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Category: Continuing Education
CE Opportunity - Rethinking Horticulture with Real Ecology (On-line)

7:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Posted by: Ulrike Rumpf

CE Opportunity - Rethinking Horticulture with Real Ecology (On-line)

iCal

Native plant gardeners, landscape designers, and land stewards often face a tension between ecological function and traditional horticultural aesthetics. In the Wild Ones National Webinar Rethinking Horticulture with Real Ecology, field botanist and science communicator Joey Santore, creator of Crime Pays But Botany Doesn’t, examines how inherited design norms like straight lines, uniform spacing, tidy edges, and color-grouped plantings shape expectations for native landscapes. These conventions, rooted in European garden traditions and reinforced by modern lawn culture, continue to influence how native plant gardens are judged, managed, and defended, often at the expense of biodiversity, soil health, and long-term ecological resilience.

Event Details

Title: Rethinking Horticulture with Real Ecology
Presenter: Joey Santore
Date: Wednesday, March 18
Time: 7 p.m. ET | 6 p.m. CT | 5 p.m. MT | 4 p.m. PT
Format: YouTube Live premiere, link provided with registration
Recording: A recording will be shared following the live event

About the Webinar

In this candid Wild Ones National Webinar, Joey Santore invites participants to step back and examine where those expectations came from and what they cost us ecologically.

Drawing from decades of field experience and his work on the forthcoming book Concrete Botany: The Ecology of Plants in the Age of Human Disturbance, Joey explores what real plant communities actually look like when allowed to organize themselves. He unpacks how plants interact in space, how disturbance shapes vegetation, and why irregular, dense, and sometimes “messy” growth often signals ecological strength rather than neglect.

This conversation challenges some of the most common assumptions in native plant gardening and landscape advocacy. It asks why ecological landscapes are so often held to aesthetic standards that undermine their function, and how those standards influence public perception, policy, and long-term stewardship.

Participants will come away with a deeper understanding of:

  • How inherited horticultural aesthetics shape expectations for native landscapes
  • What natural plant communities look like across disturbance gradients
  • Why spacing, symmetry, and tidiness can reduce ecological function
  • How embracing ecological form can strengthen advocacy and public acceptance
  • Ways to reframe “messy” landscapes as intentional, resilient systems

This webinar is especially relevant for gardeners, land stewards, educators, designers, and advocates who are working to bridge the gap between ecological knowledge and cultural expectations in suburban and urban environments.

 

CE Opportunity - Rethinking Horticulture with Real Ecology (On-line)

Tidewater Chapter of Virginia Master Naturalists: Promoting natural resource conservation in southeastern Virginia