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Ithaca Native Landscape Symposium 2024
Mar
1
8:00 AM08:00

Ithaca Native Landscape Symposium 2024

INLS 2024 will have 6 PDHs available for Registered Landscape Architects (pending ASLA approval of presentations). You must attend all 6 sessions to receieve PDH credits. PDH credits must be paid for in advance of attending classes. Please note that you will register & pay for PDHs & INLS separately ($125 Conference + $100 PDH Credits).

Register for the Symposium Here: https://www.ithacanativelandscape.com/

Register for CEUs Here: https://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?oeidk=a07ek8a6xnf44120ded&oseq=&c=&ch=

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Compost Standards and the Basics of Specification - 1.0 PDH (LA CES/HSW)
Oct
18
2:00 PM14:00

Compost Standards and the Basics of Specification - 1.0 PDH (LA CES/HSW)

Event Description

Compost Standards and the Basics of Specification - 1.0 PDH (LA CES/HSW) In this webinar, US Composting Council (USCC) staff and a panel of industry experts will delve into the historical origins of Test Methods for the Evaluation of Compost & Composting (TMECC), the Seal of Testing Assurance (STA) program, and the foundational research driving their development. The presenters will shed light on the Compost Analysis Proficiency (CAP) Program, tasked with overseeing the quality of participating laboratories. Furthermore, they will furnish practical, real-world examples of compost end-use specifications, illustrating its efficacy in enhancing soils within their natural context by adhering to these well-established standards. Lastly, a comprehensive review will be provided on the methods and terminology employed when specifying the application of compost for on-site soil improvement. Learning Objectives: Comprehend the rationale behind the creation of the STA Program and the effectiveness of the labs that participate in it, which represents the development of a national testing initiative. Gain proficiency in the interpretation of compost testing data, as presented on a STA Compost Technical Data Sheet (CTDS). Examine fundamental methodologies and specification language used in the process of specifying compost for in-place soil amendment applications.

Event Website

https://learn.asla.org/products/compost-standards-and-the-basics-of-specification-10-pdh-la-ceshsw#tab-product_tab_overview

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What’s Out There Weekend Rhinebeck & the Mid-Hudson Valley
Sep
30
to Oct 1

What’s Out There Weekend Rhinebeck & the Mid-Hudson Valley

This is a two day event. Saturday September 30 and Sunday October 1, 2023. ASLA members must register for the event to receive continuing education (PDH) for attending expert lead site tours at (14) of the sites. As a benefit to our members, PDHs for this event will be FREE! Please make sure your membership is up to date.

A special thanks to Victor Stanley for sponsoring TCLF and the PDH for the event.

PDH credits are available to non-members for $20 per tour for (1) PDH. Non-members who want PDH's must bring a separate check to each tour payable to NYU ASLA (there will be no online registration/payment option and payment must be made at the time of each tour). Please plan accordingly.

For more information on the sites and register for the event at https://www.tclf.org/whats-out-there-weekend-rhinebeck-mid-hudson-valley. Tour size is limited so register early!

Sites for which PDH will be offered:

  • SATURDAY - September 30

    • Blithewood Garden | 10:00 – 11:00 AM | led by Bridget Maple (Bard College Formal Gardener)

    • Wilderstein Historic Site | 10:00 – 11:00 AM | led by TBD

    • Hackett Hill Park (New Guinea Community) | 12:00 – 12:45 PM | led Susan McIntosh (Research Committee Chair, Celebrating the African Spirit) and Jackie Harper (Research Committee, Celebrating the African Spirit)

    • Locust Grove Estate | 12:30 – 1:30 PM | led by Kenneth Snodgrass (Director and Curator, The Locust Grove Estate & Locust Lawn Farm)

    • Springside | 1:00 – 2:30 PM | led by Harvey Flad (Professor Emeritus of Geography, Vassar College)

    • Vassar College | 3:00 - 4:30 PM | led by Yvonne Elet (Professor of Art, Vassar College)

  • SUNDAY – October 1

    • Innisfree Garden | 9:30 – 11:00 AM | led by Kate Kerin (Landscape Curator, Innisfree Garden)

    • Walkway Over the Hudson State Historic Park | 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM | led by Walkway Ambassadors (TBD)

    • Wethersfield Estate & Garden | 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM | led by Toshi Yano (Landscape & Horticulture Advisor and Former Director of Horticulture, Wethersfield Estate & Garden)

    • Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site | 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM | led by Michael Autenrieth (National Park Service Interpretative Ranger)

    • Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site Formal Garden | 12:00 – 12:45 PM | led by Frederick W. Vanderbilt Garden Association Tour Guides

    • Bellefield | 1:15 – 2:00 PM | led by Karen Waltuch (Horticulturist, Beatrix Farrand Garden Association)

    • Home of Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site | 2:15 – 3:00 PM | led by Anna de Cordova (National Park Service Horticulturalist)

    • Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site | 3:30 – 4:00 PM | led by Anna de Cordova (National Park Service Horticulturalist)

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Filter your Pollution through a Beautiful Rain Garden
Jul
13
6:30 PM18:30

Filter your Pollution through a Beautiful Rain Garden

When: Wednesday, July 13, 2022 - 6:30pm - 8:30pm.
Where: John Barrow Art Gallery , 49 E Genesee St, Skaneateles, NY
https://www.skanlakeinfo.org/events/nativeplants
It is not uncommon for properties to have downspouts, drains and pipes that take heavy rainfall directly into a lake tributary or to the lake itself – and into our drinking water. This presentation will show how rain gardens help to manage the flow of water, slow it down and help it soak into the ground so that it doesn't reach tributaries or the lake (60 minutes). Immediately followed by a Series Wrap Up, Reception/Refreshments and Tour of the Gallery.

