IN THIS ISSUE
AN OCTOBERFEST WITH A CREATIVE TWIST RETURNS TO THE DUTCHESS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS!
DISCOVER THE MAGIC OF WINDHAM MOUNTAIN CLUB
FALL IN NEW YORK’S SULLIVAN CATSKILLS: It’s Time to Go
FALL FOR ULSTER COUNTY
THE MOUNTAINS COME ALIVE THIS FALL AT BELLEAYRE MOUNTAIN
79
VOLUME 39, NUMBER 9 September 2024
PUBLISHERS
Peter Finn, Chairman, Catskill Mountain Foundation
Sarah Finn, President, Catskill Mountain Foundation
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR, CATSKILL MOUNTAIN FOUNDATION
Sarah Taft
ADVERTISING SALES
Barbara Cobb
Hillary Morse
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS & PHOTOGRAPHERS
Allison’s Restaurant, Belleayre Mountain, T.M. Bradshaw, Francis X. Driscoll, Diane Galusha/Central Catskills Chamber of Commerce, Hanford Mills Museum, Hudson Valley Dance Festival, Michael Koegel, Jeffrey Langford, Greg Madden, Elyse Mertz, Joan Oldknow, Opus 40, Quail Hollow Events, Daniel Roberts, Jeff Senterman, Sullivan County Tourism, Margaret Donsbach Tomlinson, Ulster County Tourism, Woodstock Artists Association & Museum, Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild, Woodstock Film Festival, and Woodstock School of Art.
ADMINISTRATION & FINANCE
Candy McKee
Tyleane Benjamin, Hillary Morse & Ashley Olney
PRINTING
Catskill Mountain Printing Services
CATSKILLS PAST: Accidents, Incidents, and Missteps, Large & Small by T.M. Bradshaw
THE GARDENS AT THE THOMAS COLE HOUSE by Margaret Donsbach Tomlinson
METAL AT THE MILL EXPLORATION DAY
THE GREAT OUTDOORS by Jeff Senterman
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
SUGAR MAPLES FALL 2024 WORKSHOPS
CATSKILL MOUNTAIN FOUNDATION 2024 PERFORMING ARTS SEASON
DONATE TO THE CATSKILL MOUNTAIN FOUNDATION
INDEX OF ADVERTISERS
DISTRIBUTION
Catskill Mountain Foundation
EDITORIAL DEADLINE FOR NEXT ISSUE: September 6
The Catskill Mountain Region Guide is published 12 times a year by the Catskill Mountain Foundation, Inc., Main Street, PO Box 924, Hunter, NY 12442. If you have events or programs that you would like to have covered, please send them by e-mail to tafts@catskillmtn.org. Please be sure to furnish a contact name and include your telephone number and e-mail address. To receive submission guidelines send a request to tafts@catskillmtn.org.
The liability of the publisher for any error for which it may be held legally responsible will not exceed the cost of space ordered or occupied by the error. The publisher assumes no liability for errors in key numbers. The publisher will not, in any event, be liable for loss of income or profits or any consequent damages.
The Catskill Mountain Region Guide office is located at 7971 Main Street, Hunter, NY 12442.
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Home delivery of the Guide magazine is available, at an additional fee, to annual members of the Catskill Mountain Foundation at the $100 membership level or higher.
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All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part without written permission is prohibited. The Catskill Mountain Region Guide is not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts. All photographic rights reside with the photographer. THE CATSKILL MOUNTAIN FOUNDATION 7971 MAIN STREET, P.O. BOX 924 • HUNTER, NY 12442 PHONE: 518 263 2000 • FAX: 518 263 2025 WWW.CATSKILLMTN.ORG issuu.com/catskillmtnregionguide 76 78 79 80 85 99 100 106 108
An Octoberfest with a Creative Twist Returns to the Dutchess County Fairgrounds!
Get ready for an unforgettable experience as Handcrafted Octoberfest: A Family Harvest Celebration returns to the Dutchess County Fairgrounds in Rhinebeck! Celebrating its fifth anniversary, this unique festival combines the best of Oktoberfest traditions with a vibrant, handcrafted twist, promising an event perfect for all ages.
Produced by Quail Hollow Events, Handcrafted Octoberfest offers much more than beer—though you’ll find plenty of that! This festival has earned a spot in Sunshine Artist Magazine’s 200 Best of 2024, showcasing the nation’s top contemporary craft fairs. It’s a celebration that has something for everyone, from exquisite handmade goods by fine artisans to the Hudson Valley’s top wine and spirits, musical performances, and festive activities.
Visitors can indulge in seasonal food delights, enjoy a pint in the lively beer garden, and be entertained by live music and traditional German dancers. Kids will love the family art and crafts area, complete with creative free play and seasonal programming. Plus, don’t miss ongoing demonstrations from woodworkers, fiber spinners, metal forgers, jewelers, and even an expert pumpkin carver. If you’re feeling autumnal, hop on a horse-drawn carriage ride around the fairgrounds, and catch a weigh-in of giant pumpkins—one of which will likely top 1,200 pounds!
Ola Rubinstein, director of Quail Hollow Events, says of the event, “Handcrafted Octoberfest champions the craft, training, and story behind each object and attraction. Featuring works
of art and craft, gourmet specialty foods, local wine and spirits, and agricultural marvels, it highlights the idea of small-batch and hand-spun, with lots of harvest fun on the side. Visitors can browse unique handmade goods from over 100 juried exhibitors in more than ten media categories, enjoy a picturesque horsedrawn carriage ride, and visit a petting zoo that’s perfect for little ones.”
For tickets, menu details, and the entertainment schedule, visit quailhollow.com.
DATES & TIMES
Saturday, October 5
10:00 am–6:00 pm
Sunday, October 6 10:00 am–5:00 pm
Rain or Shine! WHERE
Dutchess County Fairgrounds
6636 U.S. 9 Rhinebeck, NY 12572
quailhollow.com
FALL IN NEW YORK’S SULLIVAN CATSKILLS
It’s Time to
Go
The only thing better than sweater weather in the Northeast is enjoying it in New York’s Sullivan Catskills. Plan now to embark on an adventure to this renowned vacationland, just 90 miles from Manhattan, for a haven full of vibrant small-town charm.
In September the countryside begins its transformation into a stunning kaleidoscope of color. Amplifying these red, gold, and orange hues is the colorful Sullivan Catskills Dove Trail. It’s a collection of 75+ hand-painted Dove sculptures— in tribute to the Woodstock Music and Arts Festival held here in 1969. To help guide you to each dove location, download the trail map at SullivanCatskills.com or find each dove’s location on the free Sullivan Catskills Go app. The very first dove is at Bethel Woods Center for Arts, the site of the Woodstock festival, where you can plan your visit around Harvest Festival, every Sunday through October 6. It’s a farmers’ and artists’ market featuring the bounty, talent, and beauty of the region. Other September events at Bethel Woods include the final two outdoor pavilion concerts: Deep Purple with YES on September 6 and Megadeth on September 13. The indoor Event Gallery September concerts include JD Souther on September 8; Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes on September 20; and Five for Fighting on September 29.
The annual In the Works, In the Woods Theatre Festival at Forestburgh Playhouse is on from September 6-8 and guests can
see staged readings of new plays, new musicals and two new solo act cabarets. Catskills Brewery will host Manor Flea on September 7 & 8. Later in the month on September 21, the charming river town of Narrowsburg puts on its annual Honeybee Fest to promote awareness and education through demonstrations about these precious pollinators. The day also features food, artisans and music. Also, on September 21 Liberty and Fallsburg hold their Fall Festivals. The annual Conductor’s Clambake is next on September 22 in Livingston Manor. Then from September 2629, it’s the 13th annual Big Eddy Film Festival. Produced by the Delaware Valley Arts Alliance, the festival draws filmmakers and film lovers with a unique creative upstate energy. For more events happening in September check SullivanCatskills.com.
Outdoor enthusiasts, immerse yourself in water and land adventures. In the western part of the Sullivan Catskills, September is a great time to raft, canoe, or kayak down the Delaware River or fish in the rivers and streams (Delaware, Willowemoc, Neversink) where American dry fly fishing was born. The boating liveries typically close by mid-late October, so plan accordingly. By car, you can enjoy the foliage along the Upper Delaware Scenic Byway. Stretch your legs with a hike on the Tusten Mountain Trail or one of the numerous other trails featured on Trailkeeper.org to guide your on-foot journey. Further to the east, The Neversink Reservoir
is another gorgeous place to boat in autumn. Before or after, grab a to-go lunch or dinner from the Neversink General Store. Got pedal power? You can ride a bike on the O&W Rail Trail, with rentals available at Fortress Bikes in Hurleyville or Cinder Tracks in Mountaindale. Golfing is another popular outdoor activity here. Serious golfers won’t want to miss the Monster Golf Course at Resorts World Catskills. Other challenging and popular courses include the greens at Villa Roma, Roscoe Mountain Club, Tarry Brae, Lochmor and the Sullivan County Golf and Country Club.
After an outdoor adventure you might want to soothe your body. Try Hemlock Neversink, Awana Spa at Resorts World Catskills or Hemlock Spa at Kenoza Hall. As a bonus, each of these locations also offers dining and full-service accommodations set in lovely rural surroundings.
Hungry? Early fall provides the perfect backdrop for outdoor dining, beer, wine, and cocktails. Check out Smoke Joint Catskills in Livingston Manor, Big Kev’s in White Lake and Chick E Ribs in Liberty for BBQ. While you’re there, visit Sunshine Colony Wine Bar, Catskill Brewery, The Kaatskeller, or Upward Brewery. Other noteworthy restaurants to consider include Pasta D’Oro in Wurtsboro; Cellaio Steakhouse at Resorts World Catskills; Tavern on Main in Jeffersonville; Conover Club in Callicoon Center; The Junction, The Yarra and Northern Farmhouse Pasta in Roscoe; The Debruce in Livingston Manor; The Heron, The Laundrette, and Tusten Cup in Narrowsburg; Cochecton Fire Station and The Pump House in Cochecton; The Corner Piazza and The Old Homestead in Eldred; The Tavern at Forestburgh Playhouse in Forestburgh; Creek House Grill and the Western Supper Club in
Callicoon, and Solaia in Monticello. New to the restaurant scene is La Cignone French Bistro in Narrowsburg.
The Good Taste Beverage Trail is a favorite for craft beer, wine, cider, and spirits lovers. Sample the award-winning flavors while you chat with the proprietors and learn their backstories. There’s a former armed services vet, a husband-and-wife brew team hailing from Ukraine, a publisher turned distiller, and a vintner who quit his day job to craft wine. The newest member of the trail is Big Eddy Brewing in Narrowsburg. Want to learn more about how to taste and evaluate wine, as well as its characteristics, terminology, and history? Check out the wine classes at Terra Space in Jeffersonville, led by A.J. Ojeda-Pons, a WSET (Wine Spirt and Education Trust) certified Sommelier. Many of the wines you’ll taste with AJ can be purchased locally, too at 52 and Vine in Jeffersonville, Upstream Wine and Spirits in Livingston Manor, and Narrowsburg Fine Wines among others.
With all there is to do in the Sullivan Catskills, you’ll want to book at least a weekend stay. The full-service resorts—Resorts World Catskills, Kartrite Resort and Indoor Waterpark, and Villa Roma—cater to your every need. Vacation rentals are plentiful, and there are charming boutique inns, including Kenoza Hall, Callicoon Hills, The Bradstan at The Eldred Preserve; Chatwal Lodge at the Chapin Estate; cabins at Antrim Streamside, glamping and vintage RVs at The Domes at Catskills, Boheme Retreats and over a dozen more. To book an autumn visit and plan your itinerary, visit SullivanCatskills.com. You’ll also want to download the Sullivan Catskills Go App—a valuable tool to guide you to the fun.
FALL FOR ULSTER COUNTY
Nestled snugly in the heart of the Catskill Mountains, Ulster County is the perfect destination for fall. Natural beauty, plenty of cozy sweater weather activities and small-town charm await. So, grab your favorite sweater or jacket, put on your favorite boots (hiking, cowboy, or Chelsea—it doesn’t matter), and head out on your adventure.
Everyone knows the Catskill and Shawangunk Mountains make a magnificent backdrop for fall photos. But here’s a peek at places that deliver great backdrops that aren’t top of mind, hence our “Secret Spots” for fabulous fall photos. Bonus: they also deliver on fun.
Wallkill View Farms
Wallkill View Farms is a family-owned farm market with fresh produce, beautiful flowers, and a diabolically good selection of baked goods. The farm is especially magical in the fall, with pumpkins galore and an exciting corn maze, it is fun for all ages. They even have hayrides and activities for children. Secret Spot:
Gather the family for Insta-worthy shots in their pumpkin patch, and be sure to get the Shawangunk Mountains lit up in red, gold and orange as a backdrop.
Historic Huguenot Street
Another hidden treasure in New Paltz is Historic Huguenot Street. The beautifully preserved stone houses, dating back to the 17th century, tell the story of the Huguenot settlers who made this area their home. Guided tours offer fascinating insights into the lives of these early inhabitants, and the peaceful surroundings make it a perfect spot for pictures. Secret Spot: Get pics in front of the reconstructed 1717 French Church. Ringed by hardwood trees with vibrant autumn colors, this stone church is the perfect backdrop for fantastic pictures.
Belleayre Mountain
If you’re looking for outdoor activities, Belleayre Mountain is a fantastic destination for all things autumn. During the fall, the
mountain is a haven for hiking enthusiasts, offering trails that wind through lush forests and breathtaking vistas. Take the gondola to the top and enjoy 360-degree views. Secret Spot: In the gondola with the Catskills behind you.
Nostrano Vineyards
For a more refined autumn adventure, head to Nostrano Vineyards. This Hudson Valley vineyard offers stunning views of the surrounding countryside and a delightful selection of Hudson Valley wines to sample. Spend a leisurely afternoon sipping on a glass of Chardonnay or Pinot Noir while soaking in the beauty of the vineyards. It’s an idyllic spot to relax, unwind, and enjoy the flavors and varietals of the season. Secret Spot: Pose in front of one of their firepits and enjoy the view of the rolling hillside— then tell friends you were in Tuscany!
Other Sweater Weather Activities
As the air turns crisp and the leaves change, Ulster County offers the perfect setting for cozy activities. Bundle up and find a hike at Mohonk Preserve or Minnewaska State Park. Both offer hikes that appeal to the beginner and the well-seasoned adventurist. Stop at their Visitor’s Center before heading out to get a trail map and review the seven principles of Leave No Trace; a set of ethics promoting conservation and safety outdoors. For those less outdoorsy, go on the hunt for the very best cider donut in Ulster County. Here are a few stops to get you started:
Tantillo’s Farm Market
A multi-year winner of the Best of the Hudson Valley’s Best Cider Donut Award, Tantillo’s Farm Market is a locally beloved spot where you can savor freshly pressed apple cider that captures fall in a bottle. Pick up a dozen of their warm, award-winning cider donuts and head to their u-pick apple orchard where you can pick as little as five pounds of apples or as many as 22 pounds. Then stop at the farm stand for a pie and other delicious homemade treats.
Dubois Farms
Dubois Farms in Highland is another excellent destination for apple cider donut aficionados. This charming farm, voted best pick-your-own in Hudson Valley, offers pick-your-own apples, pumpkins, and vegetables. Along with farm animals for petting, a tavern, cafe and bakery, and, of course, their delicious apple donuts cider. Spend a day enjoying the farm life. It’s a wholesome and fun-filled way to embrace fall flavors and get a refreshing walk outdoors.
Half Moon Roundout Café
Or skip the farm and head to this renowned Kingston coffee spot for its cider donuts as much as its coffee. A bit different than their farm cousins, the folks here re-engineered a French recipe from the 1700s to create a light donut with a crunchy exterior. Don’t sleep on their coffee either as this high-end coffee shop disguises itself as a community hangout spot. If you don’t get one of their donuts, you are doing fall wrong.
Fall Festivals
Then some want to throw on their new favorite fall outfit and have fun. These festivals are the perfect stops.
Garlic Festival
Picture this: the air filled with the tantalizing aroma of garlic-infused dishes, vendors showcasing everything from garlic ice cream to garlic fudge (Wait. What?), and live music adding a festive vibe. Whether you’re a foodie looking to try new garlic-inspired delicacies or enjoy a fun-filled day with family and friends, don’t miss the Hudson Valley Garlic Festival Saugerties on September 28 & 29 for this must-visit event. (Caution: Not safe for vampires)
Hooley on the Hudson
On September 1, from 10:30 am to 8:00 pm, the Hooley on the Hudson in Kingston brings a splash of the Emerald Isle to Ulster County. The event is packed with traditional Irish music, dance performances, and delicious Irish fare. Celebrating the halfway point to Saint Patrick’s Day is like stepping into a little piece of Ireland without leaving New York. Bonus: No passport is required.
Stockade Faire
On October 5, the Stockade Faire in Kingston brings a vibrant street fair with music, art, and local crafts. Wander through the streets lined with vendor booths, sample delicious local treats, and enjoy live performances from talented musicians. It’s the perfect way to spend a fall day, soaking up the community spirit and discovering unique handmade goods. The fair reflects Kingston’s artistic soul and its friendly vibe.
Start planning your trip to Ulster County today at VisitUlsterCountyNY.com.
The Mountains Come Alive this Fall at BELLEAYRE MOUNTAIN
If you look closely, the signs have been there. They were gently waving at you as early as July. Keeping an eye on us while we hiked, cruised, swam, and paddled. Largely hidden, their presence can be found among the deep, endless dark green canopy that rolls throughout the Catskill Mountains. As July rolled into August, and finally September, they have now fully made their presence known. The endless rolling hills of green are now speckled with hues of yellow, orange, and red. Fall has crept its way into the Catskills, and it’s a time when the area surrounding Belleayre Mountain in Highmount, NY becomes alive!
While any season is a good time to visit the Catskill High Peaks, many believe that autumn is the best time of year to make the pilgrimage, with a perfect blend of cooler weather ushering in the colorful sights, sounds, and smells that can only be experienced in this time of year.
At the Discovery Lodge at Belleayre, you can effortlessly glide through the fall foliage, a breathtaking panorama unfolds as you ascend your way on a Scenic Gondola Ride to the top of the highest skiable peak just 2.5 hours north of Manhattan. A full kaleidoscope of warm colors coats the summits and valleys below you and over the horizon, while the soft air with a slight chill fills your lungs.
If you want to make those lungs work a little bit harder, you can see the colors change at a more relaxed pace on a hike. Your foot powered adventure is one you can make your own, with roughly eight total miles of trails to choose from. Either fully immerse yourself in the colors on the wooded singletrack that makes up the cross-country trails on the lower mountain, or watch the aspects and hues change gradually as you make your way up the alpine ski trails to an elevation of 3,429 feet … or a combination of both! The journey can be made into an interactive game for kids, with a printable scavenger hunt and hiking bingo card that can be printed off the Belleayre website.
The birds will be flying south, though it will not be just them soaring between the branches and falling leaves. Belleayre’s 18-hole disc golf course remains open through the colorful season with an entirely reworked layout that is much more friendly for beginners, but remaining an exciting technical challenge for a more experienced thrower.
The premier autumn event of the Catskills looms on the horizon: Belleayre’s Fall Festival! Live music will fill the air around the Discovery Lodge the weekends of October 5 & 6, and October 12 & 13 along with a whole tapestry of food, activities, and fun. The lighthearted atmosphere is inviting to soak in the
autumn ambiance, as you browse a wide assortment of thoughtful crafts created by local artisans in the area. For a little more excitement, some friendly competition is lined up with stein holding and pie eating contests, as well as a corn hole tournament conducted by Rapid Bag Slayers Cornhole. A small step outside practicality, some hatchet throwing will be set up to test your marksmanship.
Of course, the little ones are not to be left out from the foliage-filled fun! They get their own experience during the festival with fun games, arts and crafts, and more throughout the entire weekend.
Naturally, no festival would be complete without a wide array of food and beverage offerings! For both weekends, an entire food truck village will be on hand, facilitating every kind of flavor from savory, to smoky, to sweet. In conjunction with Belleayre’s Fall Festival will be their Brews & Views, where guests get to sample dozens of locally brewed beers and ciders with a commemorative glass to keep. The harmonious amalgamation of breathtaking scenery, tranquil outdoor adventures, and chipper festivities make Belleayre’s Fall Festival a perfect send-off to the summer season and a welcoming ceremony for the winter ahead.
After the final day of the Fall Festival on October 13, it will seem as though things have quieted down on the mountain, but if anything, it is the opposite as it will be full speed ahead for Belleayre’s winter season. Within a few short weeks of their final Scenic Gondola Rides, there is a very real chance that the snow
guns that line the slopes and trails will be firing up for the first time of the 24/25 ski and snowboard season, manned by the finest team of award-winning snowmakers in New York. Their first snowmaking run will be the culmination of a long summer of projects that happened throughout the summer to improve the wintertime guest experience. From an additional 28,600 square feet that has been added on the Discovery Lodge, to the continued improvements the mountain’s snowmaking infrastructure including 30,000 feet of new snowmaking pipe and 20 brand new automated fan guns, and even a brand new novice learning area that will be located at the top with the iconic views, Belleayre continues to solidify its reputation as the premier destination for year-round outdoor recreation.
As the days grow shorter and cooler, Belleayre transforms into your sanctuary. The daily grind fades away as you drive down Route 28, disappearing entirely as you immerse yourself in the breathtaking beauty of autumn in the Catskills. Whether you’re seeking adventure, relaxation, a family getaway, or simply a chance to reconnect with nature, Belleayre offers an unforgettable fall experience in New York. Experience the unique magic that only the central Catskill Mountains can offer.
For a complete list of events, activities, improvements, and mountain updates, visit belleayre.com.
Hudson Valley Dance Festival
Cultivates, Nurtures and Shares Dance in the Heart of the Hudson Valley
This year marks the 11th anniversary of Hudson Valley Dance Festival, as world-class dancers and choreographers again converge on the bucolic banks of the Hudson River to share celebrated works and make a difference. Artistic expression has been in the DNA of the Hudson Valley region since its earliest days.
“The Hudson Valley has always been a hotbed for artists,” Greene County resident Duke Dang said. “America’s first art movement, the Hudson River School, started just a walk from Historic Catskill Point, where the festival takes place. And it’s rooted in the river that connects us all. It’s part of a very rich ecosystem that supports life, supports art making and through the watershed connects us to New York City.”
The vibrant heritage of the region inspired Dang, alongside his husband, Charles Rosen, and their Catskill neighbor Todd Whitley to propose the festival over a decade ago. They reached out to Dancers Responding to AIDS Founding Director Denise Roberts Hurlin with the dream of sharing premier dance in their Hudson Valley home while simultaneously helping their neighbors in need, and the event was born.
Proceeds from the festival, set for performances at 2:00 pm and 5:00 pm on Sunday, October 13, will provide meals, medication, counseling, health care and hope through annual grants to 13 vital organizations here in the Hudson Valley and 450 more throughout all 50 states, Puerto Rico and Washington D.C.
through Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS’ National Grants Program. Dancers Responding to AIDS is a program of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS.
“This community, from its spectacular performers and choreographers to its generous and welcoming audiences, has given so much to us,” Hurlin said. “The awe-inspiring landscape, including the converted 19th century warehouse that serves as the festival’s venue, continues to inspire us to create and share art. It’s our privilege to give back to the region through these vital grants.”
In addition to providing a helping hand and supportive shoulder to those in the community and beyond, at the core of the festival’s vision is nurturing artists across the region. Dang, who is executive director of Works & Process at the Guggenheim, is continuing that legacy this year by offering a Hudson Valleybased residency to acclaimed company Masterz at Work.
The New York City-based company’s new work, created at Modern Accord Depot in Ulster County, will be shared at Hudson Valley Dance Festival. Dang believes the tranquility of the Hudson Valley plays a key role in the singular creative expression presented at the festival.
“If a tree is bearing fruit, you want to share it with your neighbors, and that’s what I do professionally with these residences,” Dang said. “In New York City, there is a hyper-connectedness where things happen really, really fast. You book studio space, you
have three hours, you create something. Whereas in the Hudson Valley, artists are provided a respite. To leave the city and spend a week in isolation, in flow state, is a different kind of creative process.”
The introduction of Masterz at Work to Hudson Valley Dance Festival is a full-circle moment. Dang and Works & Process first commissioned a work from acclaimed vogue and West African dancer Omari Wiles in 2018. In 2019, Wiles was invited to share a work at Hudson Valley Dance Festival. Dang asked Wiles who in the ballroom community could use institutional support, and Wiles recommended Courtney Topanga Washington and her company, Masterz at Work.
Powered by Works & Process’ support, the Masterz have presented works at the Guggenheim, Jacob’s Pillow, Fire Island Dance Festival and, now, Hudson Valley Dance Festival.
“What’s important to us is longitudinal, long-term support of artists,” Dang said. “This will be our third commission from Courtney and the Masterz. The piece will officially premiere in 2025, and what’s shared at the festival will be an exciting peek at a work-in-progress. It’s all so fresh—they wrap up their residency and the next day they’re at Hudson Valley Dance Festival.”
And that organic, studio-to-stage feeling is what makes the weekend so unique for the event’s dance-loving attendees. Dang shares that one of the elements that makes Hudson Valley Dance Festival unique compared to similar cultural institutions and events in the area is the ephemeral nature of the festival.
“The magic of Hudson Valley Dance Festival is that it happens just one weekend out of the year, and it’s built in the space for that moment,” Dang said. “There’s a universality to that, to a show created in an ice warehouse on the banks of the Hudson River, with the magic of fall foliage at that time of year. There’s variety, there’s something for everyone.”
Masterz at Work’s piece, alongside a diverse program of other spectacular works, will create a tangible impact in the Hudson Valley and beyond. Through the festival’s 10 iterations so far, its audiences have raised $1.3 million.
“We’re honored to channel the artistic beauty and talent that permeates this vibrant community into tangible, lifesaving help,” Hurlin said. “And this vital support will ripple to organizations in the Hudson Valley and across the country, all thanks to these
visionary performing artists and the audiences who support and believe in them.”
Dang said there’s a culture of philanthropy that permeates throughout the region.
“What’s at this event’s beating heart is supporting people who really, really need our help,” he said. “The local food pantry down the road from the festival is receiving support from Broadway Cares’ National Grants Program. Even Animalkind, which helps those who are facing tough times care for their pets, is just a 10-minute drive from here, and is receiving this support.”
When the festival premiered in 2013, Broadway Cares’ National Grants Program supported five organizations in the region. Today, that has reached 13 grantees: Albany Damien Center in Albany; Alliance for Positive Health in Albany; Animalkind in Hudson; Catskill Food Pantry in Catskill; Columbia County Recovery Kitchen in Hudson; Columbia-Greene Humane Society/ SPCA in Hudson; The Community Hospice in Albany; Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center in Kingston; Matthew 25 Food Pantry in Catskill; Rock Steady Farm in Millerton; Roe Jan Food Pantry in Hillsdale; TOUCH (Together Our Unity Can Heal) in Congers; and Troy Area United Ministries in Troy.
Tickets to Hudson Valley Dance Festival are available at dradance.org. VIP tickets and sponsorship packages include a cocktail reception and an exclusive dinner with the dancers after the 5:00 pm performance.
Since its first production in 2013, Hudson Valley Dance Festival has welcomed a treasure trove of works from a range of styles, including tap dance from Caleb Teicher & Company and Dorrance Dance, ballet from Marcelo Gomes, Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo and Wendy Whalen, and contemporary and modern from Kyle Abraham/A.I.M, MADBOOTS DANCE, Martha Graham Dance Company, Monica Bill Barnes & Company, Parsons Dance, Paul Taylor Dance Company and Stephen Petronio Company, among many others.
“I go back to Broadway Cares’ tagline: ‘what we do together makes a difference’,” Dang said. “The people who attend Hudson Valley Dance Festival see the impact it’s making and also get to experience the sublime beauty of these dancers.”
Mountain Foundation
Piano Performance Museum
By Joan Oldknow
In the small resort Village of Hunter, New York is very special museum that draws visitors from far and wide. The Piano Performance Museum at the Doctorow Center for the Arts in Hunter, NY, which opened in 2007 with the help of Jarvis and Constance Doctorow Family Foundation, takes visitors back in time to places inhabited by internationally acclaimed composers who actually wrote their works and played on specially crafted pianos in the company of like-minded friends and family. Wellreceived compositions were fine-tuned and played often in their salons, and then in music halls for yet larger audiences to appreciate. Piano manufacturers were sought after by the ever-increasing stable of European composers of the Baroque, Classical, and Romantic periods. Such is the ambience of Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Piano Performance Museum.
Museum visitors can come in for a tour, hear a piano recital or perhaps sit down to one of the playable pianos. The collection includes early and modern keyboard instruments, from 200-yearold European pianos to American pianos built in the 19th or 20th centuries. With a clavichord, harpsichord, fortepianos and modern pianos, a unique collection of miniature pianos and tuning tools and repair kits, the museum provides visual, audio and educational programs documenting the musical history and technical development of the piano.
Residencies and Workshops at the Museum
Pam Weisberg, Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Director of Performing Arts, was very supportive of the Piano Performance Museum from the beginning. She made connections with artists
who were interested in playing these early pianos and authentic replicas, and invited esteemed musicians to start workshops for younger artists, that incorporate pianos from the collection.
One of the more established workshops is the Academy of Fortepiano Performance, which recently wrapped up its seventh year. Founded by fortepianists Audrey Axinn, Maria Rose, and Yiheng Yang, the Academy welcomes pianists who have an interest in playing early instruments, and also offers an intensive study opportunity for experienced students of period performance practice. The Academy now also has a Technical Workshop, led by piano technicians Maki Masayuki and Richard Hester, for those aspiring to restore and repair older instruments.
Other residencies offer practice on the more modern pianos in the collection. Manhattan in the Mountains was started by musicians and professors at Manhattan School of Music Dr. Joanne Polk and Dr. Jeffrey Langford for modern piano students. Drs. Polk and Langford recently started a new workshop called Pianists in the Mountains, which will return next summer after a brief hiatus. The Hunter International Music Festival, which focuses on solo and chamber music training, is one of the newer residencies. These residencies continue annually and provide classes, lectures and performance opportunities for advanced students and artists.
Historic Pianos in the Collection
General interest in fortepianos is somewhat more established in Europe as that was where most of them originated, but modern pianos are still more prevalent. In the United States, interest
by Jeffrey
in fortepianos plateaued for a while, but there is steady growth now. It is more common for conservatory students to study fortepiano as a supplement to their main studies, and a few of them get hooked. In addition, U.S. audiences are getting used to professional pianists playing on fortepianos in concert halls such as Carnegie Hall. From the clavichord, harpsichord, early pianos through the modern piano, these musical instruments have changed over the years. Earlier smaller pianos have a lighter sound and later larger pianos have a stronger and heavier sound, with many variations in tone, touch and volume. These are the challenges and opportunities facing early musicians today.
The piano collection includes a Muzio Clementi piano forte, an 1831 Geib with a cabinet built by the famous American cabinet maker Duncan Phyfe, a Chickering (ca. 1851), an 1865 Steinway Civil war Square Grand and a Chopin–era John Broadwood. The collection also includes a Boardman and Gray (ca. 1915) manufactured in Albany, New York, which was owned by jazz pianist Sir Roland Hanna, on loan to the museum by his wife Mrs. Ramona Hanna. More recent acquisitions include the Erard fortepiano (ca. 1825) and an original 1826 Graf fortepiano.
Leo Tolkin, the new docent at the Piano Performance Museum, studied cello at California Institute of the Arts and then viola da gamba in the Historical Performance department at Guildhall. Much of Tolkin’s performing experience has been playing chamber music with early music ensembles. Having played the piano for the past 20 years ago, it continues to be a source of great joy. Tolkin sees the piano as “an entire orchestra at one’s fingertips.” He says that the most interesting part of working at the museum is the wonderful various people who come in to visit the museum. Some are great musicians, while others are just all around interesting people. He is working on reaching out to schools and other groups in hopes of facilitating larger groups to visit. Tolkin also wants to increase museum attendance through a larger social media presence, sharing all that the museum has to offer.
