Tag: Country Living Gardener

  • Sunday, September 19, 10:15 am – 12:15 pm – Glorious Autumn Container

    Capture colors and textures of autumn with this container garden floral design class with Betsy Williams at Tower Hill Botanic Garden on Septembver 19 at 10:15 am. Fill a 14″ pot with brilliant mums and asters, richly colored kales, variegated ivy, heucheras and other hardy plant material. With proper care your autumn container garden will brighten your doorway or patio until Thanksgiving. Plants in containers often make it through the winter if kept in a sheltered location and can be planted outdoors in the spring.

    All materials are included in this program. If you register as a pair you will receive ONE SET of supplies.

    Instructor Betsy Williams teaches, lectures and writes about living with herbs and flowers. A lifelong gardener, herb grower and cook, Betsy trained as a florist in Boston and England. She combines her floral, gardening and cooking skills with an extensive knowledge of history, plant lore and seasonal celebrations. An entertaining lecturer, she weaves stories and legends throughout her informative talks and demonstrations. Her gardens, floral work and retail shop have been featured in many books, national magazines and newspapers, including The New York Times, The American Gardener, Victoria, Better Homes and Gardens, Country Living Gardener, Colonial Homes, the Herb Companion, and Traditional Homes.

    $85 Member Adult; $100 Adult; $115 Adult Pair (Registration includes admission to the Garden) Register at www.towerhillbg.org.

  • Saturday, February 27, 10:30 am – 12:00 noon – Poupourri For a Joyful Spring

    Potpourri, French for rotten pot, is a fragrant, often beautiful, mix of scented plant material with a long and fascinating history. In this Tower Hill Botanic Garden in-person program on February 27 from 10:30 – noon, we’ll discuss the history of potpourri and the importance of fragrance through the centuries, then learn the basics of creating a modern potpourri: how to dry herbs and flowers, use essential oils, and select fixatives. Each attendee will make a quart of sweetly scented Potpourri that welcomes the coming of Spring and the joyful return of the growing season! All materials will be provided. This program will be held indoors in one of our well-ventilated classrooms. Group size (10 people) will not exceed current state restrictions. $50 for THBG members, $65 for nonmembers. Register at www.towerhillbg.org.

    Instructor Betsy Williams teaches, lectures and writes about living with herbs and flowers. A lifelong gardener, herb grower and cook, Betsy trained as a florist in Boston and England. She combines her floral, gardening and cooking skills with an extensive knowledge of history, plant lore and seasonal celebrations. An entertaining lecturer, she weaves stories and legends throughout her informative talks and demonstrations. Her gardens, floral work and retail shop have been featured in many books, national magazines and newspapers, including The New York Times, The American Gardener, Victoria, Better Homes and Gardens, Country Living Gardener, Colonial Homes, the Herb Companion, and Traditional Homes.

  • Sunday, June 2, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Berkshire Area Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy’s Open Days Program kicks off in the Berkshires on Sunday, June 2, from 10 – 4, with two superior gardens.  Ticketing information may be found at www.gardenconservancy.org.
    Under the Hemlocks, 258 Great Barrington Road
    Housatonic, MA 01236-9773
    The owners write: After a two-year absence from the Open Days program, this garden is ready to be shown again. The garden is maturing and ripening – taking on what it wants – where and when. We still have the basic structure in a wooded setting–a bowl, with a rock garden in the front and the Magnolia garden, with the pond and upper walk in the back, surrounded by many rhododendrons. Boulders are everywhere – such blessings. The many shrubs and trees we planted have grown and taken their places with grace and certainty. There are eleven Japanese maples–at least four varieties –with their graceful shapes and colors. The white Thalia daffodils look spectacular under three of these maples on the side garden. In the Fall, it is the blue Lobelia siphilitica under the same maples. The weeping pines are larger and even droopier. Different grasses and hostas are everywhere. Perennials do their thing: the blue/purple drift of phlox divaricata mingling with the tulips in Spring; the foxgloves popping up all over the upper back garden a little later. Primula Japonica put on a major display after the Spring bulbs die back. Then summer moves on apace, with lilies, including waterlilies in the pond making their appearance, culminating with the Fall display of full grown coleus, phlox, blooming Ligularia Desdemona, dahlias, grasses, Kirengeshomas, and brugmansias. Sculptures dot the garden here and there, also the unexpected. The garden has been featured in several magazines: Passport, Country Living Gardener, Country Gardens, and is one of the Great Gardens of the Berkshires, a recent book by Virginia Small and Richard Pomerantz. We have added a new garden–-the woodland walk–-a playground designed for our new grandson, complete with fire pit. People enjoy the natural flow and feel of this garden. Please feel welcome at Under the Hemlocks.

    Good Dogs Farm—Maria Nation and Roberto Flores, dirtmeisters
    334 West Stahl Road
    Ashley Falls, MA 01257
    The owners say: In the years since we were last open for the Garden Conservancy the gardens have undergone a major transformation. The madcap exuberance has been tamed. The perennials have given way to boxwood, yew, junipers and broad swaths of ground cover beneath clipped shapes. The palate is a more harmonious series of blues, greys and greens. Where once it was a riot of color, now it is a place for peace and contemplation; a place where the shadows and light are as much a part of the garden as the plantings themselves. The paths through the gardens still lead to the follies and eccentricities of the owners – the outdoor bake oven, the outdoor shower, the distant sleeping room, the Keep (a new viewing tower created by Grey Davis & Chase Booth), and the large vegetable garden contained by a rough cedar fence, etc etc. Now the paths also lead the wanderer to the mini donkeys and Haflinger horse, the new barn and paddocks, the farm that has replaced the wild meadow and a river walk carved from the bramble. And, of course, good dogs still live here – and sometimes they stay out of the garden. Our gardens have been featured in Cottage Living, Berkshire Living, The Litchfield Country Times, Oprah’s *O at Home*, Gardenista Daily, various catalogues and the books Great Gardens of the Berkshires and Jack Staub’s newest: Private Edens, published in the Spring of 2013. We look forward to seeing you.

    http://www.architecturaldigest.com/blogs/daily/2013/03/gardens-book-jack-staub-private-edens-connecticut-virginia/_jcr_content/par/cn_contentwell/par-main/cn_blogpost/cn_image_1.size.private-edens-01.jpg