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I s a m u N o g u c h i at t h e B ro o k ly n B o ta n i c a l G a r d e n w e d n e s d ay , S e p t e m b e r 3 0
12610 Eveland Road PO Box 100 Ridgely, MD 21660
events at a glance Soup ’n Walk: April 18, May 16, September 19, October 17, November 14 Arbor Day Run: April 11 Native Plant Nursery Spring Open House: April 24–26 National Public Gardens Day (free): May 8
s l a c i n a t o Pressed Bshop Work May28
Native Garden Tour: May 9
Save the date a whole new kin d of
M AG IC
flora & fauna Fifth Annual Symposium Planting in a Post-Wild World
Thomas Rainer and Claudia West in partnership with the Garden Club of the Eastern Shore
Sunday, September 27
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
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April 5
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Quoting Nature, works by Erin Murphy, on view through May 29 13
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y h p r u Erin M Nursery Opening Weekend noon–4 p.m.
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Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
Book Club 3:30 p.m.
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Eastern Redbud in Watercolor 10 a.m.–4 p.m.
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Nursery Opening Weekend Members’ Day 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Great Natives 11 a.m.–noon
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
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10
l a c i n a t o B n illustratio
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7
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
Nature as Muse 10 a.m.–1 p.m.
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Native Plant Uses 2–3 p.m.
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Book Club 3:30 p.m.
Botanical Illustration II 9:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m.
Saturday
Wild Connections homeschool program 1–2:30 p.m.
Bird Migration Walk 8–10 a.m. First Saturday Guided Walk, 10 a.m.
F o r ag i n g 26
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Botanical Illustration II 9:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m.
13
Second Saturday Nursery Walk 1–3 p.m.
Forest Music 4 p.m.
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29
Plants for Pollinators 11 a.m.–12:30 p.m.
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
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Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
Camp Pollywog 30
Water: Moving, photographs by Peggy Fleming, on view through July 31 Outdoor Sculpture Exhibit by Howard and Mary McCoy on view through September 30
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Monday
Thursday 2
Nature as Muse 10 a.m.–1 p.m.
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Native Garden Tour 10 a.m.–4 p.m.
Soup ’n Walk 11 a.m.–1:30 p.m.
Wednesday 1
July 5
15
Tuesday
Friday 3
Saturday 4
2
Shakespeare in the Meadow, 6 p.m. 9
Wild Connections homeschool program 1–2:30 p.m.
Sunday
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12
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Camp Egret 14
15
First Saturday Guided Walk 10 a.m.
Dog Walking 9–9:45 a.m.
9
Camp Egret begins
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Second Saturday Nursery Walk 1–3 p.m.
Dog Walking 9–9:45 a.m.
Honey Extraction 1–3 p.m.
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Dog Walking 9–9:45 a.m.
Glass Fused Vase Workshop 1–4 p.m.
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Butterflies: An Introduction to Watercolor and Pen 10 a.m.–2 p.m.
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19
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21
28
Split & Divide a Hive 1–3 p.m.
29
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m. Pressed Botanicals Workshop 1–3 p.m.
Skunk Cabbage Leaf Casting 10 a.m.–1 p.m.
Visit adkinsarboretum.org for full program descriptions and registration links.
30 Sowing Native Seeds 10 a.m.–1 p.m.
22
23
Book Club 3:30 p.m.
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m. 25
Art reception for Peggy Fleming and guided walk with Howard & Mary McCoy 3–5 p.m.
19
Camp Bumblebee
1
Muffin Basket 10 a.m.–3 p.m.
Shakespeare in the Meadow 6 p.m.
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
Foraging 1–3 p.m. 24 / 31
Photography Walk & Soup 9 a.m.–1 p.m.
12
18
Camp Pollywog begins
1–3 p.m.
2
8
Botanical Illustration II 9:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m.
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Nursery Opening Weekend Chocolate-Making 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Workshop for Locavores 1–3 p.m. Green Roof Bird House
Friday
Quoting Nature, works by Erin Murphy, on view through May 29 5
11
Book Club 3:30 p.m.
23
First Saturday Guided Walk 10 a.m.
