Visiting Castle Hill at Christmas is a time-honored tradition. Don’t miss this year’s event celebrating the beauty of the natural world. You’ll see birds, flowers, snowflakes, and more as you view 18 spaces decorated for the holidays. Go at your own pace and learn from interpreters stationed in rooms.
Enjoy freshly baked cookies and hot chocolate, try the Crane holiday eye spy, and shop in the Castle Hill Gift Shop during your visit.
Timed entry will limit the number of guests for the comfort of guests and staff. Advance reservations are strongly recommended. Ipswich residents: apply discount code “IPSWICH” for resident rate and show resident beach sticker or other identification at gate. Children ages 4 and under are admitted free; ages 5-14 receive the discounted child rate.
Christmas at Castle Hill runs Fridays, December 5, 12, 19, and 26, 4-7PM; Saturdays, December 6, 13, 20, and 27, 10AM-4PM (sensory-friendly hours 10AM-11:30AM); Sundays, December 7, 14, 21, and 28, 10AM-4PM.
Sensory-friendly Hours: 10AM-11:30AM on Saturdays, Dec 6, 13, 20, and 27. Reduced capacity and no flickering lights.
Accessibility: The Grand Stair has 30 steps. We’re sorry, but there is no elevator. There will be a digital picture display of second floor museum rooms for guests unable to climb the stairs.
Refund and exchange requests must be made at least 7 days in advance of the event date. Register HERE
Land Portal is a walking tour and published resource by artists Ellie Irons and Aubrie James that reveals ecological and geological features throughout deCordova’s Sculpture Park. Through this project, Irons and James aim to “foster a sense of place (in space, and in time) by calling attention to the ‘background’—the vast, alive, and ever-transforming ‘negative space’ that makes up the parts of the museum and park that are not sculptures or artworks.”
By following their annotated map, visitors are drawn to lesser-known environmental sites of deCordova’s campus, including unique tree specimens, remnants of earlier agricultural land use, and bedrock shaped by glacial sheets. At each station, visitors can follow a series of activations to connect sky and earth and ground themselves further within the surrounding landscape.
Ellie Irons is an artist and educator living and working on Mohican land in current-day Troy, New York, USA. From foraged watercolor paintings to un-lawning experiments, her work combines socially engaged art, ecology fieldwork, and embodied learning. She is a co-founder of the Next Epoch Seed Library and the Environmental Performance Agency, collaborations investigating relationships between humans and spontaneous urban plants (aka weeds). Her solo and collaborative work has been part of recent exhibitions on contemporary environmental art, including Seeds: Containers of a World to Come at the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, Ecological Consciousness: Artist as Instigator at Wave Hill, and Unsettled Nature at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History. Her work has been covered by publications ranging from Art in America to the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Irons received a BA from Scripps College in Los Angeles and an MFA from Hunter College in New York. In December 2021, she completed a PhD in arts practice at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, focused on socially engaged environmental art. Her book Feral Hues: A Guide to Painting with Weeds was published by PS Hudson in spring 2023. She is currently Co-Director of The Sanctuary for Independent Media’s NATURE Lab.
Aubrie James is an artist and scientist who uses her intimate understanding of ecology to probe systems of knowing—scientific, artistic, and otherwise. Her wide-ranging art practice intervenes on scientific convention to theorize ecology as an interactive practice of co-constructing internal (psychic) and external (material, organismic) landscapes. Holding a Bachelor’s Degree in Animal Ecology from Iowa State University and a PhD in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from Cornell University, her research led her to question how scientific convention had limited her perception and communication of the natural world. Her art practice began as scientific experiments which were covertly designed as land art, and has expanded to include sculpture, multimedia installation, and walks. She formalized her artistic practice with a Master of Science Degree in Art, Culture, and Technology at MIT. Her artworks have been exhibited at the MIT Museum, MIT.nano, and the Weisner Gallery in Cambridge, MA; the Distillery Gallery in Boston, MA; and Espacio Enredo in Madrid, Spain. Her ongoing scientific research focuses on plant biodiversity and has most recently been published in academic journals including Ecology Letters, Ecological Monographs, and Ecology. She currently lives and works in Queens, New York.
The exhibit will be on view at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum, 51 Sandy Pond Road in Lincoln, through May 31, 2026. For more information visit https://thetrustees.org/exhibit/land-portal/
Immersive and intimate, Appleton Farm Dinners highlight the work of our farmers directly, with the bounty of each harvest brought to life by visiting local chefs. Dine at twilight on the patio of our historic farmhouse, overlooking the Great Pasture and the rolling organic fields from where your meal was harvested.
