Thinking about starting a community garden on your property? Join The Garden Conservancy and Katherine Brown on September 14 at 4 pm for a lively, informal discussion of some of the wonderful benefits that are possible. We’ll also talk frankly about some challenges. You’ll learn tips for designing beds and other garden features to accommodate gardeners; organizing clean-up work parties and other community-building events; clarifying authority and responsibilities; crafting agreements; fees; handling conflicts; liability questions, etc.
A resource list with links to online information will be provided.
Location: Sycamore Farm Community Garden Providence, RI
Date and Time: Saturday, September 14, 2024 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Advolly Richmond’s beautifully illustrated talk highlights some of the flowers featured in her upcoming book, A Short History of Flowers. Many of the plants we love and grow as ornamentals first appeared in early herbals for medicinal and culinary use. But how often do we stop to think about how these beautiful flowers ended up in our tiny corner of the world?
Flowers have played pivotal roles in societies for centuries, from the wild fuchsia hedgerows of Ireland, to the lily of the valley bringing luck and making a bold fashion statement in Paris. All of these blooms hold a treasure trove of stories. Have a giggle, shed a tear, but most of all, enjoy the tales of exploration in disguise, enduring love, cultural appropriation, and hybridization that Advolly will bring to life in this webinar. You will also get a glimpse of some of the gorgeous, specially commissioned botanical illustrations which appear in the book. Advolly Richmond is a plants and garden historian, TV and radio presenter, and independent researcher in social history based in England. She lectures on garden history subjects from the sixteenth to twentieth centuries, contributes garden history features on BBC Gardeners’ World, presents plant history profiles for BBC Radio 4’s Gardeners’ Question Time, and produces The Garden History Podcast.
The Garden Conservancy’s Open Days program continues July 13 in Washington County, Rhode Island, with Thompson’s Corner in Westerly. This garden has evolved over the last twenty years. It contains more than 25 species of trees, including a London Plane tree which was planted to commemorate Westerly’s Tercentenary in 1969. There is a grove of paw paw trees started from seed and a ginkgo tree which is a descends from a tree in Westerly’s Wilcox Park, an arboretum. Although less than three-quarters of an acre in a village setting, there are two water features, a summer kitchen, a small boat barn, and an outhouse which is now the world’s smallest “she shed” on the grounds of this antique farmhouse. The emphasis has been on using natives to create a naturalistic settling. The garden is organic and toxin free. Two sessions, 10 – 1 and 1 – 4. $5 for Garden Conservancy members, $10 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.gardenconservancy.org/open-days/garden-directory/thompson-s-corner
Join garden historian Nicole Juday, author of the new book Private Gardens of Philadelphia,as she discusses the character-driven gardens she discovered in writing her book. Using examples illustrated with images from the book’s lavish photography by Rob Cardillo, she will not only highlight how these stunning gardens reflect the personalities and interests of their owners but will also point to examples of how these contemporary landscapes say something about the social, economic, political, and religious influences that have contributed to the incredible richness of horticulture in the Philadelphia region. This Garden Conservancy webinar will take place July 11, and is $5 for Garden Conservancy members, $15 for nonmembers. A recording of this webinar will be sent to all registrants a few days after the event. We encourage you to register, even if you cannot attend the live webinar. Register at https://www.gardenconservancy.org/education/education-events/virtual-talk-the-secret-world-of-philadelphia-s-private-gardens
Nicole Juday had her first exposure to great horticulture when she came to Philadelphia in the 1990s. Soon thereafter, gardening became the catalyst for a career change and a source of lifelong fascination and learning. Her work includes serving as the rosarian for Wyck House and Garden, the oldest rose garden in the country. Later she managed the renowned program at Barnes Arboretum School in Merion, then directed programming at the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society. She has served on the boards of several horticultural nonprofits and speaks and writes frequently about gardens and garden history.
Five fabulous gardens will be featured by the Garden Conservancy on May 11 in Massachusetts. For complete information visit www.gardenconservancy.org.
In Worcester, visit the garden of Matt Mattus and Joe Philip. Matt’s garden is a mature, third- generation family property in a suburban neighborhood. It contains many tall trees (now more than 90 feet tall) planted in the 1920s by his grandfather and father. “The garden is an ongoing restoration project” says Matt. “I’ve never opened it up for tours as I’ve always believed that it was more of a small collector’s garden than one that is ‘tour-worthy’, yet I know that most visitors enjoy the casual atmosphere, and the ‘down the rabbit hole-ness’ of a true collector’s garden!” Expect to see collections of interesting plants and greenhouse projects, sweet peas, stone and gravel paths, boxwood and hornbeam hedges, garden rooms, and even a small 100-year-old goldfish pond. Charming and picturesque as a small English garden and as horticulturally interesting as a botanic garden, this 1.5 acres is essentially a home garden, yet one that has recently been featured in Martha Stewart Living, Better Homes and Gardens, and other magazines. Matt Mattus, whose blog is Growingwithplants.com, is the author of Mastering the Art of Vegetable Gardening (2019) and Mastering the Art of Growing Flowers (2020).
