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SEPTEMBER 2015 V OL.22 NO.8
In Session ✱ PARENTS WHO ROCK ✱ “REDSHIRTING” KINDERGARTENERS ✱ SCHOOL YEAR RESOLUTIONS
Matthew LeFluer
Let’s Grow Kids Ambassador Alburgh
Superhero power: Connecting with children on their level. As a trained Let’s Grow Kids ambassador, Matt is highly effective at building awareness about the importance of the first years.
Dr. Jody Brakeley
Developmental Behavioral Pediatrician
VT Department of Health Child Development Clinic and Independent Practice, Middlebury
Good deeds done: When he’s not spreading the word about early childhood, Matt works with preschool children at his local library as a volunteer. Matthew says: “It’s just so exciting that I can help children have chances that I never had growing up in foster care.”
Dr. Jody says: “Brain science has seemed like rocket science, but it isn’t. We can all understand how young brains develop and use this knowledge to better support healthy development.”
Let’s Grow Kids
is proud to recognize these Vermonters as Superheroes of Early Childhood for their above and beyond commitment to the success of Vermont’s youngest children. Know a Superhero in your community who deserves to be recognized? Submit your nomination at:
letsgrowkids.org
Kathleen Fitzgerald Autism Interventionist
September 2015
kidsvt.com
Children’s Integrated ServicesEarly Intervention, Vermont Family Network, Williston
Rockingham Free Public Library, Bellows Falls
Superhero power: Empowering families to understand and support children with autism to become lifelong, engaged learners. In addition to working with individual children, Kathleen supports communities―including caregivers and child care centers―to understand autism in order to help children achieve their full potential. Good deed done: One of Kathleen’s clients reports: “When Kathleen first met my son he was basically nonverbal and in his own world. Now he speaks so much he is generally hoarse, answers to his name, and plays well with others. If we didn't have her in our life I don't know where he would be today!” Kathleen says: “My hope is that people will understand how important it is to invest in children during their earliest years, when it’s much easier to address issues before they become more significant, long term challenges.”
Good deed done: Sam partnered with other community organizations to create the Windham County Resource Calendar, an open source web platform that will connect families to local events and resources, debuting this month. Sam says: “I have the best job in the world! As a librarian, I’m able to help children build literacy skills through books, play, and learning opportunities, and contribute to a thriving community.”
Monica Stowell
Registered Home Child Care Provider Munchkins Day Care, Lyndonville
Superhero power: Working with community organizations to provide high quality (5 STARS!), affordable child care for children aged 6 weeks to 12 years. Look for Monica and “her kids” in the Lyndonville town parade, visiting with a police officer or fire fighter, and out birdwatching! Good deeds done: Monica uses resources such as Head Start and Strengthening Families to make sure all families can afford her care and all children have rich, stimulating experiences. Monica says: ”I want Vermont’s children to achieve all of their goals and remember me as one of the people who supported them to get there.”
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Kids VT
Youth Services Librarian
Superhero power: Instilling a love of stories and imagination, while laying key building blocks for early literacy and social-emotional development. Sam can be found at the library and around town reading with children.
Superhero power: Empowering Vermonters to support children’s healthy development by helping any audience understand the complex workings of early brain development. Good deeds done: In addition to direct patient care, Dr. Brakeley works with families, educators, schools and the medical community to convey current information and develop a shared language about early brain development.
Samantha Maskell
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VOL.22 NO.8
SEPTEMBER 2015 Editor’s Note....................................................................5 See & Say ..........................................................................6 Coloring-Contest Winners ................................7 Birthday Club..................................................................49 Habitat: Backyard Cidery......................................47 Use Your Words: Essay ..........................................51
HE HIGH LIVE T OW LIFE
PAY A L
Ready Or Not? ...............18
Discounts on Natural, Gluten-Free and Kid-Friendly Foods
Why some parents decide to delay their child’s kindergarten start date
EAT. LEARN. PLAY
PRICE
The Kids Beat ..................................................................8 One To Watch .................................................................10 Fit Families: Walking & Biking to School ...11 Balancing Act: Mom Behind the Mic .........12 Bookworms: Librarian Moms...........................13 Writing-Contest Winners ..................................13 Mealtime: Salad in a Jar ........................................15 Checkup: Sleep Habits.............................................16 The Art of Putting on a Play .............................17
1186 Williston Rd., So. Burlington VT 05403 (Next to the Alpine Shop)
802.863.0143
CALENDAR
Open 7 days 10am-7pm Web & Mobile site: www.cheesetraders.com
Daily Listings ..................................................................26 Classes ..................................................................................27 Playgroups ........................................................................30 Story Times ......................................................................34 Ongoing Exhibits ........................................................35
Bohemian Rap Sessions ...... 22 Conversations with parents who rock
ON THE COVER
HANDS ON Book-Inspired Contest ...........................................48 Puzzle Page ......................................................................49 Coloring Contest .........................................................50
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SEPTEMBER 2015 VO L .2 2 N O .8
In Session ✱ PARENTS WHO ROCK
Music and family collide in Michael Tonn’s cover illustration.
✱ “REDSHIRTING” KINDERGARTENERS ✱ SCHOOL YEAR RESOLUTIONS
or it
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FALL 2015
Classes start September 14
STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS Cathy Resmer Colby Roberts Alison Novak Brooke Bousquet Megan James Corey Grenier Kaitlin Montgomery Brett Stanciu
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Illustrators: Mo Oh, Michael Tonn Photographers: Matt Thorsen, Tristan Von Duntz
thfoer artsryone are eve ter! nce, and thea es in music, da 2-652-4548 ag all r fo s se 80 Clas rts.org or call www.flynna
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Contributing Writers: Angela Arsenault, JD Fox, Sarah Galbraith, Steve Hadeka, Kimberly Harrington, Ken Picard, Erinn Simon, Jessica Lara Ticktin Katie Titterton
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Editorial in Kids VT is for general informational purposes. Parents must use their own discretion for following the advice in any editorial piece. Acceptance of advertising does not constitute service/product endorsement. Kids VT is a proud member of the Parenting Media Association. Kids VT distribution is audited for accuracy.
SEPTEMBER 2015
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September 2015
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Back to School Time After Time EDITOR’S NOTE
If you’re easing kids back into the school year, this issue is full of tips to help you do it. Ken Picard talks to Dr. Lewis First, chief of pediatrics at the University of Vermont Children’s Hospital, about how parents can help their students get the sleep they need to be successful in school and beyond (“Checkup,” page 16). In “Mealtime” (page 15), Erinn Simon writes about a fun lunch option you’ll be tempted to pack — maybe even for yourself. And in “Use Your Words” (page 51), Kimberly Harrington suggests making “school year resolutions” as a way to cope with the craziness of Four years ago, when the season. carrying Theo This issue was still isn’t just full of practical school supplies. In “Bohemian Rap Session” (page 22), contributor Angela Arsenault interviews musician-parents and asks how they balance their artistic tendencies with family life. Arsenault knows something about the subject; her husband, Ryan Miller, fronts the band Guster. And in “Balancing Act” (page 12), Jessica Lara Ticktin asks Jane Lindholm, host of VPR’s “Vermont Edition,” how she juggles her high-profile job with parenting her 20-month-old son. Lastly, don’t forget to check out our September calendar — it’s packed with proof that the fun doesn’t have to end just because summer did. C
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ALISON NOVAK MANAGING EDITOR
Some of this month’s Kids VT contributors:
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FORESTS, PARKS & RECREATION
VERMONT AGENCY OF NATURAL RESOURCES
8/26/15 12:19 PM
LEFT TO RIGHT: DR. CHRIS LUNDBERG DR. FRED ZIEGLER DR. MATT ROGERS DR. TOM FISCHER
THESE GUYS CAN PUT A HEALTHY SMILE ON YOUR FACE. Each orthodontist at Timberlane Dental Group is board-certified, and has the additional training and experience to make sure you get the best smile. Our orthodontists are well versed in all the treatment options for straightening teeth, and creating healthy smiles for you and your family. To arrange an initial consultation at no-charge, please call Timberlane Dental Group at 802-864-6881, or visit timberlanedental.com
The orthodontists at Timberlane Dental Group are pleased to announce the addition of Dr. Matthew Rogers to the practice. With extensive experience treating adults, Matt is looking forward to providing patients of all ages with the care they need for beautiful smiles.
• Interceptive treatment of developing bite problems for children • Comprehensive orthodontic treatment for adolescents and adults • Treatment of complex bite problems and jaw deformities
BURLINGTON 1127 NORTH AVENUE
ESSEX JUNCTION 87 MAIN STREET
SOUTH BURLINGTON 60 TIMBER LANE
SHELBURNE 5070 SHELBURNE ROAD
• Clear and metal braces • Removable Clear Aligners including Clear Correct and Invisalign®
KIDS VT
JD FOX (“The Art of”) lives in Montpelier with his husband, dog, cat and two fish. His fiction, philosophy and fascinations can be found at jdfoxpresents.com.
Smokey Bear & Woodsy Owl: Home Sweet Home was created by the Betty Brinn Children’s Museum in collaboration with the US Forest Service. Smokey Bear and Woodsy Owl are protected by Congressional law and are used with permission from the US Forest Service. All Rights Reserved. 16 USC 580p-4 & 18 USC 711a.
SEPTEMBER 2015
KIMBERLY HARRINGTON (“Use Your Words”) is a writer, creative director, wise apple-er and heartstrings puller. She is cofounder and editor of the parenting humor site RAZED, a contributor to McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, posts things that make you laugh or cry or go “meh” on Medium, and loves her iPhone very much — and, sure, her family, too.
HURRY! ENDS SEPT. 13!
KIDSVT.COM
THE DAYS ARE LONG, but the years are short — it’s an adage people throw around a lot when they talk about raising kids. But never does it seem truer than at the beginning of a new school year. This summer, every time I told someone that my daughter, Mira, was going into third grade, I found myself questioning the statement in my head. Wait, is that right? I would think. It doesn’t seem so long ago that my stylish, thoughtful 8-yearold was a bald baby, teetering around on wobbly legs. When did she become a fullfledged big kid? Theo, my 5-year-old son, is starting kindergarten. But that doesn’t stop me from occasionally sweeping his 50-plus-pound body into my arms and toting him around like a toddler. Recently I caught a glimpse of our reflection in the mirror and saw how absurd I look with his long-limbed frame wrapped around me. But I’ll continue to hoist him while I can because I know that, sooner than I’d like to imagine, he’ll be sweeping me off my feet. Sending your child to school for the first time marks a new phase of parenting. Some moms and dads who wish to delay that transition give their kids an extra year at home before enrolling them in kindergarten. Katie Titterton writes about this practice of “redshirting” kindergarteners — and the varied reasons families choose to do it — in “Ready or Not?” on page 18.
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SEPTEMBER 2015
KIDSVT.COM
FIRST-DAY FUN
Many Vermont kids returned to school at the end of August — almost two weeks before Labor Day! We asked our Facebook followers to share snapshots from the first day. Here’s a sampling of the sweet submissions we received.
Back to School
Galbraith’s daughter, Elise, in the forest
Best of the Blog
Get Lost!
Looking to have some good, oldfashioned fun with your family this month? Corn mazes give kids and adults alike the opportunity to move their legs and solve what amounts to a life-size puzzle. Here are six spots where you can test your sense of direction. THE GREAT VERMONT CORN MAZE Danville, 748-1399 vermontcornmaze.com
This maze, on a third-generation dairy farm, has a new design every year. Situated on 10 acres, which includes some hillsides, it’s a serious challenge; visitors should be able to walk for about an hour, without a rest, to find their way out of three miles of trails. A smaller maze on the property offers a lessintense option.
HATHAWAY FARM CORN MAZE Rutland, 775-2624 hathawayfarm.com
The theme of this year’s 12-acre corn maze — which features a built-in sound system and a series of bridges — is “Under the Sea.” Toddlers can explore a mini maze and an OK Corral play area and livestock barn with donkeys, bunnies and pigs. Admission includes all mazes, the livestock barn and weekend wagon rides. On Saturdays the maze is open late, so the entry fee includes a glow stick and marshmallow roasting, too.
The winners of our three gift certificates to Petra Cliffs are… SAM MAZZA’S CORN MAZE Colchester, 655-3440 sammazzafarms.com
COLORING CONTEST
Visitors can take a one- or two-mile jaunt through sevenfoot-tall walls of corn, tracking their progress by punching a card at numbered stations scattered throughout the course. Don’t miss the farm market, animals and a few wooden play structures also on the premises.
Flamingos are usually pretty in pink. But the 97 young artists who entered last month’s coloring contest proved that the tropical birds look just as dashing in orange, blue, polka dot and camouflage. Imaginative entries included flamingos basking in paparazzi flashbulbs on the red carpet, practicing gymnastics and painting masterpieces. We especially loved the birds attempting to beat the Guinness World Record for time spent standing on one leg. Keep the creativity coming, and congratulations to all the winners!
PERCY FARM CORN MAZE Stowe, 371-9999
Located just off the five-mile Stowe Recreation Path, this maze takes approximately one hour to complete. Visitors can pet baby calves and goats, and feed them for a quarter, as well.
A CORN MAZE ADVENTURE Fort Ticonderoga, N.Y., 518-585-2821 fortticonderoga.org
Visitors navigate this six-acre maze, designed in the shape of the Fort, looking for history clues and collecting stamps. Children age 4 and under can try a shorter maze, with adult supervision.
HINESBURG
“Pinkalicious”
SUPER SUNSHINE
Lola A. Cebo, 4, Clarendon
This year’s four-acre, educationally themed maze is focused on Vermont’s new recycling laws and includes a scavenger hunt.
FABULOUS FINGER PAINTING
J.T., 2, Montpelier
6 to 8
SUCH STYLE
COURTESY OF TRISTAN VON DUNTZ
Shiloh Skalka, 5, Burlington WHO’S WALTER?
Josephine Swiech, 5, Northfield SO ORIGINAL
Emelia McCalla, 11, Rutland
Nora Austin, 8 ESSEX
“Flamingos Gone Retro”
DISCO FEVER
Raia Bryant, 10, Vergennes GOOD HOODIE
Charlotte Moriarty, 12, Jericho NEW-FANGLED ZENTANGLE
Isabel Giammusso, 12, Calais PARTY PERFECTION
Sophia Van Zyl, 7, Addison TIME TO DANCE
Joe Reed, 8, Essex GREAT GARDEN
Lola Rubin, 8, Burlington QUEEN SPARKLEBEAK
TOP TITLES
John Hoza-Frederick, 12
9 to 12
WILLISTON
“Camo Flamingo”
“PINK KONG”
Michael Palumbo, 5, Burlington “THE FLAMINGO OF DOOM” “THE SUN OF SWIRLS”
Eli Russell, 7, Plainfield
Find this month’s coloring contest on page 50. The deadline for submissions is September 15.
KIDS VT
Freya Lalumiere, 4, Burlington
SEPTEMBER 2015
Alexandria Frost, 8, Colchester
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In August, contributor Sarah Galbraith wrote about her favorite family bike excursion: riding the Island Line Trail in Colchester. The path takes bikers onto a causeway that juts into Lake Champlain. Every day during the summer, a bike ferry operated by Local Motion takes at top speed, while others were riders across a 200-foot Read more at more casual riders, like a young gap in the causeway, where kidsvt.com couple on a date and several they can continue on to South fishermen biking with their Hero. Fortunately, the bike poles sticking out behind them. ferry continues into the fall. From We pedaled through a suburban September 7 to October 12, it operates neighborhood, then a lakeside comon Fridays, weekends and holidays munity and finally onto the causeway, from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Find more info at which is a built-up path that runs on a localmotion.org flat, repurposed railroad bed into the Tristan and I pulled into Airport middle of the lake. The path has water Park. We loaded 9-month-old Elise on both sides, and we noticed wildinto her bike trailer and headed north flowers tucked in among the rocks on the path. As we pedaled, we met lining the trail and big, beautiful trees people going in both directions. Some clinging to small patches of ground. were serious cyclists zooming along Birds flitted around us as we rode by...
Autumn Driver, 4
HONORABLE MENTIONS
WHITCOMB’S LAND OF PUMPKINS Williston, 879-5239
Cruisin’ the Causeway
5 and under
l Science. Rea
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Creativity in Bloom Visit
Montshire Museum • 135+ Hands-on Exhibits • Daily Activities • Visiting Exhibitions • David Goudy Science Park • Nature Trails • Live animals & aquariums • Museum Store • Free parking $2 Off Admission! When you subscribe to Montshire’s eNews at montshire.org.
Montshire Museum of Science
montshire.org • 802.649.2200 Exit 13 I-91, Norwich, VT
Vermont’s Premier DANCE APPAREL & FOOTWEAR RETAILER
A new “multisensory creative play space” in South Burlington aims to cultivate kids’ imaginations. At WILDFLOWERS STUDIO, which opens on September 14, little hands can practice flipping a light switch, buckling a seat belt, turning a knob and ringing an old-fashioned doorbell. All those items are mounted on a wooden board that’s part of the studio’s sensory area, where kids can learn through exploring with their senses. The bright, 1,600-squarefoot room also includes a sandbox fashioned from an antique clawfoot Blais and Spisiak sit on a clawfoot bathtub; a “telephone” made with tub in the studio’s sensory area funnels and a long tube; a Lego area; and an art corner. The play space is the brainchild of Lyndsy Blais, a Colchester mom of four with a special-education background, and Sam Spisiak of Burlington, who’s studied early-childhood education and worked as a nanny. Last November, they hatched the idea to create a whimsical environment for kids ages 18 months to 10 years. They’ll offer two-hour open studios, themed classes, birthday parties and summer camps. The pair has outfitted the space by scouring yard sales, craigslist, ReSOURCE and even an auto salvage yard for materials. The women hope that kids feel free to explore and play at Wildflowers. Says Spisiak, “We want this to be a place where we don’t say, ‘No.’”
Dance!
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SEPTEMBER 2015
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Let’s get ready to
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HISTORY
Building material from the toolkit
Building a Foundation It’s difficult to make history come alive using just a textbook. Enter Preservation Burlington. The nonprofit dedicated to preserving and protecting the historic architecture of the Queen City recently released a HISTORIC ARCHITECTURE TOOLKIT, which aims to engage children ages 8 to 13 in local history and architectural heritage. Created by historians with education backgrounds, the toolkit provides samples of building materials, reference and coloring books, handouts, lessons, and a printable field notebook for students. For $25 to $50, local educators can rent the kit to use in their classrooms. The organization is also offering customizable historian-led walking tours of Burlington neighborhoods for $5 per student to enhance kids’ understanding of the history in their own backyard. HISTORIC ARCHITECTURE TOOLKIT: For more information, contact Preservation Burlington at info@preservationburlington.org or 207-907-0770.