The Steven E. Greenstein Piano Collection
The Piano Performance Museum is home to the Steven E. Greenstein Piano Collection. Until the time of his death in November 2023, Greenstein was the museum’s curator. As a tuner and restorer of early pianos, he had a vast array of pianos in his home and workshop. His knowledge and love of these pianos extended far beyond the piano museum. As President of the New York Piano Technicians Guild and as curator of the CMF Piano Performance Museum, Steven worked with other technicians to restore the pianos in the collection for use in concerts and demonstrations by guest artists, students and the general public. The collection lives on in his name with the gratitude and respect of the Catskill Mountain Foundation for his visionary collecting, expertise in piano restoration and maintenance and dedication to the goals of the museum which he established.
Piano technician Ray Johnson remembered his friend and colleague Steven Greenstein recently. Johnson first met Greenstein in 1996 when Johnson apprenticed under Greenstein. They tuned pianos together for various clients and challenged each other with their different perspectives on things like the strength of the repetition spring on a grand piano or the thickness of the glue they were using. In the early 2000’s, Johnson was tuning Yamaha and Steinway pianos brought to the Hunter Inn for the Amati Festival. They were good pianos but terribly neglected. Even after hours of tuning, they could not hold a tune by the next day. Students practiced on those pianos daily and had nothing to show for it. In 2010, the Amati Festival moved to Catskill Mountain Foundation and brought Steinway pianos to the Mountain Top. In the same way, they were good pianos that had been neglected. Students had to wait for the pianos to be serviced before they could even begin to practice. Greenstein remedied the situation by locating well-refurbished Yamaha upright pianos that were purchased by the foundation and stored on the premises yearround. These pre-owned pianos have been remarkably stable from one year to the next, and they need very little to be done to them. Johnson said that Greenstein left a wonderful legacy and was an inspiration to him.
The Steven E. Greenstein Memorial Concert
The Catskill Mountain Foundation will celebrate the memory of Steven E. Greenstein at a concert on Saturday, September 7 at 2:00 pm in the Doctorow Center for the Arts. Faculty and students of the Academy of Fortepiano Performance, the pianist and musicologist duo of Joanne Polk and Jeffrey Langford, and jazz pianist Jamie Saft will perform on pianos from the collection. Tickets are available at catskillmtn.org.
More Information
The Piano Performance Museum is located in the Doctorow Center for the Arts, located at 7971 Main Street, Hunter, NY 12442. It is open Fridays and Saturdays from 11:00 am to 3:00 pm. For more information, visit catskillmtn.org.
Celebrating 25 Years of the Woodstock Film Festival
The
Highlights
Over the past 25 years, the Woodstock Film Festival (WFF) has nurtured a remarkable community that continues to grow. The festival is honored to have hosted filmmakers who have attended multiple times, artists who have launched their careers, and industry titans who have become lifelong friends. Each year we commissioned original artwork for our posters, by artists such as Peter Max, Milton Glazer, Bill Plympton, Mary Frank, Joan Snyder, and for 2024, Matt Dillon. Take a look at some highlights of the films, people, and memories that helped create the history of WFF leading up to the 25th Anniversary.
2000
The inaugural festival, created on a shoestring as a labor of love, brought the film community and film lovers to Woodstock. Musical performances from Rahat Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Graham Parker opened the festival, while Barbara Kopple’s documentary My Generation was the closing night film. Guests included Magnolia Pictures founder Eamonn Bowles, and the late composer Elmer Bernstein and filmmaker Gary Winnick, and Les Blank, who was awarded the first-ever Honorary Maverick Award.
2001
The festival took place nine days after 9/11, helping festival goers heal from earth shattering events through art. We presented a concert by Marshall Crenshaw, and a three-part, avant-garde film series curated and presented by Jonas Mekas. Filmmakers Chris Hegedus and D. A. Pennebaker were honored, and attendees included filmmakers Karyn Kusama and Mary Harron, and actors Stanley Tucci and Ethan Hawke.
2002
Screenings featured Rebecca Miller’s Personal Velocity, which won Sundance’s Grand Jury Prize, and the world premiere of Funny HaHa by then newcomer
Andrew Bujalski. Gov’t Mule, Arlo Guthrie, and Phish all performed during a week of epic parties. Attendees included Neil Burger, Parker Posey, and Marcia Gay Harden, with Liev Schreiber presenting Tim Robbins with the Maverick Award.
2003
The festival opened with Peter Hedges’ Pieces of April, and closed with Casa de los Babys by John Sayles. Live music included the iconic bluegrass musician Peter Rowan, and actor Woody Harrelson was honored with the Maverick Award., Attendees included filmmaker Michael Almereyda, actor Annabella Sciorra, and the late Bingham Ray, tco-founder of indie film distributor October Films.
2004
Featured films included The Woodsman starring Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick, Undertow by David Gordon Green, and Down to the Bone by Debra Granik, starring Vera Farmiga. Cinetic president John Sloss received the inaugural Trailblazer Award. Panel participants included film executive and writer James Schamus, and actors Lili Taylor and Peter Riegert. Virtuose musicians Bela Fleck and Edgar Meyer headlined live shows, and other participants included Mira Nair, Peter Gabriel, Laura Linney, and Melissa Leo.
Dentler, documentarian Heidi Ewing, and filmmaker Ang Lee. The festival gave its first Lifetime Achievement Award to renowned cinematographer Haskell Wexler, and hosted shows headlined by Donovan and Béla Fleck.
2009
The festival’s year-round programming entered the national arena, screening several films in L.A. Back home in Woodstock, the festival honored Steve Buscemi with the Maverick Award, and screened Lonesome Jim. Other films included The Puffy Chair, by Mark and Jay Duplass; The Roost, an early Ti West film; and Twitch, a short by Leah Meyerhoff, the founder of Film Fatales. Janeane Garofalo, William Greaves, and Ellen Kuras were among the attendees.
2005 2006
Longtime friend Barbara Kopple was honored with the Maverick Award, presented by Rosie Perez, and then head of IFC Films Jonathan Sehring was awarded the Trailblazer Award, presented by Matt Dillon. The festival was attended by Larry Fessenden with The Last Winter Douglas McGrath with Infamous, James Ponsoldt with Off the Black, and LGBTQ+
film pioneer Barbara Hammer. Panels spanned crucial industry topics such as “Entertainment Law,” and “The Art of Producing, with with panelist documentarians Rachel Grady and Pamela Yates, editor Sabine Hoffman, producer John Sloss, and actors Giancarlo Esposito, Griffin Dunne, and David Strathairn.
2007
The festival honored Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos and producer Christine Vachon during a week of programming attended by Norman Reedus, Molly Thompson, Jonathan Gray, and Ira Sachs. The festival screened Todd Haynes’ I’m Not There, Mary Stuart Masterson’s The Cake Eaters, Julian Schnabel’s The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, and Married Life, with starring actor Patricia Clarkson attending.
2008
During this seminal year, the festival screened films by industry giants like Greta Gerwig’s Nights and Weekends, Barry Jenkins’ first feature film Medicine for Melancholy, and Bong Joon-ho, Leos Carax, and Michel Gondry’s Tokyo! Guests included Apple TV head Matt
Filmmaker Tze Chun launched his career with his first feature Children of Invention, which premiered at the festival. Ethan Hawke presented filmmaker Richard Linklater with the festival’s Maverick Award. Other attendees included Jonathan Demme, Uma Thurman, and Sarah and Emily Kunstler. Celebrating the ten year anniversary, the festival looked to the future through a panel titled “Redesigning Humanity: The New Frontier.”
2010
The festival took over the Emerson Resort & Spa for screenings of films by Vincent D’Onofrio and John Maggio, coupled with a lavish dinner and an allnight party. A screening of The Singularity is Near: A True Story About the Future was followed by a panel with renowned futurists Ray Kurzweil and Martine Rothblatt. Actors Edie Falco, Adrian Grenier, Keanu Reeves, and filmmakers Ed Burns, Alex Gibney, and Heather Rae attended, and Justin Sane and Sussan Deyhim performed.
This year’s screenings included Musical Chairs by Susan Seidelman, and Peace, Love and Misunderstanding by Bruce Beresford, who was presented with the Maverick Award by actor Tess Harper. Actor and activist Mark Ruffalo received the Meera Gandhi Giving Back Award.
Indie icon Nathan Silver presented his sophomore film Exit Elena, and has since shown all of his work at WFF. Other notable films included the documentary Casting By by Tom Donahue, Chasing Ice by Jeff Olosky, and Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God by Alex Gibney. Legendary filmmaker Jonathan Demme was honored with the festival’s Maverick Award.
Keynote speaker Slava Rubin of Indiegogo discussed crowdfunding to support creative projects, and panels delved into the intersection of new technologies and filmmaking, including “Facebook for Filmmakers and Artists.” Actor Paul Rudd participated in conversation about his career, Vera Farmiga, Andy Garcia and Sonny Rollins attended with their films, and Peter Bogdanovich was honored at the Maverick Awards.
The festival honored Mark Duplass and Darren Aronofsky during a week of programming that screened hits like The Imitation Game and Uncertain Terms. Panels explored such topics as “Women in the Director’s Chair,” and “Impact Filmmaking,” about the power of documentary filmmaking. Actors Natalie Portman, Jennifer Connelly, Courteney Cox, and Melissa Leo were among the participants.
Director and activist Josh Fox gave the keynote speech, while additional talks with musician Natalie Merchant. Filmmakers Atom Egoyan and Guy Maddin were recognized with honorary awards, and attendees participated in discussions about “Social Impact in Media,” and “Film As Memoir.” A sold-out concert at UPAC featured a performance of Cuban music featuring Carlos Varela, joined by special guest Jackson Browne.
The annual Spotlight on Women program featured 44 female directors in 2016, a third of the offerings. The festival honored David Linde with the Trailblazer Award
presented t by filmmaker Alejandro González Iñárritu, Oren Moverman with the Fiercely Independent Award presented by actor Ben Foster, and Leon Gast with the Lifetime Achievement Award presented by Barbara Kopple. Screenings included Thirsty by the late Margo Pelletier. There was also a masterclass with director Catherine Hardwicke, and an Actors Dialogue panel featuring firsttime attendee Karen Allen.
2017
The festival collaborated with filmmakers coming with their films from the Netherlands. Movies by honorees Rebecca Miller and Bill Pullman were accompanied by talks featuring both directors. Other films included Beauty Mark by Harris Doran, and Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold by Griffin Dunne. Guests included documentary filmmaker Lee Hirsch, actors Catherine Curtin and Giancarlo Esposito, and the late filmmaker and climate activist James Redford.
Honorees Julie Taymor, who attended with Across the Universe, and Matthew Heineman, who attended with A Private War, gave talks about their careers, as did actors Steve Buscemi and William Fichtner. The festival screened the exciting drama Wildlife by Paul Dano, and seminal documentaries like Mr. Soul! by Melissa Haizlip and Sam Pollard, and Stay Human by Michael Franti, who performed at the sold-out screening.
For the 20th anniversary, the festival screened some of the most exciting films of 2019, including Parasite, Marriage Story, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, and Swallows. Through documentary screenings like Parkland Rising, the festival explored some of the most important socio-political issues of our time. Events included a performance and screening of Simon Shaheen: A Musical Journey, and conversations with actor Matt Dillon and musician Janis Ian. Producer and philanthropist Abigail Disney was honored at the Maverick Awards.
2019 2020 2021
Despite the pandemic, where all theaters were closed, the festival continued its 20+-year legacy, and most filmmakers attended in-person. Responding to the challenges, the festival screened films at drive-ins and held virtual programming. Notable films included Fully Realized Humans, When Worlds Collide, and A Call to Spy, with filmmakers Lydia Dean Pilcher, Yoruba Richen, Heidi Ewing, Larry Fessenden, Malia Scharf, and Mira Nair attending in person.
The festival screened instant classics like The Worst Person in the World by Joachim Trier and Petite Maman by Céline Sciamma, as well as groundbreaking documentaries. The Maverick Awards celebrated filmmakers Eliza Hittman and Roger Ross Williams, as well as NEON founder Tom Quinn. A special performance featured Kara DioGuardi with David Bacon and The Lumineers’ Jeremiah Fraites.
2022 2023
Actress Awkwafina was honored with the festival’s new Transcendent Talent Award, while Ethan Hawke was feted with the festival’s Maverick Award, Debra Granik with the Fiercely Independent Award, and Arianna Bocco with the Trailblazer Award. The festival screened the award -winning films The Banshees of Inisherin and Triangle of Sadness, and held a musical performance by Clem Snide with Scott Avett.
Legendary filmmaker James Ivory was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award by actor Matthew Modine. 2023 buzzworthy films included I Used to be Funny, and War is Over! Inspired by the Music of John & Yoko by Dave Mullins, which premiered at the WFF and went on to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Short. Actor/musician Kiefer Sutherland performed after a screening of Texas Music Revolution, and the Zombies gave a memorable concert.
2024
Looking to the future, the Woodstock Film Festival will continue to be a vibrant, exciting space for filmmakers. The festival is proud to celebrate 25 years of fiercely independent cinema.
WOODSTOCK NOTES BEFORE 1969
By Greg Madden
On a recent summer weekend, once again the allure of a music jam summoned me, and several of my friends, to head down the back mountain road to Woodstock to celebrate one of our friend’s birthdays … which by the way he had been celebrating for more than a week.
As a quick aside, I have always thought that one should celebrate their birthday for as many days as they are years old. This becomes more challenging, however, the older we get. Not this fellow though, because he and his wife are professional Djembe/ African drummers. Woodstock is perfect fit for their joie de vivre. The beat keeps them young(er). Aside over, now back to our story.
Before retiring for an amazing celebratory birthday meal at The Garden Cafe, we would ingest their rhythmic performance with dozens of others playing various percussion instruments at the weekly Woodstock late Sunday afternoon drum circle, a Village Green tradition, this summer celebrating its 25th season. All in attendance paused to feel the true Woodstock come alive with its vibrant resounding and eternal spirit.
That day, I traveled to Woodstock knowing that I had an assignment to write something about Woodstock for this month’s column and was not sure what to write about. This was a challenge, as I was wondering if everything had already been written about Woodstock, 50 years after the 1969 festival that bears its name (even if it actually took place a good 60 or so miles away). Well, this circle “spoke” volumes as I was ignited with the rhythm, as was true for all in attendance.
What could be said that hadn’t already been previously explored by other writers? Recently another dear friend, a talented local actress, shared that various musical frequencies have been designed, performed and harmonized deeply into the fabric of Woodstock’s soul for generations. She mused that this region has drawn amazing musical and theatrical expression for many decades and has always been ahead of its time. So off to the internet I went, delving into this area’s rich history as I journeyed to find out how one iconic musical era had been built off the rich artistic legacy of the decades prior.
Being locked into the rhythmic entrainment of that drum circle as time seemingly stood still really helped me, and everything seemingly came together at that moment. I knew I had to set the wayback machine to take me back to the Woodstock that existed before half a million strong would flood the Catskill Region back in the days of free love, flower children and hippies. Those were the days my friends. A magical mystery tour and an Aquarian Exposition.
The Woodstock Festival of 1969 gets all the attention from the baby boomers and the generations who followed along, but let’s look back at the gestation period that built the rhythmic foundation for that iconic world changing “experience”.
Long before 1969, the festival that emblazoned its name in the annals of music history, Woodstock has been a haven and melting pot for artists, musicians, and visionaries, cultivating a rich and diverse musical heritage that set the stage for its pivotal
role in the countercultural revolution.
Woodstock’s journey as an artistic enclave began in the early 20th century, largely influenced by Ralph Radcliffe Whitehead, an Englishman who founded the Byrdcliffe Arts Colony in 1902.
Whitehead, along with colleagues Bolton Brown and Hervey White, envisioned a utopian community that would nurture the arts in harmony with nature. Byrdcliffe attracted painters, writers, and musicians who sought inspiration in the serene landscape of the Catskills.
This colony is the oldest operating arts and crafts colony in America and it laid the groundwork for Woodstock’s future as a magnet for creative minds. Byrdcliffe was created as an experiment in utopian living inspired by the Arts and Crafts movement. So in short, Woodstock has always been cool and if you like it now, you’d have liked it then too.
Among the early settlers to the region was the composer John Cage, who arrived in Woodstock in the 1930s. Cage’s avant-garde compositions and pioneering work in electronic music were emblematic of the experimental spirit that Woodstock would come to embody. Critics have lauded him as one of the most influential composers of the 20th century. He was also instrumental in the development of modern dance, mostly through his association with choreographer Merce Cunningham. The presence of such innovative artists helped establish Woodstock as a place where traditional boundaries in art and music were regularly challenged and transcended.
As we march forward into the 1940’s and 1950’s, the vibe saw a burgeoning of the eclectic folk music scene here, influenced by the broader American folk revival.
Key and legendary figures like Pete Seeger and The Weavers found a sympathetic audience in the town. Seeger, in particular, became closely associated with Woodstock, not only for his music but also for his activism and efforts to preserve precious folk traditions. His songs resonated with themes of social justice, peace, and environmentalism, echoing the values of the local community, another theme that has always been a Woodstock institution.
Folk music gatherings became a staple, with informal jam sessions and hootenannies taking place in homes, barns, and community centers. These events fostered a sense of camaraderie and artistic exchange, drawing musicians from across the country. The emphasis on acoustic instruments and storytelling in folk music provided a counterpoint to the increasingly commercialized music industry of the time.
You can see that there was always room for more performers and styles, as the scene offered a blended fusion for the melodic and lyrical landscape of the times.
In addition to folk music, jazz musicians and classical composers were attracted to and contributed to its eclectic musical tapestry. The presence of the renowned Music Inn in nearby Lenox, Massachusetts, which hosted jazz legends like Duke Ellington and Dave Brubeck, had a direct influence on the local jazz scene. Musicians would often travel between the two locales,
enriching the local music culture with impromptu performances and collaborations.
Classical music also has a powerful foothold in Woodstock, thanks to the Maverick Concerts, one of the oldest continuous summer chamber music festivals in the country. Founded in 1916 by Hervey White, Maverick Concerts became a platform for both established and emerging classical musicians. The rustic, open-air “music chapel” set in the woods provided an intimate setting for performances that emphasized a close connection between the artists and the audience.
Dare we forget about the Beatniks, heavens be. The post second World War era saw an influx of writers, poets, and artists associated with the Beat Generation and bohemian culture come flocking. Figures like Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac found refuge in our tranquil environment, which contrasted with the urban chaos of New York City. The Beats’ rebellious spirit and emphasis on spontaneous creativity aligned with the town’s artistic ethos.
This period also saw the rise of coffeehouses and small clubs that became venues for poetry readings, folk music, and jazz performances. The Tinker Street Café and Café Espresso were among the notable spots where artists and musicians gathered. These venues played a crucial role in nurturing young talent and fostering an environment where different artistic disciplines could intersect.
So now it makes perfect sense that by the 1960’s, Woodstock had become a melting pot of musical genres, and the arrival of rock and roll further diversified its soundscape.
Bob Dylan, one of the most influential musicians of the era, moved to Woodstock in 1963. Dylan’s presence in the town had a magnetic effect, attracting other notable musicians such as The Band, who recorded their seminal album Music from Big Pink in a house they shared in nearby West Saugerties.
Dylan’s work during this period marked a significant evolution in his music, blending folk, rock, and literary influences. This collaborative environment allowed for experimental recordings and genre-blending that would define much of the 1960s rock music. The Band’s sound, characterized by its rootsy, Americana influences, was a direct product of this fertile creative environment.
The Woodstock Festival of 1969 became a defining moment in music history, symbolizing peace, love, and unity. However, the festival’s success was deeply rooted in the rich and varied musical traditions laid here by so many others. The town’s legacy as a haven for artists and musicians continued to thrive long after the festival, with new generations of artists drawing inspiration from its storied past.
Woodstock has maintained its reputation as a creative haven. Events like the Woodstock Film Festival and ongoing performances and exhibitions at venues like the Bearsville Theater, Colony Woodstock, Levon Helm Studios, Maverick Concerts, Byrdcliffe, the Woodstock School of Art, the Woodstock Artists Association
and Museum, and at Opus 40 in nearby Saugerties reinforce the town’s commitment to nurturing the arts.
So as you find yourself magnetically drawn to our town some Sunday afternoon and enjoying the vibes of the weekly drum circle, you can feel the history and the melodies that Woodstock has shaped, released and shared across Mother Earth. Yes, you are at the epicenter.
From this town, reserved for musical royalty, a space that crafted the energy of creativity realized right where you stand and where a magnetism collected all who needed to be here for just this very “experience”.
As you flow through your Woodstock “experience” you may realize that at the very table next to yours or even while you spend a moment with someone who waited on you, that that “experiential” moment in time might have been shared with the next “big thing” in musical or artistic expression, perhaps the next Joplin, Hendrix or Dylan.
It begs the question … “Are you Experienced?” (Thanks Jimi)
Greg Madden is the Development Manager at Wellness Rx, Pharmacy for the Public Good. He also practices ancient healing modalities like Tui-Na Medical Massage and BioPhoton Light Therapy. More at IlluminatingWellness.care.
WellnessRx, Pharmacy for the Public Good is America’s first nonprofit Community Pharmacy located in Phoenicia, NY (PharmacyforthePublicGood.org), on Main Street.
Visit Woodstock
America’s Most Famous Small Town
THE ARTS
Clouds Gallery 1 Mill Hill Road
Woodstock, NY 12498
cloudsofwoodstock.com
845 679 8155
A contemporary craft gallery representing the finest in American Crafts including handblown glass, handmade sterling silver and gold jewelry, as well as ceramics and more. A well curated collection of both functional and sculptural items, unique one of a kind jewelry pieces and decorative items. Whether you are looking for a Wedding, Birthday, Anniversary, Holiday, or special occasion gift, we can help you find the perfect one. Located in the center of town, Clouds Gallery has been a staple of the Woodstock community for 50 years.
Woodstock Artists Association & Museum
28 Tinker St.
Woodstock, NY 12498
woodstockart.org
845 679 2940
Since its founding in 1919, the Woodstock Artists Association & Museum has been committed to exhibiting, collecting and supporting artists and art education and in sustaining the tradition of Woodstock as a “Colony of the Arts.” Located in the center of the village of Woodstock, New York, the WAAM functions as a cultural center as well as a repository for the work of American artists associated with the Art Colony. Each year, the WAAM presents a full schedule of group, solo and historic exhibitions of regional artists throughout its five spacious galleries.
Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild
34 Tinker St.
Woodstock, NY 12498
woodstockguild.org
845 679 2079
The Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild is a regional center for the arts. From its 250-acre mountainside campus and its arts and performance center in the village of Woodstock, Byrdcliffe offers an integrated program of exhibitions, performance, classes, workshops, symposia, and artists’ residencies. Byrdcliffe embraces all disciplines of artistic endeavor in a collaborative spirit, and seeks creative partnership with other not for profit and educational entities in order to leverage its unique resources for the benefit of the cultural life of the Hudson Valley region. Byrdcliffe was founded in 1902 and has operated as a nonprofit organization since 1938.
Woodstock School of Art
2470 NY-212
Woodstock, NY 12498
woodstockschoolofart.org
845 679 2388
Classes in fine art, including drawing, painting, printmaking, and sculpture are offered year-round in fully climate-controlled studios in historic bluestone and native timber buildings. Classes are open to all, with no entrance requirements or experience necessary. Gallery is open to the public Monday-Saturday. Visit woodstockschoolofart.org for more information.
Woodstock Artists Association & Museum
Since its beginnings in 1919, the Woodstock Artists Association & Museum has been committed to exhibiting and collecting work in all media by area artists and supporting the tradition of Woodstock as the “Colony of the Arts.” Located in the center of the village of Woodstock, New York, WAAM functions as a cultural center as well as a repository for the work of American artists associated with the Woodstock Art Colony.
Celebrating both tradition and innovation in art, WAAM honors the rich legacy of 20th-century Woodstock artists, recognizing their achievements in landscape, portrait, and abstract art. As guardians of this heritage, WAAM also embraces the avant-garde, inviting a new era of experimental, conceptual, and socially conscious art.
Each year, WAAM presents a full schedule of concurrent solo and group exhibitions of work by local and regional artists, as well as select exhibitions of works by national artists throughout its spacious galleries. Notable recent historical exhibitions include Restoring Indigenous Voices: Landscapes from the Permanent Collection, which explored the historical contexts of a selection of landscapes from the permanent collection acknowledging the Native American significance of well-known mountains, rivers, fields and sites in the region; Norma Morgan: In the Lands of the Moors and Catskills, a retrospective of the paintings and prints of well-known African-American artist Norma Morgan in the historical gallery; and Circa 1969, which explored the period between 1968 and 1972 in the Woodstock art scene, capturing the spirit of the transitional era.
This year in the Main Gallery, visitors experienced thematic contemporary group shows that highlighted the diversity of artistic expression. By a Thread: Fiber Art explored the intricate world of textile artistry, showcasing the skill and creativity of artists working with fibers. Far & Wide: National opened the doors to artists from across the country, providing a glimpse into the broader contemporary art scene. The fall 2024 exhibition, Spirit of Woodstock, shows the continuing legacy of art that pushes boundaries by local artists. Additionally, solo shows feature six standout regional artists, each with their own unique style and vision. This year, street photographer Onaje Benjamin captured the energy and essence of urban life through his lens; emerging artist Kelsey Renko brought a fresh perspective to abstract art with her large-scale colorful paintings; fiber artist Kathy Greenwood wove intricate narratives through her textile creations; painter and sculptor Sydney Cash blurs the boundaries between two and three dimensional art; multi-media artist Shanti Grumbine pushes the boundaries of artistic expression through thought-provoking installations; and dynamic symmetrical painter Carol Levine mesmerizes with her vibrant compositions. Additional contemporary exhibitions take place in WAAM’s Founders Gallery including juried and members-only small works shows and an annual site-specific installation, this year presented by sound artist Suzy Sureck.
Through this broad range of historical and contemporary exhibitions, education programs, and community engagement initiatives, WAAM fosters creativity, dialogue, and transformation for generations to come.
BANK
Ulster Savings Bank
68 Mill Hill Rd.
Woodstock, NY 12498
ATM and Drive-through available Ulstersavings.com 845 679 8384
Ulster Savings Bank is a locally focused and operated mutual savings bank with locations throughout the Hudson Valley. As a bank with no stockholders, our profits are reinvested back into the communities we serve. We are proud to be the recipient of numerous community awards reflecting our belief that helping community changes lives. We invite you to stop by our location in historic Woodstock and say hi to branch manager Alexis Nastaszewski. Experience the local difference with US and bank where you matter.
FILM FESTIVAL
25th Annual Woodstock Film Festival
October 15-20, 2024
Venues across Woodstock, Kingston, Saugerties and Rosendale woodstockfilmfestival.org
Now celebrating its 25th year, the Woodstock Film Festival (WFF) is a not-for-profit organization that nurtures and supports emerging and established filmmakers, sharing their creative voices through an annual festival and year-round programming to promote culture, diversity, community, educational opportunities and economic growth. WFF provides mentoring and educational programs benefitting filmmakers, students and diverse audiences, while serving as a powerful cultural and economic engine for the Hudson Valley and beyond. Such efforts have consistently resulted in the festival being hailed as one of the top regional film festivals worldwide.
FLORIST
Jarita’s Florist
17 Tinker St.
Woodstock, NY 12498
jaritas.com
845 679 6161
Jarita’s Florist has been proudly serving the mid-Hudson Valley area since 1977, offering a rotating collection of flowers, distinctive plants, vases and carefully curated gifts. Overseen by noted floral designer Rita Sands and husband/partner Jay Sadowitz, Jarita’s is committed to offering not only the most exceptional floral arrangements and gifts, but also the exquisite attention to detail that comes with over 40 years in the business. Because all of our customers are important, our staff will always go the extra mile to make your floral gift perfect. Make Jarita’s Florist your first choice for flowers and relax, knowing we have a “100% No Questions Asked” replacement policy. Open Wednesday-Saturday, 10am-5pm.
Opus 40
The viewer is gobsmacked when considering this single-handed achievement.
In 1938, Harvey Fite, an actor, dancer, and sculptor who established the fine arts department at Bard College in the early 1930’s, acquired an abandoned bluestone quarry in Saugerties NY, near the Village of Woodstock. Over decades, Fite worked to transform the quarry into an extraordinary six and a half-acre hand laid earthwork masterpiece, which he named Opus 40, as he planned to commit 40 years of his life to its completion. Beside the quarry he built his home and studio from recovered barn lumber.
He pays tribute to the site’s labor history in a separate building housing the Quarry Museum, where exhibits include traditional quarrying and masonry tools. Fite was fascinated with the act of labor and was committed to constructing his earthwork single-handedly and with only primitive tools, having faith and trust in his body and in the basic skills and tools used by early quarrymen.
Throughout his mid-twentieth century life and during his tenure at Bard, Fite and his wife, Barbara, welcomed visitors and artists to his site for music, performance, entertainment and artistic enrichment. Opus 40 was and remains an active, vital element in the regions artistic community. Fite passed away in 1976, 37 years into his project.
Fite’s widow established the non-profit in 1978 to showcase the 6.5 acre in-earth bluestone sculpture and its surroundings. Opus 40 has grown to nearly 60 acres of meadows, statues, paths and abandoned quarries. The family continued to use and own the house while the sculpture and grounds were open for viewing and provided a setting for diverse and dynamic musical and artistic performances, from jazz to dance, global music to local performers. In 2018 the organization hired its first professional executive director. In 2023 the non-profit acquired the 3,500 square foot house from the family, positioning the organization for the next steps in growth and development.
Today, Opus 40 is open five days a week in season for tours, general visits, and programs including hands-on workshops, nature walks, community events, and school field trips. Opus 40 offers a vibrant season of live performance — on, in, or framed by Fite’s remarkable sculpture. In all that we do, the goal is to develop direct connections between Fite’s living artwork and the public.
Art critic Brendan Gill, writing in Architectural Digest in 1989, described Opus 40 as “One of the largest and most beguiling works of art on the entire continent.” Now on the National Register of Historic Places, Opus 40 continues to engage visitors through its mind-boggling immensity and sheer spiritual beauty.
Woodstock School of Art
The Woodstock School of Art is a not-for-profit educational institution located in the renowned artists’ colony of Woodstock, New York. Nestled in the pristine woodlands of the Catskill Mountains, approximately 100 miles north of New York City, the school has been a hub for art education since 1968. It offers over 100 year-round studio classes and intensive workshops in fine arts, including drawing, painting, printmaking, and sculpture, led by professional teaching artists. These classes, conducted in fully climate-controlled studios housed in historic bluestone and native timber buildings, are open to adults of all skill levels, with no entrance requirements or prior experience needed. The Woodstock School of Art hosts five gallery exhibitions each year. These exhibitions showcase a diverse range of artworks, providing opportunities for both students and professional artists to display their work in a vibrant, supportive community.
GARDEN SUPPLY
Basil Garden Supply
Inside The Gilded Carriage
95 Tinker Street
Woodstock, NY 12498
gildedcarriage.com
845 679 2607
Celebrating 28 years! Specializing in teak, wicker and mixed materials, umbrellas, hammocks and cushions. Garden, poolside, porch or deck & patio. Browse the Kingsley Bate website, and give us a call for prices. Dining tables & chairs, lounge chairs, sofas & sectionals, benches, chaise lounges, swings & rockers. We carry cleaner and sealer to restore your old, weathered teak back to its original color. Need help designing your outdoor space, we make local housecalls! Free assembly and local delivery.
HARDWARE
Houst Hardware
4 Mill Hill Road
Woodstock, NY 12498
housthardware.com
845 679 2115
Shop local with Houst Hardware, independent and family owned for over 90 years. For all your projects, Houst Has IT. Benjamin Moore Paints, Equipment Rentals, Tools, Plumbing,
Electrical, Organic and Heirloom Garden Seeds, Organic Soils and Fertilizers, Housewares, Weber grills, Seasonal products, Camping and Toys. Everything you need for work and play.
