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    Sunday, May 05, 2024

    Green and Growing: Botanic gardens help get us outdoors during the holidays

    Blithewold Mansion is fully decorated and open during the winter Sparkle events, as well as the afternoon tea. (courtesy of Blithewold Mansion, Gardens, and Arboretum)

    November may seem an odd time to think about botanic gardens, but two of southern New England’s best-known tempt us outdoors with colorful holiday events from Thanksgiving to the new year.

    Tower Hill Botanical Gardens in Boylston, Mass., for instance, holds an evening festival of lights called “Winter Reimagined.”

    “The purpose of the event is to illustrate the forms of trees and shrubs in their dormant state along lighted pathways,” says Robert Burgess, public relations manager. “It also offers a reason for people to go outdoors at a time of year and time of day when most don’t think of it.”

    Tower Hill staff and volunteers begin working on the displays in late August.

    “We wrap trees and shrubs with 20 miles of LED lights,” says Burgess. “When we’re finished, lights cover about one-quarter of the property.” He adds that LED lights produce almost no heat and pose no danger to the trees and shrubs.

    In addition to lighted trees, there are fireside marshmallow roasts. Tower Hill’s buildings and conservatories are open as well.

    Hand-made ornaments decorate a “wishing tree forest,” kids can play in an up-cycled igloo, and two glass houses have seasonal music. The garden shop is open.

    Tower Hill is one of the most popular gardens in southern New England, with 140,000 visitors last year to its 132 acres of horticultural displays, walking trails and events. Tower Hill opened to the public in 1986, but its origins date back to 1842.

    You’ll need advance tickets for Winter Reimagined’s timed entries, as there are no tickets at the gate. See towerhill.freshtix.com or call (508) 869-6111. The event runs Tuesdays through Sundays from Friday, Nov. 24 through Sunday, Jan. 7.

    In Bristol, R.I., on Narragansett Bay, Blithewold Mansion, Gardens and Arboretum takes the holidays outdoors with two winter event series.

    First, it holds Sparkle nights on Friday evenings, Nov. 24, Dec. 8 and Dec. 22. Staff and volunteers deck the mansion in themed holiday décor. This year, it’s Roaring 20s. Outside, lantern-lit pathways lead to warm greenhouses and bonfires where visitors enjoy hot cocoa, s’mores, crafts and singing. According to Tree Callinan, director of communications and visitor experience, Sparkle draws about 800 people on a Friday night.

    Also, Blithewold holds afternoon tea Tuesday to Friday, Nov. 24 to Dec. 29. Visitors to Thursday tea can take a “Starlight Stroll” on lantern-lit paths until 8 p.m.

    The 33-acre Blithewold estate was started by the Van Wickle family in 1895 and opened to the public in 1978. It hosted more than 20,000 visitors last year and, like Tower Hill, has experienced double-digit growth in the past five years.

    Hint: If you get to Blithewold before dark, don’t miss the giant redwoods (Sequoia giganteum) on the front lawn. According to Tree Callinan, these may be the oldest of their kind in the eastern United States.

    Like Tower Hill, Blithewold has staggered start times to manage the flow of visitors. Call (401) 253-2707 for advance tickets, as there are no tickets at the door.

    Ready for a little adventure during these long winter nights? Go botanical.

    Kathy Connolly is a landscape designer, writer, and speaker from Old Saybrook. See her speaking schedule or contact her at www.SpeakingofLandscapes.com.

    What is a botanical garden?

    These increasingly popular destinations offer horticultural and botanic displays and education to both public and professionals. They are distinguished from other open spaces and museums, however, by the practice of collecting and studying plants and keeping long-term records of those plants' growth characteristics. Arboreta (a.k.a, arboretums) have the same practices but specialize in trees and shrubs. Botanic gardens and arboreta usually label plants with common names, botanical names, and sometimes their places of origin.

    In our region, several gardens and arboreta offer winter walks as well as the opportunity to visit toasty glass houses. The greenhouses at Yale's Marsh Botanical Garden at 265 Mansfield street in New Haven, for instance, are open Monday to Friday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Staff member Eric Larson recommends calling ahead, "just in case." Phone: 203-432-6320.

    Other regional gardens include Elizabeth Park at 1561 Asylum Ave., West Hartford, and Bartlett Arboretum at 151 Brookdale Road, Stamford.

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