Tag: Stockbridge School Of Agriculture

  • Saturday, February 17, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm – Medicinal Mushrooms

    Are you curious about the power of medicinal mushrooms? Join Berkshire Botanical Garden on February 17 at 2:00 pm, along with Willie Crosby of Fungi Ally. In the classroom, the woods and the kitchen, this exploration of medicinal mushrooms will serve as an introduction into some of the common mushrooms found in the Northeast woods and cultivated at home. We will learn how to prepare them to access their medicinal potency. We will get to know reishi, cordyceps, lion’s mane, maitake, and other fungal allies. 

    Owner of Fungi Ally, Willie Crosby has been growing mushrooms indoors and outdoors for nearly a decade. He works to reveal the power of mushrooms by educating people how to incorporate mushrooms into their gardens and lives. Willie teaches online for Stockbridge School of Agriculture, Cornell University, the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, as well as in person at his farm in Hadley, Mass. $40 for BBG members, $60 for nonmembers. Register at www.berkshirebotanical.org

  • Saturday, April 15, 11:00 am – 1:30 pm – Cultivating Mushrooms Outside

    Start spring early with a dive into the fungal kingdom with Berkshire Botanical Garden. Learn how to inoculate logs, wood chips and stumps for mushroom cultivation in your backyard. We will cover the basic information everyone should know about fungi and get hands-on experience doing these easy to replicate growing methods. By the end of class you will be familiar with six different wild mushroom species, three cultivation techniques and have loads of new fungal lore to share with your friends. The class takes place at Berkshire Botanical Garden in Stockbridge on April 15 from 11 – 1:30.

    Willie Crosby is the owner of Fungi Ally. He has been growing mushrooms indoors and outdoors for over nine years and works to reveal the power of mushrooms by educating people how to incorporate mushrooms into their gardens and lives. Willie teaches online for Stockbridge School of Agriculture and Cornell as well as in person at his farm in Hadley, Mass., and for UMass-Amherst. $35 for BBG members, $45 for nonmembers.

    Courtesy Freshcap.com
  • Sunday, May 1, 9:30 am – 11:30 am – Creating Your Own Edible Landscape

    Come to The New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill on May 1 at 9:30 in the morning to learn how to design and create attractive gardens filled with ornamental plants and nutrient-dense edibles. This workshop will discuss soil health, site preparation, sustainable land-use techniques, and how to maximize garden productivity while harmonizing with the landscape. With a home garden you can grow sweeter and more nutritious produce than anything you can buy in a store, but it’s essential that you start with healthy soil and learn the basics about garden design. This thorough workshop will help those interested in growing food in an urban or suburban landscape while using sustainable and organic practices.


    Inspired by working on more than 35 organic farms in New England, California, Oregon, Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, and Costa Rica, instructor Ben Barkan applies lessons learned to HomeHarvest’s unique custom garden installations. Ben earned a degree in Sustainable Agriculture from the Stockbridge School of Agriculture (4.0 GPA), is permaculture-design certified, and started HomeHarvest with just a bicycle and shovel in 2008. Ben is licensed in Massachusetts as a Construction Supervisor, Home Improvement Contractor, and enjoys designing and selling beautiful landscapes with custom construction and creative plant integration. $40 Member Adult; $55 Adult (Registration includes admission to the Garden) Register HERE.

  • Thursday, March 19, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Fruit Trees: Pruning and Care

    On March 19 from 7 – 8:30, at The Gardens at Elm Bank, 900 Washington Street in Wellesley, Stockbridge School of Agriculture Director and Professor of Pomology, Wes Autio, will present a talk on pruning fruit trees in the home landscape and will discuss the physiology of fruiting trees, methods for dwarf-tree pruning, ways to enhance fruit production, and other interesting facts for creating and maintaining a home orchard. $15/member, $20/general admission. Register at http://masshort.org

     

  • Thursday, September 5, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm – It’s All About the Soil

