Tag: Roger Swain

  • Friday, October 5 – Monday, October 8 – October Oddities

    This October, get ready for the weird, wacky, and wonderful. During Tower Hill Botanic Garden’s October Oddities exhibition Tower Hill will be taken over by bizarre plants, from giant pumpkins to terrifying seedpods, slow down to discover nature’s oddities. Enjoy our indoor plant displays and then head outside to explore our outdoor displays and spot bizarre-looking plant parts on the trails. From Devil’s Claw seedpods in the vegetable garden to prickly cacti in the conservatories, learn about the strangest plants at Tower Hill.

    Columbus Day Weekend will feature a growing exhibition for all ages – professionals, hobbyists, and amateurs alike. Plant in the spring, tend over the summer, and bring us your odd harvest in the fall! Tower Hill will offer prizes in the following categories: Funniest, Oddest, Kid-Grown, Veggie Creations, and Best in Show. All ages are welcome to compete in each category. The Best in Show winner will receive a $100 cash prize, the winner of the Kid-Grown exhibition will receive a $50 cash prize, and each winner of the other three categories will be awarded $20 gift cards for the Garden Shop at Tower Hill. Judges will include celebrity judge Roger Swain, in addition to our in-house horticultural experts.

    Roger Swain, “the man with the red suspenders”, is recognized by millions as host of The Victory Garden, television’s longest-running gardening show. For fifteen years Roger planted and pruned, harvested and chatted with PBS viewers across the country. Subsequently, he co-hosted People, Places and Plants on HGTV, a show which celebrated New England gardens and gardeners, and featured Roger’s commentary, “Food for Thought.”

    Biologist, gardener, writer and storyteller, Roger Swain was born and raised outside Boston, Massachusetts. He graduated from Harvard College, and went on to earn a Ph.D. studying the behavior in ants in tropical rainforests, before becoming Science Editor of Horticulture magazine. Since 1978 readers have been enjoying Roger’s essays and articles, as well as his five books Earthly Pleasures, Field Days, The Practical Gardener, Saving Graces, and Groundwork. When he is not talking with gardeners across the country, Roger can be found at work in the orchard and gardens of his New Hampshire farm.

    Roger Swain received the Alice Milton Award for Design from the Worcester County (MA)Horticultural Society in 2012, the American Horticultural Society Award for Writing in 1992, and in 1996 he was awarded the Massachusetts Horticultural Society Gold Medal for his “power to inspire others.”

    Exhibition Guidelines

    Each submission must be labeled with the participant’s Name, Hometown, Plant name (common and Latin), and a brief description of why this entry is “odd.” Entry cards will be available at drop-off. Submissions must be checked in at Tower Hill on Friday, Oct. 5, 2018, between the hours of 11am and 5pm, or on Saturday, Oct. 6, 2018, between 10am and 11:30am. Judging will occur on October 6 at noon. Submissions must be picked up between 3-5pm on Monday, October 8, or Tower Hill will dispose of them. Submissions will be on display indoors at Tower Hill over the weekend.

    There are six general parts of plants growers can submit: roots, stems, leaves, flowers, fruits, and seeds. Judging categories will be:

    Funniest: A plant that looks like a person, face, animal, etc.
    Kid-Grown: Any gardener under the age of eighteen can submit in this category
    Veggie Creations: Put together different plants to make an animal or monster
    Oddest: Could be unusual for the region, an odd shaped vegetable, or a strange seed pod
    Best in Show: The most impressive submission will be awarded this top prize

    Ribbons will be awarded for first, second, and third place in each judging category. First place winners of each category will receive a $20 gift certificate to the Garden Shop at Tower Hill, which will be mailed to them. Best in Show will win a $100 cash prize and the Kid-Grown winner will win a $50 cash prize.

    Note: Participants don’t have to pay admission to drop off or pick up their submissions, but must pay admission to re-enter Tower Hill over the weekend.

