Growing Home

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Growing Home GROWING HOME: AGRICULTURE IN THE CITY Saturday, November 13, 2010 The Annenberg Foundation has provided generous support for this program. Raffle donations from the following: Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Company DripWorks, Inc. Little Flower Candy Co. The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens Potted Renee’s Garden Seeds San Gabriel Nursery Seed Savers Exchange South Central Farmers’ Cooperative Rachel Vourlas Kitty Connolly THE HUNTINGTON Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens 1151 Oxford Road | San Marino, CA 91108 PROGRAM 8:30 Registration Ranch Tour sign up & refreshments, 3:00 to 5:00 Afternoon session schedule Friends’ Hall Tours Animals Food Soils Organization 9:00 Welcome Back to the Ranch Start at Ranch Auditorium Ahmanson Classroom Head House Teaching Greenhouse James P. Folsom (The Huntington) Ranch Tour: Orange Bee Keeping Cooking Fresh, Local Soil Testing Garden Tool 9:15 Session 1 Organic Flower Gardening Scott Kleinrock & Amy Seidenwurm and Seasonal Darren Butler Maintenance Ranch volunteers (Backwards Beekeepers, Christine Moore (Ecoworkshops.com, Lora Hall Tara Kolla (Silver Lake Farms, Los 3:00 (The Huntington) Los Angeles) Topanga) Angeles) 2 Session (Little Flower Candy (Full Circle Gardens, Co., Pasadena) Los Angeles) 10:00 Urban Homesteading 3:30 Break to travel between sessions Erik Knutzen and Kelly Coyne Ranch Tour: Eggplant City Chickens Fallen Fruit Infusions Growing Mushrooms Commercial Worm (Homegrown Evolution, Los 3 Angeles) Scott Kleinrock & Erik Knutzen & Kelly Matias Viegener, David David Kahn Composting Project Ranch volunteers Coyne Burns & Austin Young (Sustainable Habitats, Meredith Hackleman 10:45 Claremont Food Not Lawns 3:45 (The Huntington) (Homegrown Evolution, (Fallen Fruits, Los Los Angeles) Session Session (Metabolic Studio, Los Mary Beth Fletcher (Claremont Los Angeles) Angeles) Angeles) Food not Lawns, Pomona) 4:15 Break to travel between sessions 11:30 Food Forestry Ranch Tour: Beet Worm Composting Cooking Fresh, Local Compost Tea Master Gardeners Darren Butler (Ecoworkshops.com, Scott Kleinrock & Lora Hall and Seasonal Tara Kolla Yvonne Savio Topanga) Ranch volunteers (Full Circle Gardening, Christine Moore (Silver Lake Farms, Los (UC Cooperative 4:30 (The Huntington) Los Angeles) Angeles) Extension, Los Angeles) 12:15 Lunch Lunch & networking, Garden 4 Session (Little Flower Candy Terrace Co., Pasadena) Book signing, Bookstore & More 1:45 Keynote Edible Landscaping: The New American Garden Rosalind Creasy (Los Altos) 2:45 Walk to Botanical Center 3:00 Session 2 See schedule at right for details The Trees of South Central Farm Jaime Lopez Wolters (Metabolic Studio, LA), meet at Ranch 3:45 Session 3 See schedule at right for details 4:30 Session 4 See schedule at right for details 5:15 Closing Raffle (must be present to win), Botanical Center .
