Tag: Ed Bowen

  • Saturday, September 8, 8:00 am – 6:00 pm – Hollister House Garden Study Weekend VIII Symposium: A Passion For Plants

    Be inspired by a day long symposium on Saturday, September 8 at Hollister House Garden, 300 Nettleton Hollow Road in Washington, Connecticut (the Berkshires) featuring:

    Sarah Price – one of Britain’s most prominent garden designers on Plants First
    Kelly Norris – award-winning plantsman and author on Planting on the Wild Side
    Lynden Miller – public garden designer on Beatrix Ferrand:Inspiration and Mentor
    Taylor Johnston and Ed Bowen – of Issima on The Cutting Garden Reimagined
    Barbara Paul Robinson – passionate gardener and author of Heroes of Horticulture
    Each reservation includes continental breakfast and lunch at the symposium and cocktails and preview buying at the Sale of Rare and Unusual Plants at Hollister House Garden.

    Visit  https://hollisterhousegarden.org//srv/htdocs/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/HHG_Garden-Study_VIII.pdf for event details.

    Patron $500 – includes invitation to the speaker dinner on Friday evening at Hollister House Garden and reserved seating at the symposium. ($200 of this ticket is a contribution to the HHG Education Fund and tax deductible)
    Friend $190 – Hollister House Garden and Garden Conservancy members
    Non-members $225

    If you must cancel your reservation please notify us as soon as possible so we may make your space available to others.  Register at https://hollisterhousegarden.org/events/

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  • Saturday, October 1, 8:30 am – 3:45 pm – Inspirations for Next Year’s Garden

    The Massachusetts Master Gardener Association will hold its 2016 Massachusetts Gardening Symposium, Inspirations for Next Year’s Garden, on Saturday, October 1 from 8:30 – 3:45 at Westford Academy in Westford, Massachusetts. The MMGA has chosen this year’s symposium speakers not only for their expertise and the respect they have earned, but also for their ability to inspire audiences with practical tips and techniques. Here is a sampling of what you can expect to learn.

    MARGARET ROACH, author and radio/web site host – The 365-Day Garden

    The garden is never really out of season, according to Margaret Roach. Creating year-round visual enjoyment requires a combination of tactics: Learn about “botanical stars,” site selection and – perhaps most importantly – how to engage your senses in planning for 2017.

    ED BOWEN, plant breeder, horticulturist and nurseryman – The Best Plants You’ve Never Heard of

    Tired of the “same old-same old”? There is a practical aesthetic value in employing alternatives in the garden. Learn about some lesser known cultivars and species of familiar genera as well as new collections from the wild, all suited to New England’s climate.

    GORDON HAYWARD, garden designer, author and travel guide – Fine Art as Inspiration for Garden Design

    A new way to look at your garden based on how artists and garden designers use similar elements of composition to construct their images…including creating foreground/background and the use of light and shadow, focal points, contrast, and positive/negative space.

    BOB SOLBERG, nursery owner and hosta hybridizer – The Truth About Hostas: Why We Can’t Live Without Them

    The dirt on hostas: Are they right for your landscape? How about minis? Are the new hosta hybrids the best hostas? How do you maximize performance and deal with pests?

    REGISTRATION – $75 per person thru August 15; $95 per person August 16-September 24. Includes lectures, Garden Marketplace and lunch. No refunds after September 24, 2016. Register online at http://massmastergardeners.org/symposium/

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  • Saturday, March 5, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – One Garden, Three Perspectives: Design vs Plants

    On Saturday, March 5, from 1 – 3 at Berkshire Botanical Garden in Stockbridge, join extraordinary plantsmen Ed Bowen of Opus Nursery and John Gwynne and Mikel Folcarelli of Sakonnet Garden for a lively discussion of the plants and design concepts employed in creating the well-known Sakonnet Garden in Little Compton, RI. Learn about choice plants and consider the unusual design elements employed in this garden that surprise and delight. It is a great opportunity to hear about the inner thoughts of three great gardeners and plantsmen who share a few ideas to bring home to your own garden.

    Ed Bowen is owner of Opus Nursery, a nano-nursery in Little Compton, RI, with an increasingly anachronistic horticultural approach: actively collecting, propagating, and growing plants. His focus is the under-cultivated and garden-worthy, with a specialization in unusual perennials. Sakonnet Gardens, pictured below, the long-term project of John Gwynne and Mikel Folcarelli, is a secret garden embedded within a native coastal fields landscape. At the diminutive scale of a cottage garden, it is conceived as an intimate place to explore, with multiple paths leading one onward to unexpected experiences.

    BBG and BNARGS members $22, nonmembers $27.  Register online at www.berkshirebotanical.org.