GUIDED SCULPTURE WA L K
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
Nature as Muse 10 a.m.–1 p.m.
17
Saturday 6
Camp Paw Paw 1
May
Friday 5
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
Camp Paw Paw begins
Thursday
1
Thursday 4
10
Pollinator Week begins
22
28
Flora & Fauna Walks Stewardship Speakers Art & Performance Youth
Camp Bumblebee begins
NURSERY OPENING
Wild Connections homeschool program 1–2:30 p.m.
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16
Eastern Redbud in Watercolor 10 a.m.–4 p.m.
Spring Ephemerals 1–2:30 p.m.
Shakespeare in the Meadow 3 p.m.
15
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
NURSERY OPENING
Outdoor Explorers: Wilderness Survival 2–3:30 p.m.
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21
25
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Introduction to iPhone Photography noon–4 p.m.
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c i s u M t s Fore
Movie: Potomac: A River Runs Through Us 1 p.m.
Wild Connections homeschool program 1–2:30 p.m.
Protecting & Encouraging Pollinators 1–3 p.m.
20
Soup ’n Walk 11 a.m.–1:30 p.m.
Wednesday
3
NYC High Line bus trip
8
Arbor Day Run Registration begins at 8 a.m.
18
Tuesday
2
June 7
11
Wild Connections homeschool program 1–2:30 p.m.
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
19
First Saturday Guided Walk 10 a.m. Art reception for Erin Murphy 3–5 p.m.
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
Monday
1
Wild Connections homeschool program 1–2:30 p.m.
10
Book Launch: Chesapeake Gardening & Landscaping 1–3 p.m.
Sunday
Saturday
4
Dog Walking 10–10:45 a.m.
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15
Friday
3
Nature as Muse 10 a.m.–1 p.m.
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12
Thursday
2
key
Saturday, September 26
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g n i m e l F Peggy 29
Water: Moving, photographs by Peggy Fleming, on view through July 31 Outdoor Sculpture Exhibit by Howard and Mary McCoy on view through September 30 Photos by Ann and Richard Rohlfing
Illustrations by Barbara Bryan
Dog Walking 9–9:45 a.m.
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Dog Walking 9–9:45 a.m.
Visit adkinsarboretum.org and click on Programs|Events for full program descriptions and registration links. TRIPS New York City High Line
Tuesday, June 2 Fee: $115 members/$140 non-members includes transportation and driver gratuity. Register by May 8 to ensure trip will proceed. The High Line is a free public park elevated above the streets of Manhattan’s West Side. Built on a historic freight rail line, its planting design is inspired by the self-seeded landscape that took root after trains stopped running.
SPEAKERS Book Launch Event!
Chesapeake Gardening & Landscaping— The Essential Green Guide Wednesday, April 8, 1–3 p.m. Free and open to the public Join author Barbara W. Ellis to celebrate the longawaited Chesapeake Gardening & Landscaping. Published in association with Adkins Arboretum, this colorful, comprehensive guide shows homeowners, gardeners, and landscapers how to create more eco-friendly landscapes for the Chesapeake Bay watershed region.
events Isamu Noguchi at the Brooklyn Botanical Garden Wednesday, September 30 Fee: $125 members/$150 non-members includes transportation, driver gratuity, and admission. Register by September 2 to ensure trip will proceed. Join Adkins Arboretum and the Academy Art Museum for a return trip to the Brooklyn Botanical Garden. As part of the Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden’s 100th anniversary, BBG will exhibit outdoor sculpture by renowned JapaneseAmerican artist Isamu Noguchi.
Native Plant Uses
Thursday, May 7, 2–3 p.m. Free and open to the public Native plants are excellent sources of flavor, fragrance, fiber, tea, dye, and medicine. Join Holly H. Shimizu for a look at a wide range of natives and to explore their rich value as useful plants and as important components of Native American and early American cultures. This program is presented at the Oxford Community Center in Oxford, MD, in partnership with the Oxford Garden Club and Oxford Community Center.