Recommended publications
  • Inspired by Mexico: Architect Bertram Goodhue Introduces Spanish Colonial Revival Into Balboa Park
    Inspired by Mexico: Architect Bertram Goodhue Introduces Spanish Colonial Revival into Balboa Park By Iris H.W. Engstrand G. Aubrey Davidson’s laudatory address to an excited crowd attending the opening of the Panama-California Exposition on January 1, 1915, gave no inkling that the Spanish Colonial architectural legacy that is so familiar to San Diegans today was ever in doubt. The buildings of this exposition have not been thrown up with the careless unconcern that characterizes a transient pleasure resort. They are part of the surroundings, with the aspect of permanence and far-seeing design...Here is pictured this happy combination of splendid temples, the story of the friars, the thrilling tale of the pioneers, the orderly conquest of commerce, coupled with the hopes of an El Dorado where life 1 can expand in this fragrant land of opportunity. G Aubrey Davidson, ca. 1915. ©SDHC #UT: 9112.1. As early as 1909, Davidson, then president of the Chamber of Commerce, had suggested that San Diego hold an exposition in 1915 to celebrate the opening of the Panama Canal. When City Park was selected as the site in 1910, it seemed appropriate to rename the park for Spanish explorer Vasco Nuñez de Balboa, who had discovered the Pacific Ocean and claimed the Iris H. W. Engstrand, professor of history at the University of San Diego, is the author of books and articles on local history including San Diego: California’s Cornerstone; Reflections: A History of the San Diego Gas and Electric Company 1881-1991; Harley Knox; San Diego’s Mayor for the People and “The Origins of Balboa Park: A Prelude to the 1915 Exposition,” Journal of San Diego History, Summer 2010.
    [Show full text]
  • Botanical Encounters Level 3 an INTERACTIVE & VIRTUAL TOUR
    Botanical Encounters Level 3 AN INTERACTIVE & VIRTUAL TOUR Huntington Education Welcome to the Botanical Encounters Level 3 virtual tour! Each slide features a plant, tree, or flower with questions, activities, and links to additional information. Henry and Arabella Huntington loved to collect art, books, and plants. What do you like to collect? Video games? Posters? Sports memorabilia? In this interactive journey you’ll dive further into the Botanical collections. Let’s go exploring! Botanical Vocabulary Click on a vocabulary word to start your tour! Each word relates to something at The Huntington. Cryobiotechnology Ginger Orchid Passion Fruit Penjing Puya Once you have explored all six cards, click here! Pick Orchid Another The Rose Hills Foundation Conservatory for Botanical Science ● Orchids have been popular at The Huntington since Arabella Huntington’s day. She loved orchids and had quite a collection. Do you like orchids? ● In the wild, there are three ways orchids grow: on trees (epiphytes), on rocks (lithophytes), and on the ground (terrestrials). ● There are more than 25,000 species of orchids, making them the largest family in the plant kingdom. ● While all those orchid species might look different, there are two distinct characteristics they all share: they all have 3 petals and 3 sepals, and they have both male (stamen) and female (pistil) parts in one column. Activity Explore the online tour Orchids: Around the World on Six Continents. Find an orchid that catches your eye. Which orchid did you choose? Why did you pick that particular orchid? Where does it grow? Does it have any cultural or culinary significance? Click on these links to explore more Orchid Collection King of Orchids (From top): Masdevallia infracta ‘Huntington’s Angel’; Paphiopedilum Orchids Forever tigrinum ‘Huntington’s Crouching Tiger’; Trichopilia suavis.
