Tag: pruning

  • Saturday, February 28, 9:00 am – 11:00 am – Pruning Shrubs

    Knowing what and when to prune, and how to do so, are important as you manage your home landscape. Learn the basic techniques for pruning ornamental shrubs for optimum health and beauty. Jen Kettell, an ISA-certified arborist will address topics including pruning cuts and tools; thinning and reducing overgrown plants; shaping and encouraging new growth. The class is sponsored by the Arnold Arboretum and takes place Saturday, February 28, from 9 – 11. Fee $20 Arboretum member, $30 nonmember. Register online at http://my.arboretum.harvard.edu/Info.aspx?EventID=1.

  • Tuesdays, September 9 – November 18, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm – MMGA Home Horticulture Series

    The Massachusetts Master Gardener Association announces the MMGA Home Horticulture Series: The More You Know, The More You Can Grow!  This program is a ten-week evening class taught by Master Gardeners that will provide a comprehensive introduction to horticulture, giving home gardeners a foundation for enhancing their skills.  Topics to be covered include Nomenclature, Propagation, Turf & Alternatives, Soil, Botany, Weed Ecology, Vegetable Culture, Diseases & Pests, Perennial Culture, Woody Plants, and Pruning.  The Fall Session will take place Tuesday evenings, September 9 – November 18, from 6:30 – 8 at Elm Bank Reservation, 900 Washington Street in Wellesley.  The cost for the program is $250, due upon registration.  For more information, visit www.massmastergardeners.org.

  • Saturday, April 19, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Rejuvenating Shrubs: Lilacs, Weigela, Forsythia and More

    On Saturday, April 19, from 10 – noon, the Berkshire Botanical Garden will hold an offsite workshop on Rejuvenating Shrubs: Lilacs, Weigela, Forsythia and More. Is that old lilac refusing to flower? Spring is a great time to assess your woody shrubs for shape and structure. This hands-on workshop will focus on when, why and how to renovate or rejuvenate your woody plants. Learn about tools, timing and specific techniques available to the home gardener. Following a lecture and several pruning demonstrations, participants will learn by doing.

    Ron Yaple, A.A.S. Forestry, MCA/CLA, owner of Race Mountain Tree Services, has developed a regional reputation as one of the premier arborists. His company serves the tri-state region and is a full-service company. He is a dedicated and knowledgeable teacher of arboriculture.

    BBG members $35, non-members $40.  Register on line at www.berkshirebotanical.org or call 413-298-3926, x 15.

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  • Saturday, April 5, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm – Growing & Pruning Grapes

    The University of Massachusetts Extension will sponsor a class on Growing & Pruning Grapes on Saturday, April 5, from 10 – 1, led by Sonia Schloemann at Wards Berry Farm, 614 S. Main Street in Sharon. Grapes are one of the most universally enjoyed fruits available. Many of the new varieties have excellent taste, are winter hardy, and can make excellent wine. Grapes are fun to grow but present some challenges. Sonia Schloemann will help participants through the basics and give them the tools to overcome some of the challenges. Specific topics will include selecting varieties, planting, fertilizing, controlling pests, pruning, and vine training. Participants will have the opportunity to conduct actual pruning and gain both experience and confidence in pruning and training grapes in order to produce a bountiful crop.  $50 fee.  To register, visit https://classic.regonline.com/builder/site/?eventid=1460640.

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  • Friday, March 8, 9:00 am – 4:00 pm – Growing Fruit in a Healthy Orchard Ecosystem

    The morning Berkshire Botanical Garden program with orchard health expert Michael Phillips will have participants embracing a whole new way of thinking about growing fruit holistically, as well as understanding the principles and practices for growing healthy fruit. The afternoon session will be an offsite field study in a home orchard, where the instructor will conduct an orchard evaluation and discuss how major insect challenges can be resolved safely and organically. He will discuss how to deal with disease from a holistic perspective, so that challenges faced at your locale will become far more manageable, as you build a system that keeps trees healthy from the get-go. Pruning for fruit production will be demonstrated.

    Michael Phillips is known across the country for helping people grow healthy apples and understand the healing virtues of plant medicines. He helped found a “community orchard movement” that provides a full immersion into the holistic approach to orcharding (www.GrowOrganicApples.com). His Lost Nation Orchard has two acres of trees and supplies local families with many varieties of organic apples. The program takes place Friday, March 8, from 9 – 4, and is $150. You may register on line at www.berkshirebotanical.org.

