November 2013 - Community Garden Club of Cohasset
Transcription
November 2013 - Community Garden Club of Cohasset
the COMMUNITY GARDEN CLUB 2 0 1 3 N O V E M ! “The year lies dying in this evening light; the poet musing in autumnal woods, hears melancholy sighs among the withered leaves.” Not everyone finds November to be their favourite month. The Anglo-Saxons named November “Wind Monath” because it was the time the cold winds started to blow. The poet T.S. Elliot called it “Sombre November” and Sir Walter Scott wrote “November’s sky is chill and drear.” It’s true that November’s weather is not alway clement although traveling to my first Thanksgiving after coming to live in the U.S., we sunbathed on the ferry over to Nantucket it was so hot. However, that might not be such a good thing - English folklore has it that a warm November is the sign of a cold winter to come. “If ducks do swim at Martinmas, at Christmas they will slide.” But November is also a month full of traditions and festivals, mixing quiet and reflection as the year nears its end, with some fun and games. All Saints’ Day, All Souls’ Day, Armistice Day, Martinmas Day, St Andrew’s Day, all ask us to pause for a moment and remember. This November is a good moment to pause and remember Polly Logan, who founded this club and B E R of Cohasset, MA www.CommunityGardenClubOfCohasset.org E D I T I O N served as our first President. I never knew her personally, but I came to know something of her when my title was club historian. She was a lady, and what a lady she was! Full of energy and enthusiasm, she started and led the club with both gusto and grace, overcoming any and all difficulties with charm and laughter. She will be sorely missed by all who knew her. November isn’t all drear and melancholy - it’s spring in the Southern Hemisphere. The month is also home to Thanksgiving, a wonderful holiday here, and in England there’s Mischief Night, Stir-up Sunday and Guy Fawkes Night offering opportunities for merry making. Remember, remember the 5th of November. However, this year I want you to remember, remember the 5th of December, the House Tour doth come and jobs do us call. November sees much of the preparation for the House Tour. It’s fun, whether crafting, cooking or decorating, especially when the north winds do blow and we might have snow. November is the moment when the whole club comes together and works hard and happily in common cause. See you there. ! ! Linda November - Hip, Hip Hydrangeas! 26 November, Second Congregational Church@ 43 Highland Avenue, 9:00 a.m. coffee, 9:45 meeting. Andi Ross, artistic garden and landscape designer from Newbury, MA, will present a PowerPoint lecture that will demystify the multitude of hydrangea cultivars, separating them into easy-to-learn categories of size, color, bloom shape, pruning needs and cultural conditions. Flower Arrangement: Cynthia Chase, Hostesses: Brown, Bryant, Byrne, Chase, Chamillard, Chapman, Corriveau, Crowley, Duffield, Dwyer 5 Executive Board Meeting: The home of Mary Eisenhaure, 9:30 a.m. New member luncheon will be ! provided by the Special Events Committee with the support of the Board. 9-10 GCFM: Environmental Studies School, Series IV Course II, “The Living Earth - Land ! Issues,” Mass Horticultural Society, Elm Bank, Wellesley, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. 12 Horticulture & Design: Lightkeepers, 9:30-11:30 a.m., “Preparing for the House Tour,” ! creating material for the Yuletide House Tour Boutique. 13 Garden Therapy: “Giving Thanks,” Golden Living Center, 2-3 p.m. 18 Junior Gardeners: “Thanksgiving Table Arrangement,” Deer Hill School Cafeteria, 2:30 ! 3:30 p.m. 19 Craft Workshop: “Boxwood Topiaries,” Barbara Canney will show us how to make them for ! ourselves and the Yuletide Boutique, Lightkeepers, 9:30 a.m. 21 Craft Workshop: “Mussel Wreath,” Terese D’Urso will show us how to make one. N e w s l e t t e r E d i t o r Pa t C a m m e t t pcamme@gmail.com Please make adjustments and additions to your yearbook • Berit Rightmire’s email address is: berit.rightmire@gmail.com • Add Arienne Lima as a Regular Member: 22 Fernway, 383-0933, arienne.lima609@gmail.com • Add Tania McCann as a Regular Member: 68 Nichols Road, 717-254-0774, tania_mccann@yahoo.co.uk It is with sorrow that I must announce that Mary Londergan passed away recently. Doris Flint will donate a book to the public library in her memory. With sorrow I announce that Polly Logan, our club’s founder, passed away recently. Doris Flint will purchase a book for us to donate to the public library in Polly’s memory. Garden Club Federation of Massachusetts News GCFM FLOWER SHOW SCHOOL by Linda Fraker As Jan Todd recently told you, the Flower Show School, which was due to start a new course this fall, was postponed. We have now been informed that a new series of classes will begin in October next year and I thought it would be a good moment to let you know what the school is all about and how it works. ! Flower Show School provides for two options. Its first purpose is to teach those who wish to learn more about floral design and horticulture, including how to enter a flower show and how to stage one. If this excites you so much