LIVE MUSIC
Maverick Concerts
120 Maverick Road
Woodstock, NY 12498
maverickconcerts.org
Maverick Concerts, the oldest continuous summer chamber music festival in America, is set amid the serene woodland just outside Woodstock, NY. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the charming rustic hall is the ideal venue for an intimate encounter with chamber music. Maverick presents concerts by internationally renowned classical, jazz, and contemporary music ensembles from July through early September. Concerts are on Saturday evenings and Sunday afternoons. Maverick Family Saturdays, short interactive events designed for kids of all ages, are free and open to everyone on Saturday mornings.
Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild
The Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild provides a vibrant center for arts and crafts in the beautiful and unique rural community of Woodstock, NY, while preserving the historic and natural environment of one of the earliest utopian arts colonies in America. Byrdcliffe offers year-round events, exhibitions and classes, including a robust artist-inresidency program.
Every year the Byrdcliffe Artists-in-Residence program provides over 60 visual artists, writers, architects, and composers of exceptional talent uninterrupted creative time within the serene natural setting of the Byrdcliffe Arts Colony. Artists-in-residence open their studios to the public at the end of each monthly session. A tour of White Pines, home of Byrdcliffe founder Ralph Radcliffe Whitehead, is offered by historian Henry T. Ford monthly during the summer and fall.
Ceramics and jewelry making classes are offered on the colony throughout the year. Theatre and music events are held at the Brydcliffe Theatre at the colony, and art exhibitions are held throughout they year at the Kleinert James Center for the Arts in downtown Woodstock.
Additional information about events, residencies, classes, the history of Byrdcliffe, and how to become a member may be found at woodstockguild.org
MOVEMENT STUDIO
Mountain View Studio
20 Mountainview Ave.
Woodstock, NY 12498
mtnviewstudio.com
845 679 0901
Mountainview Studio is located
in a serene setting in the heart of Woodstock. A detached newly built therapy studio, Yutori (the Japanese concept of intentionally slowing down to simply be, breathe, listen and appreciate the beauty of nature and life), is now home to the studio’s healing classes, including massage, sound, reiki, and is also available for holistic wellness practitioners to rent.
Sunflower Market
75 Mill Hill Road
Woodstock, NY 12498
24 Garden Street
Rhinebeck, NY, 12572
sunflowernatural.com
845 679 5361 (Woodstock) • 845 876 2555 (Rhinebeck)
Sunflower is dedicated to providing products you can feel good about sharing with people you love. Prioritizing working with local farms, families, and business, Sunflower is devoted to providing clean and sustainably sourced food, 100% organic produce and a selection of carefully curated items that fit all dietary needs.
Win Morrison Realty
5 Tinker St.
Woodstock, NY 12498
Additional locations in Kingston, Catskill, Phoenicia, Saugerties & Windham winmorrisonrealty.com
845 679 9444 (Woodstock)
At Win Morrison Realty we listen to your wants and needs while assisting you to make them a reality. We pride ourselves on being the largest and most respected real estate company in the Hudson Valley. Whether it is a weekend retreat, mansion, land, commercial property or business, our experienced agents will assist you every step of the way. We have seven offices located throughout the Hudson Valley and a team of over 100 real estate professionals. We are members of numerous MLS (Multiple Listing Services) to serve you, from New York City to the Adirondacks.
RESTAURANTS
Allison’s Restaurant
51 Tinker Street
Woodstock, NY 12498
allisonsrestaurantwoodstock.com
845 684 5887
Italian restaurant serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Offering classic Italian dinners, seafood, pasta, salads, wraps, main courses and soups. Specials include portobello salad with salmon, tortilla soup and falafel with pita. Open 8 am to 9 pm, seven days a week.
Bear Cantina
In the Bearsville Center: 295A Tinker St. Woodstock, NY 12498
thebearcantinawoodstock.org 845 684 7223
Contemporary Mexican made fresh! All of your favorites are here: burritos, tacos, quesadillas, fajitas, chimichangas and more, with several meat, fish, chicken and vegan options, and a kids menu. Enjoy streamside dining with both indoor & outdoor seating. View our full menu and place your order on the Clover app.
Oriole 9
17 Tinker Street
Woodstock, NY 12498
oriole9.com
845 679 5763
Celebrating our 18th year serving the Woodstock community with a locally inspired menu, with fresh ingredients from our very own garden at Woodstock Day School. Our food is tasteful, creative, yet simple and genuine—and always made from scratch with love. Delicious food from owners dedicated to sustainable living and community cohesion. Zagat-rated. Open for breakfast, lunch and brunch from 9 am to 3 pm every day except Thursday. Online ordering and pickup available.
The Woodstock Pub 17 Mill Hill Rd. Woodstock, NY 12498
thewoodstockpub.com 845 684 5470
Pub Fare with a Mediterranean Flair! Burgers, sandwiches, pasta, pub favorites, soups, salads and more! Vegetarian, vegan, and gluten-free options available. With years of experience in the finest restaurants, our staff is excited to
present their vision to you and all our guests. Our caring and committed staff will ensure you have a fantastic experience with us. Our restaurant is available for private events: weddings, business lunches, dinners, cocktail receptions, and more. We would love to discuss how to be a part of your next event.
RETAIL
The Gilded Carriage
95 Tinker Street Woodstock, NY 12498 gildedcarriage.com 845 679 2607
For the well equipped kitchen and beautiful home. Cookware, kitchen gadgets, baking supplies, small electrics, dinnerware, glassware, flatware, table & kitchen linens, candles, bar supplies, local chocolates, outdoor furniture, European soaps. Our brands include Aarke, April Cornell, Bodum, Casafina, Chemex, Cuisinart, Field Company, Kingsley Bate, Le Creuset, Le Jacquard Français, Peugeot, Sodastream, Vietri, Votivo, and Wüsthof. Celebrating 65 years! We are ready to retire!! If you know someone who would like to take over the business, please call.
Lily’s Boutique
24 Tinker Street
Woodstock, NY 12498
lilyswoodstockny.com
Facebook: @lilyswoodstock
Instagram: @tinystainkerlilys
845 679 6470
Lily’s Boutique has been in Woodstock for 30 years. We keep evolving to stay fresh and fun! We are now offering handcrafted cozy cotton reversible quilts, beautiful tablecloths, napkins, rag rugs and embroidered pillows for your home. Great gift items for all special occasions! Luscious warm socks, scarves, hats, sweaters, leggings, jewels, local skincare, yummy chocolates, local designers and fun childrenswear! Lily’s always has a fantastic line of partywear! So if you want to look and feel fantastic, come to Lily’s and treat yourself!
Maverick Road
54 Tinker Street Woodstock, NY 12498
maverickroad.com
845 202 1103
Maverick Road celebrates the artistic & maverick spirit of Woodstock, with curated items from small makers and fair trade merchants. Our mission is to create a space that celebrates beauty, humor and the natural world. We offer a selection of local pottery, prints, housewares, greeting cards & gifts, while creating an uplifting, cheerful & inspiring experience. Here’s what our customers have to say: “It smells so good
in here.” … “It’s so happy in here!” … “I want to move in” … “I want to buy everything!” … “Lovingly Curated” … “Smells Like Rainbows!”
Pegasus Footwear
10 Mill Hill Road
Woodstock, NY 12498
pegasusshoes.com
845 679 2373
Visit Pegasus of Woodstock, Rhinebeck, and New Paltz for the footwear experience of a lifetime! This unique store proudly offers personalized fitting expertise, stylish privatelabel exclusives designed with the latest comfort technology, and new arrivals from the world’s top brands. Enjoy an extensive selection from favorites like Birkenstock, Dansko, Blundstone, On, Brooks, New Balance, L’Artiste, Ugg, and many others. With comfy footwear for every need, plus an awesome line-up of seasonal events and fundraising weekends, you’ll love getting to know Pegasus. Information on brands, events, new arrivals, and more at pegasusshoes.com.
Woodstock Design
9 Tinker Street
Woodstock, NY 12498
facebook.com/WoodstockDesignNY
845 679 8776
Women’s clothing and accessories in the heart of Woodstock since 1981 All of your favorite brands and styles + your future favorites. Look Great & Feel Great!
Allison’s Restaurant
Welcome to Allison’s Restaurant, nestled in the heart of Woodstock, NY. Our culinary haven offers a delightful blend of locally sourced ingredients and international flavors. Savor our chef’s innovative creations, served with a warm and welcoming smile. Discover a dining experience that’s both elegant and cozy, where every visit feels like coming home. At Allison’s Restaurant, our mission is to make each diner feel special, providing everyone with an experience based on detail, quality, creativity and innovation. We are committed to providing an incomparable experience for everyone, with a cozy atmosphere and fresh food prepared by a qualified team.
Our extensive menu starts with breakfast. Huevos rancheros, our Allison Breakfast special, comes with eggs cooked to your taste, homemade black beans, sweet plantains, cream, fresh cheese, and avocado, served with tortillas or toast. We also offer a variety of avocado toasts, smoked salmon on a bagel, and much more.
Our lunch menu features a variety of homemade sandwiches, including our delicious corned beef, turkey, pastrami, falafel, and more. And don’t miss our unique and delicious Butternut Squash and French onion soups!
Our dinner menu is filled with Italian classics such as homemade lasagna, Chicken Francese, pesto tortellini with scallops, delicious meatballs and more. Our menu of special dishes changes each week, to keep things fresh and customers coming back for more!
Make sure to include a meal at Allison’s on your visit to Woodstock! We are located at 51 Tinker Street in Woodstock. For more information, visit allisonsrestaurantwoodstock.com. Bon appétit!
SCULPTURE PARK & EVENT SPACE
Opus 40
356 George Sickle Road
Saugerties, NY 12477
opus40.org
845 246 3400
Created over 37 years by pioneering artist and professor Harvey Fite, Opus 40 is a nonprofit sculpture park, museum and artistic environment with 63 acres of meadows, historic quarrying trails and bluestone quarries—centered on 6.5 acres of earthwork sculpture hand-sculpted entirely from bluestone harvested on site. He framed his stonework sculpture with the surrounding woods and mountains, ensuring the local ecosystem would always be central to the impact of the site. Guests can experience our site for day-visits, guided tours, classes and workshops, or a vibrant season of live performances.
WELLNESS
Woodstock Infusions
104 Mill Hill Road
Woodstock, NY 12498
woodstockinfusions.com
845 684 5257
At Woodstock Infusions, we are dedicated to a wellness mission centered around our core principles: “move, sweat, nourish, hydrate.” These essential
pillars of a successful wellness agenda are supported by our state-of-the-art yoga and pilates infrared-heated studio, organic smoothie café, and comprehensive IV therapy center. Go to our website www.woodstockinfusions.com and join our community today!
WINE & LIQUOR
Woodstock Wine & Liquor
63 Tinker St.
Woodstock, NY 12498
woodstockwineandliquor.com
845 679 2669
Located in the heart of Woodstock, WW&L is a family-owned, lovingly curated boutique shop with more than 1000 different wines, spirits, sakes and ciders to choose from. Customers discover a focus on local wines and spirits, naturally and sustainably produced wines from around the world, in an inviting, non-pretentious environment. Respecting tradition while celebrating innovation. Check out the free in-store tastings and order through woodstockwineandliquor.com for pickup or free local delivery.
Alba’s Kitchen
Whatever You Want, Whenever You Want it
By Michael Koegel
The Catskills have aways existed in a boom or bust cycle.
From turn-of-the-century summer manors for millionaire industrialists to a deforested wasteland; from the borscht belt resorts of the 50’s to a poverty stricken no-man’s-land. The 70’s and 80’s hosted skiers and revelers then, when the celebration ended the last bus full of hung-over partiers skidded out of town. At the turn of this century many of the tiny Catskill towns were practically boarded up, with the few remaining businesses depending on the dwindling traffic from hunting and fishing season.
But then a new generation of New Yorkers who were priced out of the already over-crowded beach resorts like the Hamptons, Fire Island and the Jersey Shore looked north to the mountains, and the Catskills for a while, became the undiscovered destination for those in the know. Social media is terrible at keeping secrets, however, and the Catskills started to go viral, entering into a new boom cycle. Then the pandemic launched that boom cycle into the stratosphere.
Young entrepreneurs, especially those in the food and hospitality sector, acted like Magellan discovering the East Indies, and sent word home to Brooklyn about a vast under-served area known as The Catskills. Soon, it seemed as if anyone with two investors to rub together, and a dream of getting out of the city,
opened a restaurant in the Catskills. You know the type of places I’m referring to: Bitcoin-financed, Instagram-driven, designer showplaces, with $24 infused cocktails concocted by Master Mixologists, and a $65 entree with no sides. Sometimes the food is pretty good, but it’s hard to locate the heart and soul of these places.
So when a mom and pop place springs up without the hype of influencers, a restaurant who’s owners are in it because they love food and cooking and hospitality, and aren’t looking for “likes” and a return on investment for their shareholders, it’s a cause for celebration. Which is why I was so excited to stumble into Alba’s Kitchen in Woodstock.
Alba Giron, who opened Alba’s Kitchen in November of 2023, is the heart and soul of Alba’s Kitchen. After emigrating from Guatemala to the Woodstock area, Alba worked in a variety of local restaurants including Oriole 9, Sunfrost, The Woodstock Pub and A Taste of Home, all with the goal to one day open her own restaurant. Today, Alba is gleefully excited to be living out her dream; she’s gracious and enthusiastic and genuinely happy to welcome you into her kitchen.
Alba’s “investors” are her family. While Alba runs the kitchen, her husband Oscar manages the restaurant along with their two
sons, Oscar Jr. and Christian. The kitchen is staffed by Alba’s two sisters and at least one brother; Alba comes from a large family and I honestly lost count of the people I encountered. Her father, Manuel, operates the pizza oven.
Alba’s is an unassuming place; the converted two-story home on Tinker Street is easy to miss. My friend Matthew who was joining me for a meal drove right past the place. The dining room is simple almost to the point of being spartan. Dark wooden chairs and tables—set symmetrically along the walls and down the center of it’s dining room—are clean and modest. In fact the most eye-catching element in the room is the bright red pizza oven that is tucked back into a corner of the partially exposed kitchen.
So, it’s a pizza joint then? Well, yes and no. Since Alba is Guatemalan, and features food from where she was raised, it’s Central American? Sure, that too. Her Google page says it’s an Italian restaurant. Kinda sorta.
When we were each handed a menu, an epic six-page, laminated number that you might expect to receive at a diner, with headings that included “Breakfast and Lunch,” “Sandwiches and Burgers,” “Soups and Salads,” “Dinner,” “Kid’s Menu,” “Starters,” and the afore-mentioned “Pizza,” the big picture came into view. Alba’s has everything. Yes, the menu was huge and eclectic, but that’s as far as the comparison to a diner experience goes. Every dish on Alba’s menu is made from scratch.
Alba’s wide-ranging menu runs the gamut from a Tofu Scramble, to a Quesadilla, to Linguini with Clams, with just enough Central American dishes smattered throughout to satisfy both the Chef and her customers. When I asked Alba why she chose such a wide ranging selection of dishes, when she could easily have opened a Guatemalan restaurant (I mean, who wouldn’t welcome that?) her response was surprising, “I want to have everything for everybody.” She went on to say that if someone came into the restaurant and (shockingly) couldn’t find anything at all on the menu that they wanted to eat, she would make them anything they wanted.
I just have to stop here and reflect on that. Try that in any other restaurant—anywhere—and see what they say. Your own mother won’t even do that for you—and she loves you! Not only that, but Alba’s is open 7 days a week, from 8:00 am for breakfast right on though to dinner when the kitchen closes at 9:00 (except Sundays when they close at 5:00). Not only does she want you to
have whatever you want, but she wants you to have it whenever you want it.
Matthew and I eagerly chose from the menu at hand, but we leaned into the Guatemalan dishes. First up were the Pupusas, which came in four varieties: Black Bean and Cheese, Pork, Spinach, and Zucchini. Each of these fillings was served between two homemade corn tortillas, that were then brushed with olive oil and grilled until crispy. They all had a surprisingly distinct flavor and a satisfying crunch, well at least the three of them I was able to try did, as Matthew was reluctant to give up his grasp on the Pork Pupusa.
We tried the Chicken Enchiladas next, and while that might sound like a safe choice, I always order Enchiladas when I first see them on a menu, as I tend to judge the entire restaurant on their ability to serve their enchiladas with both crispy and gooey melted cheese on top. If you get that right then I’ll trust anything else you serve. Alba’s got it exactly right. They also came with a generous portion of guacamole, pico de Gallo and sour cream, as well as two separate sides of black beans and rice.
I need to give a shout out to Alba’s rice. Usually when an entree is served on a bed of rice, the rice feels like an afterthought; a plate-filler that you gobble down after everything else is gone. Alba’s rice came highlighted in it’s own bowl, and was so light and flavorful that I finished the entire serving as soon as I tasted it. That’s the kind of detail that make’s Alba’s Kitchen so unique. Every component on every plate was considered and elevated.
Alba’s Arugula Salad came with an unexpected twist: it was topped with fresh peach slices, toasted pecans and gouda cheese, and was a light, slightly fruity ending to our meal. If you’re lucky you’ll stop in on a night when Alba is serving specials, like her Guatemalan version of tamales that come wrapped in plantain leaves, or Horniado which is a chicken stew baked with tomatoes, garlic, peppers and onions.
We didn’t try any of the more Americanized dishes on the meal, but to be fair there was just so much to choose from. My advice is to get there soon, because as much as I know that Alba sincerely wants to be all things to all people, her giant menu and offer to cook you anything that you want can’t last forever, can it? Hopefully it can.
In the meantime Alba’s Kitchen is a hit; the online community is giving this place raves. In fact, the only negative review that I saw came from a guy who couldn’t figure out how to open the front door and left hungry.
Alba’s Kitchen, is located at 138 Tinker Street in Woodstock, NY 12498, and is open 7 days a week for breakfast, lunch and dinner, from 8:00 am to 9:00 pm, except for Sundays when they close at 5:00 pm. Reservations not needed (yet!), but if you want to call, you can reach them at 845 684 5838. If the front door sticks, pull hard!
Michael Koegel is a writer, director and producer. He owns Mama’s Boy Burgers in Tannersville, NY.
Eighth Annual Pottery Festival
CELEBRATING CATSKILL MOUNTAIN FOUNDATION
BRINGING ART TO THE MOUNTAINS
SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 11AM-5PM
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 11AM-4PM
HANDMADE POTTERY BY LOCAL AND REGIONAL ARTISTS Tyler Gulden
ARCHER | BOGEN | CULLEN | DEHNERT | GARCIA
GILLEN | GULDEN | KERNS | KERR | KUNHARDT
KUNZE | LEVENSTEIN | NICHOLS | PELHAM | PELTZMAN
REIFFER | ROTHCHILD | WATERHOUSE
IN CASE OF INCLEMENT WEATHER, THE SHOW WILL TAKE PLACE IN THE SPEAKERS SPACE, ART STUDIO AND FIBERS BUILDING ON CAMPUS
10 BIG HOLLOW ROAD, MAPLECREST, NY 12454
Margaretville Cauliflower Festival
20 Years and Counting
By Diane Galusha for Central Catskills Chamber of Commerce
As the Central Catskills Chamber of Commerce and partners prepare for the annual Margaretville Cauliflower Festival, ‘20’ is the magic number.
Not only will this be the 20th festival (Saturday, September 21), anticipated with much pleasure by participants and attendees alike, but 2024 also marks the 20th anniversaries of the launch of Pure Catskills, a consortium of Catskill Mountain farmers and producers, and of the start of the Historical Society of the Town of Middletown, which has chronicled the history of agriculture, including cauliflower production, in the region.
The Cauliflower Festival, a celebration of all that’s best about rural living, was born in 2003. It was the brainchild of Carol Molnar, proprietor of Margaretville Mountain Inn, a bed and breakfast in the former William and Thankful VanBenschoten farmhouse where the cauliflower industry began in the late 1890s, and Terry Cohen, a former owner of the house. The idea was to pay tribute to a major aspect of the region’s farming history, and to establish a new and different focus for a summertime celebra-
tion that would give Margaretville residents and visitors a reason to come together.
They have come together every year since, except 2011 when Margaretville was cleaning up from Tropical Storm Irene, and 2020, when the Covid pandemic precluded large gatherings.
The first festival, held in August of 2003, featured a vintage baseball game, car show, craft vendors, country music and kids’ activities, including a watermelon eating contest. Of course, cauliflower was offered for sale.
The following year, many local producer/participants of the new Pure Catskills marketing initiative of the Watershed Agricultural Council, brought their farm-fresh produce to the festival. What started with a small group of farmers in the Catskills region has evolved into an economic and community development program representing nearly 350 diverse farm and forest-based businesses, restaurants, local artisans, other non-profit organizations, and accommodations. Not surprisingly, the Pure Catskills tent has become a mainstay and sponsor of the harvest-time festival.
A History Tent was a key element of the inaugural festival. Area residents donated cauliflower growing tools, crates and implements for display, and a slide show of contributed photographs was on continuous loop. The impetus for the formation of the Historical Society of Middletown (HSM) picked up steam and the group was established in 2004. HSM, now 130 members strong, has continued to spotlight cauliflower and community history through displays and panel discussions in the History Tent, and through programming and exhibits at its new Middletown History Center.
Pure Catskills, HSM and a host of other organizations, vendors and community institutions will once again fill the Village Park for the 20th Margaretville Cauliflower Festival, which runs from 11:00 am to 4:00 pm on Saturday, September 21. A tractor parade up Main Street to the festival grounds starts at 11:30 am. Drivers in the Catskills Conquest 1903 Automobile Rally will put their vehicles on display for a short time in late morning.
Live music, a corn hole tournament, karate demonstrations and kids activities, crafts and games will be offered. There will be farm animals to pet and plenty of great food to eat. And don’t forget to bring a shopping bag for a head or two of cauliflower!
Main Street businesses will also welcome festival goers. The Village of Margaretville will sponsor fly fishing lessons for kids on the pedestrian bridge over the Binnekill stream, a stone’s throw from the site where long lines of farmers once waited to sell truckloads of cauliflower to NYC commission agents at a busy auction block in what is now the municipal parking lot.
The Cauliflower Festival takes place at the Village Park behind Freshtown Market Place and CVS Pharmacy, Bridge Street, Margaretville.
For more information, visit margaretvillecauliflowerfestival.org, purecatskills. com, or mtownhistory.org
Autumn in the Catskills
ART GALLERIES
Tannersville Works
6041 Main Street
Tannersville, NY 12485
tannersvilleworks.com
518 589 4017
Tannersville Works is the leading art destination in the Northern Catskills. Immerse yourself in a unique and inspiring creative experience at our stunning gallery, dedicated to bringing the best of contemporary art to our Catskills community. Our gift shop also features a thoughtful collection of new and vintage items including, fine art, beautiful housewares, apparel, hand-crafted candles, jewelry, bespoke gifts, and so much more! Our current show, featuring the landscapes of Hans Petrich, runs through September.
Windham Arts Alliance: Plein Air Extravaganza
At the Main Street Community Center
5494 NY-23
Windham, NY 12496
mainstreetcenter.org/art-shows
518 734 4168
The Windham Arts Alliance supports the arts on the mountaintop. Coming to the Main Street Center in Windham from September 7 through November 1: Plein Air Extravaganza Show! Participants from two plein air painting workshops held in Tannersville and Windham in August will display their work in a variety of media. An opening reception on September 7 from 1:30 to 5:00 pm will feature a performance by Lex Grey & The Urban Pioneers.
Windham Fine Arts
5380 Main Street
Windham, NY 12496
windhamfinearts.com
518 734 6850
Windham Fine Arts (WFA) is a contemporary art gallery located in the heart of the Catskills at the base of Windham Mountain Resort. Now in its 22nd year, WFA represents more than 60 local and internationally acclaimed artists showcasing a diverse collection of original paintings, photography, and sculpture. Mixed media, oils, watercolors, encaustic and other mediums are portrayed in inspiring landscapes, abstracts, figuratives, Hudson River School styles, and more. With over 3,000 square feet of curated artwork, the gallery stands out as a unique gem of artistic inspiration.
ART WORKSHOPS
Sugar Maples Center for Creative Arts
34 Big Hollow Road
Maplecrest, NY 12454 sugarmaples.org
A program of the Catskill Mountain Foundation, Sugar Maples Center for Creative Arts offers short term adult workshop programming in ceramics, painting, drawing, fiber arts and weekly classes in ceramics and fiber arts during the summer season, as well as year-round short courses
for adults and youth in ceramics, painting, and drawing. All classes are led by artists who are renowned and celebrated in their field. Upcoming special events include the Sugar Maples Pottery Festival, held on Labor Day weekend, August 31-September 1; and the Catskill Fibers and Artisanal Celebration, October 11-13.
ATTRACTIONS
Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Piano Performance Museum
7971 Main Street
Hunter, NY 12442
catskillmtn.org
518 263 2063
The Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Piano Performance Museum is the home of the Steven E. Greenstein Piano Collection, a one-of-a-kind collection of historic pianos and musical artifacts. A destination unlike any other in the United States, the Piano Performance Museum offers a unique glimpse into the development of pianos in Europe and America over the past four centuries. Open on Fridays and Saturdays 11:00 am to 3:00 pm by appointment. Email ppm@catskillmtn.org or call 518 263 2063 before your visit, to ensure that the museum will be open.
Gilboa Museum
122 Stryker Road
Gilboa, NY 12076
gilboafossils.org
607 588 6894
Gilboa Museum promotes natural and cultural histories. Gilboa village of 1915 was a hamlet with large residential, business and industrial sections nestled in nearly 4 square miles of rich Schoharie valley farmland. Within a decade, this cultural center had been documented, photographed, and archived before being razed and the valley filled with water destined for New York City. The Nicholas J. Juried History Center provides insight into turn-of-the-century life in rural America. Visit Saturday and Sundays from 12 to 4, Memorial Day to Columbus Day, or arrange a tour by calling 607 588 6894.
Hanford Mills Museum
51 County Highway 12 East Meredith, NY 13757
hanfordmills.org
607 278 5744
Experience a story of innovation, ingenuity and entrepreneurship at a historic working mill site. Hanford Mills Museum offers insights into the past and lessons
about the relationships between people, the things they make, and the places they live. Join us for our 2024 season starting May 15. Go to www.hanfordmills.org for more information about visiting the museum and our 2024 Exploration Days, including Metal at the Mill September 7 and Woodsmen’s Exploration Day on October 5.
BOOKSTORE
Briars & Brambles Books
Route 296 & South Street
Windham, NY 12496
briarsandbramblesbooks.com
518 750 8599
Briars and Brambles Books is your go-to Indie Bookstore in the heart of the Catskill Mountains. Briars & Brambles Books is a dream come true for owner & part-time Windham resident, Jen Schwartz. Jen has combined her love of books with her experience as a long-time library volunteer and past library board president to create an inviting, knowledgeable and professional atmosphere. The Briars & Brambles team understands that being a bookseller involves so much more than simply “selling books” and is committed to providing unparalleled personal attention.
CAR DEALERSHIP
Thorpe’s GMC
5964 Main Street
Tannersville, NY 12485
thorpesgmcinc.com
518 589 7142
Thorpe’s unmatched service and diverse GMC inventory have set them apart as the preferred dealer in Tannersville. With a full-service team of sales and service professionals, visit them today to discover why they have the best reputation in the area. They offer one of the largest GMC inventories in New York, and their trained sales staff will help you every step of the way.
COMMUNITY RESOURCES
Main Street
Community Center
5494 NY-23
Windham, NY 12496
mainstreetcenter.org 518 734 4168
The Main Street Community Center strives to build a caring, welcoming and inclusive environment to benefit all of
the communities on the Mountain Top. Centrally located in Windham, the building contains multiple rooms, including two bathrooms (one is handicap accessible), a large sitting area, a conference room, individual workspaces with computer monitors and a large screen TV, free WIFI, access to printers, and a studio for creative activities. The Artist’s Hideaway provides individual lockers for artists to safely store their supplies. There is plenty of on site parking. The Center has an ever increasing offering of classes, programs, and events for people of all ages.
Phoenix Web Collective
7947 Main Street
Hunter, NY 12442
phoenixwebcollective.com
518 628 5101
Mutual aid resource on the mountain!
Local artist shop, makers’ space, and our free mart, where you can get gently used and vintage clothing, home goods, food, toys, books, music, movies, jewelry, electronics, and more for free or pay-what-you-can. We also host small events and workshops. All are welcome!
FAIRS & FESTIVALS
Handcrafted Octoberfest
October 5-6, 2024
Dutchess County Fairgrounds
6636 U.S. 9
Rhinebeck, NY 12572
quailhollow.com
Get ready for an unforgettable experience as Handcrafted Octoberfest: A Family Harvest Celebration returns to the Dutchess County Fairgrounds! Celebrating its fifth anniver-
sary, this unique festival combines the best of Oktoberfest traditions with a vibrant, handcrafted twist, promising an event perfect for all ages.
Margaretville
Cauliflower Festival
September 21, 2024
Village Park behind Freshtown Market Place and CVS Pharmacy
Bridge Street
Margaretville, NY 12455
margaretvillecauliflowerfestival.org
Pure Catskills, HSM and a host of other organizations, vendors and community institutions will once again fill the Village Park for the 20th Annual Margaretville Cauliflower Festival. A tractor parade up Main Street to the festival grounds starts at 11:30. Drivers in the Catskills Conquest 1903 Automobile Rally will put their vehicles on display for a short time in late morning. Live music, a corn hole tournament, karate demonstrations and kids activities, crafts and games will be offered. There will be farm animals to pet and plenty of great food to eat. And don’t forget to bring a shopping bag for a head or two of cauliflower!
Catskill Mountain Foundation’s
Natural Agriculture Farm
At Sugar Maples
34 Big Hollow Road Maplecrest, NY 12454
The CMF operates a 4.5-acre farm following the Natural Agriculture method taught by the Japanese organization Shumei, the principle of which is to grow vegetables the way they would grow in Nature. No agricultural chemicals of any sort are used, and no manure or other soil additives are permitted. During growing season, visitors can purchase vegetables grown at the farm at a farmstand that operates every Saturday.
Pure Catskills purecatskills.com
A regional, buy local campaign developed by the Watershed Agricultural Council to improve the economic viability of the local community, sustain the working landscapes of the Catskills and preserve water quality in the NYC Watershed Region. Pure Catskills works to promote hundreds of farm, forest and local businesses throughout Delaware, Greene, Otsego, Schoharie, Sullivan and Ulster Counties. Search their website for local products, or pick up a copy of the Guide to Pure Catskills Products!
Shawn’s Fresh Fish 5150 Route 28
Mount Tremper, NY 12457
On Instagram: @ShawnsFreshFish 845 702 2120
Located at the Migliorelli Farm Stand. We started our business in 2016. We carry a large selection of fresh fish and seafood. Also, try our fresh made soups, salads and locally smoked fish. Requests welcomed.
FLORIST
The Blumen Haus Florist
Prattsville Plaza: 14520 Main Street Prattsville, NY 12468 blumenhausflorist.org
Find Us on Facebook 518 248 4743
Blumen Haus Florist is a locally owned and operated floral boutique dedicated to creating stunning floral arrangements and providing exceptional service to our customers. We believe in the power of flowers to brighten any occasion and bring joy to people’s lives. What sets us apart is our commitment to quality and personal attention. We hand-select the freshest, most vibrant blooms from local growers and global markets to ensure that each arrangement is of the highest quality. Our experienced florists have an eye for detail and a passion for creating unique, eye-catching designs that will exceed your expectations.
Augustine Nursery
9W & Van Kleecks Lane
Kingston, NY 12401
AugustineNursery.com 845 338 4936
We’ve been creating landscapes of distinction throughout the Hudson Valley since 1974. Today, Augustine Nursery has grown to become one of the leading residential and commercial landscape design firms and the “nursery of choice” among high-end landscape architects, independent contractors and discerning homeowners. We offer a stunning selection of larger scale, estate-grade trees, shrubs and plants. There are hundreds of varieties, ranging from the most popular to the new and emerging. We also offer a full menu of nursery services, from planning and design to installation and dress finish for greenscapes and hardscapes.
Gardens by Trista
176 Polen Hill Road
Gilboa, NY 12076
gardensbytrista.com 607 588 6762
Gardens by Trista is a full service landscape company focused on providing each client with the individualized landscape or garden of their dreams. We know each property and client holds their own unique essence which we use to transform the land and its elements into their personal-
ized landscape. We strive to fulfill the needs of each and every customer, whether it be a complete design/build for new construction or help with an existing garden that needs a rejuvenation. We also have an extensive garden maintenance division to help keep your landscape and garden in pristine condition. We also offer tree and bush pruning, orchard planning and renovation, and natural sheet mulch and organic fertilization services.
