Tag: Martha’s Vineyard

  • Saturday, May 28, 10:00 am – 2:00 pm – Spring into Summer: A Celebration of Plants

    Help the Polly Hill Arboretum in West Tisbury celebrate the seasonal opening of its Visitor Center and plant sale season on Saturday, May 28, from 10 – 2.  In addition to plants for sale, there will be special tours, garden talks, a tree raffle, family discovery tours, and more.  The Artcliff Diner Food Truck will be on hand with food for sale.  Join Tom Clark for a special 9 am early bird tour.  Free.  For more information, log on to www.pollyhillarboretum.org.

     

  • Tuesday, May 24, 10:00 am – Best of Small Flowering Trees

    In modern day landscapes small flowering trees have an essential role in providing year-round interest without growing so big to dominate them. Increasingly, gardeners have sought out trees for foundation plantings or focal points that fit the scale of the garden and form the basis for a dynamic, beautiful, and diverse landscape. On Tuesday, May 24, join Polly Hill Arboretum Executive Director Tim Boland at 10 am at the Polly Hill Arboretum in West Tisbury for an illustrated review of a wide assortment of small flowering trees that provide the right fit for your landscape needs. $5/free for PHA members.  Visit www.pollyhillarboretum.org for directions.

  • Tuesday, July 12, 1:30 pm – 4:00 pm – New England Trees in Decline: The Science Behind the Story

    David Orwig, Forest Ecologist at Harvard Forest, will speak in the Hunnewell Building of the Arnold Arboretum on Tuesday, July 12, from 1:30 – 4 pm, on the topic of New England Trees in Decline: The Science Behind the Story. Since 1907, research has been underway at the 3,000-acre property of Harvard Forest, one of the oldest and most intensively studied forests in North America. Scientists, students, and collaborators at the Forest explore topics ranging from conservation and environmental change to land-use history and the ways in which physical, biological, and human systems interact to change our earth. Join Dr. Orwig for this special opportunity to learn about tree decline in New England and to explore ways to reduce and avoid further problems. Dr. Orwig will present information that details ongoing tree decline resulting from a variety of stressors including native and exotic pests and pathogens. Conifer species will be highlighted, but ongoing hardwood tree problems will be included as well. An emphasis will be given to identification of the problem, the mode of tree decline, and appropriate treatment options when applicable. Discussion will include pests such as hemlock woolly adelgid, elongate hemlock scale, red pine scale, Sirex wood wasp, spruce diseases, emerald ash borer, Asian long-horned beetle, and oak decline on Martha’s Vineyard.  Note New Date: Postponed from April 5.
    Fee $20 Ecological Landscape Association and Arnold Arboretum members, $25 nonmember.  Co-sponsored by the Ecological Landscape Association and the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University.  Register online at https://my.arboretum.harvard.edu or by phone at 617-384-5277.

  • Saturdays, December 11, January 8, February 12, and March 12, 10:00 am – 11:00 am – Winter Walk at Polly Hill Arboretum

    Every season of the year the Arboretum landscape offers something of beauty and interest to visitors. This winter on the second Saturday of the month join Arboretum staff to explore the grounds in the “off-season.” Tours are at 10am and run for a little over an hour. Meet at the Visitor Center at 10 am and dress for the weather. Tours are free – call 508-693-9426 if the weather looks especially fierce. For directions, log on to www.pollyhillarboretum.org.

  • Monday, June 28, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Garden Conservancy Open Day in Martha’s Vineyard

    The Garden Conservancy will sponsor an Open Day in Martha’s Vineyard on Monday, June 28, from 10 – 4 (one garden is only open until 2 pm – see below). This is a walking or bike tour with little parking available in Edgartown. The best way to reach Edgartown is via Vineyard Transit Authority (www.vineyardtransit.com). There is bus service from ferry terminals at Oak Bluffs (#13) and Vineyard Haven (#1 or #13) to the Visitor Center on Church Street. There are public restrooms at Visitor Center.

    85 South Water Street

    The original parts of this house are believed to date from the 1840s. More than fifty years ago a former owner and founder of the Martha’s Vineyard Garden Club set out the sunken geometric garden in the shape of a Union Jack. In the late 1990s, the English garden designer Penelope Hobhouse added some important features to the garden, particularly the enclosure of the sunken flag garden to create an outdoor room. The garden contains some rare and unusual, as well as native, plants. Currently, the owners, who are hands-on gardeners from England, work closely with Jeff Verner of Verner Fine Gardens to implement further design changes.

