DIGGING in NOVA SCOTIA THERAPEUTIC HORTICULTURE NETWORK Winter 2018 Volume 4 Issue 1 [email protected]
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Advancing a Healing Garden Program and Partnership
Abstract To support the Healing Garden Institute (HGI), this Advancing a Healing Garden project created an overarching strategic plan for healing garden programming and development and advanced a partnership with an organization serving Program and Partnership a vulnerable population. We conducted interviews, Cape Town Project Center 2020 visited local healing gardens, read peer-reviewed literature, and examined award-winning gardens to gather expertise about healing garden design elements, therapeutic horticulture activities, and design process to structure our strategic plan. The HGI Design and Partner Guidebook and supplementary design tools, meant for both internal and collaborative use, detail this plan. We researched and evaluated organizations in Worcester that already work with HGI's target population to find potential partners. After initially identifying four organizations, we prioritized Seven Hills as our first potential partner and created a presentation to further engage and inform the leaders of this organization about HGI’s plan to implement a healing garden. Team Members Matt Adams Chris Davenport Mairead O’Neill Ciara Young Project Advisors Prof. Scott Jiusto Prof. Gbeton Somasse For more information: Project Liaison https://wp.wpi.edu/southafrica/projects/2020-projects/hgi/ Thidi Tshiguvho - Healing Garden Institute 1 choice of plants and hardscape must meet these demands Executive Summary for the garden to be considered “healing” (Momatz, 2017; Stigsdotter and Grahn, 2002). Healing Gardens Client Populations Healing gardens have existed as early as the Middle Ages, Successful healing gardens are tailored to meet the needs of where these spaces of rest and repose were placed next to the community that it serves (Ecklerling, 1996). -
NYBG Adult Education Spring-Summer Catalog
NYBG ADULT EDUCATION | SPRING–SUMMER 2021 NBWYORK BorANICAL GARDEN Welcome 2021 This spring, more than ever, people are eager to get outdoors, connect with nature, and tend to their gardens again. In a moment when so many are looking to nature for refuge and meaning, this catalog is filled with new and enriching ways to put you in touch with the natural world, whether you’re working on a Certificate, refining a skill, or pursuing a new passion. Throughout spring and summer, NYBG courses will continue online—with a full slate of classes in art, botany, floral design, landscape design, gardening, and more. And we’ll continue to bring you a lineup of Registration is now open. Please visit nybg.org/adulted or inspiring speakers. call 718.817.8720. Ecologist Suzanne Simard shares insights Please don’t wait too long to register! Many classes fill up quickly. from her thought-provoking new memoir, When classes sell out, we do try to open additional sections, so kindly Finding the Mother Tree. Celebrated add your name to the wait list and help us determine interest. gardeners Dan Pearson and Midori Shintani You’ll receive notice of priority registration when new classes are showcase their work at Japan’s Tokachi added. And keep an eye out for Adult Ed e-newsletters with updates on new classes, sections, and speakers. Millennium Forest. Two Hidden History talks reveal the valuable medical and agricultural Prices listed are Member/Non-Member. Not a Member yet? knowledge enslaved Africans brought with Call 718.817.8703. them to the Americas. -
2009 Reciprocal Admissions Program
Conejo Valley Botanic Garden The Ruth Bancroft Garden UNITED STATES 350 West Gainsborough Road 1552 Bancroft Road Thousand Oaks, CA 91358 Walnut Creek, CA94598 ALABAMA (805) 494-7630 (925) 944-9352 Aldridge Gardens www.conejogarden.com www.ruthbancroftgarden.org 3530 Lorna Road ♦ 10% discount in gift shop ♦ Free admission; Free admission Hoover, AL 35216 to spring and fall plant sales (205) 682-8019 Descanso Gardens www.aldridgegardens.com 1418 Descanso Drive San Francisco Botanical Garden ♦ Free admission to some events; La Cañada Flintridge, CA 91011 at Strybing Arboretum 10% discount in gift shop (818) 949-4200 Golden Gate Park www.descansogardens.org 9th Avenue at Lincoln Way Birmingham Botanical ♦ Free admission San Francisco, CA 94122 Gardens (415) 661-1316 2612 Lane Park Road Earl Burns Miller Japanese www.sfbotanicalgarden.org Birmingham, AL 36303 Garden, CSULB ♦ 10% discount in gift shop (205) 414-3900 1250 Bellflower Boulevard www.bbgardens.org Long Beach, CA 90840 Santa Barbara Botanic Garden ♦ 10% discount in