HARDWARE & LUMBER
Greenville, NY 12083
518 966 5333
Online at GNHlumber.com
GNH Lumber
5477 Route 23
Windham, NY 12496
518 734 3760 11513 NY-32
Renovating your home or building new? Ask our Team of Experts for inspiration, help, and on-site delivery. We offer: Lumber & Building Materials • Plumbing & Electrical Supplies • Cabinets, Countertops & Design Services • Tools, Paints, Stains & More! Discover why GNH has a reputation for highquality products and friendly customer service since 1937.
ICE CREAM
The Ice Cream Station 76 Main Street
Phoenicia, NY 12464 845 688 3333
Amidst the restaurants and shops crowded along Main Street in Phoenicia, a dessert oasis awaits you inside the Ice Cream Station. The name of the place says it all: a bounty of traditional and unique ice-cream flavors is ready to be scooped into a dish, cone, milkshake, or whatever else strikes your fancy. Open from May through late October, The Ice Cream Station offers hard and soft ice cream, shakes, cones, sundaes, malts, candy, and homemade fudge. The Ice Cream Station is owned by the Kirk Family, who also operate The Nest Egg just up the road.
LIVE PERFORMANCES
Catskill Mountain Foundation
2024 Performing Arts Season
Doctorow Center for the Arts
7971 Main St., Hunter, NY 12442
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
6050 Main St. Tannersville, NY 12485
catskillmtn.org
Ticket line: 518 263 2063
Our 2024 Performing Arts season is filled with music, dance, theater and much more! We start September at the Doctorow Center for the Arts with a piano concert honoring the late Steven E. Greenstein, collector and curator of the vintage piano collection on public display at the Piano Performance Museum. This memorial concert will feature performances by the faculty and students of the Academy of Fortepiano Performance, Joanne Polk and Jeffrey Langford, and jazz pianist Jamie Saft on pianos from the collection. We end September with a performance at the Orpheum by the world-renowned Martha Graham Dance Company. Taking advantage of the Orpheum’s new technical upgrades, the company will spend the week in a Works & Process
LaunchPAD tech-residency putting the finishing touches on a new commission by Baye & Asa. See the culmination of this process and join in on this first look before the company’s performance at Works & Process at the Guggenheim and the work’s premiere at New York City Center. And on September 29 our International Fortepiano Salons resume online with Shuann Chai and Shunske Sato, who will speak about recording Beethoven’s 10 sonatas for fortepiano & violin.
Greenville Arms
11135 State Route 32
Greenville, NY 12083
greenvillearms.com
518 966 5219
Originally built in 1889, our historically registered Inn is situated on six acres of gardens, lawns, and woodlands. The Queen Anne Revival-style main house, renovated Carriage House, and recently constructed Cottage building are host to 16 guest rooms open year-round to guests. Every guest room is uniquely decorated with a blend of antiques and modern amenities. A hot, cooked-to-order breakfast is included with each room.
Hotel Mountain Brook
57 Route 23C (Hill Street)
Tannersville, NY 12485
hotelmountainbrook.com
518 589 6740
Hotel Mountain Brook is a firstclass Adirondack style Lodge, featuring comfortable upscale accommodations with spectacular views of the Catskill Moun-
tains and delicious, complimentary breakfasts. Whether you’re serenaded by the sounds of songbirds on our terrace, enjoying a fireside game in our cozy den, or indulging in delicious s’mores by the fire, you’ll find your perfect retreat here.
Windham Manor
1161 Co Rd 10
Windham, NY 12496
windhammanor.com
518 944 1448
Our serene 45-acre property features a beautiful 12-bedroom Victorian mansion, a luxury reception barn, and breathtaking mountain views. The Main House, which can accommodate up to 24 overnight guests, offers 12 private bedrooms, an on-site gym, a full spa, a large kitchen, ADA accommodations, and sprawling communal areas. It’s the perfect space for any small reception and is also ideal for a weekend getaway; a wellness retreat; or a corporate off-site event. Just a few steps west of The Main House, The Barn at Windham Manor can hold up to 300 guests. With tall ceilings, tons of natural light, and no detail spared, the space offers the perfect mix of classic mountain charm and unique modern luxury. We also offer various beautiful outdoor wedding ceremony locations throughout the property.
Illuminating Wellness/ Mountain Top Massage
illuminatingwellness.care
518 718 4228
Transformative therapeutic massage practice combines elements of many of the healing arts such as Acupressure, Reflexology, Reiki, Chiropractic adjustment and many forms of Asian and Thai massage. BioPhoton Light Therapy – Biontology is a European healing process that detoxes, neutralizes and resets the body and healing begins immediately. This practice finds the root-cause of any symptomproducing malady and quickly neutralizes it and thus assists you in raising the body’s immune system, the key to your health. (biontology.com).
Catskill Mountain Foundation’s
Mountain Cinema
7971 Main Street
Hunter, NY 12442
catskillmtn.org
518 263 4702
Hollywood, foreign & independent films just a mile west of Hunter Mountain and a short drive from Windham. Shows running Friday through Sunday. Also available for rental.
Catskill Mountain Foundation
7971 Main Street
Hunter, NY 12442
catskillmtn.org
518 263 2000
Now in its 26th year, the Catskill Mountain Foundation, Inc. is a non-profit organization which offers a variety of programs and workshops centered on the arts. It also owns and runs The Orpheum Performing Arts Center, The Doctorow Center for the Arts (which includes the Mountain Cinema, a performance space, and the Piano Performance Museum), the Sugar Maples studio arts school, a Natural Agriculture farm and the Catskill Mountain Region Guide Magazine. The Foundation has long term partnership programs with The Joyce Theater Foundation, Works & Process at the Guggenheim, the National Dance Institute and Catskill Mountain Shakespeare, and is also home to the Hunter International Music Festival, The Academy of Fortepiano Performance, the Orpheum Dance Program, and the Maude Adams Theater Hub.
Windham Foundation
windhamfoundation.org
info@windhamfoundation.org 518 734 9636
Our mission is to enhance and enrich our community by providing charitable grants for historical preservation, the arts, education, recreation, and initiatives deemed to make Windham an extraordinary place to live, work, and visit. Established in 2004, the Windham Foundation is run by an allvolunteer Board. Donations are tax deductible.
OUTDOOR RECREATION
Belleayre Mountain
181 Galli Curci Road Highmount, NY 12441 belleayre.com 845 254 5600
The days of dormancy for ski areas in the summertime are long gone, as Belleayre has become a year-round hub of adventure, fun, and relaxation in the center of the Catskills! Whether you’re an adventurous spirit looking to immerse yourself in the quiet shaded forests, take a dip in the fresh mountain water, or simply looking for a family friendly activity that will be good for the little ones, adventures of all kinds can be based out of the highest ski area in the Catskills.
IMAGES
By Francis X. Driscoll
My work is available for purchase at:
Tannersville Antiques & Artisans: 518 589 5600
Rustic Mountain Antiques: 518 589 1202
Smitty’s Nursery: 518 734 3489
Windham Mountain Club
19 Resort Drive
Windham, NY 12496
windhammountainclub.com
800 754 9463
Your all-season escape into Upstate New York’s premier wintersport, culinary, and memory-making destination for generations to come. Windham Mountain Club is an exclusive outdoor wonderland for the discerning set, find world-class skiing, golfing, dining, outdoor pursuits, and memory-making for generations to come. Nestled in the town of Windham, New York, Windham Mountain Club is located just two and half hours from New York City. A restorative escape for more than 60 years, Windham Mountain Club has evolved to bring an elevated destination and exclusive year-round amenities and activities for the whole family to enjoy.
Images of the Northern Catskills by Francis
X. Driscoll
Work available for purchase at:
Tannersville Antiques & Artisans: 518 589 5600
Rustic Mountain Antiques: 518 589 1202
Smitty’s Nursery: 518 734 3489
francisxdriscoll.com • 518 821 1339
A frequent contributor to the Guide magazine, Francis X. Driscoll is an award-winning nature photographer whose work involves total immersion
PODCAST
in a setting so that he might capture that rare glimpse. His primary subject is the Catskill Forest Preserve. He shares his craft with others by leading hikes, conducting workshops and giving private instruction. Kaatscast kaatscast.com
Free to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
Kaatscast is a biweekly podcast focusing on Catskills history, community, arts & culture, sustainability, and tourism. Voted “Best Regional Podcast” two years in a row, the podcast has collaborated on programming with several regional organizations and is produced by Brett Barry, of Chichester-based Silver Hollow Audio, a creator of podcasts, audio tours, public radio segments, and audiobooks.
PRINTING SERVICES
Catskill Mountain Printing Services
7971 Main Street
Hunter, NY 12442 518 263 2001
Your one-stop shop for fast, personal service for all of your printing needs. Graphic design services are available, and we can print green!
RADIO STATIONS
MTC Cable Channel 20
WIOXRADIO.ORG on computers and smartphones
WIOX Community Radio—where public access meets public service to build public trust. WIOX programming is wildly diverse, live and local, and non-commercial, broadcasting from the Catskill Mountains region of upstate New York in the heart of the New York City Watershed. WIOX talk and music programs range from farming to brewing to cooking, forestry to healthcare, Rock to Pop, Bach and Goth, Blues, Folk, Country, Americana, Jazz and Salsa. WIOX: produced and supported—by you!
WRIP 97.9FM
wripfm.com
Streaming at rip979.com
RIP 97.9 is the radio voice of the Mountaintop and Valley. Broadcasting 24/7 with the equivalent of 6,000 Watts of power, we are the only radio station covering the entire region between the Hudson Valley and Oneonta. WRIP is independently owned and operated. WRIP is heard on these FM frequencies: 97.9 in Windham and Hunter, 97.5 in Durham and Greenville, 103.7 in Catskill and Hudson, 104.5 in Stamford and Delaware County, and streaming worldwide at rip979.com.
REAL ESTATE
Brainard Ridge Realty
237 South Street
Windham, NY 12496
brainardridge.com
518 734 5333
Specializing in Windham Mountain and the surrounding area for over 35 years. Visit our web site at brainardridge.com for a variety of listings both on and off the mountain: Homes, Townhomes, Rentals and Land. Whatever your needs we are here for you. Call us today!
Coldwell Banker—
Timberland Properties
TimberlandProperties.com
CatskillPremier.com
Margaretville: 845 586 3321
Boiceville/Mt. Tremper: 845 657 4177
Delhi: 607 746 7400
Stamford: 607 652 2220
Sidney: 607 604 4394
Roscoe: 607 290 4130
Start your real estate career today! Unrivaled agent support & the best training in the region. Call or email to learn more: Debra G. Danner, Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker/ Branch Manager: 518 937 0924 or Debra.Danner@Timberlandproperties.net.
Gordon Hunter Mountain Realty
6528 Route 23A
Hunter, NY 12442
gordonrealty.com
518 589 9000
Gordon Hunter Mountain Realty is dedicated to serving you when you’re looking for property in Upstate New York and Northern Catskill Mountains. Our professional staff specializes in properties near Hunter Mountain and Windham Mountain ski resorts, including Hunter, Tannersville, Jewett, Lexington, Prattsville, Windham, and Ashland. We know the Catskill Mountains and look forward to showing you all that is available to see, do and live in our wonderful world.
Carol Shaw, Broker/Owner
Shaw Country Realty
5359 State Route 23
Windham, NY 12496
518 734 3500
I have been a real estate broker in the mountain top area for nearly four decades, representing buyers and sellers, as well as dealing with various types of properties such as homes, land, and country homes, rentals, indicates a broad expertise in the local real estate market. With our many years in the industry, Shaw Country Realty has built a strong network, deep understanding of the market trends, and a keen ability to match buyers with suitable properties and help sellers navigate successful transactions. If you have any specific questions about real estate feel free to ask!
4802 State Route 23
Windham, NY 12496
516 650 5700
Windham Farms Development, LLC
Owner/Developer: Jim MacDonald
Continuing to Adopt Broker-Friendly Practices
Licensed NY State Real Estate Broker
Exclusively Offered by:
Laurie Hanenberg, Licensed Real Estate Broker/Owner
Hunter Windham Real Estate
5338 Route 23
Windham, NY 12496 518 965 8439
Modern-style farm houses and mountain homes now available. Fully approved, shovel-ready home sites for sale. Will build-to-suit, turnkey construction. Three lots currently available: Lot #1 with main house, garage, and pond, 6.43 acres, available for redevelopment; Lot#2 with elevated woodland, stone walls, and views, 3.46 acres improved with driveway, septic and well; Lot #4 with open meadows, stone walls, views, ready to build your modern farmhouse on 4.33 acres. Call and meet with us to learn about our vision and we’ll listen to yours. Live-Work-Play in the historic town of Windham, NY.
REGIONAL INFORMATION
Catskill Visitor’s Center
5096 State Route 28
Mt. Tremper, NY 12457
catskillsvisitorscenter.org
845 688 3369
Your gateway to Catskills, where you can learn about the vast outdoor recreational opportunities in the area as well as discover the cultural and natural history of the Region. The center features educational exhibits along with maps, books, gear, and gifts, as well a friendly and knowledgeable staff.
Sullivan County Tourism
SullivanCatskills.com
1 800 882 CATS
Looking for a unique getaway?
Embark on an adventure to New York’s Sullivan Catskills.
This renowned vacationland in Sullivan County is a haven of small-town charm with a vibrant twist. Here, you can immerse yourself in thrilling outdoor experiences, from rafting down the Delaware River to exploring the birthplace of dry fly fishing. And that’s just the beginning of the excitement that awaits you: visit SullivanCatskills.com to start planning your trip today.
Ulster County Tourism
VisitUlsterCountyNY.com
Nestled snugly in the heart of the Catskill Mountains, Ulster County is the perfect destination for Fall. Natural beauty, plenty of cozy sweater weather activities and small-town charm await. So, grab your favorite sweater or jacket, put on your favorite boots (hiking, cowboy, or Chelsea - it doesn’t matter), and head out on your adventure.
RESTAURANTS
A Slice of Italy
1316 Ulster Avenue
Kingston, NY 12401
asliceofitaly7115.com
845 336 7115
The finest Italian dishes, pizza, hot and cold subs, salads and more made with the freshest ingredients and served with five star customer service. Full bar featuring a range of red and white wines, bottled beers, beers on tap and liquor. We also cater, and pride ourselves on being able to deliver our quality restaurant dishes right to your door. Whatever the event, no matter how many or how few, we are there for you. Open Monday through Saturday from 11 am to 10 pm, closed on Sundays.
Angela’s Pizza
1923 Ulster Avenue
Lake Katrine, NY 12401
angelaspizzarestaurant.com
845 382 2211
Angela’s is more than just pizza! Soups, salads, pastas, subs, wraps, Italian dinners, desserts & more. … But, yeah, our pizza is dang awesome, too! Try our specialty pies or build your own! Open every day 11:00 am to 10:00 pm. Eat in or take out, and delivery is available. Catering is also available: let us bring our delicious food to your next event! Angela’s mobile app— available on both Android and iOS devices—is designed just for you. Get instant access to online ordering, Angela’s Loyalty Program, coupons, dining & catering menus, wing flavors and much more! Download the app today!
Blue Mountain Bistro-to-Go
948 Route 28
Kingston, NY 12401
bluemountainbistro.com
845 340 9800
Open 7 days a week serving homecooked healthy take-out food and baked goods. Featuring local and imported organic foods, delicious homemade desserts, sophisticated four star food by Chef Richard Erickson. At Bistro-to-Go we take seriously our mission to rise to any occasion and keep doing what we do best: serving “Feel Good Food”. Blue Mountain Bistro Catering is an award-winning, chefowned, full service catering company offering off-premises
catering for parties of all sizes. Our goal is to enhance life’s celebrations with delicious seasonal food, creative culinary presentations, and gracious, attentive service. Our passion for good food, good service, and good times will bring life to your party.
Brandywine
11157 State Route 23 Windham, NY 12496 brandywinewindham.com
518 734 3838
For the past 35 years, this fullservice Italian restaurant has offered great food and impeccable service. Share wonderful memories with your loved ones as we fill your table with delicious Italian cuisine. Born and raised in Southern Italy, owner Louis Caracciolo mastered the art of Italian cookery, and passed it on to his son Joseph, who has continued that art and tradition as chef in the restaurant. We know the formula to capture the rich flavor of your favorite Italian dishes.
Chef Deanna
1645 County Highway 6 Bovina Center, NY 13740 chefdeanna.com
Weddings and special event catering, with delivery available for larger events! Chef Deanna is on the cutting edge of the sustainable food. Surrounded by farmers and local food makers, Chef Deanna creates beautiful dishes using her Sicilian heritage and her love of everything sweet and savory.
Gracie’s Luncheonette
969 Main Street Leeds, NY 12451 graciestruckny.com
518 943 9363
Our diner-style burgers, fried chicken sandwich, loaded fries and donuts are our signature menu items.
All of our breads, pastries and desserts are made fresh in house every day. We make all of our own condiments and even our own cheese. We buy whole beef from Josef Meiller’s farm in Pine Plains, NY and we grind our own special blend for our burgers as well as cut our own steaks. We also cure and smoke our own bacon, pastrami and other meats. All eggs, dairy, produce and other meats are all sourced as locally as possible. the potatoes for our French fries are even grown right in Catskill at Story’s Farm and hand-cut daily!
High Falls Cafe
2842 Route 209
North Marbletown, NY 12484
highfallscafe.com
845 687 2699
Family owned and chef operated since 2005. Scratch kitchen, our dishes are made to order using fresh ingredients. Daily specials. Live music and events weekly. Reservations are highly suggested. Open for lunch Tuesday through Saturday 11:30 pm to 5 pm, dinner 5 pm to 9 pm. Sunday breakfast 9 am to 1 pm and lunch 1 pm to 3:30 pm. Bar open later all nights and
closes at bartenders discretion. Closed on Mondays. Check out our menus and event calendar at highfallscafe.com or like us on Facebook for daily updates at facebook.com/ highfallscafe1
Jessie’s Harvest House
5819 Main Street
Tannersville, NY 12485
jessiesharvesthouse.com
518 589 5445
Jessie’s Harvest House Restaurant and Lodge is a welcoming & cozy place to gather, featuring a delicious menu of American-style cuisine and elevated comfort foods, with locallysourced ingredients, a friendly tavern, and rustic country lodging. Family-owned & family-run, we love to share all the freshest foods our area has to offer! Catering is available. Indoor & outdoor dining.
Mama’s Boy Burgers
6067 Main Street
(at the traffic light)
Tannersville, NY 12485
Mamasboyburgers.com
518 589 6667
Established in 2015, Mama’s Boy Burgers was voted the “Best Burger Shack” in the Hudson Valley by Hudson Valley Magazine. We are all about fresh and local ingredients. Our burgers are made from local, black Angus beef from a farm 6 miles away. Our seasonal produce comes from Story Farms, our ice cream is made in the Hudson Valley. We also offer vegetarian and vegan options. Eat In, Take Out or Order Online.
Pancho Villa’s Mexican Restaurant
6037 Main Street
Tannersville, NY 12485
panchovillamex.com
518 589 5134
The Best Mexican Food this side of the Border! Pancho Villa’s is owned and operated by the Oscar and Patricia Azcue family. They have been proudly serving authentic Mexican food on Main Street in Tannersville since 1992. Rooted in tradition, their passion is sharing great food and good company. All of the traditional Mexican favorites are served here, from enchiladas and burritos to chimichangas and flautas...plus great margaritas and daiquiris! Open every day except Tuesday.
Peekamoose
Restaurant & Tap Room
8373 State Route 28
Big Indian, NY 12410
peekamooserestaurant.com
845 254 6500
Devin and Marybeth Mills hail from some of New York City’s finest restaurants, including the famed Gramercy Tavern. Seeking to move closer to the farms supplying their menu, they have beautifully restored this country farmhouse set among the Catskill Mountains. The restaurant supports local growers by changing the menu daily, using the freshest ingredients available.
RETAIL
Camp Catskill
6006 Main Street
Tannersville, NY 12485
campcatskill.co
518 303 6050
Your destination for sustainable gear & gifts, including clothing, footwear, backpacks, and hiking gear. Our mission is to help you feel good about what you buy, what you wear, and the gear you use (and reuse) in the wild. Having the right gear lets you spend more time outside in nature, which in turn connects you directly to the importance of preserving the natural wonders of our world. We work with brands that care about their impact on the planet and its people, and we donate 1% of our revenue to environmental nonprofits here in the Catskills.
Catskill Mountain Foundation Gift Shop
6042 Main Street
Tannersville, NY 12485
518 589 7500
Operated by the Catskill Mountain Foundation and located next door to the Orpheum Performing Arts Center, our shop features a curated selection of home decor items and gifts from around the Region and around the world. Open Friday through Sunday and holiday Mondays from 11 am to 6 pm.
Kenco Outfitters
1000 Hurley Mountain Road
Kingston, NY 12401 atkenco.com
845 340 0552
Our story started in 1982 with owner Bill Kennedy selling gear out of mother Libby’s station wagon with help from dad
Harry, and now we have grown into over 20,000 square feet of outdoor recreation, clothing, and footwear retail. From pickleball paddles to kayak paddles, workboots to water sandals, camping gear to housewares, Kenco has a little of almost everything. If you want to get outdoors, we have you covered. Located on the corner of Route 28 and Hurley Mountain Road. We want to be your favorite store.
The Nest Egg
84 Main Street
Phoenicia, NY 12464
thenesteggcountrystore.com
nesteggshop.com
845 688 5851
An old-fashioned country store in the heart of the Catskill Mountains. You’ll find lots of specialty and artisan crafted foods here, from local maple syrup, honey, preserves, to nostalgic candies and gourmet chocolate, to gourmet peanut butter, and more! Your source for mountain clothing and souvenirs, including Minnetonka Moccasins, t-shirts & sweatshirts, local area books and hiking maps, candles, soaps, incense, jewelry, toys, puzzles, games and more. Our home-made delicious fudge is worth the trip! Owner Robin Kirk’s family has owned The Nest Egg since 1968.
ROOFING
Sheeley Roofing
2452 Lucas Turnpike, Bldg 2
High Falls, NY 12440
sheeleyroofing.com
845 687 9182
Sheeley Roofing has been serving the greater Hudson Valley area for over 20 years. We install premium roofing using a variety of materials for both residential and commercial applications. We take great pride in our durable, and energy efficient roofs and look forward to working with you in putting the cap on your renovation or new construction project.
Catskill Center for Conservation & Development
43355 Route 28
Arkville, NY 12406
catskillcenter.org
845 586 2611
Since 1969, the Catskill Center has led the effort to protect the more than 700,000 acres of the Catskill Park and Catskill Forest Preserve. Their mission is to protect and foster the environmental, cultural,and economic well-being of the Catskill Region.
Greene County Economic Development Corporation
TREE CARE WINE & SPIRITS SERVICES
411 Main Street
Catskill, NY 12414
greenecountyedc.com
518 719 3290
Your gateway to establishing your business in Greene County. Their team connects entrepreneurs, developers, and corporate leadership with resources, municipalities, and investment incentives for job-creating businesses.
SPA
MENLA | Dewa Spa
375 Pantherkill Road Phoenicia, NY 12464 menla.org
Menla is a hidden oasis in the heart of the Catskill mountains. Featuring wellness and spiritual retreats as well as exclusive getaways, and the world-class Dewa Spa. Immerse yourself in the magic of pristine mountain forests. Explore hiking trails, encounter wildlife, and discover a rich tapestry of wellness experiences and activities. Dewa Spa’s unique architecture and Tibetan accents evoke peace and tranquillity. Eastern and Western treatments, such as Tibetan KuNye massage, herbal baths, Shirodhara, sounds baths, energy readings, and customized facials are a few of the lavish therapies found at our spa.
518 378 0664
Powell’s Tree Care
Earlton, NY
PowellsTreeCare @gmail.com PowellsTree.com
Powell’s Tree Care is your source for the best tree care in Greene County. We offer pruning, removals, viewscaping, woodscaping, storm and emergency clean-up, cabling, fertilization and stump grinding. Remember to always leave this type of work to professional arborists or tree experts. Ian Powell has two decades of experience, is on site at every job and takes pride in leaving the work site clean and mess free. We excel at tree care and tree care only.
Olivia’s Wine & Spirits
128 South Street Windham, NY 12496 oliviaswineandspirits.com 518 750 8026
Wine connoisseur Robert Giordano has traveled the world learning about wine, and brings his vast knowledge and passion for wines from all over the world to Windham. Olivia’s Wine & Spirits offers a diverse selection of wines at a variety of competitive price points, as well as a variety of bourbons, whiskeys, and other liquors. Open every day.
Town & Country Liquors
330 Route 12
Saugerties, NY 12477
townandcountryliquorstore.com 845 246 8931
Our selection of wines and spirits is among the best in the Hudson Valley. Our friendly helpful staff is here to assist you in finding the right beverage: we have a huge selection of wines and spirits from all over the world.
Call for Auditions!
Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Orpheum Dance Program is presenting the NINTH ANNUAL special holiday performances of The Nutcracker this December, and WE NEED YOU!
We’re looking for kids age 5-15 to play party children, toy soldiers, mice & angels.
We need party adults too! Appear on stage with your kids and start a new holiday tradition!
Auditions: Saturday, September 28, 11:00am-1:00pm The Red Barn, 7970 Main Street, Hunter
No dance experience is needed, but performers will need to be musical, comfortable on stage, able to take direction, and be ready to have fun!
Questions? Call us at 518 263 2001
The six performances will be Saturday & Sunday, December 7-8 and December 14-15 at the Orpheum Performing Arts Center, 6050 Main Street, Tannersville For tickets and more information, visit www.catskillmtn.org
photos by Paul
Catskills Past
Accidents, incidents, and Missteps, large & small
By T.M. Bradshaw
Area newspapers of the 19th and early 20th centuries reported on stories large and small—providing news and entertainment. Part of the fun of browsing those newspapers is the friendly, kidding tone of some items, little jokes and puns that invite the reader in. Generally used in small fillers about people, occasionally the practice worked its way into bigger, newsier stories. The overall effect is a glimpse into the realities of life at a different time, a combination of fact and flavor.
In February 1871, the Bloomville Mirror reprinted an item from the Windham Journal describing a buggy trip gone wrong— but not as wrong as it might have. Watson Briggs was traveling from Gilboa to Prattsville on a Friday night, accompanied by a woman from Ashland. In the dark Mr. Briggs had trouble discerning the location of the road, and after realizing he was no longer on it, attempted to turn around. He backed off a dugway and horse, buggy, and people fell thirty feet down the bank. Somehow both people managed to get clear of the wreckage; neither was badly hurt, but they judged the horse to be dead. They took off for Prattsville on foot—no AAA back then or a means to summon aid. Upon returning to the scene the following morning, they discovered the horse had regained consciousness and was standing, but the buggy was a pile of kindling and twisted metal.
Music can be described as “good vibrations” but vibrations that are too synced can create destructive energy waves. The June 14, 1904, Mirror-Recorder described a band concert that generated too much enthusiasm for the audience’s good. Stamford’s Churchill Hall hotel consisted of multiple buildings connected by exterior porches. One of these verandas was crowded with people enjoying the music of Baker’s Band. Between the weight of the people and their enthusiastic foot stomping keeping time with the music, the veranda gave way. The veranda floor remained attached to the building, but hinged down like a drop leaf table, sending a number of people plummeting 15 feet to the ground. There were no fatalities—the most serious injuries were broken bones, neck injuries, and dislocated joints, but most of the crowd escaped with only sprains, cuts, and bruises and a story to tell. As Dr. Stephen Churchill was the proprietor of Churchill Hall, medical aid was close at hand.
A very different type of accident or incident happened in Jefferson because of a lack of people. C. Bathgate Becker and Wallie Johnson of New York planned to go hunting in October 1922. As reported by the Mirror-Recorder on October 11 that year, Mr. Becker was concerned that “the wild woods of Jefferson” might prove damaging to his luxury car, a Pierce-Arrow, so he borrowed
the Tin Lizzie belonging to his chauffeur, David Stobie. Leaving Lizzie in a cow pasture, Becker and Johnson went off for several hours of hunting. When they returned, they discovered that they hadn’t closed the car door and a Guernsey cow was happily eating the upholstery from the inside of the door. The Mirror article ends with these two lines: “Shortly after the cow had finished her upholstering a la mode, we noticed Dr. W. H. Wheeler driving towards Jefferson. As yet, we have not heard if the cow had indigestion or turned into a Ford part.”
An earlier story reported in the Gilboa Monitor on July 20, 1899, concerned a less peaceful bovine. “Two Davenport lady cyclists had a lively encounter with an infuriated bull last Friday evening. … The road was rough and they were obliged to walk, and when quite a distance from any house the bull started after them. In their rapid flight they scaled three barbed wire fences, crossed field after field, waded the river, and finally reached a kind neighbor’s. … The ladies escaped with slight bruises and torn clothes.”
Other animals caused problems, too. In 1921, the Franklin correspondent to the Mirror noted that the Franklin Electric Light Company was plagued by eels. In the autumn, eels head to the ocean. But 1921 was a dry year, causing the eels to seek an outlet through the company’s turbines, “where they become mangled and clog the wheels.”
The Catskill Mountain News of July 23,1926 ran a very different water story under the heading “Autoists Forced to Ford Creek at Prattsville.” According to the article, after a speeding driver struck the center steel arch, displacing it and weakening the structure, “Over 500 autoists traveling on state highway number 23 between Oneonta and Catskill daily are forced to ford Schoharie Creek at Prattsville.” The article’s author used imagination to peek inside those vehicles and describe the trip. “Great excitement prevails with every autoist who comes along and suddenly finds that the bridge is gone. Women grip the sides of the car with suspense and say, ‘Now, John, be careful.’ The children scream. But one by one the cars plunk down into the stream, waddle along across it, and out the other side.”
The article also noted that the State Commissioner of Highways visited Prattsville at the time and ordered a temporary bridge be constructed immediately, “and it is supposed that his visit will result in arrangements for the construction of a new bridge there.” A new bridge was built in 1927. It was badly damaged by Hurricane Irene in 2011; its replacement opened in 2018.
Bridges spanning the Schoharie Creek at Prattsville had been damaged by weather before. The Delaware Gazette of April 6, 1836, carried an item originally printed in the Catskill Messenger stating, “Some three weeks since the bridge over the Schoharie Kill at Prattsville was carried away by the ice, it has already been rebuilt, as we are informed, in a substantial manner, with a double track and is now used daily.”
That hastily constructed bridge must have been intended as a temporary solution because three years later, on July 10, 1839, the Delaware Gazette reported that, “A new and splendid bridge
has recently been erected across the Schoharie Kill, at the village of Prattsville, Greene Co. It is a single arch, 224 feet long, and 190 in the clear, resting on solid stone abutments, and is believed to be the longest single arched bridge in America.”
Then the Bloomville Mirror noted on June 10, 1862, that “Mr. John Murray, of Delhi, has taken the job of building a $1,000 bridge at Prattsville.” According to the Franklin Visitor, it wasn’t quite finished, but ready for crossing that September.
The story of a much, much smaller piece of metal than a damaged bridge support appeared earlier in 1927, in the February 2 issue of the Mirror-Recorder. It concerned a Roxbury man, John H. Dakin and a very preventable DIY accident.
“While at work screening in the back porch at his home on Main Street he placed a few two-pointed staple tacks between his lips. With his arms upreached in fastening the screen at the highest point a tack slipped into his throat and lodged there.”
He was advised by a local doctor to go immediately to a surgeon. A neighbor, Samuel More, drove him to Oneonta. There, Dr. M. Latcher dislodged the staple, but failed to latch on to it, and Dakin swallowed it. The Mirror-Recorder wrapped up the story with a little joke and a clear though unstated resolution of the problem.
“Mr. Dakin for a time at least lived up to his fine reputation as a ‘tactful’ man. He returned to Roxbury Friday and has since been relieved of reason for further worries.”
