March into Spring 2025
Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library 5105 Kennett Pike Winterthur, DE 19735 302-888-4600 View additional information
Saturday, March 22, 2025, 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM EDT
Category: Annual Events & Programs
March Into Spring XXVIII - A Symposium for Gardeners By popular demand, the venue for 2025 will once again be: The 2025 March Into Spring Symposium will once again be a Hybrid Event with In-Person and Virtual Options. The Online Auction will remain online. Speakers and Topics
Members and non-members welcome. Registration is closed for March into Spring. New this year: Hardy Plant Society has obtained a block of hotel rooms at the Hilton Gardens in Kennett Square, PA. The hotel is 7.2 miles away from Winterthur Gardens. Deadline to reserve a hotel room is February 19, 2025. Here is the link to reserve a room: https://www.hilton.com/en/book/reservation/deeplink/?ctyhocn=PHLKSGI&groupCode=HPS&arrivaldate=2025-03-21&departuredate=2025-03-22&cid=OM,WW,HILTONLINK,EN,DirectLink&fromId=HILTONLINKDIRECT Refund Policy: Unless stated otherwise on the registration form, HPS/MAG does not issue refunds unless the event is canceled. If the event is canceled (due to factors such as inclement weather, insufficient registration, or other things beyond its control), HPS/MAG will issue the registrant a refund within 30 days of the planned event.
Plus: Fabulous vendors, book signings, HPS/MAG book sale, trolley or walking tour of Winterthur Gardens, Online Auction, and Continuing Education credits. Details to come. Vendors: Cairnsgrove Gardens & Apiary- Raw local honey, beeswax hand cream, beeswax candles, handmade soap, copper garden ornaments Cymron Cottage Landscape Contractors & Plantsmen- Unique small shrubs and perennials Steven Kristoph Nursery- Herbaceous perennials and woody nursery stock Marano Gardens LLC- Rock garden plants, and related items Rabbit Hole Plants- Rare and hardy plants from around the globe Ryeland Gardens- Conifers, interesting trees and shrubs, early spring perennials, and a selection of indoor plants Toadshade Wildflower Farm LLC- 100% native plants and native plants seeds - Toadshade offers over 400 different species native to the mid-Atlantic region Triple Oaks Nursery & Herb Garden- New and exiting hybrid Hellebores, Double Hellebore Strains, species Hellebores, Winter Daphne, Edgeworthia & some unusual native plants and broad leaf evergreens
Schedule for the Day 8:00 AM – 9:00 AM Registration and Morning Beverages and Bites- Menu Includes: Regular Coffee, Assorted Teas, Bottled Water, Assorted Petite Danish, Assorted Mini Muffins, Petite Chocolate Croissants Sliced Fresh Fruit & Organic Berries 9:00 AM – 9:15 AM Welcome and Logistics 9:15 AM – 10:15 AM Anthony Aiello: Preserving and Predicting: The Role of Botanic Gardens in a Changing Climate 10:15 AM – 10:45 AM Break: vendor shopping, book signing, and garden walks 10:45 AM – 11:45 AM Eva Monheim: Shrubs & Hedges – The Ecological Role They Play 11:45 AM – 12:45 PM Lunch in the Café or Garden Terrace, and vendor shopping and book signing 12:45 PM – 1:45 PM Jared Barnes, PhD: The Butterfly Effect: Micro Plants for Macro Impact 1:45 PM – 2:15 PM Break: vendor shopping and book signing 2:15 PM – 3:15 PM Mary Phillips: Plants, Wildlife and People 3:15 PM – 5:00 PM Trolley or walking tour of Winterthur Gardens and vendor shopping Presentation Details and Speaker Bios: Canceled: Richard T. Olsen, PhD, Director, US National Arboretum: Where the Wild Things Are: The Role of Cultivation in Plant Conservation We have had a change in one of our speakers. Dr. Richard Olsen has had to cancel. We are pleased to announce that Anthony Aiello will be presenting. Anthony Aiello: Preserving and Predicting: The Role of Botanic Gardens in a Changing Climate Botanic gardens hold a unique position in their ability for long-term preservation of plant diversity while also serving as a testing ground for finding plants that are better suited to changing climates. In this talk Tony Aiello will explore lessons learned botanic gardens’ role in plant conservation while also discussing how gardens can respond to the myriad of challenges facing their living collections. Tony will describe how botanic gardens remain resolute and resilient in maintaining and developing their living collections.
Tony’s interests include temperate trees and shrubs, in particular oaks, maples, hollies, witchhazels, and flowering cherries, as well as economic botany and the history of horticulture. He has written extensively about his travels, as well as his historic and plant interests.
Eva Monheim: Shrubs & Hedges – The Ecological Role They Play
Speaker Bio: Eva Monheim is a speaker, horticultural and environmental consultant, garden coach, and an award-winning university educator. She is a faculty member at Longwood Gardens for the Professional Horticulture Program and Continuing Education Department. Monheim was an assistant professor at Temple University where she taught numerous subjects to undergraduate and graduate students in horticulture and landscape architecture. Many of her students have gone on to be leaders in the horticulture and green industry as well as doctors in plant science and related fields. Monheim’s other endeavors include directing, producing, and co-hosting the award winning The Plant a Trillion Trees Podcast which is heard in over 110 countries. She is a Certified Arborist® through ISA (International Society of Arboriculture). Monheim authored Shrubs & Hedges: Discover, Grow, and Care for the World’s Most Popular Plants, which was nominated by The Council on Botanical & Horticultural Libraries for outstanding contributions to the literature of horticulture. Monheim is co-principal of Verdant Earth Educators, LLC (VEE) a company that writes educational documents and standards, SOPs, landscape management plans, and trains professionals in the green industry.
Jared Barnes, PhD: The Butterfly Effect: Micro Plants for Macro Impact
Speaker Bio: Jared’s story – in his own words: There’s a coloring sheet of George Washington hanging on my fridge. It looks like a 1st grader colored it because, well a 1st grader did color it about 25 years ago. We were learning about the presidents around their birthdays that winter, and while the presidents were important, what really mattered to me was what I had colored on the back blank page. Rows and rows of colorful vegetables awaiting me in my garden in just a few more months. Mary Phillips, Head of the NWF’s Garden for Wildlife® program and Certified Wildlife Habitat®: Plants, Wildlife and People
Speaker Bio: Mary leads the National Wildlife Federation’s Garden for Wildlife® program and Certified Wildlife Habitat® as an ambassador for native plants and the wildlife they support. Her work ensures all habitat programs and resources are rooted in sustainable practices and the latest science. Since 1973, the Garden for Wildlife® program has been the nation’s oldest and largest Backyard Habitat program generating and supporting millions of wildlife gardeners in North America. Since Mary arrived in 2014, the Certified Wildlife Habitat® program has grown by 64% and has tripled its email subscriptions.
Contact: Nora Sirbaugh [email protected] |