7/23/15 12:42 PM
COURTESY OF PRESERVATION BURLINGTON
WILDFLOWERS STUDIO is located at 1 Executive Drive, Suite 103, in South Burlington. For more information and a schedule of drop-in open studios and classes, visit wildflowerstudiobtv.com or email wildflowerchildrenbtv@gmail.com. Info, 318-8880. The studio will host open houses on Saturday, September 19, and Saturday, October 10, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Dance Apparel & Footwear
Anna Dewdney is single-handedly responsible for making the lowly llama one of the most recognized characters in early-childhood lit. The Vermonter’s seven Llama Llama picture books, which explore topics ranging from temper tantrums to separation anxiety, have all been New York Times best sellers. The Chicago Tribune praised her as a “geographer extraordinaire of the emotional terrain of preschoolers and their mothers.”
ALISON NOVAK
OPEN DAILY 10-5
Ain’t Love Grand
In her latest installment, LLAMA LLAMA GRAM AND GRANDPA, Dewdney writes about Llama’s sleepover at his grandparents’ house. Grandma lets him ride on a tractor, and Grandpa helps him craft a wooden chair. But there’s one big problem: Llama has forgotten his beloved stuffed animal. Grandpa digs up a special llama toy he had when he was a boy as a stand-in for the real thing. This sweet, rhyming tale celebrates the idea that — whether they’re of the llama or human persuasion — grandparents have a knack for saving the day. LLAMA LLAMA GRAM AND GRANDPA: Viking Books, $17.99. Ages 3-5. September 1 release date. Visit llamallamabook.com for more information.
✱ DESTINATION RECREATION
BY ST EV E HA D E K A
Starr Farm Playground
PHOTOS: STEVE HADEKA
RESIDENTS OF BURLINGTON’S New North End were pleased to say farewell this summer to the pressure-treated splinter factory that was Starr Farm Playground. After a series of neighborhood meetings, the city replaced the squeaky old swings with a futuristic, alien landscape that’s as fun as it looks. My wife, Maggie, and I bring our daughter, Sailor, there a few times a week. The colorful new playground is divided into two distinct areas. A toddler play structure offers a variety of old standbys such as baby swings and a small slide, along with a board showing shapes and colors, as well as a plastic hand drum. But where this new playground really shines is in the big-kid area. At 4, Sailor’s technically not old enough to play there — it’s meant for ages 5
PLUSES
• close to the dog park, beaches and bike path
MINUSES • not much shade
BURTON FLAGSHIP STORE
GROM BOOT
80 INDUSTRIAL PARKWAY BURLINGTON, VERMONT 802.660.3200 *ONLY $189! LEASE FOR THE WINTER SEASON AND RETURN IN THE SPRING.
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KIDS VT
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Local parents review a play space each month in “Destination Recreation.” Got a spot you’d like us to feature? Email us at ideas@kidsvt.com.
ASK US ABOUT OUR HARDGOODS YOUTH LEASE PACKAGE!*
SEPTEMBER 2015
• QR codes on equipment direct smartphone users to the manufacturer’s informative website
to 12 — but that’s where we spend most of our time. The centerpiece is a jaw-droppingly tall 16-foot, 7-inch PlayWeb structure, a geodesic sphere that contains its own ropes course and is connected to the main structure by a cargo net bridge suspended several feet in the air. It’s without a doubt the most challenging and fun element of the park. Even I want to get in there. Not feeling so adventurous? Kids can play plenty of great games closer to the ground with an underground “telephone” system, a fire bell and a sling-swing.
GET YOUR GROM GEARED UP FOR WINTER! KIDSVT.COM
• challenging, exciting and unexpected elements
Sailor on the PlayWeb
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by megan jameS
courteSy of calvin ann white
Q one To waTch
Not Just Fiddling Around A South Burlington teen connects through traditional music addison whiTe is used to having an audience. The 15-year-old fiddler performs with the Vermont Youth Orchestra and Young Tradition Vermont’s Fiddleheads ensemble. She also regularly appears on one of the most visible stages in the state — Burlington’s Church Street Marketplace. She busked there all summer. So during an interview at the University of Vermont’s Davis Center, when a reporter asked her to describe the kind of music she plays, she offered to give an impromptu concert demonstrating the subtle differences between traditional Irish and Scottish dance tunes. Standing outside UVM’s student center, she played reels on the fiddle while her mom looked on and college students strode by. “In Irish music, it’s common to hear a bow triplet, which is where you flick the bow across the strings,” she explained before launching into an Irish tune called “Salvation Reel.” It was windy that afternoon, and her long blond hair whipped around her instrument. When it got caught in her bow, the 15-year-old faltered momentarily, then laughed it off
name: age: Town:
ADDISON WHITE 15 SOUTH BURLINGTON
and kept playing. Not all teenagers would exude such confidence. Addison has studied the violin since age 4. In sixth grade, she became interested in fiddling. The fiddle and the violin are the same instrument; what you call it depends on how you play it. Classical violin is, “more technical; it’s Mozart and Bach,” said Addison. Fiddling is more improvisational. Fiddlers play traditional American, Irish and Scottish songs, adding flourishes to make them their own. Addison loves the style of the music, but she also loves fiddling culture. “I’ve made so many friends playing the fiddle,” she said. “There’s this enormous community that comes along with fiddling. Sometimes I’ll be busking on Church Street and someone will come up to me and say, ‘I’m an Irish step dancer. Can you play a reel for me?’ And then she’ll dance while I play.”
she played reels on the fiddle while her mom looked on and college students strode by.
Addison practices for about an hour every day. “It takes a lot of focus and patience,” she said. Her focus now? Preparing for Young Tradition Vermont’s trip to Ireland next spring. She has fond memories of a previous trip with the group, to Northumberland, England. On the first night, the teenage
musicians got together with a local English ensemble for a jam session. “We all knew the same songs, even though we were from different places,” Addison recalled. “That’s when I realized that this music really brings us all together.” K
KidsVT.com
“One to Watch” shines a light on a young Vermonter who is going places. Know a local child, age 17 or under, who’s recently done something amazing? Nominate him or her at kidsvt.com/vermont/kidsvtonetowatch/page
September 2015
YOGA
Openings in our Preschool Progam for 2015-2016. Inquire now!
BARRE P O S T N ATA L YOGA FOR FERTILITY
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EAT. LEARN. PLAY. ✱ FIT FAMILIES
B Y A L ISO N NOVAK
Walking and Biking to School
It’s a really great start to the day. It gets the blood pumping and the body moving. COLLEEN MOORE DE ORTIZ, NEWPORT PARENT AND SAFE ROUTES VOLUNTEER
To learn more about Vermont Safe Routes to School, visit saferoutes.vermont.gov.
areas, walk-to-school initiatives are challenging. Miller’s Run School in Sheffield has held Walk At School days, where students walked around the school grounds, says Hill. In some rural districts, kids get dropped off at a location half a mile from school and all walk there together. “It’s a nice way to get kids walking to school and including them even if they’re not able to walk from their homes,” says Hill. Winter weather can also be a prohibitive factor for walking and biking to school initiatives. Attendance tends to peak in the fall and spring, says Hill, and dwindle in the cold, snowy months. Still, says Shelley, “my kids are often sporting ski goggles walking down the sidewalk.” Want to see your school sign up for Safe Routes? Contact the program soon if you want help. According to Hill, funding to support a paid staff member will run out in April 2016. After that, schools will be able to find information on the Safe Routes website but will have to take a DIY approach. In other words, it’ll be more of an uphill trek.
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“Fit Families” is a monthly feature that offers easy and affordable ways to stay active. Got an idea for a future FF? Email us at ideas@kidsvt.com.
KIDS VT
Shelley says they’ve held helmetdecorating parties and hung a big poster in the school’s lobby for kids to sign when they get to school on foot or on two wheels. Twice a year, classes compete to have the most walkers and rollers for a given month. The winning class gets a Golden Shoe award and a party with smoothies made to order using a bike-powered smoothie maker. It’s not just the rewards that look different from school to school. In Newport, senior citizens, hospital employees, local law enforcement and city council members sometimes join the monthly walks. Knowing that community members are watching out for her kids has created a “feeling of connection” that Moore de Ortiz says has made her more comfortable letting her kids walk to different places. Another bonus? When city council members join the walks, she says, they get a chance to see firsthand the infrastructure that needs repair and the spots where people drive too fast. Newport is one of the few Northeast Kingdom communities with a downtown. For many rural
SEPTEMBER 2015
a map of the surrounding neighborhood and a list of student addresses — helped to identify safe and well-populated walking and biking routes. Laura Asermily, a Middlebury resident who has coordinated the Safe Routes program at Mary Hogan Elementary School for the past four years, says climate change spurred her involvement in the program. In Middlebury, students who live more than two miles from the school qualify for school bus service. “We are really trying to reach that audience who lives within the two miles,” she says. Mary Hogan’s Walk & Roll to School days are scheduled for the first Wednesday of every month. “It’s become routine now,” Asermily says. “It’s on everyone’s calendar.” To motivate kids to get involved, Safe Routes provides schools with small trinkets such as reflector bands and blinking lights to give to walkers and bikers when they arrive at school. Some volunteers get creative. At Edmunds Elementary School in Burlington, where there’s no school bus service, parent volunteer Rachel
Students walk to St. Albans City School
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“It’s a really great start to the day,” says Moore de Ortiz, who walked the two miles from her home to school with her 6- and 11-year-old sons when her schedule allowed. “It gets the blood pumping and the body moving.” It was easy to get the school involved, she says. She filled out a simple enrollment form she found on the organization’s website. Then an engineer from Boston came to the school and — using
COURTESY OF SAFE ROUTES TO SCHOOL
OLD-TIMERS WHO TELL TALES of walking miles to school might be surprised to learn that many Vermont kids these days are following in their footsteps — voluntarily. Close to 100 schools in the state have walk- and bike-to-school programs that aim to increase the number of students on the move. These initiatives are made possible, in large part, by Vermont Safe Routes to School. This statewide effort is funded by a federal grant — it’s the local arm of a national campaign — and administered by the Vermont Agency of Transportation. Safe Routes launched in Vermont in 2005; today the program reaches approximately 26,000 kids at 92 schools, says the state’s Safe Routes outreach manager, Maren Hill. Newport City Elementary School is one of them. Last school year, on the third Thursday morning of every month, Newport students joined adult volunteers on one of three different “walking school bus” routes, picking up more kids along the way. Colleen Moore de Ortiz, a parent and public health nurse in Newport, helped found the school’s Safe Routes program a year ago.
Back to School
Q balancing act B y Jessica Lara T ick ti n
matthew thorsen
Mom Behind the Mic
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How the host of ‘Vermont Edition’ juggles work and family At Harvard, Jane Lindholm was probably the only undergraduate listening to National Public Radio’s “A Prairie Home Companion” while getting ready to go out on Saturday night. A lifelong lover of public radio, the East Middlebury native says she “naively assumed” she could write to the president of NPR and ask for a job when she graduated in 2001. It didn’t happen quite like that. But by a stroke of luck, a producer of “Radio Expeditions” — a show done in partnership with National Geographic — saw Lindholm’s cover letter and résumé and offered her a paid internship at NPR’s Washington, D.C. offices. So began her career in public radio. In 2002 Lindholm got a job at “Talk of the Nation,” then left after a year to live in Australia, write a Let’s Go travel guide and backpack through Southeast Asia. Upon her return in 2004, Lindholm landed a job in Los Angeles working for NPR’s “Marketplace,” first as an assistant producer, then as a director. Lindholm and her husband, Adrian Hicks — a Welshman she met on a beach in Thailand — moved to Vermont in 2007 to be closer to her family. Vermont Public Radio was just launching a new hourlong news program, “Vermont Edition,” and Lindholm, then just 28, landed the host position. Each weekday at noon, she interviews Vermont newsmakers live, on-air, and fields calls from VPR listeners on topics ranging from the changing nature of TV narratives to the impact of algae blooms on Lake Champlain. In 2014, Lindholm took a threemonth leave following the birth of her son, Dylan. This year, the 36-year-old Monkton mom earned the title of Best Local Radio Host, and “Vermont Edition” was voted Best Talk-Radio
Mom: Jane Lindholm, host of VPR’s “Vermont Edition” Dad: Adrian Hicks, tool operator, GlobalFoundries, Essex Junction
Lindholm’s family at home in Monkton
Kid: Dylan, 20 months
Show, in Seven Days’ annual Daysies awards. Kids VT sat down with Lindholm at the VPR offices in Colchester and interviewed her for a change. On being articulate while sleep deprived: I think of doing the show as part performance. You have to get in the zone. No one wants to hear if you’re tired or sound like you’re unprepared, so you have to make yourself be interested. The really cool thing is that after doing it for an hour, at the end of the show I usually feel more jazzed than when I woke up!
lot more sympathy for how hard it is to parent under the best circumstances and how incredibly difficult it is if your circumstances are not good. On the morning routine: Mornings are hellish! My son gets up anytime between 5 and 7. I am still breastfeeding, so I do that in the mornings and at night. If my husband has already left for work, then I’m eating breakfast and trying to get the dog outside to do his business while I am also trying to take a shower and get dressed and make some lunch — which is usually what doesn’t happen — and I get Dylan in the car and drop him off at his daycare and then make the mad dash to the office in time for 9 a.m.
You’re trying to investigate in journalism why people behave the way they do, and that’s a lot of parenting, too.
How motherhood has changed her perspective as a journalist: I’ve noticed it’s harder to think about certain stories. Right when I came back from maternity leave, we were continuing to do stories on [Department for Children and Families] investigations about children who were allegedly abused by family members. My son was an infant, and I remember thinking, How could anybody ever hurt an innocent child, repeatedly and violently? On the other hand, I have a
On finding time for herself: I do wish there were more like 30 hours in a day! Such a cliché, I know. That’s the biggest struggle right now for me. I don’t have enough time to exercise or to be outside by myself. I like to go for a run or go to the coffee shop in Vergennes and have a latte and read a book … but that never happens.
On the similarities between her job and parenting: I love thinking about why [my son] is doing things. Is he just trying to manipulate me? What does he want that I am not able to give to him? You’re trying to investigate in journalism why people behave the way they do, and that’s a lot of parenting, too. Like, Why are you yelling at me right now? On what she wishes were different: I would like to change the stress level. It feels like a lot to be the primary wage earner and to feel like parenting is a huge priority. I should say that my husband is really great — he’s a real partner in housework and parenting — but internally, the pressure to do a lot of hands-on parenting feels really strong. I’m trying to figure out how to do a job that I don’t feel I can take a break from and do the job of parenting, which you don’t get a break from. It’s really hard to balance. What she loves about being a parent: Watching this little person change and develop and figure things out — so fun! He’s at an age now where language is coming so fast, and seeing him understand new words and stringing new words into sentences, that’s just amazing. I love kids, and I always knew I wanted to be a parent. It’s such a relief to enjoy it as much as I thought I would. K
In “Balancing Act,” we ask a Vermont parent about the intersection of work and family life. Know someone we should interview? Email us at ideas@kidsvt.com.
✱ BOOKWORMS B Y A L ISO N N OVAK
EAT. LEARN. PLAY.
When Mom’s the Librarian
What do people who work around books all day read to their children? Kids VT asked the experts — local librarians — about their favorite books to read at home.
Who Took the Cookies from the Cookie Jar?
The Odd Egg BY EMILY GRAVETT
All of Duck’s friends are laying eggs, and he feels left out — until he finds a large green, speckled egg to call his own. While waiting patiently for it to crack, he knits a scarf and web-footed booties for the little one inside. The egg finally opens to reveal an unexpected hatchling. “I will happily read [this book] over and over again in story times, as well as to my own children,” says Tricia Allen, youth services librarian at the Ilsley Public Library in Middlebury. She has three kids, ages 2, 4 and 6. “The narrative is simple enough that a toddler can appreciate it, while the deceptively simple illustrations hold details to be delighted over during repeated readings.” Be prepared to discuss the different types of animals that hatch out of eggs, Allen adds.
Book-Inspired Contest Winners
The classic kids’ sing-along is adapted into a story set in the Southwest. Skunk bakes a batch of cookies, but when he opens the cookie jar he finds only crumbs. He ventures out to find the culprit, meeting many creatures, including Raven, Beaver, Rabbit and Raccoon, along the way. “This has the kind of repetitive text that’s good for little kids, but the illustrations are so fully formed that they give a great sense of the place and enhance the story,” says Abby Adams, librarian at the Platt Memorial Library in Shoreham and mom to a 2-year-old daughter. There’s a lot to look at and point out in this picture book, which “helps keep parents’ attention, too,” she says.
BY LINDSEY CRAIG, ILLUSTRATED BY MARC BROWN
In this board book (also available in hardcover), little ones guess who’s dancing across the pages by looking for clues in the artwork and listening to rhymes: “Creepity! Creepity! / Lots of purple feet! / Who is dancing / that creepity beat?” Spoiler alert: It’s a caterpillar. Kate Hunter from the Orwell Free Library says this book — which has “bright pictures and simple, rhythmic text” — has been a favorite for the past year with her now-19-month-old daughter, Willa. “Together, we stomp and snap our way through the book,” says Hunter. “These days Willa even assists by reciting lines and encouraging movements.”
Juliana Van Zyl, 6, ADDISON “If I had a magic pebble, I would wish that my Opa wouldn’t lose his eyesight all the way. I want him to be able to see me and my Oma and everyone else he loves.”
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Find this month’s book-inspired drawing/writing prompt on page 48. The deadline is September 15. Happy reading, writing and drawing!
SEPTEMBER 2015
Other Winners: Emeline Maas, 5, BARRE Kylee Forrest, 10, SHELBURNE Edith Kidder, 11, LINCOLN
KIDSVT.COM
Congratulations to these talented young artists who submitted captioned pictures inspired by Sylvester and the Magic Pebble by William Steig. Each wins a $25 gift certificate to Crow Bookshop in Burlington. Here is one of the winning drawings.
Dancing Feet!
