Tag: Wambui Ippolito

  • Tuesday, July 23 – Thursday, July 25 – Nantucket Garden Festival

    The Nantucket Garden Festival is a celebration of the island’s natural beauty, featuring inspiring garden tours, engaging lectures, and vibrant floral demonstrations. Your sponsorship provides essential support for this beloved event and organization. Don’t miss this opportunity to join us in cultivating beauty and sustainability on Nantucket. Events include a Van Garden Tour with Greyson Keller, a Floral Design Workshop with Kelsey Day, an evening gathering with Todd Forrest, a Children’s Fairy Garden Workshop, ‘Sconset Walking Tour, and a Keynote Lecture and Luncheon with celebrity gardener Wambui Ippolito. For tickets and complete information visit https://www.ackgardenfestival.org/event-schedule

  • Wednesday, July 27, 5:30 pm – 6:30 pm – Immigrant Landscapes

    Wambui Ippolito is the 2021 “Best in Show” award winner at the Philadelphia Flower Show, the largest show of its kind in North America. Born in Kenya, Ms. Ippolito was influenced by her mother’s garden in Nairobi, her grandmother’s farm in the countryside, and the natural landscapes of East Africa. Speaking from personal experience, Wambui’s talk will follow immigrant footprints through the American landscape. The Polly Hill Arboretum Lecture will take place Wednesday, July 27 at 5:30 pm on Martha’s Vineyard. $5 for PHA members, $10 for nonmembers.

    Registration is required. Sign up here: bit.ly/Immigrant-Landscapes

  • Thursday, November 11, 8:30 am – 4:30 pm – Regenerative Solutions for Resilient Landscapes, Online

    Connections are vital throughout healthy landscapes and include everything from interaction between pollinator and plant to the underground networking of mycelium.

    The degree to which a landscape is successfully connected determines soil health, biodiversity, local adaptation, colonization, and species survival prospects. All connections are further challenged as ecosystems cope with climate change.

    Join The Ecological Landscape Alliance online on November 11 from 8:30 – 4:30 for this unique opportunity to consider future landscapes and learn the importance of regenerative solutions. Register at https://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/regenerative-and-resilient/

    Roy Diblik with speak on Building Strong Foundations.

    Gorgeous perennial gardens packed with color, texture, and multi-season interest (think of stunning examples like the Lurie Garden) may be aspirational but are also achievable with some plant community know-how from award-winning plantsman and designer Roy Diblik.

    Roy’s design approach begins by learning a core group of plants, and all of the characteristics of the plants, that are reliable performers, tolerant of varied initial soil conditions. The next steps are combining them with complementary plants that thrive together when grown as a community. Roy also emphasizes a design approach that minimizes garden maintenance. One reliable species is Carex used as a groundcover to reduce reliance on wood mulch, create a healthier habitat for woody plants, create interconnected plant communities that benefit the well-being

    Then, Jane Slade will present Reconnecting with Natural Light Cycles that Support Human and Wildlife Health: Starving for Darkness

    Darkness is disappearing from the face of the Earth, blinding wildlife in the light. Since the industrial revolution and the invention of the electric light bulb, the natural ecosystems of the Earth spend more and more time bathed in artificial light within a 24-hour cycle. How does the artificial light and lack of darkness impact wildlife? How does the obstruction of the night’s sky affect bird migration, pollination, and reproduction?
    Much of the study of light and health has been dedicated to the impact of light upon humans; however, animals and plants are also intrinsically photosensitive and subject to the unwanted effects of stray light. How can a rethinking of design, landscape lighting, and codes alleviate some of these harmful effects? Ms. Slade will provide encouraging considerations to minimize these negative impacts.

    Finding the Mother Tree will be given by Suzanne Simard.

    Trees are connected, that’s right, CONNECTED. Through their research, Dr. Simard and her team have discovered that trees are connected below-ground via a vast fungal network. The Mother Tree project is investigating forest renewal practices that will protect biodiversity, carbon storage and forest regeneration as climate changes. This field-based research compares various retention levels of Mother Trees (large, old trees) and their neighbors, as well as regenerating seedling mixtures, in Douglas-fir forests located across nine climatic regions in British Columbia.
    What is the mysterious, powerful force that connects and sustains others? The old, large trees in forests are responsible for nurturing and connecting forests in the same profound ways that families and human societies nurture and connect their members. Learn about the vital and inseparable bonds that enable survival of all.

    The next talk will be by Desiree Narango Phd, on Using Informed Plant Selection to Restore Pollinators and Songbirds.

    Functional food webs are essential for the successful conservation of ecological communities. In terrestrial systems, food webs are built on a foundation of co-evolved interactions between plants and their consumers. Efforts to restore urban and suburban green space, provide ecosystem services, and combat adverse impacts of development have resulted in widespread tree- and garden- planting efforts. Yet, little attention is given to the importance of plant identity for successfully supporting biodiversity. In this presentation, Dr. Narango will discuss the ecological and evolutionary relationships between plants, pollinators, and songbirds and highlight her recent research demonstrating that particular native plants are crucial for supporting local food webs. She will also share examples where species interaction data can provide quantitative metrics to inform planting guidelines to restore wildlife habitat in shared, living- and working landscapes.

    She’ll wrap up by offering some advice for how each person can help move planet Earth towards this best-case scenario. It turns out that the most effective actions to change over-arching systems are collective, political actions, whereas personal lifestyle changes and landscaping choices offer more of a cultural and personal template for the future. Come to have your hope renewed and your enthusiasm for action elevated!

