Tag: Conway School of Landscape Design

  • Saturday, February 10, 9:00 am – 3:00 pm – Plant-Pollinator Interactions on the Landscape: Native Pollination Systems

    Instructor Evan Abramson will discuss the critical role that plant selection plays in designing biodiverse landscapes at Berkshire Botanical Garden on Saturday, February 10 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Understand why pollinator habitat is the single most important factor to consider in creating resilient terrestrial ecosystems. An interdisciplinary presentation on plant-pollinator interactions and their intersections with science, design, climate resilience, ecological health and food security will be followed by a day-long design workshop with participants working in small teams. All necessary research and drafting materials and light lunch will be provided. $140 for BBG members, $160 for nonmembers. Register at www.berkshirebotanical.org

    Instructor Evan Abramson is the Founder and Principal of Landscape Interactions. A landscape designer and regional planner, he works closely with project partners along every step of the process, from conception through design, implementation and maintenance. He holds a Master of Science in Ecological Design from the Conway School of Landscape Design, Certificates in Permaculture Design and Biodynamic Gardening, and is the author of numerous publications.

  • Saturday, October 26, 10:30 am – 1:30 pm – Collecting and Sowing Native Seeds

    Heather McCargo, Founder of the Wild Seed Project, will speak on October 26 at 10:30 am at Camp Cedar Hill, 241 Forest Street in Waltham, on Collecting and Sowing Native Seeds, a lecture sponsored by Grow Native Massachusetts. $52 for Grow Native members, $62 for nonmembers. Register at www.grownativemass.org.

    Using native plants grown from seed helps us create resilient landscapes that are rich in genetic diversity. This class will focus on essential principles for propagating herbaceous wildflowers, woody plants, and ferns—and give us hands-on practice with techniques to do so successfully. Heather McCargo emphasizes the benefits of using natural processes to do much of the work, such as sowing seed outside in the fall and taking advantage of the seasonal weather patterns that each species needs to germinate. She will discuss ecologically responsible collection practices and timing; proper seed handling and storage; and describe simple methods for setting up an outdoor propagation area. The program will also recommend books and other resources for native plant propagation, and give you practice sowing seeds in pots, which you will take home at the end of the program.

    Heather McCargo is the founder and executive director of Wild Seed Project, a non-profit organization based in Maine. She is an educator with 30 years of expertise in plant propagation, landscape design, and conservation. Heather was the head propagator at Garden in the Woods during the 1990s, and has an M.A. from the Conway School of Landscape Design.

    Heather McCargo, executive director at the Wild Seed Project
  • Saturday, March 2, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Cultivating the Designer’s Mind

    Long in production, Cultivating the Designers Mind — Principles and Process of Coherent Landscape Design, is a culmination of sixty years of studying, teaching and practicing landscape design. While the book is intended for all land-related professions, landscape architects, architects, planners and engineers, it is both accessible to and useful for all audiences. By personal experience, its principles and processes are widely applicable to much of common life. Highly illustrated with real world examples, this book includes Walter’s compelling watercolor landscape paintings, and focuses on the thinking process at the various stages of a design project. It concludes with ten of the most pervasive and widely applicable design principles. This Berkshire Botanical Garden talk on March 2 from 10 – noon will share some of the sources of personal inspiration, discovered principles, and insights made in capturing on paper the elusive task called designing. There will be ample time for planned audience engagement and questions and answers in the one hour talk.

    Walter Cudnohufsky, M.L.A., is a long-time dedicated teacher. Having founded and for 20 years directed the nationally acclaimed Conway (MA) School of Landscape Design, he has honed a reasoned approach to planning design. Currently his firm is engaged in many diverse and stimulating planning/design projects throughout the region. BBG members $10, nonmembers $15. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/cultivating-designer%E2%80%99s-mind

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  • In Memoriam – Elizabeth Farnsworth

    On October 27, Dr. Elizabeth Farnsworth, the New England Wild Flower Society’s senior research ecologist, died unexpectedly at her home in Amherst, Massachusetts. She was 54. For those who knew and worked with her, who played music, paddled, or hiked with her, who cleaned seeds beside her while swapping stories at the long tables at Garden in the Woods and Nasami Farm, who took her online courses or heard her lectures, “unexpectedly” is a vast understatement. The words “Elizabeth” and “died” do not belong on the same page. That she was in her prime, radiating warmth and vitality, a vivid picture of apple-cheeked, wild-maned health, makes this notion profoundly hard to accept, and bitterly unacceptable.