BY BONNIE LASS AND PHILEMON STURGES, ILLUSTRATED BY ASHLEY WOLFF
THE LEARNING CENTER AT HEALTHY LIVING MY LITTLE GNOCCHI! Classic Potato Gnocchi: 1 1/2 lb baked potatoes
2
tsp kosher salt
1
large egg
1
tsp bu er
1
cup all purpose flour, more if needed
Scoop out baked potato insides and let cool just enough so it won’t cook the eggs. Lightly whisk egg. Put potatoes in a mound and make a small well in center. Pour in egg and sprinkle flour and salt across potatoes. Gently use hands to mix potato mixture. The less you handle it the be er. Think folding rather than stirring. If mixture is too sticky add a li le more flour until you have made a ball. Turn out and knead on a floury surface. Let dough rest for 10 minutes to relax glutens. Roll dough into 1/2 inch thick logs and use a knife to cute 1/2 inch pieces. If desired use a fork to gently indent each gnocchi to help it to retain sauce. Place finished gnocchi on a lightly floured sheet tray. Cook in salted boiling water until they float to the top. Drain well and reserve. Once the gnocchi is done add bu er and melt on medium high heat in a saucepan. Add approximately 1 cup of gnocchi and cook until lightly browned. Add sauce as desired and cook for another minute. Serve garnished with fresh parmesan.
Brown Butter & Sage Sauce: 1
stick salted bu er
16
sage leaves Zest of one lemon Parsley, for garnish Fresh parmesan, for garnish Salt and fresh pepper, as desired
In a small saucepan, melt bu er. Once fully melted, add sage and swirl pan until bu er is browned, being careful not to burn. Remove from pan and pour into heat safe bowl. Add lemon zest and season with salt and pepper as desired. Drizzle over browned gnocchi and garnish with parsley and parmesan.
• Sweet Potato Sundaes • Thursday, 9/3 · 4:00 - 5:00pm • $20 • Knife Skills with Fruitilicious Crepes • Friday, 9/11 · 4:00 - 5:00pm • $20 • Caramel Apples • Thursday, 9/24 · 4:00 - 5:00pm • $20 All classes require pre-registration. For a full schedule, or to register, go to healthylivingmarket.com; or call Customer Service at 802.863.2569. DORSET STREET, SOUTH BURLINGTON × . . × HEALTHYLIVINGMARKET.COM × AM- PM SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
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KIDS IN THE KITCHEN IN SEPTEMBER
Untitled-6 1
8/27/15 11:15 AM
✱ MEALTIME BY E RIN N SIM O N
This is not so much a recipe as a set of suggestions. (I made a southwestern salad with homemade spicy ranch dressing.) Just follow the basic guidelines — and have fun!
YOU’LL NEED:
1 Mason jar or similar container with a tight seal, at least 4 inches deep 2 tablespoons of your favorite dressing (see right for ranch recipe) 2 cups assorted veggies, protein and garnishes, layered from the heartiest to the lightest
DIRECTIONS:
Pour your dressing into the jar.
Makes about 1 cup; keeps in the fridge for up to a week
INGREDIENTS: 1/2 cup plain full-fat yogurt 1/2 cup buttermilk 1 or 2 cloves garlic, finely minced 1 tablespoon chopped chives 1 teaspoon chopped fresh dill (or 2 teaspoons dried dill) 1/2 teaspoon sea salt 1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin 1/4 teaspoon chili powder 2 tablespoons olive oil
DIRECTIONS: Combine all ingredients except olive oil in a small bowl and mix well. Add the oil in a steady stream, whisking until fully incorporated.
SEPTEMBER 2015
Next, layer your salad components. I started with chickpeas and black beans, followed by cubed cheddar cheese, shredded carrots, diced cucumbers, black olives and romaine lettuce. You could also use firm, cubed tofu, sunflower seeds, cooked chicken, grapes, raisins or Craisins, quinoa, farro or brown rice, and nuts (if their school allows them). If your kids aren’t into leafy greens, just omit them and sub in veggies they do like.
SPICY SOUTHWEST RANCH DRESSING:
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everything from breakfast smoothies to wedding favors. Using it as a salad container is a simple and brilliant idea. You can pack dressing and salad together by layering ingredients from the heartiest to the lightest, with dressing on the bottom, so your fixings stay fresh and crunchy. And you can mix and match ingredients depending on your kids’ likes and dislikes. If you don’t want to use a glass jar because your kids are young (if their school doesn’t allow glass containers), just use any tall container with a tight seal. Kids can dig right in, shaking up the jar so that the dressing is distributed and eating the salad “upside down,” or turning it out onto a plate or bowl. Add some bread, crackers or tortilla chips and fruit, and you’re done. Easy, healthy, fresh and delicious. You might even want to make an extra one for yourself.
SALAD IN A JAR
PHOTOS: ERINN SIMON
Back to School
Salad to Go IT’S MY JOB to figure out what the 40plus toddlers and preschoolers at the Burlington Children’s Space should eat for lunch — and I’m pretty good at it. But I still struggle with fresh ideas for my own kids’ midday meal. Every September I find myself wondering yet again what the heck to pack in their lunch boxes. We are just as rushed as everyone else on weekday mornings, so the kids’ lunches have to be easy to prepare. It helps if they’re visually appealing; the kids will likely ignore a peanut-butter sandwich that’s been squashed under an apple all morning. Of course, the cook in me wants the food to be delicious, too. This year, just as I was beginning to doubt there was a packable lunch that met all those requirements, I turned to Pinterest — and found salad in a jar. The Mason jar is ubiquitous on the internet these days, filled with
EAT. LEARN. PLAY.
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“Mealtime” is a feature about families and food. Got a topic you’d like us to explore? Email it to ideas@kidsvt.com.
✱ CHECKUP W IT H DR. L E W IS FIRST
How can parents help their school-age kids get enough sleep?
Back to School
THE AMERICAN ACADEMY of Pediatrics estimates that about 15 million schoolchildren nationwide don’t get enough sleep at night, which can dramatically affect their health, development and academic performance. But many parents, especially those who don’t get enough sleep themselves, find it challenging to help their children establish healthy sleep patterns. This month, Dr. Lewis First, chief of pediatrics at the University of Vermont Children’s Hospital, offers tips for helping kids get the sleep they need, so they can wake up feeling refreshed and ready for the day.
Got questions for the doctor? Send them to ideas@kidsvt.com.
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Parents should establish a nightly routine and then decelerate their kids’ activities as the evening progresses.
© TYLER OLSON | DREAMSTIME.COM
KIDS VT: How much sleep do schoolage kids need each night? LEWIS FIRST: All children and adolescence, which pushes back the teenagers need at least eight and a half time they feel tired and go to bed. As a to nine and a half hours of sleep per result, they tend to want to go to sleep night. That is critical for children who later and then wake up later. But if it’s want to do well in school, sports and a school day, they can’t sleep past 6 or other extracurricular activities. It also 7 a.m., which makes them less alert in gives them a healthier attitude and their morning classes. helps them emotionally. A good night’s sleep can help teenagers who drive KVT: Do you think public schools reduce their risk of being in a traffic should push back their morning accident. There’s also evidence to start times? suggest that sleepLF: Yes. In 2014, the deprived children American Academy eat unhealthy of Pediatrics strongly snacks with more recommended that fats and carbohyall schools consider drates when they an 8:30 a.m. or stay up later, which later start time, increases their and last month, the risk of becoming U.S. Centers for overweight. Disease Control DR. LEWIS FIRST and Prevention KVT: Do older kids reiterated that have different sleep patterns position. Based on data from the than younger kids? 2011-12 school year, they determined LF: As children enter adolescence, that America’s schoolchildren are not their circadian rhythms change, and getting enough sleep, which is affecting they don’t get sleepy until later at night. school performance, sports, behavior, The added stress of middle and high diet and more. But, as of 2012, only 15 school, combined with more homepercent of Vermont public middle and work and other demands, can cut into high schools started at 8:30 or later. their sleep time. Melatonin, a chemical Vermont’s children would be well the brain releases to make the body served in the long run by starting school tired, gets released later at night in later and getting a full night’s sleep.
KVT: How do parents know if their kids aren’t getting enough sleep? LF: One way is simply to keep track of what time your kids go to bed and when they wake up. Some children may be able to get by on a little less than eight and a half hours of sleep, but parents should watch for warning signs: Do kids struggle to wake up in the morning? Are their teachers reporting that they’re having increasing difficulty concentrating as the school year progresses? Are they falling asleep in class? Do they seem more moody, sad or withdrawn? All of these might be signs of sleep deprivation in kids that their parents should talk about with their child’s health care professional — and, of course, with their child. KVT: What’s the best way for kids to wind down at bedtime? LF: First, parents should set regular bedtimes and waking times. They should establish a nightly routine and then decelerate their kids’ activities as the evening progresses. Also, turn off electronic devices with screens such as televisions, computers, tablets and smartphones one to two hours before bedtime. Studies show that the blue light emitted by those screens actually inhibits the release of melatonin and doesn’t allow the body to relax and fall
INTERVIEW COMPILED AND CONDENSED BY KEN PICARD
asleep. Teens are particularly sensitive to that blue light. Parents should also keep room lights dim toward bedtime and reduce the noise level in the house. Certainly avoid any stimulants, such as caffeinated beverages. Finally, parents should maintain consistent bedtimes and wake-up times even on weekends to help kids establish regular sleep patterns. Remember, the body can catch up on sleep but cannot store sleep for the future. KVT: What should parents do if their kids are waking up frequently during the night? LF: First, parents should consider altering their kids’ sleep environment as I recommended in the previous question. If kids are waking up and staying up, my suggestion is they should get up and read a book or do something to keep their mind occupied, like little puzzles, until they feel tired again. But don’t turn on a TV, and avoid anything that’s scary or action-packed. KVT: What’s the best way for kids to wake up? LF: There shouldn’t be any gradual easing into it. Wake them up with an alarm clock or with spirited music, then open the blinds or shades and turn on lights, because the human body is cued to light. That will get them awake and alert and let them start processing things to get their day going. If kids get going earlier in the morning, they’ll get tired earlier in the evening and in turn have a better chance of getting the required sleep they need. Finally, all kids need to start the day with a healthy breakfast, which energizes the brain and improves school performance.
Q THE ART OF
By JD Fox
EAT. LEARN. PLAY.
Putting on a Play Montpelier’s Lost Nation Theater is known for its polished productions. In July, it revived Stone, LNT founding director Kim Bent’s award-winning original play about the Barre granite industry. But the company has a more youthful side: It runs a program for fledgling thespians called Theater FOR Kids BY Kids. This summer, its participants staged Charlotte’s Web. At the final rehearsal, the cast and crew put finishing
The Charlotte’s Web camp, for kids age 9 and up, ended with four performances. Keenan’s codirector, Shawn Sturdevant, worked with Bent to adapt the famous children’s story for the stage, with original songs by Keenan. “Make sure you’re not looking at the floor,” Keenan instructed her
Keenan and her colleagues intentionally treat the young campers like professional actors. “We believe that kids of any age will meet the standards that you set,” Keenan explained. “You can have high expectations, and they will reach for those, and they will feel a great sense of pride when they get there. We’re big believers in setting the bar high.” Before his star turn as Wilbur, Justin performed as Jim Hawkins, the child protagonist in LNT’s spring production of Treasure Island. “It’s easy to say a few words, but to make them mean anything at all, that’s the hard part,” he explained. Justin Murray The success of a play depends not only on solid performances from the actors but also on smooth operations charges during rehearsal. “Make behind the scenes. Theater FOR eye contact with the audience.” She Kids BY Kids provides opportunities paused, then asked the group what for youngsters to work on lightning, kind of theater they were in. scenery construction and backstage “Three-quarters,” the kids anmanagement. swered in unison. That means having Seventh grader Maryam Sarafzade an audience on three sides, Keenan reran things minded them. She backstage for demonstrated how Take the stage Charlotte’s Web. to move properly These local theater companies have “Her job was to across the stage opportunities for young actors: figure out where in such a space: Think circles, not all the props Lost Nation Theater, Montpelier, angles. One by one, belong, to track 229-0492, lostnationtheater.org each cast member them, hand them Lyric Theatre Company, Williston, practiced a circle off,” Keenan ex658-1484, lyrictheatrevt.org walk. plained. “Because The group conwe had mulVermont Children’s Theater, tiple kids playing tinued to rehearse, Lyndonville, 626-5358, multiple parts, she addressing issues vermontchildrenstheater.org was doing all those as they cropped up. Very Merry Theatre, Burlington, costume changes “It’s a beautiful 355-1461, verymerrytheatre.org and making sure megaphone, but the costumes were it’s muffling your Town Hall Theater, Middlebury, where they needed voice,” Keenan 388-1436, townhalltheater.org to be for that quick told 11-year old change to happen.” Greta ZeankowskiIn addition to its summer camps, Giffin, who played the narrator. Lost Nation Theater offers school“You need to hold it away from your mouth.” vacation camps. All the youth programLater, she reminded 13-year-old ming has one thing in common, said Justin Murray, the actor playing Keenan: “We want to really challenge Wilbur, to stay faithful to his lines. the kids, and we want to expose them right away to what a professional “You’re paraphrasing … Please read it theatrical process is like.” K exactly,” she said, stressing the poetry of E. B. White’s words.
It’s easy to say a few words, but to make them mean anything at all, that’s the hard part.
kidsvt.com September 2015
jD Fox
The young cast of Charlotte’s Web
touches on the show. “What happened with props?” LNT artistic director Kathleen Keenan asked the group. “I know we have props.” The actors should be using them all the time now, she continued, not just miming. The question set the actors into a flurry of chatter. Ten-year-old Dariush Sarafzade, who played Lurvy, the farm’s hired man, asked Keenan to clarify when he should bring out the slop bucket.
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“The Art of” spotlights creative skills that enrich kids’ lives. Got a class or teacher to recommend? Email us at ideas@kidsvt.com .
Ready or Not? Not?
Why some parents decide to delay their child’s kindergarten start date BY KATIE TITTERTON
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KIDSVT.COM
Back to School
W
hen Anne Hanson’s son, Anders, was approaching school age more than a decade ago, she sat down to study her outdoorsy little boy. He was “all about imagination and gross motor play, and those are things he won’t be able to do as much if he’s enrolled in kindergarten at age 5,” she remembers thinking. In Vermont, kids can start kindergarten at 5, but they’re not required to enroll until age 6. So Hanson and her husband, Eric, decided to give Anders an extra year at home. Their work schedules allowed at least one
parent to be with their son, in bucolic Craftsbury. They considered that extra year a gift, allowing their only child to mature and strengthening the family bond. It gave them a chance to have “a deeper, longer relationship” with him, says Hanson, who’s since become an early childhood educator. Now 17 and entering his junior year of high school, Anders is a competitive Nordic skier and, according to his mom, a confident student and pleasant guy to be around. Looking back, she’s pleased with the decision her family made — and recognizes the
good fortune in having that flexibility. “If you have the freedom to step back from the pressures of society,” she says, “look at where [your children] are and what will best meet them where they are.” Increasingly these days, parents across the country are making the same choice, giving their 5-year-olds an extra year filled with unstructured play, pre-K and play dates before starting kindergarten. According to the National Center for Education Statistics, 17 percent of American kindergarteners
ultimately end up on top — not their period, while child-selected activities older classmates.” and time spent teaching art, music She sites a Norwegian study showand science decreased. ing that adults who as children started In many cases, it’s also a bigger school a year later than their peers time commitment. In 1998 only 56 had significantly lower IQ scores than percent of children attended full-day their younger counterparts — and kindergarten. Today, that number has they earned less, too. A 2008 Harvard jumped to 80 percent. University study showed similar These increased demands are one results in the U.S. of the main reasons some parents Indeed some Vermont parents choose to delay their child’s start date. are eager to enroll their kids in Jemima Talbot lives in Essex. Her kindergarten exactly because it offers 5-year-old daughter, Lila, is eligible a structured, academic environment. for kindergarten but is spending Some even apply for waivers to enroll another part-time preschool year at children whose birthdays fall just the Saxon Hill School in Jericho — in before or after their district’s cutoff part because Talbot wants more time date, which varies from September 1 for her to play. “I don’t want her to go to the end of December. directly into a rigorous, school-based “There are probably as many environment. I really believe in families that think about redshirting outdoor and play time,” she says. their kids as there The Saxon Hill are families who School, a private want their kids in parent cooperative, early,” says Melissa also provides a Riegel-Garrett, pre-K smaller, cozier coordinator for the environment than Vermont Agency of the full-day public Education. school kindergarten From the state’s Lila would attend in perspective, the Essex. decision to redshirt “If she was going a child is entirely up into a one-class Melissa Riegel-Garrett, kindergarten, that to the family. “The Vermont Agency Agency of Education would have impacted of Education hasn’t come out with my decision,” says any guiding principle Talbot. “But she’s or philosophy about this at all,” says going into full-on school, waiting in Riegel-Garrett. line for lunch, waiting in line to go to The state doesn’t track how many the bathroom. It’s a little much for parents are doing it, either, though ansomeone who just turned 5.” ecdotal evidence suggests that Vermont Adam Tarmy of Monkton says the is in line with the national trend. full school day was also “a little much” for his daughter, who has a late-AuThe Changing Face of gust birthday. He gave his now-7-yearKindergarten old three years of preschool before starting kindergarten; she’s about to Why are parents’ feelings about kinenter first grade. If she had started at dergarten changing? Partly because age 5, she would have been among the kindergarten has changed — it looks youngest in her kindergarten class. different than it did when today’s Instead, she was one of the oldest. moms and dads were growing up. “I think if she went a year earlier, she For starters, it’s more academic. would have had a harder time physiA 2015 University of Virginia study cally with the stamina,” says Tarmy. comparing kindergarten classrooms in the United States between 1998 and Giving her a chance to build strength and coordination was also a concern. 2010 found that teachers’ academic “She’s small in stature,” Tarmy says. expectations, teacher-directed instruction and assessment, and time spent teaching advanced math and literacy content increased during that Ready or Not, p.20 »
Illu str
atio ns: M o
Oh
There are probably as many families that think about redshirting their kids as there are families who want their kids in early.
September 2015 Kids VT
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But does the practice actually benefit children in the long run? The jury is still out. New Yorker writer Maria Konnikova examined the evidence in a 2013 article. “While earlier studies have argued that redshirted children do better both socially and academically — citing data on school evaluations, leadership positions and test scores,” Konnikova writes, “the more recent analyses suggest that the opposite may well be the case: The youngest kids, who barely make the age cutoff but are enrolled anyway,
kidsvt.com
started at age 6 in 2008, compared with just 9 percent in 1995. The practice of holding kids back is referred to as “redshirting,” a term borrowed from the world of college sports, where it means keeping an athlete out of competition for a year to lengthen their period of eligibility. Books like Freakonomics and Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers popularized redshirting — both noted that many elite soccer and hockey players were born during the earliest months of the year, making them the oldest kids in their classes.