that you would like to become a Flower Show Judge, then its second purpose is to teach you how. As you can see in the Yearbook, we have lots of members who are judges although many of them are now retired. The School consists of a set of 4 classes or sessions each of which has three main components: 1 The Design curriculum gives instruction on traditional and as on tablescapes and new trends in design. creative design, as well 2 The Horticulture curriculum consists of basic instruction in proper gardening techniques, from seed and plant selection, plant culture and the control of problems, to the cultural needs of specific perennials, annuals, container plants, trees, shrubs, fruit, vegetables and nuts. 3 The final component teaches the knowledge needed to enter standard flower shows within both individual garden clubs and at other events, such as the Boston Flower Show. This component will include how to condition your plant material and how to create and promote flower shows. How does it work? Each session takes place over a two-day period with an exam on the third day. If you are just interested in learning and do not wish to become a judge, then each session lasts two days and does not include an exam. The preliminary class schedule is October 2014, spring of 2015, fall of 2015 and finally the fall of 2016. Enrollment for applications will open in the spring of 2014. You may be unaware that our club offers a scholarship of half the cost of tuition for a member taking any of the GCFM School study courses. In addition, if you don’t want to qualify as a judge, GCFM is running a twofor-one offer for Flower Show School so that two members of a club can come for the cost of one person. They share a study guide and still get all the information. So here’s a chance to learn, for very cost, about flower design and horticulture, how to enter flower shows, and even how to judge one. Garden Club Federation of Massachusetts News (cont.) “That’s Amore!” by Linda Fraker I want to make sure that all of you know that the 2014 Boston Flower & Garden Show takes place on March 12-16 at the Seaport World Trade Center. The GCFM is hosting the Design Division, which is entitled “That’s Amore!” They have a fabulous schedule covering all aspects of love to inspire the flower arrangers amongst us.They are currently accepting entries in all divisions on a first-come, first-served basis. In the last year or two, Cynthia Chace, Jan Todd, Carol Graham and Patty Johnson have taken part and entered the individual categories. They haven’t all had years of experience, but they decided to have a go and they’ve won first and second places, including “Best of Day” for one of the entries. So if you were wondering whether or not to give it a try, take inspiration from your fellow members and enter the show. If you’re not sure you’re ready to sign-up as an individual, there are also categories for clubs to enter, such as decorating an arbor or arranging a tablescape-both with brides and grooms in mind. So if you think you might like to give it a try, let me know or you can go directly to the following link: http://www.gcfm.org/FlowerShows/ShowInformation. ! ! ! The Massachusetts Horticultural Society Presents Design Division II “I Do! I Do!” Boston Flower & Garden Show Seaport World Trade Center, Boston, MA, March 12-16, 2014 Dear Designer, It’s never too early to start thinking about Spring, and what better way to anticipate the season than by signing up to participate in the Boston Flower Show on March 12th – 16th. Design Division II has an exciting and, hopefully, challenging schedule planned and just needs some creative designers to make it a reality." "With a great deal of help from both Cathie Healy and Julie Pipe, we have developed a schedule that complements the overall Flower Show theme of “Romance in the Garden”. The “I Do! I Do!” schedule celebrates the life-long commitment to love that we call marriage – from engagement through a landmark anniversary. The classes offer a variety of design options including an arbor (a club completion), an underwater design and an artisan class that may be mailed in. We hope you are as excited by this year’s schedule as we are. All entries should be sent to Julie Pipe. Please send your entry form to her at the address listed on the schedule. Entries will be accepted on a first come/first served basis. If a class is filled, your name will be put on a waiting list in case a space becomes available. · The entry days are Tuesday, March 11th and Friday, March 14th. · The Schedule will also be available online at the Massachusetts Horticultural Society website at: ! ! ! ! http://www.mmasshort.org/design-division-II This is my first adventure in chairing a flower show, so the road ahead may be a little bumpy, but I have a wonderful committee working with me, many of whom have participated in this event in the recent past."" I look forward to working with you in making the 2014 Design Division II a successful part of the Boston Flower Show. Hope you will join us! Jill Malcolm Design Division II Chairman jillyjill07@comcast.net or 508-429-4395 "What Garlic is to food, insanity is to art." - Augustus Saint-Gaudens..American sculptor "There is