    After all, as one can imagine her shouting in the face of whatever stopped her heart that day, she still had so much to do.

    She already had packed a lot of achievement into her foreshortened life, as at least one grieving colleague observed. She was an accomplished botanist, educator, and scientific illustrator. At the time of her death, Elizabeth was co-leading the Society’s effort to conserve seeds of hundreds of rare plant species throughout New England. But Elizabeth’s many contributions to the Society started more than two decades ago. Recent members might know that she wrote, constructed, and taught the Society’s first set of online botany courses and wrote the ground-breaking “State of the Plants” report. A few years earlier, she co-led the National Science Foundation grant for developing Go Botany, our interactive online guide to the entire New England flora, and then won an additional grant from the same source to support student research in conservation biology. She coordinated planning for the conservation and management of more than 100 species of rare plants. She illustrated dozens of entries in Flora Novae Angliae by Arthur Haines, the Society’s research botanist. And with a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, she conducted an assessment of seed banking and collections practices at the Society and published a model protocol by which to prioritize target populations for seed collection. A natural and passionate teacher, Elizabeth jumped in to serve as interim education director in 2013, arranging all the courses the Society offered.

    The Society is not the only institution that will miss her and her scholarly contributions. When she died, Elizabeth was serving as senior editor of the botanical journal Rhodora and on the graduate faculties of the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the University of Rhode Island. Before that, she also had taught at Smith, Mount Holyoke, and Hampshire colleges and the Conway School of Landscape Design. As a writer, she displayed the rare ability to address both academic peers and novice botanists with equal clarity—and not a whit of condescension for the latter. To date, she had published 54 peer-reviewed scientific journal articles and 61 invited publications for public media. She also co-authored the award-winning A Field Guide to the Ants of New England, which she also illustrated; the Connecticut River Boating Guide: Source to Sea; and the Peterson Field Guide to the Ferns. Her delicate, precisely rendered illustrations also grace the pages of Natural Communities of New Hampshire and three other books.

    How, then, did she find time to deliver more than 230 invited presentations throughout the world, much less to sing and play guitar semi-professionally and paddle her prized hand-built kayak? Alas, it is too late to ask. She loved to travel, preferably in further exploration of the natural world, and, at various times in her career, she conducted research on ecosystems all over the globe, focusing on conservation, plant physiology, mangroves, and climate change. She served as a scientific consultant to the United Nations, the National Park Service, The Trustees of Reservations, the U.S. Forest Service, the Massachusetts and Connecticut Natural Heritage programs, and the Mount Grace Land Conservation Trust.

    Brilliance marked her early: At Brown University, Elizabeth earned her B.A. in environmental studies in seven semesters, graduating with honors. She went on to study at University of Vermont, receiving her M.S. in field botany. While earning her Ph.D. at Harvard University, she was awarded a Bullard Research Fellowship and a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship. Her dissertation on mangrove seedlings launched a journey to 17 countries as a Harvard Traveling Scholar, to conduct a comparative survey of mangroves. She was honored to be chosen as a teaching assistant to E. O. Wilson, with whom she shared a passion for ants.

    Elizabeth, a gifted storyteller, enjoyed sharing tales of her travels and other adventures—about the time all the members of the Grateful Dead crashed at the house she shared with roommates in college, about sitting around camp with David Attenborough in a South American rainforest, about leeches invading unmentionable places (which, of course, she mentioned). Now her friends, colleagues, and students are seeking solace by sharing our memories and stories about her.

    “She was that rare human being who was talented in both the sciences and the arts, who excelled in everything she did,” said Director of Conservation Bill Brumback, the person at the Society who has worked most closely with Elizabeth over the years. “And she made the world a little better for those who knew and worked with her.”

    For those who would like to honor Elizabeth’s legacy with a donation, her family suggests sending donations to New England Wild Flower Society, Hitchcock Center for the Environment, or any other conservation organization of the donor’s choice.

