Tag: Tovah Martin

  • Wednesday, April 14, 12:00 noon – 1:00 pm – Maximizing Space in the Garden: Creating More of a Good Thing, Online

    No matter if you’re gardening in a close-knit neighborhood or a sprawling estate, you want to garden efficiently, prolifically, sustainably, and beautifully. You need to garden smartly and you’ve got to conserve your resources.

    This Ecological Landscape Alliance free online lecture on April 14 at noon focuses on all the points on your checklist. When you layer a garden, not only do you maximize space, but you can also create hardworking habitats. You can fulfill a balance between what you need and what nature needs.

    Using her own garden that speaker Tovah Martin calls Furthermore as an example, I describe how to create layers in varied habitats including the perennial, berry, and vegetable gardens. The result is visually fulfilling, low maintenance, and mulch-eliminating when plants go wall-to-wall. This lecture shares how that shakes down to serve our needs as well as the needs of pollinators and other creatures. You can expect to hear many innovative ideas beyond the usual solutions. Register at www.ecolandscaping.org.

    Tovah Martin is an avid (verging on obsessed) gardener indoors and outside. She is the author of many gardening books. Her latest title, The Garden in Every Sense and Season received GardenComm’s Gold Medal Media Award in 2019. That book follows The Indestructible Houseplant, The Unexpected Houseplant, and The New Terrarium, and  Tasha Tudor’s Garden.

    A freelance writer, Tovah’s articles have appeared in publications throughout the country including Country Home, Traditional Home, Martha Stewart Living, New England Home, Flower, Cottage Journal, and many more. Tovah has also had numerous television appearances. She is the recipient of their medal for outstanding literary achievement and received the Gustav Mehlquist Award—the highest honor bestowed by the Connecticut Horticultural Society. She is an accredited Organic Land Care Professional through NOFA   With lifelong experience with indoor gardening, she also serves as a houseplant coach.

    For more information, Tovah can be found at www.tovahmartin.com.

  • Monday, November 5, 8:00 am – 4:30 pm – Season’s End Summit: The Sensory Garden – Elements to Enrich Every Landscape

    Monday, November 5, 8:00 am – 4:30 pm – Season’s End Summit: The Sensory Garden – Elements to Enrich Every Landscape

    As designers we aspire to create remarkable landscapes for ourselves, landscapes primarily measured in terms of visual, ecological, and functional appeal. Yet all of our senses are engaged as we experience the space and weigh the merits of the landscapes we enter. With planning, a sensory garden can deliver elements that involve all of the senses and ultimately deepen our connections with the space. In a culture dominated by technology, professional and amateur landscape designers have a unique opportunity to provide a rich experience for clients so that once disconnected from work, screen, headphones, and device, they can enjoy a multi-faceted garden that engages all of the senses and reconnects the soul.

    The Ecological Landscape Alliance invites you to slow down for one day on November 5 to contemplate a sensory-inspired journey into landscape design. Attend ELA’s 9th Annual Season’s End Summit as we explore sensory design elements, not just for specialty gardens but for every garden. Challenge the status quo, learn new approaches, reconnect with colleagues, and get inspired to embrace sensory dimensions in your next designs.

    Tovah Martin – The Garden in Every Sense and Season
    Gain inspiration for your next design as nationally known and celebrated Tovah Martin shares advice and ideas to deeply enhance the gardening experience for you and your clients. Tovah explores the garden on all levels by attuning your nose to the scents and training your ears to listen. Learn to garden with eyes wide open, ears to the ground, and hands outstretched as Tovah leads us on an odyssey of exploration to awaken the senses and arouse our abilities of perception on all levels.

    Ellen Sousa – Savor the Fragrance and Feast on the Bounty

    The sense of smell merges delightful sensory experience with lasting associative memory. It is easy to incorporate fragrances into a garden through blooms or aromatic foliage. Ellen will discuss how and when plants release their fragrance, provide placement suggestions for greatest impact, and share design tips for overlooked plants that offer floral, spicy, and fresh fragrances. But it is not just about the aroma. As we catch the scent of ripening fruit, the taste-buds begin tingle with anticipation of mouth-watering edibles. Ellen will inspire us with design options that satisfy the sense of taste from vegetables, herbs, and spices to fruits, nuts, edible flowers, and more.