September 2015 Kids VT
20
Vermont is in the process of democratizing early childhood education. Act 166, which provides universal access to prekindergarten, was signed into law in 2014 and is now slated for statewide implementation by July 1, 2016. Some school districts and supervisory unions are already implementing Act 166 for this school year. The Winooski School District is one of them. For years, it offered only one public preschool class at its K-12 educational center, and two other part-time classes at the Winooski Family Center, where space was limited. Families who couldn’t afford private preschool had few options, so the district decided to allow 4-year-olds turning 5 by December 31 to enroll in kindergarten. “We wanted kids to have a chance to come to school,” said Winooski kindergarten teacher Jessica Perrotte. “And then if they’re not ready for first grade, they do another year of kindergarten.” This year, thanks to Act 166, Winooski began offering four half-day preschool programs at JFK Elementary along with the program at the Winooski Family Center. This bump in public preschool allowed the school to change its kindergarten cutoff date to September 1, putting it in line with most Vermont districts. Under Act 166, children ages 3 to 5 are eligible for 10 hours per week of free prekindergarten education from qualified public or private pre-K programs. This affected Jemima Talbot’s decision to give her daughter an extra year of pre-K at the private Saxon Hill School, instead of enrolling her in public school in Essex. Saxon Hill has a licensed kindergarten. But while private pre-K programs are eligible for the public funding guaranteed by Act 166, private kindergartens are not. “I’m eligible to receive $3,000 for preschool,” says Talbot, adding that because prekindergarteners and kindergarteners share classroom space, her daughter picks up some of the benefits of kindergarten anyway. “I’ve just seen great changes in her over the year,” she says. Kindergarten can wait.
Ready or Not
continued from p.19
Illustrations: Mo Oh
kidsvt.com
Pre-K All The Way
time, and if they’re delayed, we have a problem,” Farrall says. “A so-called readiness year won’t target the skills When Not to Redshirt they need and won’t remediate the issue. This kindergarten and first Giving a child extra time to develop grade year are really important. If we socially, emotionally and even physijust take a readiness cally is a reasonable year, we’re essentially choice for parents to delaying intervention.” make, says Melissa If parents are Farrall, program concerned about manager of diagnostic their preschooler’s services at the Stern cognitive skills, says Center for Language Castleton schooland Learning. But if a based clinician C. Bela child does not appear Schug, they should talk cognitively ready to the coordinator of for school, delaying their school district’s kindergarten is not the early-intervention answer. special education Certain basic Jessica Perrotte, program, called Triple language skills develop Winooski kindergarten E, or Essential Early naturally by age 5 or 6, teacher Education. Farrall says. If a child’s language development Money Matters seems a little delayed, a family may be tempted to give her another year to Parents considering redshirting also hone the ABCs and build vocab before have to weigh the cost. Public school kindergarten. But that’s not the way kindergarten is free. But parents the brain develops. working full-time who keep their kids “The research we have says we home, or enroll them in part-time have skills related to reading and preschool programs, will still need to writing that develop naturally at this “We wanted her to at least have the opportunity to play some sports.”
You can say anything you want about those stereotypes, but it’s really an individual case, and it’s up to the parents to decide.
pay for childcare. And for some, the costs are prohibitive. Maggie Van Duyn of Richmond applied for a waiver to enroll her daughter, Zoey, in kindergarten early. “The biggest driver? Saving on childcare costs,” she says. Van Duyn is a social worker with the Vermont Department for Children and Families. She advises the families she works with to give their children a school experience as early as possible. At-risk children need the social and academic supports and routines of school — and as many caring, reliable adults as possible. “When I’m working with someone who needs support, I’m encouraging them to send their child to school. I’m encouraging other people to get involved in that child’s life,” she says. If a client told her that his or her child was emotionally unready for kindergarten, Van Duyn explains, she would advise them that the child in fact needs kindergarten in order to develop those emotional skills. Van Duyn’s daughter, Zoey, who turned 5 just a few weeks after starting kindergarten, shared a classroom with kids turning 7. Van Duyn was advised against starting her daughter
WE WALK
BECAUSE IT SHOULDN’T HURT TO BE A CHILD early because Zoey would have to adjust to school with kids more than a year older than her. “My thought is, Whose fault is that?” says Van Duyn. “Someone of privilege has the choice to hold their child back. And that’s really lucky for them. But it continues to put other people at a disadvantage.”
Free choice
Other kids benefit from a later start date. Shelburne mom Jenna Mazur used to be skeptical of redshirting. “I didn’t get it. I thought it was kind of strange,” she says. “But when it came time for [my daughter] Eva to enter kindergarten, I totally got it.” August-born Eva started kindergarten at age 6. “She did great,” says Mazur. “She was a helper in class because she was just a little bit older and had learned some things already. Her confidence was so much greater. I’m so glad I did that with her.” In making this decision, parents should talk to kindergarten teachers in their school district to get a sense of their classroom style and educational philosophy, says RiegelGarrett. “I just can’t stress enough the importance of families looking at their own kids and gathering the information they need to make the best decisions for their kids.” K
if a child does not appear cognitively ready for school, delaying kindergarten is not the answer.
Some children who start school early rise to the occasion. Last year, Winooski teacher Jessica Perrotte had a student in her kindergarten class who turned 5 on December 31, the town’s thencut-off date; it changed this year to September 1 (see sidebar). “He had no fine motor skills, and he shouldn’t at that age,” she recalls. “By December, he was above grade level, and we were floored. You can say anything you want about those stereotypes, but it’s really an individual case, and it’s up to the parents to decide.”
2015 WALK FOR CHILDREN
Register online at www.pcavt.org or 1-800-CHILDREN Saturday, September 12 at the State House in Montpelier WALK or 5K RUN in Montpelier! Saturday, September 19 at the Howe Center in Rutland Saturday, September 19 at First Unitarian Universalist Church in Burlington Spider-Man and distinctive likeness(es) thereof are trademarks of Marvel Characters Inc. and are used with permission. © 2008 Marvel Characters, Inc. All rights reserved. www.marvel.com.
Check-in at 8:00 a.m. WALK at 10:00 a.m. Untitled-6 1
8/26/15 12:15 PM
Mental Health and Addiction Care for Children and Adolescents
Once, she couldn’t face the day.
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Call 802-258-3700 brattlebororetreat.org k4t-BrattleboroRetreat0315.indd 1
September 2015
Mental illness and addiction can keep young people from their full potential. To help you reach children and adolescents with serious challenges, we offer specialized, expert care at the Brattleboro Retreat.
KidsVT.com
Now she dreams about the future.
2/20/15 10:47 AM
n a i m e h o B F
rom January to May of this year, my husband, Ryan, was touring the U.S. and Europe with his band, Guster. He spent a total of 31 days at home during that time. While he was away, I was at home in Williston, doing all the normal stuff one does with a 6-year-old daughter and 4-year-old son: drop-offs and pickups, coordinating school schedules with my unpredictable freelance writer schedule. My friends were extremely supportive, but even they would occasionally say things like, “Man, I don’t know how you can be OK with this,” or, “Doesn’t it bother you that he’s off seeing the world while you’re stuck at home?” And the honest answer is, “Sometimes.” But mostly I’m psyched to be married to someone who makes a living doing exactly what he wants to do. I’m inspired by his work ethic and commitment to his art — and I really appreciate the free concert tickets we get because of his job.
S N O I S S E RAP S
Conversations with parents who rock B Y A N G E L A A R S E N A ULT
Arsenault’s family
SEPTEMBER 2015 KIDS VT
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with the way I’ve prioritized my time in his absence. Knowing what a circus my family life can feel like at times, I was curious to speak with other Vermont parents for whom music — and the creative life — play a very important role. We had lots to talk about, including the trouble with touring, what it’s like to work and parent with the same person, and the financial realities faced by countless members of today’s creative economy. The bottom line? Living the creative life usually means equal parts fulfillment and sacrifice, clarity and uncertainty. But it’s worth it — we couldn’t be ourselves if we tried to live any other way.
Lio and Dash brushing their teeth at a club
Ryan arrives home from touring
COURTESY OF ANGELA ARSENAULT & RYAN MILLER
KIDSVT.COM
MICHAEL TONN
In the 15 years Ryan and I have been together, we’ve developed a few key rituals around his time on tour that help us stay connected. FaceTime is crucial. We both reach for the phone regularly to share the little moments — our family’s review of the day’s rose, bud and thorn at dinner time; saying goodnight at bedtime — and the big stuff, like, “Look! Daddy’s on top of the Eiffel Tower!” We also implemented a rule that Ryan can’t say anything about the state of our house for at least 72 hours after he comes home. This is an important acknowledgement of the fact that I run the house differently — and, yes, a little less neatly — when Ryan is away, and it lets me know that he agrees
Josie takes the stage
Hackney performing
obby Hackney Jr., frontman for punk band Rough Francis, comes from a musical family. His father and uncles started their own punk band, Death, in Detroit in the 1970s. Hackney and his brothers helped the world rediscover the band, and their family’s story has since been written up in Rolling Stone and the New York Times, and captured on film in the documentary A Band Called Death. Hackney met Sara Goldstein, who now writes for Parent.co, when the two were in their early twenties. When they found out that Sara was pregnant with their first child, they realized that things were going to have to change.
try to make it worth our while. We have to turn down one-off shows if the money’s not that great and if it’s far away. If we do a show out of town, we make sure we do at least two or three around it, like make it a long weekend.
courtesy of Sara Goldstein and Bobby Hackney
The family
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Parents:
Bobby Hackney Jr., 37, and Sara Goldstein, 33
Kids:
Son Kiernan, 9, and daughter Josie, 4
Listen to some of those songs for yourself at roughfrancis.com.
Kids VT bohemian, p. 24 »
23
Kids VT: How much time do you spend on the road these days, Bobby? Bobby: When we go out, we usually
KVT: But it’s also really important, I would think, to you, Bobby, that you have a partner who supports your desire to make music. Bobby: Yeah. It’s funny because when I go out, there are some people who don’t even know that I have a family.
KVT: How do you think your musical proclivities have impacted your kids, if at all? Bobby: [Our daughter] Josie, she loves to sing, and she loves music. Our kids love listening to Rough Francis, and it’s really cool to hear them singing our songs. But they always use that against us. We’ll tell them to quiet down and not do something, and then they just start singing a Rough Francis song. I’m like, “I can’t get mad at you now, because you’re singing one of my songs!”
September 2015
Said Sara: “With finding out that we were going to have a baby, it wasn’t, ‘ok, well, you have to stop this fooling around, playing music business.’ It was, ‘You have to get smarter about how you’re doing it.’” Which is what they’re still doing a decade later.
KVT: So that’s nice for you, right Sara? It helps when you can plan ahead. Sara: Definitely. And I think because it’s ... it’s not that it’s a hobby. He’s doing something that’s important and that gives another dimension to who he is. So obviously I fully support that, but there’s a realistic end of things, which is finances. Because Rough Francis is not the way that he makes money — it’s a supplemental thing — there naturally comes: the kids, his job, my job, then music.
KVT: How do you work it out with your job when you need to leave for a tour? Bobby: Well, I work part-time [as a designer for Kids VT’s sister publication Seven Days], and I freelance. So that makes it a lot easier for me to go away. I’m lucky to have that, too, because I can actually work from the road.
kidsvt.com
Home Base: Burlington
KVT: How does having a family factor into your decisions? Bobby: Well, childcare. It’s good because I’m the one that manages the band, so I book at least six months out. We book way in advance so I can talk to Sara about it.
They’re like, “Oh, yo. You have a wife and two kids? Oh, my god!”
continued from p. 23
A
manda Gustafson and Eric Olsen were both fixtures in the Burlington music scene — Amanda in her band Wide Wail and Eric as part of Helen Keller Music — when they met in 2002. Their first musical collaboration came about when a mutual friend asked each of them to join the band that accompanied the Spielpalast Cabaret. They played in the cabaret ensemble for a few years but formed their own band, Swale, (with drummer Jeremy Frederick) “right after the first year,” said Olsen. Thirteen years, one wedding and two children later, Gustafson and Olsen are still making music together, as well as devoting time to their respective day jobs. Eric is a web developer and owner of Perfect Day Media. Amanda is an English Language Learners classroom teacher in the Burlington School District. We spoke at their home in Shelburne while the three of us folded a sizable mountain of laundry.
24
Kids VT
September 2015
kidsvt.com
Eric: Absolutely. Amanda: I know what the kids need, I’m the one who’s, like, got towels in the car and I’ve packed some food, and… Eric: The leader, yeah, we defer. Amanda: We eat dinner together every single night, which is all because Eric gets home for us to do that, and we have breakfast together. We spend a ton of time together as a family, and we spend a lot of time together practicing, so those two dynamics are flip-flopping a lot over the course of the week.
Eric: Ideally, the sitter is coming in at dinner and maybe eats with us or arrives just after dinner. There are some shows where there’s early loadin and we miss [eating dinner with the kids]. We cook for them, and then we split. And then sometimes it’s a late show and we can put them to bed beforehand, and the sitter can come and just watch TV and make money. KVT: Would you be in a band full time if you could? Eric: It would depend on what you’re talking about; I wouldn’t want to spend less time with the kids. If you’re talking dream, that dream probably doesn’t entail rigorous touring, PARENTS: Eric Olsen, 44, and Amanda Gustafson, 43 even though I would love to KIDS: Daughters Magny, 7, and Esme, 4 tour. You know HOME BASE: Shelburne what I mean? That’s hard, because then when is dinner, when Swale is all that? I feel like we have a nice pocket, personally. I feel like there are some people who like our songs, and they’re interested enough to buy enough records that we can just make another one and keep writing. I feel like that’s really fulfilling. Amanda: I think most people would be lucky to have what we have. KVT: You both have full-time jobs, you’re raising two kids, and you’re making art that people enjoy and consume. From the outside looking in, it seems to me you’ve got it figured out. Eric: Sometimes I think that the only thing that I might have figured out is that I’ve just got to show up; I’ve just got to be there. Amanda: It’s true. There have been many times when, like, I’ve put the kids to sleep, fallen asleep with the little one, and then I wake up because Eric is knocking me on the bottom of my foot, like I’m a stable boy asleep in the hay. It’s like, “Let’s go!” And you just get up, and you go to rehearsal, and you sit down, and you play. Now it’s your turn to show up. Go here: swalesong.com.
At The Kids Are Alright concert at Higher Ground last spring
courtesy of sam simon
Amanda: I was going to say that I think we balance each other out in an opposite way. In the band, I feel we all defer to Eric — and I mean that in the best possible, most positive way. In rehearsal, he’s so competent and he makes everybody feel like we know what we’re doing and keeps it positive. With the family dynamic, I feel like the tables are a little bit turned. I feel really competent.
KVT: How do you eat dinner together every night and play shows as often as you do? Amanda: We eat dinner at 5:30.
courtesy of shem roose
KVT: I wonder if the years you’ve spent creating music together inform the way you parent together? Eric: I feel that we balance each other out in a lot of ways. In the band, we’re very different, and yet I think that’s such an important part of that dynamic, and likewise in our family.
The family on the slopes
courtesy of Eric Olsen and Amanda Gustafson
Bohemian
courtesy of justin lander and rose friedman
Getting ready for showtime
PARENTS:
Justin Lander, 39, and Rose Friedman, 34
KIDS:
Daughter Eva, 5, and son Charlie, 7 months
HOME BASE: East Hardwick
M
usicians Rose Friedman and Justin Lander met in 2001 while working with Bread and Puppet Theater. They overlapped for four and a half years before marrying and starting their own company, Modern Times Theater. These days they do musical performances featuring “old jazz from the 1910s and ’20s,” with Justin on coronet and Rose playing the ukulele. Modern Times Theater also puts on handcrafted puppet shows for children and adults, and Rose and Justin produce and perform in Vermont Vaudeville. They’ve received grants from the Vermont Arts Council and the Vermont Community Foundation, and have appeared at Burlington’s Festival of Fools, the Shelburne Museum and Derby Line Community Day, as well as other regional venues. If all that creating wasn’t enough, they’re also raising two kids and tending to the farm on which they live in East Hardwick.
On stage
The whole family
Justin: There’s a lot of room in there for our own creative work and homesteading work. We don’t ever have a day off. Rose: Before we had kids, we felt like, Oh, my God. This is the craziest experiment and a ridiculous idea to imagine that we can raise food and be connected to a piece of land and also be artists, because up to that point everything we had done was touring all over the States and internationally and just kind of nonstop moving. When we moved here, we thought, Well, we’re going to have to really give up a lot of the performing stuff and we’ll just find those opportunities when we can. Then we realized that there was more and more possibility of performing somewhat locally and still being able to come home and milk a cow. That seemed like a crazy enough experiment, but then when we added kids into it, it got even wonkier. In a way, it was like, Well, we’re doing this crazy thing. We might as well just try to blend in all of it, everything we want to do, and try to make it work. KVT: What other kinds of logistical things have popped up for you when blending work and parenthood? Rose: I feel like we are inventing the universe every day anew. Justin: Every gig. Rose: As the kids’ ages change, that makes different things possible or challenging. Right now, Eva’s at an age where she can suddenly be much more reliable and independent and responsible. Justin: We can bring her to any gig and put her in the audience, and we’re totally fine, but we earned that after many, many by-the-seat-of-the-pants gigs when she was younger. We had one show where, halfway through a music set, from the audience, Eva’s voice came and said, “Mom? Dad?” and the whole audience went silent. We said, “Yes, Eva?” She said, “Don’t play another song.” Rose: Everyone was like, “Oh, isn’t that cute?” K
Kids VT
Watch that cute heckler’s parents perform at moderntimestheater.com.
September 2015
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Justin: I work in a medium-size industrial maple syrup operation so that, at the time in the winter when there’s really not a lot of performing work, that’s a full-time job. Then the rest of the year, I can manage to do a
Rose: Working in the woods and making candy, basically.
kidsvt.com
Charlie explores while his dad sets up for a performance
KVT: Can you talk a little bit about the financial logistics of living a creative life where you’re not getting what most people relish, which is a steady paycheck and predictable income? Rose: We can’t support our family just on art-making. We raise a lot of our own food, and we live in a way that is probably, compared to a lot of Americans, maybe a little closer to the poverty line. But we feel like we live in the absolute lap of luxury because we’re eating what we think is the best food available, and we have a beautiful house, and we’re healthy, and we have a lot of friends and support nearby. We have a pretty high-class life; it just doesn’t involve a lot of fancy dishwashers and stuff. We do shows, and each of us has a small stream of income from a different job. I do some educational consulting work. I work with a lot of homeschooling families and I get a little bit of money from that, and then Justin makes maple syrup.
day or two, sometimes three, a week there.
SEPT
CALENDAR
Sponsored by:
Like the University of Vermont Medical Center on Facebook and get weekly updates from Dr. First! See “First With Kids” videos at uvmhealth.org.