    Friends and family members are planning a memorial celebration in western Massachusetts, probably after Thanksgiving. For further information on developments, check http://newfs.org periodically.

  • Sunday, June 4, 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm – Rain Garden Fundamentals

    As more land is developed for building, badly needed space for storm water absorption and cleaning is rapidly disappearing. Rain gardens can play a significant role in urban and suburban areas by cleaning, cooling, and slowing runoff so that it doesn’t pollute water bodies. On Sunday, June 4 from 1:30 – 3 at Garden in the Woods in Framingham, learn how rain gardens work, how you can create a low-tech and effective rain garden, and which durable natives you should plant there. Presented by Anna Fialkoff in conjunction with the Ecological Landscape Alliance. $20 for members of sponsoring organizations, $24 for nonmembers. Anna Fialkoff is an Ecological Horticulturist & Designer at Garden in the Woods, New England Wild Flower Society. She is a graduate of the Conway School of Landscape Design. Register and see more at: http://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/rain-garden-basics/#sthash.ugPoQ05C.dpuf

  • Saturday, October 29, 9:30 am – 4:30 pm – Landscape Design Clinic

    This fast-paced, information-saturated Berkshire Botanical Garden clinic with noted landscape architect Walt Cudnohufsky on Saturday, October 29 from 9:30 – 4:30 introduces design students, homeowners and gardeners to methods of problem-solving as part of the design process. It will lead to the basic conceptual elements of a landscape master plan. All attendees will participate in the process of observing and designing and will come away with an understanding of how a good design evolves from evaluation and analysis. An active discussion format will focus on common design principles. A step-by-step presentation will focus the discussion later in the afternoon. The field trip will be held rain or shine. Dress for outdoors, wear waterproof footwear, and bring a bag lunch.

    Walter Cudnohufsky is owner of Walter Cudnohufsky Associates Landscape Architects, Land and Community Planners, Ashfield, MA. He is the founder and for 20 years was the director of the Conway School of Landscape Design. For fees and to enroll, call 413-298-3926.

  • Fridays, July 24 and July 31, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Writing in the Garden

    Rich in sensory experience, a garden is an especially inspiring place in which to write. In this two-hour workshop, to be held twice on July 24 and 31, from 10 – noon, participants will visit two gardens at Tower Hill and write spontaneously in response to prompts inspired by the surroundings. Both aspiring and experienced writers are welcome.

    Instructor Jane Roy Brown is an award-winning writer, editor, and landscape historian who lives in Conway, Massachusetts. Jane works part-time as director of educational outreach at the Library of American Landscape History, a nonprofit organization based in Amherst, Massachusetts, which publishes books, produces films, and organizes exhibitions about American landscape history. Her workshop series, The Heart of Story: Writing Stories of Our Lives, focuses on how to write memoir.

    With Susan Haltom, Jane is co-author of One Writer’s Garden: Eudora Welty’s Home Place (University Press of Mississippi, September 2011), which won the 2012 Eudora Welty Award. Jane also wrote Drawing Lessons, a history of the Conway School of Landscape Design (CSLD via lulu.com, November 2011, work for hire).
    Her articles on travel, gardens, and landscape architecture have appeared in numerous periodicals, including Architectural Record, the Boston Globe travel section, The Christian Science Monitor, Garden Design, Harvard Magazine, and Preservation. She is a contributing editor for Landscape Architecture, the magazine of the American Society of Landscape Architects. She received a 2008 Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Gold Award from the Society of American Travel Writers Foundation. She edited the 2003 Journal of the New England Garden History Society and worked in various editorial staff positions at AMC Outdoors, the magazine of the Appalachian Mountain Club, from 1995 to 2004, where she received a 2004 national Gold Award from the Society of National Association Publishers.  After earning a B.A. at Middlebury College, Jane completed the certificate program in landscape-design history at Radcliffe Seminars (now the Landscape Institute at Boston Architectural College). As her final project, she documented the history of the 1926 Jens Jensen landscape at Skylands, the former summer home of Edsel and Eleanor Ford in Seal Harbor, Maine.

