Tag: Greenfield

  • Saturday, October 19, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Franklin, Hampden, & Hampshire Counties Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy presents three private gardens open to the public on October 19 from 10 – 4. Complete details are found at www.gardenconservancy.org

    The Kinsey-Pope Garden in Amherst has been a work in progress since 1978. 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. Please note this garden is open for two sessions, 10 – 1 and 1 – 5.

    Rock Valley Paradise is located in Holyoke. The garden is a sanctuary, and a happy place. Although the owner has flowers and herbs, her passion is food for the family. The spot includes a small orchard of fifteen fruit trees, apples, peaches, plums, pears, apricots, and cherries. Our berries include blueberries, goji berries, elderberries, and black, red, and champagne currants. The concord grapes provide us with lots of juice for the winter months. Seasonally she grows all five kinds of tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, squash, eggplant, and all the other “regular veggies.” Our homestead also boasts two dairy goats, a dozen chickens, and a hive of honey bees. This garden’s estimated size is ¼ acre.

    The last garden on the tour is Swampfield, in Sunderland (below). The owner says: “When we moved here in 2015, the property was a blank slate. Since then, we have added 7,000 sq. feet of perennial border, in a mixture of sun and shade. Our sunny borders are filled with classic cottage garden plants and many natives. While there’s a playful exuberance, the color palette within each season is relatively limited—creating a sense of harmony and continuity as you explore the property. The two woodland gardens are lush, with towering actaeas and tiny primroses and everything in between. The garden crescendos in the fall as mums, asters, sedums, and more explode alongside scores of ornamental grasses and shrubs—just as their foliage begins to take on exciting hues. “Welcome to Swampfield! This garden’s estimated size is 7,000 sq. feet.

  • Saturday, June 15, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Spring into North Adams

    On Saturday, June 15, join the Pioneer Valley Institute at Greenfield Community College for a day-long PVI tour to North Adams, featuring great scenery and geologic history of the Berkshires, the unique marble natural bridge and dam at Natural Bridge State Park, Western Gateway Heritage State Park focusing on the Hoosac Tunnel history, and MassMoCA with one of the largest contemporary visual art exhibits in the US. Along the way we will discuss the stories behind the scenery of this fascinating region with geologist Richard Little. A bus option is available, at cost, with a minimum of 25 participants.

    Tour fees (includes admission)
    With bus transportation: $47 ($57 non-PVI members)
    You provide transportation: $22 ($32 non-PVI members)

    Bus space is limited to 25. Contact Richard Little at rdlittle2000@aol.com to sign up or for more information.

    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a1/East_Portal_of_Hoosac_Tunnel.jpg/640px-East_Portal_of_Hoosac_Tunnel.jpg

  • Thursday, November 17, 10:00 am – 11:30 am – The Roses at the End of the Road

    With an illustrated lecture on Thursday, November 17, at 10:00 a. m., Pat Leuchtman will take us on a virtual stroll to see her country garden. The talk is part of the Mass Hort Library’s Author Series, and it is free and open to the public. The author of the new book, The Roses at the End of the Road, began planting her Rose Walk 30 years ago and will tell us about romantic old fashioned roses as well as hardy and disease resistant roses. For 30 years, she has written a column for The Recorder in Greenfield, Massachusetts, and other newspapers, which include The New York Times, the Boston Globe, and the Burlington Free Press. She has also written for magazines, including Horticulture and Organic Gardening. Her book is made up of lively essays about life among the roses and with the commonweeder.com blog. Books will be available for purchase.  Pre-registration is desirable but not required. To tell us that you are coming, please call Librarian Maureen Horn at 617-933-4912 or email her at mhorn@masshort.org.

  • Saturday, September 19, 10:30 a.m. – Culinary Pleasures and Daylily Sale

    Herban Learning Adventure will hold a workshop on Saturday, September 19, beginning at 10:30 a.m. at Glenbrook Gardens, 56 Glenbrook Drive, Greenfield, MA.  The cost of the workshop is $40, and you may sign up by logging on to www.stockbridgeherbs.com, or by emailing info@stockbridgeherbs.com, or by calling 413-665-6918.

    The morning begins with Herb Vinegars, Syrups and Cordials. Preserve the freshness of your garden herbs.  Start with some taste tests and learn about flavor combinations.  You will make your own herb-infused vinegar and herbal syrup to take home.  Then, at 11:45, discover Herbal Salts and Sugars.  Delight friends at your next party with a Lavender Margarita using herbal salt that you’ll create in this workshop.  You’ll also make herb-infused sugars to use in baking and an all-purpose herbal seasoning salt.  You’ll leave with salts and sugars and a great margarita recipe.  Finally, at 1:00 pnm, discover Seasoning Wreaths, Swags and Culinary Blends.  Capture herbal flavors by creating mini-wreaths and swags, which can be used to season soups and stews.  You’ll also make a multi-purpose herb blend.  Recipes and techniques for using your creations will be included.

    Herban Learning Adventures is brought to you by several Franklin County Farms with the hope that you enjoy herbs every day.

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