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Ecology Based Design: In the Field
Jun
24
8:00 AM08:00

Ecology Based Design: In the Field

Ecology Based Design: In the Field

When: Friday June 24, 2022 - 8:00am - 11:00am
Where:
Go Native! perennials, 3130 East Lake Rd, Skaneateles NY.
https://www.skanlakeinfo.org/events/nativeplants
*Note: There is limited capacity for this event, so sign up early. Please consider carpooling.
In this on site, outdoor, interactive session, we will visit various landscapes on the Doce Lume Farm/Go Native! perennials property and discuss how the natural patterns and processes have influenced their current condition and the techniques that were used to achieve them. We will also discuss techniques to assess the current state of the plantings to best formulate an effective management plan going forward. A variety of planting types will be examined including meadow, woodland, and native garden. Demonstration and discussion with Sam Quinn, SUNY ESF Restoration Science Center and Larry Weaner, Larry Weaner Landscape Associates. Duration:  3.0 hours.

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Planning for the Unplanned: Native Design as an Ecological Process
Apr
27
8:45 AM08:45

Planning for the Unplanned: Native Design as an Ecological Process

When: Wednesday April 27, 2022 - 8:45am - 10:30am
Where:
ZOOM webinar with Larry Weaner
Registration link
Landscape professionals and their clients have become aware of the benefits of including native plants in their landscapes. The importance of incorporating ecological processes, factors that often determine the success or failure of plants in the wild, is far less understood. In this session we will explore how incorporating natural processes like disturbance, succession, competition, pollination, and colonization can help designers and contractors consistently establish the ecology-based landscapes that their clients increasingly seek. Duration: 1.75 hrs.

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Meadow, Thicket, Woods, and Water: The Patterns of Native Landscape Design
Mar
23
8:45 AM08:45

Meadow, Thicket, Woods, and Water: The Patterns of Native Landscape Design

When: Wednesday March 23, 2022 - 8:45am - 10:30am
Where:
ZOOM webinar with Larry Weaner
Registration link (PDH registration link below)
Selecting and arranging plants is at the heart of all landscape design. In native design, selecting plants according to their environmental associations, and arranging them according to their natural distribution patterns plays a crucial role. This presentation will examine how to arrange overall habitat typologies within a site, then drill down to the formulation of specific species compositions within those habitat types. Case studies will illustrate how this approach can be applied on a wide variety of landscape scales and settings. Duration: 1.75 hrs.

PDH (CEU) registration link for the Meadow, Thicket, Woods, and Water session is now live!
*Note: you must also register at the general link above to receive the Zoom info*


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Ithaca Native Landscape Symposium (INLS)
Mar
4
to Mar 5

Ithaca Native Landscape Symposium (INLS)

Event Location

Virtual - https://www.ithacanativelandscape.com/

Event Description

INLS 2022: Maintaining Connections We have heard from many of you, sharing your gratitude that this group of energetic and dedicated people has kept gathering, even if virtually, until we can all gather again in person. As organizers of INLS, we are equally grateful for all of you who are staying with it--maintaining those connections among all of us who work for the greater good of our natural environment. Our connections mirror the connections we strive to learn about, protect, and preserve in the natural world around us. We also hear from more and more speakers that their work reveals fragile, delicate, and often only newly recognized connections in nature--between birds and plants, fungi and plants, insects and plants, and of course the world of micro-organisms--subtle relationships that often elude casual human observation. Maintaining these connections before we break them or lose them is now more critical than ever, as pressure on the natural web increases. As Aldo Leopold said, long before most people were paying attention: "If the biota, in the course of aeons, has built something we like but do not understand, then who but a fool would discard seemingly useless parts? To keep every cog and wheel is the first precaution of intelligent tinkering.” Assume nature has inherent value, at all scales and in all its parts, equally. These are the connections we try to explore, explain and maintain through INLS 2022--through our connections with our INLS community. We look forward to sharing these connections with you. ~Dan Segal & Rick Manning

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Reshaping Rochester Webinar with Mitchell Silver on the Public Realm
Apr
28
11:00 AM11:00

Reshaping Rochester Webinar with Mitchell Silver on the Public Realm

The public realm is that part of our city that we all occupy together: streets, sidewalks, parks, plazas. “The public domain (realm) does not mean the absence of unpleasantness or conflict. Indeed, coming to terms with the presence of different, strange, and sometimes troublesome people is essential to a viable and creative public life. The public domain involves a tension between strangeness and familiarity, activity and idleness, purposeful and purposeless behavior. “ (Andreas Feldtkeller). The presentation will explore new directions and achievements in creating an equitable public realm.

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