    [Show full text]
  • The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical
    THE HUNTINGTON LIBRARY, ART COLLECTIONS, AND BOTANICAL GARDENS 2007 ANNUAL REPORT | For Generations to Come 2007 ANNUAL REPORT | For Generations to Come JULY 1, 2006 – JUNE 30, 2007 BOARD OF TRUSTEES 2006 – 07 TRUSTEES TRUSTEES EMERITI Peter W. Mullin Stewart R. Smith, Chair Robert F. Erburu, Chair Nancy B. Munger Peter K. Barker Philip M. Hawley Ruth B. Shannon MaryLou Boone Mrs. Earle M. Jorgensen Lawrence R. Tollenaere Paul G. Haaga Jr. T. M. McDaniel Jr.** Robert E. Wycoff Anne F. Rothenberg BOARD OF OVERSEERS 2006 – 07 Peter D. Kaufman, Lloyd E. Cotsen Boyd Hight Timothy J. Sloan OVERSEERS EMERITI Chair Joseph H. Coulombe Claudia P. Huntington Janet Stanford Edward M. Carson, Kenneth S. McCormick, Anne L. Crotty Sally Hurt John A. Sturgeon Chair Vice Chair Judith Danner Maurice H. Katz Philip V. Swan Norman Barker Jr. Ashwin Adarkar Kelvin L. Davis Jennie Kiang L. Sherman Telleen Dorrie Braun David Alexander Brent Dibner Russel I. Kully Geneva H. Thornton Frances L. Brody Gwen Babcock Frances K. Dibner Francis D. Logan David T. Traitel Louise Jones Merle H. Banta Roger Engemann James B. Lovelace Robert S. Warren Malcolm McDuffie Olin Barrett Robert N. Essick Wendy Munger Sally K. Wenzlau Ronald L. Olson Andrew F. Barth Judith Farrar Elizabeth Nickerson J. Patrick Whaley Howard J. Privett Helen L. Bing Gordon Fish Harlyne Norris Alyce de Roulet Therese Stanfill John E. Bryson Margaret R. Galbraith Kay S. Onderdonk Williamson Richard J. Stegemeier Joan Caillouette Eunice E. Goodan Gregory A. Pieschala Norman B. Williamson David A. Thomas Nancy B. Call Maria O. Grant Lynn P.
    [Show full text]
  • Gift from Brody Estate Represents “A Remarkable Moment for the Institution, and a Great Challenge”
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Nov. 16, 2010 CONTACTS: Susan Turner­Lowe, 626­405­2147 or [email protected] Thea M. Page, 626­405­2260 or [email protected] GIFT FROM BRODY ESTATE REPRESENTS “A REMARKABLE MOMENT FOR THE INSTITUTION, AND A GREAT CHALLENGE” Expected to yield more than $100 million, gift will help provide much­needed financial stability SAN MARINO, Calif.—A gift from the estate of Frances Lasker Brody to The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens is expected to yield in excess of $100 million, the largest single cash gift to the institution and one that will go a great distance toward providing much­needed financial stability, says Huntington President Steven S. Koblik. The equivalent of a 40 percent increase of the institution’s endowment, Brody’s gift also will require intense fiscal discipline to ensure it has the long­term impact the donor intended, he says. Brody, who died in November 2009 at the age of 93, served as a member of The Huntington’s Board of Overseers for 20 years. The Huntington received $15 million from her estate in October and another $80 million last week. Brody’s house, a landmark midcentury modern structure by A. Quincy Jones, is on the market for more than $24 million; income from that sale will also be distributed to The Huntington. Brody Gift to The Huntington Page 2 of 4 “We are overwhelmed by Francie’s generosity and her vision,” says Koblik. “She was an extraordinary woman with a fierce intellect who thought strategically and was completely tuned in to The Huntington’s challenges, its culture, and its capacity.
    [Show full text]
  • What Plants Need in Order to Survive and Grow: Air 
    Botanical Garden Programs: Reading Plants WHAT PLANTS NEED IN ORDER TO SURVIVE AND GROW: AIR Grades 3–6 I. Introduction lants, like all living organisms, have basic needs: a source of nutrition (food), Pwater, space in which to live, air, and optimal temperatures in order to grow and reproduce. For most plants, these needs are summarized as light, air, water, and nutrients (known by the acronym LAWN). Students will conduct an experiment to evaluate whether plants need air in order to survive and grow. II. Objectives ♦ Students will learn how to conduct an experiment and use this knowledge to gather data about how plants respond to being providedwith or deprived of air. ♦ After making observations and measurements, students will analyze their data to draw conclusions about basic plant needs. III. Standards Assessed Grades 3–5 Life Sciences Science Content Standards K–12 (2000), California State Board of Education ♦ Plants have structures that serve different functions in growth, survival and reproduction (3.3.a). ♦ Plants have structures for gas exchange (photosynthesis and respiration) and transport of materials (5.2.a). The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens 1 Botanical Garden Programs: Reading Plants Air Grades 3–5 (cont.) Investigation and Experimentation Science Content Standards K–12 (2000), California State Board of Education ♦ Scientific progress is made by asking meaningful questions and conducting careful investigations. As a basis for understanding this concept . students should develop their own questions and perform investigations (3.5, 4.6, 5.6). Grades 6–8 The Living Environment Benchmarks for Science Literacy (1993), American Association for the Advancement of Science ♦ Animals and plants have a great variety of body plans and internal structures that contribute to their being able to make or find food and reproduce (5.A 6-8).