    Trevor Smith – Tap into Your Inner Child

    Children touch everything to fully engage with their surroundings, a well-planned sensory garden invites visitors of all ages to experience this enjoyable sensation. In the sensory garden there are many textural options to invite interaction. Trevor encourages designers to incorporate plants featuring smooth, rough, waxy, hairy, silky, spiny, and even sticky elements and shares some favorite plant options. Of all of the senses, incorporating sound is where Trevor’s designs excel. Sound elements in the garden create a sense of calm and serenity. There are several ways to incorporate sounds by including: plants that rustle in the breeze; enhancing habitat features to invite wildlife bringing chirping, buzzing, and birdsong; adding man-made features such as wind chimes; or integrating a water feature to provide the most soothing of sound of moving water. Trevor will share ideas and address questions as we channel our inner child in the sensory garden.

    After lunch, all of the Summit speakers will join in a lively panel discussion. Panelists will answer questions to help address some challenges posed by sensory gardens. And regardless of a landscape’s design theme, there is a checklist of strategies at the core of any successful, ecological landscape. Panelists will discuss issues and provide tips for putting these principles and practices to work in any landscape.

    The day long event will take place at the Community Harvest Project Barn, 37 Wheeler Road in North Grafton, and is $119 – $129. Visit www.ecolandscaping.org for registration and complete information.

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  • Sunday, May 20, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – The Garden in Every Sense and Season

    Your garden could be so fulfilling, if you plug in. This Boot Camp for the Senses at Tower Hill Botanic Garden on Sunday, May 20 from 1 – 2 explores the garden on all levels by attuning your nose to its scents and training your ears to listen. Learn to garden with eyes wide open, ears to the ground, and hands outstretched. Tailored to the current season, this lecture will awaken your senses and spark perceptions on all levels. Subtleties that you never noticed before will be uncovered and defined. We’ll share advice and ideas; we’ll explore a “Smellathon” to help get nostrils in gear. Want to broaden your horizons? After this presentation, your garden will be more savory, you will know its touch, smell its aromas, hear its voice, and see it anew.

    An avid (verging on obsessed) gardener indoors and outside, Tovah Martin is the author of many gardening books – most recently The Indestructible Houseplant (2015, Timber Press), The Unexpected Houseplant (2012, Timber Press) and The New Terrarium (2009, Clarkson Potter) as well as the popular Tasha Tudor’s Garden (1994, Houghton Mifflin). A freelance writer, her articles have appeared in publications throughout the country including Country Gardens, Garden Design, Traditional Home, Martha Stewart Living, O the Oprah magazine, Old House Interiors, Horticulture magazine, Yankee, Connecticut Cottages & Gardens and numerous others as well as The Daily Telegraph in Europe. In addition to being the 2012 Writer in Residence for the new Victoria magazine, she is an accredited Organic Land Care Professional through NOFA, an honorary member of the Garden Club of America and the recipient of their medal for outstanding literary achievement. In 2013, she received the Gustav Mehlquist Award—the highest honor bestowed by the Connecticut Horticultural Society. She has appeared on the Martha Stewart Show, PBS television series and the CBS Sunday Early Show as well as many other television and radio broadcasts. She speaks throughout the country and has lectured aboard the QE2. Tovah can be found at http://www.tovahmartin.com and she blogs at http://www.plantswise.com. $10 for THBG members, $20 for nonmembers. Register at https://towerhillbg.thankyou4caring.org/pages/event-registration-form—the-garden-in-every-sense-and-season–talk–book-signing

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  • Saturday, January 13, 2:00 pm – The New Shade Garden: Creating a Lush Oasis in the Age of Climate Change

    Berkshire Botanical Garden’s 2018 Annual Winter Lecture will take place Saturday, January 13 at 2 pm at Lenox Memorial High School in Lenox.

