Tag: Wildflowers of New England

  • Mondays, May 1 – May 22, 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm Eastern – Wildflowers of New England, Live and Online

    This Native Plant Trust Live virtual course provides a comprehensive introduction to native plants, including their identification, ecology, and conservation. We explore New England’s native plants by studying key identification features of flowers, leaves, and stems; family characteristics; growth patterns; pollinators; seed dispersers; and habitats. You will learn basic botanical skills and tools for identifying wildflowers and study pollination and coevolution of flower structure and design, habitats and ecology, and conservation concerns. (This course is also offered in-person). Neela de Zoysa leads the four Monday sessions, May 1 – 22. $216 for NPT members, $264 for nonmembers. Register at www.nativeplanttrust.org Once registered, students will receive an automatic email containing details about the course and their receipt. These details may include pre-class readings, handouts, an access link, or directions to field sites. A reminder email will be sent out 1 week in advance.

    Common Groundnut courtesy Go Botany
  • Saturday, September 18, 9:00 am – 2:00 pm – Field Survey of Grassland Meadows

    This field class at Berkshire Botanical Garden on September 18 from 9 – 2 will explore the colorful variety of meadow flora that comes into its own in late summer and early fall. In the field we will observe and identify late-season grasses (which include such species as little bluestem, purple lovegrass, Indian grass, and switchgrass) and fall-blooming wildflowers such as asters, goldenrods, Joe-pye weeds, and many others. Our explorations will include both upland and wetland meadow communities. Leader Ted Elliman worked for many years for Native Plant Trust as a staff botanist, invasive species program manager, and as an instructor of botany, ecology, and conservation classes. His book, The Wildflowers of New England, an identification guide to much of the region’s native flora, was published in 2016 by Timber Press. In the 1980’s, Ted started and directed an environmental education and wilderness adventure center in the Berkshires. Since the mid-1990’s, he has periodically led natural history tours to southwest China, where he worked for two years as a teacher and forest ecologist.

    BBG members $55, nonmembers $65. Register at www.bershirebotanical.org.

  • Wednesdays, October 7 – 28, 12:30 pm – 3:30 pm – Wildflowers of New England

    This Native Plant Trust four part course provides a comprehensive introduction to spring-blooming native plants, including their identification, ecology, and conservation. We explore New England’s native plants in a field setting at Garden in the Woods by studying key identification features of flowers, leaves, and stems, family characteristics, growth patterns, pollinators, seed dispersers, and habitats. You will learn basic botanical skills and tools to identify wildflowers, pollination and coevolution of flower structure and design, habitats and ecology, and conservation concerns. Neela de Zoysa instructs on Wednesdays, October 7 – 28, 12:30 – 3:30. $216 for NPT members, $264 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/wildflowers-new-england-fw/

  • Sunday, June 28, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm – Wildflower Field Study

    Join ecologist Ted Elliman for a Berkshire Botanical Garden lecture on June 28 from 10 – 4 highlighting wildflowers of New England’s natural habitats, including alpine summits, forests, meadows, wetlands, and coastal environments. This program will focus on spring-flowering plants that will be (or almost be) in bloom in the forests and meadows of the Berkshires. After an introductory lecture, Elliman will lead a walking field study at BBG as well as at an off-site location. Optional transportation to the off-site location will be provided by BBG.

    Ted Elliman has worked for the Native Plant Trust as a staff botanist, invasive species program manager, and as an instructor of botany, ecology, and conservation classes. His book, The Wildflowers of New England, an identification guide to much of the region’s native flora, was published in 2016 by Timber Press.

    $85 for BBG members, $95 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/spring-wildflower-field-study

  • Saturday, May 20, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm – Wildflowers of Spring

    Spring is a special time in New England, when many of the region’s native plants bloom en masse. This New England Wild Flower Society class at Garden in the Woods on Saturday, May 20 from 10 – 1 offers a quick introduction to seasonal favorites. We will learn to identify flowers, habitats, and pollinators through a combination of classroom instruction and a walk in the field at Garden in the Woods. Bring a hand lens and Wildflowers of New England. Led by Neela de Zoysa, the fee is $40 for NEWFS members, $48 for nonmembers. Register online at http://www.newfs.org/learn/our-programs/wildflowers-of-spring  Image from www.wellsreserve.org.

  • Tuesdays, April 25 – May 16, 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm, or Wednesdays, April 26 – May 17, 10:00 am – 12:30 pm – Wildflowers of New England

    New to the world of native plants? There’s no better way to study the region’s flora than in the field. In this New England Wild Flower Society four part class, we will learn to identify New England’s native plants by studying their habitats at Garden in the Woods. The class will examine family characteristics, growth patterns, and key identification features of flowers, leaves, and stems. Bring a hand lens and Wildflowers of New England. The Wild Flowers of New England sessions take place at Garden in the Woods Tuesdays, April 25 – May 16 from 6:30 – 9, and are taught by Neela de Zoysa. $136 for NEWFS members, $170 nonmembers. Register online at www.newfs.org. There is a second Wildflowers of New England class which begins on 4/26/17, during the day, from 10 am – 12:30 on April 26 – May 17. Image from elkmoundwildflowers.com.

  • Saturday, September 21, 9:30 am – 12:30 pm – Wildflowers in the Fall

    A follow-up to New England Wild Flower Society’s spring course, “Wildflowers of New England,” this class highlights flora in the last stages of the growing season. What fruits have the spring wildflowers produced, and how are they dispersed? Which flowers are blooming in the fall and why? Which pollinators are active? The program includes a walk in the Garden, a power-point presentation to illustrate key points, and samples for dissection and close observation. References for fruits and winter identification will be provided. Bring Newcomb’s Wildflower Guide and a 10x hand lens to Garden in the Woods in Framingham.  The course will be held Saturday, September 21, from 9:30 – 12:30, led by Dr. Neela De Zoysa, botanist and author of A Field Guide to the Common Trees and Shrubs of Sri Lanka, and costs $40 for NEWFS members, and $48 for nonmembers.  Register online at www.newfs.org/learn/catalog/bot3009.

    http://www.outsidepride.com/images/products/detail/wildflowers/perennial.jpg