SPOTLIGHTS & LISTINGS BY BRETT STANCIU
Highlights SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6
NEW WORLD FESTIVAL More than 70 musicians celebrate Vermont’s Celtic and French Canadian heritage through traditional tunes, children’s activities and dance. Chandler Music Hall, Randolph, noon-11 p.m. $12-39; free for children ages 2-12. Info, 728-6464.
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13
BEE HERE NOW FESTIVAL The honey makers steal the show at this celebration with an observation hive, quilt activity and parade. Dress up as a bee for a chance to win a prize. Shelburne Orchards, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 985-2753.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19
CELEBRATION OF BIRDS
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Avid avian fans delight in this fête of feathered friends featuring exhibits, speakers and food. Staige Hill Farm, Charlotte, 4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 434-3068.
In 1996, choreographer Marilyn Klaus founded Ballets with a Twist, a dance company devoted to mixing classical ballet with high-energy choreography. Its latest production, MINT JULEP AND OTHER SPIRITED DANCES, brings together lively pop music, whirling movement and colorful costumes for a series of vignettes inspired by iconic American refreshments. PBS praised the New York City-based company for its “surprising style.” Belly up to the barre and enjoy!
BALLETS WITH A TWIST: MINT JULEP AND OTHER SPIRITED DANCES: Saturday, September 19, 7:30 p.m., at Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center in Stowe. Recommended for ages 7 and up. $20-59. Info, 760-4634. sprucepeakarts.org
SATURDAY & SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26-27
CHAMPLAIN MINI MAKER FAIRE COURTESY OF BALLETS WITH A TWIST
SEPTEMBER 2015
KIDSVT.COM
High Spirits
Tech enthusiasts celebrate the DIY mindset at this quirky science fair featuring robotics, student experiments, arts and crafts and more. Shelburne Farms, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $6-9; free for ages 10 and under. Info, 863-5956.
Submit your October events for print by September 15 at kidsvt.com or to calendar@kidsvt.com.
1 TUESDAY
Baby & Maternity
Burlington Postnatal Yoga: Moms tote their pre-crawling kids to an all-levels flowing yoga class focused on bringing the body back to strength and alignment in a fun, nurturing environment. Evolution Prenatal and Family Yoga Center, Burlington, 10:45-11:55 a.m. $15 or $130 for a 10-class pass. Info, 864-9642. Burlington Prenatal Yoga: Mothers-to-be build strength, stamina, comfort and a stronger connection to their baby in this all-levels class. Evolution Prenatal and Family Yoga Center, Burlington, 4:15-5:30 p.m. and 4:15-5:30 p.m. $15 or $130 for 10-class pass. Info, 864-9642. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: Women prepare for birth through yoga, with a focus on strengthening the body and mind. See prenatalmethod. com for class descriptions. Prenatal Method Studio, Burlington, 12:15-1:15 & 4:30-5:30 p.m. $15. Info, 829-0211. Montpelier Postnatal Yoga: Brand-new mamas and their littles relax, stretch and bond. For moms with babies up to age 1 including early crawlers. Emerge with Amy LepageHansen, Montpelier, 10:45 a.m.-noon. $15. Info, 223-5302.
Fairs & Festivals
Champlain Valley Fair: Cotton-candy fun and carny curiosities collide at the state’s largest fair, complete with midway rides, daily parades and live entertainment. Midway opens at 11 a.m. All ages. Champlain Valley Expo, Essex Junction, 10 a.m. $5-12; free for children under 5; additional tickets required for grandstand concerts and rides. Info, 878-5545.
Games
Family Game Night: Families take over the library’s tabletops for a fun evening. Ages 5 and up. Fairfax Community Library, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 849-2420.
Health & Fitness
Catamount Trail Running Series: Athletes of all ages and abilities choose between 2.5- and 5- kilometer courses — with a 10K option on the second Tuesday of each month — during this fun evening race. Catamount Outdoor Family Center, Williston, 6 p.m. $3-8; free for children under 8. Info, 879-6001.
Library & Books
Hinesburg Crafternoons: Kiddos get creative with different themes and materials. Ages 9 and up. Carpenter-Carse Library, Hinesburg, 3-4 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 482-2878.
Youth Media Lab: Aspiring Spielbergs film, edit and produce videos while exploring other areas of digital media. Grades 4 and up. Follows the school calendar. Ilsley Public Library, Middlebury, 3:30-4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 388-4097.
Music
2 WEDNESDAY
Health & Fitness
Raptors in Residence: The mysteries surrounding birds of prey are revealed as visitors come face-to-face with live owls and hawks. All ages. Shelburne Farms, 1-1:30 p.m. $5-8; free for children under 3. Info, 578-8013.
Baby & Maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:45-7:15 p.m.
Fairs & Festivals
Library & Books
Champlain Valley Fair: See September 1.
Food
Champlain Island Farmers Market: Farms, specialty food businesses and artisans sell their high-quality wares. St. Rose of Lima Parish, South Hero, 3-6 p.m. Free. Info, 617-652-2304. Middlebury Farmers Market: Crafts, cheeses, breads, veggies and more vie for spots in
Classes
Essex Open Gym: Energy-filled kids flip, jump and tumble in a state-of-the-art facility. Ages 6 and under. Regal Gymnastics Academy, Essex, 11 a.m.-noon. $8. Info, 655-3300.
Colchester Read to Hank the Therapy Dog: Summer book lovers share stories with Hank, a sweet retriever, while little ones listen. Ages 4-10. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 11:30 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 264-5660. Dorothy Canfield Fisher Book Discussion: Rain Reign by Ann M. Martin engages readers in lively discussion. Ages 8-11. Burnham
List your class or camp here for only $20 per month! Submit the listing by September 15 at kidsvt.com or to classes@kidsvt.com.
Baby and Kids Yoga Classes at Evolution Prenatal & Family Yoga Center: Bring yoga and wellness into your family’s life with our classes for all ages. We offer 15 weekly classes for babies, toddlers, preschoolers and school-aged children up to teens. New fall series begin September 14. Pre-registration required. See website for pricing and schedule. Evolution Prenatal & Family Yoga Center, 20 Kilburn St., Burlington. Info, 899-0339, evolutionprenatalandfamily.com Prenatal Yoga Classes at Evolution Prenatal & Family Yoga Center: Have a more comfortable pregnancy and prepare for birth with stretching, strengthening and relaxation. No yoga experience necessary. Prenatal Yoga: Sundays, 10 a.m., Mondays 5:45 p.m., Tuesdays 4:15 p.m., Wednesdays 5:45 p.m., Thursdays 12:15 p.m., Fridays 8:15 a.m. Drop-ins welcome. $15/ class or $130/10 class pass. Location: Evolution Prenatal & Family Yoga Center, 20 Kilburn St., Burlington. Info, 899-0339, evolutionprenatalandfamily.com Postnatal Yoga Classes at Evolution Prenatal & Family Yoga Center: Join our community of mothers and bring your body back to balance and strength. For mothers 6 weeks postpartum and on. Babies under crawling welcome to come with mama! Postnatal Yoga: Sundays 12:15 p.m., Tuesdays, 10:45 a.m. Postnatal Core: Fridays at noon. Drop-ins welcome. $15/class or $130/10 class pass. Location: Evolution Prenatal & Family Yoga Center, 20 Kilburn St., Burlington. Info, 899-0339, evolutionprenatalandfamily.com Little Music Makers: This fun, action-packed Saturday morning music and movement program offers interactive, developmentally enriching activities
for caregivers and their children, ages 5 and under. Activities include guitar sing-alongs, rhythm instruments, knee bounces, colorful ribbons, finger plays, kazoos, peekaboo songs, scarves, beach balls, lullabies, finger plays, kazoos, peekaboo songs, scarves, movement to music, parachute fun and lots of bubbles! Session 1: September 26–October 31, Session 2: November 14–December 19. Family Music Makers (ages 0 – 5 yrs.): 9-9:45 a.m., Preschool Music Makers (ages 2.5 - 5 yrs.):10-10:45 a.m., Toddler & Baby Music Makers (ages 0 - 2.5 yrs.): 11-11:45 a.m. Cost: Toddler/Baby and Preschool Music: $55 for Colchester residents/$60 for non-residents. Family Music: Two children for $100 for Colchester residents/$105 for nonresidents. Location: Colchester Meeting House, 830 Main St., Colchester. Register online at colchestervt.gov /333/Parks-Recreation, then click on Online Registration, then Preschool Programs. Info, 264-5640, elliesparties@comcast.net Kids Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu: Brazilian JiuJitsu for children promotes self-esteem, self-defense and bully-proofing, character development, a physical outlet with discipline, cooperation with other children, respect for peers and adults, perseverance and a healthy lifestyle. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu will help your kids learn skills they can use for the rest of their lives; regular BJJ training builds endurance, resilience, patience, discipline, self respect and helps to instill courage and self confidence. First class is free! Free uniform with first-month enrollment fee. Location: Vermont Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, 55 Leroy Rd., Williston. To register, contact 660-4072, julio@bjjusa.com or stop by our school. vermontbjj.com
Memorial Library, Colchester, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 264-5660. Little BOOM VT: Tiny hands experience drumming through stories and rhythms. Ages 1-5. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10:30-11:15 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216.
Nature & Science
Programs for Preschoolers: Farm activities wow little learners with themed stories, handson activities and a special visit to the barn. Ages 3 and up. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, 9-10:30 a.m. $3-5; preregister. Info, 457-2355. Wagon-Ride Wednesdays: Horse-drawn rides provide fun for the whole family. Admission includes all farm programs and activities. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. $414; free for children under 3. Info, 457-2355.
3 THURSDAY
Arts & Crafts
Needle Felt an Owl: Budding fiber artists craft a feathered friend in wool with local artist Annette Hansen. Fairfax Community Library, 6-8 p.m. $15; preregister. Info, 849-2420. Webby’s Art Studio: The museum’s temporary and permanent exhibitions inspire specialized art activities for all ages. Shelburne Museum, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Regular admission, $7-24; free for children under 5. Info, 985-3346.
Baby & Maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 12:15-1:15 p.m. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. Essex La Leche League: Moms bring their little ones to a discussion of parenting and breastfeeding. First Congregational Church of Essex Junction, 7-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 383-8544.
Community
Summervale: Live music, Slow Food Vermont tastings, kids’ crafts and food-focused activities varying by week promise locavore fun in the sun. No pets. Burlington Intervale Center, 5:308 p.m. Free admission; cost of food and drink. Info, 660-0440.
Fairs & Festivals
Champlain Valley Fair: See September 1.
Games Join the CHAMP and the Lake Monsters for Kids Eat Free: The first 400 kids through the gates receive a voucher for a free hot dog, drink and chips. Centennial Field, Burlington, gates, 6p.m.; game, 7 p.m. $5-15. Info, 655-6611.
Health & Fitness
Yoga with Danielle: Simple movement, stories and songs satisfy children ages 0 to 5 and their caregivers. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.
Library & Books Music Snow Farm Vineyard Summer Concert Series: Weather permitting, crowds gather for a weekly rotation of classical, jazz, swing, bluegrass and rock. Picnicking begins at 5 p.m.;
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Children’s Sing-Along: Parents sip coffee while wee ones break into song with a local musician. Ages 5 and under. The Bees Knees, Morrisville, 10-10:45 a.m. Free. Info, 888-7889. Preschool Music: Little ones dance and sing to a lively beat. Ages 3-5. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Free. Info, 264-5660.
shoppers’ totes. Marble Works District, Middlebury, 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Free. Info, 537-4754. Woodstock Market on the Green: Fresh vegetables, farm eggs, local meats and cheeses, cut flowers, and seasonal fruits and berries represent the best of the growing season. Woodstock Village Green, 3-6 p.m. Free. Info, 457-3555.
kidsvt.com September 2015
Movies
Nature & Science
Sept
Calendar community
Burlington Fire Trucks at EcHo: Fire prevention pros offer safety tips and open their truck doors for a tour. ECHO Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. $10.5013.50 regular admission; free for children under 3. Info, 864-1848.
Fairs & Festivals
champlain Valley Fair: See September 1. Vermont state Fair: Crowds converge on the midway for circus acts, racing pigs, demolition derbies and live music at this annual ag-centric affair. Vermont State Fairgrounds, Rutland, 5-10 p.m. $10-12 per day; free for children 12 and under with an adult; $5 parking fee. Info, 775-5200.
CourteSy oF Cabot ConneCtS
Food
O’er the Hills What better way to explore the scenic landscape of Cabot and peacham than on two wheels? caBoT RidE THE RidGEs, a 10K fundraiser for mentoring program Cabot Connects, takes bikers of all ages over paved and dirt roads, through farm fields and forests. there’s an option to run or walk the route, too. more experienced bikers choose a 30K or 60K course, with the seriously rugged registering for the 100K. après ride, participants and spectators enjoy lunch featuring a local lineup of food, including Woodbelly pizza, Kingdom Creamery of Vermont ice cream and Jasper Hill Farm cheese. let the good times roll. caBoT RidE THE RidGEs: Sunday, September 13, 8 a.m.-3 p.m. at Cabot High School. All ages. $15-25; $40 per family; free for children 12 and under. Ticket includes lunch; $10 for lunch only. ridetheridges.net
music starts at 6:30 p.m. Food and drink available to purchase from various vendors. Snow Farm Vineyard, South Hero, 5-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 372-9463.
Nature & science
Raptors in Residence: See September 1.
Games
4 FRIDAY
Baby & maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 8:30-9:30 a.m. mother’s Gathering: Moms and new babies spread out, sip tea, nurse and share stories. Children under age 2. Yoga Mountain Center, Montpelier, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 223-5302.
magic: The Gathering: Planeswalkers seek knowledge and glory in this trading-card game. New players welcome. Grades 6 and up. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.
Health & Fitness
Essex open Gym: See September 2.
submit your october events for print by september 15 at kidsvt.com or to calendar@kidsvt.com.
an appointment!
Kids VT
28
Williston dental team
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Five corners Farmers market: From natural meats to breads and wines, farmers share the bounty of the growing season at an outdoor exchange, complete with live entertainment and kids’ activities. Lincoln Place, Essex Junction, 3:30 p.m. Free. Info, 5cornersfarmersmarket@ gmail.com. Foodways Fridays: Visitors tour the heirloom garden, then watch how veggies make their way into historic recipes prepared in the 1890 farmhouse kitchen. All ages. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Regular admission, $4-14; free for children under 3. Info, 457-2355. Richmond Farmers market: Vendors peddle hand-held pies, honey ice cream, homemade pickles, just-picked produce and much more at this lively showcase of locavorism. All ages. Volunteers Green, Richmond, 3-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 343-9778.
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Library & Books
followed by a craft or game. Mill Trail Property, Stowe, 10:30 a.m. & 1 p.m. Free. Info, 253-7221.
Brownell Drop-in Story Time: Babies, toddlers and preschoolers stop by for picture books and finSee Dr. First videos ger plays. Brownell Library, Essex Fairs & Festivals “First With Kids” at Junction, 10-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, uvmhealth.org. Champlain Valley Fair: See 878-6956. September 1. Early Bird Math: Young children Dawson Perley Memorial Car and their caregivers put two and Show: Visitors stroll among two together using interactive vehicles and participate in a raffle and silent books, songs and games to explore arithmetic auction. All proceeds benefit the scholarship concepts. Ages 3-5. Richmond Free Library, fund. Westcom’s Snack Bar, Bakersfield, 10 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 434-3036. a.m.-3 p.m. Free; $15 per car registration. Info, 393-1055. Movies Vermont State Fair: See September 4, Hardwick Movie Night: The Jeudevine Library 8 a.m.-10 p.m. presents a family-friendly movie on the Town House’s big screen in conjunction with HardFood wick’s First Friday festivities. Hardwick Town House, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 472-5948. Burlington Farmers Market: Producers and artisans offer fresh and prepared foods, crafts Music and more in a bustling marketplace. All ages. Burlington City Hall Park, 8:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Burlington Music With Robert: Families sing Free. Info, 310-5172. along with a local legend. All ages. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Capital City Farmers Market: Veggies, honey, Info, 865-7216. maple syrup and more change hands at a celebration of locally grown food. All ages. Kids Music With Linda ‘Tickle Belly’ Bassick: Downtown Montpelier, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, Toe-tapping tunes captivate kiddies. Radio 223-2958. Bean, Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 660-9346. Champlain Island Farmers Market: Farms, specialty food businesses and artisans sell their 5 SATURDAY high-quality wares. St. Joseph Church, Grand Isle, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 617-652-2304. Arts & Crafts Chocolate-Bar Making: Budding chocolatiers Kids’ Building Workshop: Handy helpers temper and mold the sweet stuff, then create learn do-it-yourself skills and tool safety as and wrap four goody-filled bars to take home. they construct seasonal projects. Ages 5-12. Children under 9 must be accompanied by an Home Depot, Williston, 9 a.m.-noon. Free; adult. South End Kitchen, Burlington, 3-4 p.m. preregister at workshops.homedepot.com. Info, $25; preregister. Info, 864-0505. 872-0039. Middlebury Farmers Market: See September Saturday Kids Drop-In Craft Class: Little 2. hands create craft projects with seasonal or Rutland Farmers Market: Local vendors sell holiday themes, including leaf wind chimes, farm-fresh veggies and fruits, artisan cheese, pumpkin lanterns and harvest moon mirrors. handcrafted breads and more at this outdoor Ages 5-15. Parent must accompany. Shelburne emporium. Downtown Rutland, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Craft School, 10-11 a.m. $10 per child. Info, Free. Info, 342-4727. 985-3648. Shelburne Farmers Market: Musical enterTraditional Craft Saturdays: Local artisans tainment adds cheer to this exchange of fruits, demonstrate toothbrush rugs, basket and veggies, herbs, honey, maple syrup and more. chair- seat making, leather tanning and woodAll ages. Shelburne Village Green, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. working. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, Free. Info, 482-4279. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Regular admission, $4-14; free for children under 3. Info, 457-2355. Library & Books Webby’s Art Studio: See September 3. Milton Therapy Dog Visit: A patient pooch listens to kids read aloud. Ages 3 and up. Milton Baby & Maternity Public Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 893-4644. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
Community
Vermont Ballet Theater and School CENTER FOR DANCE 2015-2016 Class Registration Now Open!!
Ballet • Pointe • Modern • Jazz • Lyrical Contemporary • Hip-Hop • Yoga • Pilates Cardio and more. t’s Vermon ker c ra tc u N Own s n io it d au 6 Sept. 2
Ages 3-Adult, Beginner-Pre-Professional
TWO LOCATIONS! Essex Campus: 21 Carmichael Street, Suite 203 Shelburne Campus: 4066 Shelburne Road
To reg is www.v ter visit bts.org or call 87 8-2941
“Simply the Best” Main Office: 802-878-2941• The Dance Shop at VBTS: 802-879-7001 vbts.org • info@vbts.org
6 SUNDAY, P.32 k4t-vtbs0915.indd 1
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Official School of Vermont Ballet Theater, Winner of Readers Choice Award Best Ballet School, Alexander Nagiba Director.