gift shop (562) 985-8885 1212 Mission Canyon Road www.csulb.edu/~jgarden Santa Barbara, CA 93105 Dothan Area Botanical Garden ♦ 10% discount in gift shop; (805) 862-4726 5130 Headland Avenue discount on admission to some www.sbbg.org 2009 Reciprocal Dothan, AL 36303 special events ♦ Free admission (334) 793-3224 www.dabg.com Fullerton Arboretum South Coast Botanic Garden Admissions Program ♦ Free admission 1900 Associated Road 26300 Crenshaw Boulevard Fullerton, CA 92831 Palos Verdes Peninsula, CA 90274 Huntsville-Madison County (714) 278-3407 (310) 544-6815 Participating Gardens, Arboreta, and Conservatories Botanical Garden www.arboretum.fullerton.edu www.southcoastbotanicgarden.org 4747 Bob Wallace Avenue ♦ 10% discount in gift shop; ♦ Free admission and parking; free Huntsville, AL 35805 free admission to Green Scene admission to all events except (256) 830-4447 Garden Show fundraisers Your membership card is your garden passport to America’s www.hsvbg.org ♦ Free admission The Gardens at Heather Farm Turtle Bay Exploration Park & treasures. -
PLANT in the SPOTLIGHT Cover of Ajuga in This Vignette at Pennsylvania's Chanticleer Garden
TheThe AmericanAmerican gardenergardener® TheThe MagazineMagazine ofof thethe AmericanAmerican HorticulturalHorticultural SocietySociety March / April 2013 Ornamental Grasses for small spaces Colorful, Flavorful Heirloom Tomatoes Powerhouse Plants with Multi-Seasonal Appeal Build an Easy Bamboo Fence contents Volume 92, Numbe1' 2 . March / Apl'il 2013 FEATURES DEPARTMENTS 5 NOTES FROM RIVER FARM 6 MEMBERS' FORUM 8 NEWS FROM THE AHS The AHS Encyclopediao/Gardening Techniques now available in paperback, the roth Great Gardens and Landscaping Symposium, registration opening soon for the National Children & Youth Garden Symposium, River Farm to participate in Garden Club of Virginia's Historic Garden Week II AHS NEWS SPECIAL Highlights from the AHS Travel Study Program trip to Spain. 12 AHS MEMBERS MAKING A DIFFERENCE Eva Monheim. 14 2013 GREAT AMERICAN GARDENERS AWARDS Meet this year's award recipients. 44 GARDEN SOLUTIONS Selecting disease-resistant plants. 18 FRAGRANT FLOWERING SHRUBS BY CAROLE OTTESEN Shrubs that bear fragrant flowers add an extra-sensory dimension 46 HOMEGROWN HARVEST to your landscape. Radish revelations. 48 TRAVELER'S GUIDE TO GARDENS 24 BUILD A BAMBOO FENCE BY RITA PELCZAR Windmill Island Gardens in Michigan. This easy-to-construct bamboo fence serves a variety of purposes and is attractive to boot. 50 BOOK REVIEWS No Nomeme VegetableGardening, The 28 GREAT GRASSES FOR SMALL SPACES BY KRIS WETHERBEE 2o-Minute Gardener, and World'sFair Gardem. Add texture and motion to your garden with these grasses and 52 GARDENER'S NOTEBOOK grasslike plants ideal for small sites and containers. Solomon's seal is Perennial Plant Association's 20I3 Plant of the Year, research shows plants 34 A SPECTRUM OF HEIRLOOM TOMATOES BY CRAIG LEHOULLIER may be able to communicate with each other, industry groups OFA and ANLAto If you enjoy growing heirloom tomatoes, you'll appreciate this consolidate, the Garden Club of America useful guide to some of the tastiest selections in a wide range of celebrates roo years, John Gaston Fairey colors. -
Healing Gardens for Cancer Populations
PROGRAMS Healing Gardens for Cancer Populations By Lesley Fleming, HTR and Marcia Figueiredo Reprint permission has been given by the American Horticultural Therapy Association Healing gardens for cancer populations: one size or style does The Gathering Place: Norma’s Healing Garden, not have to fit all. Mirroring the diversity of types and stages of Cleveland, Ohio cancer, these healing gardens each have their own blend of nature http://www.touchedbycancer.org/about-us/take-a-tour/ and health services translated and designed into hardscape, softscape, and aesthetic vibe. The commonality among them is the recognition of nature as a healing element. Leah Diehl’s categorization of healing gardens describes two branches: passive restorative gardens and active enabling gardens. Diehl describes restorative gardens as those that provide passive “experiences… focus[ing] on the requirements for mental restoration” (2013, p. 4). Enabling, or active, gardens specific for cancer populations may provide therapeutic and medical services such as horticultural therapy, creative arts therapy, acupuncture, and infusion treatments. Therapeutic garden design and health goals can be interrelated. Therapeutic goals for those dealing with cancer often address increasing a sense of hope, renewal, and restoration. Therapeutic The Gathering Place Norma’s Healing Garden Pool of Grass, Gathering Terrace and Portico. Photo: Virginia Burt, RLA, ASLA© interventions can be both active and passive and it is helpful to note that “scheduled and programmed activities” (in both restorative and The Gathering Place “supports, educates and empowers enabling gardens) are identified as an important characteristic of individuals and families touched by cancer through programs therapeutic gardens (American Horticultural Therapy Association and services free of charge” (The Gathering Place, 2013, para. -
