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Latest Past Events

Participate in Pollinator Research

Duke Gardens Lewis St. Entrance 2000 Lewis Street, Durham

We need your help with pollinator research! We want to know if people and pollinators prefer the same garden styles. Join Maegan Luckett, horticulturist in the Blomquist Garden of Native Plants, for a tour of our parking lot pollinator garden plot between 10 a.m. and noon and take a 3-minute survey.  Your feedback is invaluable as we learn more about pollinator preferences. This is a drop-in opportunity. No registration required. 

Free

NEW DATE Native Plant Solutions: Perennials to Fill the Gaps (virtual)

Virtual (Zoom)

NEW DATE. 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 explores a group of plants whose survival strategies give them an edge when there’s open space. Uncovered ground in a landscape is an invitation for something to grow there. Often, what grows is a plant we don’t want (i.e., a weed). Gaps show up in new plantings before the plants have matured and in established plantings when they are disturbed. In this session, we’ll focus on dynamic fillers—desirable species that can be used to close those gaps, fill any new ones that arise, and provide seasonal color. Learn how to use these plants to reduce the need for weeding and mulching, and to create beautiful, resilient, lower-maintenance plantings.  

Free

Healing Ukraine: Botanical Gardens in a Time of War — a Model of International Collaboration (virtual)

Virtual (Zoom)

Join us for a timely webinar about Ukrainian botanical gardens and their critical role during the ongoing war with Russia. Since the Russian invasion in early 2022, Ukraine’s botanical gardens have been serving as centers of respite, recovery, environmental education, and nature healing. Leaders from several Ukrainian gardens will describe their current focus on Therapeutic Horticulture, utilizing US expertise provided primarily by North Carolina Botanical Garden to assist the traumatized population of their country, including veterans and displaced families. Ukrainian botanical garden leaders will provide vivid images of their gardens and their work and will discuss the crucial support from US partners. The webinar will conclude with a question-and-answer session and will explain how you can assist these efforts.  

Free