no such thing as a little Garlic" - Arthur Baer...American humorist by Eric Eisenhauer Yes, the planting season for this magnificent culinary tour de force is upon us. Plant in November and harvest in August-September 2014. If you plant now, you will see green shoots pushing up in February/March....even with snow on the ground. Don't wait until spring to plant, as is sometimes advised, since garlic needs a real cold snap to begin its natural growth cycle. My advice is to buy your garlic from a dedicated internet supplier who offers garlic for seed planting. Supermarket garlic, however attractive it looks, is often irradiated to kill off parasites, as are potatoes and many root crops, and is unsuitable for planting. Do a Google search and you will see many listed suppliers of seed garlic - one of my favorites is Meadow View Farms in Cheney, WA..... at http://www.meadowviewfarmstand.com/produce.html Planting instructions can found at https://www.garlicfarm.ca/growinggarlic.html. They also sell garlic for planting. Good luck - try and get the garlic cloves into the soil before the soil freezes! Conservation by Adrienne Dubois RESULTS OF THE CONSERVATION SURVEY taken at the general meeting by club member on September 24, 2013 A special vote of thanks to all the members who responded to this survey! 40 members answered Yes/No to eleven questions. Here are the results: 1. 75% use energy-efficient light bulbs in their house. 2. 65% do not leave the water running while brushing their teeth. 3. 100% do not leave their car idling while running an errand. 4. 30% still drink water out of plastic bottles. 5. 72% use reusable grocery bags. 6. 72% buy locally grown produce. 7. 7% have automatic irrigation lawn sensors that activate the water flow when the ground is dry. 8. 55% use eco-friendly cleaning products. 9. 90% turn down the heat and/or AC when they are not home or asleep. 10. 15% have a rain barrel. 11. 50% use a composter. At our next meetings: a) Examples of safe, clean, reusable bottles will be demonstrated. b) Eco-friendly cleaning products will be available. c) In the spring, information about the purchase and installation of rain barrels will be provided. d) Members who do not have a composter might consider getting one. Note: Automatic sensors which activate the irrigation system when the ground is dry are one useful step to conserve our water supply. Natural fragrant odors busters: (adapted from Martha Stewart Living) • Simmer 6 lemon slices and a handful of cloves in water for 10 minutes. • Place eucalyptus in a room that has a musty odor. Simmer the leaves in water for 10 minutes to cleanse the air. • Fill a deep glass dish with ! inch of white vinegar and set it in a room until the odor disappears. Announcements Craft Workshops for the Holiday House Tour BoutiqueEverybody come join in the fun of making goodies to put in our Boutique at the holiday tour. We hope to have a successful fundraiser from our crafts, but mostly we want to have fun doing this together! WE NEED EVERYBODY’S HELP. ! We will meet Thursday, October 24 (coming right up) at 9:30 a.m. at the Lightkeepers to work on a variety of items: gumdrop trees/topiaries, decorated candles, and jute-covered Christmas trees. Don’t worry if you don’t know what to do! We will teach you. We also have a box of ornaments from last year that a few of you may be able to rectify. This is your chance to make those creative juices flow. Bring your GLUE GUN, EXTENSION CORD, SCISSORS, CLIPPERS. You get to choose what you would like to do. Please contact Barbara Canney if you need more information: 781-405-4570 or barbaracan@me.com. Horticulture and Design - We have reserved our next Horticulture and Design workshop on November 12th as an open space to aid in creating items for the house tour. Currently we are planning to construct boxwood topiaries at the Lightkeepers starting at 9:30 a.m. Please look for additional information via email as the time draws closer and we can more clearly define our needs. For this workshop, plan to bring clippers, garden gloves, and a trash bag. If you have boxwood, please contact Barbara Canney to see whether she needs fresh materials. Realize that there is no cost to club members for items created for sale at the House Tour Marketplace. If you are making an item for personal use, however, there may be some cost associated with the materials that have been purchased. This is an especially fun and creative time for our membership. Please come and play with us. For additional information you can call Judy at 781-383-7058 or email at judyd617@comcast.net. Your Club Needs You! DON YOU NOW YOUR GAY APPAREL The 2013 Yuletide House Tour is on 5 December. ! All hands on deck are needed to deck the halls and work on many other jobs. Yes, it’s that time again. The Yuletide House Tour. On 5 December. ! As I know I don’t have to remind you, the House Tour is our big fund raiser. The one that ensures we can go on doing all the things we enjoy doing as a club. And the one where the whole club is expected to help out and take part. You will be receiving emails and phone calls from our team of Christmas Elves asking for your help to make crafts and to help sell them, to prepare, cook