Thursday, June 14, 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm – A Night in Napa

Join the Massachusetts Horticultural Society on Thursday, June 14 from 6 – 8:30 pm for A Night in Napa, a Garden Party in the Italianate Garden.  Enjoy live music, delicious hors d’oeuvre, and wines of Napa Valley.  All the gardens will be set for strolling and enjoying, but the the main attraction will be the Italianate Garden, set to transport you. Tickets are $100.  Order online at www.masshort.org. The Gardens at Elm Bank are located at 900 Washington Street in Wellesley. For more information contact Elaine Lawrence at registrations@masshort.org.

Image result for A Night in Napa Massachusetts Horticultural Society
RSS
Follow by Email
Instagram

Wednesday, May 30, 7:00 pm – Renewal of the Blue Garden in Newport, Rhode Island

Frederick Law Olmsted Jr., with the Olmsted Brothers firm, designed the Blue Garden from 1912 – 1918 for the Newport, Rhode Island estate of Arthur Curtiss James and his wife, Harriet. The garden room featured a unique planting palette of blues and purples “with some whites”, and shades of green foliage, and was surrounded by an evergreen enclosure to screen the garden from view. The garden was opened to friends in August 1913 with a celebration called “The Blue Masque”, and was heralded with numerous magazine articles and photographs depicting its architectural and horticultural riches. By 2012 the garden was almost forgotten, subsumed under a thick covering of weeds and invasive trees. This Arnold Arboretum lecture on Wednesday, May 30 at 7 pm in the Hunnewell Building will present the story of the people who originally created the Blue Garden and how the restoration team used original plans, drawings, and photographs from the Frederick Law Olmsted National Historic Site Archives to reinterpret the design and rebuild the garden in all its glory, while meeting contemporary sustainable standards. Free, but registration required; Reception to follow.

Offered with Friends of Fairsted. Featured speakers are Sarah Vance, MLA, Director, The Blue Garden, and Arleyn A. Levee, Landscape Historian, Hon. ASLA

Arleyn A. Levee is a landscape historian and preservation consultant, specializing in the work of the Olmsted firm. For many years, she has worked with various non-profit preservation groups and landscape architecture firms doing the research and evaluations needed for rehabilitation and protection of Olmsted-designed historic landscapes, both public and private. She is the author of The Blue Garden: Recapturing an Iconic Newport Landscape, published in 2016, and many articles about Olmsted firm commissions and the various firm designers responsible for this work. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Wellesley College, Master of Arts in Teaching from Harvard University, and a Certificate from the Radcliffe Seminars Program in Landscape Design.

Before assuming the position as Director of the Blue Garden, Sarah Vance was a senior associate with Reed Hilderbrand Landscape Architecture, part of the team that developed the rehabilitation plan for the garden and supervised its construction. Her role included analyzing the original drawings and developing planting plans for the garden and surrounding planted enclosure. As Director, she now works with a dedicated group of gardeners to ensure the design intent of the garden’s plan and to maintain it as an accessible and sustainable landscape. She takes special pleasure in sharing the story of this once-forgotten landscape and experiencing the appreciation, surprise and delight of its many visitors. Sarah received a Master in Landscape Architecture with Distinction from the Harvard University Graduate School of Design.

Register at http://my.arboretum.harvard.edu or call 617-384-5277.

Image result for The Blue Garden: Recapturing an Iconic Newport Landscape

RSS
Follow by Email
Instagram

Saturday, May 19, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Bruso Rhododendron & Magnolia Garden Tour

Take a guided tour of hybridizer and propagator Joe Bruso’s 3-acre woodland garden containing predominantly species and hybrid rhododendrons, magnolias and wildflowers. Many of the hybrids are of his own creation. The tour is scheduled at a time when the garden is normally at peak bloom, but attractive foliage is a main theme of this garden as well. Joe is a member of the Board of Directors of the Massachusetts Chapter, American Rhododendron Society. Directions will be sent upon registration. The Tower Hill Botanic Garden sponsored tour will take place Saturday, May 19 from 10 – 12. THBG members $25, nonmembers $35. Register at https://towerhillbg.thankyou4caring.org/pages/event-registration-form—bruso-rhododendron-and-magnolia-garden

Image result for Joe Bruso Rhododendron

RSS
Follow by Email
Instagram

Thursday, May 24, 11:30 am – City of Boston Park Budget Hearing

Let’s fill the room at this City of Boston budget hearing at 11:30 on May 24 in the City Hall Council Chamber to demonstrate our support for parks and trees across all of our beautiful and diverse neighborhoods. Prepare testimony if you can, and lend your voice to the chorus of people asking for more resources to keep our green spaces and trees safe, attractive and available to all.

Image result for City of Boston parks budget hearing

RSS
Follow by Email
Instagram

Tuesday, May 22, 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm – The Back Bay Streetscape: A Study in Symmetry

Take a walking tour of the eastern blocks of the Back Bay on Tuesday, May 22, from 3 – 5 pm. The Back Bay is a miracle of preservation, one of the largest examples of Victorian and Edwardian residential architecture in the United States. This walking tour takes a look at some examples of wonderful architectural compositions. The event is presented by the Architecture Committee of the Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay (NABB) and http://BackBayHouses.org, as part of the annual Preservation Month celebration.

