In the first event of ‘ Fall Lecture Series, author Kathryn Aalto will discuss her New York Times best-selling book, “The Natural World of Winnie-the-Pooh: A Walk Through the Forest That Inspired the Hundred Acre Wood.”
The 2019 Jane and Torrence Harder Lecture will be held Thursday, Sept. 12, at 5:30 p.m. in Call Auditorium, Kennedy Hall. A garden party will follow outside the Botanic Gardens’ Nevin Welcome Center; both events are free and open to the public.
Lecture series
Sept. 25 – Class of ’45 Lecture, “Using Street Art to Inspire a Balance Between Humans and Nature,” artist Eder Muniz; 6 p.m., Ten Eyck Room, Nevin Welcome Center, Cornell Botanic Gardens ( required due to limited seating). Funded in part by the Cornell Council for the Arts
Oct. 9 – William J. Hamilton Lecture, “Wild at Cornell with Hilton Carter,” interior/plant stylist and author of “Wild at ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾: How to Style and Care for Beautiful Plants”; 7:30 p.m., Statler Auditorium
Oct. 25 – Audrey O’Connor Lecture, “Mexica/Aztec Connections to Plants and Foods,” , storyteller, musician and cultural presenter; 7:30 p.m., Statler Auditorium
Dec. 4 – Elizabeth E. Rowley Lecture, “Coloring the Conservation Conversation,” , Ph.D., Alumni Distinguished Professor of Wildlife Ecology, Clemson University, and recipient of the Dan W. Lufkin Prize for Environmental Leadership by the ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Audubon Society; 7:30 p.m., Statler Auditorium
This year’s Harder Lecture celebrates the link between the literary and natural worlds, and will take the audience on a “walk” through England’s Ashdown Forest. The journey places listeners in the Hundred Acre Wood, one of the most iconic settings in children’s literature. This forest is where A.A. Milne observed his young son, Christopher Robin, at play with his animals and revived memories of his own childhood exploring the wilds – a synthesis that became the stories beloved by children and the adults who have read with them for nearly a century.
As an American landscape historian and garden designer living in England, Aalto developed a passion for walking the country’s public footpaths and discovered Ashdown Forest and the farm where the Milne family lived. Using E.H. Shepard’s original illustrations for “Winnie-the-Pooh” and “The House at Pooh Corner,” along with her own photographs, Aalto places listeners in the story’s spaces: a hollow tree, a bridge from which to watch sticks race in the water, a place buzzing with life.
Parts travelogue, biography and natural history, Aalto’s talk weaves history with humor, birdsong with booklore, to reveal the natural stage upon which these masterpieces of children’s literature were created.
“Katherine Aalto warmly teaches us that without the Hundred Acre Wood, we might never have known Winnie-the-Pooh, and the forest that still inspires generations of children and parents to forge friendships through the discovery of nature,” said Christopher Dunn, the E.N. Wilds Director of Cornell Botanic Gardens. “Nature shapes stories, families and cultures, and in turn our ongoing work is to appreciate and conserve that natural world.”
Aalto’s work explores historic, horticultural and natural history themes. She is author of “Nature and Human Intervention” (2011) and the forthcoming “Writing Wild: Women Poets, Ramblers, and Mavericks Who Shape How We See the Natural World” (March 2020).
Lynn Yenkey is a freelance writer.