EVENTS
TENTH ANNUAL ARBOR DAY RUN Saturday, April 11 Registration begins at 8 a.m. 5K registration fee: $25 ages 16 and up/$15 ages 15 and under Fun Run and Healthy Kids Dash are free. 5K Run/Walk and a one-mile Family Fun Run/Walk. The event kicks off with a Healthy Kids Dash at 8:50 a.m. Postrace festivities include refreshments, awards, and a native tree raffle. Visit arbordayrun.org or call 410-634-2847, ext. 0 for more information. NATIVE PLANT NURSERY OPENING WEEKEND Members-only Sale: Friday, April 24, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Public Sale Days: Saturday, April 25, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Sunday, April 26, noon–4 p.m.
The Arboretum’s Native Plant Nursery offers the region’s largest selection of ornamental native plants for the Chesapeake gardener. This season’s offerings will include a wide variety of perennials, flowering trees and shrubs, grasses, ferns, and vines, just in time for spring planting. Members, including those who join on any sale day, receive a 10% discount on plants, gift shop items, and books. Members at the Contributor ($100) level and above receive a 20% discount on plants. Sale days are crowded, so please leave dogs at home. Members may place presale orders through April 12 at adkinsplants.com. CELEBRATING NATIVES: A GARDEN TOUR OF TALBOT COUNTY Saturday, May 9, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Tickets: $20 in advance/$25 on the day of the tour. Visit adkinsgardentour.org or 410-634-2847, ext. 0 for tickets. The first garden tour of its kind on the Eastern Shore highlights the beauty of native gardens while emphasizing their importance in creating a bio-diverse landscape—one that supports all kinds of life, from healthy soil organisms to insects, birds, and mammals. Now in its third year, the self-guided driving tour features eight gardens in Talbot County, each of which demonstrates its own flair and commitment to the use of native plants.
FLORA & FAUNA
Green Roof Bird House
Saturday, April 25, 1–3 p.m. Fee: $45 members/$55 non-members Join Morris Arboretum’s green roof horticulturist Louise Clarke to plant a green roof nest box. An introduction to green roof benefits, maintenance of your nest box, tips on attracting birds, and mounting instructions are included.
Spring Ephemerals—The Fleeting Flowers
Sunday, April 26, 1–2:30 p.m. Free for members/free with $5 Arboretum admission for non-members Spring offers a dazzling diversity of flowers that emerge, bloom, and are gone in the blink of an eye. Join Arboretum docent and Maryland Master Naturalist Margan Glover on a walk to discover these botanical treasures of early spring.
YOUTH AND FAMILY Science for Homeschoolers: Wild Connections
Fridays, April 3–May 8, 1–2:30 p.m. Fee: $55 members/$70 non-members ($10 sibling discount) Advance registration required Homeschoolers will explore the complex interrelationships between wild animals, the plants they depend on for food and shelter, and humans. Each week will spotlight a unique environmental connection, from the causal relationship between acorn yields, white-footed mice, and Lyme disease to how an increase in ethanol production has led to a decrease in the monarch butterfly population.
Outdoor Explorers—Wilderness Survival
Sunday, May 3, 2–3:30 p.m. Fee: $5 members/$7 non-members per person or $15 members/$20 non-members per family Move over, Bear Grylls! Why watch examples of wilderness survival on television when you can gain hands-on survival skills at the Arboretum? Activities will include water collection and purification, starting a fire with flint, foraging, and shelter-building.
SUMMER NATURE CAMPS Adkins Arboretum’s Summer Nature Camps give children the opportunity to enjoy their precious summer the oldfashioned way—outdoors! Campers will make new friends and lifelong memories while exploring the Arboretum’s forest, meadow, stream, and wetland habitats. From grazing on blackberries to splashing in the Blockston Branch, Summer Nature Camps provide children with a truly enchanted experience. Registration is underway for Camp Bumblebee (June 15–19 for ages 2–3), Camp Pollywog (June 22–26 for ages 4–6), Camp Paw Paw (June 29–July 3 for ages 7–9), and Camp Egret (July 6–10 for ages 10–12). Advance registration is required, and early registration is recommended as camps fill quickly. Visit adkinsarboretum. org for camp descriptions and registration information, or call 410-634-2847, ext. 0.
