Home / General Information / Garden and Community News / November 2007
Holiday Wreath Sale (2007)
Category(-ies): Holiday Wreath Sale
Each year the Friends of the Garden make up to 300 fresh Christmas wreaths for the holiday season. Including materials from the Botanical Garden and from members private gardens, each wreath is unique and many contain examples of rare and unusual plants. The styles vary considerably and range from the traditional evergreens and berries, to contemporary designs and colour schemes suitable for the most chic modern home. The wreaths come in small, medium and large sizes (10" to around 30") and range in price from $30 upwards. The wreaths are guaranteed to last well into the New Year with adequate watering (laying them out in the rain overnight works very well!)
Attractive table decorations, door swags and miniature Christmas trees are also available.
Christmas wreaths and decorations will be available at the Shop in the Garden from Wednesday, November 28th through to December 9th - or until supplies run out. Winter hours at the Shop in the Garden are from 10am to 4:30pm.
All proceeds support research, education and plant conservation at UBC Botanical Garden and Centre for Plant Research.
For more information:
Posted by Daniel Mosquin at 3:07 PM on November 30, 2007
Interwoven Wild: An Ecologist Loose in the Garden
Category(-ies): 2007 Archives
From the Native Plant Society of British Columbia email listserv:
NPSBC South Coast Book Launch:
Interwoven Wild: An Ecologist Loose in the Garden
By Don Gayton
Thursday, December 6, 2007 at 7:00 p.m.
Vancouver Museum, Whittick Lounge
1100 Chestnut Street, Vancouver BC
Free parking and admission; The public is welcome
Nationally-known field ecologist Don Gayton brings his wealth of experience to show us how nature and ecology perform their magic right in our gardens and home landscapes. Engaging the reader with real — and occasionally hilarious — gardening experiences, Gayton marries the joys of gardening to the fascinations of ecology. In charming and lyrical prose, he explores the inter-reliance of species, soil fertility, weed invasions, and how the rampion got its name. He also speculates on gardeners — their need to landscape, to purchase specialized tools, to use (or shun) chemicals, and the art they bring to the enterprise. By skilfully interweaving the work of painters, writers, and landscape architects, Gayton marks gardening and landscaping as primordial human urges, and the garden as a gift, a celebration, a revelation buried in our collective mythologies. This is a book for everyone who sees deeper meanings in their gardens and landscapes.
Don Gayton is the author of three books of non-fiction (The Wheatgrass Mechanism, Landscapes of the Interior, Kokanee), and numerous technical and popular articles. His writing has won several honours, including the Canadian Science Writer’s Award, the Saskatchewan Writers Guild Non-Fiction Award, and the US National Outdoor Book Award. Don has worked as a grassland specialist for both the Saskatchewan and British Columbia governments, and currently works as an ecologist for FORREX in British Columbia’s Okanagan Valley.
Posted by Daniel Mosquin at 3:06 PM on November 30, 2007