    With a backyard garden, you can grow sweeter and more nutritious produce than anything you can buy in the supermarket. It’s essential that you start with soil that is healthy and rich in micro-life. Learn what it takes to develop and maintain soil that produces bumper crops. In this Tower Hill Botanic Garden class on September 5 from 6 – 8 with Ben Barkan, we’ll discuss soil properties including texture, pH, plant nutrients and organic matter. Learn how to test your soil and interpret the results. We’ll also discuss how to cope with soil contamination and ensure food safety and nutrient density. The class is especially suited to those interested in growing food in an urban/suburban landscape while using sustainable and organic practices. $26 for THBG members, $31 for nonmembers. Register at www.towerhillbg.org

    Inspired by working on more than 35 organic farms in New England, California, Oregon, Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, and Costa Rica, Ben applies lessons learned to HomeHarvest’s unique custom garden installations. Ben earned a degree in Sustainable Agriculture from the Stockbridge School of Agriculture (4.0 GPA), is permaculture-design certified, and started HomeHarvest with just a bicycle and shovel in 2008. Ben is licensed in Massachusetts as a Construction Supervisor, Home Improvement Contractor, and enjoys designing and selling beautiful landscapes with custom construction and creative plant integration.

  • Friday, October 5 – Saturday, October 6 – Stockbridge School of Agriculture Centennial Celebration

    A series of exciting events will mark 100 years of Stockbridge School of Agriculture on October 5 and 6 on the campus of University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

    The $75 registration fee includes any and all events throughout the weekend:
    the Friday Welcome Reception, Saturday Morning Bus Tour (Agricultural Learning Center, Cold Spring Orchard Research & Education Center, Hadley Farm, Joseph Troll Turf Research Center, and the Levi Stockbridge Home) , Saturday Lunch in the Atrium of the John Olver Design Building, Saturday Afternoon Campus Tour and/or Saturday Centennial Gala. During registration you will select the events and tours you will attend.

    For registration and more information, visit the website, https://umass.irisregistration.com/Home/Site?code=Stockbridge100.

  • Tuesday, July 24, 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm – Novel Approaches to Sustainable Horticulture

    Several common denominators define sustainable gardens everywhere. Comprehensive soil management, native plantings, water conservation, and reduced lawn size are some of the paths toward sustainable landscapes, regardless of climate or clientele. With the basics covered in other Ecological Landscape Alliance programs, join us on Tuesday, July 24 from 1 – 5 at Garden in the Woods, 180 Hemingway Street in Framingham, for the ELA Summer Workshop as we explore new strategies to add to the toolbox to save time, reduce your carbon footprint, and bring a tasty snack to your table as we continue our quest for more sustainable landscapes with some novel approaches.

    Incredible Edibles – More Fruit for Your Labor
    Ben Barkan
    The lone patio tomato is now being supplanted by a sophisticated palette of edible options in landscape design. Rather than separate edible plants into a home orchard or vegetable garden, the aesthetics of many of these plant invite incorporation into borders and hedges. Imagine springtime cherry blossoms from fruiting cherries rather than the ornamental varieties; build multi-season interest with bountiful blueberries in summer followed by spectacular autumn foliage; and create unexpected winter interest from the purple-red vines of the thornless blackberry.

    The Space In Between – Cover Cropping Reimagined
    Anna Fialkoff

    Farmers have known the advantages of cover-cropping for generations: erosion control; improved soil tilth; increased atmospheric nitrogen fixation; reduced nutrient leaching; support for beneficial soil organisms; improved water infiltration; and weed control. Recent experiments have been adopting the benefits of cover cropping in place of mulch in a horticulture setting to fill in between newly planted perennials or immature shrubs. Anna Fialkoff will discuss this cover cropping technique and explain the process and benefits of seeding nitrogen-fixing partridge pea (Chamaecrista fasciculata) in garden beds.

