Sunday, September 23 – Sunday, September 30 – Climate Preparedness Week

During September 23–30, 2018, Communities Responding to Extreme Weather (CREW) marks the first annual Climate Preparedness Week, a week dedicated to learning, service, and actions that better prepare our communities for extreme weather events. By coming together, we also hope to provide the resources and space to think about the ways that climate change disadvantages some communities more than others.

These events will be a special opportunity to connect with like-minded, motivated individuals and organizations in the Greater Boston area. In doing so, we hope to both make an immediate impact in our communities, and spark a long-term conversation about climate preparedness. Individuals, families, groups, and communities can register climate preparedness-related activities that week, or join a project in their region. There are no limits to creativity or scale: panel discussions, tree-planting, emergency training, open-mic performances, activist art, space for reflection, and even more—every activity related to climate preparedness is welcome!

Join our growing list of partners, including…

Boston Climate Action Network, the Boston Public Health Commission, several branches of the Boston Public Library, the Boston Student Advisory Council, the Cambridge City Council, the Climate Action Business Association, Climate Ready Boston, Eastie Farm, Friends of the Middlesex Fells, GreenCambridge, Greenovate Boston, The Harborkeepers, the Metropolitan Area Planning Council, Mothers Out Front, the Mystic River Watershed, the New England Aquarium, Sierra Club Massachusetts Chapter, St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral, “What’s up Eastie?”, Williams College, and more!

For the complete list of events, including the Farm Kickoff with Green Cambridge at the Hurley Street Neighborhood Farm on September 23, visit https://www.climatecrew.org/prep_week?locale=en

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Saturday, September 22, 2:00 pm – 5:00 pm – Dinner from the Ground Up: A Menu to Welcome Fall

Join cookbook author Alana Chernila on Saturday, September 22 from 2 – 5 in the Center House at Berkshire Botanical Garden in Stockbridge for a meal to honor the gorgeous vegetables of the New England Fall with a menu from her new book, Eating From the Ground Up: Recipes for Simple, Perfect Vegetables. This will be a hands-on class, so push up your sleeves and get ready to make watermelon radishes with herb compound butter, scarlet turnip galettes with from-scratch pie pastry, miso greens, and butternut squash custard with bourbon pecans. All vegetables will be sourced locally and at their peak. We’ll discuss how to find and store the best vegetables, as well as tricks to bring out the best in every root and leaf. Students will share a light meal together to truly celebrate the bounty of the Berkshires. All participants will receive a free signed copy of Eating From the Ground Up.

Alana Chernila is the author of three books: The Homemade Pantry, The Homemade Kitchen, and Eating From the Ground Up: Recipes for Simple, Perfect, Vegetables. She also writes, cooks, teaches cooking and cheese making, and blogs at EatingFromTheGroundUp.com. Alana is the Marketing and Special Events Manager for Guido’s Fresh Marketplace in Great Barrington and Pittsfield.

Kitchen classes are sponsored by Guido’s Fresh Marketplace.

Advance registration is highly recommended, but walk-ins are always welcome, space permitting. $55 for BBG members, $65 for nonmembers. Register at www.berkshirebotanical.org.

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Sunday, September 30, 9:00 am – 11:00 am – Great Meadows, Late Season

Great Meadows in Concord is exactly what it sounds like: a great, wet meadow that spans a large tract of land in eastern Massachusetts. Join Dan Jaffe on Sunday, September 30 from 9 – 11 for walk around the impoundments. Explore open wetland species such as cardinal flower, rose mallow, and showy tick trefoil while surrounded by beavers, blue heron, and marsh wren. We will identify species and discuss their cultivation. This New England Wild Flower Society session is $21 for NEWFS members, $25 for nonmembers. Register online at www.newenglandwild.org.

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Saturday, September 29, 10:00 am – 2:00 pm – Fall Wildflowers, Fruit, and Foliage

Fall is a time of intense activity for plants. Asters and goldenrods provide a last burst of color and insect pollinators abound. Learn to identify seasonal wildflowers and spring- flowering plants in fruit. Through classroom instruction and a walk in the Garden in the Woods in Framingham, you will learn the science behind what happens as plants prepare for winter. Bring a hand lens and Wildflowers of New England. The New England Wild Flower Society course takes place Saturday, September 29 from 10 – 2 and is taught by Neela de Zoysa. $53 for NEWFS members, $64 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.newenglandwild.org/learn/our-programs/fall-wildflowers-fruit-and-foliage

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Saturday, September 22, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm – Seed Saving

Join Dottie “Lou” Kratt on Saturday, Septembver 22 from 10 – 1 at Berkshire Botanical Garden in this hands-on workshop to learn how to save seeds from your garden. Topics covered will be proper handling, collecting times, cleaning and storage. The primary focus will be native perennials and annuals. Participants will collect seeds from the grounds of BBG and be able to take some seeds home for next year’s garden!

Dottie “Lou” Kratt is the owner of Northeast Native Seeds, a small native seed company specializing in local native species. Previously, Lou was the Propagation and Seed Bank Manager for Project Native and a gardener at BBG.

Advance registration is highly recommended, but walk-ins are always welcome, space permitting. $25 for BBG members, $35 for nonmembers. Register online at www.berkshirebotanical.org.