This event is free and open to the public. To RSVP, please email architecture@nabbonline.com. The event is limited to 30 participants. Meeting place will be confirmed at time of reservation.

Image result for back bay boston architecture

RSS
Follow by Email
Instagram

Wednesday, May 23, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – History of Botanical Illustration Webinar

This New England Wild Flower Society webinar on Wednesday, May 23 from 1-2 traces the history of botanical illustration from Paleolithic times to the present, taking you on a fascinating journey from early cave painters to religious artisans, explorers, and painters such as Pierre Redoute, George Ehret (his Cereus pictured below), and Margaret Mee. Instructor Dorie Petrochko, President of Connecticut Natural Science Illustrators, will also explore more contemporary interpretations of botanical illustration. $10 for NEWFS members, $13 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.newfs.org/learn/our-programs/history-of-botanical-illustration

Image result for George Ehret botany

RSS
Follow by Email
Instagram

Wednesday, May 23, 7:30 pm – Food and Fuel from Sunlight, Air, and Water

Daniel G. Nocera, the Patterson Rockwood Professor of Energy at Harvard University, has created the bionic leaf to use just sunlight, air and water to make sustainable fuel and fertilization systems. Come to Wright-Locke Farm at 78 Ridge Street in Winchester on Wednesday, May 23 to learn how these discoveries set the stage for large scale, distributed, deployment of solar energy and distributed food production as well as its implications for the poor of the world.

The session will be held at 7:30 on Wednesday 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.

Image result for daniel nocera harvard

RSS
Follow by Email
Instagram

Thursday, May 24, 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm – Asa Gray Garden: A Behind-The-Scenes Preview

Members of The Garden Club of the Back Bay are invited to a private tour led by Dave Barnett, President & CEO of Mount Auburn Cemetery, on Thursday, May 24 from 1:30 – 3, beginning at the Story Chapel, 580 Mount Auburn Street in Cambridge. In recognition of our Club’s role in saving the Boston Public Library’s Japanese Maples, now in the Asa Gray Garden, all members are cordially invited to a behind-the-scenes tour of the renovated garden.  Learn about the project, including details of the the native and exotic plants selected for the design, and see the final stages of the renovation up close, as planting work begins. RSVP by May 17 to Anna Moir at 617-607-1947 or amoir@mountauburn.org. If you are not a member of The Garden Club of the Back Bay, join now at http://gardenclubbackbay.org/shop.

Image result for Asa Gray Garden Mt. Auburn

RSS
Follow by Email
Instagram

Tuesday, May 22, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Humane and Happy Gardening

In this myth-busting talk on Tuesday, May 22, beginning at 7 pm in the Hunnewell Building of the Arnold Arboretum, learn how common growing methods divide the natural world into false dichotomies and perpetuate misperceptions about the wild species living among us. Discover practical ways to put humane gardening philosophies into action by protecting wild nurseries of animals large and small, eliminating unintended hazards to wildlife, nurturing plants that provide food and shelter, and humanely resolving conflicts with mammals and other commonly misunderstood creatures. Nancy Lawson will provide simple principles for both attracting wildlife and peacefully resolving conflicts with all the creatures who share our world. Nancy is the author of The Humane Gardener: Nurturing a Backyard Habitat for Wildlife and blogs at http://HumaneGardener.com. Fee $10 Arboretum member; $18 nonmember.

A columnist for All Animals magazine, Nancy Lawson founded Humane Gardener, an outreach initiative dedicated to animal-friendly landscaping methods. Her book and garden have been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post, O: The Oprah Magazine, and other media outlets. Read Nancy’s recent post, Why Should I Car About These Animals.

Register at http://my.arboretum.harvard.edu or call 617-384-5277.

RSS
Follow by Email
Instagram

Tuesday, May 22, 10:00 am – 2:00 pm – Wildflowers of Macomber Woods

Macomber Woods in Framingham is a woodland oasis that encompasses an upland forest, a babbling brook, and wooded wetlands. There is evidence of human handiwork in the stonework, cattle guards, and century-old wisteria vines and rhododendrons, but clearly the property has been untouched for decades. New England Wild Flower Society will sponsor a walk with Roland “Boot” Boutwell on May 22 from 10 – 2. We expect to see a host of spring wildflowers in bloom, including Indian cucumber root (Medeola virginiana), pink lady’s-slippers (Cypripedium acaule – picture below from GoBotany!) and jack-in-the-pulpit (Arisaema triphyllum). Bring lunch. $38 for NEWFS members, $46 for nonmembers. Co-sponsored by the Massachusetts Association of Conservation Commissions. Register at http://www.newfs.org/learn/our-programs/wildflowers-of-macomber-woods

RSS
Follow by Email
Instagram