Hospital Rooftop Garden
HOSPITAL ROOFTOP GARDEN Dr. Sima POUYA* Prof. Dr. Öner DEMİREL** ABSTRACT Public hospitals tend to be overcrowded, creating a higher need for patients to have access to a place where they can de-stress and heal their psyches. As hospitals around the world are increasingly adopting a patient-centred care model, they are also finding new ways to incorporate care into the built environment. One of the fastest growing trends is the installation of green roofs, or roof gardens, to create tranquil oases on otherwise bar- ren roofop spaces. In this research, with regard to benefits and advantages of roof gardens and healing gardens, the integration of these two gardens in the roofop of the hospitals can contribute to the health problems of the patients as well as providing ecological profits and ecosistem services. In this research, with the analysis and survey of some hospital roof gardens, it has been attempted to discover the specific design qualities and features of these gardens. Key Words: Green roof/Roof - garden, Healing garden, Hospital roofop garden, Well- being, Healing * Karadeniz Technical University,Landscape Architect, Trabzon / TURKEY [email protected] ** Karadeniz Technical University, Faculty of Forestry, Department of Landscape Architecture, Trabzon / TURKEY [email protected] 150 ANADOLU ÜNİVERSİTESİ HASTANE ÇATI BAHÇELERİ Dr. Sima POUYA* Prof. Dr. Öner DEMİREL** ÖZET Kamu hastaneleri aşırı kalabalık olma özelliği gösterir, dolayısıyla hastaların psikolo- jilerini iyileştirebilecekleri, streslerinin azaltabilecekleri mekanlara gereksinim duyarlar. Dünya genelinde hastanelerin giderek hasta merkezli bir bakım modelini benimsedikleri görülür. Aynı zaman da tedavinin, inşa edilmiş çevreye dahil edilmesi için yeni yollar aranmakta ve geliştirilmektedir. En hızlı büyüyen eğilimlerden biri, çorak çatı alanla- rında sakin ortamların oluşturulması yani yeşil çatıların veya çatı bahçelerinin kurul- masıdır. -
Farming for Life Quality and Sustainability: a Literature Review of Green Care Research Trends in Europe
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health Review Farming for Life Quality and Sustainability: A Literature Review of Green Care Research Trends in Europe Marina García-Llorente 1,* ID , Radha Rubio-Olivar 2 and Inés Gutierrez-Briceño 2 1 Department of Applied Research and Agricultural Extension, Madrid Institute for Rural, Agricultural and Food Research and Development (IMIDRA), Finca Experimental “El Encín”Ctra N-II, Km 38, Madrid 28800, Spain 2 Social-Ecological Systems Laboratory, Department of Ecology, Edificio de Biología, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, C/Darwin 2, Madrid 28049, Spain; [email protected] (R.R.O.); [email protected] (I.G.B.) * Correspondence: [email protected] or [email protected]; Tel.: +34-91-8879392 Received: 9 April 2018; Accepted: 13 June 2018; Published: 17 June 2018 Abstract: Green care is an innovative approach that combines simultaneously caring for people and caring for land through three elements that have not been previously connected: (1) multifunctional agriculture and recognition of the plurality of agricultural system values; (2) social services and health care; and (3) the possibility of strengthening the farming sector and local communities. The current research provides a comprehensive overview of green care in Europe as a scientific discipline through a literature review (n = 98 studies). According to our results, the Netherlands, the UK, Norway and Sweden followed by Italy have led the scientific studies published in English. Green care research comprises a wide range of perspectives and frameworks (social farming, care farming, nature-based solutions, etc.) with differences in their specificities. Green care studies have mainly focused on measuring the effectiveness of therapeutic interventions. -
TPG Index Volumes 1-35 1986-2020
