Tag: Boston Nature Center

  • Saturday, November 3, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Nature Journaling for Adults

    In the tradition of the early naturalists and explorers, you will be learning about the natural world by drawing and writing, listening and discovering, using your very own hand-crafted nature journal, at this Boston Nature Center class on Saturday, November 3, from 10 – noon. You will explore the sanctuary, using journals to write about and draw trees, rocks, landscapes, plants, birds, and other interesting animals. You will learn to observe the natural world more closely by using writing and drawing to describe what you see. You will use pencil, pen, colored pencils, and even watercolor in our journals, so that you can prepare for your own continued exploration of the changing seasons.

    Mass Audubon members: $7, non-members $9. Registration is required. Register online at www.massaudubon.org or call 617-983-8500 to register by phone.  Image from www.homemadesimple.com.

  • Friday, November 9, 7:00 pm – 10:00 pm – Birds and Brew Fundraiser

    Have a hoot while supporting Boston Nature Center’s education programs, on Friday, November 9, from 7 – 10 at The Boston Nature Center, 500 Walk Hill Street in Mattapan.  The evening will feature beer tastings with local breweries, live music, trivia contests with prizes, bird demonstrations by Blue Hills Trailside Museum, and great pub food.  For tickets please call 617-983-8500, or purchase on line at www.massaudubon.org.  This is a 21+ event and valid ID will be required.  Tickets are $50 in advance and $60 at the door – last year’s event sold out in advance!

  • Sunday, October 21, 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm – Fancy Fall Foliage

    The Boston Nature Center and the Arborway Coalition will sponsor a free Fancy Fall Foliage program on Sunday, October 21 from 2 – 3:30. Spring is known for its colorful flowers, but fall also has an amazing variety of color. Join us for a leisurely stroll through the meadows, forest, and wetlands to behold the vibrant red of the red maple or the bright yellow of the aspen. The program will include exploration, hands-on activities, and an art project. Preregistration is encouraged but walk-ins are welcome.  The Boston Nature Center is located at 500 Walk Hill Street, Mattapan, and you may register at www.massaudubon.org.

  • Monday, September 24, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Boston Nature Center: Urban Landscape Restoration

    Join Mass Audubon Director Julie Brandlen, along with soil and environmental remediation specialist Bruce Fulford, for a tour of the recent restorations at the Boston Nature Center (BNC) including an expanding urban orchard, green roof, butterfly garden, and BNC’s Nature Nook (below), a nature play area made from natural and recycled materials. In addition to the enriched landscape elements, BNC also features the greenest municipal building in Boston. $20 for Environmental Landscaping Association and Mass Audubon members, $25 for non members. Register today at https://www.eventville.com/catalog/eventregistration1.asp?eventid=1009614.

  • Thursday, August 2, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Boston Nature Center: Urban Landscape Restoration

    Located in Mattapan and surrounded by residential neighborhoods in the city of Boston, Massachusetts Audubon’s Boston Nature Center (BNC) is a 67-acre oasis and landscape restoration success story. Formerly the site of the Boston State Hospital, this restoration has transformed BNC into open space and natural habitats including more than two miles of trails and boardwalks through meadows, fresh-water marsh, woodlands, and gardens. The Garden Club of the Back Bay has held a meeting in its green building and members were impressed.  Visit with the Ecological Landscaping Association on Thursday, August 2, from 10 – 12.  Register online at www.ecolandscaping.org.  $20 for ELA or Mass Audubon members, $25 for nonmembers.

  • The Garden Club of the Back Bay Announces 2012 Grants at Annual Meeting

    The Garden Club of the Back Bay Announces 2012 Grants at Annual Meeting

    The Annual Meeting of The Garden Club of the Back Bay, Inc. took place Monday, May 14, and $66,000 in grants and expenditures were unanimously approved by the membership. Co-President Jackie Blombach is pictured below announcing the grants to the attendees.