Items in unexpected places proved to be protective rather than dangerous in a very early story printed in the Catskill Recorder and Greene County Republican of May 14, 1829.
“Advantages of Newspapers—A person riding very rapidly yesterday was thrown, by the stumbling of his horse, violently upon the pavement, his head coming first in contact—by great good luck, a quantity of newspapers had been deposited in his hat for leisure reading—these served to break the force of the fall; so that, though stunned and sadly bruised, he escaped a fracture of the skull.”
And a skull, or its tanned covering, proved to be invaluable in this story from the Mirror-Recorder of August 7, 1930, under the headline “Charlie Wright’s Bald Head Stamford Beacon for Lost Newark Flier.”
Stephen Ransom and Fred Pollard left Newark Municipal airport at two o’clock on a Saturday afternoon, heading for Stamford. Not quite two hours later, they arrived, but pilot Ransom couldn’t locate the Dayton E. Griffin airport at South Gilboa. Circling the general area, searching for a landmark, Ransom spotted a group of golfers. Among them, he recognized the perennially tanned dome of his friend Charlie. Knowing he was in the right place, Ransom landed his plane in a meadow on the other side of the fence near the clubhouse. Ransom and Pollard were Stamford’s first guests to arrive by plane.
T. M. Bradshaw shares other thoughts on history at tmbradshawbooks.com.
The Gardens at the Thomas Cole House
By Margaret Donsbach Tomlinson
When artist Thomas Cole lived in Catskill, the village was surrounded by primeval forest, though change was already coming. In his 1836 “Essay on American Scenery,” Cole bemoaned “the ravages of the axe” and worried that “another generation will behold spots, now rife with beauty, desecrated by what is called improvement.” Today, the landscape is much changed, but the guardians of his former home are working to restore some of what has been lost.
The nonprofit Thomas Cole National Historic Site owns the house and six acres of what was once a 110-acre farmstead. For years, the site was neglected, maintained primarily by clearing brush and mowing lawns. But an archaeological study commissioned by the Cole House found traces of flowerbeds along a path to the front door. Old letters, journals and a painting by one of Cole’s fellow artists helped identify many of the flowers that had flanked the path: hollyhocks, larkspur, poppies, roses, asters, dahlias and valerian. Today, the restored beds focus on some of our most beautiful native wildflowers, including coneflowers (Echinacea purpurea), beebalm (Monarda fistulosa), black-eyed Susans (Rudbeckia hirta), and a double-flowering cutleaf coneflower (a cultivar of Rudbeckia laciniata).
Small pocket meadows recreate the wild beauty Cole so loved, while providing seeds and nectar for birds, bees and butterflies. The pocket meadows are gently maintained by removing invasive plants and by carefully timed mowing that cuts down
invasives before they seed while allowing native wildflowers, which set seed at different times, to grow and multiply. Although expanses of mowed lawn are still maintained for the comfort of visitors, the grass is mowed to a higher, healthier level. The staff have been studying where best to add more flower beds for pollinators, “carving out sections and seeing how it goes,” says Betsy Jacks, the Cole House Executive Director.
When enough funds are raised, a large new bed for native shrubs and wildflowers will be planted in front of the new Visitor Center, which officially opened to the public this past July. Contributions for the new pollinator garden will come from people who “adopt” a shrub or plant, and whose names will be featured on identification markers.
The native wildflowers on the Cole House grounds have qualified it for a place on the official list at Pollinator Pathway. This organization encourages people to plant small or large gardens of native plants to help our bees, moths and butterflies survive and thrive. Home gardeners are welcome to enjoy the Cole House gardens at 218 Spring Street in Catskill, and to linger for ideas and inspiration. The grounds are open free of charge to the public from dawn to dusk daily.
Margaret Donsbach Tomlinson enjoys gardening in Catskill. She also writes a weekly Substack series, The Generous Garden, online at mtomlinson.substack.com.
METAL AT THE MILL EXPLORATION DAY
Join Hanford Mills Museum on September 7 from 10:00 am until 4:00 pm for our Metal at the Mill Exploration Day. This day will feature the Dan Rion Memorial Antique Engine Jamboree, and the museum has invited regional collectors of historic engines, tractors, doodlebugs, outboard motors, vehicles, and other machines to display their collections. Hanford Mills staff and volunteers will also display and demonstrate some of the historic engines and machinery that are in our own collection.
A variety of exhibitors and vendors will join us for the day. Representatives from the New York Power Authority’s BlenheimGilboa Visitor Center will be educating visitors about their hydroelectric plant with a STEM activity. DeForest Axe & Toolworks will have restored woodworking tools, leather goods and other items for sale. In addition, Intelligent Green Solutions will be at Exploration Day to talk to visitors about their solar power solutions for homes and businesses.
Food products will be available for sale as well. Helen’s Little Kitchen food truck will be on-site, offering breakfast and lunch. Brookside Maple & Farm is a fourth-generation family farm that raises beef and produces maple syrup and other maple products. Union Grove Distillery will be offering tastings of their products that will also be for sale. Visitors are also welcome to bring their own lunch and snacks and enjoy all food at our picnic tables.
Stoddard Hollow String band will be playing music from 1:00 until 3:00 pm. They perform traditional and original songs that capture the sound and spirit of old-time Appalachian mountain music.
Check our website, hanfordmills.org, or our social media channels for updates.
ABOUT HANFORD MILLS MUSEUM
Experience a story of innovation, ingenuity and entrepreneurship at a historic working mill site. Sheltered in a valley in the northwestern Catskills of New York, Hanford Mills Museum offers insights into the past and lessons about the relationships between people, the things they make, and the places they live. As one of only a handful of operating water-powered mills, the museum has earned a place on both the National and NYS Registers of Historic Places.
Hanford Mills is located at 51 County Highway 12 in East Meredith, at the intersection of Delaware County Routes 10 & 12, just 10 miles from Oneonta, and 15 miles from Delhi. For more information, visit hanfordmills.org or call 607 278 5744.
H THE GREAT OUTDOORS IN THE CATSKILLS
By Jeff Senterman
ow has your summer been in the Catskills? We’re starting to turn the corner now, from summer into fall as the month of September brings cooling temperatures and by mid-month, hints of the vivid leaf colors that will peak in October. While September signifies a slow end to summer, it is a great time to get outside and enjoy the region. Crowds are starting to thin, the temperatures are moderating, and there is generally good weather, all of which make it the perfect time to take the hike, ride a bike, visit a farmers market, have a picnic, or partake in any other Catskills adventure you had been planning!
One thing though, the Catskills have been busy. We’ve seen high levels of use throughout the region, especially at our most popular trailheads and destinations. When you are enjoying the great outdoors in the Catskills, we need you to act responsibly and take care of the great outdoors. The Catskill Park is a “Carry It In, Carry It Out Park,” and that means you won’t find trash receptacles along trails or at trailheads—what you bring in, you should pack back out and take home to dispose of properly. If we all do our part, we can maintain the environment and protect the important natural resources of the Catskills.
Most importantly, we all must work to Leave No Trace when we visit the great outdoors. There are seven principles to the Leave No Trace message, but the overall message is the most important. When you visit an area, leave it as good, if not better, than when you arrived. That means staying on trail, not damaging natural features, bringing all of your trash out with you (including those orange peels), and being aware of your impacts on the environment and your fellow hikers.
Please do your part and make sure the forests, trails, swimming holes, and even our roadsides aren’t covered in litter!
Mid-Season Stewardship Efforts Show Positive Impact in the Catskills
The Catskill Center’s Catskill Stewards Program commenced its 2024 season with mixed visitation trends within the Catskill Park, indicating overall growth compared to the previous year. Some locations have experienced notable increases in foot traffic, while others have seen slight declines. The overall upward trend in visitation underscores the continued importance of monitoring
the Catskills’ most popular outdoor destinations and highlights the value of the stewards’ efforts in preserving the park’s natural heritage while promoting a positive visitor experience.
The program includes seven full-time Catskill Stewards and one part-time Ridgerunner, all certified in Wilderness First Aid, trained as Leave No Trace educators, and instructed by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) on forest rules, regulations, and invasive species identification. Stewards are stationed at high-use locations throughout the region, including Peekamoose Blue Hole, Kaaterskill Falls, Platte Clove and Thorn Preserves, Devil’s Path, and six Fire Tower locations. They collaborate closely with Forest Rangers in their efforts to protect and preserve the Catskill Park. Their duties include providing information on permit requirements, removing litter, rehabilitating illegal campsites, protecting water quality, and promoting responsible recreation practices. Additionally, they assist the United States Forest Service in data collection to better understand visitor demographics and usage trends.
From May 1 to mid-July 2024, the Catskill Stewards engaged with 23,335 visitors and 1,772 dogs, bringing total visitation to 28,223 across all locations. Peekamoose Blue Hole saw 7,822 visitors, an increase of nearly 1,100 from 2023. Kaaterskill Falls had 14,421 visitors, a decrease of roughly 3,800 from last year. Devil’s Path attracted 1,163 visitors, an increase of 400 from 2023, while the Fire Towers recorded 705 visitors, up by approximately 185 from 2023. At Peekamoose Blue Hole, stewards turned away 5,000 visitors due to capacity limits. Throughout the start of the season, the stewards have built connections with a diverse range of park users, including hikers, anglers, birders, families, swimmers, and cyclists, as both residents and visitors of the Catskills.
Joining these efforts are the Catskill Mountainkeeper Stewards, focusing on high-use areas in the Western Catskills. From May through June 2024, the Mountainkeeper Stewards welcomed 2,158 visitors and 123 dogs, surpassing last year’s numbers. They cover five primary locations at Big Pond, Alder Lake, the Beaverkill Covered Bridge, the Peekamoose Blue Hole Lower Field, and the Neversink Fishing Access Point. Like the Catskill Center stewards, they are trained in DEC rules and regulations, Leave No
Trace principles, and Wilderness First Aid, and collaborate with the United States Forest Service on visitor surveys.
Visitors have expressed appreciation for the stewards’ presence at trailheads and the noticeable improvements in site conditions. Popular activities reported this season include fly fishing, swimming, boating, kayaking, and enjoying the natural beauty of the park. Stewards have welcomed visitors speaking English, Korean, Czech, Spanish, Hindi, Burmese, Indonesian, and Lithuanian thus far, and counted up to 45 bird species in one day at a single location. These experiences highlight the Catskill Park as a vibrant destination for both people and wildlife, and underscores the continued importance of stewardship efforts in the Catskills.
The Catskill Stewards Program is a program of the Catskill Center, supported by donations, grants, and the NYS Environmental Protection Fund, administered by the NYSDEC. Stewards are paid seasonal staff of the Catskill Center who are trained specifically to meet the demands of welcoming tens of thousands of people to the Catskills annually. Learn more about the program at catskillcenter.org.
Loving the Catskills to Life!
We often hear how a place is “loved to death” and can easily see how overuse or high use can negatively impact the natural areas that people want to visit. As part of anything that we do, we want to make sure we are able to welcome more visitors to the Catskills to enjoy our important places, all without harming those places! We want to make sure our visitors help invest in and regenerate our natural areas—we want to love the Catskills to life!
In my mind we can all take a few steps in that direction:
1. We need to ensure that we do not just take from the Catskills. Find ways to give back, whether they are large or small. When you’re hiking and see a candy bar wrapper, pick it up and pack it out! Thinking bigger? There are lots of volunteer opportunities in the Catskills tackling everything from invasive species to trail maintenance to staffing a fire tower! Sign up at catskillcenter.org/volunteer.
2. Raise our voices for the Catskill Park with all of our elected officials. We need to continue the good work that has been accomplished in Albany and ensure continued funding to improve the infrastructure of the Catskill Park and help our communities. These improvements make the Park more accessible, but at the same time help ensure natural resources protection and make for a better Park experience.
3. Pass on our love and appreciation for wild areas and the Catskills to new users and generations while understanding that those we talk to may have none of the experiences we have had, and that their frames of reference are likely completely different from ours. We need to move forward together for the Catskills with understanding and compassion on all sides.
4. We need to help the communities of the Catskills. When we enjoy the great outdoors, we need to make sure we also stop on main streets and enjoy our local communities. Get a coffee at a local shop, buy a sandwich at a deli within the Catskills, stop for dinner on your way home in the Catskills. Outdoor enthusiasts need to use their economic potential for good in the Catskills!
Do your part and love the Catskills to life!
#RecreateResponsibly in the Catskills
Time in nature, and outdoor recreation has proven to be essential for all.
Especially during uncertain times, all of us, from seasoned outdoor enthusiasts, to families heading out to their local park for the first time, can turn to community and simple reminders about how to safely & responsibly recreate outdoors while caring for one another.
The Recreate Responsibly guidelines came together to offer a starting point for getting outside to keep yourself and others safe while working to maintain access to our beloved natural spaces.
Read on to learn the primary tips on how to responsibly recreate outdoors. Each edition of the guidelines have been developed by bringing together topline issues and experts to distill key concepts that when implemented, build a community of care in the outdoors.
Learn more at recreateresponsibly.org
Know Before you Go
Check the status of the place you want to visit for closures, fire restrictions, and weather.
Plan and Prepare
Reservations and permits may be required. Make sure you have the gear you need and a back-up plan
Build an Inclusive Outdoors
Be an active part of making the outdoors safe and welcoming for all identities and abilities.
Respect Others
There is space for everyone and countless outdoor activities. Be kind to all who use the outdoors and nature differently.
Leave No Trace
Respect the land, water, wildlife, and Native communities. Follow the seven Leave No Trace principles. Learn more at LeaveNoTrace.org
Make It Better
We all have a responsibility to sustain the places we love. Volunteer, donate, and advocate for the outdoors.
Permits Required to Visit Peekamoose
Blue Hole through September 15
The Blue Hole is a day-use area and a permit is required for all visitors to the Peekamoose Blue Hole and the entire nearby Peekamoose Valley Riparian Corridor along the Rondout Creek, including campers, picknickers, hikers, and anglers everyday between May 15 and September 15 of each year.
Permits are $10, and must be acquired at least 24 hours in advance, but no more than a week in advance. Only advance registrations will be accepted. No walk-in registrations are available. Permits must list the names of all members of the visiting party when making the registration. Names can be changed up to one day in advance. Each permit will be linked to a vehicle, and the permit must be displayed on/in the vehicle. Permits can be acquired from Reserve America at newyorkstateparks.reserveamerica.com/.
For more information on the Peekamoose Blue Hole and Riparian Corridor permits, please call the Catskills Visitor Center at 845 688 3369.
New Hiking Challenge Showcases
The Catskills’ Hidden Treasures
The Congressman Maurice D. Hinchey Catskills Visitor Center is thrilled to be hosting the Catskills Adventure Challenge. This unique challenge offers outdoor enthusiasts a fresh and exciting opportunity to explore the Catskill Mountains while fulfilling their passion for adventure.
The Catskills Adventure Challenge is designed to offer both new and seasoned hikers a unique set of objectives that highlight the beauty and diversity of the Catskill Mountains. The Catskills Adventure Challenge invites participants to embark on eight carefully selected hikes that showcase the region’s breathtaking landscapes, diverse ecosystems, and rich history. To complete the challenge, participants must finish six of these eight hikes, providing flexibility and variety to suit all levels of experience and interest. Participation in the challenge is straightforward and rewarding.
Guides with detailed information about each hike are available at the Catskills Visitor Center or via the official challenge website at catskillsadventurechallenge.com.
Upon completing the hikes, participants are asked to compile a log of their adventures, including details of the six trails completed. Adding a personal touch to the submission, participants are encouraged to include a favorite photo from the challenge. Submissions should be made via the convenient online form available on the official challenge website. All who complete the challenge will receive a special Catskills Adventure Challenge patch, symbolizing their adventurous spirit and lasting connection to the stunning Catskills wilderness.
Visit the Catskill Park’s Visitor Center
Located at 5096 Route 28 in Mount Tremper, the Congressman Maurice D. Hinchey Catskills Visitor Center (CVC) is the official
visitor center for the Catskill Park. A program of the Catskill Center, staff are available at the CVC with information, maps and all the advice needed to plan a Catskill adventure. The CVC is open every day in the summer months from 9:30 am to 4:00 pm. Visitors can get their Catskill questions answered in person, receive tourism literature, and make purchases at the CVC’s shop that includes hiking maps, regional books, and much more. CVC staff are also available to answer questions about the Catskills and the Catskill Park via email at info@catskillcenter.org or phone at 845 688 3369 during normal business hours.
In addition to tourism services, there are 1.5 miles of trails on the CVC’s grounds, including the 0.5 mile long accessible Interpretive Loop Trail, which are open to the public daily. The 80-foot tall Upper Esopus Fire Tower is also open daily to visitors, offering unrivaled views of the surrounding mountains and Esopus Creek valley. Picnic tables are available on site for those who wish to enjoy a picnic lunch.
Visitors can explore the ever expanding resources available online for the CVC on the web at catskillsvisitorcenter.org, the CVC’s Facebook page at facebook.com/catskillsvisitorcenter, and the CVC on Instagram at @catskills.visitor.center.
Catskills Hiking Guides with the Hiker Trash
Husbands on YouTube and the Web
Looking to explore the trails of the Catskills (and beyond) before you hit the trail? My husband and I have a YouTube channel showcasing our hiking adventures in the Catskills and beyond! You can find The Hiker Trash Husbands on YouTube at youtube. com/thehikertrashhusbands. If you’re in the Catskills and have cable provided by MTC, you can catch our videos on CatskillsAir, MTC Channel 1.
For the two of us, The Hiker Trash Husbands is not only a way to show friends and family our hiking adventures, but an effort to provide positive LGBTQ+ representation in the hiking world. We love to showcase our own hiking adventures, along with other queer outdoors folks. You can learn more about our efforts, along with detailed hike descriptions and guides, by visiting our website at hikertrashhusbands.com.
Catskill Park Advisory Committee
The Catskill Park Advisory Committee (CPAC) was established to facilitate communication within the Park and consists of representatives from local governments and organizations chaired by the Catskill Center. Meetings are held quarterly and are open to the public. If you’d like to learn more, join the mailing list or attend the next meeting, please email the Catskill Center at at cccd@catskillcenter.org with CPAC in the subject asking to be added to the mailing list.
Catskill Park Trail Conditions
Local recreational opportunities are always changing in the Catskill Park and by visiting the Catskills Visitor Center’s Trail
Conditions page, you can stay on top of those changes. Staff at the Visitor Center are regularly posting updates related to the Catskill Park, Catskill trails, Catskill campgrounds and camping, Catskill boating, and more at catskillstrailconditions.com.
Give Back to the Catskills
The natural beauty, the majesty of the mountains, the protection of the Catskill Forest Preserve, the region’s natural and cultural resources, all need your help! By supporting the work of the Catskill Center, you support: stewardship of our Catskill Park and its vast natural resources; the Center’s collaborative spirit as we convene, create partnerships and facilitate discussions that benefit the region; and the Center’s work to support education, arts and culture throughout the Catskills. To support the work of the Catskill Center, become a member online through their website at www.catskillcenter.org/ donate or donate by mail: Checks made out to the “Catskill Center” can be mailed to Catskill Center, PO Box 504, Arkville, NY 12406.
Jeff Senterman is the Executive Director of the Catskill Center for Conservation and Development in Arkville, NY, a member of the Board of Directors of the Catskill Watershed Corporation and, and a member of the Board of Directors of the Central Catskills Chamber of Commerce. Jeff graduated with a degree in Environmental Science from Lyndon State College and worked for many years as an Environmental Planner in New England before coming back to New York and the Catskills in the nonprofit sector. To learn more about the work of the Catskill Center in the Catskills, visit catskillcenter. org.
The MOUNTAIN CINEMA
UPCOMING FILMS
National Anthem (Opens 8/30)
Between the Temples (Opens 9/13) Sing Sing (Opens 9/27)
Good One (Opens 10/11) Fly Me To The Moon
Harold and the Purple Crayon Borderlands
PERFORMANCES
• Faculty & Students of the Academy of Fortepiano Performance
• Joanne Polk and Jeffrey Langford
• Jazz Pianist Jamie Saft
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 2:00 PM
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
This is just a sampling of all of the events in the Catskills this September. To request that your event be included in future calendars, please email tafts@catskillmtn.org
Please call ahead or visit the website for each event to confirm details, including any admission costs.
ONGOING
Birdsong Farmers Market
Birdsong Farmers Market is located on one of the most beautiful properties in Delaware County. Shop from farmers, herbalists, craftspeople, and producers and then wander the stunning property. The art gallery will be open if there is an exhibition on display.
Location: 38480 Highway 10, Delhi
Hours: Every Saturday, 10:00 am-2:00 pm
Bovina Farmers Market
The best local agricultural and craft products from the community’s artisans and farmers. Fresh food, live music, and children’s activities make it an engaging weekly community event for all ages. Rain or shine.
Location: 50 Creamery Road, Bovina
Hours: Every Friday to Labor Day, 4:00-7:00 pm
Delhi Farmers Market
An amazing line up of dedicated farmers, bakers, producers, herbalists, craftspeople and more. You will find a variety of your kitchen staples—fresh bread, farm fresh cheeses, vegetables, jams, poultry and more.
Location: Courthouse square, Delhi
Hours: Every Wednesday, 9:00 am-2:00 pm
Woodstock Farm Festival
Woodstock’s other festival, celebrating local food, live music, and our rockin’ community
Location: Mountainview Lot, Rock City Road, Woodstock
Hours: Every Wednesday, 3:00-7:00 pm
Greater Hancock Farmers Market
The Greater Hancock Farmers’ Market & Craft Fair has an array of local vendors. There is often live music and a variety of attractions ranging from Chicken BBQ to car shows and more.
Location: Hancock Town Square, 20 E Main St, Hancock
Hours: Every Saturday through October 12, 10:00 am-2:00 pm
More Info: facebook.com/ HancockFarmersMarketNY
Kingston Farmers Market
The Kingston Farmers Market fosters a sense of community, where people come together to shop, talk and learn. A wide variety of produce, baked goods, alcohol, goodies and gift items.
Location: County Courthouse parking lot, 285 Wall St, Kingston
Hours: Every Saturday through November 23, 9:00 am-1:00 pm
More Info: kingstonfarmersmarket.org
Pakatakan Farmers Market
The Pakatakan Farmers’ Market is a great destination for breakfast or lunch, while getting your weekly shopping done! The array of food vendors, farmers, producers, herbalists, and craftspeople, make it the perfect place to shop for weekly groceries, enjoy a nice Saturday brunch, and also shop gifts for special occasions.
Location: 46676 NY-30, Halcottsville
Hours: Every Saturday through November, 9:00 am-1:00 pm
More Info: roundbarnmarket.org
Saugerties Farmers Market
All the best of local produce, including fruits and vegetables, pasture-raised meats, artisanal cheeses, eggs, maple syrup, honey, wines and spirits, baked goods, jams and jellies, prepared foods, and more.
Location: Cahill School Parking Lot 115 Main St., Saugerties
Hours: Every Saturday, 10:00 am-2:00 pm
More Info: saugertiesfarmersmarket
Phoenicia Farmers Market
Phoenicia Farmers Market is a volunteer-led movement to increase access to locally-grown foods in the Town of Shandaken. We bring together local farms, artisanal makers, full-time residents, and seasonal visitors to a weekly market to shop, learn, gather, and compost. EBT/SNAP Benefits are accepted.
Location: Main Street, Phoenicia
Hours: Every Sunday through October 27, noon4:00 pm
More Info: phoeniciafarmersmarket.org
Stamford Farmers Market
Vendors sell local meat, produce, honey, pickles, jams, and much more.
Location: 87 Fisher Road, Stamford
Hours: Every Sunday through September 1, 1:00-4:00 pm
Online Meditation with Bushel
Bushel is hosting online meditation sessions that include guided meditation, group interaction, and support. New sitters and seasoned sitters are welcome. Meditation sessions are free and open to all, but donations are welcome to support this program.
Location: Join via Zoom
Hours: Monday-Friday, 6:30-7:00 am
More Info & Zoom Link: bushelcollective.org/meditation-calendar/
Magic On Main—
An Intimate Parlor Experience
Join Magician Sean Doolan for a magic show in his private library located in a historic building on Main Street in Windham. Sean will weave his personal story of transitioning from a trial lawyer to a magician in interactive magical routines. In this parlor show, By reservation only, no walkins. Dates and times subject to change without notice, see website for updated calendar.
Location: 5428 NY Route 23 (Main Street), Windham
Dates & Times: Check website for most up-todate schedule
Tickets: $20/person
More Info: MagicOnMainWindham.com
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 1
41st Annual Iroquois Arts Festival
Features an all Iroquois Art Market, the Sky Dancers, the Iroquois Indian Marching Band (Sat only); storyteller Perry Ground; family activities; Native food vendors, and more.
Location: Iroquois Museum, 324 Caverns Road, Howes Cave Times: 10:00 am-5:00 pm
More Info: iroquoismuseum.org or 518 296 8949
Eighth Annual Pottery Festival
A unique exhibition of local ceramic artists, celebrating Catskill Mountain Foundation bringing art to the mountains. Handmade pottery by local and regional artists.
Location: Sugar Maples Center for Creative Arts, 34 Big Hollow Road, Maplecrest Times: 11:00 am-5:00 pm Saturday; 11:00 am4:00 pm Sunday
More Info: catskillmtn.org
Hand to God
Hand to God takes place in a church basement in a small Texas town where the teens of the Christian Puppetry Ministry gather to bring the Word to the Flock. But one puppet takes on a foul-mouthed, demonic life of its own—unleashing the community’s barely repressed lust and a darkest secrets. Like nothing you’ve seen before, this hilarious & blasphemous Broadway
CATSKILL MOUNTAIN FOUNDATION
TRANSFORMING LIVES THROUGH THE ARTS
THANK YOU TO OUR FUNDERS & SUPPORTERS!
Catskill Mountain Foundation is supported in part by New York State Council on the Arts, the Greene County Cultural Fund administered by the Greene County Legislature, The Jarvis and Constance Doctorow Family Foundation, The Royce Family Foundation, The Samuel and Esther Doctorow Fund, The Orville and Ethel Slutzky Family Foundation, Platte Clove Bruderhof Community, Bank of Greene County Charitable Foundation, The Greene County Youth Bureau, Marshall & Sterling Insurance, All Souls’ Church, Stewarts Shops, Windham Foundation, and by private donations.
7971 Main Street, Village of Hunter 518 263 2001 • www.catskillmtn.org
hit is a ruthless comedy about sinners, sex … and sock puppets!
Location: Forestburgh Playhouse, 39 Forestburgh Rd, Forestburgh
More Info: fbplayhouse.org
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 2
Woodstock-New Paltz Art & Crafts Fair
The Hudson Valley is famous for its vibrant festival scene, and among the gems is the Woodstock-New Paltz Art & Crafts Fair. Celebrating its 43rd year, this beloved event is not only one of the region’s oldest craft fairs, but also consistently ranks among the nation’s best contemporary craft shows by Sunshine Artist Magazine. This biannual festival bookends the summer season, gracing Memorial and Labor Day weekends since 1982.
Location: Ulster County Fairgrounds, 249 Libertyville Road, New Paltz
Times: Saturday & Sunday 10:00 am-5:30 pm; Monday 10:00 am-4:00 pm
More Info: quailhollow.com
Marjorie Kellogg Drawings and Maquettes
Ms. Kellogg is currently designing Flyin’ West for the Westport Country Playhouse. Her set for Passions appeared in the 2013 Glimmerglass Festival, and this fall at the White Nights Festival at Lincoln Center. Her designs for the 2004 world premier of Richard Danielpour’s opera, Margaret Garner were exhibited at the June 2007 Prague Quadrennial, an international exposition of scenography.
Location: Franklin Stage Company, 25 Institute Street, Franklin
More Info: franklinstagecompany.org
THROUGH SEPTEMBER
7
Showcase Exhibition
Students of instructors at the Woodstock School of Art will be on display.
Location: Robert H. Angeloch Gallery, Woodstock School of Art, 2470 Route 212, Woodstock More Info: woodstockschoolofart.org
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 8
Neil Driscoll & Irina Grinevitsky
Solo Exhibitions
Longyear Gallery of Margaretville is pleased to announce the opening of two solo exhibitions by Longyear members: “Gateway,” featuring new paintings by Neil Driscoll, and “ Navy Yard in Daylight,” featuring the art of Irina Grinevitsky. They will be accompanied by a group show of the art of all other Longyear members.
Location: Longyear Gallery, 785 Main Street, Margaretville
Gallery Hours: Friday-Sunday and holiday Mondays from 12:00-5:00 pm
More Info: longyeargallery.org
Twenty/20
Curated by Carrie Feder, the exhibition Twenty/20 celebrates the 20th anniversary of the Athens Cultural Center by exploring the multiple meanings of “twenty,” as a number, an anniversary, a cycle and as a symbol of change, passage of time, transformation and growth. “Twenty” holds significance in mathematics, astrology, numerology and religion as well as signifying the coming of age in many traditions. Location: Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens Gallery Hours: Saturday & Sunday, 12:00-5:00 pm
More Info: athensculturalcenter.org
Out of Order
Intimate, funny, playful, loving, sad. 50 index cards in a bowl. Some are confessions, characters, stories, others prompt weird group activities in the room. One card at a time is removed and performed in whatever order the universe dictates. It’s a game. It’s a play. It’s an experience with other people. Originally conceived to be performed in living rooms, we’ll be presenting it in the immersive confines of our Speakeasy lobby space. Audience members will be in close proximity to the performer and their inner selves. Come over and play with your friend Carl. It can’t hurt…?
Location: Bridge Street Theater, 44 West Bridge Street, Catskill
Day & Time: Thursday-Saturday @ 7:30 pm; Sunday @ 2:00 pm
More Info: CenterforPerformingArts.org
Murder on the Orient Express
CENTERstage Productions is thrilled to present the mystery play Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie and adapted for the stage by Ken Ludwig, directed by Emily DePew. A who-done-it mystery. Passengers aboard the opulent Orient Express awake to frightful news: Overnight, the American business mogul among them was stabbed to death behind locked doors. Thankfully, debonair detective Hercule Poirot is on the train and on the case. Murder on the Orient Express is an adaptation of Agatha Christie’s famous murder mystery novel. The story revolves around a murder that takes place on a train in 1934. The detective Hercule Poirot interrogates passengers of the train to get to the bottom of the mystery.
Location: The CENTER for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Route 308, Rhinebeck
Days & Times: Friday & Saturday @ 8:00 pm; Sunday @ 3:00 pm
More Info: CenterforPerformingArts.org
Beehive: The 60s Musical
Told from the perspective of six young women who come of age during this enigmatic decade, BEEHIVE is a musical revue that celebrates the powerful female voices of the 1960’s –with songs like “Proud Mary”, “Me and Bobby McGee”, “A Natural Woman,” “To Sir With Love”, “Son of Preacher Man”, and many, many more! You’ll be dancing in the aisles as you’re reminded how the great songs of the 60’s thrilled us, challenged us, and made us see the world in a whole new way.
Location: Shadowland Stages, 157 Canal Street, Ellenville
Days & Times: Thursday-Saturday @ 8:00 pm; Sunday @ 2:00 pm
More Info: shadowlandstages.org
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 12
High Noon Tunes
Local musicians perform from through midSeptember. Free Admission—bring a lawn chair or blanket in the park to enjoy the music. In the event of rain, the concerts are moved indoors to The Function at Catskills Junction, 28 Railroad Avenue, Stamford
Location: Veterans Memorial Park, Main Street, Stamford
Time: Every Thursday, 12:00-1:00 pm
More Info: stamfordnymusic.com
THROUGH SEPTEMBER 29
Works by Ford Crull
Curated by Carter Ratcliff. Ford Crull continues to explore the expressive power of personal and cultural symbols in a series of densely painted and vividly colored compositions. Crull uses identifiable images such as hearts, wings, crosses, and the human figure, as well as geometrical emblems and abstract forms whose meanings are less explicit. Words, in the form of cryptic, fleeting phrases, also animate Crull’s pictorial world.
