Native Plant Trust


Saturdays, September 9, 16, & 23, 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm – Plant Systemics, Online

This Native Plant Trust online three part program builds on your cumulative vocabulary, knowledge, and skills in plant identification and classification based on vegetative and reproductive structures. This program builds on your cumulative vocabulary, knowledge, and skills in plant identification and classification based on vegetative and reproductive structures. From there, we delve into the breadth and complexity of plant identification. We will discuss hybridization and phylogeny to develop a deeper appreciation for the role of evolutionary history in understanding organismal relationships. The three session program will be held online September 9, 16, & 23 from 1 – 4. $108 for NPT members, $132 for nonmembers. Register at www.nativeplanttrust.org Dr. Jessamine Finch (below) is the instructor. Please note: NPT does not make video or audio recordings of classes or programs available after the fact, because they believe education is interactive, with instructors and students building a community and culture of learning. Some programs may be recorded strictly for instructor-training purposes.


Tuesday, July 18, 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm Eastern – Field Discoveries, Online

Join Native Plant Trust for a closer look at some of the rare New England plants we monitored in the most recent field season, as well as some new plants we discovered. This webinar will also discuss conservation facilitation and address how the pandemic and a transition to a new data system are affecting Native Plant Trust’s Plant Conservation Volunteer efforts. Micah Jasny will speak live on July 18 from 6 – 7 online. $12 for NPT members, $15 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/field-discoveries/ Picture: Copyright: Dan Jaffe © Native Plant Trust


Thursday, July 20, 5:30 pm – 8:30 pm Eastern- Shade Gardens: Embracing the Dark Side, Online

Creating lush and vibrant gardens in the shade tends to frustrate even the best gardeners. How do we infuse more color, adventure, and intrigue into those spaces? The mood, plants, and conditions act as our guide. This July 20 Native Plant Trust virtual workshop with Cheryl Salatino blends site-specific assessment, design strategies, and plant options to help enliven your imagination. The webinar will be from 5:30 – 8:30, and is $45 for NPT members, $54 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/shade-gardens-embracing-dark-side/ Please note: NPT does not make video or audio recordings of classes or programs available after the fact, because we believe education is interactive, with instructors and students building a community and culture of learning. Some programs may be recorded strictly for instructor-training purposes.


Wednesday, July 12, 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm Eastern – Native Plant Trust at 125: A Talk with Debbi Edelstein, Live and Online

Join us for a conversation about the strategic vision for the organization as it approaches its 125th anniversary. Presented by Debbi Edelstein, Executive Director, Native Plant Trust.

To attend this free program at Garden in the Woods in Framingham in-person, please register here

To attend this free program virtually, please use the register link at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/native-plant-trust-125/

Please note: NPT does not make video or audio recordings of classes or programs available after the fact, because it believes education is interactive, with instructors and students building a community and culture of learning. Some programs may be recorded strictly for instructor-training purposes. Please visit this page to review this and other FAQs about our policies.


Saturday, July 15, 12:30 pm – 4:30 pm – Orchids of New England

Curious about Lady’s-slipper orchids or the rose pogonia, made famous by Robert Frost’s poem? Orchidaceae is one of the largest plant families in the world, and there are 50 orchid species native to New England, from showy lady’s slipper (Cypripedium reginae) to rose pogonia (Pogonia ophioglossoides). While some species are common, many are of conservation concern. This session provides context for understanding native orchid habitats, diversity, and conservation issues. You will learn identification techniques, pollination strategies, and life-cycle stages for native orchids. Learn about the members of this highly evolved plant family and their specialized pollination strategies and interesting life cycles. Botanist Neela de Zoysa will conduct a class on Orchids of New England on Saturday, July 23 at 12:30 pm at Garden in the Woods in Framingham. $60 for Native Plant Trust members, $72 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/orchids-new-england-2/

Image result for rose pogonia orchid


Sundays, July 9 & July 16, 1:00 pm – 3:30 pm – Native Woody Plant Materials

Explore the huge variety of native trees, shrubs, and woody vines. You will learn which species grow well in shade, which support local wildlife, and how to stagger plantings for continual bloom, fruit production, and fall color. The two-part Native Plant Trust course on July 9 and 16 at Garden in the Woods in Framingham addresses growth characteristics, cultural requirements, and best horticultural uses. Trevor Smith instructs. $108 for NPT members, $132 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/native-woody-plant-materials/


Saturday, July 8, 12:30 pm – 3:30 pm Eastern – Milkweeds and Dogbanes, Online

Milkweeds (Asclepias) are some of the most attractive and fragrant wildflowers, in addition to being magnets for butterflies and pollinators. Learn about their special relationship with monarch butterflies and their complex flower structure, ingenious pollination strategy, and protective chemical arsenal. This class will help you identify the common and rare species and recognize their surprising range of habitats. You will also learn tips for milkweed cultivation and discuss the dangers that threaten this native plant. The Native Plant Trust webinar on July 8 from 12:30 – 3:30 will be led by Neela de Zoysa. $45 for NPT members, $54 for nonmembers. Register HERE.

Please note: We do not make video or audio recordings of classes or programs available after the fact, because NPT believes education is interactive, with instructors and students building a community and culture of learning. Some programs may be recorded strictly for instructor-training purposes. Please visit this page to review this and other FAQs about our policies.