    Top 20 Odd Plants to Grow in New England

    Squash, Winter ‘Yokohama’ – (Cucurbita maxima) – A dark blue-green bumpy/warty fruits.
    Squash, Patty Pan ‘Striped Green and White Striped – (Cucurbita pepo) Green and white striped and bumpy flattened fruits. Can be eaten as a summer squash or left on plant to mature and be used as a decorative gourd.
    Squash, Winter ‘Pink Banana’ – (Cucurbita maxima) – A long 2’x3′ pink skinned squash.
    Squash, ‘Tromboncino’ – (Cucurbita moschata) -When grown on trellis forms long straight-necked fruits with bulbus base give a trombone-like silhouette, or if allowed to grow along ground the neck can curl and distort into many interesting shapes.
    Gourd ‘Caveman’s Club’, ‘Dinosaur’ – (Lagenaria siceraria) – A knobby/bumpy textured green gourd with a short handle and a rounded club-like blossom end.
    Edible Gourd ‘Cuccuzi’/ ‘Snake’ – (Lagenaria siceraria) – Eaten at the 12″-18″ stage these light green skinned fruits can easily get 4′-5′ long or longer.
    Luffa Gourd -(Luffa aegyptiaca) – Used as bath sponge when dry.
    Love-in-a-Puff – (Cardiospermum halicacabum) – A dainty vine with small white flowers, later producing inflated seed pods containing a seed with a heart shaped spot.
    Devil’s Claw – (Proboscidea louisianica) – Large seeds with 2-4 pronged “hook-like” ends.
    Sunflower ‘Mongolian Giant’ – (Helianthus annuus) – 10′ tall plants with large 18″+ flower heads and individual seeds 1″long.
    Corn ‘Oaxcan Green’ – (Zea mays) Unusual green kernels.
    Beans, Dry ‘Tiger Eye’ – (Phaseolus vulgaris) – Dry beans are reddish-tan mottled with cream in interesting patterns.
    Yard long Bean ‘Chinese Red Noodle’ – (Vigna unguiculata subsp. sesquipedalis) 24″ long red/burgundy seed pods.
    Beans, Dry ‘Ying-yang’ – (Phaseolus vulgaris) Cool beans with yin-yang pattern on black and white dry beans.
    Amaranth ‘Dreadlocks’ – (Amaranthus caudatus var. gibbosus) Magenta-pink Pom-pom-like flowers on long drooping stems.
    Love-in-a-mist -(Nigella damascena) interesting when dried; inflated balloon-like seed pods)
    Bells-of-Ireland – (Moluccella laevis) Unusually shaped green flowers.
    Poppy ‘The Giant’ – (Papaver somniferum) Interesting dried seed pods.
    Cockscomb celosia – (Celosia argentea var. cristata (Cristata Group) ) – Flowers grow into brain-like shapes.
    Snapdragon – (Antirrhinum majus) – Seed pods look like skulls when dry.

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  • Saturday, March 17, 10:00 am – 11:30 am Roger Swain on Vegetable Gardening

    PBS/HGTV host and author Roger Swain shares his profound knowledge of vegetable gardening with inimitable style on Saturday, March 17 at 10 am at the Marlborough Senior Center and Council on Aging, 40 New Street in Marlborough. Plentiful free parking in garage at Weed & Court Streets, across Granger Blvd. from Senior Center.

    Fundraiser co-sponsored by The Hudson Garden Club, the Sterling Garden Club, and The Colonial Garden Club of Marlborough. $10 in advance (call Patricia Main at 508-494-6255) or $15 at the door. Light refreshments will be served.

  • Saturday, August 20, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Monadnock Region Open Day

    A fabulous day in New Hampshire awaits on Saturday, August 20, courtesy of The Garden Conservancy.  Most gardens described below are open from 10 – 4, although some are open at 9 am.  For complete information visit www.gardenconservancy.org. $7 per garden admission.