    [Show full text]
  • How Gardens Can Inspire Calm and Teach Life Lessons
    Botanical Activity Guide How Gardens Can Inspire Calm and Teach Life Lessons School Programs and Partnerships Welcome to The Huntington! This activity guide is based on seven of the 16 themed gardens at The Huntington. The Herb Garden was established in the 1970s and is designed to showcase herbs in four general categories of use: Medicinal, Culinary/Flavor, Cosmetic and Perfume, and Dyes/Fibers The Shakespeare Garden features plants with a variety of textures and colors, a number of which were mentioned in Shakespeare’s plays, that were grown during the 1500–1600s, or have connections to plants of the Renaissance. The Rose Hills Foundation Conservatory for Botanical Science is a 16,000-sq.-ft. greenhouse with a plant lab and three different plant habitats: a lowland tropical rainforest, a cloud forest, and a carnivorous plant bog. The Desert Garden, established more than a century ago, hosts approximately 2,000 succulent species and highlights the ways plants have adapted to survive heat, drought, and animal predators. The Ranch Garden is a teaching garden where gardening techniques are demonstrated and experimental concepts are tested. It is home to fruit trees, vegetables, perennial herbs, native shrubs, and reseeding annuals. The Brody California Garden is filled with native and other Mediterranean-climate plants that can thrive in southern California. It is punctuated with fruit trees that reflect the estate’s agricultural roots. The Rose Garden, established in 1908 and a favorite of founders Henry and Arabella Huntington, showcases more than 3,000 individual rose plants and more than 1,200 different cultivated varieties.
    [Show full text]
  • Plants Are up to Something Exhibition at the Rose Hills Foundation Conservatory for Botanical Science
    CONSERVATORY COOKBOOK Exhibit recipes from the Plants Are Up to Something exhibition at the Rose Hills Foundation Conservatory for Botanical Science WRITTEN AND ILLUSTRATED BY KATURA REYNOLDS The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens San Marino, California CONSERVATORY COOKBOOK Plants Are Up to Something 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................... 3 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ....................................................................................... 7 EXHIBIT RECipES GENERAL NOTES .................................................................................................. 8 1. How Sweet Is It? ..................................................................................... 9 2. How Do Pitcher Plants Digest Insects? ........................................... 16 3. Pollen on the Move ............................................................................... 22 4. Leaves Are Full of Holes ...................................................................... 28 5. Seeds that Travel With Animals ....................................................... 33 6. Spices from the Rain Forest ............................................................... 39 7. Structures of Carnivorous Plants ...................................................... 47 8. Bog Cross Section .................................................................................. 52 9. Leaf Quilt ...............................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Jay T. Last Collection of Agriculture Prints and Ephemera: Finding Aid
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c89g5r3g Online items available Jay T. Last Collection of Agriculture Prints and Ephemera: Finding Aid Finding aid prepared by Charla DelaCuadra. The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. Prints and Ephemera The Huntington Library 1151 Oxford Road San Marino, California 91108 Phone: (626) 405-2191 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.huntington.org © November 2019 The Huntington Library. All rights reserved. Jay T. Last Collection of priJLC_AGR 1 Agriculture Prints and Ephemera: Finding Aid Overview of the Collection Title: Jay T. Last Collection of Agriculture Prints and Ephemera Dates (inclusive): approximately 1818-1924 Bulk dates: 1850-1900 Collection Number: priJLC_AGR Collector: Last, Jay T. Extent: approximately 2,315 items Repository: The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. Prints and Ephemera 1151 Oxford Road San Marino, California 91108 Phone: (626) 405-2191 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.huntington.org Abstract: The Jay T. Last Collection of Agriculture Prints and Ephemera contains roughly 2,315 items from approximately 1818 to 1924, with the majority of material dating from 1850 to 1900. The collection consists mainly of advertising prints and ephemera related to crop, hay, livestock, and dairy farming, including the tools, equipment, supplies, and structures used for cultivating soil; raising, harvesting, and storing crops; irrigating land; growing grasses for animal fodder; marking territory lines or separating fields and pasture lands; and boarding, breeding, feeding, rearing, tending, and selling farm animals. Language: English. Note: Finding aid last updated on November 19, 2019. Access Open to qualified researchers by prior application through the Reader Services Department.
