You have one more day to check off another person on your holiday gift list – give a beautiful, hand decorated holiday wreath from The Garden Club of the Back Bay. Your wreath can be delivered in Back Bay, Beacon Hill, the Fenway, and South End, with an elegant gift card attached, or you may pick it up yourself at The First Lutheran Church of Boston, 299 Berkeley Street, on the corner of Berkeley and Marlborough Streets, and present it to that special person in your life. The proceeds from this sale go directly into neighborhood beautification, especially benefiting the street trees of the City of Boston. Click here to print the order form and fax it immediately to 617-249-1762. Our on-line check out is currently out of service. If you prefer to telephone, call 617-859-8865. Your wreaths will be ready for pick up or delivery on Thursday, December 10. If you would like to be on next year’s mailing list, email info@bostonflora.com, and we’ll be happy to notify you in 2010.
Tag: City Of Boston
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Saturday, November 21 and Sunday, November 22, 12 noon – 5 pm – Schon and Schon
Nancy Schon is a great friend of the City of Boston and the Boston Parks Department. You are invited to a special exhibit of the artwork of Nancy and Ellen Schon on Saturday, November 21 or Sunday, November 22, from noon – 5 pm, at 291 Otis Street, West Newton, Massachusetts. Please visit www.schon.com and www.ellenschon.com for more information about these fine artists.
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Holiday Wreaths from The Garden Club of the Back Bay
We wish to highlight reasons why supporting The Garden Club of the Back Bay through our 2009 Holiday Wreath Sale is so important to the Back Bay, the City of Boston, and the Greater Boston Area, so from now through the end of November, we’ll feature posts which focus on different projects funded by our loyal and generous customer base.
Today, let us consider the rather prosaic but important task of tree pruning. It’s not glamorous – no one ever swoons over the thought of lopped off tree limbs. Without periodic pruning, however, tree branches fall in storms, tearing off bark and allowing pathogens to enter the trees, weakening and often ultimately killing them. Tree limbs which are not pruned back hit pedestrians in the face, interfere with traffic, obscure traffic signals, and create misshapen and often ugly silhouettes. Building shadows force trees to lean toward the light, so growth is lopsided. Pruning can give such trees a more graceful appearance. The City of Boston naturally believes in pruning, but budgetary restrictions only allow pruning when a tree is in danger of toppling over and crushing personal property.
The Garden Club of the Back Bay came to the rescue a number of years ago, allocating a portion of our yearly budget to the task of pruning. We hire an excellent licensed arborist, Bob Lorie, to prune existing trees during street cleaning days when cars have been cleared from the streets. There are approximately 600 sidewalk trees in the Back Bay and most trees have been pruned at least once. We continue regular pruning of the smaller trees to get them above the height of traffic and to give them a good shape as they mature. We also offer pruning services for front yard trees at a group rate. We hope you will consider purchasing one of our lovely wreaths. Proceeds support our pruning efforts. To order, and for more information, click here.
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Friday, November 13, 7 – 11 pm – Friends of Christopher Columbus Park Gala Fundraiser
Join the Friends of Christopher Columbus Park on Friday, November 13, from 7 pm – 11 pm, at the Boston Marriott Long Wharf, 296 State Street, Boston, for a wonderful 6th annual Gala to raise money to support the Christopher Columbus Park. There will be a cocktail hour, dinner, dancing, & a silent auction. The ticket price is $150, and you may reserve by emailing info@foccp.org, or logging on to www.foccp.org/Gala.html.
The Friends of Christopher Columbus Park (FOCCP) is a non-profit organization made up of North End and Waterfront neighbors whose purpose is to further the restoration, protection, preservation, care, enhancement, improvement, and maintenance of the Christopher Columbus Waterfront Park. The FOCCP work closely with the City of Boston Parks and Recreation Department to keep the park clean and well maintained.This all-volunteer neighborhood group provides funding for the Annual Trellis Lights, maintains the Rose Kennedy Rose Garden, and purchases new trees and plants for the Park.
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Saturdays, October 31 and November 21, 9:00 am – 2:00 pm – City of Boston Hazardous Waste Drop Off Days
Get rid of the paint, the aerosol cans, the chemicals, the works, on either Saturday, October 31 at the UMass Boston Boston Harbor Campus, 100 Morrissey Blvd. or on November 21 at the Boston Public Works Yard, 315 Gardner Street in West Roxbury. Log on to www.cityofboston.gov/publicworks/recycling/hazardouswaste.asp for directions and a full list of items accepted. No televisions or computers, please, and bring proof of residency with you.
This just in from our friend Penny Cherubino at www.bostonzest.com. The directions on the City’s web site are wrong (ah, the government!), but Penny has posted the correct information at : http://www.bostonzest.com/2009/10/boston-hazardous-waste-collection-days-fall-2009.html

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Sunday, November 8, 2 – 3:30 pm – Healing Spaces: The Science of Place and Well-Being
Can a pleasant view speed healing? In this lecture on Sunday, November 8 at 2 pm at Trinity Church here in the Back Bay, Dr. Esther Sternberg will present the science of mind-body connections and human perception as it relates to place. Using examples from her book, Healing Spaces: The Science of Place and Well-Being, to explain the neurobiology of the senses, she will explore how a theme park, concert hall, cathedral, labyrinth, or garden can trigger or reduce stress, induce anxiety or instill peace. Dr. Sternberg will provide clues to how and why we respond to our surroundings that could influence the places we create in the future. Fee $10 Arnold Arboretum members, $15 nonmembers .
Dr. Esther M. Sternberg, Chief of Neuroendocrine Immunology and Behavior and Director of the Integrative Neural Immune Program at the National Institute of Mental Health, is internationally recognized for her discoveries in brain-immune interactions and the brain’s stress response on health. Dr. Sternberg is also Director of the Integrative Neural Immune Program, NIMH/NIH and Co-Chair of the NIH Intramural Program on Research in Women’s Health. She was on the faculty at Washington University before joining the National Institutes of Health in 1986.
Co-sponsored by the Arnold Arboretum and Trinity Church in the City of Boston. To register, log on to www.arboretum.harvard.edu.
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Monday, August 31, 6 pm – Boston Bikes Initiative Community Meeting
The Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Services and Boston Bikes invite you to a
COMMUNITY MEETING
Monday, August 31, 2009
6:00 PM
Boston Public Library Central Branch
Mezzanine Conference Room
700 Boylston StreetAs part of Mayor Menino’s Boston Bikes Initiative, the City of Boston is creating bike lanes on major roadways to improve access and safety for all users. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the proposed installation of bike lanes on Commonwealth Avenue.
For more information, please contact:
Will Onuoha, Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Services
(617) 635-3485
Nicole Freedman, Boston Bikes
(617) 918-4456Boston Bikes is part of Mayor Menino’s plan for a vibrant and healthy city that benefits all its citizens. It seeks to make Boston a world-class bicycling city by creating safe and inviting conditions for all residents and visitors. The Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay supports a public process but has some reservations about the plan as proposed, and encourages us to attend this first public meeting.

