bilingual educational YouTube channel called INSECT [昆蟲島] ISLAND.

The talk is free and open to the public. The meeting is readily accessible via public transportation. Parking is available in the Oxford Street Garage with advance arrangement, as described here, or (usually but not always) at spaces on nearby streets. Everyone is also welcome to join us for dinner before the talk (beginning at 5:45 PM) at the Cambridge Common, 1667 Mass Ave., Cambridge.

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Thursday, June 6 – Saturday, June 8 – Conefest at the Oregon Garden

We love attending the Conifer Society national meetings and we know their format: establish a headquarters in a hotel conveniently located near worthy conifer viewing, be it private, public or park. Board buses, visit conifers, repair to the hotel for dinner, rinse and repeat. It’s a great way to enjoy Coneheads and conifers. But what if our hotel was located in one of the most comprehensive and beautiful conifer gardens in the country? What if we could view choice specimens simply by walking out the doors of our rooms and into a conifer wonderland? That’s what you’ll be doing June 6 – 8, 2019 when the Western Region hosts the national meeting at The Oregon Garden Resort.

The Oregon Garden, an ACS Reference Garden, was established in the 1990s by the Oregon Association of Nurserymen to showcase the products of Oregon’s #1 industry, horticulture. In partnership with the ACS, largely through the efforts of our own Doug Wilson, TOG’s conifer collection has grown into one of the best places in the country for viewing choice cultivars, meticulously labeled, in beautiful combination with companion plants. Early June in Oregon is still very spring-like, with lingering blossoms, fresh new growth on conifers and the possibility of showers. The moist air, abundant rainfall and cool nights produce healthy, vigorous plants that often show themselves to be stellar specimens of their species.

Because TOG is so lovely (and because there is much, much more to see than the conifer collection), we are designing this meeting with ample time at the Resort. In fact, Saturday’s agenda is entirely at the Resort! No buses, flexible scheduling and a wide variety of activities should make for a relaxing, informative and fun day. We will not only have space in the schedule for viewing the conifers, we will have aesthetic pruning demonstrations, workshops and lectures, and free time for strolling, loafing or spa treatments. We will also provide suggestions for nearby attractions, such as Conifer Kingdom/Rare Tree Nursery (3 miles from TOG), Silver Falls State Park (11 miles from TOG) and Western Evergreen (14 miles from TOG). As there is no public transportation from the airport to the Garden, we expect that most of you will have rental cars. For those that don’t, we will have a group of volunteers who will happily provide transport and we plan to use TOG’s shuttle to get to and from Conifer Kingdom. We are still finalizing the schedule, but will release it with plenty of time for you to make any bookings you wish.

Our dinners, our breakfasts and one of our lunches will be onsite at the Resort or the Garden. Guests at the Resort can enter the Garden at any time, even when it is closed to the public. In June the days are long and the weather mild. You can stroll the conifers with coffee or cocktail in hand, and your room is close by if you need a wrap or an umbrella.

For the full itinerary and speaker list,  and details of a post meeting tour on Sunday, June 9, visit http://conifersociety.org/events/event/2019-national-meeting/

Image copyright Janice M. LeCocq for the American Conifer Society.

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Thursday, April 25, 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm – Swing Into Spring Gala

Join Nashoba Valley Winery for great food, good friends, and a fun night to benefit cancer support services at the Swing Into Spring Gala for the Virginia Thurston Healing Garden.

Enjoy gourmet hors d’oeuvre and desserts, locally vinted wines and craft beer, live music by Bare Hill Band, raffles, and an assortment of auction items you won’t want to miss. The event takes place at Nashoba Valley Winery, 100 Wattaquadock Hill Road in Bolton, Massachusetts. $75. Purchase tickets online at http://healinggardensupport.org

The Healing Garden Cancer Support Center is a beautiful facility located in 8 acres of woodlands and gardens. Its cancer care complements medical care and is instrumental in improving quality of life for all those who are affected by cancer.

