• A group opportunity. Invite your friends.
  • 22 people are interested
 

Nursery Volunteers Needed at The Ruth Bancroft Garden!

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ORGANIZATION: The Ruth Bancroft Gardens Inc.

  • A group opportunity. Invite your friends.
  • 22 people are interested
Aloes, Agaves and Palms at The Ruth Bancroft Garde

Work in a beautiful rustic, outdoor setting with a great team of plant-loving people! Ruth Bancroft Garden Nursery Volunteers make a valuable contribution to the Garden by helping grow and maintain our collection of drought-tolerant plants. As members of our Nursery team, you will get a chance to learn about propagation and how to care for our unique plant collection.

Nursery volunteers meet on Thursday mornings, 10am-12pm.

We look forward to hearing from you!
Please call the office at 925-944-9352 or go here for the volunteer application form: https://www.ruthbancroftgarden.org/rbgarden/pages/documents/VolunteerApplication2017.pdf

More opportunities with The Ruth Bancroft Gardens Inc.

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About The Ruth Bancroft Gardens Inc.

Location:

1552 Bancroft Road, Walnut Creek, CA 94598, US

Mission Statement

The mission of the Ruth Bancroft Garden, Inc. is to preserve this exceptional example of garden design and to continue to develop its collection of water-conserving plants for the education and enjoyment of the public.

Description

The Ruth Bancroft Garden occupies land that was once part of a 400-acre fruit farm that produced walnuts and Bartlett pears in the Ygnacio Valley. The farm was started in the 1880s by Hubert Howe Bancroft, a famous historian and publisher who amassed a huge personal library of books related to the American West. Bancroft sold his important collection to the University of California, which became the nucleus of The Bancroft Library.

In the 1930s the farm was awarded first place in the state for pears 8 out of 9 years. At the height of production the farm had 200 seasonal employees. Pears were shipped to the East and as far away as England.The farm was passed down to Philip Bancroft, Sr. and then to his son, Philip Bancroft, Jr.

The farm remained in operation until the late 1960s, when the property was rezoned for city residential use. The land was sold to developers for expanding Walnut Creek. The last walnut orchard on the property was cut down in 1971, and Philip Bancroft, Jr. gave this land to his wife, Ruth, to plant a new garden using succulents from her large collection.

Ruth, then in her 60s, seized this opportunity. She enlisted Lester Hawkins, co-owner of Western Hills Nursery, to design the layout of pathways and garden beds. Ruth herself chose the plants, many of which were planted out from one gallon containers. In the early 1970s, Philip built Ruth's Folly, the wooden structure that marks the traditional entrance to the garden.
By trial and error, Ruth discovered how to use succulents in the landscape and how to protect tender plants from winter rains and the occasional hard freeze. She created dynamic planting combinations by using contrasting textures, forms, and colors.

Ruth's garden began to attract a great deal of attention from other gardeners and horticulturists. In 1988, Frank and Anne Cabot visited Ruth and were troubled to hear that there were no plans to preserve the garden. They were inspired to form the Garden Conservancy, a nonprofit dedicated to preserving significant American gardens, and The Ruth Bancroft Garden became the first preservation project of the newly formed organization. The Garden opened to the public in the early 1990s.

Today, The Ruth Bancroft Garden, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit which owns the garden and raises funds for its preservation. The garden is protected by a conservation easement, which ensures that the property will always be a garden and will be preserved in the spirit of its founder, Ruth Bancroft. The Garden has become an outstanding example of a water-conserving garden, appropriate for our Mediterranean climate. The garden also houses important collections of aloes, agaves, yuccas, and echeverias. Aeonium 'Glenn Davidson', the first succulent in Ruth's collection, is still growing in The Garden.

CAUSE AREAS

Community
Environment
Community, Environment

WHEN

Thu Jan 11, 2018 - Thu Dec 27, 2018
10:00 AM - 12:00 AM

WHERE

1552 Bancroft RoadWalnut Creek, CA 94598

(37.923496,-122.03632)
 

SKILLS

  • Gardening
  • Horticulture

GOOD FOR

  • People 55+
  • Group

REQUIREMENTS

  • Must be at least 18
  • Orientation or Training
  • 2 hours a week
  • Must be able to work in an outdoor setting, on your feet.

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