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Garden Futurist
Pacific Horticulture
45 episodes
9 months ago
Advocates for the power of gardens to heal the environment
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Business
Science
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Advocates for the power of gardens to heal the environment
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Business
Science
Episodes (20/45)
Garden Futurist
Episode XL: Innovative Programs for New Careers in Horticulture with UC Davis
Read the companion article here. Garden Futurist is highlighting examples of innovative programs in the Pacific region that are truly preparing students for the future of horticulture within a variety of careers. There has been some alarm in the last decade around the loss of horticulture and plant related degree and certificate programs. Can we get to the bottom of the conflict in views between talk of a “botanical education extinction” and evidence of younger generations’ growing interest in plants?  Garden Futurist spoke with A. Haven Kiers, Asst. Professor of Landscape Architecture, Department of Human Ecology, University of California, Davis. We also spoke with recent graduate of the program, Mavi Arias. Listed to Part 1 of our Innovative Programs podcast with UCB Botanical Garden here. This episode was sponsored by: Bartlett Tree Experts
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1 year ago
28 minutes 6 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXIX: Innovative Programs for New Careers in Horticulture with UBC Botanical Garden
Summer 2024  Read the companion article here. We are highlighting examples of innovative programs in the Pacific region that are truly preparing students for the future of horticulture within a variety of careers. There has been some alarm in the last decade around the loss of horticulture and plant related degree and certificate programs. Can we get to the bottom of the conflict in views between talk of a “botanical education extinction” and evidence of younger generations’ growing interest in plants?  Garden Futurist spoke with Douglas Justice, Associate Director, Horticulture & Collections at the University of British Columbia Botanical Garden on UBC Botanical Garden’s Horticulture Training Program. We also spoke with recent graduate of the program, Christian Bendsen.  This episode was sponsored by: Devil Mountain Nursery
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1 year ago
27 minutes 51 seconds

Garden Futurist
Garden Futurist Podcast: Episode XXXVIII: The Interface of Nature and Culture with Noel Kingsbury
Spring 2024 Read the companion article here.“On all scales, at a time when nature biodiversity is facing enormous challenges because of urbanization and climate change, the garden in the broadest sense should be a place where we can celebrate the beauty of plants and the functionality of that space—it should also serve nature.”Internationally acclaimed horticulture writer, garden, and planting designer Noel Kingsbury breaks down ecological and naturalistic planting design practices for a new era.Noel Kingsbury and Haven Kiers challenge regional garden designers to submit to Design Futurist Award 2024.Pacific Horticulture’s Design Futurist Award elevates the power of garden design to achieve climate resilience, steward biodiversity, and connect people with nature. Find your theme: Growing for Biodiversity, Drought and Fire Resilience, Nature is Good for You, Garden Futurist, Sustainable Gardening This article was sponsored by: Garden Futurist Podcast: Proud Winner: 2023 GardenComm Silver Laurels Award
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1 year ago
42 minutes 29 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXVIII: The Interface of Nature and Culture with Noel Kingsbury
Read the companion article here. “On all scales, at a time when nature biodiversity is facing enormous challenges because of urbanization and climate change, the garden in the broadest sense should be a place where we can celebrate the beauty of plants and the functionality of that space—it should also serve nature.” Internationally acclaimed horticulture writer, garden, and planting designer Noel Kingsbury breaks down ecological and naturalistic planting design practices for a new era. Noel Kingsbury and Haven Kiers challenge regional garden designers to submit to Design Futurist Award 2024. Pacific Horticulture’s Design Futurist Award elevates the power of garden design to achieve climate resilience, steward biodiversity, and connect people with nature. Find your theme: Growing for Biodiversity, Drought and Fire Resilience, Nature is Good for You, Garden Futurist, Sustainable Gardening This episode was sponsored by: First Editions Shrubs & Trees
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1 year ago
42 minutes 28 seconds

Garden Futurist
Garden Futurist Podcast: Episode XXXVII: You’re About to Want to Grow a Fruit Tree with Rachel Spaeth
Spring 2024 Read the companion article here.Learning to garden with fruit trees can connect you to unimaginable flavor experiences, a romance with non-commercial cultivars, and a willingness to try grafting. We spoke with Dr. Rachel Spaeth, Interim Curator of the Prunus Collection for the USDA Agricultural Research Service in Davis, CA about ways to support biodiversity conservation for real and the fascinating people and organizations who make it all possible. This episode is sponsored by: Garden Futurist Podcast: Proud Winner: 2023 GardenComm Silver Laurels Award
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1 year ago
41 minutes 41 seconds

Garden Futurist