    Adaptive Management –
    Flexible Strategies to Guide Plant Growth in Naturalistic Landscapes
    Nick Novick

    Many techniques recommended for “weed control” often concentrate on complete removal or elimination — pulling or digging out, treating with herbicide, etc. Sometimes these measures are necessary, but in densely planted communities of native plants, sometimes these more time- and labor-intensive procedures aren’t really needed. Simply reducing the vigor of some plants by selective cutting or mowing might be enough to tip the balance to allow desirable plants to claim the space. This discussion will give an overview of some novel techniques for managing plant growth including timed mowing and cutting, removing seed heads, etc. Whereas more traditional landscapes are often managed to look essentially the same from year to year, plantings based on dense communities will often change over time. Along with specific field tactics, we’ll also touch on the mindset that is more accepting of a dynamic landscape and allows for flexible decision making about how to guide plant growth that responds to evolving conditions.

    Rethinking Leaf Management at Garden in the Woods
    Mark Richardson

    For decades, the American landscape aesthetic has included a manicured lawn; meticulously “cleaned” garden beds; and an annual application of bark mulch (often artificially colored, sometimes not bark at all but ground construction debris, and usually hauled in from great distances). At the Garden in the Woods, horticultural staff have always taken a more environmental approach, collecting and chopping leaves to reapply to gardens in lieu of bark mulch. But in the past three years, the staff have modified the process further to be even more sustainable. The new strategies take into account both budgets and ecosystems and have had a positive impact on both. The fundamental shift includes a more natural approach to leaf management. Now the staff leave the majority of the leaves in place, further minimizing their carbon footprint. Mark Richardson will share tips and lessons learned as they have committed to leave the leaves, an ecological method which is both intriguing and achievable.

    Panel Discussion
    We wrap up the program with a panel discussion. The afternoon speakers will answer questions about these new strategies and will address audience questions as well.

    Speaker Bios

    Ben Barkan is the owner & founder of HomeHarvest, a Boston area landscape design company that creates edible landscapes of abundant, nutrient-dense produce in gardens that are aesthetically pleasing and function as resilient and regenerative ecosystems. Ben holds a degree in Sustainable Agriculture from the Stockbridge School of Agriculture, is permaculture-design certified, and has worked on more than 35 organic farms in New England, California, Oregon, Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, and Costa Rica. With a rich set of experiences, Ben applies lessons learned to HomeHarvest’s unique custom garden installations.

    Anna Fialkoff is an Ecological Horticulturist & Designer at Garden in the Woods, New England Wild Flower Society. She is a graduate of the Conway School of Landscape Design.

    Nick Novick owns and operates Small Planet Landscaping, which provides environmentally responsible land-care services including design, installation, and maintenance of meadows, woodland gardens and other habitat types based on native-plant communities. Other services include home orchard care, and lawn fertility and weed management. In addition to his degree in Environmental Conservation, Nick is a graduate of the UMass Extension Green School; and is a Rhode Island/CRMS Coastal Invasive Plant Manager; and is the ELA representative on the Massachusetts Invasive Plant Advisory Group. Nick is a former ELA board member and newsletter editor.

    Mark Richardson oversees the New England Wildflower Society’s botanic garden, Garden in the Woods, and its native plant nursery operation, Nasami Farm, in Whately, Massachusetts. He studied ornamental horticulture at University of Rhode Island and helped run a mid-sized ornamental plant nursery before finding his true passion in public horticulture. He led undergraduate programs at Longwood Gardens, overhauled the curriculum of the Professional Gardener Program, and oversaw adult education at Brookside Gardens. In 2013, Mark assisted with the development of the first comprehensive master plan for Garden in the Woods. He holds an MS from the University of Delaware’s Longwood Graduate Program. Mark also serves as a Trustee on the ELA Board of Directors.

    $30 for ELA members, $40 for nonmembers. Register online at https://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/summer-workshop-novel-approaches-to-sustainable-horticulture/

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  • Thursday, October 17, 7:00 pm – 114th Honorary Medals Dinner

    Please join The Massachusetts Horticultural Society for an evening of cocktails and dinner and welcome  keynote speaker William Cullina, Executive Director of the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens,  the 2013 George Robert White Medal of Honor Awardee.