    [Show full text]
  • The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens
    in FACT The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens 2017–18 1 Quick Facts and Figures about The Huntington 2017–18 table of contents A Collections-Based Research and Educational Institution 2 Henry and Arabella Huntington 3 The Five Program Areas 4 Architecture at a Glance 12 Financial Highlights 14 Institutional Governance 15 Key Contacts 18 A Collections-Based Research and Educational Institution The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens is a collections-based research and educational institution serving scholars and the general public. Each year, The Huntington: • Provides 1,700 scholars with access to a world-class collection of rare books, manuscripts, photographs, maps, paintings, prints, sculpture, and decorative arts; • Awards $1.85 million in fellowships (through a peer-review process) to scholars for advanced humanities research; • Educates thousands of schoolchildren and their teachers in art, history, literature, and botanical science through special tours Henry and Arabella Huntington and programs; • Organizes special exhibitions to enhance the visitor experience, Railroad and real estate businessman Henry Edwards Huntington interpret the collections, and facilitate learning; and was born on Feb. 27, 1850, in Oneonta, N.Y. Henry and his uncle, Collis P. Huntington, were leaders in building the railroads that • Hosts more than 750,000 visitors. span the country. In 1892, Henry moved to San Francisco to represent Huntington interests on the Pacific Coast. And in 1902 The Huntington has a membership totaling more than 40,000 (two years after the death of Collis), Huntington transferred his households, an active volunteer corps of some 1,500, and a headquarters to Los Angeles and started to connect, consolidate, full- and part-time staff of more than 400.
    [Show full text]
  • What Plants Need in Order to Survive and Grow: Light 
    Botanical Garden Programs: Reading Plants WHAT PLANTS NEED IN ORDER TO SURVIVE AND GROW: LIGHT Grades 3–6 I. Introduction lants, like all living organisms have basic needs: a source of nutrition (food), water, Pspace in which to live, air, and optimal temperatures in order to grow and reproduce. For most plants, these needs are summarized as light, air, water, and nutrients (known by the acronym LAWN). Students will conduct an experiment to evaluate whether plants need light in order to survive and grow. II. Objectives ♦ Students will learn how to conduct an experiment and use this knowledge to gather data about plant responses to different growth regimes. ♦ By making observations and measurements, students will then analyze their data to draw conclusions about basic plant needs. III. Standards Assessed Grades 3–5 Life Sciences Science Content Standards K–12 (2000), California State Board of Education ♦ Plants use carbon dioxide (CO2) and energy from light to build molecules of sugar and release oxygen (5.2.f). The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens 1 Botanical Garden Programs: Reading Plants Light Grades 3–5 (cont.) The Living Environment Benchmarks for Science Literacy (1993), American Association for the Advance- ment of Science): ♦ Some source of “energy” is needed for all organisms to stay alive and grow (5.E 3-5). ♦ In any particular environment, some kinds of plants and animals survive well, some survive less well, and some cannot survive at all (5.D. 3–5). Investigation and Experimentation Science Content Standards K–12 (2000), California State Board of Education ♦ Scientific progress is made by asking meaningful questions and conducting careful investigations.