    The Garden of Jenny Lee Hughes & Edward Yoxen in Stoddard, New Hampshire: After clearing old hillsides in 2006 for views and sheep, stone terraces were added next to the old farmhouse—in part to create a platform for growing ornamental plants that volunteer to grow in gravel and to have a salad garden close at hand. The mixed garden, consisting of meadows, hills, and a lake view surrounds a working edible garden and an ornamental mixed border. Each spills into the frames of other in a manner that brings the two together but still retains the individuality of both. Sheep get moved around to keep the open spaces. Their wool is not sold or used for spinning but rather is used at the bottom of the composted garden beds to help retain moisture on soil which is mostly freely draining. Designed by owner Jenny Lee Hughes, whose clients’ gardens have been featured in local and national publications, the garden features trees, understory plantings, ground covers, hedges, specimens, re-seeding annuals, perennials, herbs, fruits, and vegetables. The aim is a garden that feels natural in its surroundings, yet brings something unforgettable to it. And, at 3 pm, enjoy A Nose’s Tour of the Garden with Tovah Martin. Tovah Martin talks about fragrance, plus we’ll sample the aromatic wares and learn a lot about plant scents in the process. Bring your nose: a smellathon will be included.  Garden is pictured below.

    Juniper Hill Farm in Francestown, New Hampshire: The Gardens at Juniper Hill Farm surround an eighteenth-century saltbox house and farmstead that remain much as they were 200 years ago. The approximately two acres of gardens surrounding the farm might best be described as “country formal.” There is a courtyard garden, a formal lilac garden leading to a frog pool, a whimsical stumpery, a tranquil Mediterranean-inspired “clipped green” garden, a formal potager, and a pool house modeled after the garden pavilion at Hidcote. Scattered throughout the garden are many planted containers and more than 150 boxwoods representing eleven different varieties. Because winter interest was an important consideration in the original layout of the garden, strong architectural lines have become an important design element. The house and garden have been featured several times in both regional and national magazines. For photos and more info on Juniper Hill go to www.josephvalentine.com or Notes From Juniper Hill on Facebook. As another special feature, from 10 – 11:30 Roger Swain will be on hand for a Garden Q & A. He’ll be glad to provide both encouragement and advice. Known as ‘the man with the red suspenders’ and recognized by millions, Roger Swain was host of the popular PBS TV series, The Victory Garden for fifteen years. Plus, specialty growers Broken Arrow Nursery will be on site selling plants. This garden will be open from 9 – 5.

    The Gardens of Laura & Jamie Trowbridge in Peterborough, New Hampshire: Their 1765 Cape Cod-style house is set on a hillside with a sweeping view to the west. Nineteen years ago, they bought the property and set to work creating a long border garden along the rambling, lichen-covered stone wall at the edge of the lawn. Over the years, the full sun border has become the main feature of the landscape as it evolved to include a mixture of annuals, perennials, bulbs, shrubs, and specialty trees. In addition to the eclectic and colorful border, there are garden areas surrounding the old house which include a sunny patio covered with tropicals in containers as well as shade gardens and a shady patio which has become an ideal location for a collection of potted begonias. There are three vegetable gardens, too. The gardens have been featured in New Hampshire Home magazine, Country Gardens magazine, and Fine Gardening magazine is currently working on a design story for 2017.  Rocky Dale Gardens will be on site selling plants during this Open Day.

    The Gardens of Michael & Betsy Gordon in Peterborough, New Hampshire: This small garden in the village was designed by a plantsman to be an extension of the house. The house and garden are situated on a hill and the garden is terraced on three levels. The upper level was designed to be enjoyed from the street. The middle level is laid out formally using yew hedges and a century-old granite wall foundation to create a garden room. The lowest level, an informal woodland garden, has both eastern North American and eastern Asian shade-loving plants. The garden was planted with a mixture of unusual trees, shrubs, perennials, grasses, annuals, and bulbs. Plants were selected primarily for interesting form, foliage, and texture. The garden is chronicled in the blog, thegardenerseye.blogspot.com.  Nano-nursery Opus Plants will be on site selling plants during this Open Day.