    108 North Water Street – Stretch’s Garden

    The garden called “Stretch’s Garden” is comprised of a hillside garden border, flowing down the hillside, with Edgartown Harbor creating quite a picturesque backdrop. The owner writes: “We can enjoy the full-season display from our front porch of dozens of perennial species, including hand-pollinated seedlings of delphinium, phlox varieties, gaura, agastache, and Oriental lilies. Many tried-and-true annuals such as Marguerite daisy, angelonia, cosmos, and cleome help summer-long interest and beauty. I enjoy doing my own flower arrangements, but hate to steal even one bit of color from the garden, so we created the cut flower garden at the back of the house. Now with our newly enclosed glass back porch addition, we love its beauty so much we think we’ll have to add a third garden to cut from!”

    Cate & Tom Applegate, 61 South Summer Street (open until 2 pm)

    The garden was created in 1992 and includes a border of mature evergreens enhanced by layers of rhododendrons, hydrangeas, arborvitaes, cypress, leucothoe, hollies, and hemlocks with an understory of ferns and ivy. The yard has a delicate band of white impatiens circling it, which serves to complement the cool feeling accentuated by the canopy of stately trees. The atmosphere is serene, calm, and elegant, and is added to by an intimate private patio surrounded by sunny perennial flower beds abundant with blooms and color from May through October. Phlox, Shasta daisy, dahlia, veronica, delphinium, and several varieties of lilies all find their home here. Jeff Verner of Verner Fine Gardens assists with the garden.

    Michael & Janice Donaroma, 46 Braley’s Way

    This quintessential cottage compound consists of seven gardens each having its own unique character. A rose-covered trellis covers the entire front of the guest cottage, playing off the whimsical island bed. The upper level has a cool meditative garden while the studio bed is filled with hot, happy colors. Inside the pool area is the white garden which bursts into bloom during mid-summer. At the far end of the property is the Mauve Garden which leads into the enclosed cut flower and veggie garden. Enjoy the diversity on this small half-acre of property.

    John & Judith Tankard, 16 School Street

    This is a new garden planted in 2005 to complement the historic house built around 1730 and fully renovated by the owners, an architect and a garden writer (who has spoken twice to The Garden Club of the Back Bay.) The garden was designed by Nan Blake Sinton and is composed mainly of hardy shrubs and ornamental trees. Pale pink ‘New Dawn’ roses climb on the fence surrounding the garden, and the roof of the garden shed is covered in ‘White Eden’ and ‘Abraham Darby’ roses as well as a Clematis montana rubens. There are two crabapples (Malus ‘Donald Wyman’), a large Viburnum sieboldii, and fragrant lilacs in the main garden. An espalier, created from Viburnum plicatum mariesii, on the wall of the house and a hedge of clipped Philadelphus coronarius in the parking area provide a bit of formality. There are small flower beds with astilbes, lavender, nepeta, salvia, and other perennials. A small brick patio is planted with lace cap hydrangeas and Hydrangea macrophylla ‘Enziandom’. At the front of the house, there are American hollies, English boxwood, Ilex glabra ‘Nigra’ and a large viburnum. One of the outstanding features of the garden is a large, old sycamore maple on the lane at the corner of the property, a survivor from earlier days.

    Woodside Garden – Dorothy Chaffee, 78 Planting Field Way

    The garden at Planting Field Way is a woodside garden built on the bones from other gardens of my past. When the owner moved from the harsher conditions of her home at Job’s Neck, located on Edgartown Great Pond, “into town,” she brought some of the plants with her. Because of the more sheltered quality of the new garden, she was able to incorporate more delicate plantings such as dahlias, phlox, delphiniums, and campanulas. Her garden consists of a variety of heights, leaf shapes, and textures, and incorporates her favorite colors: peach, salmon, soft yellow, pink, and white with touches of blue. Each year she has added a few perennials that meet her criteria for color and form. The play off the salmons and soft yellows off the blues and whites are echoed inside the house and on the deck. The colors follow one throughout the house and yard. She feels the garden has a wonderful serene and private quality. The garden contains a low stone wall, a statue, and a birdbath as well as a stone pathway—the plantings complement and highlight these features and draw one’s eye through the garden. The rhododendrons form a pretty backdrop to the garden and surrounds. Recently she has expanded the garden so it can be seen from the screened porch as well as the back deck.

    For directions and ticketing information, log on to www.gardenconservancy.org.