KIDS VT
Archaeology at ECHO: Fledgling prehistorians make pinch pots, participate in a flint knapping demo of projectile points and bring in their own ancient finds for experts to identify. ECHO Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, Burlington, 1-5 p.m. Regular admission, $10.50-13.50; free for children under 3. Info, 864-1848. Summer Naturalist Program: Hands-on exploration of the natural world — from bugs to trees — piques the curiosity of kids of all ages,
now! Register gin e th b s e Class ber 8 . m te p e S on
SEPTEMBER 2015
Education
Full Dome Planetarium: Astronomy enthusiasts learn about celestial objects in this 20-minute program geared toward kids ages 4-8. Arrive 15 minutes in advance of presentation. Fairbanks Museum & Planetarium, St. Johnsbury, 12:30 p.m. $3 per person; call to reserve tickets. Info, 748-2372. Raptors in Residence: See September 1.
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KIDSVT.COM
Over the Edge for the Flynn: 100 intrepid adventurers rappel nine stories down one of the tallest buildings in Burlington to raise funds for the Flynn. Courtyard Marriott Harbor Hotel, Burlington, Free. Info, 652-4533.
Nature & Science
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CALENDAR
Playgroups 2015-2016 All Access
Season Passes
Kids enjoy fun and games during these informal get-togethers, and caregivers connect with other local parents and peers. The groups are usually free and often include snacks, arts and crafts, or music. Contact the playgroup organizer or visit kidsvt.com for site-specific details.
MONDAY Burlington Crawlers, Waddlers & Toddlers: St. Joseph School, 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Free. Info, 862-2121. Burlington Playgroup: Robert Miller Community & Recreation Center, 9-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 578-6471. Charlotte Playgroup: Charlotte Central School, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 764-5820. Jericho Playgroup: Jericho Community Center, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 899-4415. Swanton Monday Playgroup: Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, 9:45-11:15 a.m. Free. Info, 868-7656. TUESDAY Bradford Playgroup: Grace United Methodist Church, 9-11 a.m. Free. Info, 685-2264, ext. 24. Brookfield Playgroup: First Congregational Church of Brookfield, 9:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 685-2264, ext. 24. Burlington Dads’ Night: VNA Family Room, 3-7 p.m. Free. Info, 860-4420. Essex Junction Building Bright Futures Playgroup: Maple Street Recreation Center, 9-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 876-7555. Johnson Baby Chat: Church of the Nazarene, fourth Tuesday of every month, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 888-3470.
Set Yourself Up For Unlimited Smiles This Winter
WEDNESDAY
Prices go up after Sept. 21
$579 Adult (ages 26-64) $169 Youth (ages 7-17)
2015-16 Bolton Valley Season Pass Holders will receive a $100 Gift Certificate to Wendell’s Furniture and Wendell’s Vermont Bed Store. 8 7 7 - 9 B OLTON b o l to n va l ley.co m
$29 Child (6 and under) $139 Night Pass (all ages)
Season Long Ski & Snowboard Leases for all ages starting at $99. Season Long Ski and Ride School Programs are also on sale now.
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with purchase of parent’s Adult All Access Season Pass
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See Dr. First videos “First With Kids” at uvmhealth.org.
Burlington Playgroup: See Monday. Chace Mill New Mothers’ & Infants’ Playgroup: Prenatal Method Studio, 1:30-3 p.m. $3 suggested donation. Info, 829-0211. Essex Building Bright Futures Baby Playgroup: Move You Fitness Studio, 9-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 876-7555. Fairfield Playgroup: Bent Northrop Memorial Library, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 827-3945. Hinesburg Playgroup: Hinesburg Town Hall, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 482-4667. Richmond Playgroup: Richmond Free Library, 8:45-10:15 a.m. Free. Info, 899-4415. Shelburne Playgroup: Trinity Episcopal Church, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 764-5820. South Royalton Playgroup: United Church on the Green, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 6852264, ext. 24. St. Albans Building Better Families Playgroup: NCSS Family Center, St. Albans, 9-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426.
Williston Babytime Playgroup: Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, first Wednesday of every month, 6-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. THURSDAY Alburgh Playgroup: NCSS Family Center, Alburgh, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. Brandon Stories & Crafts: Brandon Free Public Library, 9:30 a.m. Free. Info, 247-8230. Burlington EvoMamas Playgroup: Evolution Prenatal and Family Yoga Center, second Thursday of every month, 10:2011:50 a.m. Free. Info, 864-9642. Essex Junction Building Bright Futures Playgroup: See Tuesday, 9:30-11 a.m. Montgomery Playgroup: Montgomery Town Library, 9-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 527-5426. Randolph Playgroup: White River Craft Center, 9:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 685-2264, ext. 24. West Fairlee Playgroup: Westshire Elementary School, 9-11 a.m. Free. Info, 6852264, ext. 24. Williston Play Time: Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, 11 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 878-4918. FRIDAY Huntington Playgroup: Huntington Public Library, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 899-4415. Montgomery Tumble Time: Montgomery Elementary School, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 347-1780. Randolph Toddler Time: Kimball Public Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 728-5073. Swanton Friday Playgroup: Swanton Public Library, 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 868-3033. Underhill Playgroup: Underhill Central School, 9:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 899-4415. SATURDAY Morrisville Baby Chat: Lamoille Family Center, second Saturday of every month, 1011:30 a.m. Free. Info, 888-5229.
Shelburne Farms
A n 3 7 th nua l!
HARVEST FESTIVAL
A C ELEBRATION
OF
V ERMONT F ARMS , F ORESTS , & F UTU UTURE
19 10 AM–4 PM
Adults $10 Seniors & Children $5 Members & Children 2 & Free RAIN OR SHINE ATM ON PREMISES FOLLOW SIGNS FROM RTE. 7 www.shelburnefarms.org 985-8686 1611 Harbor Road Shelburne, VT Please, no pets. Special thanks to Charlotte-Shelburne Rotary
Kids VT
Fun for the Whole Family!
September 2015
Forest, Farm & Traditional Arts Exhibits & Demonstrations Wagon Rides Children’s Activities Children’s Farmyard Haybale Maze Locally Produced Food Performers & Musicians (see schedule online)
kidsvt.com
Saturday SEPTEMBER
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CALENDAR admission, $3.50-7; preregister. Info, 434-2167.
6 SUNDAY
Baby & Maternity Burlington Postnatal Yoga: See September 1, 12:15-1:30 p.m. Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 10-11:30 a.m.
See Dr. First videos “First With Kids” at uvmhealth.org.
Community
Labor & Leisure Day: Families pitch in on the farm, helping to build a split-rail fence and scrub laundry on a washboard. Come quittin’ time, they hop a wagon ride and sample some fresh-churned ice cream. All ages. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Regular admission, $4-14; free for children under 3. Info, 457-2355. Soccer for Soles 3 vs 3 Festival: Spirited players raise money for needy soccer programs in the U.S. and Africa. Music, an auction and local food vendors lend a festive air. Ages 6 and up. Browns River Middle School, Jericho, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. $20 per player; preregister. Info, 371-7870.
Education
Archaeology at ECHO: See September 5.
Fairs & Festivals
Champlain Valley Fair: See September 1. New World Festival: More than 70 musicians celebrate Vermont’s Celtic and French Canadian heritage through traditional tunes, children’s activities and dance. Chandler Music Hall, Randolph, noon-11 p.m. $12-39; free for children ages 2-12. Info, 728-6464. Vermont State Fair: See September 4, 8 a.m.-10 p.m.
The flexibility you want. The college savings you need.
Food It’s never too late to start. Whether you’re a parent, a grandparent, or just someone interested in saving for a child’s future, a Vermont Higher Education Investment Plan (VHEIP) account is an easy way to get started. It’s the only 529 college savings plan that qualifies for a Vermont income tax credit. You can open an account online or request an enrollment form by mail. Visit vheip.org or call 1-800-637-5860 to learn more.
Stowe Farmers Market: Live music, food and craft vendors make for a bustling atmosphere. All ages. Stowe Farmers Market, 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Free. Info, 472-8027. Winooski Farmers Market: Local produce, farm goods, artisan crafts, kids’ activities and tunes come together on the banks of the Winooski River. Champlain Mill, Winooski, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, winooskimarket@gmail. com.
Health & Fitness
Essex Open Gym: See September 2, 1-2:30 p.m.
Music
Nature & Science VHEIP is sponsored by the Vermont Student Assistance Corporation, a public nonprofit established by the Vermont legislature in 1965 to help Vermont students and families plan and pay for college. VHEIP investment management is provided by Intuition College Savings Solutions, LLC (ICSS). Consider the investment objectives, risks, and expenses before investing and read the disclosure booklet available online or by mail. Investments in VHEIP are neither insured nor guaranteed, and there is the risk of investment loss. Before investing in a 529 plan, you should consider whether your state has a 529 plan that offers favorable state income tax or other benefits that are available only if you invest in that state’s 529 plan.
Full Dome Planetarium: See September 5. Sundays for Fledglings: Aspiring junior birders learn all about the work birds do through observation, research and goofing around. Ages 5-9; siblings welcome. Birds of Vermont Museum, Huntington, 2-2:45 p.m. Regular
Baby & Maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:45-7:15 p.m. Chace Mill Prenatal Barre: Momsto-be get a ballet-inspired workout. Prenatal Method Studio, Burlington, 5:30-6:30 p.m. $15. Info, 829-0211. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:30-6:30 p.m. La Leche League: Moms and moms-to-be drop in for help with specific nursing questions and to connect with others. Babies and older children welcome. Vermont Department of Health, St. Johnsbury, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 274-1023. Pee Wee Pilates: New moms strengthen their cores with babies in tow. Prenatal Method Studio, Burlington, 10:30-11:30 a.m. $15. Info, 646-206-0514.
Fairs & Festivals
Vermont State Fair: See September 4, 8 a.m.-10 p.m.
Health & Fitness
Essex Open Gym: See September 2. Kids’ Crit: Young cyclists circle city blocks in a junior noncompetitive version of the Burlington Criterium, in honor of Richard Tom. Burlington City Hall Park, 1 p.m. Free; preregistration required. Info, 849-9863.
Library & Books
Babies & Toddlers Rock: Little musicians ages 24 months and under sing songs and engage in early literacy activities. Rutland Free Library, 10-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 773-1860.
8 TUESDAY
Arts & Crafts
Preschool Art: Little artists dig into clay, paint, collage and printmaking. (See spotlight on page 38.) Shelburne Craft School, 10-11 a.m. $10 per child. Info, 985-3648.
Baby & Maternity
Burlington La Leche League: New moms bring their questions to a breastfeeding support group. Babies and older children welcome. Lending library available. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 10 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 985-8228. Burlington Postnatal Yoga: See September 1. Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. Montpelier Postnatal Yoga: See September 1.
Community
JUDA Welcome Day: An open house welcomes interested visitors to hear about curriculum and kids’ holiday activities while mingling with other families. Chabad Jewish Community Center, Burlington, 3:30 p.m. Free. Info, 658-5770.
Submit your October events for print by September 15 at kidsvt.com or to calendar@kidsvt.com.
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KIDS VT
SEPTEMBER 2015
KIDSVT.COM
Music in the Meadow: The mountains and sunset provide a backdrop for an outdoor concert, with lots of space for picnicking. Gates open two hours before performance. Trapp Family Lodge, Stowe, 5:30 p.m. $10-30. Info, 253-5720.
7 MONDAY
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Looking for a babysitter? • Babysitters & Event Sitters • Full & Part Time Nannies • Temporary Nannies Available • Gift Certificates Available We are Vt’s oldest & most experienced childcare placement agency. Our providers have undergone an intensive screening process.
vermontnannyconnection.com • 872.1VNC(1862) k12h-VtNanny0814.indd 1
®
Celebrate your Birthday at the Vermont Teddy Bear Factory!
All parties include: • A private tour • A Make a Friend for Life® Bear for each child
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• Private party space staffed by a Vermont Teddy Bear Ambassador.
Ask about our different party packages! The Vermont Teddy Bear Company 6655 Shelburne Road, Shelburne, VT (802)985-3001 ext. 1700 • birthdayparties@vtbear.com k6h-VTTeddyBear0614.indd 1
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Personalized care throughout your pregnancy, labor and delivery
Dig In barre calls itself “the granite center of the World,” and for good reason. Since 1880, workers have been excavating the 4-mile-long, 2-mile-wide and 10-mile-deep rock deposit there. at the bArre GrAniTe FesTiVAl, junior geologists get a taste of the action, sandblasting tiles, etching drawings on rock, and splitting blocks with hand tools. the littlest visitors can construct buildings from foam, ooh and ahh at the working oxen and horses, and climb on an antique train and hefty machinery. Live music, art displays, craft demonstrations and bocce games round out the rockin’ festivities.
Individualized Gynecological care for all stages of your life.
bArre GrAniTe FesTiVAl: Saturday, September 19, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., at the Vermont Granite Museum in Barre. All ages. $2-5; $10 per family. Info, 476-4605. vtgranitemuseum.org
Games
Health & Fitness
catamount Trail running series: See September 1.
movies
youth media lab: See September 1.
music
children’s sing-Along: See September 1. Preschool music: See September 1.
Our personable & attentive staff is here for you! Childbirth Classes on-site: www.laboroflovevt.com Free Breastfeeding Classes by certified instructors Water Birth Available 96 Colchester Ave, Burlington 802-658-0505 • Toll Free 877-275-8929 www.affiliatesobgyn.com • Visit us on Facebook
Kids VT
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Gaming For Teens & Adults: Players of all skill levels engage in Magic: The Gathering and other amusements. Children under 13 must be accompanied by an adult or have parental
permission to attend. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 5-7:45 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216.
September 2015
milton community Activities Fair: The Milton Community Youth Coalition sponsors this annual fair, offering one-stop shopping for families to learn about local sports, recreation, clubs and service opportunities. Milton Elementary/ Middle School, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 893-1009. Vermont state Fair: See September 4, 8 a.m.-10 p.m.
KidsVT.com
Fairs & Festivals
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Story Times
Visit our website for our
2015-2016 Class Schedule
Early-literacy skills get special attention during these read-aloud sessions. Some locations provide additional activities such as music, crafts or foreign-language instruction. Contact the story-time organizer or visit kidsvt.com for details.
Northfield Children’s Story Time: See Monday. Rutland Story Time: Rutland Free Library, 10-10:45 a.m. Free. Info, 773-1860. Shelburne Story Time: Pierson Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 985-5124. St. Albans Story Hour: See Monday. Vergennes Story Time: Bixby Memorial Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 877-2211. Westford Story Time: Westford Public Library, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 878-5639.
MONDAY
Vermont’s only certified
Irish Dance School! All Ages…All Levels Did you enjoy watching Riverdance? Why not learn some of the steps! Call now for information and reserve a spot in our Fall Classes! Classes offered in Colchester (NEW LOCATION) & Middlebury
Beth Anne McFadden T.C.R.G. (802) 999-5041 www.mcfaddenirishdance.com
In-Store Bakery...
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Apple Cider Donuts daily! Homegrown Fresh Produce Garden Mums in many colors Fall Harvest Decorating VT & Specialty Foods Gifts for Home and Garden
Colchester Preschool Story Time: Burnham Memorial Library, 10:30 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 264-5660. Cruisers & Crawlers Play & Stay Story Time: Highgate Public Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 868-3970. Essex Preschool Story Time: Essex Free Library, 10:30 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 879-0313. Hyde Park Story Time: Lanpher Memorial Library, 6 p.m. Free. Info, 888-4628. Milton Infant Story Time: Milton Public Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 893-4644. Northfield Children’s Story Time: Brown Public Library, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 485-4621. Richmond Story Time: Richmond Free Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 434-3036. Richmond Pajama Story Time: Richmond Free Library, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 434-3036. St. Albans Story Hour: St. Albans Free Library, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 524-1507. Stowe Story Time for 2- to 3-Year-Olds: Stowe Free Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 253-6145. Waitsfield Story Time: Joslin Memorial Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 496-4205. Waterbury Baby & Toddler Story Time: Waterbury Public Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 244-7036. Woodstock Baby Story Time: Norman Williams Public Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 457-2295. TUESDAY
3.5-mile Corn Maze Open Daily thru Oct. 31st Giant Pumpkin Weigh-In Saturday, Sept. 26, 1-3pm Hayrides to the Pumpkin Patch Weekends beginning September 26 Harvest Festival Days Saturday, October 3 & Sunday, October 4
Come visit our farm market this fall! 277 Lavigne Road Colchester sammazzafarms.com 802-655-3440
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KIDS VT
SEPTEMBER 2015
KIDSVT.COM
FALL ACTIVITIES
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Alburgh Story Hour: Alburgh Public Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 796-6077. Barre Children’s Story Hour: Aldrich Public Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 476-7550. Colchester Toddler Story Time: Burnham Memorial Library, 10:30 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 264-5660. Craftsbury Story Time: Craftsbury Public Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 586-9683. East Barre Story Time: East Barre Branch Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 476-5118. Fairfax Preschool Story Time: Fairfax Community Library, 9:30-10:30 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 849-2420. Highgate Music & Movement Story Time: Highgate Public Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 868-3970. Hinesburg Youngsters Story Time: Carpenter-Carse Library, 9:30-10 a.m. Free. Info, 482-2878. Milton Preschool Story Time: Milton Public Library, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 893-4644. Montpelier Story Time: Kellogg-Hubbard Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 223-3338.
FRIDAY
South Burlington Tiny Tot Time: South Burlington Community Library, 9:15 & 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 652-7080. Williston Story Time: Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 878-4918. Winooski Pajama Time: Winooski Memorial Library, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 655-6424. Woodstock Preschool Story Time: Norman Williams Public Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 457-2295. WEDNESDAY Barnes & Noble Story Time: Barnes & Noble, South Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 864-8001. Essex Drop-In Story Time: Essex Free Library, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 879-0313. Essex Toddler Story Time: Essex Free Library, 10:30 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 879-0313. Highgate Music & Movement Story Time: See Tuesday. Hyde Park Story Time: See Monday, 10 a.m. Johnson Story Time: Johnson Public Library, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 635-7141. Norwich Story Time: Norwich Public Library, 10:30-11 a.m. Free. Info, 649-1184. Marshfield Story & Activity Time: Jaquith Public Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 426-3581. Quechee Story Time: Quechee Public Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 295-1232. Randolph Morning Story Time: Kimball Public Library, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 728-5073. South Burlington Baby Book Time: South Burlington Community Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 652-7080. Stowe Story Hour: Stowe Free Library, 10:15-11:15 a.m. Free. Info, 253-6145. Swanton Storytime: Swanton Public Library, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 868-7656. Warren Preschool Story & Enrichment Hour: Warren Public Library, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 595-2582. THURSDAY Colchester Preschool StoryTime: See Monday.