    Eleanor Briggs’ Garden in Hancock, New Hampshire: In the words of the owner, “My gardens surround Hancock’s first house, built in 1776 by the town clerk, Jonathan Bennett. Since it is a farmhouse, the plantings are informal and blend into surrounding woods and fields. On each side of the “front” door are raised beds reminiscent of colonial gardens. The real front door (never used) is flanked by plantings of old roses and lavender. Behind a 1970 wing is a forty-eight-foot-long koi pond designed by landscape architect Diane McGuire and planted with lotus and water lilies. McGuire also laid out the perennial bed and woodland garden. The AIA-award-winning screened porch was designed by Dan Scully. Sculptures in the terraced vegetable garden are by Noel Grenier. A pair of 200-year-old granite Korean rams graze on the back lawn. I have followed McGuire’s brilliant layout of the parallel borders but have deepened the perennial bed to make more room to “paint” with interesting annuals and perennials. In the woodland border witch hazel, azaleas, snakeroot and rogersias blend into the woods. Walking between the borders from sun to shade, one comes to a new bog garden surrounded by marsh marigolds, skunk cabbage, and cardinal flowers. Last fall, in the field below the vegetable garden, I started a small pollinator garden. Very exciting!”  See the Porter Garden Telescope on display at this garden courtesy of Telescopes of Vermont. At the request of the Garden Host, directions to this garden are provided at additional gardens open on this date, or by calling the Garden Conservancy office toll-free weekdays, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. EST, 1-888-842-2442.

    The Gardens of Maude & John Odgers in Peterborough, New Hampshire: Maude is drawn to using unusual combinations of trees, shrubs, perennials, and annuals in creating interesting textures, harmonies of balance, color, light, movement, and design. Her gardens draw inspiration from English border gardens, and her work as an artist. For her, gardening is painting in motion. A soft palette and flowing shapes are used to create a quiet sense of serenity. Stonewalls and granite pieces complement the New England countryside. Maude and John cleared this land thirty-five years ago, designing and building everything themselves—from the house, with an attached garden room, to a small post-and-beam barn (now garden shed), arbors, unusual undulating wooden fences with moon gates, a bluestone patio that emulates the gardens shapes, an enclosed raised-bed vegetable garden, a frog pond—along with the many garden beds that envelope their home. Their garden has been featured in numerous publications. Achille Agway will be on site selling plants during this Open Day.

  • Wednesday, July 4 – Monday, July 9 – Thirtieth Perennial Plant Symposium

    The yearly Perennial Plant Symposium is the only annual symposium devoted entirely to perennials. It is also the oldest with the first symposium presented in 1983. The location changes each year. Enjoy learning about and observing perennials, gardens, and production facilities all across the USA and Canada. This summer the annual meeting of the Perennial Plant Association takes place in Boston, Massachusetts. The conference includes optional tours before and after the symposium, trips to public and private gardens, a trade show, and retail, grower, or designer’s talks and tours. Selected highlights include:

    July 4th: Optional walking horticultural tour of Boston, historical tour by bus of Boston, Lexington and Concord,  and fireworks cruise

    July 5th: Public Day Seminar Speakers

    Julie Merservy:  Home Outside – Creating the Landscape You Love

    Debra Knape: Good Enough To Eat – Designing Edible Landscapes

    David Culp:  Best of Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow

    Adrian Bloom:   Bloom’s Best Perennials and Grasses

    Roger Swain: Ace of Shovels: Finding the Perfect Garden Tool

    Laura Deeter: Bringing Your Perennials Up Right

    July 6th: Eleven fascinating presentations featuring growers, landscape designers, and retailers, plus Keynote by Julie Merservy:  Hearing the Stream With Open Eyes – The Evolution of a Designer

    July 7th: Morning Bench to Border Tours of Cavicchio Greenhouses, Stonegate Gardens, Russell’s Garden Center, Garden in the Woods, Weston Nursery, and Tower Hill Botanic Garden.

    Afternoon Divine by Design Garden Tours of four private gardens, Elm Bank (Massachusetts Horticultural Society), Weston Nursery, and Tower Hill Botanic Garden.

    July 8th – Trade Show and Sixteen Lectures on topics ranging from Biological Controls to New and Upcoming Coreopsis Cultivars to Container Gardening.

