The Best Japanese Festivals & Events On the Web

New Years Oshogatsu Festivals in the United States
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Tuna Cutting Show (Master Chef Breaks Down a Whole Tuna Live - Fresh Cuts Available After the Show)
2026: 33rd Annual New Year's ʻOhana Festival: Celebrate the Year of the Horse (Hawaiʻi's Beloved Local and Japanese New Year's Traditions)
Discover Japan: Kimono & Culture Fair in Gardena (An Authentic Japanese Holiday Shopping Experience)
Martin Luther King Jr. Day (Government Offices, Banks, and Schools Closed)
2026 Presidents Day: Honoring the Leadership and Legacy of America’s Presidents (Government Offices and Banks Closed; School Closures Vary)
9th Annual Cultural Ikebana Exhibition (Exquisite Shōgatsu Flower Arrangements will be Showcased) JACCC (2 Days)
Thanksgiving Day is Thursday (Plan Ahead: Expect Traffic, Higher Fares and Hotel Rates)
What is Black Friday in United States?  What About in Japan?  Black Friday vs Cyber Monday? (Day After Thanksgiving)
2026 Daylight Saving Time Begins: Clocks Set Forward One Hour (West Coast / Los Angeles)
2026 Season: LA Kings at Crypto Arena: Hello Kitty™ Event/Fan Giveaway Night
Chanoyu - Experience the Way of the Tea (A Rare and Authentic Japanese Tea Ceremony in Phoenix)
2025 Harajuku Holiday Fest, Salinas (Exclusive Holiday Merch, Kawaii Culture, and the Bay Area’s Best Harajuku Food in One Place)
2026 Daylight Saving Time Ends: Clocks Set Back One Hour (West Coast / Los Angeles)

2020 Portland Japanese Garden: Garden + Lecture Series: Richard DeverellNEW

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Date: Monday, 23 March, 2020       Time: 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm
Portland Japanese Garden
611 S.W. Kingston Ave.
Portland, OR 97205
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Map of Portland Japanese Garden, 611 S.W. Kingston Ave.

The future role of botanical gardens. We live in an age of extinction.  An estimated one fifth of all plant and animal species are currently endangered with this proportion estimated to rise to 50% unless we change the way we’re treating our planet.  Meanwhile, climate change threatens fundamental changes to our planet’s ecosystems and our ability to grow sufficient food to feed humanity.  This challenge will be exacerbated by the continued rapid rise in human population, in particular in Africa.  And ever more of us are living in cities yet urban lifestyles bring mental health challenges and risk the disconnection of people from nature. This is a daunting cocktail of global challenges for the 21st century.  They will affect every individual, in every society and country.  Botanic gardens such as RBG Kew were born in the 18th and 19th centuries - the age of Empire.  During this period and subsequently, Kew acquired extraordinary botanical collections and expertise.  But what current relevance do these assets have? What is the purpose of institutions like RBG Kew in the 21st century and, in particular, what contribution can Kew make in helping to find solutions to these urgent challenges?  Drawing upon current case studies and looking to the future, Richard Deverell will set out an answer to this question and, in doing so, make the case for botanical science as the discipline that might just save the world.

Richard Deverell joined Kew in 2012, after 20 years at the BBC where he helped to launch and then ran the BBC News website, led the Children’s Department and finally was part of the team that set up BBC North in Salford. While working at the BBC, Richard was a Kew Trustee for six years. He was the first person appointed to the role of Director who was not a professional botanist and since taking up the role has led Kew through a period of significant change. He appointed Kew’s first Director of Science which in turn led to the publication of Kew’s Science Strategy.  Richard is also a Visitor of the Oxford Botanic Garden and Champion for the Food Forever Initiative.  He studied Natural Sciences at Cambridge.

The Garden+ lecture series places the Japanese garden  in bold and inspiring new contexts by bringing designers, authors, practitioners, and researchers to the Garden to share fresh ideas.  Come experience original perspectives, thought-provoking research, and new creative work. We bring presenters from around the globe to shed new light on how gardens connect to subjects as diverse as spirituality, technical innovation, architecture, culture, design, and society - all made more resonant with the  Garden itself as a backdrop. Garden+ is a presentation of the International Japanese Garden Training Center, which is supported by the Japan Foundation Center for Global Partnership.

Disclaimer: Please double check all information provided on our platform with the official website for complete accuracy and up-to-date details.

   

Monday, 23 March, 2020



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