Brandon Preschool Story Time: Brandon Free Public Library, first Friday of every month, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 247-8230. Craftsbury Story Time: See Tuesday. Enosburg Story Hour: Enosburg Public Library, 9-10 a.m. Free. Info, 933-2328. Georgia Preschool Story Time: Georgia Public Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 524-4643. Huntington Story Time: Huntington Public Library, 10:45 a.m. Free. Info, 434-4583. Lincoln Toddler/Preschool Story Time: Lincoln Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 453-2665. Milton Toddler Story Time & Craft: Milton Public Library, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 893-4644. Montpelier Story Time: See Tuesday. Rock, Roll & Read Drop-In Story Time: Essex Free Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 879-0313. South Burlington Pajamarama: Barnes & Noble, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 864-8001. St. Johnsbury Story Time: St. Johnsbury Athenaeum, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 748-8291. Stowe Baby & Toddler Story Time: Stowe Free Library, 10-10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 253-6145. Waterbury Preschool Story Time: Waterbury Public Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 244-7036. SATURDAY Barnes & Noble Saturday Morning Story Time: Barnes & Noble, South Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 864-8001. Barre Story Time: Next Chapter Bookstore, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 476-3114. Burlington Story Time at Phoenix Books: Phoenix Books, 11 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 448-3350. Colchester Saturday Story Time: Burnham Memorial Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 264-5660. Enosburg Story Hour: Enosburg Public Library, 9-10 a.m. Free. Info, 933-2328. Swanton Storytime: See Wednesday, 10:30 a.m.
SEPT CALENDAR
BRIGHTality Tutoring & Education Consulting, LLC
Nature & Science
8 TUESDAY (CONTINUED)
Programs for Preschoolers: See September 2. Wagon-Ride Wednesdays: See September 2.
Nature & Science
Raptors in Residence: See September 1. See Dr. First videos “First With Kids” at Story Time in the Nestlings uvmhealth.org. Nook: Tales about birds are 10 THURSDAY followed by a nature walk, crafts or music, depending Arts & Crafts on the weather. Intended for Webby’s Art Studio: See September 3. preschoolers, but all ages welcome. Birds of Vermont Museum, Huntington, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Regular admission; $3.50-7. Info, 434-2167. Baby & Maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 12:15-1:15 p.m. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1,
9 WEDNESDAY
Baby & Maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:45-7:15 p.m.
First time ill customers w E E R F a get HOU R of r tutoring afte g in as purch the first two.
Education
History for Homeschoolers: See September 9.
802-662-4232 tutoringessexjunction.com BRIGHTalityFutures@gmail.com
Education
History for Homeschoolers: Eager learners dive into history-related activities organized around different monthly themes. Ages 6-12. Check vermonthistory.org for specific details. Vermont History Museum, Montpelier, 1-3 p.m. $6.50-8; preregister. Space is limited. Info, 828-2291.
Fairs & Festivals
Vermont State Fair: See September 4, 8 a.m.-10 p.m.
Food
Champlain Island Farmers Market: See September 2. Middlebury Farmers Market: See September 2. Woodstock Market on the Green: See September 2.
Games
Dungeons & Dragons Night: Players assume invented personas and use cleverness and luck to overcome challenges, defeat enemies and save the day. Beginners welcome. Ages 9-13. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 5:307:45 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 264-5660. Family Game Night: Friendly competitions of Candy Land, checkers and Monopoly enliven the library. Bring your own board or borrow from the library. Georgia Public Library, Fairfax, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 524-4643.
Health & Fitness
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Ongoing Exhibits ECHO LEAHY CENTER FOR LAKE CHAMPLAIN, BURLINGTON Info, 864-1848 ‘Smokey Bear & Woodsy Owl: Home Sweet Home’: This traveling exhibit, created in collaboration with the U.S. Forest Service, teaches young woodland stewards how to care for natural resources through on-the-job forest ranger training. Every other Friday from 10 a.m. to noon, the Burlington Fire Department teaches about preventing fires locally. Through September 13. FAIRBANKS MUSEUM & PLANETARIUM, ST JOHNSBURY Info, 748-2372 ‘Dinosaur Discoveries: Ancient Fossils, New Ideas’: Prehistoric bones and computer simulations provide a vivid picture of dinosaur-era life and how our understanding of it has changed in the last two decades. Through December 15. HELEN DAY ART CENTER, STOWE
Library & Books
Info, 253-8358 ‘Exposed’: National and local outdoor sculptures of all size spread through the town of Stowe. Through October 14. MONTSHIRE MUSEUM OF SCIENCE, NORWICH
TICKETS FOR THE 2015-2016 SEASON AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 21
KIDS VT
For schedules and ticket information, visit www.UVMathletics.com
SEPTEMBER 2015
Info, 649-2200 ‘Prehistoric Menagerie’: Life-size sculptures of animals from the Cenozic Age — including a woolly mammoth, a tiny horse and a 7-foot-tall carnivore with the head of a warthog — transport visitors back in time. Through September 7.
KIDSVT.COM
Essex Open Gym: See September 2.
Colchester Read to Hank the Therapy Dog: See September 2. Hinesburg Dorothy Canfield Fisher Book Discussion: Middle-schoolers read Gabriel Finley and the Raven’s Riddle by George Hagen, then meet to discuss the fantasy story’s riddles and suspense. Carpenter-Carse Library, Hinesburg, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 482-2878. Lego Club: Mini-makers participate in surprise challenges with colorful interlocking blocks. Ages 6 and up. Fairfax Community Library, 3-4 p.m. Free. Info, 849-2420. Little BOOM VT: See September 2.
Family friendly education center providing tutoring, assessments, homeschooling support, classes, individual lessons, academic resource library, and curriculum support.
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Piano & Guitar Lessons with Damon Ferrante
10 Thursday (continued)
• Columbia University & Juilliard-Trained Music Professor • 25 Years’ Teaching Experience / Lessons for All Ages • Author of Best-Selling Music Education Books
Fairs & Festivals
Vermont state Fair: See September 4, 8 a.m.-10 p.m.
Library & Books
• Fun, Friendly & Creative Teaching Style • All Musical Genres from Classical to Rock
Damon Ferrante • 802-735-4220 www.steeplechasearts.com k8h-SteeplechaseArt0915.indd 1
Sept calendar
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Discover
colchester Lego club: Mini-makers participate in surprise challenges with colorful interlocking blocks. Ages 6-10. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 4 p.m. Free. Info, 264-5660. spanish musical Kids: See September 3. st. albans Library Legos: Young building enthusiasts engage in creative construction with their peers. St. Albans Free Library, 3-5 p.m. Free. Info, 524-1507.
music
the Difference Helping all students reach their academic and social goals. Reading | Writing | Math | SAT Test Prep | Social Thinking® Groups Stern Center for Language and Learning - 802-878-2332
music for Preschoolers: Lively tunes with local musicians strike the right note among the wee crowd. Ages 5 and under with a caregiver. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30 a.m. Free; limited to one session per week per family. Info, 878-4918.
Nature & science
raptors in residence: See September 1.
11 FRIDAY
Instruction and Communication Services To learn more, please visit: http://bit.ly/2015fallsvcs Untitled-9 1
“Vermont’s Largest Selection of Kids’ Bikes!”
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Your kids may be ready for school, but-
Are they ready to RIDE to school?
Baby & maternity
Burlington Prenatal yoga: See September 1, 8:30-9:30 a.m. mother’s Gathering: See September 4.
Education
milton homeschool Project day: Out-ofclassroom learners share their current projects with an audience of parents and siblings. Grades K through 12. Milton Public Library, 2:30 p.m. Free. Info, 893-4644.
Fairs & Festivals
south End art hop: Queen City artists come out of the woodwork for this exciting and varied exhibition of visual art. Visit seaba.com for a complete schedule of events, including ones geared towards kids. Various South End locations, Burlington, 5-10 p.m. Free. Info, 859-9222. Vermont state Fair: See September 4, 8 a.m.-10 p.m.
Food
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Kids VT
September 2015
KidsVT.com
Five corners Farmers market: See September 4. Foodways Fridays: See September 4. richmond Farmers market: See September 4.
Games
Come to Earl’s for all your back-to-school biking needs.
Helmets, locks, bells, clothing, packs, and more! 2500 Williston Road South Burlington Untitled-12 1
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dungeons & dragons: Players exercise their problem-solving skills in imaginary battles and adventures. Grades 6 and up. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 6-8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.
health & Fitness
Library & Books
Early Bird math: See September 4.
music
Burlington music With robert: See September 4. Kids music With Linda ‘Tickle Belly’ Bassick: See September 4. songs and stories with matthew: Listeners of all ages applaud tales and tunes. Brownell Library, Essex Junction, 10-10:45 a.m. Free. Info, 878-6956.
12 SATURDAY
arts & crafts
saturday Kids drop-in craft class: See September 5. steamroller Printmaking Workshop: Helen Day Art Studio hosts an art making session where families make big prints with heavy machinery. Ages 5 and up with an adult. Drop in any time. Rain date September 13. Sushi Yoshi, Stowe, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. $20. Info, 253-8358. Traditional craft saturdays: See September 5. Webby’s art studio: See September 3.
Baby & maternity
Baby-item sale: Hosted by the local La Leche League and Babywearers, this annual event in its third decade offers affordable, quality goods. Item donations accepted on September 11, 8 a.m.-noon. All ages. Bethany Church, Montpelier, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 244-1254. chace mill Prenatal yoga: See September 1, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
Education
Brown’s raid–reenactment: The past comes to life in this historic surprise attack, complete with costumes, music and artifacts. See fortticonderoga.org for a detailed schedule of events. Fort Ticonderoga, 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. $8-19.50; children under 5 free. Info, 518-585-2821. summer Naturalist Program: See September 5.
Fairs & Festivals
Glory days Festival: An annual familyoriented fest celebrates the town’s choo-choo history with children’s entertainment, a model train show, live music and engine displays. Saturday’s train ride winds along the Connecticut River. Downtown, White River Junction, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free; $10 for train excursion. Info, 295-5036. Kids hop: A kid-friendly complement to SEABA’s South End Art Hop, Kids Hop offers creative opportunities including recycled art projects, painting, wood crafts and various demonstrations. See seaba.com for events and other locations. Designed for kids ages 3-12. SEABA Tent, Burlington, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 859-9222. south End art hop: See September 11, 10 a.m.9 p.m. Vermont state Fair: See September 4, 8 a.m.10 p.m.
Essex open Gym: See September 2.
submit your october events for print by september 15 at kidsvt.com or to calendar@kidsvt.com.
Food
proceeds benefit the Children’s Room. Info, 244-5605. Open Streets BTV: People of all ages bike, stroll, roll, dance and skate along car-free streets in the Old North End, amid activities and food geared toward families. BurSee Dr. First videos lington’s Old North End, 10 a.m.-3 “First With Kids” at p.m. Free. Info, 881-7767. uvmhealth.org.
Burlington Farmers Market: See September 5. Capital City Farmers Market: See September 5. Champlain Island Farmers Market: See September 5. Chocolate Sculpture Demo: A master chocolatier demonstrates how to make Alice in Wonderland-themed sweet figures. All ages. South End Kitchen, Burlington, 2-3 p.m. Free. Info, 864-0505. Middlebury Farmers Market: See September 2. Rutland Farmers Market: See September 5. Shelburne Farmers Market: See September 5.
Health & Fitness
Fun Run/Walk: This fundraiser for Hunger Mountain Children’s Center begins with a noncompetitive one-mile race, followed by family festivities and food. Rusty Parker Memorial Park, Waterbury, 3-7 p.m. $10-25; $60 per family; free for children 2 and under; $10 per person for food and fun only. Info, 244-5544. PCA Walk & Run to End Child Abuse: Runners and walkers show support for child abuse prevention by competing in a family-friendly event. T-shirts, hot dogs and snacks provided. Check-in 8 a.m. Vermont Statehouse, Montpelier. Check-in, 8 a.m.; event, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 229-5724.
Library & Books
Café Make: Patrons of all ages drop in during this open time for creative collaboration around using the library’s resources. Carpenter-Carse Library, Hinesburg, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 482-2878. Spanish Musical Playgroup: Rhymes, books, songs and crafts en español entertain niños. Snacks provided. Ages 5 and under. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 10:30 a.m.noon. Free. Info, 878-4918.
Nature & Science
13 SUNDAY Burlington Postnatal Yoga: See September 1, 12:15-1:30 p.m. Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 10-11:30 a.m.
Community
Bee Here Now Festival: The honey makers steal the show at this celebration with an observation hive, quilt activity and parade. Dress up as a bee for a chance to win a prize. Shelburne Orchards, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 985-2753. Glory Days Festival: See September 12. South End Art Hop: See September 11, noon-4 p.m.
Learn more about the benefits of local and organic ! Visit www.nofavt.org/why-organic or call 802-434-4122. Untitled-1 1
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Food
Stowe Farmers Market: See September 6. Winooski Farmers Market: See September 6.
Health & Fitness
Cabot Ride the Ridges: Families enjoy a 10K bike, run or walk tour of one of the most beautiful ridges in Cabot, while more experienced riders navigate 30-100K courses. A feast of local foods follows. (See spotlight on page 28.) Cabot School, 8 a.m.-3 p.m. $15-25; $40 per family. Free for children ages 12 and under. Price includes lunch. Info, 563-3338. Essex Open Gym: See September 2, 1-2:30 p.m.
Nature & Science
Full Dome Planetarium: See September 5. Wild Mushrooms of Autumn: Hunting for wild edibles is made accessible and entertaining in a colorful presentation, followed by a foray into the woods to hunt for the gourmet goods. Ages 12 and up. Green Mountain Audubon Center, Huntington, 1-3 p.m. $25-30; preregister. Info, 434-3068.
14 MONDAY
Baby & Maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:45-7:15 p.m. Chace Mill Prenatal Barre: See September 7. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Pee Wee Pilates: See September 7.
Food
Mama Mangez: Families prepare and share a meal and conversation. Tulsi Tea Room, Montpelier, 4-6 p.m. Free; ingredient donation optional. Info, 595-7953.
VSA Vermont Drum Festival 2015
Sunday, Oct. 4 • 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at Fletcher Free Library 235 College Street Burlington Join the beat! Listen or drum with us! Come support the talents of Vermonters with disabilities!
FREE ADMISSION For information or to request access services by September 15: 802-871-5043 or info@vsavt.org
www.vsavt.org/boomvt
THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS
Health & Fitness
Mervyn L. Brenner Foundation, Inc.
Essex Open Gym: See September 2.
KIDS VT
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Barn Dance: Refreshments, live music, hayrides, games, a silent auction and a pie contest make for family fun. Beard’s Barn, Waterbury Center, 2-5 p.m. $15 per person; $20 per family;
Fairs & Festivals
SEPTEMBER 2015
Baby & Maternity
Brown’s Raid–Reenactment: See September 12.
KIDSVT.COM
Beautiful Birds: Games, activities and observation help avian enthusiasts learn about native flyers. Ages 3 and up. Gardener’s Supply, Williston, 10-11 a.m. $5 donation to Audubon Vermont; preregister. Info, 658-2433. Bird-Monitoring Walk: Beginning birders embrace ornithology on an identification walk. All ages. Green Mountain Audubon Center, Huntington, 7:30-9:30 a.m. Donations appreciated. Info, 434-3068. Full Dome Planetarium: See September 5. Raptors in Residence: See September 1.
Education
Certified Organic, Locally Grown. Healthier for you and your family.
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SEPT
Lake Champlain
CALENDAR Health & Fitness
Catamount Trail Running Series: See September 1.
Movies
Youth Media Lab: See September 1.
Music
Children’s Sing-Along: See September 1. Preschool Music: See September 1.
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Nature & Science
Raptors in Residence: See September 1.
16 WEDNESDAY COURTESY OF SHELBURNE CRAFT SCHOOL
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Vergennes, Vermont
(802) 475-2022 www.lcmm.org
The Shelburne Craft School opened its doors in 1945, bolstered by the belief that working with one’s hands is an important element of a well-rounded life. Today, more than 1,500 people every year enroll in classes there that teach skills such as blacksmithing, woodworking and stained-glass making. This fall a new drop-in program, PRESCHOOL ART, gives little ones and their caregivers an opportunity to dig into wet clay or paste up collages Eric Carle-style. Kids investigate lines, shapes, colors and textures and instructors offer stories and practical tips for nourishing kids’ budding creativity. The adults are encouraged to roll up their sleeves and get messy, too. PRESCHOOL ART: Tuesdays, September 8 toDecember 15, 10-11 a.m. at the Shelburne Craft School. Ages 3-5. $10 per child. Info, 985-3648. theshelburnecraftschool.org
Baby & Maternity
14 MONDAY (CONTINUED)
Library & Books Burlington Stories With Megan: Preschoolers have a ball with rhymes, songs and books. Ages 2-5. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216.
A child-centered A child-centered alternative education.
alternative education. ... dedicated to to the the philosophy philosophy and …dedicated and teachings of of Maria Maria Montessori teachings Montessori
Montpelier Montessori School Berlin, VT Berlin, VT www.mscvt.org
Music
See Dr. First videos “First With Kids” at uvmhealth.org.
Music for Preschoolers: See September 10, 11 a.m.
15 TUESDAY
Arts & Crafts
Preschool Art: See September 8.
All inquiries: All
Breastfeeding Cafe: Moms nurse their babies, chat and pose questions to a certified lactation consultant. Pregnant women, supportive dads and older siblings welcome. Ilsley Public Library, Middlebury, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 349-3825. Burlington Postnatal Yoga: See
September 1. Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. Montpelier Postnatal Yoga: See September 1.
Games
Crafternoon: Little art lovers make a handson masterpiece. South Burlington Community Library, 3-4 p.m. Free. Info, 652-7080.
Baby & Maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:45-7:15 p.m.
Food
Champlain Island Farmers Market: See September 2. Middlebury Farmers Market: See September 2. Woodstock Market on the Green: See September 2.
Health & Fitness
Essex Open Gym: See September 2.
Library & Books
Colchester Pajama Story Time: Small ones curl up for bedtime tales, cookies and milk. Ages 18 months-5 years. Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 264-5660. Colchester Read to Hank the Therapy Dog: See September 2. Little BOOM VT: See September 2.
