• Saturday, February 8, 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm – Wine Tasting and Talk of Boston-Developed Heirloom Grape Varieties

    Join The Massachusetts Horticultural Society on February 8 for an afternoon of wine and knowledge as we explore heirloom grapes and the wines they create.

    The life, grapes, and wines of E. S. Rogers of Salem, MA (1826-1899) will be featured at this late-afternoon talk by J. Stephen Casscles. Stephen is a Hudson Valley winemaker at the Hudson-Chatham Winery who grows many of the heirloom grape varieties that were developed by Edward S. Rogers in 1851. During our time we will talk about Rogers’ efforts to breed superior grapes in Salem, MA., his resultant grape varieties, how they grow in the field, and the kinds of wines that they make. Rogers named grape varieties include:  ‘Salem’, ‘Agawam’, Merrimac’, ‘Massasoit’, and ‘Wilder’ .

    $55/ MHS member. $75/general admission. Register here.

  • Sunday, January 26, 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm – Gibson and Prescott House “Little Women” Behind-the-Scenes Movie Tour

    The Gibson House and its Boston House Museum Alliance partner, the Federal-style Prescott House, are both featured in the upcoming “Little Women” movie, adapted from Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel. Come for a behind-the-scenes look at locations featured in the film and stories about the filming. Tours of the houses will be followed by a wine and cheese reception at the Prescott House. 

    Tickets for the tour of both houses and reception are $45; pre-registration is necessary at Eventbrite. Space is limited!

    Emma Watson, Florence Pugh, Saoirse Ronan, and Eliza Scanlen as Meg, Amy, Jo, and Beth March. Photo by Wilson Webb, copyright CTMG, Inc., courtesy Sony Pictures
  • Tuesday, January 28, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm – Franklin Park Master Plan Community Workshop

    Over the next 18 months, the City of Boston is partnering with a team of landscape architects, planners, ecologists, and community engagement experts to create a master plan for an engaging and diverse Franklin Park. Help shape the future of the park and connections to the surrounding neighborhoods. This first meeting will take place January 28 from 6 – 8 at the William J. Devine Golf Course Clubhouse (and if you haven’t been, it’s worth the trip.) William J. Devine Golf Course at Franklin Park was established October 26, 1896 and is the second oldest public golf course in the nation behind Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx borough of New York City. Snow date: Thursday, January 30 from 6:00 – 8:00 pm


  • Saturday, February 8, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – What’s Your Plant Story? Zine Workshop

    Tell the story of your life with plants. Do you grow things? Do family or relatives tend gardens or farms? What is your relationship to the land you live on? Join instructor Alena Mcnamara in the Tower Hill Library on February 8 from 1 – 3 and create your own “zine”–a small photocopied and often hand-drawn magazine that can incorporate images, text, and more–to share your story with friends, family, and others in your community. Fee ($5 for Tower Hill members, $19 for nonmembers) includes materials. Register at www.towerhillbg.org.

  • Tuesday, January 14, 7:30 pm – Mound-building Termites and How They Coordinate Their Work

    The public is invited to attend the January meeting of the Cambridge Entomological Club on Tuesday, January 14, at 7:30 pm at Harvard University, 26 Oxford Street MCZ 101. Dr. Justin Werfel, Senior Research Scientist at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, will present a talk entitled Mound-building Termites and How They Coordinate Their Work.

    Termites construct complex mounds that are orders of magnitude larger than any individual and fulfill a variety of functional roles for the colony. The traditional understanding of how the insects organize their efforts focuses on stigmergy, a form of indirect communication in which actions change the environment and thereby provide cues that influence future work. Dr. Werfel will discuss studies that point to the importance of cues including surface geometry, active excavation, and humidity, but, surprisingly, show no role for the putative cement pheromone that has been central to the theory for six decades. There will also be robots!

    Justin Werfel leads the Designing Emergence Laboratory. His research interests are in the understanding and design of complex and emergent systems, with work in areas including swarm robotics, social insect behavior, evolutionary theory, engineered molecular nanosystems, and educational technology. His work has been featured by numerous national and international media, highlighted among Science’s “top 10 scientific achievements of 2014”, and denounced by a former assistant secretary of the US Treasury as “an enemy of the human race.” (which to our mind is high praise) The meeting is free.

  • Thursday, February 6, 8:30 am – 4:30 pm – Urban Tree Symposium: The Future of the Urban Forest

    Join Tower Hill Botanic Garden and the Ecological Landscape Alliance on February 6 from 8:30 – 4:30 (snow date February 7) as experts in the field explore the importance of our urban forests, as well as ways we can create sustainable urban forests for the future.