    Ken Druse plumbs the depths of shade once again – 20 years after the publication of his best seller, The Natural Shade Garden. This time, it’s to tackle the challenges that have arisen due to our changing climate. The low-stress environment of shade (lower temperatures, fewer water demands, carbon sequestration) is extremely beneficial for our plants, our planet, and us. Ken details new ways of looking at all aspects of the gardening process, in topics such as designing your garden, choosing and planting trees, preparing soil, solving the deer problem, and the vast array of flowers and foliage – all within the challenges of a changing climate, shrinking resources, and new weather patterns. Ken knows that the best defense is to create a cool, verdant retreat – he says, “The garden of the future will be in the shade.”

    Ken Druse is a celebrated lecturer, an award-winning photographer, and an author, who has been called “the guru of natural gardening” by the New York Times. He is best known for his twenty gar­den books published over the last twenty-five years. The American Horticultural Society listed his first large-format work, The Natural Garden (Clarkson Potter, 1988), among the best books of all time. His book, Making More Plants (Stewart Tabori & Chang, 2012) won the award of the year from the prestigious Garden Writers Association. That group gave Ken the 2013 gold medal for photography and the silver for writing. Also in 2013, the Smithsonian Institute announced the acquisition of the Ken Druse Collection of Garden Photography comprising 100,000 images of American gardens and plants.

    The Garden Club of America presented Ken with the Sarah Chapman Francis medal for lifetime achievement in garden communication.

    KenDruse.com is a blog with ten years of archived podcast interviews. He also appears monthly on Margaret Roach’s radio show, A Way to Garden.

    The Winter Lecture Series was begun by the Berkshire Botanical Garden in 1997 and was established to bring inspiring speakers to the region to talk about horticulture, landscape design and history, plants and plant exploration, and home gardening.

    Over the years, the Garden has invited such luminaries as Marco Polo Stufano, Anna Pavord, Joe Eck, Tovah Martin, Dan Hinkley, W. Gary Smith, Penelope Hobhouse, Ken Druse, Gordon Hayward, Lauren Springer and Scott Ogden, Bill Cullina, Fergus Garrett, Debs Goodenough, Margaret Roach, Michael Dirr, Glyn Jones, Louis Benech, Alan Power and Thomas Woltz to share their knowledge of plants, gardening, design and history with an interested audience of gardeners and horticulturists from the region. The series has proven to be a popular event in the region and is held annually in mid-winter. Proceeds from ticket sales are used to further the Garden’s education and horticulture efforts.

    Advance registration is highly recommended, but walk-ins are always welcome, space permitting.  Many thanks to the Winter Lecture sponsor: The Red Lion Inn. Register online at https://berkshirebotanical.org/see-and-do/winter-lecture-series/

  • Saturday, January 21, 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm – The Begonia Winter Survival Guide

    Winter is way too long for gardeners, so why not turn to begonias? Is there another group of plants with equal diversity, definition, and intrigue? On Saturday, January 21 at 1 pm, garden writer and self-described plant-obsessive Tovah Martin will share her passion for these delightful houseplants. Featuring colorful leaves in just about every shape imaginable topped by spikes of adorable little flowers and an unflappable personality, begonias turn attention inside when the weather is yucky outdoors. Begonias can easily become the best cold-season companions, but there are a few tricks for keeping them happy and healthy. That’s what this begonia intensive is all about. Come with questions and courage, and leave as a die-hard begonia fan. Tovah will also demonstrate how to make more begonias to share with friends and converts and there will be some cuttings for students to bring home. This Berkshire Botanical Garden lecture will take place in the Education Center in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, and is $25 for BBG members, $30 for nonmembers. Register online at www.berkshirebotanical.org.

    Tovah Martin is an avid (verging on obsessed) gardener indoors and outside. She is the author of many gardening books—most recently The Indestructible Houseplant, which follows the success of The Unexpected Houseplant and The New Terrarium, as well as the popular Tasha Tudor’s Garden.

  • 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.

