Speaker: Lynn O’Shaughnessy Her photos havebeen published in Orchids and Or-
chid Digest. She also had a photo selected for the 2006 AOS calendar
and recently won the Monrovia “First Signs of Spring” photography contest.
Brighton Mi Garden Club
January 2022 Meeting
Join us on January 13th for our speaker, Lynn O’Shaughnessy for Michigan Native Plants and My Experience with them.
The Brighton Michigan Garden Club is meeting virtually for the next few months due to the resurgence of COVID in Livingston County. To request the link to join us, email bmgcboard@brightonmichigangardenclub.org.
Virtual Meeting Schedule
10 a.m. – Log in and socialize
10:30-11 a.m. – Formal business meeting
11 a.m. – 12 p.m. – Guest speaker
12 p.m. – Wrap up
We hope to see you there!
September Meeting
After a long hiatus due to COVID, the Brighton Michigan Garden Club is meeting again in person.
Join us on September 9, 2021 when our featured speaker will be Kimberly Holback, presenting “Visual Garden Journals and Botanical Sketchbooks.” Kimberly will describe how she uses sketchbooks and “visual journals” to plan a garden, document flowers or fully experience beautiful moments outdoors.
This workshop will introduce basic techniques for creating a personalized and visual garden journal (no artistic experience required) and lots of inspirational ideas and resources to start your own journey.
An interactive portion of the presentation will include a guided art project. There is a $1.50 fee per person to purchase a journal.
Meeting Schedule
10 a.m. – Doors open
10:30-11 a.m. – Business Meeting
11 a.m.-12 p.m. – Luncheon
12-1 p.m. – Guest speaker
The Brighton Michigan Garden Club meets at the Brighton Community Center, located at 555 Brighton Street in Brighton, Michigan.
Hope to see you there!
May 28-Sept. 30
Upcoming meetings
We hope to start meeting again in September. Check back for our schedule.
November meeting
Attend the November meeting of Brighton Garden Club to learn about land conservancy and why it matters.
Sara Thomas, a founding member of Livingston Land Conservancy and the current Land Acquisition Chair of the group, will speak about the history of the Conservancy, how land protection works and why it is so vital for the future of human health, diversity of species and fighting climate change. She will also share ways that we can help the organization with its work.
Brighton Garden Club meets the second Thursday of every month September through June at the Brighton Community Center, located at 555 Brighton Street in Brighton. Our business meeting begins at 10:30 a.m., followed by lunch and socializing at 11 a.m. and our featured speaker at noon.
Join us!
October Meeting
If you love a good yarn, this month’s featured presentation is for you.
“A Garden to Die For: Poison Plants and Evil Herbs” is full of fascinating stories combining botany, history and the pharmacological effects of many well-known plants. Advanced Master Gardener Arla McPeek is the presenter.
Brighton Garden Club meets the second Thursday of every month September through June at the Brighton Community Center, located at 555 Brighton Street in Brighton. Our business meeting is at 10:30 a.m., followed by lunch and socializing at 11 a.m. and our featured speaker at noon.
Join us!
September Meeting
No garden is too big or too small to benefit from a water feature, says Brian Kerschbaum from Waterscape, Inc. He is the featured speaker for our September meeting.
The meeting will be held on Thursday, September 12 at 10:30 a.m. at the Brighton Community Center, located at 555 Brighton Street in Brighton.
Meetings begin with a discussion of club business at 10:30 a.m., followed by lunch and socializing at 11 a.m. and our featured speaker at noon.
Join us!
Brighton Veterans Memorial Garden to Honor Rosie the Riveter
The Brighton Garden Club and the Brighton Veterans Memorial Committee will be honoring the women of the Greatest Generation at 10 a.m. on August 14, 2019 as two special Rosie the Riveter rosebushes are added to the garden at the Veteran’s Memorial at Mill Pond Park.
“Rosie the Riveter” is the nickname for the millions of female workers who stepped in to fill critical jobs left behind when men were called to fight in World War II. These hard-working women built the tanks, ships and planes that the Allies needed for victory. In an era when women were not expected to work outside of the home and female factory workers were rare, the “Rosies” also proved that “We Can Do It!”
The rosebushes are provided by the Willow Run Chapter of the American Rosie the Riveter Association (ARRA) as part of an initiative to plant over 80 Rosie the Riveter rosebushes in Michigan this season. ARRA was founded in 1998 by the WWII “Rosies” themselves for the purpose of providing fellowship and preserving their stories and legacy. The ARRA has over 6,000 members nationwide, with over 500 members in Michigan.
The roses are of a new variety called the “Rosie the Riveter Floribunda Rose” developed by Weeks Roses to honor the female home front workers of WWII. This hardy variety of rose has a beautiful orange-red bloom and will bloom continually throughout the season.
“We are delighted that the Brighton Veterans Memorial is providing a permanent home for some of our Rosie the Riveter rosebushes,” says Nancy J. Zajac, president of the Willow Run Chapter of ARRA, “And we hope that they will add beauty to the Memorial while representing the important wartime contributions of the ‘Rosies’.”
“The Rosie the Riveter rosebushes will be a wonderful addition to the garden at our Veterans Memorial, and will allow the ‘Rosies’ of WWII to symbolically take their place in support of our servicemen and women, just as they did in WWII,” says Brighton Garden Club member Jane Wilson.