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Transform Your Lawn to Save Our Ecosystem

According to NASA, turf grass lawn covers more of the U.S. than any other irrigated crop, while degrading our environment. Lawns are resource-heavy, requiring mowing, irrigation, fertilizer, and pesticides to thrive in New England. Learn why you should “kill your lawn” and how to replace it with beautiful and environmentally friendly gardens. Transitioning your yard to incorporate native plants in the lawn or gardens helps to mitigate floods, heat waves, sea-level rise, and the mass extinction of species.

Our speaker, Mark Richardson, is Director of Horticulture for New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill in Boylston, Mass. He has a passion for ecological horticulture and native plants. He is co-author of the book Native Plants for New England Gardens (Globe Pequot, 2018).

New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill opened in 1986. Today’s Garden sits on 200 acres. The Garden cares for an irreplaceable collection of plants and places sustainability and environmental stewardship at the forefront of their work.

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January 23

Can New Fission/Fusion Technologies Help Fight Climate Change?

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May 1

We May Need a Bigger Boat: