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Archive for the ‘nature’ Category

Please welcome Mt.Cuba Center to the Classes Near You section!

You can view their classes here and at Classes Near You > Delaware.


Mt. Cuba Center

www.mtcubacenter.org
Mt. Cuba Center is a botanical garden in Hockessin, DE dedicated to the conservation, display, and research of native plants. Their woodland wildflower gardens are recognized as the area’s finest. The Center hosts many interesting classes related to plants, gardening and the arts. View their full schedule of on-site classes and distance learning classes on their website.

    Fall Photography Free Stroll
    Saturday, October 26, 2013
    7:30 am – 11:30 am

    Enjoy this early morning opportunity to photograph the gardens of
    Mt. Cuba Center!

    Chris Starr will offer advice, tips, and ideas as well as answer your photography questions. Photographers of all experience levels, from novices to experts, will receive personal guidance. Stroll the gardens while capturing the visual glory of autumn. Be sure to bring your lenses, camera manual, and dress for the weather. Tripods are welcome. Garden admission is included with registration. Chris Starr is an experienced photographer who has played many roles at Mt. Cuba Center since 1984. Currently he is a member of the grounds team. View Details/Register


    Hidden Treasures

    November 5-7, 2013
    10:00 am to 3:00 pm

    Create botanical art from a new perspective!

    Primarily using graphite pencil, but including watercolor and colored pencil, create a drawing with a range of texture and tone. Our focus will be more on the sculptural and textural qualities of our plant source than on color. Learn how to capture nature from a different vantage point and see the art you can create from spent flowers, dried up leaves or spindly stalks. John will augment his group instruction with individual coaching. Basic drawing ability needed and a materials list is provided upon class registration. Please bring your lunch.

    John Gist is an acclaimed artist who worked as an illustrator after graduating from the Philadelphia College of Art (now the University of the Arts) with a degree in Illustration. He has taught art for over 15 years including at Bartram’s Garden and the Philadelphia Society of Botanical Illustrators. His work has been displayed in several exhibitions, including the exclusive International Exhibition of Botanical Art and Illustration at the Hunt Institute, the Philadelphia Society of Botanical Illustrators Exhibition at the Philadelphia International Flower Show, the Woodmere Art Museum, and with the American Society of Botanical Artists annual shows. View Details/Register


    Multiply Your Natives from Seed

    Saturday, November 9
    9:00 am – 2:00 pm

    Learn how to identify, collect, and sow native seeds. Join Bill McAvoy, Delaware’s state botanist, and Phil Oyerly, Mt. Cuba Center’s greenhouse manager, as they share their joint expertise in growing native plants from seed. Bill will teach you how to correctly identify seeds, explain the ethics of collecting seed from the wild, and demonstrate sustainable seed collecting practices. Clean the seed you harvest, learn seed scarification and stratification techniques, and find out the best ways to store seed. This is a hands-on workshop so be dressed for the weather and able to walk the rugged terrain of our Natural Lands. Students will take home wildflower seeds. Please bring a bagged lunch.

    William McAvoy has been the Delaware state botanist for the last 23 years, while serving in the Delaware Division of Fish and Wildlife. He is the primary author of the 2001 publication The Flora of Delaware, an annotated checklist, which has been revised as an online database. Phil Oyerly is the greenhouse manager at Mt. Cuba Center and has worked in the plant propagation area for many years. Phil and his staff grow native plants in support of the landscape and research activities of
    Mt. Cuba Center. View Details/Register


    Winter Tree Identification

    Saturday, January 18, 2014
    (Snow date: February 1, 2014)
    9:00 am – 12 Noon

    Learn the basics for identifying woody plants in winter. Don’t let the leafless trees of winter scare you! Eileen Boyle, Director of Education and Research at Mt. Cuba Center, will teach you distinguishing characteristics for identifying native trees and shrubs during the austerity of winter. Examine bark, study habit, inspect buds, and collect twigs then put them through a dichotomous key. Dress for winter conditions since this class will be held both outdoors and in the lab. Eileen Boyle is the Director of Education and Research at Mt. Cuba Center. Previously she was the director of horticulture at the Philadelphia Zoo and the New York Botanical Garden. She has also worked as a horticulture professor, an administrator for the New York City’s parks, and for the USDA. View Details/Register


    Why We Need More Natives in Our Gardens

    Tuesday, January 28, 2014
    (Snow Date: Feb. 4, 2014)
    7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

    Garden for life – ours and theirs!

    Specialized relationships between animals and plants is the norm in nature, rather than the exception. Plants that evolved in concert with local animals provide for their needs better than plants that evolved elsewhere. Doug will explain why this is so, why it is important to restore biodiversity to our residential properties, what we need to do to turn our landscapes into functioning ecosystems once again, and what we will gain by doing so. Doug will sign copies of his book, Bringing Nature Home. Doug Tallamy is Professor and Chair of the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology and Director of the Center for Managed Ecosystems at the University of Delaware in Newark, DE. He has authored 73 research articles and taught Insect Taxonomy, Behavioral Ecology, and other courses for 30 years. Chief among his research goals is to better understand the many ways insects interact with plants and how such interactions determine the diversity of animal communities. His book, Bringing Nature Home: How Native Plants Sustain Wildlife in Our Gardens, received the 2008 Silver Medal by the Garden Writers Association.
    View Details/Register


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GardenFest6_8_11 UCR Botanic Gardens
Celebrates 50 Years!

http://gardens.ucr.edu

The University of California Riverside Botanic Garden (UCRBG) is celebrating its 50th anniversary with a family garden festival. Demonstrations, lectures, a marketplace, and children’s activities are planned for this special event. The Garden is excited to announce the UCRBG Children’s Fund. Visit the festival to learn more about this new fund and how the Garden will begin its next 50 years as a teaching and educational facility promoting environmental sustainability.

Visit ArtPlantae in the garden as it kicks off a Teacher Trunk Show featuring children’s books about plants, instructional books about botanical art and exhibition catalogs showcasing the best of contemporary botanical art.

Teachers, what kind of resources about plants, nature and art do you want for your classroom? Stop by and let me know!

The UCR Botanic Gardens 50th Anniversary Festival is free and open to the public. Parking, $5. Hours: 10 AM – 4 PM.

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Learn about Jane’s FREE class with Strathmore Artist Papers!


Jane LaFazio

janelafazio.com/
Jane is a mixed media artist and a member of the San Diego Sketchcrawl group. Jane teaches at conferences across the U.S. and leads classes in Italy and Greece too. In addition to sketching classes, Jane teaches workshops in collage, mixed media, and quilting. There are always many, many opportunities to learn from Jane in-person. Below is a short list of classes that may be of interest to you. To view all of Jane’s upcoming classes, see her teaching schedule online.

Also see this interview with Jane and her Ask The Artist Q&A with readers.


    FREE! Artful Card-making Techniques

    Jane will co-teach this online course with artist Joanne Sharpe through Strathmore’s Artist Studio. This class begins on September 3, 2013 and is designated at Workshop 3 in the roster. Act now to join the forum for this class — it already has more than 1,300 members!
    Join the forum for Workshop 3


    Sketching & Watercolor: Journal Style

    Six-week online class.
    Learn how to record your life, your summer vacation and other adventures using a loose and quick style of journaling. Participants in this online class will learn a new technique or subject each week and will receive links to supporting material. Communicate with fellow participants and see each others’ projects progress. Designed for beginners. Cost: $85. Online classroom will open Fall 2013.
    View Details


    Sketching and Watercolor in a Mixed Media Journal

    Six-week online class.
    Learn to draw from life using Jane’s quick approach to drawing. Take your art journaling to a whole new level! Cost: $90. Online classroom will open Fall 2013.
    View Details


Learn from Jane In-person
:

  • Walking and Watercolor in Italy – October 7-13, 2013
  • ArtWalk: San Diego – January 13-19, 2014
  • ArtWalk: Italy – May 24-30, 2014
  • ArtWalk: The French Riviera – June 1-7, 2014
  • Nature Journaling in Massachusetts – September 12-14, 2014

This information can also be found at Classes Near You > Southern California.

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Autumn colors at Tower Hill Botanic Garden are the focus of these classes with artist, Helen Byers.

Here is the latest at Classes Near You > Massachusetts:


Helen Byers

www.helenbyers.com
Helen Byers is an artist and educator with a background in literary and educational publishing. Her drawings and paintings have been exhibited in solo and group shows in the West and East and are held in various private collections. Her illustration credits include six children’s books and six literary book covers. She teaches courses and workshops in botanical drawing and painting, as well as field sketching and nature journaling, to students at all levels.

For more information about Helen Byers and her work, including slide shows from her courses, visit www.helenbyers.com.

    Autumn Leaves: Botanical Painting in Watercolor
    Wednesdays, October 9, 2013 and October 16, 2013
    10 AM – 3 PM
    Tower Hill Botanic Garden, Boylston, MA

    In this two-day workshop, Helen will discuss and demonstrate contemporary botanical watercolor techniques. Students will work with single autumn leaves. They will learn how to sketch for accuracy and practice color mixing and painting techniques. All levels welcome.
    Cost: $100 nonmembers, $90 members

    For information and to register, email education@towerhillbg.org,
    or call 508-869-6111.


    Seeds and Gourds: Botanical Art in Colored Pencil

    November 9 – 10, 2013
    11 AM – 4 PM
    Tower Hill Botanic Garden, Boylston, MA

    In this two-day weekend workshop, Helen will demonstrate how to draw and paint late-fall seedpods and colorful gourds using colored pencils. Students will learn how to create detailed drawings in layers, using regular and water-based colored pencils. All levels welcome.
    Cost: $100 nonmembers, $90 members

    For information and to register, email education@towerhillbg.org,
    or call 508-869-6111.