  • Sunday, March 29, 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm – Practicing the Dark Arts: Tips and Plants

    Tips, techniques and lesser known plants for shade, with a special emphasis on later blooming herbaceous plants, is the topic of this Tower Hill Botanic Garden class on Sunday, March 29 from 2 – 3 with Ed Bowen. THBG member price $15, non-member $25. Register online at www.towerhillbg.org, or call 508-869-6111.

    Ed Bowen is a working gardener and proprietor of Opus Plants, a small nursery in southeastern New England specializing in unusual herbaceous plants. For
    years he was an instructor in the Massachusetts Master Gardener Program, is involved with Sakonnet Garden in Little Compton, RI, on the horticultural steering committee at
    North Hill in Vermont, and has written for Horticulture Magazine and other publications.

  • Saturday, March 10, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – A Nursery Man’s Miscellany: New and Lesser Known, Garden-worthy Plants

    Join nurseryman Ed Bowen of Opus Nursery on Saturday, March 10, from 1 – 3, at Berkshire Botanical Garden, for a look at the lesser known garden-worthy plants sure to enhance your garden. Ed’s philosophy suggests that while he appreciates the efficacy element of gardening, success depends on many factors beyond simple plant selection. This lecture will open your eyes to an eclectic range of choice plants to rejuvenate your perennial plant palette

    Ed Bowen is a horticulturalist and owner of Opus Nursery, Little Compton, RI. Opus is a deliberately small nano-nursery actively collecting, propagating, and growing a diverse range of plants. Ed’s focus is the under-cultivated and garden worthy, and he specialize in unusual perennials. He employs strictly organic pest controls, and is striving to be peat free. The class is $22 for BBG members, $27 for non-members, and you may register on-line at www.berkshirebotanical.org.  Photo below, copyright Sakonnet,  from an excellent website www.whatweretheskieslike.com, reporting on gardens, horticulture, and botany.

  • Saturday, September 11, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Garden Conservancy Open Day in Little Compton, Rhode Island

    Three beautiful gardens will be open for viewing in Little Compton, Rhode Island on Saturday, September 11, from 10:00 am until 4:00 pm.  For more information, log on to www.gardenconservancy.org.

    The Atwater Garden (pictured below) is a country garden with the ocean glimmering in the distance, displaying the unique horticultural skills and knowledge of its owners.  Nate Atwater tends the vegetable garden and Berta Atwater, a judge of rhododendrons and Garden Club of America judge of horticulture, has designed and executed the other gardens, which are notable for their carefully pruned trees and shrubs.  Two rock gardens by Lloyd Lawton are surrounded by a collection of rhododendrons, azaleas, ilex, hostas, dwarf conifers, grasses and Japanese maples.  The garden also contains rare plants not yet on the market.

    Gioia Browne and Jim Marsh’s Garden, at 79 Peckham Road in Little Compton, features towering American elms and stonewalls framing the 17th century farmhouse on three acres.  The owners have enhanced the mature landscape by adding gardens and planting more than 150 trees and shrubs.  The woodland garden surrounding the 19th century barn is planted with ferns, jack-in-the-pulpits and hostas.  The enchanting summer house, used for tools and casual dining, overlooks the dianthus, gentians, ferns and dwarf conifers in the rock garden.  In the 75 foot perennial border, foxgloves, phlox, old roses, clematis, daylilies, dahlias, anemones, asters, and others bloom from May through November in shades of pink, purple, and blue.  Nearby are the shrub walk, hydrangea bed, and the geometric, cutting, and white gardens.

    Sakonnet is an exotic cottage garden imbedded within a native coastal fields landscape. It is a long-term project of John Gwynne and Mikel Folcarelli, abetted by Addie Kurz (energetic sister), and Ed Bowen of nearby Opus Nursery. All are Rhode Islanders, with John (trained as a landscape architect and involved with the Wildlife Conservation Society in New York), and Mikel with Façonnable in Nice. This garden began in the mid 1970s as a small clearing deep within a naturally grown tangle of local arrowwood and autumn olives. Now slightly larger than an acre, it is a whimsical series of spaces organically shaped within the thickets. Paths and walls were designed and thousands of rarely grown plants were added. Divided into a series of outdoor rooms, each space reflects ongoing experiments with lighting, space, color mixing, and growing rarely seen plants—many semi-hardy. High stone walls and hedges have enabled microclimate modifications that help exclude cold winds and create warm or cool pockets for growing Himalayan plants or southern plants like palmettos. One space, planted with soft yellows often seems to catch the sunlight on a gray, coastal Rhode Island day. A new Mughal treehouse is a centerpiece of “the tropics”. Sakonnet is an experiment in process to see what can be grown in coastal Rhode Island.  For a sneak peek, see www.Sakonnetgarden.com).

    Admission to each participating private garden is $5 per person; children 12 and under are admitted free. Admission may be paid in cash or check. Tickets are not required to attend Open Days.

    The Atwater Garden