Beekeeping Workshops
Saturdays, May 23, July 11, and November 7, 1–3 p.m. Fee: $15 members/$20 non-members per program Join University of Maryland Extension apiculturist Mike Embrey for beekeeping and crafting workshops. On May 23, learn to Split & Divide a Hive. Practice harvesting honey during Honey Extraction on July 11, and learn to pour and wrap beeswax candles—and take home a few of your own—during Candle Making on November 7. All programs are held at the Native Plant Nursery.
Sowing Native Seeds Workshop Sunday, May 30, 10 a.m.–1 p.m. Fee: $30 members/ $35 non-members Join a fun morning of seed sowing at the Arboretum’s Native Plant Nursery with horticulturist Leslie Hunter Cario. Learn about growth requirements, materials, and seeding techniques, and take home sown seeds for your own garden.
Protecting & Encouraging Pollinators
Thursday, April 16, 1–3 p.m. This program is free. Entomologists in the United States and Europe are investigating causes of declining pollinator health. Join Stanton Gill, professor of landscape technology at Montgomery College, for an update on this research and what it means for the horticulture industry.
Great Natives
Friday, April 24, 11 a.m.–noon This program is free. Wondering what to plant this spring? Let Chris Pax provide some ideas just in time for shopping during the Native Plant Nursery Opening Weekend. A professional landscape designer with a master’s degree in sustainable landscape design, Chris is lead designer of the Native Landscape Design Center.
Pollinator Week
June 15–21 Learn how to support and celebrate pollinators! Visit this week to pick up locally collected Liatris seed packets and Stick Bee Houses. The Arboretum Gift Shop will feature pollinator books and gifts, including bee condos handcrafted by volunteers, and the Nursery will debut its new bug mansion.
Plants for Pollinators
Saturday, June 20, 11 a.m.–12:30 a.m. Free for members/free with $5 admission for non-members Observe Pollinator Week by learning easy ways to make your garden pollinator friendly. Master Gardener and horticulturalist Lisa Winters will discuss her favorite plants for butterflies, bees, beetles, and others.
walks GUIDED WALKS • DOG WALKING • SOUP ,n WALKS
Foraging
Sunday, May 17, 1–3 p.m. Fee: $15 members/$20 non-members Learn to identify, harvest, and prepare many of spring’s wild edibles when Bill Schindler, Ph.D. returns to the Arboretum to lead this hands-on workshop that immerses participants in the exciting, sustainable, and nutritious world of foraging for wild plants.
STEWARDSHIP
SATURDAY WALKS
Explore the rich and unique native plant habitat of Adkins Arboretum. Led by Arboretum docent naturalists, First Saturday Guided Walks are offered on April 4, May 2, June 6, July 4, and August 1 at 10 a.m. Discover mature and young native forests, meadows, a wetland, and rain and pollinator gardens, as well as the Arboretum’s Native Plant Nursery and the children’s teaching garden. Tours begin at the Visitor’s Center and last approximately one hour.
Second Saturday Nursery Walks explore the tremendous diversity of plant material at the Arboretum’s Native Plant Nursery with horticulturalist Eric Wittman on the second Saturday of June through October, with a special walk on Saturday, April 25 during the Native Plant Nursery Opening Weekend. Walks are free with the Arboretum’s $5 admission fee and are always free for members. Visit adkinsarboretum.org for more information.
Dog Walking with Vicki Arion
Every Thursday, 10 a.m. through June, 9 a.m. in July and August Free for members/free with $5 admission for non-members Adkins Arboretum is a wonderful place to take a walk, but did you know you can bring along your best friend, your dog? Join Arboretum Trustee Vicki Arion for a stroll along the best paths for exploring with your furry friend. If you don’t have a dog of your own, opportunities are available to walk and socialize dogs from local shelters. Call 410-634-2847, ext. 0 for more information.
the arts
Bird Migration Walk
Saturday, May 2, 8–10 a.m. Free for members/free with $5 admission for non-members Join Wayne Bell on a guided bird walk to scout for migrant warblers that regularly pass through the Arboretum in early May. Many of these birds are colorful and full of song.