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Attention teachers, naturalists and artists near Dallas Center, Iowa!

The Leaf Lab at the Brenton Arboretum will open on August 20, 2013 and will be open every Wednesday from 1-4 PM through November 13, 2013. Visitors to the lab will learn about leaf morphology and plant identification. They will also be able to compare leaves in their personal collections to leaves in the lab and to leaves on the trees in the Arboretum’s living collection.

Cost: $5 lab contribution per visit

Learn more about the Brenton Arboretum, their classes and other services at www.thebrentonarboretum.org. Follow them on Twitter (@brentontrees) and Facebook.

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When students arrive in your classroom, what is their attitude towards plants?
How did these attitudes form?

If you teach a traditional botanical art class, you most likely have enthusiastic students with vast amounts of plant-based experiences and knowledge. If you lead nature walks and work with the public, you may find that your audience does not have a particular interest in plants.

Do you ever wonder what people’s experiences with plants have been prior to meeting them?

I do. While I don’t have an answer to the question above, I can share a study that might serve as a first step to answering this question.

In the late 1980s, then-graduate student Margarete R. Harvey, conducted a study of how children experience plants and how their experiences contribute to their interest in the environment. She describes her research project and findings in Children’s Experiences with Vegetation.

Harvey (1989) conducted a study in which she evaluated children’s experiences with vegetation as play objects, as food, as tasks, as obstacles, as ornament and as adventure. She created subcategories for each experience. Because knowing these subcategories is important to understanding even this very brief look at Harvey’s research, I need to create a quick list of each experience and their respective subcategories. Here they are as presented in Harvey (1989):

    Vegetation as Play Object
    (tree climbing; playing in tall grass; playing hide-and-seek in bushes)

    Vegetation as Food
    (picking fruit and vegetables; tasting leaves, flowers or berries;
    planting seeds)

    Vegetation as a Task
    (mowing the lawn; watering plants; pulling weeds)

    Vegetation as an Obstacle
    (being stung by nettles; allergic reactions; plants interfering with
    an activity)

    Vegetation as Ornament
    (growing houseplants; putting flowers in a vase; pressing leaves
    or flowers)

    Vegetation as Adventure
    (playing in a park; walking in a forest; camping)

Harvey (1989) created a questionnaire that was distributed to 995 children, ages 8-11, at 21 schools in England. Her analysis is based on the 845 completed questionnaires she received. Harvey analyzed how often students engaged in the 18 activities described above, their level of enjoyment with these experiences, children’s attitudes towards vegetation and their attitudes towards trees, bushes and flowers on school grounds.

Large amounts of data were analyzed. Here are some interesting points from Harvey (1989):

  • Boys enjoy contact with vegetation as play objects and as adventure.
  • Girls enjoy contact with vegetation more as food and ornament.
  • Girls’ attitudes towards vegetation is more positive overall.
  • Both boys and girls liked bushes the least. Boys liked trees best, girls liked flowers the most.
  • Older children had fewer positive reactions to plants, than younger children.
  • Children of higher socio-economic status had more experiences with vegetation, more contact with vegetation and expressed more appreciation towards plants.
  • Experiences with vegetation had a positive influence on children’s attitudes towards plants.

These points only hint at what is contained in Harvey’s interesting paper. Pick up a copy of her paper to learn about the tools she used to measure degrees of enjoyment, student interest in vegetation, and how children’s past experiences with vegetation influenced their attitudes towards plants.

Get a copy of Children’s Experiences with Vegetation at your local college library.


Literature Cited

Harvey, Margarete R. 1989. Children’s experiences with vegetation. Children’s Environments Quarterly. 6(1): 36-43.



Related

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Morphology Preview copy

Five members of Amicus Botanicus, a painting group formed by graduates of the 2004 Botanical Painting Diploma Course at The English Gardening School, will take part in MOR.PHOLO.O.GY: An Exhibition of Botanical Art at the Sunbury Embroidery Gallery at Sunbury-on-Thames, near London. This exhibition opens on July 2, 2013 and will be on view through July 28, 2013.

Artist Louise Young says, “The gallery is a delightful little modern gallery within a lovely walled garden in the middle of Sunbury. It is close to Hampton Court Palace where the flower show will be held in July.”

In this exhibition, artists Linda McDonald, Mary Ellen Taylor, Louise Young, Caroline Jenkins and Shirley Slocock share their views of the natural world.

Be sure to also add to your calendar the presentation about orchids in art by Dr. Phillip Cribb, former Deputy Director and Herbarium Curator at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Dr. Cribb is the co-author of A Very Victorian Passion: The Orchid Paintings by John Day, a book about orchid enthusiast, John Day (1824-1888). This very inspiring book contains a sample of the more than 2,300 orchids painted by Day that are housed at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Dr. Cribb wrote this book with Michael Tibbs in 2004.

Mor.phol.o.gy

Sunbury Embroidery Gallery
Sunbury-on-Thames, England
July 2-28, 2013

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