    Thirty thousand dollars has been set aside for street tree care, including planting, pruning, and inoculating.  In addition to this amount, the following organizations will benefit from our Club’s fund raising successes, including our holiday wreath project and our upcoming Twilight Garden Party:

    $5,000 to The Friends of Copley Square, for treating with fertilizer and fungicide the diseased trees (the ones not being removed) for root stress due to canker stain and compacted ground conditions.

    $5,000 to The Friends of the Public Garden, to continue the inoculation of elms against Dutch elm disease.  The street trees to be treated are not on the Commonwealth Avenue Mall, but are located on Commonwealth Avenue beyond Massachusetts Avenue.

    $5,000 to The Esplanade Association, for the Eliot Memorial Demonstration Garden.

    $5,000 to the Commonwealth Avenue Mall Committee, for its Historic Elm Preservation Project.

    $3,000 to the Emerald Necklace Conservancy, to help pay for plant material for the completion of Mother’s Rest, at Boylston Street and The Fenway.

    $3,000 to City Roots/Urban Ecology Institute, for plant materials (trees and shrubs) for a project underway in Allston/Brighton, which also includes a citizen science and education component.

    $3,000 to the Boston Nature Center of the Massachusetts Audubon Society, supporting some level of scholarships to twenty children for the summer camp.  The children range in age from 5 to 14 and are from the local neighborhoods of Mattapan, Roslindale, and Jamaica Plain.

    $2,000 to the Charles River Clean Up Boat, helping keep our beloved river trash free.

    $500 to the Ellis Neighborhood Association, to inoculate an historic elm tree in the South End against Dutch elm disease. This contribution will cover half the expense of the treatment, with the other half being paid by the Ellis Neighborhood Association.

    $500 to The Blossom Fund of The Boston Committee of The Garden Club of America, for our five year fund raising effort to be awarded next year to a project in or around The Rose Kennedy Greenway.

    Additionally, we are purchasing four tree fences to be installed in the neighborhood, three in front of The First Lutheran Church on Berkeley Street, and one in front of The French Cultural Center of Boston, on Marlborough Street, at a total cost of $4,000.

    We congratulate all our grant recipients, and thank our supporters for giving us the ability to beautify Boston.

  • Thursday, May 17, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm – More Ticks in More Places

    Several local green space organizations have joined together to present the following educational program about tick awareness and tick bite prevention.  More Ticks in More Places: How the ever-changing ecology of tick-borne diseases in the Northeastern US affects you! will be presented by Thomas N. Mather, Ph.D, Director, The University of Rhode Island Tick Encounter Resource Center, on Thursday, May 17, 6:30–8:00pm in the Hunnewell Building, Arnold Arboretum, 125 Arborway, Boston.

    In New England, 2011 was an exceptionally “ticky” year, and there are predictions for a possible 20% increase in the tick population in 2012. Dr. Thomas Mather will discuss current trends in tick encounter risk as well as his efforts to help individuals and communities prevent tick bites and Lyme disease. Learn about tick life cycles, environmental factors contributing to Lyme disease, and what you can do to protect yourself so that you can continue to enjoy the green spaces in and around Boston. Reserve now. Space is limited.

    Free, but registration requested.

    Register online at http://my.arboretum.harvard.edu or by phone at 617-384-5277.

    Sponsored by Boston Natural Areas Network; Mass Audubon’s Boston Nature Center; Brookline Parks & Open Space; Emerald Necklace Conservancy; Franklin Park Coalition; Friends of the Blue Hills; New England Mountain Bike Association; Olmsted National Historic Site, NPS; and Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University.

  • Sundays, February 12 and March 25, 9:30 am – 4:30 pm – Real Food Campaign Course

    The Real Food Campaign is announcing a two-session course, presented by Dan Kittredge, at the Boston Nature Center, 500 Walk Hill Street, in Mattapan on two Sundays, February 12 and March 25, from 9:30 am to 4:30 pm. The course is designed for urban home and community gardeners, as well as growers from elsewhere who want to learn how to grow more bionutrient rich food crops so they and others can live healthier lives.