    The 114th Honorary Medals Dinner will take place Thursday, October 17, 2013 beginning at 7:00 p.m. in the Hunnewell Building Carriage House,  900 Washington Street, Wellesley, Massachusetts. The keynote address is Gardening On the Edge of the Continent.  Gardening in Coastal Maine has more than its share of challenges and opportunities. Close proximity to the Atlantic Ocean buffers the coast from the worst of winter cold and as importantly, summer’s heat. Still, winter is long and snow-cover unreliable. Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens is trying out many, many perennial species and cultivars for suitability and adaptability. In this talk, William Cullina will detail some of the Gardens’ triumphs, failures, and “too soon to tells” in an informative, humorous, and visually rich presentation about gardening on the edge of the Continent.

    Other award winners include Mary Ann Streeter, Allandale Farm, Art Scarpa, the Garden Club of America, the Stockbridge School of Agriculture, Katherine Tracey of Avant Gardens, and meteorologist David Epstein.  Tickets are $125, and may be ordered online at www.masshort.org.

    http://www.newfs.org/images/grow/William%20Cullina%20with%202%20grasses_Debra%20Strick.JPG

  • Thursday, May 3, 7:00 pm – Backyard Apples

    The visual experience of flowering fruit trees in the home landscape is surpassed only by the delicious variety of summer and fall fruits which they produce. Growing apples successfully can be a horticultural challenge, but it can be done! Dr. Wes Autio will present a program at Elm Bank on Thursday, May 3 beginning at 7 pm  on how to grow apples in the home landscape. Varieties, root stocks, young-tree care, nutrition, pruning, training, and pest control will be covered.

    Wes Autio grew up in a rural/tourist part of western Maine and received his B.S. degree in Horticulture from Virginia Tech and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Pomology from UMass. In 1985, he joined the faculty at the University of Massachusetts. He currently serves as the UMass Fruit Program Leader and Coordinator of the Stockbridge School of Agriculture’s Fruit & Vegetable Crops Program. He regularly interacts with tree-fruit farmers and the many individuals interested in tree fruit in the landscape. His research focuses on apple and peach rootstocks and controlling growth of apple trees with mechanical and hormonal approaches.  Photo from Through a Glass, Darkly. Free, but registration recommended at www.masshort.org.

  • Saturday, October 3, 9:00 am – 12 noon – The World’s Flora: Home in New England

    Embedded in the New England landscape and filling the catalogues of our nurseries are many plants that have achieved a sort of “resident” status here. Some of them may be among the earliest plants introduced to America from distant parts of the world; others arrived here more recently. This program, to be held at Tower Hill Botanic Garden on Saturday, October 3, from 9 – 12,  combines an indoor slide presentation with an outdoor walkabout to observe some of these plants growing in the on the grounds of Tower Hill.

    We will look at imports from a variety of habitats that were well suited for our conditions, including those that were altogether too well suited and now are designated “invasive species.” Whether you are a gardener tempted to try exotic plants, a geography buff who wants to learn more about the habitats of certain plants, or someone who is merely intrigued by the way in which plants can adapt to different environments, come join us for this brief sampling of international flora.

    Instructor Dennis Collins is a plant taxonomist on the staff of Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Mass. He has degrees in arboriculture and park management, urban forestry and landscape management, and biodiversity and taxonomy of plants. He has worked at the Stockbridge School of Agriculture in Amherst, Mass., and the University of Edinburgh and Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, in Scotland, and has taught many courses on horticultural subjects at Mount Auburn and the Arnold Arboretum. Once, long ago, he led a group of intrepid Garden Club of the Back Bay members on a walking tour of Mt. Auburn, which is still talked about as a highlight of our many wonderful programs. To register, log on to www.towerhillbg.org. The fee is $15 for Tower Hill members and $18 for non-members.

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