Location: Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild, 34 Tinker Street, Woodstock
More Info: woodstockguild.org
THROUGH OCTOBER 9
Yoga for Gardening with Pamela Martin
Join us for outdoor yoga classes led by Pamela Martin and other local yoga teachers. Learn tips and tricks to avoid injury, and to help support the body during gardening and yard work. A stretch and strength class appropriate for multiple levels. Please bring a mat, water, sunscreen and bugspray. Wear comfortable clothing you can move in. In case of inclement weather, sessions will take place indoors in the Education Center. This program starts just after
our garden volunteering ends. Please feel free to join us for volunteer gardening.
Location: Mountain Top Arboretum, 4 Maude Adams Road, Tannersville
Day & Time: Every Wednesday, 3:15-4:15 pm
More Info: mtarboretum.org
THROUGH OCTOBER 19
Plant Matter
A group exhibition curated by Gallery Manager Ursula Hudak featuring flora and biomaterial matter, with a secondary focus on invasive plants and the effects of climate change. Nearly 20 artists, both local and regional, will present works from all aspects of plant life and decay, from representational works to art made with plant pigments or constructed using found organic materials. The art for this show will span a wide range of mediums including paintings, prints, collages, sculptures and ceramic works.
Location: Roxbury Arts Center, 5025 Vega Mountain Rd, Roxbury
More Info: roxburyartsgroup.org
THROUGH OCTOBER 27
Native Prospects: Indigeneity and Landscape Native Prospects: Indigeneity and Landscape juxtaposes an Indigenous approach to the articulation of land with the American landscape paintings of Thomas Cole. The exhibition presents 19th-century paintings by Thomas Cole featuring Native figures, in context with Indigenous works of historic and cultural value, and artworks by contemporary Indigenous artists: Teresa Baker (Mandan/Hidatsa), Brandon Lazore (Onondaga, Snipe Clan), Truman T. Lowe (Ho-Chunk), Alan Michelson (Mohawk member of the Six Nations of the Grand River) and Kay WalkingStick (Cherokee).
Location: Thomas Cole National Historic Site, 218 Spring Street, Catskill Days: Saturdays & Sundays
More Info: thomascole.org
Still Standing
The 2024 exhibit, STILL STANDING, showcases 12 structures preserved by past and present members of the Friends of Historic Kingston. We invite you to come celebrate our predecessors’ foresight in restoring these iconic structures and to reflect on your own essential role in protecting our city’s architectural heritage.
Location: Friends of Historic Kingston Gallery, 63 Main Street, Kingston
Dates & Times: Friday & Saturday, 11:00 am4:00 pm
More Info: fohk.org
THROUGH NOVEMBER 30
Outside the Box
Iroquois Museum’s Outside the Box presents the work of 10 Iroquois/Haudenosaunee individuals whose creative paths diverge from the unexpected to break molds and make inroads into areas of expression where Indigenous representation is rare.
Location: Iroquois Museum, 324 Caverns Road, Howes Cave
More Info: iroquoismuseum.org or 518 296 8949
THROUGH DECEMBER 1
Alan Michelson: Prophetstown
Artist Alan Michelson (Mohawk, Six Nations of the Grand River) presents a site-responsive exhibition throughout the historic artist’s home and landscape including the first complete American display of Prophetstown, 2012; the first New York display of Hanödaga:yas (Town Destroyer), 2018; and video and other mixed media installations.
Location: Thomas Cole National Historic Site, 218 Spring Street, Catskill Days: Saturdays & Sundays
More Info: thomascole.org
THROUGH DECEMBER 28
Iyengar Yoga with Carolyn Christie
Join Carolyn to reconnect your mind and body through yoga asana practice. The Iyengar method of learning and practicing asanas engages the mind as well as body. With breath as conditioner, the mind as the seeker, Iyengar yoga practice gives strength mobility to the body, stability to the mind. Open to all; class is for all levels, from no experience with yoga to many years $20 per 90-minute class, payable to the instructor
Location: Bushel Collective, 106 Main St, Delhi Time: Saturdays, 10:00-11:30 am
More Info: bushelcollective.org
SEPTEMBER 1
Bovina Farm Day
Bovina Farm Day Celebrates the agricultural history of Bovina by hosting events, selling food, and a large vendor tent. Churn butter, go on hay rides, tour the farm, participate in the apple pie or scare crow making contest, and much more!
Location: Crescent Valley Road, Bovina Time: 10:00 am-5:00 pm
More Info: farmingbovinany.org/bovina-farm-day
Harvest Festival featuring Rosehaven Alpacas
Highlighting local farms, artisans, and flavors, this annual farmers market features live music, food trucks, crafts, special offerings, and more.
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel Time: 11:00 am
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Hooley on the Hudson
Come on down to the 23rd annual Hooley on the Hudson! Featuring three stages of live music, step dancing, craft & food vendors, and activities for all ages throughout the day. Hosted by the City of Kingston and the Ancient Order of Hibernians Division 1 of Ulster County, proceeds from this event go to the Irish Cultural Center of the Hudson Valley, the Food Bank of the Hud-
son Valley, and other area charities. A Parade of Dignitaries will start the Festival at 11:30am followed by an opening ceremony featuring the Ulster County AOH Pipes & Drums Band.
Location: T.R. Gallo Memorial Park, Broadway, Kingston
Time: 11:30 am-6:00 pm
More Info: hooleyonthehudson.com
Bearsville Center’s Country Festival
Saddle up for a weekend filled with live performances from top country artists, line dancing lessons, delicious southern cuisine, and plenty of down-home fun!
Location: Bearsville Center, 277-297 Tinker Street, Woodstock Time: 12:00-6:00 pm
More Info: bearsvilletheater.com
Afternoon Concert: Helen Gillet
Helen Gillet is a singer-songwriter and surrealist-archeologist exploring synthesized sounds, texture, and rhythm using an acoustic cello. Over the years—working in New Orleans with musicians of all stripes, from avant-garde jazz and classical to pop and funk—Gillet has developed a singular polyglot style. The core of her work is solo performance with live looping, layering cello parts and vocal lines. Rhythmic figures emerge with bowed or plucked ostinatos or a variety of rubbing and slapping on the body of the cello, then enhanced with melodies played or sung in her haunting alto.
Location: Opus 40, 356 George Sickle Rd, Saugerties
Time: 1:00 pm
More Info: opus40.org
Summer Send-Off BBQ
Celebrate Labor Day weekend and soak up the final days of summertime! All you can eat BBQ!
Location: River Pavilion at Hutton Brickyards, 200 North Street, Kingston
Time: 1:00-8:00 pm
More Info: huttonbrickyards.com
Seeds Under Nuclear Winter—an Earth Opera
Elizabeth Clark’s Seeds Under Nuclear Winter: An Earth Opera is a recreation of spiritual visions, dreams, and stories through world and sacred music, performance art, movement, and light experiments, shared within an immersive and multi-sensory community experience. The Earth Opera takes place in a post-apocalyptic atmosphere, and centers around finding light, beauty, and hope in the darkest times—and on our deep connection with all living things, our planet, and with each other. Orchestrated for harps, ethereal voices, South American/Andean instruments, Indonesian gamelan, strings, choir, drones, dulcimer, piano, gongs, waterphone, and a cast of 31 Hudson Valley performing artists, the ‘Earth Opera’ steps into otherworldly realms and unfolds upon a non-linear and timeless path, similar to the way we dream.
Location: Widow Jane Mine, 668 Rt. 213, Rosendale
Time: 3:00 pm
More Info: widowjanemine.com
Chamber Music Festival: Borromeo String Quartet with Henry Kramer, piano
The award-winning Borromeo String Quartet is one of the most important ensembles of our time. Admired and sought after for both its fresh interpretations of the classical music canon and its championing of works by 20th and 21st century composers, the ensemble has been hailed for its “edge-of-the- seat performances,” by the Boston Globe, which called it “simply the best.”
Praised by The Cleveland Classical Review for his “astonishingly confident technique”, pianist Henry Kramer is a musician of rare sensitivity who combines stylish programming with insightful and exuberant interpretations. The concert will include works by Vijay Iyer, Beethoven, Bizet, and Fauré.
Location: Maverick Concerts 120 Maverick Road, Woodstock
Time: 4:00 pm
More Info: maverickconcerts.org
A Conversation with D&H Historian Bill Merchant on Solaris
Bill Merchant will once again guide participants in a conversation about the many remains of the Rondout’s history that can be seen along the waterfront, as Solaris sails from the Maritime Museum to the Eddyville Dam and back.
Location: Hudson River maritime Museum, 50 Rondout Landing, Kingston Time: 4:00 pm
More Info: hrmm.org/all-boat-tours.html
Nine Chefs, One Table 2024
For the second year, Chef Einat Admony is hosting “Nine Chefs, One Table,” a dinner to benefit the James Beard Foundation. Joining Chef Einat in the kitchen this year are Chefs Amanda Freitag, Esther Choi, Ilan Hall, Gabriele Bertaccini, TJ Steele, Bricia Lopez, Shenarri Freeman, and Miriam Milord.
Location: Kerhonkson
Time: 4:30-8:30 pm
More Info: eventbrite.com/e/ nine-chefs-one-table-2024-tickets929259579417?aff=oddtdtcreator
Bradstan Cabaret Series: An Evening with Jeanne MacDonald
Award-winning vocalist Jeanne MacDonald returns to The Bradstan Cabaret Series for the third consecutive year. Jeanne was the first ever solo performer at the original Bradstan Country Hotel, and she has been sharing her passion and talents with the world ever since, frequenting renowned stages across the country.
Location: The Eldred Preserve, 1040 State Rte 55, Eldred Time: 7:00 pm
More Info: theeldredpreserve.com
Israel Vibration & Roots Radics
Reggae legends Israel Vibration and Roots
Radics feature some of the best original recording musicians in the business. The positive vibrations emanating from the music of Israel Vibration have been spellbinding audiences, critics and DJs for over three decades.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
SEPTEMBER 1 & 2
Open House at the Catskill Water Discovery Center
View our exhibits: “Of Rivers and Reservoirs: The NYC Water Story” and NYC DEP “Water Resources Art and Poetry Contest Champions. Preview the East Branch Nature Preserve through interpretive signs, and enjoy creative activities for children.
Location: Catskill Water Discovery Center, 669 Highway 38, Arkville Hours: 12:00-4:00 pm
More information: waterdiscoverycenter.org
SEPTEMBER 1-30
September Showcase: Art Across the Seasons Windham Fine Arts presents September Showcase: Art Across the Seasons. Celebrate the beauty in the blend of seasons as seen through the eyes of Joseph Sampson, Liza Sokolovskaya, Mara Lehmann and more. Join us and immerse yourself in the warmth of summer to the hues of autumn.
Location: Windham Fine Arts, 5380 Main Street, Windham
More Info: director@windhamfinearts.com, 518 734 6850, or windhamfinearts.com
SEPTEMBER 2
Labor Day Monday at Weed Orchards & Winery
A family friendly event with tons of fall fun in store! Dogs are also allowed to attend on a leash!
Location: Weed Orchards & Winery, 43 Mount Zion Road, Marlboro Time: 11:00 am-4:00 pm
More Info: weedorchards.com
SEPTEMBER 4
Blues Night Gabriel Butterfield’s Tone Masons
An evening of Blues featuring Gabriel Butterfield, the eldest son of Blues legend Paul Butterfield; Jimmy Eppard, and Jim Curtin.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
Sunset Flix: The Wizard of Oz
Watch the original Wizard of Oz on the beautiful Hasbrouck House lawn! Bring a picnic blanket, chair, and your furry friend! Snacks and drinks are available.
Location: Hasbrouck House, 3806 Main Street, Stone Ridge
Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: hasbrouckhouseny.com
SEPTEMBER 5
Solaris Live Music Cruise—
Mike + Ruthy of The Mammals
Take in beautiful views of the Hudson River while listening to live Indie Folk/Americana music with Mike + Ruthy of The Mammals!
Location: Hudson River Maritime Museum, 50 Rondout Landing, Kingston
Time: 6:00 pm
More Info: hrmm.org
Emily Keating w/ Greg Castro
Emily Keating is a force to be reckoned with. Known for her powerful and unique voice, Emily captivates audiences, making her one of the strongest singers in Manhattan. Her songwriting style, rooted in folk with catchy pop melodies, invites listeners to sing along.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
SEPTEMBER 6
First Fridays Athens
Embrace the arts and join us at the Athens Cultural Center for our vibrant “First Fridays” happy hour! We open our doors to celebrate the rich tapestry of culture and creativity that defines our community. Best of all, it’s absolutely free to attend! Discover new exhibitions, connect with fellow art enthusiasts, and unwind with a refreshing drink in hand. Whether you’re a local resident or just passing through, our First Fridays are the perfect opportunity to immerse yourself in the arts, share ideas, and enjoy the welcoming atmosphere of the Athens Cultural Center.
Location: Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens Time: 5:00-7:00 pm
More Info: friendsofathens.org
First Fridays Catskill
Stroll Main Street, Catskill on the 1st Friday of every month. Local shops are open late, most until 8 pm, offering specials like sips & snacks, pop-ups, music, discounts, and FUN!
Location: Main Street & Bridge Street, Catskill
More Info: firstfridayscatskill.com
Walton First Fridays
Local shops in Walton stay open late with deals and events for the community to enjoy!
Location: Walton
More Info: instagram.com/waltonfirstfridays
An Evening with Jazz in the Valley
The TRANSART Ensemble sees an alchemy between one of creative music’s most progressive thought-leaders—vibraphonist Bryan Carrott alongside soulful jazz pianist Sharp Radway, progressive jazz bassist Christopher Dean Sullivan and legendary master-percussionist Chief Baba Neil Clarke. The quartet brings a unique voice to the jazz idiom that marries a deeplyrooted foundation in the rhythms of the African diaspora with modern composition and an unparalleled improvisational prowess.
Location: Opus 40, 356 George Sickle Rd, Saugerties
Time: 5:00 pm
More Info: opus40.org
Deep Purple with Special Guests YES
There simply aren’t enough superlatives to properly acknowledge the contribution Deep Purple has made to rock music. Having sold more than 100 million albums and filled global arenas for decades, there’s little wonder that the respected British radio station Planet Rock named the group the 5th Most Influential Band Ever. The band were also presented the Legend Award at the 2008 World Music Awards and were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2016. Deep Purple truly are rock royalty.
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel Time: 6:30 pm
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Mick Lynch
Mick Lynch is an Irish singer/songwriter from Dublin, based in upstate New York. He is a founding member of Irish band The Guggenheim Grotto (later, Storyman) which enjoyed critical acclaim in the U.S. and Ireland.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
American Aquarium
For nearly two decades, American Aquarium have pushed toward that rare form of rock-androll that’s revelatory in every sense. “For us the sweet spot is when you’ve got a rock band that makes you scream along to every word, and it’s not until you’re coming down at three a.m. that you realize those words are saying something real about your life,” says frontman BJ Barham. “That’s what made us fall in love with music in the first place, and that’s the goal in everything
we do.” On their new album The Fear of Standing Still, the North Carolina-bred band embody that dynamic with more intensity than ever before, endlessly matching their gritty breed of country-rock with Barham’s bravest and most incisive songwriting to date.
Location: Levon Helm Studios, 160 Plochmann Lane, Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: levonhelm.com
SEPTEMBER 6-8
In the Works–In the Woods Festival
The In the Works—In the Woods Festival was created and founded in 2021 at the Forestburgh Playhouse. It grew out of the passion for nurturing, developing and celebrating new plays and musicals—and the diverse writers and artists who bring them to life. Dozens of creators from around the country gather on our campus to rehearse, rewrite, commune, workshop and share their gifts with our community at large. Over the course of the festival weekend, we present staged readings of the new plays, new musicals and two new solo cabaret acts. In addition, the Festival features Q & A talkbacks with our audiences, Off The Cuff conversations with world-renowned theatre-makers, open-mic nights, tastings by local food and beverage artisans—and plenty of other wonderful surprises.
Location: Forestburgh Playhouse, 39 Forestburgh Road, Forestburgh More Info: fbplayhouse.org
SEPTEMBER 7
Greene County Y Triathlon
Join us at beautiful Sleepy Hollow Lake as we strengthen our community one stride at a time. The Greene County YMCA Tri is a 350 yard swim, 11.5 mile bike and a 5k with chip timing used for the event.
Location: The Lodge at Sleepy Hollow Lake, 92 Randy Road, Athens
Time: 8:00 am
More Info: cdymca.org/events/greene-countyymca-triathlon
Metal at the Mill Exploration Day
This Exploration Day features the Dan Rion Memorial Antique Engine Jamboree, and the museum will invite regional collectors of historic engines, tractors, doodlebugs, outboard motors, vehicles, and other machines to display their collections. Hanford Mills staff and volunteers will also display and demonstrate some of the historic engines and machinery that are part of our own collection.
Location: Hanford Mills Museum, 51 Co. Rd. 12, East Meredith
Time: 10:00 am-5:00 pm
More Info: hanfordmills.org
The Rock and Roll Playhouse plays the Music of Queen + More for Kids
The Family Concert Series is back and ready to rock with our youngest audience members! Presented in collaboration with the Rock and Roll Playhouse, we will host an inclusive family friendly concert on our Horizon Stage the first Saturday of the month. Featuring the music of some of the most iconic musicians in Rock History with creative activations that celbrate Bethel Woods unique history and vision for a world made better through music and art.
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel
Time: 11:00 am
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Vintage Base Ball: Pidgeon Pennant featuring Delhi Polecats, Saugerties BBC, Kingston Guards
Vintage base ball is an ode to the way base ball was played in the 1800s, when rules were changing yearly and only the catcher wore a mitt. The game is competitive and fun, focused on bringing the community together for an exciting afternoon! Feel free to pack a picnic, grab your friends, sip something refreshing and cheer on your favorite team. Mark your calendar and start planning your adventure to participate in this vibrant tradition!
Location: Cantine Field, Saugerties
Time: 12:00 pm
More Info: delcovintagebaseball.org
Hudson Valley Craft Beverage Festival
Twin Star is hosting 25+ producers of delicious craft beverages! Enjoy two full hours of tastings and show your support for small businesses!
Location: Twin Star Orchards, 155 N Ohioville Rd, New Paltz
Time: 12:00-5:30 pm
More Info: twinstarorchards.com
Food Truck Festival
Indulge your taste buds at the Dutchman’s Landing Food Truck Festival in Catskill! Join us for a day filled with mouthwatering delights from a variety of food trucks, all set against the picturesque backdrop of Dutchman’s Landing.
Location: Dutchman’s Landing, 10 Main Street, Catskill
Time: 12:00-6:00 pm
Annie Mardiney: Catskill Raptors
The wildly popular Annie Mardiney from Wild Mountain Birds in Ulster County shows and discusses her raptors. Join us and learn about these beautiful creatures, see them up close and personal. Learn how saving wildlife is a collaborative effort. Annie is a professionally licensed and insured wildlife rescue and rehabilitator located in Rosendale New York. She is also qualified to use wild birds for education. One of our most popular nature presenters, Annie is not to be missed by anyone with a keen interest in hawks, owls, and falcons.
Location: Woodchuck Lodge, 1633 Burroughs Memorial Rd, Roxbury Time: 1:00 pm
More Info: jbwoodchucklodge.org
Arm-of-the-Sea Theater presents Estuary Tales
This puppet extravaganza chronicles the life and times of the Hudson River, rendered in the visual poetry of mask and puppet theater. This performance tells the tale of a lively young couple who live by the Esopus Creek and encounter the wildlife who call it home. FREE outdoor performance.
Location: West Kortright Center, 49 W Kortright Church Rd., East Meredith
Time: 1:30 pm
More Info: westkc.org
Steven E. Greenstein Memorial Concert
Steven E. Greenstein was the collector and curator of the vintage piano collection on public display at the Doctorow Center for the Arts. This memorial concert will feature performances by the faculty and students of the Academy of Fortepiano Performance, Joanne Polk and Jeffrey Langford, and jazz pianist Jamie Saft on pianos from the collection.
Location: Doctorow Center for the Arts, 7971 Main Street, Hunter Time: 2:00 pm
More Info: catskillmtn.org
Keegan Ales 21st Birthday Toga Party
Party like it’s your 21st in your togas because Keegan Ales is old enough to drink! Games, Animal House themed fun, live music, and MORE! Location: Keegan Ales, 20 Saint James St., Kingston Time: 3:00-9:00 pm
More Info: keeganales.com
Dzieci Theatre’s Makbet
The riotous clan of Dzieci Theatre will greet you with song, dance, and divination, then lead you between the gargantuan stone pillars and around the subterranean pools, in a riotous whirlwind of spine-tingling theatrical invention. With feats of astonishing physicality and otherworldly choral chanting, Dzieci’s Makbet (their boldly visceral take on Macbeth), comes alive through the unflinching performance of a handful of actors who take turns spontaneously trading off parts at the drop of a hat, exploding the art of storytelling, and creating a one-of-akind experience which audiences have said is, “Absolutely liberating!”
Location: Widow Jane Mine, 668 Rt. 213, Rosendale Time: 4:00 pm
More Info: widowjanemine.com
Celebrate Byrdcliffe!
Join us for Woodstock Byrdcliffe’s annual celebration and fundraiser, Celebrate Byrdcliffe! Gather with others in the community for a fun-filled afternoon of food, libations, a silent auction, and dance with a live performance by The Lucky 5. This year we are honoring Henry T. Ford, Chairman Emeritus and Byrdcliffe Historian, for his support and efforts to preserve the history of the Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild.
Location: Byrdcliffe Barn, 485 Upper Byrdcliffe Rd, Woodstock Time: 4:00-6:30 pm
More Info: woodstockguild.org
Reggae on the Rock: Junior Toots
Acclaimed international roots-reggae crooner, Junior Toots, the son of the legendary Toots Hibbert of Toots & The Maytals has been a mainstay in the recorded and live music scene for decades and with an ever-growing fanbase. He’s managed to captivate audiences worldwide with his electrifying high-energy stage performance, soul-filled vocals and socially charged lyricism, along with catchy, singalong Jamaican-rooted original tracks.
Location: Opus 40, 356 George Sickle Rd, Saugerties
Time: 5:00 pm
More Info: opus40.org
Lara Hope & The Ark-Tones w/ Mac & Cheeze Balkan PowerTrio
Winner of an Ameripolitan Music Award, and named the “Best Up-And-Coming Band” by Hudson Valley Magazine, Lara Hope & the ArkTones are the Northeast’s premier Roots Rock n’ Roll outfit! The Ark-Tones recently released their 3rd studio album, the all-original Here To Tell The Tale, which has been getting rave reviews nationally and internationally. They’ve spent much of the past decade on the road, both in Europe, and in the U.S., and have had the pleasure of touring with some of their musical heroes, including a national tour with The Brian Setzer Orchestra, and regional tours with The Blasters, and the Reverend Horton Heat. The Mac & Cheeze Balkan PowerTrio plays traditional and modern regional southern Balkan folk musics typically performed at weddings, harvests, holidays, ritual events, or just plain parties.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 7:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
Film: The Big Lebowski
Nothing bothers Jeff Lebowski (Jeff Bridges), aka The Dude, who spends his time bowling and chilling. But when two thugs break into his apartment with the errant belief that they’re strong-arming a Pasadena millionaire, ‘the Dude’ is activated. The Coen Brothers have big fun in this tale of tangled identity, bowling, White Russians and kidnapping. With John Goodman, Steve Buscemi, Julianne Moore, Philip Seymour Hoffman, John Turturro and Sam Elliot. (dir. Joel & Ethan Coen, US, 1998, 117 min.)
Location: Orpheum Theatre, 156 Main Street, Saugerties
More information: upstatefilms.org
Cat Power Sings Dylan:
The 1966 Royal Albert Hall Concert Last November in London, Cat Power took the stage at Royal Albert Hall and delivered a songfor-song recreation of one of the most fabled and transformative live sets of all time. Held at the Manchester Free Trade Hall in May 1966— but long known as the “Royal Albert Hall Concert” due to a mislabeled bootleg—the original performance saw Bob Dylan switching from acoustic to electric midway through the show, drawing ire from an audience of folk purists and forever altering the course of rock-and-roll.
Location: Ulster Performing Arts Center, 601 Broadway, Kingston
Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: bardavon.org
Nicole Atkins with Special Guest Justin & The Cosmics
For two decades, Nicole Atkins has created her own brand of spectral American rock & roll. She’s an old-school torch singer for the modern world, funneling her award-winning songwriting chops and genre-spanning influences — including psychedelic rock, Muscle Shoals soul, the pop grandeur of Roy Orbison, and the dark drama of Nick Cave — into six albums that have earned a global audience.
Location: Levon Helm Studios, 160 Plochmann Lane, Woodstock
Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: levonhelm.com
Jazz at the Maverick: Miguel Zenón Quartet
Multiple Grammy Nominee and Guggenheim and MacArthur Fellow Miguel Zenón represents a select group of musicians who have masterfully balanced and blended the often contradictory poles of innovation and tradition. Widely considered as one of the most groundbreaking and influential saxophonists and composers of his generation, he has also developed a unique
voice as a conceptualist, concentrating his efforts on perfecting a fine mix between Jazz and his many musical influences.
Location: Maverick Concerts 120 Maverick Road, Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: maverickconcerts.org
SEPTEMBER 7-8 & 14-15
Honeycrisp Festival
Lots of family friendly activities, including face painting, playground, hay rides, and live music! We will be serving special apple themed food and drinks and delicious Jane’s ice cream. Don’t forget your apple cider donuts! Our farm will have plenty of apples available to pick. This is a family friendly event, and we allow friendly, leashed dogs on the property. Admission tickets are required for all guests 5 and older to enter the orchard and winery. Event is held rain or shine.
Location: Weed Orchards & Winery, 43 Mount Zion Road, Marlboro Time: 10:00 am-6:00 pm
More Info: weedorchards.com
SEPTEMBER 7-NOVEMBER 1
Plein Air Extravaganza
Participants in plein air workshops held in August display their work.
Location: Main Street Center, 5494 County Route 23, Windham
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 7, 3:00-9:00 pm
More Info: mainstreetcenter.org
SEPTEMBER 8
Harvest Festival:
Featuring the 3rd Annual Pie Eating Contest
Highlighting local farms, artisans, and flavors, this annual farmers market features live music, food trucks, crafts, special offerings, and more.
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel Time: 11:00 am
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Afternoon Concert:
Liam Singer, Maeve Schallert, Catie Friel Friends and musical collaborators Liam Singer, Maeve Schallert, and Catie Friel will trade songs, back each other, and generally provide a pleasant bed of chamber folk and experimental sounds that fans of Sufjan, Eno and the like will find entracing!
Location: Opus 40, 356 George Sickle Rd, Saugerties
Time: 1:00 pm
More Info: opus40.org
Gardiner Brewing Company’s 6th Year Anniversary
Jam out to the ultimate tribute band (The Tonebenders) as you enjoy delicious food and drinks! Join GBC in celebrating 6 years of business!
Location: Gardiner Brewing Company, 699 Rt. 208, Gardiner
Time: 3:30-6:30 pm
More Info: gardinerbrewingcompany.com
Film: A Serious Man
Reportedly based on the brothers’ own Jewish suburban upbringing, A Serious Man follows a few weeks in the life of an upstanding family man whose troubles are mounting so quickly that they’re hard to track. In keeping with the “happily doomed” mood of the ’60s, the Coens portray every blessing as a potential curse, then insist, with only a tiny wink, that we “embrace the mystery.” (dir. Joel & Ethan Coen, US, 2009, 105 min.)
Location: Orpheum Theatre, 156 Main Street, Saugerties
More information: upstatefilms.org
Maverick Chamber Music Festival: Music from Copland House
Music From Copland House is the acclaimed resident ensemble at Aaron Copland’s National Historic Landmark home in New York, now restored as a unique creative center for American music. Since its triumphant New York debut as the Opening Night of Merkin Hall’s 1999-2000 season, Music from Copland House (MCH) has come to occupy a special place on the U.S. musical scene as perhaps this country’s only wide-ranging American repertory ensemble. Provocatively uniting past and present, American and non-American, it journeys across 150 years of our nation’s rich musical legacy, reaching back deep into the 19th century and forward to just-completed compositions. The concert will include works by Mozart, Viet Cuong, Copland, and Fauré.
Location: Maverick Concerts 120 Maverick Road, Woodstock
Time: 4:00 pm
More Info: maverickconcerts.org
JD Souther
Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee JD Souther is “one of the most celebrated songwriters of his generation,” writes Interview Magazine “Raised on a steady diet of big band and jazz during his childhood, Souther has routinely returned to that music—as well as the genius songwriters of the early 20th century (Gershwin, Cole Porter)—for inspiration. On his latest studio album, Tenderness, Souther combines these musical threads, striking a perfect balance between understated jazz and the ineffable pop narratives that have been the backbone of much of his greatest work.”
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel
Time: 7:00 pm; pre-show dinner (tickets sold separately) starts at 5:30 pm
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
The Vapors w/ Pajamazon
Best known for their massive 1980 worldwide hit “Turning Japanese,” The Vapors continue to bring their individually styled brand of New Wave inspired music to fans old and new in the form of high-quality live performances, and the ongoing development of critically acclaimed new material.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
SEPTEMBER 8 & 22
Free Guided Tour of the Five Locks Walk
Join our Historian Bill Merchant for a free guided tour of our National Historic Landmark Five Locks Walk as part of the Hudson River Valley Ramble. Meet at the Mid-Hudson Visitor Center at 2:00pm for hike with history. No advance registration needed.
Location: D&H Canal Historical Society, 1315 Rte 213, High Falls
Time: 2:00 pm
More Info: canalmuseum.org
SEPTEMBER 9
Film: The 2 Tone Records Story featuring author Daniel Rachel
Daniel will be in conversation with Tony Fletcher about his new book Too Much Too Young: The 2 Tone Records Story: Rude Boys, Racism, and the Soundtrack of a Generation with a preface by Pauline Black, singer of the legendary band the Selecter. This is the story of truly iconic bands like the Specials, Madness, the English Beat, the Selecter, Bad Manners, and others in the UK “ska revival” of the early 1980s. These bands were decades ahead of their time, in their integration of Black and white musicians and their musical synthesis of ska, punk, and other genres. The author interviewed ALL the musicians in these bands and presents the history in a fascinating way.
Location: Orpheum Theatre, 156 Main Street, Saugerties
More information: upstatefilms.org
SEPTEMBER 10
Film: Raising Arizona
A surreal, hyperactive farce in which a bumbling petty thief (Nicholas Cage) and the lady cop (Holly Hunter) who keeps arresting him fall in love and decide to start a family. Arizona is turned into a mythical haven for a memorable gaggle of no-hopers, halfwits and has-beens. (dir. Joel & Ethan Coen, US, 1987, 94 min.)
Location: Orpheum Theatre, 156 Main Street, Saugerties
More information: upstatefilms.org
SEPTEMBER 11
Wednesday Evening Concert Series Presents Bourbon & Branch
Local musicians perform from mid-June to midSeptember. Free Admission—bring a lawn chair or blanket in the park to enjoy the music. In the event of rain, the concerts are moved indoors to The Function at Catskills Junction, 28 Railroad Avenue, Stamford
Location: Veterans Memorial Park, Main Street, Stamford
Time: 6:00-7:30 pm
More Info: stamfordnymusic.com
Film: The Man Who Wasn’t There
One of the Coen brothers’ finest achievements; this is a modern tribute to the classic noir films of old, dripping in atmosphere and masterful cinematography. We’ve got a tangled web of family money, unhappy marriages, stifled dreams, greed, adultery and murder. In Ed Crane (Billy Bob Thornton), the small-town California barber whose misguided attempt to escape his lot in life ignites the drama. (dir. Joel & Ethan Coen, 2001, 118 min.)
Location: Orpheum Theatre, 156 Main Street, Saugerties
More information: upstatefilms.org
Sunset Flix: E.T.
Watch the classic E.T. on the beautiful Hasbrouck House lawn! Bring a picnic blanket, chair, and your furry friend! Snacks and drinks are available.
Location: Hasbrouck House, 3806 Main Street, Stone Ridge Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: hasbrouckhouseny.com
SEPTEMBER 11-29
Felix Beaudry: Window Show
Felix Beaudry is a textile artist based in Kingston, NY. He works primarily with his industrial knitting machine; making tapestry and sculpture. He works primarily with his industrial knitting machine; making tapestry and sculpture. Congenital Knot at Situations was his first solo show in New York City.
