Every spring, we invite the public to join us for Garden Days, a special celebration of the gardens at their peak. This year's programs will be held on Saturday, June 5, and Sunday, June 6, and will explore the role of plants in medieval horticulture, medicine, artistic production, literature, magic, and folklore, with a particular focus on trees. Frances Reidy, consulting arborist, will discuss caring for our trees, such as the espaliered pear trees and the venerable quince trees of the Bonnefont garden. Deirdre Larkin, the Museum... Read more
Every spring, we invite the public to join us for Garden Days, a special celebration of the gardens at their peak. This year’s programs will be held on Saturday, June 5, and Sunday, June 6, and will explore the role of plants in medieval horticulture, medicine, artistic production, literature, magic, and folklore, with a particular focus on trees. Frances Reidy, consulting arborist, will discuss caring for our trees, such as the espaliered pear trees and the venerable quince trees of the Bonnefont garden. Deirdre Larkin, the Museum’s Associate Managing Horticulturist, will offer lectures about trees and woodland management in the Middle Ages. Gardeners from The Cloisters will be on hand throughout the day to answer your questions about the care of our gardens and the plants that grow in them. Hour-long general tours of the gardens will be offered twice each day. And families with children ages four through twelve will enjoy “The Medieval Forest,” an hour-long workshop in both English and Spanish that explores the flora and fauna of the forest as represented in works of art in the galleries and in the gardens themselves.