    July 9 – Optional Tour to garden centers and Newport gardens

    July 10 – Option Tour:  Journey to the Edge!  The Maine Event.  Visit five wholesale and retail growers in New Hampshire and Maine, and experience a lobster bake at the Coastal Maine Botanic Garden.

     

    Lectures, reception and the trade show will take place at the Boston Park Plaza Hotel, 50 Park Plaza at Arlington Street. The room rate is: $129 for Single or $129 for Double.  Non Perennial Plant Association members are invited to register for the entire conference at non-member rates, or just for the public day on July 5th.  Registration information will be available at www.perennialplant.org.  This is a fabulous opportunity for our Boston area gardening community to participate in one of the nation’s premier horticultural events.

     

  • Tuesday, February 28, 6:45 pm – Grow What You Eat

    The Norwood Evening Garden Club will host biologist, gardener, writer, and entertaining storyteller, Roger Swain, on Tuesday February 28, at 6:45 p.m. at the Carriage House behind the First Baptist Church, 71 Bond Street, Norwood. The public is invited to attend. A $10.00 donation is requested.

    Recognized by millions of people as the man with the red suspenders, Mr. Swain is the former host of the popular PBS-TV horticulture show, The Victory Garden, and long-time science editor of Horticulture magazine. He will speak on his favorite topic, vegetable gardening, encouraging listeners to Grow What You Eat. Mr. Swain has penned four books on gardening for which he received the American Horticultural Society’s award for writing. He is also the recipient of a Massachusetts Horticultural Society gold medal for his power to inspire others.

    When he is not writing, lecturing or being filmed for television, Mr. Swain can be happily found working in his own gardens, either at his home outside Boston or at his farm in southern New Hampshire. For information about the Norwood Evening Garden Cub, contact Susan Pearson at 508-668-4039 or visit www.NorwoodEveningGardenClub.com.

  • Saturday, July 16, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm – Gilmanton Year-Round Library Garden Tour

    Tour Patty Humphrey’s gardens, featured in New Hampshire Home magazine, and listen to Roger Swain, former host of PBS’s The Victory Garden, for a $35 donation that includes a box lunch, on Saturday, July 16, from 10 – 3, in support of the Gilmanton Year-Round Library, 1385 Route 140, Gilmanton, New Hampshire.  The event will take place at 78 Garvin Hill Road in Chichester, New Hampshire.  For tickets and information, contact Susan Barr at susan.barr75@gmail.com, or call 603-267-1905.

  • Thursday, July 22 – Saturday, July 24 – American Horticultural Society National Children & Youth Garden Symposium

    Register today for the 2010 American Horticultural Society National Children & Youth Garden Symposium, to be held July 22 – July 24 in Pasadena, California.  The Symposium’s theme is “The Vitality of Gardens: Energizing the Learning Environment.”  Featured keynote speakers include Alice Waters, chef, author, and proprietor of Chez Panisse Restaurant in Berkeley, and the founder of The Edible Schoolyard.  Also, meet Sam Levin, one of six co-founders of Project Sprout, an organic, student-run garden on the school grounds in Massachusetts, and Roger Swain, familiar to many American gardeners as the genial host for 15 years of the popular PBS television program The Victory Garden.  The Symposium is hosted by the Descanso Gardens, Garden School Foundation, the Huntington Library Art Collections and Botanical Gardens, Kidspace Children’s Museum, Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden, the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Gardens, and the University of California Common Ground Garden Program. For more information, log on to www.ahs.org.

    The restoration we seek in gardens is more essential than ever, but gardens are also sources of healthy food, environmental protection and personal fulfillment. The garden can be an incubator for fostering engaged citizens. For children and youth, a garden can be a science lab, art studio, kitchen, gathering place, theater of the imagination, a special place to explore the world.

    Come learn how to create and use gardens to provide dynamic environments for experimentation, social engagement, self-expression, and connection to the natural world. Hear from youth, the adults in their lives, and national experts about the vital role of gardens in the lives of today’s youth.