Location: Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens Gallery Hours: Saturday & Sunday, 12:00-5:00 pm
More Info: athensculturalcenter.org
SEPTEMBER 12
Alain Johannes w/ Sammy Boller
The list of musicians that Alain Johannes has worked with reads like an encyclopedia of California rock history. In high school he was in bands with Flea, Hillel Slovak, Jack Irons and Anthony Kiedis, all of whom would form the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Later Alain formed Eleven with Natasha Shneider and Jack Irons. They toured with Pearl Jam and Soundgarden, and for several years recorded and toured with Queens of the Stone Age. As a writer, producer and engineer, Alain has worked with Chris Cornell, No Doubt, Mark Lanegan, Jimmy Eat World, Queens of the Stone Age, Brody Dalle and Arctic Monkeys. Alain has been a touring member of PJ Harvey’s band, as well as Them Crooked Vultures which featured Dave Grohl from Foo Fighters, Josh Homme from Queens of the Stone Age, and John Paul Jones from Led Zeppelin. As a composer, Alain has written music for films such as Eagles of Death Metal: Nos Amis and for video games such as Tom Clancy’s “Ghost Recon Wildlands.”
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock
Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
SEPTEMBER 13
On the Fly Story Slam
On the Fly Story Slam presents an evening of five minute, true stories, inspired by the evenings theme. Come tell a story or just sit back and listen and enjoy.
Location: Opus 40, 356 George Sickle Rd, Saugerties
Time: 6:00 pm
More Info: opus40.org
Headwaters Hangouts
Headwaters Hangouts offers creators of all disciplines the opportunity to work on expression in new and different ways in a social setting. A workout for your creative muscles and an opportunity to meet and network with other local creators, Headwaters Hangouts programming is free and open to everyone.
Location: Headwaters Arts Center, 66 Main St, Stamford
Time: 6:00-8:00 pm
More Info: roxburyartsgroup.org
Megadeth with special guests Mudvayne & All That Remains
Released by UMe on September 2, 2022, The Sick, The Dying … And The Dead! further establishes MEGADETH as a band that has both defined and repeatedly redefined heavy metal since formation, and which follows up 2016’s Grammy®-winning Dystopia, which debuted at #3 on the Billboard Top 200 (MEGADETH’s highest chart position since its 1992 classic Countdown to Extinction).
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel Time: 6:30 pm
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Roxanne Dupuis: “Public Libraries in Crisis: the Challenges Facing a Beloved American Institution”
Roxanne Dupuis is a population health scientist whose research focuses on community health, the social determinants of health, and the relationship between foodways and health. For many years, she engaged with local residents and community organizations on the Healthy Library Initiative based at the University of Pennsylvania. As part of this initiative, she worked with the Free Library of Philadelphia, the National Network of Libraries of Medicine, and the Public Library Association to harness the power of public libraries to improve population health. These efforts were published in leading public health journals, with extensive press attention.
Location: D&H Canal Historical Society, 1315 Rte 213, High Falls
Time: 7:00 pm
More Info: canalmuseum.org
Dopapod
Although classified as a jam band, Dopapod incorporates bits of funk, heavy metal, jazz fusion, progressive rock, and country. They have self-released seven studio albums, and spend most of their time touring.
Location: Bearsville Theater 291 Tinker Street, Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: bearsvilletheater.com
The Mountain Jam Band:
An Allman Brothers Tribute
The Mountain Jam Band is an Allman Brothers tribute band compromised of some of the most talented musicians in the tri-state area. MJB has become known for recreating the live Allman Brothers experience through signature guitar licks mixed with extended improvisational jams.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
Lady Lamb
From her early days, Aly Spaltro has remained focused on music that connects, empowers and builds community. She built her fanship the old-fashioned way, getting in front of audiences and projecting her poetic confessionals, silencing rowdy crowds with an a cappella opening song in the center of a dark stage. Spaltro was quick to develop a reputation as a breakout star in New England, and then expanded slowly outwards, moving to New York at twenty to continue work on the songs that would become Ripely Pine. Her voice has never wavered, has grown more honest and open with time, and anyone witnessing the long lines of fans seeking signatures after her performances can see how her work has impacted fans. Her live shows are revelations, a further deep dive into what makes Ripely Pine such a mainstay.
Location: Levon Helm Studios, 160 Plochmann Lane, Woodstock
Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: levonhelm.com
SEPTEMBER 13, 21 & 28
Headless Horseman Haunted Attractions
Are you brave enough to make it through the many haunted attractions at Headless Horseman? Please see website for time slots.
Location: Headless Horseman Hayrides & Haunted Attractions, 778 Broadway, Route 9W, Ulster Park
More Info: headlesshorseman.com
SEPTEMBER 13-15
Meadowlark
Show your support Hudson Valley farmers! See the website for the awesome lineup they have in store!
Location: Arrowood Farms 236 Lower Whitfield Road, Accord Time: 6:30-9:30 pm
More Info: meadowlarkfest.org
SEPTEMBER 13-29
The Garbologists
Danny, a gruff blue-collar sanitation veteran, is paired up with Marlowe, an Ivy League-educated newbie on their NYC garbage route. As they pick up the trash of the city, learning the secret art of ‘mongo’ (hunting for discarded treasure), they work their way to common ground in this poignant new comedy.
Location: Shadowland Stages, 157 Canal Street, Ellenville
Days & Times: Thursday-Saturday @ 8:00 pm; Sunday @ 2:00 pm
More Info: shadowlandstages.org
SEPTEMBER 13-OCTOBER 14
Two Solo Exhibitions:
Gail Freund and Sheila McManus
Two Solo Exhibitions featuring Gail Freund and Sheila McManus.
Location: Longyear Gallery, 785 Main Street, Margaretville
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 14, 3:00-5:00 pm
Gallery Hours: Friday-Sunday and holiday Mondays from 12:00-5:00 pm
More Info: longyeargallery.org
SEPTEMBER 14
Second Saturday Trunk Sale
Shopping for a Cause! Presented by Cultivate Catskill: Come for the selling, shopping, and socializing!
Location: Greene County Water Street Parking Lot, situated behind the Greene County office building
Time: 9:00 am-1:00 pm
More information: cultivatecatskill.org
Uptown Car Show
Bring your friends and family to enjoy an afternoon full of cars, bikes, trucks, and entertainment in Uptown Kingston’s stockade district.
Location: Uptown Kingston
Time: 11:00 am-3:00 pm
More Info: mainetti.law/carshow
Animalia
The second installment of a unique, fully vegan festival dedicated to raising up a creative, empathetic culture that “celebrates our common animal-hood.” One that intends to examine all elements that lie at the intersections of social justice, empathy, speciesism, mutual aid and art as the force that connects us, humans and non-humans!
Location: Opus 40, 356 George Sickle Rd, Saugerties
Time: 11:00 am-6:00 pm
More Info: opus40.org
Vintage Base Ball:
Bovina Dairymen v. Fleischmanns M.A.C.
Vintage base ball is an ode to the way base ball was played in the 1800s, when rules were changing yearly and only the catcher wore a mitt. The game is competitive and fun, focused on bringing the community together for an exciting afternoon! Feel free to pack a picnic, grab your friends, sip something refreshing and cheer on your favorite team.
Location: Creamery Field Vintage Base Ball Park, County Route 6, Bovina Center
Time: 12:00 pm
More Info: delcovintagebaseball.org
A Celebration of the Life of Lou Trapani
Please join us at The CENTER to celebrate the life of Lou Trapani, the life force behind the CENTER for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck for more than a quarter century. Please RSVP at our website.
Location: The CENTER for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Route 308, Rhinebeck Time: 1:00-4:00 pm
More Info: CenterforPerformingArts.org
Century House Historical Society Presents Subterranean Poetry Festival
This year’s Subterranean Poetry Festival is curated by White Noise, with help by Sam Truitt, and features poets from the White Noise series at Green Kill gallery in Kingston. This is a fundraiser for Century House Historical Society.
Location: Widow Jane Mine, 668 Rt. 213, Rosendale
Time: 3:00 pm
More Info: widowjanemine.com
Karina Rykman
Karina Rykman plays bass, sings, jumps around, and laughs a lot. Straddling the worlds of jam rock and indie pop drenched in psychedelia, Karina’s effervescent presence comes to life in musical form.
Location: Bearsville Theater 291 Tinker Street, Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: bearsvilletheater.com
Little Steven’s Underground Garage presents Genya Ravan’s Chicks & Broad Revue
Little Steven’s Underground Garage presents Genya Ravan’s Chicks and Broads Revue featuring Palmyra Delran & The Doppel Gang, Tracy City and GSX.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
Neighbors for Neighbors
An evening of music to celebrate community, benefitting People’s Place and O+. Featuring Gail Ann Dorsey and Amber Rubarth with special guests.
Location: Levon Helm Studios, 160 Plochmann Lane, Woodstock
Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: levonhelm.com
Bright Morning Stars: An Evening in Memory and Celebration of Happy Traum
Maverick Concerts joins Woodstock and the music world in sadness at the passing of Happy Traum—a favorite guest artist over many years at the Maverick Concerts—who passed away on July 17 at the age of 86. A galaxy of his friends and family gather in tribute and celebration of a true Woodstock legend: the man, his spirit, and his music. Featuring Adam Traum, John Sebastian, Cindy Cashdollar, Byron Isaacs, Eugene Ruffolo, Kenny Kosek and surprise guests
Location: Maverick Concerts 120 Maverick Road, Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: maverickconcerts.org
SEPTEMBER 14 & 28
Saturday Tours: Hudson-Athens Lighthouse
Come experience what living on the lighthouse was like first hand during one of our Saturday Tours. Tours are guided with experienced and knowledgeable docents. There are interactive exhibits with videos on the history of the lighthouse and its inhabitants to enjoy. The tours are one and a half hours from shore to shore, with approximately one hour on the lighthouse for the tour.
Location: September 14: Depart from Athens Riverfront, Athens; September 28: Depart from Henry Hudson Riverfront Park, Hudson Hours: 10:00 am-12:00 pm
More information: halps.org
SEPTEMBER 14-OCTOBER 12
2024 Woodstock Monoprint Invitational Exhibition Auction
In July over 60 artists came together to print over 400 prints. Come see the best prints from
each of the artists at the Woodstock Monoprint Exhibition & Auction. All prints are 8×10” and start at $200.
Location: Robert H. Angeloch Gallery, Woodstock School of Art, 2470 Route 212, Woodstock Time: 2:00 pm-4:00 pm
More Info: woodstockschoolofart.org
SEPTEMBER 14-NOVEMBER 2
Nature Ruthlessly Recalled: Paintings by Susan Mayr
For most of her life Susan Mayr has been an urban dweller longing for mountains, forests, and trees. She has traveled regularly to Nova Scotia for months at a time to fill herself with its atmosphere and light. In this show, memory meets the moment as her work reveals itself in a place remembered.
Location: Headwaters Arts Center, 66 Main Street, Stamford
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 14, 4:00-6:00 pm
More Info: roxburyartsgroup.org
SEPTEMBER 15
Mushroom Walk with Chris Baker of Chicory Naturalist
Participants will earn important skills for mushroom identification, sustainable foraging practices, and appreciation for the many roles fungi play in our ecosystem. Please bring a basket for picking and sensible shoes for heading off trail.
Location: Opus 40, 356 George Sickle Rd, Saugerties
Time: 11:00 am-1:00 pm
More Info: opus40.org
Harvest Festival featuring Paint & Sip
Highlighting local farms, artisans, and flavors, this annual farmers market features live music, food trucks, crafts, special offerings, and more.
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel
Time: 11:00 am
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Merz Trio
Hailed as “entrancing” (BBC Music Magazine) and “artists in the deepest sense of the word” (CutCommon), Merz Trio have been lauded for their “perfection of intonation and ensemble” (Hudson Review). Winners of the Naumburg, Concert Artists Guild, Fischoff and Chesapeake Competitions, and recipients of a Salon de Virtuosi Career Grant, Merz Trio are passionately committed to reshaping the narrative of classical
music through vibrantly dynamic programming and wide-ranging interdisciplinary collaboration. Their programming style juxtaposes classical standards, new music, and their own arrangements of familiar and forgotten works, fluidly interwoven and guided with speaking from the Trio’s members. Their interdisciplinary collaborations include ongoing projects with directors Emma Jaster and Jon Levin, dancer Caroline Copeland, and Sandglass Puppet Theater.
Location: First Presbyterian Church & Stamford United Methodist Church, 96 Main St, Stamford Time: 3:00 pm
More Info: friendsmusic.org
Terry Radigan Band
The Stamford, NY, Concert Series is happy to present Terry Radigan Band! Free Admission: bring a lawn chair or blanket in the park to enjoy the music. In the event of rain, the concerts are moved indoors to The Function at Catskills Junction, 28 Railroad Avenue, Stamford, NY 12167.
Location: Veterans Memorial Park, Main Street, Stamford Time: 3:00-4:30 pm
More Info: stamfordnymusic.com
Bradstan Cabaret Series: John Pinto Jr. + Jaron Barney | Love Letter to Broadway
“The Book of Mormon” stars John Pinto Jr. + Jaron Barney continue The Bradstan Cabaret Series. John is ecstatic to return to The Eldred Preserve with Jaron for their one-night-only show, “Love Letter to Broadway.”
Location: The Eldred Preserve, 1040 State Rte 55, Eldred Time: 7:00 pm
More Info: theeldredpreserve.com
Sam Morrow w/ King Kyote
Five albums into an acclaimed career, Sam Morrow has carved out a sound that’s his own version of modern-day American roots music: a mix of roadhouse rock & roll, bluesy R&B, and country-fried funky-tonk, driven forward by groove, grease, and guitars. King Kyote echoes the yells of Rock & Roll’s fore-bearers while having a deeply rooted harmony with the Blues, Roots Rock & Indie-Americana genres. A force to be reckoned with on stage, Kyote’s live shows prove that pure raw talent combined with honest songwriting is still the future of music.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
SEPTEMBER 17
Food Truck Fiesta with My Cuzzin Vinny Band
Live music, food trucks, beer, wine, and water sold by Bloomington Fire Department! The rain date is following Tuesday.
Location: Bloomington Fire Department, 14 Taylor Street, Bloomington
Time: 5:00-9:00 pm
More Info: 845 338 2794
SEPTEMBER 19
Solaris Live Music Cruise— Veterans in a New Field
Enjoy music of the Union Irish Brigade in the Civil War and other old-time tunes on the beautiful Hudson River!
Location: Hudson River Maritime Museum, 50 Rondout Landing, Kingston
Time: 6:00 pm
More Info: hrmm.org
Maggie Rose – No One Gets Out Alive Tour
Come watch Maggie Rose perform American soul and country at Bearsville!
Location: Bearsville Theater, 291 Tinker Street, Woodstock
Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: bearsvilletheater.com
Shakedown Citi—Celebrating The Music of The Grateful Dead
Shakedown Citi are seasoned, full-time musicians / singer-storytellers / Grateful Dead nerds from New York City with a deep love and passion for the Dead and all affiliated catalogues. Dream setlists, high-energy vibes, amazing jams and improvisation while channeling the spirit and energy of the Dead without trying to copy them.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
SEPTEMBER 20
Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes
For Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes, ‘comfortable’ has never been a word associated with their brand of raucous, roots-tinged rock and bluesy reverie. The band has flourished with more than thirty albums, releasing twelve studio albums since 1976. Rolling Stone named their early release Hearts of Stone as one of the “top 100 albums of the 70s and 80s” … thousands of live performances around the globe, a legion of famously-dedicated and enthusiastic fans, and a vibrant legacy of classic songs that have become “hits” to their worldwide fan base.
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel Time: 7:00 pm
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Jimmy Vivino
Jimmy Vivino (aka Jimmy V) has always considered himself “a blues man with a job”. Although best known for serving 26 years as Conan O’Brien’s musical director, guitarist and bandleader, his experience in the music business predates that by 20 plus years. Jimmy V
has produced, led bands and recorded with a countless number rock and roll and blues artists for five decades including the likes of Hubert Sumlin, Warren Haynes, Joe Bonamassa, Elvis Costello, Johnnie Johnson, Son Seals, Shemekia Copeland, Levon Helm, Phoebe Snow, Dion, Laura Nyro, Bob Margolin, Lowell Fulson, John Sebastian, Joe Louis Walker and Al Kooper to name a few. When not producing, recording or touring with other artists, Jimmy still tours the country and the world with his own band. Jimmy’s latest record, Gonna Be 2 Of Those Days, will be released in Early 2025 by Gulf Coast Records.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
SEPTEMBER 20-29
Into the Woods
The CENTER and Teens on Stage are thrilled to present Into the Woods, music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, book by James Lapine. Directed and choreographed by Lynne Czajka and musically directed by Russell McCook. James Lapine and Stephen Sondheim take everyone’s favorite storybook characters and bring them together for a timeless, yet relevant, piece … and a rare modern classic. The Tony Awardwinning book and score are both enchanting and touching. The story follows a Baker and his Wife, who wish to have a child; Cinderella, who wishes to attend the King’s Festival; and Jack, who wishes his cow would give milk. When the Baker and his Wife learn that they cannot have a child because of a Witch’s curse, the two set off on a journey to break the curse. Everyone’s wish is granted, but the consequences of their actions return to haunt them later with disastrous results.
Location: The CENTER for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Route 308, Rhinebeck
Day & Time: Friday & Saturday @ 8:00 pm; Sunday @ 3:00 pm
More Info: CenterforPerformingArts.org
SEPTEMBER 21
Mushroom ID Walk with Luke Sarrantonio Join Luke Sarrantonio of Mycophilic for a mushroom ID walk! Develop your mushroom ID skills and learn how to recognize different forest types that may lead you to certain mushrooms. We never eat a mushroom unless we are 100% sure of its identity, a common phrase is often repeated “if in doubt toss it out”. That said, there are plenty of excellent edible mushroom that you can learn to ID which don’t have poisonous look-a-likes and are delicious! Luke Sarrantonio is a mycologist and the founder of Mycophilic and For the Love of Fungi Mushroom and Arts Festival. He studied Environmental and Forest Biology at SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry. To learn more about Luke and Mycophilic, visit www.mycophilic.net. Registration is $10 for non-members and free for members. Registration is required.
Location: Mountain Top Arboretum, 4 Maude Adams Road, Tannersville
Time: 10:00 am-12:00 pm
More Info: mtarboretum.org
Wet Plate Photography with Mark Burnham
Wet plate photography is a 19th century technique that is one of the earliest forms of photography. From making wet plates, to long, slow exposures this workshop will give participants an in depth, hands-on experience with the core processes of the wet plate technique. No previous photography is necessary and all participants will have the opportunity to make multiple unique beautiful images to take home.
Location: Headwaters Arts Center, 66 Main Street, Stamford
Time: 10:00 am-3:00 pm
More Info: roxburyartsgroup.org
Skywalk Arts Festival
We welcome back many local artists and photographers, as well as welcoming new artists to our festival. We all know how beautiful our Hudson Valley is, but not many of us are able to capture that beauty in paintings and photos. Join us at the Skywalk Arts Festival to purchase amazing paintings and photos that bring the beauty of the Hudson Valley into our homes! Come enjoy live music as you wander the grounds. Create your own painting under the direction of our festival favorite, Stasia Fernandez.
Location: Hudson River Skywalk, State Route 23, Catskill
Time: 10:00 am-4:00 pm
More Info: hudsonriverskywalk.org
Margaretville Cauliflower Festival
Welcome to Margaretville for a great day of fun! Featuring cauliflower for sale, live music, unique selection of vendors and shopping options, community organizations and activities, and favorite food vendors!
Location: Village Park behind Freshtown Market Place and CVS Pharmacy, Bridge Street, Margaretville
Time: 11:00 am-4:00 pm
More Info: margaretvillecauliflowerfestival.org
Narrowsburg Honeybee Fest
A festival in Narrowsburg NY, Sullivan County, which promotes awareness, demonstration and education about our declining honey bee population. This year we will be celebrating our 10th Annual Bee Fest at Fort Delaware.
Location: Fort Delaware Museum, 6615 NY-97, Narrowsburg
Time: 11:00 am-5:00 pm
More Info: facebook.com/HoneyBeeFest/
Rebel Soul Music Fair
Proto-hip hop and spoken word legends The Last Poets headline a special evening with Reggae from Rebelle, DJ Strafe and Synacure!
Location: Opus 40, 356 George Sickle Rd, Saugerties
Time: 4:30-9:00 pm
More Info: opus40.org
Backstage at Bethel Woods
Join us for our signature fundraiser, Backstage at Bethel Woods, as we honor local visionary and Bethel Woods founder, Alan Gerry. The event will include a vibrant backstage experience filled with great company, a behind the-scenes cocktail reception, dinner on the Pavilion stage, a lively auction, and a highly acclaimed musical performance, all while benefitting our nonprofit organization. Celebrate and support continuing efforts to make the world better through the power of music and the arts.
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel
Time: 5:00 pm
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Safaris with Susan Kottemann
Susan L. Kottemann has been traveling to Africa since 1985. Over that time she has built relationships with conservationists, rangers, craftsmen, and local guides, and has been using her experience to curate incredible custom safari trips for adventurous travellers.
Location: Kenco Outfitters, 1000 Hurley Mountain Road, Kingston More Info: KencoOutfitters.com
SEPTEMBER 21-22
Catskill Mountain Quilters Hall of Fame Quilt Show
Experience the patchwork of traditional artists when the the Catskills Mountain Quilters Hall of Fame presents its Biennial Quilt Show highlighting quilt entries from guild members as well as recent inductees. The show for this year is titled “Festival of Quilts” and is hosted by the 10 guilds within the five counties of the Catskill area. The raffle quilt this year is a Heritage pattern of the Catskill area—Majestic Mountains. Location: Roxbury Arts Center, 5025 Vega Mountain Road, Roxbury
Time: 10:00 am-4:00 pm
More Info: roxburyartsgroup.org
Equus Fest East
A celebration of all things horse and rural lifestyle with clinics, demos, vendors, food, entertainment and raffles!
Location: Ulster County Fairgrounds, 249 Libertyville Road, New Paltz
Time: 10:00 am-5:00 pm
More Info: equusfesteast.com
September Harvest Grape Stomping Festival
Join Benmarl for a day of wine tastings, grape stomping, live music, and hayrides – all while overlooking the beautiful fall foliage!
Location: Benmarl Winery, 156 Highland Avenue, Marlboro
Time: 11:00 am-8:00 pm
More Info: benmarl.com
Art Walk Kingston
Art Walk Kingston is a celebration of the arts and the local community and one of the largest open studio tours in the Hudson Valley. Over the course of two days, visitors and local residents are invited to explore three distinct areas of the city of Kingston and immerse themselves in a range of art and events. Paintings, photographs, drawings and sculptures are just some of the mediums that will be on display at home studios and galleries across the city. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the event weekend will offer a broad range of art and activities for everyone.
Location: City of Kingston
Time: 12:00-5:00 pm
More Info: artsmidhudson.org/artwalkkingston
Woodsist Festival
Two stages, various talented artists, great local food vendors, craft beer, and more!
Location: Arrowood Farms, 236 Lower Whitfield Road, Accord
Time: 12:00-9:30 pm
More Info: woodsistfestival.com
SEPTEMBER 21-22 & 28-29
Grape Stomping Festival
Wine tasting, grape stomping, lawn games, live music, wood-fired pizza—what more could you ask for?
Location: Robibero Wintery, 714 Albany Post Road, New Paltz
Time: 11:00 am-5:30 pm
More Info: robiberofamilyvineyards.com
Apples & Wine Festival
Join us as we celebrate harvest season at Weed Orchards! Enjoy the beautiful Hudson Valley views as you pick your own produce! Multiple varieties of apples will be available. There will be lots of family friendly activities; face painting, playground, hay rides, and live music! We will be serving special apple themed food and drinks and delicious Jane’s ice cream. Don’t forget to get your apple cider donuts!
Location: Weed Orchards & Winery, 43 Mount Zion Road, Marlboro
Time: 10:00 am-6:00 pm
More Info: weedorchards.com
SEPTEMBER 22
Harvest Festival featuring Donuts on a String Challenge
Highlighting local farms, artisans, and flavors, this annual farmers market features live music, food trucks, crafts, special offerings, and more.
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel
Time: 11:00 am
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Ukrainian Community Day
Join us for a brand new community event celebrating the music and culture of Ukraine. Enjoy live musical performances, singing and dancing workshops, food and craft vendors, and guided nature explorations. 50% of all proceeds will be donated to Ukrainian-American Youth Association of the Hudson Valley.
Location: The Ashokan Center 477 Beaverkill Rd, Olivebridge
More Info: ashokancenter.org
Afternoon Concert: Kaethe Hostetter
Kaethe Hostetter is a sought after collaborator with well known Ethiopian artists, playing stages for 150,000 people with Teddy Afro, and working in the studio with Mahmoud Ahmed.
Location: Opus 40, 356 George Sickle Rd, Saugerties
Time: 1:00 pm
More Info: opus40.org
The Wildwoods
In the heart of Lincoln, Nebraska, The Wildwoods emerge as a folk/Americana trio, a musical tapestry woven by the husband-andwife duo, Noah (guitar) and Chloe Gose (violin), accompanied by the bassist Andrew Vaggalis. Their story is a symphony of exploration and connection, a journey that has taken them from the Midwest to international stages, carving out a unique place in the folk landscape. Their presence has graced stages alongside artists such as Mighty Poplar, Sierra Ferrell, Aiofe O’ Donovan, Melissa Carper, Jamie Wyatt and Joe Nichols at concerts and festivals like Summerfest, FreshGrass and the Oyster Ridge Music Festival.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
SEPTEMBER 26
Indigo De Souza with Ill Peach
Indigo De Souza is an American-Brazilian singer-songwriter from Asheville, North Carolina. Her third album, All of This Will End, was released in April 2023. She has been noted for creating “intimate, anxious indie rock songs
[that] wrangle with disappointment and relationship challenges,” with personal and confessional lyrics.
Location: Bearsville Theater 291 Tinker Street, Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: bearsvilletheater.com
Hackensaw Boys—“Love What You Do” 20th Anniversary Tour w/The Glass Hours Roots music shapeshifters Hackensaw Boys have been making audiences holler and dance since way back in 1999. Formed in Charlottesville and now based in Lynchburg, Virginia, this hard traveling group has built an international following for their high-energy performances and down-to-earth presentation. Despite their roots in traditional music, their homegrown aesthetic (bolstered by the “charismo,” their calling card percussion instrument handmade from cans and other metal objects) belies their contemporary approach to songcraft and showmanship.
Location: Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: colonywoodstock.com
Madi Diaz Tour
Madi Diaz has been making records and writing songs professionally since the late 2000s, but it wasn’t until she released 2021’s History Of A Feeling that she felt the glare of wider notoriety. It wasn’t her debut album, but it certainly felt like it. She made her daytime and nighttime television debuts, embarked on her first solo tour since 2014, supported Waxahatchee and Angel Olsen on tour, and collaborated with them on record. Harry Styles handpicked Diaz to open for him in arenas and stadiums in North America, and was so taken by her captivating live show, he asked her to be a member of his touring band, to sing alongside him all over Europe and the UK, as well as continuing to open the show in various cities. After three months on the road touring internationally, Diaz is back in Nashville and gearing up to release her new album, Weird Faith, perched on the precipice of her moment.
Location: Levon Helm Studios, 160 Plochmann Lane, Woodstock
Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: levonhelm.com
SEPTEMBER 26-28
Dracula
DRACULA, the original Broadway version, returns to the Widow Jane Mine in Rosendale! Theatre on the Road, a traveling company based in Rosendale, will produce and stage Dracula at the Widow Jane Mine in Rosendale. From the Bram Stoker novel, this is the original
Broadway production that premiered in 1927 and was revised in 1997 starring Frank Langella. Written by Hamilton Deane and John L. Balderston, this production has been described by Newsweek as “as evening of high class fun”. Location: Widow Jane Mine, 668 Rt. 213, Rosendale Time: 7:00 pm
More Info: widowjanemine.com
SEPTEMBER 26-OCTOBER 6
ChipandGus
The two loneliest men in upstate New York meet once a month in the grungy back room of a rundown Schenectady sports bar, to do the one thing they both love … play ping pong. In this fast-paced, blisteringly brilliant comedy, the most casual of acquaintances discover that their lives intertwine in ways they couldn’t possibly have known. Virtuoso verbal and physical comedy with tons of heart from writer/performers John Ahlin and Christopher Patrick Mullen. Presented in collaboration with Fat Knight Theatre. Location: Bridge Street Theater, 44 West Bridge Street, Catskill
Day & Time: Thursday-Saturday @ 7:30 pm; Sunday @ 2:00 pm
More Info: CenterforPerformingArts.org
SEPTEMBER 27
Geoff Miller: “In Search of the Hudson River School of Musicians”
Ulster County Historian Geoffrey Miller presents a talk that focuses on the major American and foreign-born composers working in the United States in the early through mid-19th century. There was definitely a body of works produced during the period reflective of the ethos of the Hudson River School Artists, but it failed to coalesce into a movement. Some composers, though, did find employment throughout the region as choral directors for churches, music instructors at local academies, and band directors, leaving behind a record of their activities in sheet music, much of it published locally.
Location: D&H Canal Historical Society, 1315 Rte 213, High Falls
Time: 7:00 pm
More Info: canalmuseum.org
Nabihah Iqbal
Nabihah Iqbal is a musician, producer, DJ and broadcaster from London. She has made her prolific work rate look effortless with a resume as varied as her music, having recently collaborated with artist Zhang Ding, been commissioned to compose music for the Turner Prize, collaborated with Wolfgang Tillmans and was recently involved in a group performance at the Barbican as part of its major Basquiat retrospective. In 2022 Nabihah was announced as a guest director for England’s largest multi-arts festival, Brighton Festival, in 2023, her “biggest, most challenging and exciting curatorial position” to date.
Location: West Kortright Center, 49 W Kortright Church Rd., East Meredith Time: 7:00 pm
More Info: westkc.org
Augustana: Something Beautiful Tour
Augustana presents an array of music from his 20 year career in a powerful, intimate solo performance highlighting his latest studio album, Something Beautiful. From the artist’s evergreen hits “Boston,” and “Sweet and Low” up through his inspiring and energetic new material, Dan Layus brings fans even closer to the songs that they know and love. Special guests, verygently are one Nashville’s most exciting young bands comprised of three uniquely talented individuals whose voices and songwriting styles complement each other to create a refreshing and instantly memorable sound.
Location: Levon Helm Studios, 160 Plochmann Lane, Woodstock Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: levonhelm.com
SEPTEMBER 28
Earth * Body * Sky: The Inner and Outer Visions of Harriet Tubman with Janell Hobson Harriet Tubman is most renowned for her work as an Underground Railroad conductor who freed more than 70 people from slavery. She later went on to free close to 750 people from slavery at the Combahee River, becoming the first woman in U.S. history to lead a military raid in 1863. What is lesser known is how Tubman achieved these feats through an inner and outer vision connecting her disabled body with the natural environment through her deep-seated spiritual faith. Dr. Janell Hobson will explore the complex history of Tubman’s Black eco-feminist consciousness, from slavery in the South to post-emancipation freedom in upstate New York, in this public lecture. Registration is free for members and a $10 donation for non-members. Registration is required.
Location: Mountain Top Arboretum, 4 Maude Adams Road, Tannersville Time: 10:00-11:30 am
More Info: mtarboretum.org
Call for Auditions: The Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Orpheum Dance Program presents The Nutcracker Catskill Mountain Foundation is presenting the NINTH ANNUAL special holiday performances of The Nutcracker this December, and WE NEED YOU! We’re looking for kids age 5-15 to play party children, toy soldiers, mice & angels. No dance experience is needed. The six performances will be Saturday & Sunday, December 7-8 and December 14-15 at the Orpheum Performing Arts Center, 6050 Main Street, Tannersville, NY.
Location: Catskill Mountain Foundation’s Red Barn, 7970 Main Street, Hunter Time: 11:00 am-1:00 pm
More Info: catskillmtn.org
Gardiner Day
Celebrate yet another Gardiner Day with the community, your family, friends, fun activities, food, crafts, and entertainment!
