Garden University at The Oregon Garden brings fun, educational opportunities to the public year round. With a variety of lectures, demonstrations and workshops intended to provide you with information, history, and techniques that can be applied to your own garden, travels, and daily lives.
September 2, 2011
Cooking Green with Chef Justin of Vitality
What is your favorite fresh summer dish? Fresh produce is one of the very best things about summer in Oregon. The variety of fresh fruits and vegetables allows us to experiment with new and exciting recipes.
Chef Justin, of Wellspring’s Vitality restaurant, will take you on a culinary adventure that dives in to healthy cooking and eating choices—healthy for you and healthy for the environment!
Join us for this cooking demonstration and taste Chef Justin’s amazing creations as well.
Cooking Green: Reducing Your Carbon Footprint in the Kitchen with Chef Justin Huff of Vitality
Saturday September 10, 2011
Founder’s Square
1:00 p.m.
Tickets:
$15 non-member, includes Garden Admission
Free for Garden Members
Call 503-874-8100 or email membership@oregongarden.org for tickets.
August 8, 2011
Plants of the Bible program August 20th
Coming to Garden University on Saturday August 20th, Professor Lytton Musselman will be speaking about Plants of the Bible - enlightening participants on the actual fruits and flowers of biblical times. Was Eve really tempted by an apple? Is mustard mentioned in the Bible? Why are trees so prominent in the Scriptures? Why it is difficult to make bread like that of Bible times. And why no one would eat “Ezekiel’s bread”.
A book signing of Figs, Dates,
This program begins at 1 p.m. in the Education Center at The Oregon Garden
Tickets are available by calling 503-874-2533 by August 19th or at the Visitor Center the day of the program
$15 General Admission (includes Garden admission & tour)
Free for Oregon Garden Members and Volunteers
July 8, 2011
Garden University announces addition to 2011 schedule
The Garden University series is adding a program to the schedule for 2011.
Showstopping color in spring and summer from the best easy-care shrubs and using groundcovers, sedums and succulents to save water as well as add beauty year round.
Some of the inspirational images that will be shown are from show gardens around the world as Marianne has been leading garden tours to the most spectacular places on the planet. Inspiration from Italy to Australia but purely practical advice on what grows best in the Western climate of the Pacific Northwest.
About Marianne Binetti:
Known for her light-hearted and fun approach to gardening Marianne graduated from WSU with a degree in Horticulture and is the author of 10 gardening books including "Easy Answers for Great Gardens" , She writes and award-winning, syndicated newspaper garden column, appears on local and HGTV. Now that their children are grown, Marianne and her husband Joe lead tours see the most beautiful gardens in the word.
Tickets:
$15 for non-members, includes admission to The Oregon Garden
Free for Garden members
Tickets available at the Visitor Center or by contacting the Membership Department at 503-874-2533 or membership@oregongarden.org
June 18, 2011
Gardens just right for four-legged friends

Saturday June 25th at 1 p.m.
NOTE: the location of this lecture has been changed to the Education Center
Tickets: $15 non-members (includes Garden admission); Free for Garden members
About our speakers:
Anne Taylor is originally from Wisconsin with an in-born interest in nature. This interest is the reason she started her company Living Elements Landscape. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin. After moving to Portland, she received an Associate of Applied Science in Horticulture. Anne is a licensed landscape contractor, a certified arborist, landscape designer, an organic gardener and animal lover. Through her business Anne shares her skills, beliefs, and obsessions with everything green.
Melinda Frey established Raindrop Garden Design in 2006. A gathering of influences have led Melinda to garden design. Growing up in a family where art and the creative process were encouraged as a means of expression, each member took a slightly different route. Countless hours playing and exploring in her childhood home’s garden left a lasting impression on Melinda beginning a lifelong passion for plants and a love of gardening. A healthy respect for nature also developed early on, exploring the wonders of the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
After studying photography at Brookes Institute, Melinda spent many years in the photographic industry developing a strong sense for composition, color, texture and flow, and now borrows from this skill set to visualize and design gardens.
As a lifelong pet owner, Melinda has shared her garden with numerous dogs over the years, implementing pet friendly gardening techniques. Her home garden has adapted to their best friend’s needs as well as being beautiful and inviting surroundings for all who use the garden. In 2009, Melinda launched a collaborated project with friend and associate Anne Taylor to share information and techniques that have worked well in our personal gardens with our own pets. The presentations we offer become as much of a learning experience as a teaching format.
May 26, 2011
Conifers to fit any location