    Tower Hill member price is $20 per session, nonmembers $35 per session.  Register at www.towerhillbg.org.

  • Wednesday, June 3, 9:30 am – 12:30 pm – Ashintully Garden: From a Designer’s View

    Ashintully, the name given to the original 1,000-acre estate belonging to Egyptologist Robb de Peyster Tytus, is located in Tyringham, MA. The garden was a gift of John Stewart McLennan Jr. and his wife Katharine to The Trustees of Reservations. Mr. McLennan, an accomplished and honored composer, designed the elegant gardens over 30 years as a parallel creative effort to his musical work. Tour the garden at Ashintully on Wednesday, June 3, from 9:30 am – 12:30 pm with landscape architect Walter Cudnohufsky and see this important garden through fresh and discerning eyes. There will be a detailed and lively group discussion about what makes Ashintully great. Participants will learn about garden design as a set of planned relationships and an exercise of restraint, focusing on the ten most important garden design principles as illustrated in Walter’s forthcoming book. The gardens blend several natural features into an ordered arrangement with both formal and informal beauty. In 1997, Ashintully Gardens received the Massachusetts Horticultural Society’s H. Hollis Hunnewell Medal. Enjoy a fresh June morning at this lovely garden space.

    Walter Cudnohufsky, M.L.A. is a long-time dedicated teacher. Having founded and for 20 years directed the nationally acclaimed Conway (Mass.) School of Landscape Design, he has honed a reasoned approach to planning/design. Currently, his firm is engaged in many diverse and stimulating planning/design projects throughout the region.

    Dress for outdoors with sturdy walking shoes.  Berkshire Botanical Garden member price $40, nonmembers $45.  Register on line at http://www.berkshirebotanical.org/event/ashintully-garden-from-a-designers-view/?instance_id=3342.

  • Tuesday, January 7, 9:00 am – 11:00 am – Irrigation Tips for Landscape Designers

    The Ecological Landscaping Association and the New England Wild Flower Society will co-sponsor Irrigation Tips for Landscape Designers on Tuesday, January 7, from 9 – 11 (snow date Wednesday January 8), a panel discussion lead by Theresa Sprague and Trevor Smith, at Garden in the Woods in Framingham.  $20 for ELA and NEWFS members, $25 for nonmembers.

    The goal of most irrigation systems is to produce healthy landscapes while conserving water.  For landscape designers to achieve this goal, irrigation systems need to be well designed.  This panel discussion will held you understand the basics of irrigation systems in order to improve communication with irrigation contractors.  For more information email ela.info@comcast.net, or call 617-436-5838.  Theresa Sprague is the owner of BlueFlax Design in Mattapoisett, where she focuses on merging science with the fine art of landscape design.  She holds a Masters Degree from the Conway School of Landscape Design and is currently ELA’s Vice President.  Trevor Smith is owner of Land Escapes, a full service ecological landscaping company in the Boston area. He is currently ELA’s President.

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  • Saturday, November 2, 9:30 am – 4:30 pm – Landscape Design Clinic: Introduction to a Coherent Process

    This fast-paced, information-saturated Berkshire Botanical Garden clinic on Saturday, November 2 from 9:30 – 4:30 will introduce design students, home owners and  others to an opportunity finding and problem solving design process. It will lead to the basic conceptual elements of a landscape master plan. All attendees will participate in the process of observing and designing. Students will come away coherent examples of how design happens. An active discussion format will focus on common design principles. A step by step power point presentation will focus the discussion later in the afternoon. This all day workshop is a prerequisite for Landscape Design Clinic Level II course offered in spring 2012. The field trip is held rain or shine. This class can be taken as a core requirement for the Horticulture Certificate Level II program, or as an individual class.  $125 fee.  To register call Berkshire Botanical Garden at 413-298-3926, or Berkshire Community College, 413-236-2127.

    Instructor – Walter Cudnohufsky, M.L.A. is a long-time dedicated teacher. Having founded and for twenty years directed the nationally acclaimed Conway (Mass.) School of Landscape Design, he has honed a reasoned approach to planning design. Currently his firm is engaged in many diverse and stimulating planning/design projects throughout the region.

    http://www.wcala.com/images/home/Patio.jpg