Spring Soup ,n Walks
Nature, Nurture, and Nutrition Fee: $20 members/$25 non-members Following a guided walk with a docent naturalist, enjoy a delicious and nutritious lunch along with a brief talk about the meal’s nutritional value. Copies of recipes are provided. All gift shop purchases are 20% off on Soup ’n Walk days.
Fleeting Ephemerals Saturday, April 18, 11 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Appearing in early spring, ephemerals flower, fruit, and die back in a short period of time. Join a walk to look for pollinators and to catch glimpses of pink spring beauty, mayapple, and dogwood blossoms, yellow trout lily, golden groundsel, sassafras and spicebush blooms, and white beech tree blossoms. Tuckahoe Creek & Beyond Saturday, May 16, 11 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Tuckahoe Creek is a beautiful, tranquil spot that provides views of a wide variety of flowering plants. Look for box turtles in addition to mountain laurel, beech and tulip trees, black cherry tree blossoms, pink lady’s slipper and Solomon’s seal blooms, and mayapple fruit.
ARTS • CRAFTS • WRITING • MUSIC • PERFORMANCE • EXHIBITS
BOTANICAL ART PROGRAMS
Programs in botanical art are offered throughout the year. A show comprising student works will be exhibited at the Visitor’s Center December 1 to January 29, 2016 with a reception on December 5.
Eastern Redbud in Watercolor
Thursdays, April 23 and 30, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Fee: $125 members, $155 non-members This workshop taught by Kelly Sverduk will highlight the eastern redbud, Adkins Arboretum’s 2015 Native Tree of the Year. Designed for intermediate level and above, the class will begin with sketching, composition, and tonal graphite and then transition to painting with watercolor.
Botanical Illustration II
Wednesdays, May 13, 20, and 27, 9:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Fee: $125 members/$155 non-members In botanical drawing, light and shade communicate the three dimensionality of the plant. This series taught by Lee D’Zmura emphasizes the principles of light and shadow and the techniques necessary to add tonal shading to graphite drawing. Botanical Illustration I is required.
Butterflies: An Introduction to Watercolor & Pen
Thursday, May 21, 10 a.m.–2 p.m. Fee: $40 members/$50 non-members Explore a combination of two versatile media in this introductory-level class led by Kelly Sverduk. Participants will leave with a completed study of a native butterfly.
Introduction to iPhone Photography
Sunday, April 26, noon–4 p.m. Fee: $55 members/$65 non-members plus the cost of apps Inside your iPhone is one of the most inspiring, capable, and fun imaging systems for photography. We now carry both a camera and a darkroom with us! Join Karen Klinedinst to learn techniques that are exclusive to iPhone photography to explore how apps can transform photos into works of art.
Natural Material Muffin Basket Workshop
Saturday, May 2, 10 a.m.–3 p.m. Fee: $45 members/$55 non- members Make a muffin basket in just one morning! Under the instruction and guidance of Lee Zimmerman Nelson, you’ll create an easy round muffin basket using natural material. Muffins and materials provided.
Glass Fused Vase Workshop
Thursday, May 14, 1–4 p.m. Fee: $60 members/$70 non-members Create a stylized glass vase with guidance from Karen Montgomery of Clay Bakers. Score and break glass to build the design on a 12” base piece that will then be fired.
Introduction to Watercolor for Botanical Art
Thursdays, September 10, 17, 24 and October 1, 9:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Fee: $125 members/$155 non-members The third course in developing proficiency in botanical art, this program taught by Kelly Sverduk focuses on the introduction of basic watercolor techniques. Class exercises and projects will provide a fundamental understanding and mastery of techniques.
Pomegranate in Watercolor
Thursdays, October 15 and 22, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Fee: $125 members/$155 non-members The pomegranate is a fruit rich in history, folklore, and cultural significance. In this workshop taught by Kelly Sverduk, participants will receive detailed instruction to turn a graphite drawing into a finished botanical portrait.
Autumn Fruit & Berries
Thursday, November 5, 9:30 a.m.–3:30 p.m. Fee: $75 members/$95 non-members Join Lee D’Zmura to capture the beauty of autumn berries and fruit in watercolor. Emphasis will be placed on creating highlights, multicolored subjects, and dry brush techniques. This program is for beginners.
