Tag: Carol Gracie

  • Friday, December 7, 8:00 am – 5:00 pm – 2018 Ecological Plant Conference

    Brooklyn Botanic Garden is host to the Ecological Landscape Alliance (ELA) third annual Ecological Plant Conference at Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Brooklyn, New York. Join us on December 7 from 8 – 5 as five plant masters discuss a few valuable plants at length, from native perennials to under-story heroes to top performing trees. Cultivation, propagation, behavior, and ecological function will be highlighted, with an emphasis on plant communities. Presenters will delve into the interactions between individual plants and the complex interactions among plant communities, as well as interactions with the plant’s environment.

    Noted plant masters Carol Gracie, Andi Pettis, Laura Hansplant, Bill Logan, and Don Leopold will lead this rare opportunity to delve into the world of plants.

    This conference is an opportunity for professional gardeners, horticulturists, landscape architects, and designers to explore deeply the cultivation of the plants professionals in the Northeast work with every day. Speakers will share their expertise with plant selection, pruning techniques, and long-term plant care, offering the necessary information to grow and create healthy, dynamic, and beautiful plant communities. Morning coffee and catered lunch are included with registration. $119 for ELA members, $139 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.ecolandscaping.org.

    The High Line’s Urban Nature: Tenacious Plants for Tough Places
    ~Andi Pettis

    The High Line’s renowned plantings are inspired by the natural landscape that grew wild there, before the elevated rail line was transformed into a New York City public park.
    In this talk, Andi Pettis will present some of the toughest plants growing on the High Line, both the cultivated species and some of the plants that grew wild on the rail tracks, spontaneously and without any care or thought from human beings. She will explore how we can study the spontaneous nature in urban environments in order to glean lessons about the tenacity of plants, and how we can apply those lessons to our ecological landscapes.

    Pioneering Higher Ground – Explorations in Designing Rooftop Habitats
    ~Laura Hansplant

    Why can native volunteer plants thrive on green roofs while the same intentional plantings fail? How can rooftop landscapes support urban habitat with the same resilience as sedum roofs? What lessons can we learn for on-ground landscapes? Rooftop environments offer unique opportunities for urban habitat. The ecology of these plant communities parallels natural, thin-soil environments but also presents some important functional differences. In this session, Laura Hansplant compares alternative design approaches to establishing meadows on green roofs based on observations of plant community dynamics and tracking plant performance at pilot projects over the past fiver years.

    The Thousand Year Wood: Past, Present and Future of People and Oaks
    ~William (Bill) Bryant Logan

    Oaks and people have been intimately related since the Mesolithic, at the latest. Bill will sketch the long history of that relationship, including the many things that oak taught us. We will look from Japan, to Europe, to California, considering the intimate relationship between people and oaks. He will look at the present possibilities for planting and maintaining oaks in the landscape, considering the preferences of different species and where they are best placed in the landscape. Finally, Bill will examine the current threats to oak trees from newly-arrived pathogens and discuss how these potential problems should adjust the way we plant and care for oaks.

    Native Wildflowers – Beyond Their Beauty: How They Integrate into the Environment
    Carol Gracie

    Although the beauty of local wildflowers enhances our enjoyment of the outdoors in summer, a look behind the flowers’ beauty reveals the important roles that they play in the ecology of our northeastern environment. Carol Gracie look at how the plants have adapted to their habitats, their role as a food resource for insects, their methods of dispersal, and some of their uses by humans as medicines, foods, and dyes. Our native wildflowers also provide easy-care beauty in our home gardens.

    Native Plants and Natural Plant Communities for Difficult Sites
    ~Donald (Don) J. Leopold

    An expert on native species, Don Leopold will go into depth of native herbaceous and woody species that are no maintenance, long-lived, adapted to extreme conditions (e.g., salinity, alkalinity, drought, shade), attract wildlife (especially birds and butterflies), are deer-proof, and/or produce food for people. Native species for the most challenging sites will be highlighted. The ecological role of these species in their natural communities and how these assemblages of species can be used for home gardens as well as urban projects and larger scale restoration of degraded industrial landscapes will also be covered.

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  • Wednesday, April 6, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Spring Wildflowers: Ephemeral Beauty with a Purpose

    Carol Gracie, author of Spring Wildflowers of the Northeast, will speak at the Cambridge Public Library, 449 Broadway, on Wednesday, April 6 from 7 – 8:30 as part of Grow Native Massachusetts’ public lecture series. Doors open at 6:30 and the lecture is free.

    Our native spring wildflowers evolved in the once contiguous forests that stretched the length of the East Coast and west to the prairies. Their flowering coincides with increased sunlight and warmth before the forest canopy leafs out, and their associations with the early-flying insects of spring are remarkable. Come learn about the life cycles of selected species in detail— and why many populations are in a marked decline due to human activity. By understanding their evolutionary relationships to forest habitat, we can better protect these ephemeral beauties on all lands, and integrate them into our woodland gardens.