Garden Futurist Podcast: Episode XXXVII: You’re About to Want to Grow a Fruit Tree with Rachel Spaeth
Spring 2024  Read the companion article here. Learning to garden with fruit trees can connect you to unimaginable flavor experiences, a romance with non-commercial cultivars, and a willingness to try grafting.  We spoke with Dr. Rachel Spaeth, Interim Curator of the Prunus Collection for the USDA Agricultural Research Service in Davis, CA about ways to support biodiversity conservation for real and the fascinating people and organizations who make it all possible. This podcast was sponsored by: Flora Grubb Gardens
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1 year ago
41 minutes 40 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXVI: Solving the Mystery of the Lost Apples with David Benscoter
Spring 2024  Read the companion article here. For those who love a good mystery, the work to rediscover rare and thought-to-be-extinct heirloom varieties of apples is an incredible story. 17,000 named apple varieties were at one point cultivated in North America. Today, only a fraction remains. David Benscoter, Founder of the Lost Apple Project, shares how committed sleuthing has led to the miraculous recovery of apples that have not been cultivated in 100 years. This episode was sponsored by: Sunset Plant Collection
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1 year ago
35 minutes 4 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXV: We Can Protect Plants from Invasive Pests with Tyler Hale
Read the article here.We know that the tree canopy plays a huge part in climate resilience. Urban centers are often the sites of first introductions of invasive pests and pathogens. Knowing what to look for can help us avoid unhealthy plants in our own gardens, but a bit of knowledge might just prevent real disaster. Protecting our urban forests takes all of us working together, professionals and community members. Tyler Hale is the Program Manager of the Plant Protection Program and Sentinel Plant Network at the American Public Gardens Association. These programs share scouting resources, diagnostic support and educational materials to help public gardens stop serious pests and diseases by working on the front lines of early detection.  
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1 year ago
37 minutes 11 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXV: We Can Protect Plants from Invasive Pests with Tyler Hale
Winter 2024Read the companion article here.We know that the tree canopy plays a huge part in climate resilience. Urban centers are often the sites of first introductions of invasive pests and pathogens. Knowing what to look for can help us avoid unhealthy plants in our own gardens, but a bit of knowledge might just prevent real disaster. Protecting our urban forests takes all of us working together, professionals and community members.  Tyler Hale is the Program Manager of the Plant Protection Program and Sentinel Plant Network at the American Public Gardens Association. These programs share scouting resources, diagnostic support and educational materials to help public gardens stop serious pests and diseases by working on the front lines of early detection.  This episode is sponsored by: GARDEN FUTURIST A show about innovative thinkers contributing to a climate resilient future through the power of gardens.Produced and hosted by Sarah Beck, Adriana Lopez, and Adrienne St Claire Edited and directed by Kelsey Skonberg 
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1 year ago
37 minutes 12 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXIV: Protecting Invertebrates from Pesticides with Aaron Anderson
Read the companion article here. Invertebrates do so many important things. But beyond the benefits they provide to ecosystems, they’re fascinating creatures. When you look at them closely, bees are all sorts of metallic colors. There is a beautiful diversity of butterflies. Parasitoid wasps have amazing antenna that are branching in different directions. A lot of us just aren’t aware of them when we’re out in a garden or going for a walk, because so many of them are so small. The more people appreciate how cool they are and how important they are, hopefully the more interested they’ll be in conserving them and protecting them. Aaron Anderson, Pesticide Program Specialist, Towns and Cities Lead, Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation This episode is sponsored by: Sunset Plant Collection
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1 year ago
35 minutes 8 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXIV: Protecting Invertebrates from Pesticides with Aaron Anderson
Winter 2024Read the companion article here.Invertebrates do so many important things. But beyond the benefits they provide to ecosystems, they’re fascinating creatures. When you look at them closely, bees are all sorts of metallic colors. There is a beautiful diversity of butterflies. Parasitoid wasps have amazing antenna that are branching in different directions. A lot of us just aren’t aware of them when we’re out in a garden or going for a walk, because so many of them are so small. The more people appreciate how cool they are and how important they are, hopefully the more interested they’ll be in conserving them and protecting them.Aaron Anderson, Pesticide Program Specialist, Towns and Cities Lead, Xerces Society for Invertebrate ConservationThis episode is sponsored by: GARDEN FUTURIST A show about innovative thinkers contributing to a climate resilient future through the power of gardens.Produced and hosted by Sarah Beck, Adriana Lopez, and Adrienne St Claire Edited and directed by Kelsey Skonberg  ...