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  • Thursday, June 17, 10:00 am – How to Create a Hummingbird-Friendly Garden

    Highfield Hall, 56 Highfield Drive in Falmouth, presents a lecture by Shelley Baker-Vance on Thursday, June 17, at 10 am.  Shelley has been a professional gardener and nursery specialist on Martha’s Vineyard and Cape Cod for over 30 years, so she has the kind of practical experience to help you learn about hummingbirds and how to attract them.  Shelley will cover the types of hummingbirds coming to Cape Cod, the timing of when they come to feeders and flowers, and she’ll share ideas on annuals and perennials to keep them coming back to your garden during their stay on the Cape.  $5 suggested donation.  For more information, log on to www.highfieldhall.org.  Image of hummingbird in Cotuit courtesy of House Calls For You.

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  • Saturday, May 29, 10:00 am – 2:00 pm – Polly Hill Arboretum Opening Day Plant Sale

    Help celebrate the opening of The Polly Hill Arboretum Visitor Center with the annual Memorial Day Plant Sale. Whether you’re a budding gardener or a seasoned veteran, this plant sale will have something for you. Arboretum staff have chosen and grown plants that are noted not only for their superior ornamental qualities but also for their adaptability to Martha’s Vineyard. They plan to offer a selection of trees, shrubs, and perennials including many Island natives. Check out www.pollyhillarboretum.org for a plant sale preview. Plants will be for sale all season long.  You may also call them at 508-693-9426.

    And while you’re there, stop by the Far Barn between 11 am and noon for Great Plants For Vineyard Gardens. Join executive director Tim Boland for this plant sale preview as he gives an illustrated presentation featuring some of the distinctive plants featured in the plant sale. Tim will highlight the ornamental attributes of many of the plants and provide tips on successful culture and garden use. He will begin with a talk in the Far Barn, followed by a walking tour of the grounds to view plants growing in the Arboretum’s collections.  Free.

  • In The Garden Online Auction

    COGdesign announces the In The Garden Online Auction to benefit community green spaces.  Bids will be accepted through Tuesday, April 13, at www.cogdesign.org. Items include a granite compass rose by sculptor Karin Stanley (pictured below), a weekend getaway on Martha’s Vineyard, organic compost from Coast of Maine, a 7’ tall hand-crafted iron tuteur in Mediterranean blue, and many other wonderful items for bidding! Hand tools, house improvement services, garden-inspired art, personal adornments (beads), wine & food, garden consultations, museum memberships, books, ONE-OF-A-KIND treasures, and, naturally, a Garden Club of the Back Bay holiday wreath.

    In The Garden Online Auction is brought to you by COGdesign – the Community Outreach Group for Landscape Design – landscape professionals dedicated to providing pro bono planning and design services to homeless shelters, public schools, community gardens, low income housing, and neighborhood parks. Wherever people need plants, gardens, and parks, you’ll find COGdesign volunteers lending a hand.

    Celebrate the start of spring by visiting IN THE GARDEN Online Auction to invigorate your hibernating soul and satisfy your craving for sunshine and warmth! Color, crafts, and creative inspirations will be yours for the highest bid.

  • Saturday, October 10, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm – Native Earth Teaching Farm Popcorn Festival

    Celebrate the coming of fall on Saturday, October 10, from 10 – 3, at the Native Earth Teaching Farm Popcorn Festival.  Lots to taste, explore and experience – and lots of popcorn for all.  There will by wool dyeing of the farm’s hand spun wool with flowers, goat walking, taste testings, a quest, and hands-on demos. Sponsored in part by the Martha’s Vineyard Cultural Council, all are welcome to this free event, taking place at the Native Earth Teaching Farm, 94 North Road, Chilmark.  For more information, call 508-645-3304, email contact-us@mvol.com, or check the website, www.nativeearthteachingfarm.org.

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  • Thursday, August 20 – Sunday, August 23 – 148th Annual Agricultural Society Fair in Martha’s Vineyard

    Rides, games, live music, livestock, competitions, craft demonstrations, food, shopping, art show, and awards for homegrown vegetables, fruits, flowers and homemade goodies. And of course, the ever popular dog show. There’s truly something for everybody.

    Thursday, August 20 – Sunday August 23.

    Don’t miss it!



    Admission Fee: Yes

    Martha's Vineyard Agricultural Society
    For More Information:
    Contact: MV Agricultural Society
    Address: Agricultural Hall, 35 Panhandle Rd, West Tisbury, MA
    Phone: 508-693-9549