Up next in the Garden University series:
The Lecture:
Exciting new conifer cultivars provide designers and garden enthusiasts with a whole new palette of textures, shapes, and colors for creating year-around garden interest.
As a professional garden designer and current President of the Association of Northwest Landscape Designers (ANLD), Anne Marsh will show through slides some of these new and unusual conifers being used in Portland gardens, discussing issues such as placement and objective. At the same time, Dave Leckey, a grower of mature small conifers, will discuss and have examples of these same conifers on display. Between Anne and Dave, the audience will be able to see the plants, learn of their characteristics and growing needs, and get ideas on how to successfully place them in garden situations.
The Speakers:
Anne Marsh has over 35 years of experience in plant selection and garden design and is the President of the Association of Northwest Landscape Designers (ANLD). Anne’s company, Marsh & Fear Garden Solutions was created by Anne and her partner, Gary Fear, about 9 years ago after transforming their own garden in SW Portland. They welcome the public to visit their garden each month from April to August. Open garden dates are available at www.marshfear.com For more information about the ANLD, visit http://www.anld.com/
David Leckey has put his lifelong passion for energy conservation and earth-friendly practices into use in his business, Oregon Small Trees Nursery. The nursery, located west of Wilsonville, specializes in mature, slow-growing, low-maintenance, container- grown conifers and Japanese maples. David has also either written for or been featured numerous times in publications including Fine Gardening magazine, The Oregonian, and Digger magazine. Dave’s nursery is open to visitors by appointment at www.oregonsmalltrees.com
May 4, 2011
Ciscoe Morris speaks at The Oregon Garden this week!
Spuds taste best when you grow them in a garbage can.
Kids and adults both love growing potatoes in a garbage can. Begin with a clean 15 gallon can and punch lots of holes for drainage in the bottom. Locate the can in full-sun and fill it with 6 inches of potting soil. Plant the seed potatoes just below the surface and make sure they are completely covered with soil. Either mix in an organic vegetable fertilizer or feed every two weeks with a soluble houseplant fertilizer. Water the spuds and in no time the vines will begin to grow.
When the vines grow about 4 inches, cover all but the top inch with a growth medium such as soil, compost, woodchips or straw. Water as necessary to keep the soil moderately moist, and continue the process of covering the vines until they grow out of the top and the can is completely full. Soon the potatoes will bloom. At this point you can reach and feel around for potatoes. If you find some good sized ones, bring them in and cook them up.
These are new potatoes, not long lasting, but they taste great, especially if you follow Julia Child's advice and add more butter! If you wait until the vines die back in fall, you can store your potatoes for a long period. This is the real fun. Make sure the kids are present before you dump the can to check out the bounty. It's always a surprise. Once I only got 8 potatoes, but the biggest one was the size of a Volkswagen bug! Another time I harvested 55 delicious, good-sized spuds. Buy an extra big plate, just in case you grow a Volkswagen.
Garden tips from May speaker Ciscoe Morris

On May 21st, radio and television personality Ciscoe Morris will be speaking at Garden University program "Spice Up Your Garden with Environmentally Friendly Design Ideas" Join us at 2 p.m. in the Education Center to hear Ciscoe's fun and interactive talk. Book signing to follow.
When you bite into an apple and a worm smiles back at you, the extra protein is complements of a codling moth. If, on the other hand, you’re greeted by the smiles of several half-maggots, you’ve just snacked on apple maggots. My best efforts at using environmentally friendly methods, from sticky traps to spraying clay, to control these pests have failed miserably, and every year most of my apples end up a gourmet treat for my neighbor’s horse. Now there’s a new, natural way to control these pests and That is 100% effective against apple maggot and fairly successful at preventing coddling moth as well. You simply place a pantyhose footie around each apple when you thin your fruit in early spring. You don’t need to tie a knot.
Simply stretch it over the fruit making sure the apple ends up in the middle. Footies won’t harm your apples. They breathe, don’t absorb water and expand with the apple as it grows. The only problem I've found is that you get slightly more apple scab on susceptible trees. To prevent expensive visits to the relationship counselor when your better half discovers that all the feet have been cut off her nylons, buy them by the box from your local nursery or at http://www.homeorchardsociety.org/fruitsoxs/