Appleton Farms is delighted to announce the return of Gloucester’s Talise for the November Farm Dinner. Guests will enjoy a multi-course journey of family style seasonal dishes under the setting sun on our Farmhouse patio. You won’t want to miss the experience of Talise bringing their seaside culinary magic to the farm. Pop your favorite bottle of wine and enjoy the last nights that summer has to offer with this special meal. BYOB! Menu subject to slight variation depending on the crops of our harvest. The date is November 6, the address is 219 County Road in Hamilton and Ipswich, and the cost is $132 for Trustees members, $165 for nonmembers. Register at https://thetrustees.org/event/441890/. Staff gratuity is included in the ticket price.
In June 2025 deCordova opened Nature Sanctuary, an outdoor exhibition that explores relationships between the natural world and ideas of home. Spanning the Sculpture Park’s front lawn and beyond, this exhibition features original, site-inspired commissions and loans by six women artists: Venetia Dale, Kapwani Kiwanga, Joiri Minaya, Zohra Opoku, Kathy Ruttenberg, and Evelyn Rydz. The exhibit will remain on view through October 4, 2026.
The artworks of Nature Sanctuary express refuge, care, and shared protective relationship between humans and the natural world. Through their work, these artists consider past, present, and future ramifications of climate change, as well as deeper histories of land use and the migration of people, plants, and animals across homelands. Their projects also reveal contradictions inherent to a “nature sanctuary” and expose how the exclusion or displacement of living beings has been justified to protect the natural world.
Nature Sanctuary is framed by deCordova’s former identity as a family home and the museum’s present-day integration within The Trustees. As Massachusetts’ largest and the nation’s first conservation and preservation nonprofit, The Trustees protects more than 120 special places, as well as countless plants and animals. The exhibition deepens awareness of deCordova’s “more than human” landscape and its unique ecological and geological features. Programming and interpretation led by environmental caretakers will center these interconnections of art and place. The deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum is located at 51 Sandy Pond Road in Lincoln, and more information may be found at https://thetrustees.org/exhibit/nature-sanctuary/
The Trustees of Reservations and City Natives announce the return of the Fall Plant Sale on Saturdays in September at 30 Edgewater Drive in Mattapan. Pick up resilient varieties of native perennials, trees, shrubs and fruit trees along with garden supplies, locally grown garlic, and straw, Proceeds support The Trustees’ network of Boston Community Gardens.
Join The Trustees and City Natives on August 9 at 11 am for a free Tree ID Walk. Meet at 30 Edgewater Drive in Mattapan. Learn the basics of tree identification with City Natives’ urban grower Lacey along the Neponset River. More information at https://thetrustees.org/SeedSow
Join Urban Grower Lacey for a taste of native flora with The Trustees on Saturday, July 12 from 11 – 12:30. Learn about sustainable food systems and the local edible plants that used to– and could again– feed the northeast. The program will be held at City Natives, 30 Edgewater Drive in Mattapan. It’s free. Street parking is available and the nursery is a short walk from the Mattapan Center Red Line Trolley station. Directions and more information at https://thetrustees.org/event/440973/
Join The Charlesgate Alliance and the Charlesgate Farmers Market on Sundays, June 22 – October 12, 10:00 am – 2:00 pm, for the popular Farmers Market. Support local farmers, small businesses, and musicians. Entering its second year, the event has been a success and fills a community need for fresh food and friendship.
Come celebrate Black history and liberation in the Nightingale Garden! Cohosted by The Trustees of Reservations, Codman Square Neighborhood Development Corporation, Egleston Main Street, and Dorchester Food Coop. The event takes place Thursday, June 12 from 5:30 – 7:30 at Nightingale Garden, 512 Park Street in Boston. For complete details visit https://thetrustees.org/event/440287/
This 4-part Zoom series, co-sponsored by MLTC and The Trustees, is intended for staff and board members from land trusts interested in initiating or expanding work in urban/developed parts of their service areas. Covers five topic areas, lots of participant interaction, and includes an associated field trip in July. Cost: $20 MLTC members, $35 non-members. One registration covers all participants within your organization for all four weeks.
Each week, speakers from Massachusetts land trusts will share examples of their work in five different topic areas, delving into issues such as their motivations for the project, the relationships they needed to build, considerations for working on land that is owned by partners, and benefits and challenges they’ve experienced. They will also describe lessons learned, recommendations for successful partnerships, and funding sources that may be particular to urban work. They hope to demonstrate that with the right motivation and preparation, any sized land trust can embark on similar work. Each week will offer plenty of time for questions from attendees. For complete information and to register visit https://thetrustees.org/event/440353/