Petersham is the location of an organic, toxin-free, dry/xeriscape garden called Swift River Farm. When Bruce and Gus acquired this 87-acre property in north central Massachusetts in 1998, there wasn’t even the hint of a garden to be seen. Over the next few years, an orchard of heirloom apple varieties was planted, stone walls built, and the first of several perennial gardens was installed. A woodland garden filled with spring ephemerals, epimediums, hellebores, mukdenia, hostas, and small flowering trees and shrubs now stretches from the front of the house down along the north side of the property to a bed of tree peonies. There is also a large rock garden, a spring garden with primulas, and spring bulbs. In 2010, Gordon Hayward created a master plan designed to unite the gardens, adding a water garden, a large pollinator meadow garden, an oak walk, and gravel paths allowing easy access between different areas. Since 2012 Helen O’Donnell, garden designer and plantswoman extraordinaire, has been consulting on planting design and new garden projects.
The Berry Garden in Boylston began as an open hayfield in 2001, and everything in the garden was planted by the owners. What was once a hayfield has become a wonderful garden with a great diversity of well-cultivated plants. So much time and energy has been lavished on it that it has the feel of an established garden. Many layers lead the visitor past a marvelous array of trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants. The owners’ great passion for plants is infectious. Parts of the garden are still evolving. This garden’s estimated size is 2 acres.
A larger site is the garden of Pepe and John Maynard in Groton. In their words: Our place, currently about 25 acres, was originally part of a much larger property, most of which was placed under conservation in 2006. We were attracted to it by the sweeping views to the west, dramatic sunsets, and the protection offered by hundreds of acres of surrounding fields and woodland, all protected from development. Starting in the nineteenth century, successive large country houses had been built on the site, surrounded by the formal, high-maintenance gardens of the day. The last of these rather grand houses was demolished in the 1960s. The succeeding generation of the previous owning family was more interested in breeding Black Angus than in horticulture. As a result the formal gardens had succumbed to neglect, bittersweet, and browsing deer by the time we purchased the property in 2007. At that time we had no interest in restoring formal gardens. Our first steps were to plant an allée of small sugar maples along the lane leading to our barn, and to fence a small nursery area where we could stockpile plants and grow them safe from deer. We dithered about building a deer fence around more of the property, fearing it would interfere with the view, but finally fenced about 15 acres. The fence enabled us to begin planting to create informal, naturalistic grounds using native plant material as much as possible. While the nursery is now empty and the maples in the allée have reached 12 inches in diameter, all the plantings are still young and have only begun to mature. Nonetheless we believe the grounds have grown in enough to reward unhurried exploration with a wide variety of trees and shrubs, and, in the spring, extensive plantings of daffodils and other bulbs. The surrounding areas under conservation are open for walks, and a few remaining Black Angus add interest to the landscape. In the summer of 2020 an energetic couple working for us decided to clear out a small formal garden neglected for 25 years and overgrown to the point of invisibility. An exceptional stonemason rebuilt the dry stone walls over the winter and we began replanting in the early summer of 2021. An exceptionally wet summer helped to get new perennials established.This garden’s estimated size is 10 acres. Please note this garden will be open until 6 pm.
The Kinsey-Pope Garden is open three times a year, in Amherst, Massachusetts. It is a landscape of many uncommon trees with strikingly beautiful bark and a wide variety of textures, flowers, berries, and great autumn color; many shrubs with more than one season of beauty; perennials flowering in three seasons; ground covers of unusual dramatic effect covering all beds during all seasons; and in winter offering a wide palette of interesting shapes, lovely bark, and many evergreen trees and shrubs. In addition, there are three bridges over a stone-lined swale, a hand-built screened gazebo and curved top arbor, a charming little pond, many benches and Japanese stone lanterns, large-stone walkways and stone walls, and a Japanese inspired fence surrounding all of the ½-acre garden. Admission will be in two sessions, 10 – 1 and 1 – 5.
Moon Gardenis a guide to creating a garden that comes alive at night, with night-blooming plants and night-fragrant flowers. The book is full of design and horticultural wisdom, planting tips for outdoor, indoor, and container gardens, and soothing rituals such as journaling and meditations. With beautiful botanical illustrations, Moon Gardenencourages readers to approach gardening as a grounding, spiritual practice.