    As a symposium attendee you will participate in the only national symposium that explores the positive impact of gardens in the lives of children and youth, meet and learn from leading youth garden experts, receive useful and relevant project, curriculum, design and garden management ideas, explore the gardens and programs of the Symposium hosts, participate in 3 dynamic days of workshops, lectures, poster sessions and field trips and network and share your own expertise with children’s gardening advocates from across the nation. The early full registration fee is $330 (AHS members $290) before June 1, and $350 thereafter.   Lodging is available at the Westin Pasadena Hotel (the location of the sessions) at a discounted special rate of $155/night for reservations made by July 9.  Call the hotel at  866-837-4181 and ask for the National Children & Youth Garden Symposium room block.

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  • Thursday, March 25, 11:30 am – 6:00 pm – Gardening Essentials at the Boston Flower & Garden Show

    The Massachusetts Horticultural Society has put together a full day of programs as part of the Paragon Group’s Boston Flower & Garden Show, opening March 24 and running through March 28 at the Seaport World Trade Center.  On Thursday, March 25, beginning at 11:30, Art Scarpa opens the morning with ‘The Care and Feeding of Houseplants’. Whether we live in a grand house or a one-bedroom apartment, houseplants are an essential part of New England because six months out of the year there’s nothing growing and green outside. This program will deal with houseplant basics: selection, care and maintenance. You will come away with your thumb considerably greener.

    At 12:30, MassHort has assembled on stage a virtual encyclopedia of gardening knowledge. Roger Swain, Paul Miskovsky and Kerry Ann Mendez invite everyone to bring their best questions on any topic related to gardening. Swain (pictured below) is the well-know host of PBS’ ‘The Victory Garden’ (he will also speak on the subject of tools on Saturday), who brings a dollop of humor to his broad knowledge of all things botanical. Miskovsky is considered one of the region’s best landscapers. He has installed two gardens on the exhibit floor; one, a 1,080 square foot garden (Falmouth-based Miskovsky Landscaping) and a second one for Heritage Museum and Gardens. Paul creates inspiring gardens for his public and private clients, but he can also tell you how to properly plant a rhododendron. Mendez is a ‘passionate perennialist’, an exceptional gardening speaker and the proprietor of ‘Perennially Yours’ in upstate New York.

    At 1:30, Rita Wollmering offers ‘Ready, Set, Grow – Preparing for a Successful Vegetable Garden’. She’ll take you through the practical steps that lead to a more successful vegetable garden. With planning, preparation and smart planting, gardeners can see an increase in both the health and yield of their plots.

    At 2:30, Betty Sanders talks on ‘The Green, Organic and Affordable Lawn’. The level of hype and dubious information about ‘organics’ has gotten to a state where someone with a wide body of knowledge, no axe to grind and nothing to sell is needed to sort it all out and answer all questions in a way that listeners understand their options.

    At 3:30 p.m., Cathy Felton will talk on ‘Editing the Mature Garden’. What do you do with a yard full of overgrown shrubs and perennials with dead centers? It may be the house you’ve lived in for 40 years or it may be the one you just purchased. Either way, bringing a landscape back to a manageable shape doesn’t always need to be a job for a contractor – or pointlessly expensive. The program will show how incremental steps can undo decades of neglect.

    At 5 p.m., Sally Muspratt offers ‘Small is Beautiful: Do-it-Yourself City Landscaping’. Not everyone has five acres, not everyone can hire a designer. The house in the city with 50 feet of street frontage can have just as much appeal as an estate. But where do you begin when you’re starting with some old boxwood and scraggly grass? This talk will take homeowners on a step-by-step process toward achieving a great landscape in a small space, and is especially appropriate for those of us located in the City of Boston.

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  • Tuesday, November 24, 1:00 – 2:30 pm – E.O. Wilson: Darwin and the Frontiers of Evolution

    On Tuesday, November 24, beginning at 1 pm (the 150th anniversary of the publication of Darwin’s On the Origin of Species) a panel of scientists led by E.O. Wilson and Everett Mendelsohn will discuss Darwin’s legacy and talk about the frontiers of evolutionary and molecular biology, hosted by the Reading Odyssey and the Darwin Facebook Project.  Sponsors include National Geographic, Citrix Online and their HiDef Conferencing Division, Campaign Monitor, Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology, National Center for Science Education, Squarespace, Creation the Movie, and the New York Academy of Sciences.  The live lecture is free, although only 84 tickets remain as of today, so you may reserve your tickets at http://darwinlecture4.eventbrite.com.