    [Show full text]
  • LORI A. FLORES Associate Professor, Department of History, Stony Brook University (SUNY) [email protected]
    LORI A. FLORES Associate Professor, Department of History, Stony Brook University (SUNY) [email protected] EMPLOYMENT Fall 2017 – Present Associate Professor, Department of History, Stony Brook University Fall 2012 - Spring 2017 Assistant Professor, Department of History, Stony Brook University 2011-2012 Consortium for Faculty Diversity Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of History, Bowdoin College EDUCATION 2011 Ph.D. in United States History, Stanford University 2005 B.A. Cum Laude with Distinction in History, Yale University PUBLICATIONS Books Latino Food Workers and Their Struggles for Justice in the U.S. Northeast, 1940 to the Present (working title, book manuscript in-progress) The Academic’s Handbook (revised and updated 4th ed, co-edited with Jocelyn Olcott), Duke University Press, 2019. Grounds for Dreaming: Mexican Americans, Mexican Immigrants, and the California Farmworker Movement (Yale University Press, Lamar Series in Western History, 2016) *Winner, Best First Book, Immigration and Ethnic History Society *Winner, Best History Book, International Latino Book Awards *Winner, Martin Ridge Award, Historical Society of Southern California *Honorable Mention, Gita Chaudhuri Prize, Western Association of Women Historians *Finalist, Weber-Clements Book Prize, Western History Association Articles in Refereed Journals “The Future of Latino San Francisco As Seen Through Murals,” BOOM: A Journal of California, Vol. 6, No. 4 (Winter 2016), 16-27. *Being translated into German for “San Francisco Anthology” (working title) published by Assoziation A, Berlin, 2019. “Slow and Sudden Deaths: Reflecting on the Chualar Tragedy of 1963 and the Persisting Traumas of the Bracero Program,” Diálogo Vol. 19 No. 2 (Fall 2016), 79-85. “A Town Full of Dead Mexicans: The Salinas Valley Bracero Tragedy of 1963, A Collision of Communities, and the End of the Bracero Program,” Western Historical Quarterly Vol.
    [Show full text]
  • Archive Zine
    THE LOS ANGELES ARCHIVISTS COLLECTIVE (L.A.A.C.) LAAC is made up of individuals in the greater Los Angeles area that are interested in and affiliated with the archival profession. OUR MISSION - Build a local community that encourages professional development and skill-sharing, with a particular emphasis on supporting students and new professionals in the field. - Facilitate a forum for collaboration, education, participation, and professional growth. - Provide archival outreach to local community groups by offering educational workshops, facilitating connections to local resources, and promoting general archival awareness. CONNECT Email: [email protected] Website: https://laacollective.wordpress.com/ Twitter: @laacollective Instagram: @laacollective Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/laacollective Google Group: https://groups.google.com/d/forum/laacol- lective image via https://patriarchive.wordpress.com/ Respect des Fonds: The principle of provenance dictates that records of different origins (provenance) be kept separate to preserve their context. n. (provenancial, adj.) ~ 1. The origin or source of something. - 2. Information regarding the origins, cus- tody, and ownership of an item or collection. - From the Society of American Archivists Glossary, http://www2.archivists.org/glossary/terms/p/provenance THE PRESENT IS ROOTED IN THE PAST: ARCHIVES ARE THE REPOSITORIES OF THE PAST Preservation is about honoring the accomplishments of previous generations, the places they lived and worked and most importantly, their legacy to us. Some edific- es, artifacts and memorabilia are worth protecting and saving because they link us with our past and help us to understand who we are. These treasures tell a commu- nity where it came from and what previous generations achieved.
    [Show full text]