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Through September 30 – Breathing Room: Mapping Boston’s Green Spaces

Boston boasts some of the nation’s most recognizable and cherished green spaces, from Boston Common, to the Emerald Necklace, to hundreds of neighborhood parks, playgrounds, tot lots, community gardens, playing fields, cemeteries, and urban wilds. In this Boston Public Library exhibition, you will learn how the country’s oldest public park grew from a grazing pasture to an iconic recreational and social center, how 19th-century reformers came to view parks as environmental remedies for ill health, how innovative landscape architects fashioned green oases in the midst of a booming metropolis, and what the future holds for Boston’s open spaces. As you explore three centuries of open space in Boston, perhaps you will feel inspired to go outside and discover the green spaces in your own backyard. See the exhibit at the Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center at the BPL’s Central Library in Copley Square through September 30. Gallery hours are Monday through Thursday, 10 – 7, Friday & Saturday, 10 – 5, and Sunday, 1 – 5. For more information visit www.bpl.org.

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Monday, September 24, 7:00 pm – Tales from an Uncertain World

On Monday, September 24, at 7 pm, author L.S. Gardiner will speak at Porter Square Books, 25 White Street in Cambridge on her latest book, Tales From an Uncertain World: What Other Assorted Disasters Can Teach Us about Climate Change. So far, humanity hasn’t done very well in addressing the ongoing climate catastrophe. Veteran science educator L. S. Gardiner believes we can learn to do better by understanding how we’ve dealt with other types of environmental risks in the past and why we are dragging our feet in addressing this most urgent emergency. Weaving scientific facts and research together with humor and emotion, Gardiner explores human responses to erosion, earthquakes, fires, invasive species, marine degradation, volcanic eruptions, and floods in order to illuminate why we find it so challenging to deal with climate change. Insight emerges from unexpected places—a mermaid exhibit, a Magic 8 Ball, and midcentury cartoons about a future that never came to be.

Instead of focusing on the economics and geopolitics of the debate over climate change, this book brings large-scale disaster to a human scale, emphasizing the role of the individual. We humans do have the capacity to deal with disasters. When we face threatening changes, we don’t just stand there pretending it isn’t so, we do something. But because we’re human, our responses aren’t always the right ones the first time—yet we can learn to do better. This book is essential reading for all who want to know how we can draw on our strengths to survive the climate catastrophe and forge a new relationship with nature.

L. S. Gardiner is the author of two and illustrator of nine children’s books about science. She works at the UCAR Center for Science Education, and resides in Boulder, Colorado. The talk is free. More information may be found at https://www.portersquarebooks.com/event/ls-gardiner-tales-uncertain-world

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Friday, October 19 – Monday, October 22 – American Society of Landscape Architects Annual Meeting and EXPO

The ASLA Annual Meeting and EXPO in Philadelphia October 19 – 22 offers over 130 courses, allowing attendees to earn up to 24 professional development hours (PDHs). There are also many tours and special events connected with the event, including The Cultural Landscape Foundation look at Longwood Gardens: Experience a World Apart on Friday October 19 from 9:30 – 6:30, the LAF’s 33rd Annual Benefit on Friday night from 7 – 10 at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, A Tailgate at the Pennsylvania Convention Center on Saturday at the Pennsylvania Convention Center, The ASLA Council of Fellows Investiture Dinner on Sunday at 7 at the Philadelphia Marriott Downtown, Land8 Happy Hour on Sunday from 8 pm at the Field House Sports & Beer Hall, and a Women in Landscape Architecture Walk on Monday from 7 am – 8:30 am, highlighting the recent transformation of urban parks and plazas along Philadelphia’s iconic Benjamin Franklin Parkway.

Discounted rates have been negotiated for meeting attendees at nine Philadelphia hotels, all within walking distance of the Pennsylvania Convention Center. You must register by September 14 for discounted registration rates. Complete information on the entire event may be found at https://www.aslameeting.com/

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Wednesday, September 26, 7:30 pm – Chefs as Catalyst Connectors in Our Complicated Food World

Vittorio Ettore (Bistro 5 & A Tavola), Frank McClelland (L’Espalier), Lori Deliso (Kid’s Cooking Green & Dave’s Fresh Pasta) will speak at Wright-Locke Farm on Chefs as Catalyst Connectors in Our Complicated Food World. Join us for a panel discussion with local chefs who have been making strides to reconnect people with the food they eat and the landscapes and people that are behind those meals. What is the role of a chef in this complicated time that we live in? How do they inspire and teach? How are chefs working within our local food systems? Where do the see their greatest impact? These are some of the questions that we’ll be asking our Chef Panel. Make sure to bring your own questions to ask, too!

The session will be held at 7:30 at Wright-Locke Farm in Winchester on Wednesday, September 26 in our beautiful 1827 Barn, and will be followed up with a Q&A session. We will also offer a casual supper before each presentation. For more details, check out our website, http://wlfarm.org, or to RSVP, email Kim Kneeland at kkneeland@wlfarm.org.

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Sunday, September 23, 12:00 noon – 4:00 pm – Arlington’s Tree-mendous Fall Garden Tour

The Arlington Garden Club and the Arlington Chamber of Commerce will host a 2018 Fall Garden Tour on Sunday, September 23, 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm (Rain or shine). The self-guided tour will include private and public gardens that feature trees and their importance in the landscape. The tour will offer a variety of gardens, each with special qualities to inspire the visitor: street side gardens, native plant gardens, hidden backyard gardens, and even edible gardens. The selected gardens will be located in several areas of Arlington, including Morningside, Arlington Center/Jason Heights and East Arlington.

Tickets can be purchased immediately at http://arlcc.chambermaster.com/events/details/arlington-s-tree-mendous-fall-garden-tour-700 or in person at Book Rack, 13 Medford St. in Arlington beginning on September 1.

$25 in Advance, $30 on day of tour.  For information on The Arlington Garden Club visit www.arlingtongarden.org

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