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Saturday, May 4, 12:45 pm – World Labyrinth Day

CELEBRATE PUBLIC ART in collaboration with ArtWeek Boston, Age-FriendlyBoston Strong Commission, Boston APP/Lab, The Eliot K-8 Innovation School, Boston Public Schools, Greenway Conservancy, North End Waterfront, and SPARKBoston, with Friends of Heritage Park on Saturday, May 4. WELCOME 12:45pm. WORLD LABYRINTH DAY: WALK AS ONE AT 1pm. Join people in cities and towns in 35 countries worldwide walking as one in peace & harmony, immediately followed by the RECEPTION TO VIEW THE 2019 ABSTRACT SCULPTURE AT 1:30pm.

Remarks: Ted Touloukian, AIA, Board Chair, Boston Society of Architects Foundation, introducing Geometry as Public Art: Telling A Story, the curriculum developed in collaboration with The Eliot K-8 Innovation School, Boston Public Schools. Tea and desserts hosted by MEM Tea Imports and Eastern Lamejun Bakers
RSVP appreciated

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Thursday, April 18, 6:00 pm – Frontiers in Evolution

Frontiers in Evolution is a special event taking place April 18 at 6 pm in the Geological Lecture Hall of the Harvard Museum of Natural History, 24 Oxford Street in Cambridge, moderated by Andrew J. Berry, Lecturer on Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University

New approaches to studying evolutionary processes, from genomics to big data, have revolutionized the study of organisms across geological time and geographical space. Join us for a series of short “flash” lectures presented by Harvard graduate students and learn about the range of questions that scientists are asking today about evolution.

Evolution Matters Lecture Series

Series supported by a generous gift from Drs. Herman and Joan Suit

Free event parking at the 52 Oxford Street Garage

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Thursday, April 18, 12:00 noon – 1:30 pm – The Green Ideal: Botanical Practices and the Creation of Santiago’s Civic Landscape

The Harvard Graduate School of Design presents a free lecture by Romy Hecht on April 18 at 12 noon at 48 Quincy Street in Cambridge entitled The Green Ideal: Botanical Practices and the Creation of Santiago’s Civic Landscape.

Romy Hecht is a Professor at the School of Architecture, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (PUC), where she gives courses and research seminars on historical narratives and design theories of nineteenth- and twentieth-century landscapes. She holds a Ph.D. in History and Theory of Architecture from Princeton University and an M. Arch and professional degree in architecture from the PUC. She has been a Visiting Professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture at the GSD (2012), in the Ph.D in Architecture program at the Universidad Nacional de Rosario in Argentina (2016) and in the Master in Architecture program at the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Lima (2017). She is also a former fellow at Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, Washington, D.C. (2015, 2017–2018).

As an author and recipient of National Grants and research fellowships, Hecht has developed a fundamental task in the studies of landscape architecture in Latin America. She has focused on constructing a comprehensive history of Chile’s landscape projects, particularly in post-independence Santiago, describing how landscape strategies have been shaped by a dynamic relationship between botanical practices, political decisions and economic circumstances giving form to an arboreal culture that has transformed the city.

Anyone requiring accessibility accommodations should contact the events office at (617) 496-2414 or events@gsd.harvard.edu.

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Wednesday, April 17, 6:00 pm – The American Land Museum: Places as Cultural Artifacts

A free Public Lecture on Wednesday, April 17 entitled The American Land Museum: Places as Cultural Artifacts, will be given by Matthew Coolidge, Director, Center for Land Use Interpretation.

The Center for Land Use Interpretation explores how land in the United States is apportioned, utilized, and perceived. Through exhibitions and public programs, the Center interprets built landscapes—from landfills and urban waterfalls to artificial lakes—as cultural artifacts that help define contemporary American life and culture. Coolidge will discuss the Center’s approach to finding meaning in the intentional and incidental forms we create and also talk about the Center’s efforts to develop the American Land Museum, a curated selection of locations across the country that exemplifies our relationship with the American landscape.

The lecture will take place at the Harvard Art Museums, 32 Quincy Street, Cambridge, in Menschel Hall, Lower Level. Please enter the museums via the entrance on Broadway. Doors will open at 5:30 pm.

Free admission, but seating is limited. Tickets will be distributed beginning at 5:30 pm at the Broadway entrance. One ticket per person.

Free event parking at the Broadway Garage, 7 Felton Street

This Curatorial Innovations Lecture is presented by the Harvard Museums of Science & Culture in collaboration with the Harvard Art Museums and the Harvard Graduate School of Design

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