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1 year ago
35 minutes 9 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXIII: Hit the Lights! The impacts of Artificial Light on Ecosystems with Shannon Murphy
Winter 2023 Read the companion article here. This is a really special time of year and at Pacific Horticulture we are attempting to connect with nature in a way that may feel a bit off-kilter to many of us gardeners- we are embracing the darkness!   Helping to introduce this topic, we have Katherine Renz, author of the recent article “The Night Garden: Design for Pollinators and People that Thrive Under Dark Skies.”  We spoke with Dr. Shannon M. Murphy Professor at Department of Biological Sciences, University of Denver about her research on the impacts of artificial light at night on moths, herbivorous insects, and invasive plants and how gardeners can help support ecosystems at night. This episode is sponsored by: Devil Mountain Nursery
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1 year ago
40 minutes 19 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXIII: Hit the Lights! The impacts of Artificial Light on Ecosystems with Shannon Murphy
Winter 2023Read the companion article here.This is a really special time of year and at Pacific Horticulture we are attempting to connect with nature in a way that may feel a bit off-kilter to many of us gardeners- we are embracing the darkness!  Helping to introduce this topic, we have Katherine Renz, author of the recent article “The Night Garden: Design for Pollinators and People that Thrive Under Dark Skies.” We spoke with Dr. Shannon M. Murphy Professor at Department of Biological Sciences, University of Denver about her research on the impacts of artificial light at night on moths, herbivorous insects, and invasive plants and how gardeners can help support ecosystems at night.This episode is sponsored by: GARDEN FUTURIST A show about innovative thinkers contributing to a climate resilient future through the power of gardens.Produced and hosted by Sarah Beck, Adriana Lopez, and Adrienne St Claire Edited and directed by Kelsey Skonberg  Sarah Beck is the executive director of Pacific Horticulture.Adriana López-Villalobos currently lives in Vancou...
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1 year ago
40 minutes 20 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXII: Great Expectations for Seed Keeping with Jennifer Jewell
Fall 2023 Read the companion article here. From a gardener's hyperlocal natural history to raw, existential questions, in her new book What We Sow, Jennifer Jewell delves into researching the story of seeds. There is so much talk about biodiversity loss and climate change, yet the central, essential role of seeds is often missing from greater public discourse. Join us as we explore seed conservation on a global, community, and individual scale. You may develop great expectations of your own. This episode was sponsored by: Sunset Plant Collection
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1 year ago
43 minutes 51 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXXI: Stalking the Crop Wild Relatives with Colin Khoury and Michael Kantar
Read the companion article here. There is a very cool set of native plants that are related to the plants we eat. You can likely find these Crop Wild Relatives in areas around where you live. These plants can help us better understand how familiar plants evolved, while they hold keys to helping us adapt in the future. Meet two scientists who are passionate about maximizing biodiversity on our plates, while racing against time to conserve plants that are critical to our cultural and agricultural future. Garden Futurist talks to Dr. Colin Khoury, Senior Director of Science and Conservation at San Diego Botanic Garden, and Dr. Michael Kantar, Associate Professor at the University of Hawai`i at Manoa. This episode was sponsored by: Bartlett Tree Experts   Episode Image Credit: Published by the Royal Society @ 2016, by Colin K. Khoury, et. al.  View Article: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2016.0792   Interested in learning more? References can be found at the bottom of the podcast article here.  