    Bionutrient rich crop production is a form of biological farming that works to balance and enliven the soil so that the crops growing in it provide all the necessary minerals, phytonutrients, anti-oxidants and enzymes that humans and animals need in their bodies. The soil is stimulated by adding amendments containing the minerals in which the soil is deficient. Then, with close observation of the plants as they grow and by providing nutritional support with regularly applied drenches and foliar sprays, the vitality and energy of the soil and plants are enhanced to produce healthier crops, greater yields, extended seasons and longer shelf life. Insects cannot digest the complex compounds developed in healthier plants, and healthy plants are not as vulnerable to disease. As a result insect and disease problems diminish and can entirely disappear.

    The Boston Nature Center is easily accessible by the T. The course begins at 9:30 am and ends at 4:30 pm, The cost is $150, and it’s possible to register for that amount online with a credit card at www.realfoodcampaign.org.. Some scholarship aid may be available. For further information and to register by check or in installments for the course, please contact Douglas Williams, Course Administrator, at doug@realfoodcampaign.org or 603-924-7008.

  • Saturday, August 27, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm – Honey Harvest: From Hive to Jar

    Want to know how honey gets from hive to jar? Interested in tasting the sweet liquid right from the hive? This Northeast Organic Farming Association/Boston Nature Center workshop on Saturday, August 27, from 10 – 1, will cover all aspects of harvesting honey, from frame removal to jarring. Jean-Claude Bourrut will begin the workshop at the apiary, located at 500 Walk Hill Street in Mattapan, where participants will learn how to remove harvestable frames of honey. Afterward, the group will move inside to learn about extraction. This workshop focuses on participation and hands-on demonstration so that participants can do as well as watch. Cost: $25 members/ $30 non-members.  Jean-Claude Bourrut has been keeping honeybees for 20 years in urban and suburban settings. He currently manages a dozen hives in three apiaries. Pre-registration is required for those who do not have their own veil. There are only 7 extra veils (see Mata Hari enacting The Dance of the Seven Veils, below) so sign up soon! To register for the workshop or for more information visit www.nofamass.org or contact Laura Eppstein by email at laura@nofamass.org or by phone at 617-913-0538.

  • Saturday, August 20, 9:30 am – Tour-de-Hives

    Starting at 9:30am on Saturday, August 20, 2011, this 9-mile bike tour will feature 5 different hive sites around Boston. Each site visit will include a presentation by a local beekeeper on various beekeeping subjects- organic hive management, making and keeping Top Bar Hives, the role of the queen, and more. The group will break for lunch in Jamaica Plain, where the first 30 Tour-De-Hive registrants will receive a lunch discount at City Feed & Supply. The day will conclude with music, food and merriment at Follow the Honey Bee Festival in Cambridge. Can’t bike that far? No problem! Carpool or take public transportation to and from the sites as you please.

    Here is the schedule:

    9:30- 10:15 City Natives Apiary
    30 Edgewater Drive, Mattapan

    10:45-11:30 Boston Nature Center Apiary
    500 Walk Hill Street, Roslindale

    11:45-12:30 Leland Street Herb Garden
    11 Leland Street, Jamaica Plain

    1:00-1:45 Allandale Farm
    259 Allendale Rd, Brookline

    2:00-2:45 LUNCH at City Feed and Supply

    3:00-3:45 South Huntington Street Hives
    252 S. Huntington Ave, JP

    4:45-8:00 Follow the Honey – Honey Festival
    1132 Mass. Ave, Cambridge

    Pre-Registration recommended (first 30 people to register receive lunch discount). Please bring your own veils! Extra veils will only be available for the first 7 people who register. For more information, email laura@nofamass.org. Suggested donation $15.