and serve the refreshments, to decorate and host the houses, to set up and clear up. Be prepared to do more than one job. Yes, it’s hard work, but it’s work done in the company of people who like to chatter and jabber, to cackle and giggle. If you’re a newer member, here’s your chance to meet lots of other members. If you’re an older member, here’s your chance to say hello to a new member and make another friend. ! We will organise the work shifts on the day so that if you wish to buy a ticket and see all the houses you will have plenty of time to do so. To meet that commitment, we need everyone to take a turn. In return for your efforts, you have until midnight on Halloween to buy tickets at a discount, as many as you like, for $25 each. If you would like to see the results of all your hard work, get your order to Maureen Adams by witches’ hour, midnight, on 31 October. Linda The month in pictures Building a Centerpiece with Gail Saccone and Jan Todd Garden Therapy Type to enter text Junior Gardeners send a tall thanks to Chris Kennedy of Kennedy’s Country Gardens for his generous donation Wreath workshop with Barbara Canney The Garden Club of Nagoya Activity Report of October 2013 ! Our October general meeting was a workshop of “Bonseki” instructed by Ms.Yoshimi Ando, a licensed instructor of Tokyo Kuyokai of Hosokawa School. ! Bonseki, literally translated “ Rocks on a Tray,” is an ancient Japanese art form in which miniature Japanese landscape is created with small white sand, pebbles and rocks (the size varies from fine ground sand to size of fists) on a black lacquered tray. The origins of Bonseki are unclear but it is believed that Emperor Temmu, who reigned from 673 through 686 A.D. made use of Bonseki techniques to describe natural objects and landscapes. It is also widely known that a number of gardens in Kyoto were planned and designed with the use of Bonseki. as temporary blueprints. Under the aesthetically minded Shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa (1444-1490), Bonseki became popular among members of the aristocracy. As his retirement villa Yoshimasa initiated Ginkakuji Temple (Temple of the Silver Pavilion) with a sand garden called “Gin Sha Dan” (Sea of Silver Sand). It was designed and built by the famous landscape gardener Soami (1455-1525), who used Bonseki as his blueprint for designing this garden. Ginkakuji Temple was registered by UNESCO as a World Heritage site in 1994. ! A century later, Sen no Rikyu, the famed master of the Tea Ceremony, practiced Bonseki and one of his students, Hosokawa Sansai, set up a school dedicated to Bonseki with established techniques. The Edo Period (1603-1867) saw many Bonseki schools set up as it gained in popularity. It became very popular among many ladies of the Shogunate court in the city of Edo (Tokyo.) With the restoration of Imperial rule, Bonseki declined sharply as much more emphasis was placed on modernity and Western culture. In recent times, however, Bonseki has seen some revival as new groups continue to improve upon the Hosokawa techniques, while preserving its traditional elegance. ! Our instructor of this day, Ms.Yoshimi Ando who belongs to this Hosokawa School, started to practice this traditional art at her middle school days as a club activity. She has dedicated herself with steady zest to keep the flame of this tradition alight. ! People can imagine how it looks by thinking of painting landscape with white paint on a black canvas. Not only the paint (white stone) and canvas (black lacquered tray) are unique, but also the tools used are very special. To work on Bonseki, several delicate tools such as a spoon made of ivory, fallen feathers of water fowl, small flax brooms, sifters and wood wedges are used instead of paint brushes. White sand, pebbles, and small rocks are basic materials. Haze or mist on the mountains can be created by special thin boards and wedges, while by using different shapes of spoons, the sea shore, snow drifts and clouds are created as well. Sieves are used to differentiate sizes of stones. The trays are either oval or rectangular, measuring about 23.5 X 13.5 inches in size. Oval trays have a low rim while rectangular ones are flat. Bonseki scenes often depict mountains, seashores and gardens. Small stones are used to represent mountains, shore lines or rocky islands that waves break upon. A sea or river can be symbolized, not by water, but by sand raked in patterns that suggest rippling water. ! Bonseki is similar to the tea ceremony, where meditation accompanies a learned pattern of actions and finished Bonseki trays are sometimes placed in the little alcoves below the hanging scrolls in tea ceremony rooms. Bonseki scenes by design are generally meant to be temporary because materials used, sand and stone, easily shift or crumble. Occasionally powdered glue may be added to the sand and set with steam to create more permanent displays. ! With basic explanation Ms. Ando demonstrated the creation of a Niagara Falls Bonseki. We were then challenged to create our own simple Bonseki. ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! Takako Kohri, Recording Secretary CGCC 252 Old Oaken Bucket Road Norwell, MA ! 02061 ! !