Tag: Michael Nadeau

  • Wednesday, October 27, 8:30 am – 4:30 pm – 2021 Season’s End Summit, Online Virtual Conference

    Designed landscapes evolve over time with changes that are sometimes subtle and sometimes dramatic. For optimal results, gardens require continual monitoring and maintenance. Unfortunately, few projects include ongoing engagement with the client, and in general many designers have little involvement after the first year or two.

    Have you wondered how a favorite designs has matured, or how a project has fared over the years?

    This fall four expert designers will revisit landscapes that were installed five or more years ago and will share their observations at the ELA Season’s End Summit. A fifth presenter will focus on the importance of design considerations that help to ensure successful outcomes over time including the importance of a management plan.

    Join the Ecological Landscape Alliance online on October 27 to explore what lessons can be learned by analyzing original designs and assessing the mature landscapes that resulted. Our experts’ findings will offer insights, inspiration, and a few surprises to consider for your future designs. Darrah Cole will present three examples from The Greenway, Sandra Nam Cioffi will discuss the Aga Khan Garden in Edmonton, Canada, Laura Kuhn will give the luncheon keynote on Design Meets Stewardship: Making Designs for Nature to Run With, Tom Brightman will revisit the Meadow Garden at Longwood Gardens, and Michael Nadeau will end with The Gift or Curse of Hindsight: Learning from Nature, the Master Designer. Speaker bios and complete descriptions, and registration opportunities, can be found at https://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/ela-summit-2021/

  • Friday, September 30 and Saturday, October 1, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – Invasive Plant Identification, Removal, and Control Strategies

    Michael Nadeau, founding member of the Organic Land Care Project, will explore invasive plants, their identification, removal and control strategies for gardeners and homeowners on Saturday, September 30 and Saturday, October 1 at the Berkshire Botanical Garden in Stockbridge. On Friday, his lecture at the botanical garden will focus on plant identification, removal and control strategies of common invasives.   On Saturday, the class will undertake an offsite site evaluation to demonstrate how to develop a realistic plan to manage invasive plants. This program focuses on practical applications to help the home and professional gardeners tackle this problem which is becoming increasingly pervasive.

    Michael Nadeau has been a landscaper, arborist, and ecological designer for over 40 years. He was a founding member of the Organic Land Care Project, a sister organization of the CT Chapter of the Northeast Organic Farming Association, which created the first set of standards for organic landscaping based on NOFA and USDA Standards. Michael is a co-creator and instructor of the CT-NOFA Organic Land Care Accreditation Course, a previous owner of Plantscapes Organics, a Fairfield County-based landscape restoration company since 1980, and owner of Wholistic Land Care Consulting, LLC, in Sharon, CT. www.michaelnadeau.org. Photo of innovative invasive control by www.nyis.info.

    BBG members $40, nonmembers $45. Register online at https://berkshirebotanical.org/education/lectures-and-workshops/

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