Public Garden Index – Volumes 1-35 (1986 – 2020) #Giving Tuesday. HOW DOES YOUR GARDEN About This Issue (continued) GROW ? Swift 31 (3): 25 Dobbs, Madeline (continued) #givingTuesday fundraising 31 (3): 25 Public garden management: Read all #landscapechat about it! 26 (W): 5–6 Corona Tools 27 (W): 8 Rocket science leadership. Interview green industry 27 (W): 8 with Elachi 23 (1): 24–26 social media 27 (W): 8 Unmask your garden heroes: Taking a ValleyCrest Landscape Companies 27 (W): 8 closer look at earned revenue. #landscapechat: Fostering green industry 25 (2): 5–6 communication, one tweet at a time. Donnelly, Gerard T. Trees: Backbone of Kaufman 27 (W): 8 the garden 6 (1): 6 Dosmann, Michael S. Sustaining plant collections: Are we? 23 (3/4): 7–9 AABGA (American Association of Downie, Alex. Information management Botanical Gardens and Arboreta) See 8 (4): 6 American Public Gardens Association Eberbach, Catherine. Educators without AABGA: The first fifty years. Interview by borders 22 (1): 5–6 Sullivan. Ching, Creech, Lighty, Mathias, Eirhart, Linda. Plant collections in historic McClintock, Mulligan, Oppe, Taylor, landscapes 28 (4): 4–5 Voight, Widmoyer, and Wyman 5 (4): 8–12 Elias, Thomas S. Botany and botanical AABGA annual conference in Essential gardens 6 (3): 6 resources for garden directors. Olin Folsom, James P. Communication 19 (1): 7 17 (1): 12 Rediscovering the Ranch 23 (2): 7–9 AAM See American Association of Museums Water management 5 (3): 6 AAM accreditation is for gardens! SPECIAL Galbraith, David A. Another look at REPORT. Taylor, Hart, Williams, and Lowe invasives 17 (4): 7 15 (3): 3–11 Greenstein, Susan T. -
LATIS Forum on Therapeutic Gardens
LATIS Forum on Therapeutic Gardens Copyright (c) 2005 by the American Society of Landscape Architects 636 Eye Street, NW Washington, DC 20001-3736 202 898 2444 www.asla.org Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 84-07-1877 ISSN:0195-5764 LATIS and this special LATIS Forum are produced by ASLA as an education service to the profession of landscape architecture. Policy and subject matter selection is administered through ASLA's Professional Practice Library under the guidance of the Professional Practice Institute, the Council on Education, and the Council of Professional Practice Networks. Contributors: Barnes, Marni, ASLA. Principal, Deva Designs, Palo Alto, California. Carman, Jack, FASLA. President, Design for Generations, Medford, New Jersey. Committee Advisor, Council of Professional Practice Networks. Carman, Nancy, MA, CMC. Director of Marketing Services, New Life Management & Development, Inc. Mt. Laurel, New Jersey. Chambers, Nancy, HTR. Director, Enid Haupt Glass Garden, Rusk Institute for Rehabilitation, New York University School of Medicine. Cooper Marcus, Clare. Professor Emerita, University of California, Berkeley. Cosco, Nilda G., Education Specialist, Natural Learning Initiative, College of Design, North Carolina State University. Epstein, Mark, ASLA. Adolfson Associates, Seattle, Washington; Co-chair, Therapeutic Garden Design Professional Practice Network. Johansson, Sonja, FASLA. Principal, Johansson Design Collaborative, Inc., Lincoln, Massachusetts. Kavanagh, Jean Stephans, FASLA. Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture, Texas Tech University. Luymes, Don. Associate Professor, Faculty of Land and Food Systems, University of British Columbia. Mooney, Patrick F., ASLA. Associate Professor, Faculty of Land and Food Systems, University of British Columbia. Moore, Robin C. Professor of Landscape Architecture, Natural Learning Initiative, College of Design, North Carolina State University. -
Growing Community, Naturally. Healing Troubled Youth Through Gardening
7/21/2013 Growing Community, Naturally. Healing Troubled Youth Through Gardening Reflection • Please take a moment, close your eyes and think about the physical space of the schools you attended as a child. • How did the green space (or lack of) effect your interactions with the school, your peers and community? My Practice • Licensed Mental Health Counselor • Mental Health Specialist at Renton Academy • Passion for gardening • Integrated gardening into each classroom weekly: teaching nutrition, life skills, agricultural practices, biological science, and social skills. 1 7/21/2013 Topics to be addressed • Population targeted • Research overview • Leaders in the field • Connections to Re-EDucation • Case studies from Renton Academy • Student and family perceptions • Toolkit – how to integrate gardening into your practice Who is the targeted population? • Students with emotional and behavioral disorders (EBD). • Generally divided into two subcategories: those with externalizing behavior and those with internalizing behavior. Who is the targeted population? • Externalizing behavior includes aggression, disruption, and other forms of acting out; internalizing behavior includes such problems as depression, anxiety, and social withdrawal, in which the primary difficulty is private or internal. 