  • Saturday, January 30, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – The Indestructible Houseplant

    The Berkshire Botanical Garden, 5 West Stockbridge Road in Stockbridge, presents author Tovah Martin on Saturday, January 30 for a stimulating lecture based on her book The Indestructible Houseplant. Grow houseplants that will prosper. Get recommendations for dozens of low-maintenance, tough windowsill companions that can survive and thrive despite challenging conditions. Also get suggestions for new varieties as well as creative ideas for containers. Get information about watering, fertilization and ongoing care. BBG members $15, nonmembers $20. Register online at www.berkshirebotanical.org.

  • Saturday, August 23, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Monadnock/Greater Manchester Region Open Day

    The Garden Conservancy announces its Monadnock/Greater Manchester Region Open Day, featuring gardens of Peterborough and Francestown, on Saturday, August 23 from 10 – 4.  Admission to each garden is $5.

    This Open Day will feature a plant sale by Broken Arrow Nursery at The Gardens at Juniper Hill Farm in Francestown.  And don’t miss a lecture and book signing by garden writer Tovah Martin on this date at 7 p.m. at Bass Hall at the Monadnock Center for History and Culture, 19 Grove Street, Peterborough – Trowels & Tomorrow: Garden Stewardship. Admission: $5.

    A special invitation is also extended to Open Days visitors to enjoy a prix fixe menu at the Waterhouse Restaurant, 18 Depot Street, Peterborough. Available on August 23rd only.  Thank you to the regional media sponsor, New Hampshire Home magazine!

    Featured gardens are detailed below.  For complete directions, visit https://www.gardenconservancy.org/opendays/open-days-schedule/openday/923-monadnock-greater-manchester-region-open-day.

    The Gardens of Maude and John Odgers, 130 Four Winds Farm Road, Peterborough. More than thirty years ago, John and Maude cleared their land and began building their home. The gardens quickly emerged, drawing inspiration from English border gardens and Maude’s work as an artist who is intrigued with texture, color, and design. A soft palette and flowing shapes are used to create tranquility. Stone walls and granite pieces complement the New England countryside. John built the house, a small post-and-beam barn (that now serves as a garden shed), the curved wooden arbors, an artistic wooden fence with moon gate, a unique bluestone patio, and a small pond. Woodland and vegetable gardens have been recently added. There are many places for quiet reflection: chairs placed around the gardens, the curved patio that emulates the garden shapes, attached garden room, a retreat in the woods, or by the pond, complete with frog song.

    Fry Garden, 69 Pine Street, Peterborough. The garden consists of more than forty garden areas connected by staircases and pebbled or grass walkways, and spread over a twelve-acre site. They include level spaces and terraced areas designed to accommodate the significant elevation changes on the property. Styles range from formal near the house to less structured closer to wooded areas, a number of water features including numerous pools and two ponds, and a large perennial garden. Some striking features are a 300-foot sycamore allée, a series of semi-circular terraces bordered by standard Korean lilacs, an arboretum, an allée of 110 crabapples that border an acre garden, and an orchard of twenty fastigiate hornbeams underplanted with European ginger. Designers Gordon Hayward and Doug Hoerr have contributed to the design.

    The Gardens of Terry Reeves and David Baum, 53 Old Jaffrey Road, Peterborough. Gardening is as much about revealing what already exists as it is about the creation of the new. Our garden was inspired by towering pines, 200-year-old maples, a seven-foot old barn foundation, and stone walls surrounding our 230-year-old colonial house. By working with the existing trees and walls, we have created a garden that extends the eye from our perennial beds across a thirty-acre field to a far-away ridge line. A mixture of spiritual elements (a large stone Ganesha, a prayer circle) gives the visitor a feeling of quiet and focus in a setting enhanced by its significant vertical and horizontal perspectives. One of the interesting features of this garden is the ability to view it from above and look directly down into one of the larger borders. A woodland allée with a sculptured surprise completes the journey. Our desire is to create a garden that is both deeply personal and historically integrated and leaves the visitor feeling peaceful and uplifted.