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2 years ago
46 minutes 4 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXX: What if Farmland Looked Like Ecological Gardening with Tim Crews
Read the companion article here. If you knew it would reduce erosion risks, sequester more carbon, require less fuel, fertilizer, and pesticides to grow them, would you eat a new perennial grain?  The Land Institute states that: “Our science has demonstrated that new perennial grain crops can be developed, and that diverse, ecologically intensified cropping systems hold the potential to bring grain crop agriculture to a level of ecological function on par with native grasslands and other natural ecosystems.”    Garden Futurist spoke with Tim Crews Chief Scientist; International Program Director, Director of Ecological Intensification at The Land Institute to find out how ecological perennial gardening ideas could scale up to vast areas of our agricultural landscapes.   This episode was sponsored by: Devil Mountain Nursery
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2 years ago
44 minutes 3 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXIX: On the Scruffy Wild Edge of Urban Jungle with Ben Wilson
Read the companion article here. This episode explores the landscape history of cities as ecosystems, not ecosystems of business but actual living systems.   New research shows that urban gardens support a greater number of species than an equivalent sized semi-wild rural habitat. As gardeners, as horticulturists, we may want to curate these gardened environments. How much urban landscape should be a “scruffy wild edge-land”? How does looking to the past help us plan the future of cities?  Sarah Beck speaks with historian Ben Wilson about his sixth book, Urban Jungle: The History and Future of Nature in the City. With special guest Saxon Holt. This episode was sponsored by: Devil Mountain Wholesale Nursery
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2 years ago
38 minutes 43 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXVIII: Crime Pays, Botany Doesn’t; We Get Real with Joey Santore
Summer 2023 Read the companion article here. Joey Santore shares his enthusiasm for studying the diversity, evolution and ecology of the Earth’s plant life so we can see it’s the least boring topic there is! Shedding pretention to get real, this interview digs into why we should embrace Botanical Latin and a distaste for elitism as we rip out lawns and find plant exploration in unexpected places. This episode was sponsored by Sunset Plant Collection
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2 years ago
31 minutes 41 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXVII: Food Sovereignty and Space for Perennials with Michelle Week
Read the companion article here. “It’s going to take all peoples from all cultural backgrounds to grow and build a resilient and solid food system for our urban centers.”   Michelle Week is a first-generation female Native farmer. She owns and operates x̌ast sq̓it which translates to Good Rain in the traditional language of the Arrow Lakes peoples.   Michelle Week brings us a story that is about access to traditional foods for Indigenous community members and what is revealed when she looks closely at the plants themselves.   This episode was sponsored by: Bartlett Tree Experts
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2 years ago
44 minutes 15 seconds

Garden Futurist
Episode XXVI: What a Bee Knows and Why it Matters with Stephen Buchmann
Read the companion article here. Pollination ecologist Dr. Stephen Buchmann has been studying bee biology for more than four decades. His new book is What a Bee Knows Exploring the Thoughts, Memories, and Personalities of Bees. “In every possible way, my life has been a wonderful and fascinating journey into the private lives of bees while discovering some of their innermost mysteries.” This episode is cohosted by special guest Aaron Anderson whose recent article for Pacific Horticulture “I Did My Graduate Research in a Garden Ecology Lab, This is What Gardeners Want to Know” is now available. Sponsored by Bartlett Tree Experts 
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2 years ago
41 minutes 53 seconds

Garden Futurist
Advocates for the power of gardens to heal the environment