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Walk on the Wild Side

Duke Gardens - Gatehouse Entrance to Blomquist Garden of Native Plants 420 Anderson St., Durham, United States

Join horticulture staff and volunteers on a walk around the Blomquist Garden of Native Plants to learn about connections between people, plants and place.  Each month will feature a different seasonal topic related to gardening with native plants. Look for additional walks on May 1 and June 5.   

Free

Member Monday Garden Walks: Peak Spring in the Historic Terraces

Onsite at Duke Gardens - directions to follow

Stay connected to the most recent garden updates and seasonal highlights by learning directly from Duke Gardens staff on a casual stroll. While construction for the transformative Garden Gateway Project is underway, enjoy exclusive access on this monthly walk.  Use your members' free code or become a member today! Tens of thousands of bulbs planted in the fall burst into bloom every spring in the Historic Terraces. Join us to enjoy this brilliant display at its peak.  

Free

Botany Spotlight: Mosses of Duke Gardens

Onsite at Duke Gardens - directions to follow

Walk the Gardens with Blanka Aguero, bryophyte data manager at the Duke University Herbarium, in collaboration with the Duke University Herbarium, to look for mosses and liverworts, discussing what they tell you about the site. You will learn identifying characteristics of these small plants by observing similarities and differences with a magnifying lens. Blanka will lead a separate program focused on the mosses of Duke Forest on April 29.

$24

EcoSomatics: Transformative Frameworks

Onsite at Duke Gardens - directions to follow

Explore different facets of transformation through the lens and practice of ecosomatics in a series of five workshops designed around a central theme that can also be taken as stand-alone classes. The April 10 session will focus on transformative frameworks for understanding and engaging with change. Bringing together ecosomatics and decolonial thought, this class invites participants to reflect on the profound transformations happening in our world and the ways we might show up differently in this era of climate change. Through guided movement, embodied reflection and sensory exercises, we will consider how our interdependence with the natural world can inspire new ways of being. Engage with the garden as a site of learning, connection and possibility, and leave with tools for grounding and action in these times of transformation.   

$25

April Fusho-an Tea Gathering-Friday

Onsite at Duke Gardens - directions to follow

Join us for a moment of respite in the Duke Gardens teahouse, where you will experience the centering calm of a traditional Japanese tea gathering. Enjoy the aesthetics, poetry and serenity of this rich tradition over an enticing bowl of whisked green tea and a Japanese confection. Guests will meet onsite at Duke Gardens, to be escorted on a 10-minute walk to the teahouse. Seating is on the ground unless a chair is requested during registration by emailing GardensEducation@duke.edu. Capacity of eight; for ages 12 and up.

$68

Spring Ephemerals in the Blomquist

Duke Gardens Lewis St. Entrance 2000 Lewis Street, Durham, NC, United States

A special phenomenon happens in the native woodland garden every spring—sunlight reaching through bare branches warms the soil and a group of delicate spring wildflowers burst to life.  Due to their small stature and brief visible life span, it can be easy to miss these harbingers of spring. Join curator Annabel Renwick to learn more about spring ephemerals and spot what is popping up in the Blomquist Garden of Native Plants at this time of year.      

$18

April Fusho-an Tea Gathering-Saturday, first seating

Onsite at Duke Gardens - directions to follow

Join us for a moment of respite in the Duke Gardens teahouse, where you will experience the centering calm of a traditional Japanese tea gathering. Enjoy the aesthetics, poetry and serenity of this rich tradition over an enticing bowl of whisked green tea and a Japanese confection. Guests will meet onsite at Duke Gardens, to be escorted on a 10-minute walk to the teahouse. Seating is on the ground unless a chair is requested during registration by emailing GardensEducation@duke.edu. Capacity of eight; for ages 12 and up.

$68

April Fusho-an Tea Gathering-Saturday, second seating

Onsite at Duke Gardens - directions to follow

Join us for a moment of respite in the Duke Gardens teahouse, where you will experience the centering calm of a traditional Japanese tea gathering. Enjoy the aesthetics, poetry and serenity of this rich tradition over an enticing bowl of whisked green tea and a Japanese confection. Guests will meet onsite at Duke Gardens, to be escorted on a 10-minute walk to the teahouse. Seating is on the ground unless a chair is requested during registration by emailing GardensEducation@duke.edu. Capacity of eight; for ages 12 and up.

$68

Botany by Plant Family: The Key to See

Onsite at Duke Gardens - directions to follow

With ethnobiologist Marc Williams. Learning to notice plant family patterns can greatly aid in demystifying the “green wall” of plant species around us. Nearly 350,000 species of flowering plants are known to global science, and these species have been grouped into over 400 flowering plant families. By learning the top 30 plant families growing around you, you will begin to recognize plants everywhere you go. After an indoor presentation on the major plant families common to the Southeastern U.S., reinforce your plant identification skills on a walk in the Gardens to observe family patterns in leaf, flower and fruit types. Discuss edibility, medicinality, craft, wildlife support and landscape beauty as you gain a more holistic understanding of the major plants comprising Southern U.S. flora and their potential ecological and ethnobotanical applications.

$32

Native Plant Solutions: Perennials for Planting on Slopes (virtual)

Virtual (Zoom)

Spend your lunch hour getting to know some of the best go-to plants for building ecologically sound landscapes. In the Native Plant Solutions series, we take a deep dive into a handful of specific native plants, focusing on a landscape situation or plant adaptation that makes them particularly helpful. This session addresses the challenge of what to plant on slopes. Most of us garden on sites that aren’t flat. We deal with hills, ditches, banks, ridges, and all the ups and downs that come with them. It’s physically more difficult to work on them, and they’re particularly vulnerable to erosion when rainfall going downhill gathers speed and volume. What plants work best on slopes? In this session, we’ll discuss objectives for managing slopes and connect them to plant attributes that fulfill those objectives. The plants you choose are part of a larger community on which native fauna and flora rely. Learn how to approach slopes as an opportunity to improve function and add ecological benefits without sacrificing aesthetics.   

Free