Presenter Jarema Osofsky is a Brooklyn-based landscape designer with roots in Hong Kong. Jarema’s design studio, Dirt Queen NYC, works closely with clients to create verdant gardens that offer meaningful and ecologically sustainable connections to the natural world. Her debut book, Moon Garden: A Guide to Creating an Evening Oasisinvites readers to dive into the enchanting world of night gardens. Jarema’s work has been featured in Architectural Digest, T Magazine, Elle Decor, Apartment Therapy, and others.
The artist and landscape architect Isamu Noguchi’s (1904–1988) interests and production spanned an exceptionally broad terrain from furniture and lamps to courtyards and gardens. Although his gardens include several of the twentieth century’s most iconic landscape designs, Noguchi nonetheless occupies a place removed from the normal practice of landscape architecture. As an artist, he relied more on intuition than on objective analysis, and he shaped his landscapes as sculpture, with space as their primary vehicle.
In his comprehensive and richly illustrated study of Noguchi’s gardens, noted landscape historian Marc Treib describes and critiques projects that date from Noguchi’s early, unrealized projects for playgrounds and monuments to a large park in Sapporo, Japan, whose construction was completed only posthumously. The story begins with the discussion of Noguchi sculpture that relate in some way to actual landscapes, then moves to the dance set designs for Martha Graham, finally entering the realm of actual landscapes with his gardens for the Reader’s Digest offices in Tokyo.
Marc Treib, Professor of Architecture Emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley, is a historian and critic of architecture and landscape architecture who has published on a wide variety of modern and historical subjects in the United States, Japan, and Scandinavia. His most recent books include The Landscapes of Modern Architecture: Wright, Mies, Neutra, Aalto, Barragán; The Aesthetics of Contemporary Planting Design; Serious Fun: The Landscapes of Claude Cormier; The Shape of the Land: Topography and Landscape Architecture; and most recently, Poodling: On the Just Shaping of Shrubbery.
Design legend Bunny Williams has made her name creating interiors with livable elegance, and nowhere is this more apparent than her own beloved country house in Connecticut where she lives throughout the year. Over the past 35 years, Bunny has brought her impeccable eye to a series of gardens that extend across the verdant and ever-evolving 22-acre property. Now, in her new book Bunny Williams: Life in the Garden,Bunny shares her passion and infectious enthusiasm for planting, entertaining, and living among nature year-round.
Join her and the Garden Conservancy on Thursday, April 18 at 2 pm for a personal look at life in the garden as she shares awe-inspiring photos from all four seasons and the lessons she’s learned along the way. $5 for Garden Conservancy members, $15 for general public. A recording of this webinar will be sent to all registrants a few days after the event. We encourage you to register, even if you cannot attend the live webinar. Register at https://www.gardenconservancy.org/education/education-events/virtual-talk-life-in-the-garden
Join The Garden Conservancy and Mikyoung Kim, Founding Principal of Mikyoung Kim Design, FASLA, on February 22 from 2 – 3 online as she discusses her career from academic dean to leading a firm of growing international stature at the vanguard of rewilding, preservation, neurodiversity, and inclusion, with notable projects like Ford’s Michigan Central Station adaptive-reuse Master Plan for the historic train station in Detroit, Boston Children’s Hospital’s Master Plan & Healing Gardens, as well as Master Plan for Long Hill and Sedgwick Gardens for the Trustees of the Reservations in Massachusetts.
Touching on resonance and resilience, Mikyoung will address her fascination with the rhythms and harmony of nature as her research division explores an inclusive design for the future of gardens and the urban landscape. $5 for Conservancy members, $15 for general public. Register at https://www.gardenconservancy.org/education/education-events/virtual-talk-resilience-rewildingA recording of this webinar will be sent to all registrants a few days after the event. We encourage you to register, even if you cannot attend the live webinar.
Did you miss Troy Scott Smith’s Sissinghurst Through the Seasons webinars, sponsored by The Garden Conservancy? They are pleased to present all four episodes in a convenient bundle, including Troy’s four seasonal video diaries. Combining history, horticulture, and hands-on education, this landmark series is the Garden Conservancy’s most popular virtual program series to date. Throughout this four-part series, Troy Scott Smith will guide you through the course of a gardening year at Sissinghurst. Troy will share with you how the garden looks, which flowers are blooming at each season, and what the garden looked like when it was first created in the 1930s. He will uncover the secrets of pruning and propagation and the art of the English Garden. Each episode is packed with information, all simply explained and illustrated, giving you techniques and confidence to put into practice in your own garden.
For more information and to purchase the bundle, click the link HERE.