    Carol Gracie is a botanist and highly-skilled photographer. In addition to Spring Wildflowers of the Northeast: A Natural History, she has authored several field guides. Her botanizing in South and Central America has led to seven tropical plant species and one genus being named for her.

  • Friday, May 8, 8:00 am – 4:30 pm – Naturalistic Garden Symposium

    “What’s past is prologue.” After decades of landscape design that emphasized form over function, often at the expense of environmental quality, it is now commonplace for our landscapes to reflect many of the principles developed by early 20th-century naturalistic landscape designers like Warren Manning and Will Curtis, founder of Garden in the Woods. Learn about the intriguing connections between the wild gardens of old and the new naturalism of today, and about the plants that support our efforts to develop beautiful, ecologically-sensitive gardens, on Friday, May 8, at the New England Wild Flower Society’s Naturalistic Garden Symposium. The day will include:

    Wild Gardens: Past, Present, and Future
    Rick Darke, President of RICK DARKE LLC, a Pennsylvania-based consulting firm that blends art, ecology, and cultural geography in the design and management of living landscapes

    William Robinson’s 1870 classic The Wild Garden challenged tradition by suggesting that managed, self-perpetuating plant populations were essential to resource-conserving gardens. This concept resonated with progressive British, northern European, and American gardeners alike, inspiring diverse naturalistic designs. Rick Darke will look at how wild gardening has evolved and why it is more relevant than ever to today’s and tomorrow’s conservation-based gardens.

    The Natural History of Spring Wildflowers: A Closer Look
    Carol Gracie, naturalist and author of Spring Wildflowers of the Northeast: A Natural History

    The wildflowers that brighten our woodlands in spring are more than just a delight for the eye and a lift for the winter-weary spirit. Each has a role in the environment, including interesting interactions with pollinators and seed dispersers. Learn about the fascinating life histories of some favorite spring wildflowers as we examine them in depth.

    A Sense of Where You Are: Finding a New Naturalism
    Tobias Wolf, award-winning landscape architect and the owner of Wolf Landscape Architecture

    What if we asked our landscapes to do more than just look good? Gardens and landscapes can support biodiversity, cleanse and absorb stormwater, and improve soil health. Just as important, they can invite us outdoors and help us feel connected to the world around us. Landscape architect Tobias Wolf will share his experience in shaping landscapes that combine ecological performance with a distinct sense of time and place. He will show how urban and suburban landscapes can incorporate the qualities we value in wild places, and how design that is informed by the structure and function of native plant communities can bring new vitality to public spaces and private gardens.

    Registration includes continental breakfast and lunch. $92 for NEWFS members, $115 for nonmembers. Register online at http://www.newfs.org/learn/our-programs/naturalistic-garden-symposium.

  • Saturday, April 12, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Northeast Wildflowers to Brighten Your Spring Garden

    Learn about the importance of native wildflowers and how to bring them into the garden setting, on Saturday, April 12 from 10 – noon at the Berkshire Botanical Garden, at a talk and book signing with author Carol Gracie. Wildflowers brighten the New England woodlands in spring and are more than just a delight for the eye and a lift for the winter-weary spirit. Each has a role in the environment and often has interesting interactions with pollinators and seed dispersers. Learn about the fascinating life histories of some favorite spring wildflowers. Topics include adaptations for early blooming, medicinal and other uses, the origin of wildflower names, pollination and seed dispersal. A book sale and signing of Carol’s beautiful newly published Spring Wildflowers of the Northeast: A Natural History will follow the talk.

    Carol Gracie is a naturalist and photographer with a degree in plant studies from Lehman College of the City University of New York. She is retired from The New York Botanical Garden, where she headed the Children’s Education Program and the Foreign Tour program and taught in the Continuing Education Program. In 2006 she co-authored (with Steve Clemants) Wildflowers in the Field and Forest: A Field Guide to the Northeastern United States. Her latest book, Spring Wildflowers of the Northeast: A Natural History, was published in March of 2012.

    $25 for BBG members, $30 for non-members.  Sign up at www.berkshirebotanical.org or call 413-298-3926, x 15.

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  • Sunday, April 28, 1:30 pm – 3:30 pm – Spring Wildflowers of the Northeast: A Natural History

    The Ecological Landscaping Association, New England Wildflower Society, Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, Massachusetts Audubon Drumlin Farm, and Tower Hill Botanic Gardens will co-sponsor Spring Wildflowers of the Northeast: A Natural History, with author Carol Gracie, on Sunday, April 28, from 1:30 – 3:30 at Garden in the Woods in Framingham.  The wildflowers that brighten our woodlands in spring are more than just a delight for the eye and a lift for the winter-weary spirit.  Each has a role in the environment, with often interesting interactions with pollinators and seed dispersers.  Topics will include adaptations for early blooming, medicinal and other uses, the origin of wildflower names, pollination and seed dispersal, and the latest scientific research on the ecology of these beautiful plants.  Following the lecture and book signing, enjoy an optional docent-led walk through Garden in the Woods in its early spring glory.  $15 for members of a sponsoring organization, $18 for nonmembers.  Register by calling 617-436-5838, or visit www.ecolandscaping.org.

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