  • Garden Club of the Back Bay Receives $5,000 Beautify Boston Grant from the City of Boston for Historic Linden Pruning Project

    The Garden Club of the Back Bay has successfully applied for a grant from the City of Boston to prune 67 Linden trees between Berkeley Street and Massachusetts Avenue, working with Bob Loree and The Boston Tree Company, in consultation with Boston’s Tree Warden Greg Mosman. The primary focus of the Garden Club for many years has been the care and planting of street trees of the Back Bay. There are about 1200 street trees in our neighborhood. For the last ten years the Garden Club, in consultation with the Boston Parks and Recreation Department, has been able to support an intense planting and pruning program.

    We have, in this period of time, pruned almost every tree in Back Bay at least once. Our focus has been on the removal of dead wood, clearing branches back from traffic signs, shaping new or smaller trees, and raising of the canopy to allow for clear vehicle and pedestrian passage. Although we have done some pruning of the very large mature street trees in the Back Bay, we have not done this in a systematic way, due party to the increased expense of pruning the large trees and the urgent need to address the younger trees.

    In 1910 Beacon Street, under the direction of Arthur Shurcliff and with help from residents led by Mrs. Lord, was planted with 350 Linden trees. Today there are only 67 Linden trees remaining. Many of these are very large trees now 112 years old, and some are plantings that were done in the 60’s to replace trees lost from the original planting. All of these 67 trees need attention.  The Garden Club will match the $5,000 Beautify Boston grant dollar for dollar, and begin Phase I of the project in spring, 2013.

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  • Saturday, January 26, 9:00 am – 12:00 noon – Pruning in Winter

    The Arnold Arboretum will hold a class on Pruning in Winter in the Hunnewell Building, 125 Arborway, on Saturday, January 26 from 9 – noon. Jen Kettell, an ISA-certified arborist, will explain the reasons for pruning and what to consider when pruning dormant trees, shrubs, and vines. She will demonstrate techniques, give guidelines for determining which plants benefit from winter pruning, and explain how plants heal from pruning wounds.

    Note: this workshop teaches ornamental pruning techniques; it does not provide information on pruning for fruit production. The fee is $48 ($35 for Arnold Arboretum members) and you may register by emailing pam_thompson@harvard.edu.  Image from www.danwilt.com.

  • Thursday, April 5, 7:00 pm – Pruning Outdoor Trees and Shrubs

    Pruning is a practice that is periodically required on all woody landscape plants and a yearly pruning program helps to maintain the health, beauty and safety of plantings. Jack Kelly of Bartlett Tree Experts will discuss those techniques that are safe and reasonable for the home gardener to do as well as discussing when it’s time to call in an arborist for consultation and management of large or difficult specimens. The lecture, entitled Pruning Outdoor Trees and Shrubs, will take place at the Massachusetts Horticultural Society’s headquarters at Elm Bank in Wellesley on Thursday, April 5 beginning at 7 pm. The event is free but registration is recommended at www.masshort.org.

  • Saturday, March 24, 11:00 am – Pruning Essentials

    Russell’s Garden Center, 397 Boston Post Road in Wayland, is holding a free workshop on Saturday, March 24, beginning at 11 am, on Pruning Essentials. Proper pruning enhances flower production and the overall health and beauty of woody plants. Now is a perfect time of year to get started! Participants will learn when to prune, how to decide what to remove, and how to make proper cuts. There will be an indoor session followed by a demonstration using existing specimens in the landscape at Russell’s. Bring your questions!

    This workshop will be led by Julie Thornton, a Master Gardener and pruning professional. For more information and directions, visit www.russellsgardencenter.com.

  • Saturday, September 24, 10:30 am – 1:30 pm – Pruning Small Ornamental Trees

    Autumn is a great time to assess your woody plants for shape and structure. This Berkshire Botanical Garden demonstration/workshop will focus on pruning, including when, why and how to shape, renovate, train or rejuvenate your woody plants. Learn about pruning tools, timing, and specific techniques available to the home gardener. Pruning techniques specifically for both evergreen and deciduous hedges will be covered. The program will take place Saturday, September 24 from 10:30 – 1:30 at the Garden in West Stockbridge, Massachusetts.  Ken Gooch is a Massachusetts Certified Arborist, and the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Management’s Forest Health Specialist for Berkshire County. He is an educator and lectures widely on a variety of topics including forest health, pruning, and arboriculture. Fee is $30 for BBG members, $35 for nonmembers. You may register on line at www.berkshirebotanical.org.  Wear waterproof outerwear and boots, and bring a bag lunch.