2 7/21/2013 Who is the targeted population? • Many of the students at Renton Academy have mental health diagnoses as well. ▫ ADD/ADHD ▫ Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) ▫ Depression ▫ Anxiety http://www.education.com/reference/article/emotionalbehavioral-disorders/ Who is the targeted population? • Garden therapy is appropriate for students who internalize and externalize their feelings. • It can be a time to build relationships for students who withdraw, working in pairs on a quiet task. • For students with more exuberant energy, handing them a shovel and a wheelbarrow can give them a chance to channel their liveliness in a positive way. -
Plants and People Together: the Benefits of Selling Garden Therapy
Plants and People Together: The Benefits of Selling Garden Therapy Horticulture Therapy What is it? Horticultural Therapy (HT) Therapeutic Horticulture . is the practice of engaging people in horticultural activities to improve physical, emotional, social, vocational, and / or spiritual health. Therapeutic benefits occur when people are exposed to plants and when they take part in planning, planting, growing, and caring for plants. My goal is to bring plants and gardening to those who have lost the privilege or are unable to do conventional gardening. Green spaces are healing Flower Power !! . Immediate impact on happiness when receiving flowers universal reaction in all age groups. Long-term positive effect on mood, less depressed, anxious and agitated after receiving flowers . Intimate connections. The presence of flowers led to increased contact with family and friends. "Common sense tells us that flowers make us happy," said Dr. Haviland-Jones. "Now, science shows that not only do flowers make us happier than we know, they have strong positive effects on our emotional well being." Populations that I work with…. 1. Children 2. Seniors 3. Residents in retirement homes 4. Residents in long term care My dear friend Evelyn 5. Brain Injured and Rehab 6. Gardeners and the general public 7. Conferences for Healing Culture Days in Welland An Aging population . As the population ages we find more people wanting to live in green spaces or in easy access of them. Seniors need to experience the feeling of self worth which can be found through growing and nurturing plants. Opportunity for social interaction . Improve fine motor skills, physical strength, and mobility HT Activities; Taking cuttings, seeding, transplanting and repotting Elements needed for a therapeutic garden space . -
Therapeutic Garden Characteristics
THERAPEUTIC GARDEN CHARACTERISTICS (Adapted from American Horticultural Therapy Association Board of Directors, April 30, 1995) Therapeutic gardens are featured in national publications and are being built with increasing frequency in health care settings. Among these new gardens, there is a high degree of correlation in physical design and programming intended to improve therapeutic benefits to garden visitors and participants. These identified factors interrelate with a vigorous plant dominated landscape to achieve restorative and horticultural therapy objectives and are likely to be associated with excellence in the design of therapeutic gardens. Some common characteristics are: 1. Scheduled and programmed activities: A horticultural therapy program guiding and promoting a program of activities and experiences in the garden is ideal. However, even in gardens designed for the passive/independent enjoyment by visitors, special events increasing the number of visits, classes encouraging routine garden tasks, and publicizing activities of all kinds familiarize special populations, facility staff, families of clients or patients, and nearby community residents with the garden. 2. Features modified to improve accessibility: Garden elements, features and equipment are all selected or modified to provide accessible places, activities and experiences to the greatest extent possible. Each modification to the therapeutic garden environment eases the task of gardening and or enhances the horticultural experience for the visitor/gardener enabling them to see and even to study plants, to touch or smell them, to encounter the luxuriant garden growth in their own way, on their own terms and at their own pace. 3. Well defined perimeters: Edges of garden spaces and special zones of activities within the garden are often intensified to redirect the attention and the energies of the visitor to the components and displays within the garden.