Tag: Richmond

  • Thursday, April 25 – Sunday, May 5 – Historic Homes & Gardens of the Colonial South

    The American Horticultural Society will sponsor a tour April 25 – May 5 aboard the American flagged Yorktown.  Discover the gracious beauty and enduring charm of the American South on this idyllic small-ship voyage from Savannah, Georgia, to Richmond, Virginia.  Experience some of the finest historic homes and gardens in the area accompanied by expert guides such as architectural historian Marlene Heck and Colonial Williamsburg’s gardening authority Laura Viancour.  AHS Executive Director Tom Underwood and his wife Jane will be the tour’s AHS hosts.  For more information, please contact Joanne Sawczuk at 703-768-5700, ext. 132, or email jsawczuk@ahs.org.

  • Sunday, November 4 – Friday, November 9 – Mark Catesby’s Third Centennial in America

    300 years ago and a century before Audubon, British born Mark Catesby followed his passion in search of plants and nature that were foreign to England and set out for America in 1712. There he discovered a new world of endless possibilities and strange creatures.

    The Catesby Commemorative Trust invites you to explore Mark Catesby’s world and discover how he introduced the wild beauty of North America to the astonished eyes of Europe and went on to influence artists such as William Bartram and John James Audubon.

    On November 4th – 9th, 2012, The Catesby Commemorative Trust will bring together experts from America and Europe to discuss Catesby’s influences, drawings, science and impact on natural history.  You will travel to places once visited by Mark Catesby and have the privilege of viewing his most famous etchings.

    They  hope you will join them in Richmond, Virginia, Washington, D.C. and Charleston, South Carolina to discover the scientific value and marvel at the beauty of Mark Catesby’s remarkable work. For a complete itinerary, and to register, visit www.catesbytrust.org/tercentennial/

  • Saturday, June 26, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm – Hedgemania

    The Berkshire Botanical Garden is holding a workshop on shearing, pruning and shaping hedges of all sizes and shapes on Saturday, June 26, from 10 – 1, in Richmond, Massachusetts.

    Join horticultural expert Matt Larkin for a hands-on hedge pruning workshop. The focus is on creating and maintaining a healthy, beautiful hedge. Learn about the different plants available for hedging including boxwood, yew, hornbeam, and privet. See first hand how these plants grow and learn techniques needed to tame them into formal and not-so formal shapes. Matt will share his “tools of the trade”, and his knowledge of cultivating these useful plants. Step-by-step instruction on pruning will be provided, and participants will sharpen their pruning skills on a variety of plants.
    Matthew Larkin established Black Barn Topiary in 2001 in an effort to provide large scale living sculpture to the garden obsessed. His work is currently growing at the Hartford Children’s Hospital, The London Hotel and various gardens in Connecticut and New York.  The class costs $35 for BBG members, $45 for non members, and you may register on line at www.berkshirebotanical.org, or by calling 413-298-3926.

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  • Sunday, June 6, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Garden Conservancy Open Day in Berkshire County

    Two  fabulous gardens will be open to the public on Sunday, June 6, from 10 – 4, through The Garden Conservancy’s Open Days program.

    Black Barn Farm,  937 Summit Road in Richmond:

    After being greeted by a pair of fantastical bird topiary, guests pass by the new “back door” terrace and its collection of container plantings. (Don’t miss the alligator on top of the Taxus hatfieldii!) Proceed through doors into the privet-hedged spring bulb garden, with its Fritillaria melagris, muscari, and thalia. Gazing balls are placed at face height, which allows you to see yourself in the garden. A stroll down an allée of Wyman crabapples leads you to the Tsuga chinensis-hedged pool garden and shade pavilion. Proceeding west through a fanciful taxus colonnade, enjoy the seventy odd specimen topiary in various stages of development. A pergola of Robinia pseudoacacia, draped with wisteria and under-planted with bulbs, leads you past the boxwood topiary garden and into the formal potager, with its beech hedge and rustic growing frames. Check out the new kitchen garden on the west side of the house, with its bluestone-and steel-raised beds. The garden encompasses approximately three acres.

    Apple Hill, 12 Red Rock Road in West Stockbridge:

    This magical writer’s retreat was once an apple farm, and many old apple trees still grow here. It is a place of quiet trees; a forest of silver birches flows into drifts of orchards, amid the tranquil green of white pines. There is a harmonious unity between the house and its setting. A cobblestone terrace at the back is set with drifts of ferns and blurs the division between indoors and outdoors, as does the wisteria-draped pergola. A harp-shaped grass garden along the driveway leads to the lovely curving rhododendron plantings, and these in turn connect to the long garden, which runs the length of the houses and beyond, set with golden locust trees and mixed plantings — evergreen and deciduous shrubs, roses, irises, peonies, delphiniums, and other perennials. The long garden culminates in a rock garden and a meditation bed that the children call “The Secret Garden”. A series of smaller ponds flows down the hillside to the main pond, which is set about with willows, planted with water lilies, and flanked by a borrowed landscape of blue hills. An arbor walk featuring a fish pool links the house with the writing studios. Woodland beds among the birches are planted with hosta, maidenhair and ostrich fern. Come discover the gardens that Tina Packer has described as “among the most beautiful and inviting I’ve ever seen.”

    For ticketing information, log on to www.gardenconservancy.org and click on to “Open Days.”

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