    The Gardens of Michael and Betsy Gordon, 14 High Street, Peterborough. 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. The lowest level is an informal woodland garden and is a work in progress. The garden was planted with a mixture of unusual trees, shrubs, perennials, grasses, annuals, and bulbs. Plants were selected primarily for interesting foliage and textures.

    The Gardens at Juniper Hill Farm, 151 Reid Road, Francestown. 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.juniperhillfarmnh.com or Notes From Juniper Hill on Facebook.

    The Gardens of Laura and Jamie Trowbridge, 29 Cornish Road, Peterborough (pictured below.) The owners say: “We purchased this property thirteen years ago after falling in love with the 1763 cape surrounded by big maples, wandering myrtle, and lichen-covered stone walls. We set about creating a long, curving perennial border along the stone wall facing west with a view of the rolling hills beyond as a backdrop. Over the years, the character of the border has evolved from traditional perennials to a mixture of perennials, shrubs, bulbs, ornamental annuals, and specialty trees. Tried-and-true heirloom plantings with newer and more unusual plants have been used to create an eclectic, yet harmonized, landscape. We’ve added numerous shade gardens and a kitchen patio that serves as an ideal location for containers of unusual annuals and succulents. The property also includes an organic vegetable garden, pumpkin and berry patches, plus bees, and chickens.”

  • Thursday, January 30, 7:00 pm – Trowels and Tomorrow

    The beauty of gardens is that they mature. Join Tovah Martin at Elm Bank, 900 Washington Street, Wellesley, on Thursday, January 30 beginning at 7 pm in this lecture about horticultural preservation, stewardship, and how gardeners grapple with change. We address the challenges of bringing landscapes into the next generation.

    Whether you have inherited a landscape or created a garden over decades and now face mature trees and shrubs that require preemptive pruning or relocation, we explore issues and answers. We look at woodland gardens and grand estates, we explore gardens great and small. We tackle such sticky wickets as rehabilitating overgrown boxwood hedges and coping with plants that were once considered exotics but have now been unmasked as invasives.

    This is a lecture about bringing yesterday’s gardens into tomorrow. But we also talk about plant preservation and heirloom varieties, honoring the people who have worked to preserve vintage ornamentals so those plants with a past can become the superstars of future gardens.

    Ms. Martin will have copies of her most recent books available for purchase and signing.  Fee is $20 for Massachusetts Horticultural Society members, $25 for nonmembers.  For more information visit www.masshort.org or call 617-933-4973.  Image below from www.flowermag.com.

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  • Saturday, February 2, 10:00 am – 2:00 pm – Houseplant Smackdown

    Seduced by begonias? Join the crowd. Are you crazy about cacti, spines and all? How about orchids? You must have killed at least one. Have a thing for air plants? There is always room for one in the bathroom.  On Saturday, February 2, from 10 – 2, join three mad gardeners—Tovah Martin, Rob Genneri and David Burdick—and learn how to successfully cram more plants into your house in a hands-on session with houseplants. The event takes place at the Berkshire Botanical Garden, 5 West Stockbridge Road in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Bring a plant to repot or be evaluated. Consider the different growing mixes and learn how to take cuttings and divisions and, finally, how to keep them all happy inside your house until spring. Join the fun with our favorite plant experts for a houseplant smackdown and learn their secrets. You’re guaranteed to go home with more than you came with.

    Tovah Martin is a horticulturist, writer and garden personality living in northwestern Connecticut. She writes for many horticultural publications and has authored several books. Her popular book on terrarium gardens, The New Terrarium, was published in 2009, and The Unexpected Houseplant was published in August of 2012. Rob Gennari is a garden designer and owner of Glendale Botanicals, a specialty tropical nursery located in Berkshire County. He uses tropical plants in his design work and has in-depth experience with propagating, growing and maintaining them. David Burdick is owner of Daffodils and More, a retail bulb and plant nursery located in Dalton, MA. He is a plants man extraordinaire and is well versed in a diverse range of plant groups. He has instructed for the Berkshire Botanical Garden for many years.  BBG member price $75, non-members $85, and you may register on line at www.berkshirebotanical.org.