Wednesday, June 21, 10:00 am – 2:00 pm Eastern – Seeing the Forest and the Trees: Exploring the Social History of the Outdoors, Online

Join The Native Plant Trust on June 21 for a virtual spring symposium focusing on aspects of the social history of natural spaces, from nature appreciation and inspiration to notions of territory, access, and participation. We will explore and consider humanistic and scientific approaches to this subject through a transdisciplinary lens. Through these investigations, we will consider how historical actions continue to impact societal and environmental change. Here’s the program:

10:00 a.m. Communities of Color & Access to Nature
With Mardi Fuller

People of Color face systemic barriers to accessing natural spaces for recreation and have limited visibility in the mainstream conservation movement. The reasons for this are layered and complex, but date back to the founding of the United States, the original sins of dispossession and slavery and the colonial imagination that positioned white people as landowners with practical and figurative freedom of movement while restricting the rights and movement of People of Color. In this talk we will explore the founding policies, cultural norms and illusions that have led to the entrenched exclusion that People of Color experience today. 

Mardi Fuller advocates for racial equity through writing, speaking and community building. A lifelong backcountry adventurer, in January 2021 she became the first known Black person to hike all 48 of New Hampshire’s high peaks in winter. She lives in Boston where she works as a nonprofit communications director and volunteers with the local Outdoor Afro network. She writes for Outside magazine, SKI magazine, Melanin Basecamp and more. Mardi is committed to personal and corporate Black liberation and thereby, liberation for all humanity. She believes deeply in nature’s healing power.

11:00 a.m. Native People and the World
With Chief Don Stevens (Abenaki)

Don Stevens will discuss how the Abenaki created a space for agroforestry work to benefit all relationships that existed. He will discuss the spirituality behind those important interpersonal relationships with the land, animals, and plants that still exist today.

Don Stevens is Chief of the Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk-Abenaki Nation and President of AHA (Abenaki Helping Abenaki.) Don is an accomplished leader, businessman, writer, and lecturer. Don has served on many boards and commission including the Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs and Attorney General Board of Racial Disparities. He helps lead the fight to obtain legal recognition, acquire land, and federal settlement agreements for the Abenaki People. He has 30 years of experience in Information Technology, Logistics, and Manufacturing strategies. Don served in the US Army, graduated from Champlain College, and holds several Honorary Doctorate Degrees.

12:00 p.m. When Life Gives You Lemons
With Dr. Xan Chacko

In the early 20th century, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) funded international expeditions with the aim of finding plant specimens for introduction into the agricultural landscape and new experimental projects in hybridization. One such agricultural explorer, noted for his eponymous lemon, was Frank Nicholas Meyer, an immigrant from the Netherlands whose expeditions in Asia have brought to the United States celebrated fruit and toxic weeds. The era of these plant explorers has ended, but their material trace remains in a variety of spaces and modes of existence that have hitherto been disregarded. Reading Meyer’s letters shows the authority and discipline behind his transformation from gardener’s apprentice to professional plant collector. These photographs and plants are understudied material traces that enable historians to re-examine the means by which credit was received, given, and exchanged.

Xan S. Chacko is a Lecturer and Director of Undergraduate Studies for the program in Science, Technology, and Society at Brown University. In 2018, Chacko received a PhD from the Cultural Studies Graduate Group at the University of California, Davis, with designated emphases in Feminist Theory & Research, and Science & Technology Studies. Chacko’s co-edited volume, Invisible Labor in Modern Science, which explores the people and practices that are crucial to the production of scientific knowledge but remain uncredited and marginalized, was published in August 2022.

Please note: We do not make video or audio recordings of classes or programs available after the fact, because we believe education is interactive, with instructors and students building a community and culture of learning. Some programs may be recorded strictly for instructor-training purposes. Please visit this page to review this and other FAQs about our policies. $60 for NPT members, $72 for nonmembers. Register at www.nativeplanttrust.org Picture courtesy Getty Images/Thomas Barwick


Saturday, June 3, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – Floodplain Forests

Floodplains have special plants that are adapted to inundation and fluctuating water levels. Join The Native Plant Trust and Neela de Zoysa an easy walk in the Greenways Conservation Area in Wayland, Massachusetts, on June 3 at 1 pm, to observe the vegetation of a typical small-river floodplain with nearly half a mile of shoreline accessible to the Sudbury River. This stretch of the river is federally designated as a wild and scenic river and has beautiful stands of silver maple (Acer saccharinum), basswood (Tilia americana), swamp white oak (Quercus bicolor), red maple (Acer rubrum), and shrub swamps of buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis). $30 for NPT members, $36 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/floodplain-forests/


Saturday, June 3, 8:00 pm – Mushroom Modulations

Native Plant Trust proudly presents its first visiting artist, Christine Southworth. Christine is a Lexington-based multimedia composer whose work primarily involves nature—lightning, honeybees, coral reefs, spiders, snowflakes, and, currently, mushrooms. Her new work incorporates photographs and videos of mushrooms growing at Garden in the Woods and around Middlesex County from summer 2021 through the present, and she is using these to create an immersive performance environment. The electrical currents given off by mycelium networks are thought to be used as communication between different fungal fruiting bodies. Surrounded by her images of mushroom colonies growing and fading throughout the seasons, she will make music with live mushrooms that she has grown by “listening to” slight electrical variations in the colonies via electrodes placed on different parts of the fruiting growth and converted to sound. The performance will be followed by a discussion with the artist.

The event takes place June 3 at 8 pm at Garden in the Woods in Framingham. $15 for NPT members, $18 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/mushroom-modulations/