Tag: Catherine Zimmerman

  • Wednesday, January 18, 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm, & Saturday, January 21, 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm – Hometown Habitat, Stories of Bringing Nature Home

    Come to Garden in the Woods in Framingham on either Wednesday, January 18 at 2 or Saturday, January 21 at 4 for a screening of Hometown Habitat. Catherine Zimmerman (The Meadow Project) has teamed up with Doug Tallamy, PhD and the Chesapeake Conservation Landscaping Council to produce a new film on native plants called Hometown Habitat . The Meadow Project and CCLC missions promote the principles of conservation landscaping and expand the practice of conservation landscaping throughout the Chesapeake Bay region.

    Hometown Habitat is a 90-minute environmental, education documentary focused on showing how and why native plants are critical to the survival and vitality of local ecosystems. Entomologist Doug Tallamy, whose research, books, and lectures on the misuse of non-native plants in landscaping sound the alarm about habitat and species loss, provides the narrative thread throughout the film. The message: “We can change the notion that humans are here and nature is some place else. It doesn’t have to, and shouldn’t be that way.” Each individual has the power to conserve resources, restore habitat for wildlife and bring beauty to their patch of earth.

    Award winning director Catherine Zimmerman and her film crew traveled across the country to visit Hometown Habitat Heroes, people – young and old and with varied backgrounds – who are reversing detrimental impacts on the land and in the water of major U.S. watersheds, one garden at a time. Catherine and the film crew wind their way through the watersheds of Florida, the prairies of the Mississippi River Basin, the streams and rivers of the Rocky Mountains, the Chesapeake Bay, the Great Lakes and Columbia River to share success stories and works-in-progress that celebrate conservation landscaping that re-awakens and redefines our relationship with Nature.

    Along with the everyday Hometown Heroes, we meet ecologists, entomologists and other experts who will share the science behind how today’s ‘native-plants-know-best’ enthusiasts, landscape architects, and conservation groups are helping 20th century-minded city planners, businesses and developers appreciate the myriad 21st century benefits of low-maintenance, seasonally-dynamic, and eco-healthy landscape installations, that respect Nature’s original best practices.

    $18 ELA members, $25 nonmembers – See more at: http://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/screening-hometown-habitat-stories-of-bringing-nature-home/2017-01-18/#sthash.QuSWorED.dpuf

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  • Wednesday, March 6, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Meadowscaping in Urban & Suburban Spaces

    Grow Native Massachusetts is sponsoring a public lecture series through June, 2013, from 7 – 8:30 on the first Wednesday of each month at the Cambridge Public Library, 449 Broadway in Cambridge. The next in its series of Evenings With Experts will take place Wednesday, March 6, with Catherine Zimmerman, author of Urban & Suburban Meadows, speaking on Meadowscaping in Urban & Suburban Spaces.  Join us to learn why meadow and prairie habitats are so beneficial, both economically and environmentally. Then, consider the benefits of meadowscaping.  Ms. Zimmerman is passionate about getting Americans to forgo their devotion to monocultures of pesticide-ridden lawns. She will give us a step-by-step primer on reducing lawn size and installing a beautiful meadow garden in its stead. No space is too small. Join the movement to bring back native habitat for wildlife and human life! Ms. Zimmerman is a filmmaker, author, and founder of the Meadow Project.  The event is free and open to all.

  • Saturday, October 13, 9:00 am – Meadowscaping: A Recipe for Healthy Urban & Suburban Landscapes

    Catherine Zimmerman will lecture on Saturday, October 13 beginning at 9 am at the Chatham Community Center, 702 Main Street in Chatham, on Meadowscaping: A Recipe for Healthy Urban & Suburban Landscapes.  Ms. Zimmerman is the author of Urban & Suburban Meadows, and a book signing will follow,  The free program is sponsored by the Chatham Conservation Commission, the Chatham Conservation Foundation, Inc., the Association to Preserve Cape Cod, and Grow Native Massachusetts. There is limited seating, so registration is encouraged at www.chatham-ma.gov.