    Now here’s even better news:  you may watch it as a free webcast (1,870 spaces), a teleconference if you are so set up (171 spaces), or a Skype pass (161 spaces).  The deadline for signing up is November 17 for the live lecture, and November 21 for the teleconference free pass or Skype free pass.  You may sign up for the webcast right up to the end on November 24.

    You may know E.O. Wilson as perhaps the most famous ant researcher of modern times, and the mentor of gardening guru Roger Swain.  This event will be a truly special and stimulating celebration of Darwin.

  • Wednesday, September 2, 9 – 5 – Creating a Garden for Multi-Season Interest

    On Wednesday, September 2, MassHort and the Perennial Plant Association are teaming up to offer a day-long seminar titled, ‘Creating a Garden for Multi-Season Interest’. They’re bringing in some of the best writers, down-to-earth speakers and creative plantsmen in the business to Elm Bank, and you’re invited to listen, learn and ask questions.

    The speakers include Adrian Bloom (of Blooms of Bressingham); Stephanie Cohen, who has earned the title of ‘the Perennial Diva’; William Cullina of the Coastal Maine Botanical Garden; ‘Victory Garden’ host and writer Roger Swain, Weston Nurseries’ Wayne Mezitt, and MassHort’s own Joe Kunkel.

    Adrian Bloom starts things off by talking about the practical and inspirational factors for success in a garden. His thesis is that we all know that perennials and grasses have a changing role to play through the seasons but how often do we consider their placing and potential impact in combination with other plants? Elm Bank’s Bressingham Garden is a study in how to make the a garden’s impact greater than the sum total of its plants.

    Award-willing author and garden designer Stephanie Cohen will focus on the autumn garden. The lushness of summer need not be followed by a whimper in the fall. Ms. Cohen will show examples of perennials and grasses that peak in autumn, berries and fruits, bark, and glorious color adorning trees and shrubs. You’ll walk away with an understanding that ‘Fallscaping’ ought to be a part of every garden’s design.

    Bill Cullina may well be the world’s most engaging garden writer. Books about perennials fill the shelves of every store, but Cullina’s newest offering in his series on plants, ‘Perennials: A New Look at an Old Favorite’, breathes new insights into a familiar subject. He will present the “psychology of perennials” – their needs, wants, and potentials. By starting at the roots, moving up the stems, leaves and flowers, Bill will provide both new and seasoned gardeners with a strong foundation for a lasting relationship with perennials.

    In the afternoon, horticulturalist Roger Swain will address the subject of garden tools. His view is that hand tools – the trowels, spades and other implements that extend our reach and power – may have evolved for evolution’s sake rather than for the benefit of the user. His presentation will be a tour through the evolution of familiar garden tools emphasizing the importance of matching not only the tool to the task, but fitting it to the user’s hand and body.

    Swain will be followed by veteran New England plantsman Wayne Mezitt, who will focus on the interplay between woody plants and perennials. Mezitt, whose family has bred many of best known rhododendron and azalea in use in the northeast today, will offer practical advice on flowering shrubs that push the beginning and end of the gardening season in New England.

    Joe KunkelThe day’s final speaker will be veteran nurseryman and MassHort executive director Joe Kunkel, who will speak on plant evaluations at Elm Bank. Commercial plant breeders from around the world send Elm Bank hundreds of cultivars for evaluation. Kunkel will highlight the plants that have stood out among their peers in the New England Trial Garden and the Bressingham Garden. He’ll talk about how homeowners can use regional trial gardens to narrow the list of attractive cultivars to a group that not only looks good in a pot at a garden center, but that will thrive in a back yard.

    The program runs from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The fee for those who register before August 25 is $95. The price rises $20 after that date. Lunch is included in the cost of the program.

    To sign up download the program and registration form or call 614-771-8431.
    Early registration ends August 25.