Location: Majestic Park, 40 Murphy Ln, Gardiner Time: 11:00 am-4:00 pm
More Info: gardinerlibrary.org
Fall Night Out
We are excited to announce we are bringing back Fall Night Out this year. This event is an adult oriented event, but children are welcome if you so choose.
Location: Town of Lloyd, Vineyard Avenue & Main Street, Highland Time: 5:00-9:00 pm
More Info: townoflloyd.com
Martha Graham Dance Company: Baye & Asa’s Cortege 2023
Taking advantage of the Orpheum’s new technical upgrades, the world-renowned Martha Graham Dance Company will spend the week in a Works & Process LaunchPAD tech-residency putting the finishing touches on a new commission by Baye & Asa. See the culmination of this process and join in on this first look before the company’s performance at Works & Process at the Guggenheim and the work’s premiere at New York City Center.
Location: Orpheum Performing Arts Center, 6050 Main Street, Tannersville
Time: 7:00 pm
More Info: catskillmtn.org
Bardavon presents Jack DeJohnette—Solo Piano
This concert offers a rare opportunity to experience NEA Jazz Master Jack DeJohnette playing solo piano. DeJohnette is celebrated for his work as a drummer with Miles Davis Bitches Brew Band, Herbie Hancock, Keith Jarrett, Bobby McFerrin, Bill Evans, and as a band leader and composer. He is among the world’s most recorded and influential living percussionists. Location: Woodstock Playhouse, 103 Mill Hill Road, Woodstock
Time: 7:30 pm
More Info: woodstockplayhouse.org
Morgan Wade: The Obsessed Tour
Morgan Wade is currently situated as one of Nashville’s fastest rising and most critically acclaimed young stars, hailed by some of the world’s most respected publications, from Rolling Stone to The New York Times, thanks in great effect to Reckless, her stunning 2021 debut album, the now 28-year-old—the same person who not long ago felt as if she “didn’t have anything,”—now finds herself eager and ready to reveal herself to her ever-growing legion of dedicated fans like never before. To hear Wade tell it, it’s time to peel back layers of her psyche and let people in.
Location: Levon Helm Studios, 160 Plochmann Lane, Woodstock
Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: levonhelm.com
SEPTEMBER 28-29
Hudson Valley Garlic Festival
Browse through craft vendors, shop the marketplace, enjoy live music, watch chef demos and lectures, and most importantly—enjoy all things garlic!
Location: Washington Avenue Extension, Saugerties
Day & Time: 10:00 am-6:00 pm
More Info: hvgf.org
SEPTEMBER 29
Harvest Festival featuring
Stein Holding Challenge
Highlighting local farms, artisans, and flavors, this annual farmers market features live music, food trucks, crafts, special offerings, and more.
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel
Time: 11:00 am
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Chosen Family presents
Cowboy Sadness and Astrid Sonne
Danish artist, composer, producer and viola player Astrid Sonne brings her unique blend of modern composition and electronic manipulation to Opus 40.
Location: Opus 40, 356 George Sickle Rd, Saugerties
Time: 4:00-7:30 pm
More Info: opus40.org
Karan Casey Trio Concert
Legendary folk and traditional Irish singer Karan Casey will grace our stage on her North American tour.
Location: The Ashokan Center 477 Beaverkill Rd, Olivebridge Time: 7:00 pm
More Info: ashokancenter.org
Five for Fighting with String Quartet
To date, Five For Fighting, has released six studio LPs, including the platinum certified America Town and The Battle for Everything; and the top-10 charting Two Lights, along with an EP and live albums.
Location: Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel
Time: 8:00 pm
More Info: bethelwoodscenter.org
Piano Performance Museum
FALL 2024 WEEKLY COURSES
To register for weekly classes please call Hillary Morse at 518-263-2010 or register online at catskillmtn.org
CERAMICS OPEN STUDIO
Saturdays 2:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Sundays 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Wednesdays 8:00am - 8:00pm
October 9 – December 11 (10 weeks)
Course Fee: $250
Lab Fee: $50 [includes 25 lbs. clay and firing]
Registration Fee: $40
Sugar Maples Center for the Creative Arts offers the best equipped studio in the Mountain Top region. If you’re a potter/sculptor working with clay, come enjoy working at your own pace on your ideas/visions. There will be bisque firings, cone 6 oxidation firings, and participation in one cone 10 soda firing at the conclusion of the course. This unique opportunity is for makers who have a knowledge of the ceramics processes with which they need to continue to develop their ‘voice.’ Additional clay is available for purchase.
WHEEL THROWING
INTRODUCTION:
YOUR JOURNEY STARTS HERE
Sundays 10:00 am – 1:00 pm
October 13 - December 15 (10 weeks)
Course Fee: $250
Lab Fee: $50 [includes 25 lbs. clay and firing]
Registration Fee: $40
This exciting course is for folks who want to learn how to make pots on the potter’s wheel. Students will be taught the A to Z about preparing clay and using tools that are unique to this fascinating process of creating functional pottery. Glazing and firing techniques will be covered. There will be demonstrations, heaps of individual attention, and lots of discussions about ceramics’ rich history. Join us here in the most beautiful ceramics studio in the Catskill region!
WHEEL THROWING INTERMEDIATE:
MAKING
GREAT POTS
Sundays 1:30 pm - 4:30 pm
October 13 - December 15 (10 weeks)
Course Fee: $250
Lab Fee: $50 [includes 25 lbs. clay and firing]
Registration Fee: $40
Is it time to extend your knowledge of and skills in making pots? This NEW weekly course is intended for makers who can throw basic forms like cylinders, bowls, plates, etc. and would like to extend their skills on the potter’s wheel. This course is also perfect for the artist who would like to refresh their relationship to pottery-making. A variety of forms, types of lids, handles, spouts, and other elements will be covered. This fun class will also help students understand and apply engobes, slips, and glazes. Loading kilns and learning about firing will be shared. Additional clay available for purchase.
HAND BUILDING WITH CLAY
SECTION 1
Monday 6:00 pm - 9:00pm
October 14 – December 16 (10 weeks)
Course Fee: $250
Lab Fee: $50 [includes 25 lbs. clay and firing]
Registration Fee: $40
SECTION 2
Saturday 10:00 am – 1:00 pm
October 19 – December 14 (9 weeks)
Course Fee: $225
Lab Fee: $50 [includes 25 lbs. clay and firing]
Registration Fee: $40
This dynamic and enjoyable course is intended for anyone who has the desire to build with clay those ‘things’ that their minds eye can imagine! Come join us in our sunny and well-equipped studio at the foot of Thomas Cole Mountain and put your hands to work. Basic techniques such as coil building, slab construction, scoring, and pinch forming will be taught. You don’t have to have any experience to delve into this exciting world of creating sculptures, vessels, or any other form that crosses your mind. Applying engobes, underglazes, and glazes with be presented through demonstrations, exercises, with time to practice!
2D STUDIO: DRAWING
Sundays 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
October 13 - December 15 (10 weeks)
Course Fee: $250
Lab Fee: $15
Registration Fee: $40
Are you interested in learning/continuing to draw, but don’t know where to start or would like to polish up your skills? If so, this Drawing class is perfect for you! This 10-week course is designed for artists of all levels. Whether you’re a seasoned artist or just starting your artistic journey, you’ll find inspiration and guidance in a supportive learning environment. Explore fundamental techniques, from capturing light and shadow to mastering perspective and composition. Expand your artistic vocabulary and develop your unique style. With a focus on individual growth, this class nurtures creativity and builds confidence.
2D STUDIO: PAINTING
Sundays 1.30 pm - 4:30 pm
October 13 – December 15 (10 weeks)
Course Fee: $250
Lab Fee: $20 [includes paint and a canvas]
Registration Fee: $40
This transformative 10-week painting course is designed to nurture your creativity and elevate your skills. Whether you’re a seasoned artist seeking new challenges or a beginner eager to explore the fundamentals, this supportive environment is your launchpad. Expand your artistic horizons, refine your techniques, skills and discover your unique style under the guidance of experienced instructors. Explore various styles, experiment with different mediums, and create personal works of art. Join us for a transformative journey of self-expression and artistic growth. No prior experience is necessary.
2024 PERFORMING ARTS SEASON
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SATURDAY, JANUARY 6 AT 7:30PM LAYERHYTHM
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Kick off the New Year with a play-based jam session of freestyle live music, dance, and audience interaction that will get you off your feet.
Presented in partnership with Works & Process at the Guggenheim. LayeRhythm will go straight from Catskill Mountain Foundation to the Works & Process Underground Uptown Dance Festival at Lincoln Center.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2 AT 7:30PM
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3 AT 4:00PM
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3 AT 7:30PM THE ROCKY HORROR SHOW
Maude Adams Theater Hub Catskill Mountain Foundation
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
The Greatest Love Story Ever Told? Richard O’Brien’s The Rocky Horror Show, live on stage, returns to the Orpheum for two nights only. Great night for a date night! Costumes Encouraged!
FEBRUARY 14-18 V-SEASON
Maude Adams Theater Hub
Catskill Mountain Foundation
Doctorow Center for the Arts
FEBRUARY 14 & 16 AT 7:00PM
The Women by Clare Boothe Luce
FEBRUARY 15 & 17 AT 7:00PM
God of Carnage by Yasmina Reza
FEBRUARY 17 & 18 AT 2:00PM
The Gin Game by Donald L. Coburn
V Season is Back! An amazing weekend of three plays that amuse, inspire, and maybe even move you to tears. Grab a friend and join MATH for this annual series of staged readings.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 18 AT 2:00PM
INTERNATIONAL FORTEPIANO SALON
“Dancing the Minuet to the Fortepiano”
Yi-heng Yang, Maria Rose & Patricia García-Gil Hosts
Streaming LIVE on Facebook and YouTube
The Baroque minuet contained all of the musical attributes that maintain its status as the most popular dance form—whether to be danced or not—throughout the 18th century: a pleasing character, a simple texture, and regular, clearly delineated phrases. When playing minuets on the fortepiano, how do you make them dance? By asking a choreographer of course! Join choreographer Julia Bengtsson and fortepianist Patricia Garcia Gil in an exploration of the inherent connection between dance and music.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24 AT 3:00PM ERTH’S DINOSAUR ZOO LIVE
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Get ready for the ultimate playdate— 65 million years in the making—as Erth’s DINOSAUR ZOO
LIVE guides your family on a breathtaking tour that begins in pre-historic Australia. You’ll observe, meet and interact with an eye-popping collection of amazingly life-like dinosaurs and other creatures presented in a theatrical performance that will thrill and entertain kids while stimulating their imaginations in ways that will forever connect them to their world.
SATURDAY, MARCH 2 AT 7:00PM
DANÚ: “TRADITIONAL MUSIC FROM IRELAND”
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Hailing from historic County Waterford, Danú is one of the leading traditional Irish ensembles of today. Their standing room only concerts throughout Ireland are true events featuring high-energy performances and a glorious mix of ancient Irish music and new repertoire.
SATURDAY, MARCH 9 AT 7:00PM 360 ALLSTARS
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
A phenomenal physical performance exploring all forms of rotation and boasting a stellar international cast of World Champion and World Record-holding athletes and artists, 360 ALLSTARS is a spectacular fusion of the extraordinary artistry that emerges from street culture.
“BMX, basketball, breakdancing, beatboxing, acrobatics, drumming and more! The most thrilling stage show ever.”
—Weekend Notes ★★★★★
SUNDAY, MARCH 24 AT 2:00PM INTERNATIONAL FORTEPIANO SALON
Yi-heng Yang, Maria Rose & Patricia García-Gil Hosts
Hilda Huang Guest
Streaming LIVE on Facebook and YouTube
Hilda Huang is a modern performer of historical music who brings together traditions of performance on piano and harpsichord. Her work has earned international acclaim with the distinction of first prize at the Leipzig International Bach competition and appearances at the Leipzig and Montréal Bach Festivals.
SATURDAY, MARCH 30 AT 7:00PM LADIES OF HIP HOP: THE BLACK DANCING BODIES–SPEAKMYMIND
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Part of an ongoing performance and documentary effort focused on Black women in street and club dance culture, in this session of Black Dancing Bodies each member of the collective responds to the question, “If I could speak my mind, what would I say?” In this world premiere, experience new writings, music, and movement spanning dance styles from African, to waacking, vogue, Hip-hop, and house; all curated under the direction of Michele Byrd-McPhee.
SpeakMyMind was commissioned by Works & Process, developed in Works & Process LaunchPAD residencies at Bethany Arts Community (2022, 2023, and 2024) and Catskill Mountain Foundation (2022), and Office Hours Residency at The Kennedy Center (2023) with performances at the Guggenheim Museum, Jacob’s Pillow, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, the National Gallery of Art, SummerStage, Dancers Responding to AIDS Hudson Valley Dance Festival, and New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.
SpeakMyMind is a 2023 New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project grantee, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Foundation and Mellon Foundation.
FRIDAY, APRIL 5 AT 7:00PM
SATURDAY, APRIL 6 AT 7:00PM
STUPID F*ING BIRD
By Aaron Posner
Directed by Caitlin McColl
Maude Adams Theater Hub
Catskill Mountain Foundation
Doctorow Center for the Arts
In this irreverent, contemporary, and very funny remix of Chekhov’s The Seagull, Aaron Posner stages a timeless battle between young and old, past and present, in search of the true meaning of it all. STUPID F*ING BIRD will tickle, tantalize, and incite you to consider how art, love, and revolution fuel your own pursuit of happiness.
SATURDAY, APRIL 13 AT 2:00PM APRIL IN PARIS
Joanne Polk piano
Jeffrey Langford lecture
Doctorow Center for the Arts
Come join husband and wife team musicologist Dr. Jeffrey Langford and pianist Dr. Joanne Polk as they take a romantic conversation and musical stroll through Paris. Enjoy performances of songs with the word “Paris” in the title, including “I Love Paris” by Cole Porter and “April in Paris” by Vernon Duke. These songs were transcribed for Dr. Polk by composer David Shenton, who will attend the concert and will be part of the Q&A after the concert. Other composers featured will include Claude Debussy and Cécile Chaminade.
SATURDAY, APRIL 27 AT 7:30PM THE TEMPEST
Doctorow Center for the Arts
The Tempest will use physicality, clowning, and cinematic theatricality to create magic, spectacle, and community dialogue. Join Catskill Mountain Shakespeare at the Catskill Mountain Foundation on April 27 to experience it yourself!
This touring production is presented thanks to the generous support from Shakespeare in American Communities, a program of the National Endowment for the Arts in partnership with Arts Midwest. From April 8-28, 2024, Catskill Mountain Shakespeare will tour to local middle schools, high schools, libraries and other community venues throughout the greater Catskill region.
SATURDAY, MAY 4 AT 7:00PM
TRAILBLAZING WOMEN OF COUNTRY: FROM PATSY TO LORETTA TO DOLLY
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
With their chart-topping hits and record-breaking sales, Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, and Dolly Parton wove threads of contemporary womanhood throughout the tapestry of country music, resulting in unprecedented commercial success and earning each a place in the Country Music Hall of Fame. Trailblazing Women of Country will feature soloists Miko Marks, one of CMT’s 2022 Next Women of Country; and Nashville based singer Kristina Train, supported by a 5-member all-female band.
SATURDAY, MAY 11 AT 7:00PM
CAMILLE A. BROWN & DANCERS: I AM
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Camille A. Brown is a three time Tony Award nominated director and choreographer whose work taps into both ancestral and contemporary stories to capture deeply personal experiences and cultural narratives of African American identity. Through the medium of dance, she has been successful in stage, TV, and film. She was the first black director in the history of the Metropolitan Opera MainStage, and has directed and choreographed numerous productions. TV & Film work includes the Academy Award nominated Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and the Emmy award winning Jesus Christ Superstar
SATURDAY, MAY 18 AT 2:00PM ORPHEUM DANCE PROGRAM COMMUNITY BALLET CLASS ANNUAL RECITAL
Victoria Rinaldi
Orpheum Dance Program Director
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
The Orpheum Dance Program Community Ballet Class is a year-round program of ballet instruction for children of all ages which includes an annual student dance recital and participation in two fully-staged ballets each year. The recital showcases the work of all students and can also include alumni who have joined acclaimed ballet companies or who are studying dance at major universities.
SATURDAY, MAY 18 AT 8:00PM JOSH FROMER COMEDY NIGHT
Maude Adams Theater Hub
Catskill Mountain Foundation
Doctorow Center for the Arts
Comedy Night is back, and it’s cleaner than ever! Josh Fromer brings opener Amanda Gail and headliner Greg Stone to the Catskills for an evening of hilarious stories and keenly-crafted jokes.
SATURDAY, JUNE 22 AT 1:00PM WOVEN CURRENTS
Yi-heng Yang piano
Judd Weisberg Woven Currents projected prints and live drawing on stage
Doctorow Center for the Arts, Cinema I
A multi-media collaboration between artist Judd Weisberg and pianist Yi-heng Yang. Weisberg has created a series of prints capturing the magical junctions where two streams merge, and Yi-heng Yang has composed music drawn from the musical pitches of the currents as they meet. This performance includes projected images from the Woven Currents print series and live drawing by Weisberg projected on the movie screen accompanied by Yi-heng Yang performing composed and improvised works on piano.
ACADEMY OF FORTEPIANO PERFORMANCE FESTIVAL
Doctorow Center for the Arts academyfortepiano.org/academy2024
Academy of Fortepiano Performance students will participate in master classes and workshops supported by plentiful access to pianos from the 18th & 19th century or their modern replicas.
MAY 25 – JUNE 2
ACADEMY OF FORTEPIANO PERFORMANCE WORKSHOP FOR SOLO FORTEPIANO
Guest artists: Elizaveta Miller and Jiayan Sun
SATURDAY, MAY 25 AT 7:00 PM
FACULTY AND GUEST ARTIST CONCERT: WHEN THE PIANO WAS YOUNG
Audrey Axinn, Maria Rose, Andrew Willis and guest artist Elizaveta Miller
SUNDAY, MAY 26 AT 2:00 PM MASTERCLASS With Elizaveta Miller
TUESDAY, MAY 28 AT 2:00 PM
LECTURE/CONCERT: “TOCCATAS AND FANTASIES” With Julian Jenson
THURSDAY, MAY 30 AT 2:00 PM
LECTURE/CONCERT: “HISTORICAL IMPROVISATION” With Nicola Canzano
FRIDAY, MAY 31 AT 2:00 PM RECITAL AND MASTERCLASS With Jiayan Sun
SATURDAY, JUNE 1 AT 7:00 PM STUDENT CONCERT
Featuring students from the Academy of Fortepiano Performance
JUNE 2 – JUNE 8
CHAMBER MUSIC WORKSHOP FOR FORTEPIANO AND STRINGS
Guest faculty: Cynthia Roberts
FRIDAY, JUNE 7 AT 7:00 PM STUDENT CONCERT
Featuring students from the Chamber Music Workshop
FRIDAY, JULY 5 AT 6:00PM
SATURDAY, JULY 6 AT 1:00 & 6:00PM CHARLIE & THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
Maude Adams Theater Hub Catskill Mountain Foundation
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
This summer MATH has the golden ticket for Broadway’s latest version of the timeless classic, Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Led by the directing talents of Liz Piccoli, the assembled cast and creatives are turning the Orpheum stage into a Candyland for your 4th of July weekend entertainment. Get your tickets early, and tell all your friends!
FRIDAY, JULY 12 AT 5:30 PM
CATSKILL MOUNTAIN FOUNDATION BENEFIT DINNER
The Big Red Barn
Help us celebrate our 26th year of bringing arts to the mountaintop at our Annual Benefit. Join us for a cocktail reception, dinner, dessert and presentation, followed by a private premiere of Catskill Mountain Shakespeare’s summer production, Julius Caesar
RUNNING JULY 13-JULY 28
JULIUS CAESAR
Outdoors & in the tent behind the Big Red Barn
catskillmountainshakespeare.com
As Julius Caesar’s appetite for power grows ravenous, a group of rebel politicians join forces to save Rome the only way they see how. Their daring bloodshed is just the beginning of this saga of bloodlust, treachery, and brutality, all in the name of a better world. Contemporary dance, visual art and fashion combine with dynamic storytelling to create a visceral theatrical experience. Julius Caesar offers a meditation on power in our contemporary world and immerses us, the audience, into its heart.*
*NOTE: This performance contains instances of intimacy, violence, and mature content matter. The recommended age for audiences is 12 and up.
SUNDAY, JULY 14 AT 3:00PM
STARS OF BALLET
with New York City Ballet Principal Adrian Danchig-Waring
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Following last year’s sold-out Jacques d’Amboise tribute, Adrian Danchig-Waring returns with a star studded cast, including dancers from New York City Ballet, in a program of classics and contemporary favorites.
SATURDAY, JULY 20 AT 7:00PM
NATIONAL DANCE INSTITUTE MOUNTAINTOP SUMMER RESIDENCY PERFORMANCE
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
National Dance Institute (NDI), founded by Jacques d’Amboise, brings its award-winning dance program to the Catskill Mountain Region, with a two-week residency for children in Grades 3 – 8. Under the Artistic Direction of NDI choreographer Dufftin Garcia, the children will participate in high energy dance classes and choreography workshops accompanied by live music. The program culminates in a performance onstage at the Orpheum Performing Arts Center featuring the dancers and live music set against a backdrop of colorful banners created over the many years of the collaboration between NDI and the Catskill Mountain Foundation. This is a high-energy event that draws large crowds every year!
SUNDAY, JULY 21 AT 2:00 PM SATURDAY & SUNDAY, JULY 27 & 28 AT 2:00 PM
GALA BENEFIT FILM SCREENING: SATURDAY, JULY 27 AT 5:30 PM
TEXAS TOWN
By Horton Foote Doctorow Center for the Arts hortonbythestream.org
Texas Town, filled with pathos, hints at some of life’s biggest questions. The play explores life in the small fictional town of Harrison, Texas after the peak of the cotton industry and just before oil had hit the state in a big way.
Horton by the Stream celebrates its 30th summer season this year. The winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the Academy Award, Horton Foote is America’s storyteller. Dubbed “the most prolific playwright nobody knows”, Horton Foote seems at times to be an insider secret in the theater world.
This year not only will the company present this early rarely done play, but it will also present a 30th Anniversary Benefit screening of Horton Foote: The Road to Home, a documentary film about the life and work of Horton Foote. A reception will feature special guests, wine, and cheese.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 AT 2:00 & 7:00PM SUNDAY, AUGUST 4 AT 2:00PM
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
The magic continues this summer with CMF’s spectacular production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream
This unique production, conceived by former Metropolitan Opera ballerina Victoria Rinaldi, transports the audience to an enchanted wood to witness what hilarity unfolds, when fairies meddle with the love lives of mortals. All ends well with a triple wedding and gala ballet. Now in its fifth year, this beloved production of the Orpheum Dance Program is continuing last year’s successful collaborations with Aquila Theatre and Joffrey Ballet School New York. Students from the Orpheum Dance Program’s Community Dance Class, alongside other local children, will be given the opportunity to appear on stage with professional actors and dancers in a fresh, new program filled with new scenes and updated choreography in a production that will enchant audiences young and old.
AUGUST 1-10, 2024
HUNTER INTERNATIONAL MUSIC FESTIVAL
Doctorow Center for the Arts huntermusicfestival.com
Offering a beautiful escape into the mountains and an intensive summer music program all in one package, Hunter International Music Festival is a unique, ten-day music festival experience focusing on both solo and chamber music training.
SUNDAY, AUGUST 4 AT 7:00 PM MUSIC SALON AT HIMF Red Barn
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6 & 7 AT 7:00 PM YOUNG ARTISTS CONCERT SERIES
THURSDAY, AUGUST 8 AT 7:00 PM
FRIDAY, AUGUST 9 AT 4:00 PM STUDENT CHAMBER MUSIC PERFORMANCES
FRIDAY, AUGUST 9 AT 7:00 PM FACULTY CONCERT: AROUND THE WORLD, AN EVENING OF MUSICAL INTEGRATION
The program will include: Beethoven’s Cello Sonata No. 2 in G minor; Fauré’s Piano Quartet No. 1 in C minor, Op. 15; and Dvořák’s Piano Quintet No. 2 in A Major, Op. 81
SATURDAY, AUGUST 10 AT 7:00 PM GUEST ARTIST CONCERT: THE LYSANDER TRIO
The Lysander Piano Trio has been praised by The Strad for its “incredible ensemble, passionate playing, articulate and imaginative ideas and wide palette of colors.” The group has developed a reputation for exciting programming, finding creative ways to connect well-known masterworks with pieces by lesser-known and underrepresented composers, discovering common threads across cultures and times.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 10 AT 6:00PM
OMNY TAIKO
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Second Performance!
SUNDAY, AUGUST 11 AT 2:00PM
Windham Civic & Performing Arts Centre
5379 Route 23, Windham
OMNY Taiko Drummers returns to the mountaintop to again present their eagerly anticipated performance at the Orpheum. OMNY Taiko’s mission is to foster a culture of community and support through the art of Japanese taiko drumming to impact and connect our global society. The sound of the taiko drum has the power to connect ourselves with those around us and with the universe at large.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 17 AT 7:00PM
PRE-CONCERT TALK AT 6:45PM WINDHAM FESTIVAL CHAMBER
ORCHESTRA
Music of Tchaikovsky, Scott Joplin & Robert Manno
Robert Manno, conductor
Melissa Wimbish, soprano
Andrew Garland, baritone
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Windham Festival Chamber Orchestra welcomes Melissa Wimbish, soprano and Andrew Garland, baritone for a program that will include:
Manno: Portrait of Millay for Soprano & String Orchestra on Five Sonnets by Edna St. Vincent Millay (Premiere)
Manno: Fern Hill (Dylan Thomas) for Baritone & Chamber Orchestra (Premiere of Orchestra Version)
Tchaikovsky: Souvenir de Florence for String Orchestra
Scott Joplin: Three Rags for Chamber Orchestra (arr. Skoryk/Manno)
Windham Festival Chamber Orchestra was formed in 2000 by conductor Robert Manno. The orchestra is comprised of the finest musicians from the New York area and includes current and former members of some of the world’s most esteemed orchestras and ensembles.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 24 AT 7:00PM THE MOSS ENSEMBLE
Darcy Dunn, mezzo-soprano
Marshall Coid, countertenor & violin
Elizabeth Rodgers, piano
Mary Wooten, cello
Doctorow Center for the Arts
The Moss Ensemble returns to the CMF for an evening of beautiful music that stirs our hearts and, we hope, yours. Featuring works by Beethoven, Monteverdi, Ravel, Faure, Vitali, Debussy and Griffiths, as well as pieces by our own Marshall Coid and Mary Wooten. Please join us!
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 AT 2:00PM
STEVEN E. GREENSTEIN
MEMORIAL CONCERT
Doctorow Center for the Arts
Steven E. Greenstein was the collector and curator of the vintage piano collection on public display at the Doctorow Center for the Arts. This memorial concert will feature performances by the faculty and students of the Academy of Fortepiano Performance, Joanne Polk and Jeffrey Langford, and jazz pianist Jamie Saft on pianos from the collection.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 AT 7:00PM
MARTHA GRAHAM DANCE COMPANY:
BAYE & ASA’S CORTEGE 2023
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Taking advantage of the Orpheum’s new technical upgrades, the world-renowned Martha Graham Dance Company will spend the week in a Works & Process LaunchPAD tech-residency putting the finishing touches on a new commission by Baye & Asa. See the culmination of this process and join in on this first look before the company’s performance at Works & Process at the Guggenheim and the work’s premiere at New York City Center.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 AT 2:00PM INTERNATIONAL FORTEPIANO SALON
“Shuann Chai and Shunske Sato: Recording Beethoven’s 10 Sonatas for Fortepiano and Violin”
Yi-heng Yang, Maria Rose, & Patricia García-Gil Hosts Streaming LIVE on Facebook and YouTube
FRIDAY & SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4 & 5 AT 7:00 PM OLD JEWS TELLING JOKES
Maude Adams Theater Hub Catskill Mountain Foundation Doctorow Center for the Arts
A revue that pays tribute to and reinvents classic jokes of the past and present. Think you’ve heard them all before? Not this way. If you’ve ever had a mother, visited a doctor, or walked into a bar with a priest, a rabbi and a frog - OLD JEWS TELLING JOKES will give you a second opinion, and ask you where you got that.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6 AT 2:00PM INTERNATIONAL FORTEPIANO SALON
With Guest Pierre Goy Yi-heng Yang, Maria Rose, & Patricia García-Gil Hosts Streaming LIVE on Facebook and YouTube
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 AT 7:00PM
HOME AGAIN: CAROLE KING TRIBUTE
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
HOME AGAIN covers the entire repertoire of the multi-award winning singer/songwriter Carole King. Included on the list are songs she wrote & recorded on her own as well as songs she wrote that were recorded by others.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9 AT 7:00PM
CALEB TEICHER & DANCERS
A VERY SW!NG OUT HOLIDAY
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
‘Tis the season to swing! In a special holiday revival of the hit show, SW!NG OUT, acclaimed director/choreographer Caleb Teicher and their collaborators (Evita Arce, LaTasha Barnes, Nathan Bugh, and Eyal Vilner) invite you to revel in the joy of social dance and festive cheer! In A Very SW!NG OUT Holiday, Lindy Hop champions bring their talents to the Orpheum’s stage to kick off the holiday season.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16 AT 7:00PM
SOME ENCHANTED EVENING
BENNY BENACK III STELLA KATHERINE COLE JABU GRAYBEAL
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Led by Emmy-nominated crooner Benny Benack III and singer and social media sensation Stella Katherine Cole, Some Enchanted Evening leads audiences on a jazz-inspired journey through Broadway’s greatest hits from the Golden Age of yesterday to the freshest hits of today. From Hammerstein to Hamilton and everything in between, this musical mashup also showcases Jabu Graybeal, a one-of-a-kind talent and tap-dancing star.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30 AT 7:00PM
TWELFTH NIGHT ENSEMBLE
YI-HENG YANG, FORTEPIANO
AQUILA
THEATRE
Doctorow Center for the Arts
Fortepianist Yi-heng Yang, Twelfth Night Ensemble, and Aquila Theatre are collaborating on a special performance featuring the double concerti of Mozart with spoken word dramatizations of the life of Mozart.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7 AT 2:00 & 7:00PM
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 8 AT 2:00PM
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14 AT 2:00 & 7:00PM
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15 AT 2:00PM
THE NUTCRACKER
Orpheum Performing Arts Center
Now in its ninth year, the CMF Nutcracker has become a holiday favorite of residents of the surrounding Catskills and Hudson Valley. Featuring ballet stars of the future, this spectacular production has become one of the finest Nutcrackers in upstate New York.
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20
HOLIDAY SPECTACULAR
Maude Adams Theater Hub
Catskill Mountain Foundation
Doctorow Center for the Arts
This December, the community gathers once more to sing, read, and share in the seasonal spirit for the 3rd Annual Holiday Spectacular. All are welcome to be a part of the performance, and tickets are free!
Your support matters and makes everything we do possible!
EACH YEAR, THE CATSKILL MOUNTAIN FOUNDATION
• Presents and hosts more than 20 performances and lectures
• Offers free or subsidized arts programs that are enjoyed by hundreds of local children.
• Hosts arts residencies bringing many artists to our community for extended stays.
• Operates the Catskill Mountain Foundation Gift Shop, featuring a curated selection of books and gifts from around the Region and the world.
• Publishes the monthly Guide magazine, distributed throughout the Catskill Region, and in Albany.
• Is the home of the Piano Performance Museum, a rare collection of historic playable pianos.
• Runs a dozen studio arts programs, with students from around the U.S.
• Shows more than 100 films on our three screens in Hunter.
YES! I would like to help the Catskill Mountain Foundation in its mission to bring the arts to the Mountaintop
Please accept my donation of: $
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Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild woodstockguild.org
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Woodstock Design facebook.com/WoodstockDesignNY
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Woodstock Film Festival woodstockfilmfestival.org
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Woodstock Infusions woodstockinfusions.com
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The Woodstock Pub thewoodstockpub.com
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Woodstock School of Art woodstockschoolofart.org
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Woodstock Wine & Liquor woodstockwineandliquor.com
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WIOX 91.3FM
wioxradio.org
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WRIP 97.9FM
rip979.com
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