    Lectures include:

    The State of the Urban Forest in the Northeast – Chris Roddick, Head Arborist, Brooklyn Botanic Garden

    Using Technology to Manage the Urban Forest – David J. Nowak, PhD, Senior Scientist / i-Tree Team Leader, US Forest Service

    Management Options for Insect Pests of Trees and Shrubs – Tawny Simisky, Extension Entomologist, UMass Extension Landscape, Nursery, and Urban Forestry Program

    Tree Selection, Establishment, and Care – Bill Logan, Founder and President of Urban Arborists

    How to Increase the Urban Canopy – Panel Discussion

    Breakfast and lunch are included. $110 for members of sponsoring organizations, $125 for general public. Register online at www.towerhillbg.org.

  • Wednesday, March 11 – Sunday, March 15 – Boston Flower & Garden Show 2020: Garden Party, Celebrating Friends & Family

    The Boston Flower & Garden Show has a century-long history of providing a breath of spring and brief reprieve from the New England winter. The show inspires, educates, and motivates the region’s gardeners. It’s a great place to discover new ideas, and have a lot of fun at the same time.

    The 2020 show runs from March 11 – 15, 2020, and is held at the Seaport World Trade Center in Boston. This year’s theme is Garden Party, Celebrating Friends & Family. Tickets may be purchased in advance at www.masshort.org.

  • Saturday, February 1, 1:30 pm – 2:30 pm – Warm Room

    Warm Room: Photographs from Historic Greenhouses (2019) is the culmination of a twenty year project that began at the Planting Fields Arboretum on Long Island where the author Peter Moriarty lived in 1996. Significant American sites were added as the series of gelatin-silver prints evolved. Site notes were made for each of the locations. In 2010 a major grant permitted the addition of British and European works to contrast with the American photographs. Research at the Mertz library at the New York Botanical Garden set the itinerary for a two month excursion. There are 58 photographs in the book, which have been carefully scanned by Thomas Palmer. In addition there are 13 architectural drawings from both Royal and public archives in the US, UK, BE and FR. Botanists at the various conservatories have provided the proper Latin names for plants within his photographs. Ernesto Aparicio designed the book, which will we be printed by Verona Libri, Italy in October, 2019. Prints from this project are now in several collections (Princeton Art Museum, Yale University Art Gallery, Davison Art Gallery at Wesleyan University, Mt. Holyoke College Art Museum, Hood Museum of Art at Dartmouth College and the Worcester Art Museum) and a key set is in the Mertz Library. Moriarty published Lotte Jacobi Photographs with David Godine (Boston, MA 2003). BigTown Gallery in Rochester, Vermont represents his work.

    Peter Moriarty’s Warm Room photographs and photogenic subject matter lend themselves beautifully to the gelatin-silver technique. The striking plant forms juxtaposed with glass house architecture provides an intriguing contrast between the built and natural environments. The Warm Room series is rich in tonal variation and texture offering a unique viewpoint into a world rarely imagined. Peter Moriarty is an emeritus professor of art, who taught both in the Vermont State Colleges and at the Trinity School in NYC. He is the author of Lotte Jacobi Photographs (2003) and his prints are represented by BigTown Gallery in Rochester, Vermont. His work is in numerous public collections including the Princeton, Yale, Dartmouth, Mt.Holyoke.

    Join the author for a talk and book signing on February 1 at Tower Hill Botanic Garden beginning at 1:30 pm. $10 for Tower Hill members, $20 for nonmembers. Books will be available for purchase (extra).

  • Tuesday, January 28, 10:30 am – 11:30 am – Fun With Flowers

    The Garden Club Federation of Massachusetts, Inc. presents Fun with Flowers on Tuesday, January 28 from 10:30 – 11:30 at St. Brigid’s Church Lower Hall, 1981 Massachusetts Avenue in Lexington. Easily arrange flowers to use seasonally and every day. Learn how to make simple and elegant designs to impress guests and beautify your home. The demonstration will be given by Kathy Leva, and accredited flower show judge and Lexington Field & Garden Club member. The cost is $5, payable at the door. To sign up, email kathryn.leva@gmail.com by January 14.

  • Saturday, February 1 – Tuesday, March 31 – The Orchid Show

    You won’t want to miss Tower Hill’s first-ever Orchid Show. Inspired by street art, this inaugural show is spectacular and immersive. In the Limonaia, visitors are greeted with incredible and lush displays of orchids and tropical plants, integrated seamlessly with custom-made graffiti art by local Worcester artist Croc. Colorful art displays continue throughout the Milton Gallery. Visitors will enjoy an exciting lineup of event weekends and adult and youth programming. This never-before-seen combination of street art and orchids is beautiful, dramatic, and inspiring!

    Opening weekend, Saturday and Sunday, February 1 and 2, includes paper orchid making, an artist talk with graffiti artist Croc, orchid pin making, and tours. Complete information may be found at https://www.towerhillbg.org/orchid-show/