Acorns: An Introduction to Watercolor
Thursday, November 19, 10 a.m.–2 p.m. Fee: $40 members/$50 non-members There’s something charming about acorns. In this class taught by Kelly Sverduk, newcomers to watercolor will capture that charm with paper and paint.
Pressed Botanicals Workshop
Thursday, May 28, 1–3 p.m. Fee: $15 members/$20 non-members Press and preserve nature to enjoy as framed art or to begin your personal herbarium. Join staff horticulturist Joanne Healey for a hands-on demonstration of pressing fresh plant material and mounting dried material to take home.
Skunk Cabbage Leaf Casting
Friday, May 29, 10 a.m.–1 p.m. Fee: $45 members/$55 non-members Cast a live leaf onto stone to create a unique garden ornament or bird bath with crafters Sandy Bemis and Chris Eckert.
Photography Walk & Soup
Saturday, June 6, 9 a.m.–1 p.m. Fee: $45 members/$60 non-members Take a morning photo walk with photographer Josh Taylor to learn pointers on capturing stunning landscapes and colorful close-up images. Enjoy the Arboretum’s signature Soup ’n Walk fare for lunch while Josh discusses and shares his photographs of nearby gardens.
Introduction to iPhone Photography
WRITING Nature as Muse
First Wednesdays, April 1, May 6, June 3, July 1, and August 5, 10 a.m.–1 p.m. Free for members/free with $5 admission for non-members Enjoy writing as a way of exploring nature. This group is open to anyone who enjoys scribbling lines of thought across parts of trees now bound with rings or glue.
MUSIC AND PERFORMANCES Shakespeare in the Meadow: The Comedy of Errors
Friday, Friday, May 1, 6 p.m. Saturday, May 2, 6 p.m. Sunday, May 3, 3 p.m. Fee: $10 members/$15 non-members Shore Shakespeare returns to the Arboretum with this hilarious romp of mistaken identity. In his first big hit, Shakespeare combines sparkling wit, glorious language, and adventure to present a clever and popular comedy of human blindness, romance, folly, and suspense. Bring a chair or blanket, drinks and a picnic, and prepare to hang on!
Forest Music
Friday, June 12, 4 p.m. This program is free. Mana Saxophone Quartet returns to the Arboretum for a unique improvisatory performance in the forest. Positioning themselves within hearing distance, though not necessarily within sight of each other, these innovative musicians will respond to each other’s playing in a musical conversation winding through the trees. A brief concert will follow in the Visitor’s Center.
Movie on Sunday Afternoon
Potomac: The River Runs Through Us Sunday, June 14, 1 p.m. Fee: Free for members/free with $5 admission for non-members Each of us is connected to rivers in our everyday lives. Most of the six million people living in the Potomac River watershed do not realize that their drinking water comes from the Potomac. Co-directed, produced, and written by Peggy Fleming and Sean Furmage, this film follows the flow of the Potomac water from its origin, into homes and businesses, and back to the river. Join Peggy for the screening and for discussion to follow. Her photographs will be on display in the Arboretum gallery June 2 to July 31.
ART EXHIBITS Although abstract, Erin Murphy’s richly textured drawings, mono-prints, and paintings speak of atmospheric landscapes. On view March 31 through May 29, the works in her show, Quoting Nature, are full of subtle, glowing colors that suffuse them with haunting feelings of mystery and light. Reception: Saturday, April 4 from 3 to 5 p.m. Entitled Water: Moving, Peggy Fleming’s show of abstract photographs of water explores the infinitely varied dance of light and shadow as water interacts with its surroundings. On view June 2 through July 31, these close-up studies are filled with stunning color and intricate rhythmic patterns. Reception: Saturday, June 6 from 3 to 5 p.m. Drawing their inspiration from the forest itself, Centreville artists Howard and Mary McCoy see their work as a collaboration with nature. On view June 1 through September 30, this is their ninth biennial outdoor sculpture show at the Arboretum. There will be a guided sculpture work in conjunction with Peggy Fleming’s reception on Saturday, June 6 from 3 to 5 p.m.