    Finally, Yujuan Chen, Phd, will speak on Human-Natural System Connections: Soil, Water, and Trees. Currently more than half of the world population lives in urban areas — human-natural systems. Coupled with a changing climate, cities and towns are under high pressure to provide residents with sufficient resources, a livable environment, and desired quality of life. This presentation will discuss human-natural system connections including soil, water, trees, and their interactions with human decisions and activities. At the international level, how can we comprehensively integrate forests and trees into sustainable urban development with sound policies? At the regional level, how can we strategically and effectively engage communities in soil management and conservation? At the site level, how can we help urban tree establishment, improve tree growth, and ultimately sustain related long-term ecosystem services (e.g., stormwater mitigation) through urban soil best management practices? The findings from a set of studies will be shared to illustrate the connections and potential of green (trees), blue (water), and brown (soil) infrastructure in the city.

    For full biographies and information, visit https://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/regenerative-and-resilient/

  • Thursday, October 5, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm – People & Plants of the World: Landscape Commonalities, Online

    Viewing landscapes and plants through the lenses of different cultures will help designers create panoramas that are not only aesthetically pleasing but are spaces where Nature is no longer reorganized and alien. Working with Nature to create landscapes in which both people and plants are considered is the new frontier for landscape designers. Join the Native Plant Trust and Wambui Ippolito on October 5 at 6:30 pm online. $15 for NPT members, $18 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/people-plants-world-landscape-commonalities/

  • Wednesday & Thursday, September 22 & 23, 1:00 pm – 5:00 pm, and Friday, September 24, 8:00 – 12:30 pm – Plan it Native Landscape Conference, Online

    Deep Roots and its partners present the annual Plan It Native Landscapes Conference. This year’s event features live online content that can be accessed from anywhere, plus in-person Kansas City field trips for the best of both worlds! The conference takes place September 22-24, three half-days packed with interactive sessions, inspiring keynote speakers, and opportunities to connect with the native plant community.

    About Deep Roots

    Deep Roots is a not-for-profit organization comprised of multi-sector partners working to increase native plant landscapes. Our mission is to encourage the appreciation, conservation, and use of native plants in the heartland. Following in Olmsted’s footsteps, Deep Roots is an organization that focuses on the benefits of native landscape design and conservation while emphasizing the values of justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion. Native landscapes contribute to improving public health, smart urban planning, and much more! Deep Roots’ partners consist of small and large businesses, municipalities, state government agencies, parks departments, not-for-profit organizations and individuals. Partners collaborate to share resources, opportunities, and create synergy to plant more native species and provide education that results in more native landscapes. In 2019, Deep Roots created the Plan It Native Landscapes Conference to help increase the collective native plant expertise of the region. In 2020, more than 560 people from 40 states and 4 countries attended online.

    Plan It Native 2021

    Plan It Native provides education relevant to professionals (a minimum of 9 CEUs are available for landscape architects), native plant enthusiasts, and home gardeners. Whatever your experience with native plants, you will find resources to grow your knowledge. You’ll learn from speakers who understand your challenges and provide expert advice to help you advance.

    Plan It Native is organized into three tracks:
    • Design & Business – From formal to naturalistic, from the greenhouse to the retail counter to your front yard, these sessions will help you create more beautiful and beneficial projects.
    • Land Stewardship & Management – Sessions on the establishment, restoration, and management of native woodland, wetland, riparian, and prairie.
    • Policy & Communications – A new track for this year, these sessions will help you build awareness and action for native plants within your community.

    With daily keynote speakers, and a wealth of virtual networking opportunities, Plan It Native is far more than just a webinar! Along with 18 concurrent sessions in the three tracks, attendees will also enjoy keynote sessions from these notable experts:

    Nancy R. Lee, founder Social Marketing, Inc.
    Nancy Lee has more than 30 years of professional marketing experience, with special expertise in Social Marketing, the proven discipline for behavior change for social good.

    Wambui Ippolito, Horticulturist and Landscape Designer
    She is the 2021 Best in Show award winner at the Philadelphia Flower Show. She is the first Black woman ever to win and first solo female Major Exhibitor to do so.

    Dr. Peter Raven, President Emeritus, Missouri Botanical Gardens
    Author of numerous leading textbooks and several hundred scholarly articles, Dr. Raven has been a tireless champion of sustainability and biodiversity, earning him the plaudit of “Hero for the Planet” from Time.

  • Sunday, February 7, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – Landscapes in Time and Space, Online

    In her Berkshire Botanical Garden February 7 lecture, Wambui Ippolito tells the story of European, African and new immigrants and their relationship with American plants and soil, with the aim to birth a new perceptivity and embrace of nature stewardship. All proceeds from ticket sales will be donated to Volunteers in Medicine to support their mission of providing health care services in the Berkshire region. The online event is $12 for BBG members, $15 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/landscapes-time-and-space

    Wambui Ippolito is a horticulturist and landscape designer and a graduate of the New York Botanical Garden’s School of Professional Horticulture. She develops programming for museums, public gardens and parks exploring the broader context of horticulture, focusing on the intersections between migration, culture, history and science. She lectures both in the USA and internationally and is the principal designer of her own New York-based landscape design firm. In her former career, Wambui worked as a Development & Democracy Consultant at international organizations both in the USA and elsewhere. She is multilingual, fluent in five languages. Wambui is the founder of the BIPOC Hort Group, a multicultural organization with membership from the African American, Asian, African, Latin American and Caribbean public and private professional ornamental horticulture community.