Movies
Film: Winged Migration: A big-screen event wows viewers with a bird’s-eye perspective. All ages. Jaquith Public Library, Marshfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 426-3581. Marshfield Family-Themed Movies: A wholesome flick entertains viewers of all ages. Jaquith Public Library, Marshfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 426-3581.
Nature & Science
Programs for Preschoolers: See September 2. Wagon-Ride Wednesdays: See September 2.
Parenting
Breastfeeding Families Group: Nursing moms (and supportive dads, too!) gather for snacks and advice. Church of the Nazarene, Johnson, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Info, 888-3470.
Gaming For Teens & Adults: See September 8.
802.223.3320 802.223.3320
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Submit your October events for print by September 15 at kidsvt.com or to calendar@kidsvt.com.
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Providing Providing aa mixed-aged, mixed-aged, developmental developmental program for program3for children -9 children 3-12 years of age. years of age.
Artists-in-Training
Arts & Crafts
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Arts & Crafts
Crafternoon: Fairy Houses: Artsy kids make miniature houses from natural materials. Ages 6 and up. Fairfax Community Library, 3-4 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 849-2420. Webby’s Art Studio: See September 3.
Baby & Maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 12:15-1:15 p.m. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1.
Fairs & Festivals
The Tunbridge World’s Fair: This old-fashioned agricultural extravaganza, in its 144th year, features Antique Hill, free entertainment and livestock shows. Midway priced separately. Tunbridge Fairgrounds, 8 a.m.-9 p.m. $10-15; $35 season pass; free for children under 12. Info, 889-5555.
SEPTEMBER 2015
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Music for Preschoolers: See September 10. The Wiggles: The Rock n’ Roll Preschool tour
KIDS VT
Critter Construction: Hold onto your hard hat! Preschoolers explore different styles of animal structures, from bird nests to beaver lodges, then create their own cozy hideaways. Ages 3-5. Meet at the sugarhouse parking area. Green Mountain Audubon Center, Huntington, 9-10:30 a.m. $8-10 per adult-child pair; $4 for each additional child; preregister. Info, 434-3068. Homeschoolers’ Day: Science & Nature: Young scientists experiment, observe and collect data with the museum as a 100-acre laboratory. Montshire Museum of Science, Norwich, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. $11-14; free for children under 2. Info, 649-2200. Raptors in Residence: See September 1.
Baby & Maternity
Colchester Lego Club: See September 10. Spanish Musical Kids: See September 3.
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Nature & Science
18 FRIDAY
Library & Books Music
get kids all shook up. Dorothy the Dinosaur and Captain Feathers join in the fun. Paramount Theatre, Rutland, 6:30 p.m. $28.50-44.50. Info, 775-0570.
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Mother’s Gathering: See September 4.
3:15-4pm Creative Ballet (3-6) 4-5pm Lyrical Ballet 1 (7-11) 5-6pm Girls Hip Hop (7-11)
Save the NEKCA Teen Center: This fundraiser to keep the Teen Center in Newport open features live music and a silent auction. The Knoll Barn, Derby, 6-9 p.m. $10. Info, 334-8237.
Gale Recreation Center, Stowe, 6-10 p.m. $15 per person. Info, 253-3054.
See Dr. First videos “First With Kids” at uvmhealth.org.
Health & Fitness
Essex Open Gym: See September 2.
Library & Books
Education
Homeschool Day: Students learn about the life of an 18th-century soldier on a day exclusively reserved for homeschool groups. All ages. Fort Ticonderoga, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Regular admission, $8-17.50; free for kids under 5. Info, 518-585-2821.
Early Bird Math: See September 4. Jiggity Jog: A musical meet-up with Miss Susan includes singing, dancing and instrument playing. Ages 2-6. South Burlington Community Library, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 652-7539.
Fairs & Festivals
Music
The Tunbridge World’s Fair: See September 17, 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Food
Five Corners Farmers Market: See September 4. Foodways Fridays: See September 4. Richmond Farmers Market: See September 4.
Games
Kids’ Night Out: Youngsters enjoy an evening of dinner, a movie and games. Grades K-6. David
Burlington Music With Robert: See September 4. Kids Music With Linda ‘Tickle Belly’ Bassick: See September 4. Songs and Stories with Matthew: See September 11.
19 SATURDAY
Arts & Crafts
DIY SmartPhone Gloves: Tech-savvy kids use conductive thread to transform a pair of their
2015/2016 SEASON
Multi class and family discounts!
Monday
Community
Tues
3:15-4pm Jazz / Ballet Combo (5-8) 4-5pm Jazz 1 (7-10) 5-6pm Jazz Teen/Tween 6:15-7:15pm Tween/ teen Yoga
Wed
3:15-4pm Kids Yoga (5-9) 4-5pm Teen/Tween Lyrical (11+) 5-6pm Pointe/ Intermediate Ballet (11+ ) must take Lyrical also
Thurs
3:15pm Mini Hip Hop (4-7) 4-5pm Breakin age (7+) 5-6pm Teen/Adult Hip Hop (11+)
ENROLL TODAY!
Season S pots fill fast!
Sat 8:30-9:15am Mini Hip Hop (3-6)
Sunday 8:30-9:15am Kids Yoga (3-7)
150 Dorset Street (The Blue Mall) South Burlington 497-0136 www.honestyog acenter.com k2h-HonestYoga-0915.indd 1
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own gloves. Fairfax Community Library, 1011:30 a.m. Free; preregister. Info, 849-2420. saturday Kids drop-in craft class: See September 5. Traditional craft saturdays: See September 5. Webby’s Art studio: See September 3.
Baby & maternity
chace mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
community
children’s day: Young visitors play Victorianera games and explore this historic building with a scavenger hunt. All ages. Noyes House Museum, Morrisville, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free; donations accepted; preregister. Info, 888-7617. milton Touch a Truck: Beep, beep! Kids climb aboard awesome autos and talk to their drivers. All ages. Bombardier Park, Milton, 9 a.m.-noon. Free. Info, 893-4922.
dance Ballets with a Twist: mint Julep & other spirited dances: Classical dance mixes with lively choreography and colorful costumes. (See spotlight on page 26.) Recommended for ages 7 and up. Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center, Stowe, 7:30 p.m. $20-59. Info, 760-4634.
Education
Barre Granite Festival: The local history of stonecutting is celebrated through folk music, exhibits and hands-on kids’ activities. (See spotlight on page 33.) Vermont Granite Museum, Barre, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. $2-5; $10 per family. Info, 476-4605. summer Naturalist Program: See September 5.
Fairs & Festivals
Eat By Northeast: The Skinny Pancake and Higher Ground present this weekend celebration of Vermont food, with kid-friendly programming including scavenger hunts, farmer Olympics, hands-on science experiments and building challenges. Preregister for some events at eatxne.com. (See spotlight on page 42.) Oakledge Park, Burlington, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Free admission; donations benefit local food nonprofits. Info, 652-0777. Harvest Festival: Families celebrate autumnal abundance in style with hayrides, children’s activities, fall foods and musicians on multiple stages. Shelburne Farms, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Regular admission, $5-10; free for children under 2. Info, 985-8686. The Tunbridge World’s Fair: See September 17, 7 a.m.-10 p.m.
Food
Burlington Farmers market: See September 5. capital city Farmers market: See September 5. champlain island Farmers market: See September 5. middlebury Farmers market: See September 2. Rutland Farmers market: See September 5. shelburne Farmers market: See September 5.
Health & Fitness
EvoKids saturday Yoga: Youngsters master basic yoga poses through games, songs and dance. Mindfulness activities help them improve their focus and concentration. Ages 3-9. Evolution Prenatal and Family Yoga Center, Burlington, 11:30 a.m.-12:15 p.m. $15. Info, 864-9642. PcA Walk & Run to End child Abuse: See September 12. First Unitarian Universalist Church Lawn, Burlington; Howe Center, Rutland, check-in, 8 a.m.; event, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 229-5724.
Library & Books
Burlington curiosity day: Curious George is featured in the 11 a.m. story hour, with monkey
business all day. Phoenix Books Burlington, Free. Info, 872-7111. Essex curiosity day: Little admirers of the small renowned monkey named George enjoy some monkey business. All day. Phoenix Books, Essex Junction, Free. Info, 872-7111. milton Therapy dog Visit: See September 5.
movies
movie matinee: A family-friendly film plays on the big screen. Snacks provided. Milton Public Library, 1 p.m. Free. Info, 893-4644.
music Burlington Taiko, “drums, drums, drums”: Listeners enjoy this Japanese musical performance, then participate in the finale. Bring a chair or blanket for seating. Hopkins Center for the Arts, Hanover, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 603-646-2422.
Nature & science
celebration of Birds: Avid avian fans delight in this fête of feathered friends featuring exhibits, speakers and food. Staige Hill Farm, Charlotte, 4:30 p.m. Free. Info, 434-3068. Full dome Planetarium: See September 5. Live caterpillar Zoo: Naturalist and photographer Sam Jaffe guides visitors to discover 19 sATuRdAY, p.42
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with Amy LePage-Hansen
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HATHAWAY FARM & CORN MAZE You’re Lost… You’re Laughin’… You’re LOVIN’ it!
calendar
12-acre “Under the Sea” Maze, New this Year… Smartphone Games & Pedal Go-Karts! Livestock Barn * Play Area * Mini Maze
SNACK SHACK & WAGON RIDES ON THE WEEKENDS! Admission $12 Adults Pumpkins! $10 Kids 4-11 & Seniors Open 10-5 – Closed Tuesdays Moonlight Madness every Saturday night admission until 9pm in Sept & Oct 741 Prospect Hill Rd, Rutland Town, VT hathawayfarm.com • 802.775.2624
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Foodies young and old get their fill of burlington’s locavore culture during EaT BY NoRTHEasT, a two-day celebration featuring homegrown food, drink and music. the second annual festival aims to both entertain and educate on how to “go local” while raising $20,000 for food-focused nonprofits. adults can learn to grow veggies and raise backyard chickens in 45-minute workshops, or attend cooking demos and lessons from the area’s top chefs. Kiddos compete in sack races, scavenger hunts and a farmer Olympics (overalls optional). bring your picnic blanket, Frisbee and, most importantly, a big appetite. EaT BY NoRTHEasT: Saturday and Sunday, September 19 & 20, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., at Oakledge Park in Burlington. All ages. Free; fee for some events. Info, info@ eatbynortheast.com. eatxne.com. 19 saTuRdaY (cOntinued)
September 2015
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the largest, spiniest and wackiest caterpillars residing in their own backyards. North Branch Nature Center, Montpelier, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. $3-5. Info, 229-6206. Raptors in Residence: See September 1.
20 SUNDAY
Plan your next party at the Fairbanks Museum & Planetarium
1302 Main Street, St. Johnsbury, VT 05819 FairbanksMuseum.org (802) 748-2372
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Say you saw it in
8/26/15 12:04 PM
Baby & maternity
Burlington Postnatal Yoga: See September 1, 12:15-1:30 p.m. Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 10-11:30 a.m.
Fairs & Festivals
Eat By Northeast: See September 19. The Tunbridge World’s Fair: See September 17, 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Food
stowe Farmers market: See September 6. Winooski Farmers market: See September 6.
Health & Fitness
Essex open Gym: See September 2, 1-2:30 p.m. shelburne Farms Fun Run: Young racers hoof it along half-, one- and 1.5-mile courses, with parents encouraged to lace up, too. Registration at 12:30 p.m. Ages 4-12. Shelburne Farms, 1 p.m. $3-5. Info, 863-8412.
Nature & science
Full dome Planetarium: See September 5. sundays for Fledglings: See September 6.
21 MONDAY
Baby & maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:45-7:15 p.m.
Chace Mill Prenatal Barre: See September 7. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Pee Wee Pilates: See September 7.
Middlebury Farmers Market: See September 2. Woodstock Market on the Green: See September 2.
Games
Health & Fitness
Essex Open Gym: See September 2.
Library & Books
See Dr. First videos “First With Kids” at uvmhealth.org.
Babies & Toddlers Rock: See September 7. 10-10:30 a.m. Burlington Stories With Megan: See September 14. Milton Legos at the Library: Kids construct creatively with colored blocks. Grades k-5. Milton Public Library, 3:30-5 p.m. Free. Info, 893-4644. Pajama Story Time: Flannel-clad kiddos bring their favorite stuffed animals for seasonal tales, crafts and a bedtime snack. All ages. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.
Music
Dungeons & Dragons Night: See September 9.
Health & Fitness
Essex Open Gym: See September 2.
Library & Books Colchester Read to Hank the Therapy Dog: See September 2. Little BOOM VT: See September 2.
Movies
Webby’s Art Studio: See September 3.
Arts & Crafts
Baby & Maternity
Games
Gaming For Teens & Adults: See September 8.
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 12:15-1:15 p.m. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1.
Fairs & Festivals
Milton Giant Pumpkin Weigh-In: Enormous squash compete for the heaviest title. Milton Farmers Market, 4-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 893-4922.
Library & Books
Read to Van Gogh the Cat: Feline fanciers sign up for 10-minute sessions with a furry friend. All ages. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 3:30-4:30 p.m. Free; preregister for reading slot. Info, 878-4918.
Movies
Music
Youth Media Lab: See September 1.
Music
Children’s Sing-Along: See September 1. Preschool Music: See September 1.
Arts & Crafts
Baby & Maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:45-7:15 p.m.
Baby & Maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 8:30-9:30 a.m. Mother’s Gathering: See September 4.
Food
Five Corners Farmers Market: See September 4. Foodways Fridays: See September 4. Richmond Farmers Market: See September 4.
Games
Dungeons & Dragons: See September 11.
Shelburne Farms Harvest Festival 4pm
9, 101 r e b m e t p e S Saturday,
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Champlain Island Farmers Market: See September 2.
and
KIDS VT
Food
25 FRIDAY
SEPTEMBER 2015
Brushbots: Junior technicians assemble robots from toothbrushes and tiny motors in this STEAM activity. Fairfax Community Library, 3-4 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 849-2420.
Music for Preschoolers: See September 10.
KIDSVT.COM
23 WEDNESDAY
Saturday, September 12, 10-2pm
Arts & Crafts
Colchester Lego Club: See September 10. PBS Kids at the Library: Younger viewers enjoy an animated episode, snacks and crafts. Sponsored by Vermont PBS. South Burlington Community Library, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 652-7080. Spanish Musical Kids: See September 3.
Library & Books
at the South End Art Hop
Programs for Preschoolers: See September 2. Wagon-Ride Wednesdays: See September 2.
22 TUESDAY
Burlington Postnatal Yoga: See September 1. Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. Montpelier Postnatal Yoga: See September 1.
Kids Hop
Nature & Science
24 THURSDAY
Baby & Maternity
at...
Movie Matinee: See September 19.
Music for Preschoolers: See September 10. 11 a.m.
Preschool Art: See September 8.
Come see
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Health & Fitness
Essex Open Gym: See September 2. Yoga with Danielle: See September 3.
See Dr. First videos “First With Kids” at uvmhealth.org.
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Fourth Friday Family Film Night: Families enjoy a movie while eating their own snacks or the library’s. Carpenter-Carse Library, Hinesburg, 6-8 p.m. Free. Info, 482-2878.
Music
Health & Fitness
Brownell Drop-in Story Time: See September 4. Early Bird Math: See September 4.
Movies 8/26/15 1:28 PM
Kids Music With Linda ‘Tickle Belly’ Bassick: See September 4.
26 SATURDAY
Arts & Crafts
Saturday Kids Drop-In Craft Class: See September 5. Traditional Craft Saturdays: See September 5. Webby’s Art Studio: See September 3.
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Shelburne Orchards
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KIDS VT
SEPTEMBER 2015
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grows locally so that you can buy locally! Enjoy the apple harvest! Pick apples and shop at the Cider House Farm Market Seasonal Hours September & October Monday–Saturday 9–6 Sunday 9–5
2nd Annual “Bee Here Now” Sunday, Sept. 13 from 10-4 Learn all about the bees!
∑
14th Annual Pie Fest & Cider House Run Sunday, Sept. 27 from 11-2:30
216 Orchard Road, Shelburne (802) 985-2753 www.shelburneorchards.com k4t-ShelburneOrchards0915.indd 1
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Food
Burlington Farmers Market: See September 5. Capital City Farmers Market: See September 5. Champlain Island Farmers Market: See September 5. Chocolate-Bar Making: See September 5. Middlebury Farmers Market: See September 2. Rutland Farmers Market: See September 5. Shelburne Farmers Market: See September 5.
Library & Books vermont commons school, grades 6-12, south burlington, vt
Pittsford Harvest Fair: Handmade or home-grown is the theme in this outdoor festival. All ages. Pittsford Village Green, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Free. Info, 483-9972.
Chace Mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
Education
Museum Day Live!: Nineteen historic sites and museums across the state open their doors to the public free of charge during this national event sponsored by Smithsonian magazine. Visit smithsonian.com/museumdaylive to search for participating locations. Various locations statewide, Free. Info, museumday@ si.edu. Summer Naturalist Program: See September 5.
Fairs & Festivals
Bristol Harvest Festival: The fun commences with a pancake breakfast, bandstand music, horse-drawn wagon rides and a pie-eating contest. All ages. Bristol Town Green, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 453-5885. Burke Fall Foliage Festival: Families fall in love with autumn during daylong festivities including a parade, rubber duck race, bounce houses, face painting, wagon rides, a farm animal petting zoo and an interactive reptile exhibit. All ages. Village Green, East Burke, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Free. Info, 626-4124. Champlain Mini Maker Faire: Tech enthusiasts celebrate the DIY mindset at this quirky science fair featuring robotics, student experiments, arts and crafts, and more. Shelburne Farms, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $6-9; free for ages 10 and under. Info, 863-5956. Forest Festival Weekend: Woods lovers explore the park’s history and ecology while enjoying horse-drawn wagon rides, woodworking and portable sawmill demonstrations, hikes with foresters, and wood crafts for kids. All ages. Marsh-Billings Rockefeller National Historical Park, Woodstock, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Info, 457-3368.
EvoKids Saturday Yoga: See September 19.
Library & Books
South Burlington Library Card Day: Young readers sign up for their first library card, scamper into a scavenger hunt and receive a book bag to decorate. Ages 5 and up. South Burlington Community Library, 9:30-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 652-7080.
Nature & Science
Archaeology Day: How did local people live in the past? This question is explored through pottery and tool-making demos, spear throwing, and a hands-on dig during this daylong celebration of humans. Montshire Museum of Science, Norwich, 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Regular admission; $11-14, free for children under 2. Info, 649-2200. Bird-Monitoring Walk: Eagle-eyed participants bring binoculars to search the museum’s property for fluttering feathers. Best for adults and older children. Birds of Vermont Museum, Huntington, 7:30-8:30 a.m. Free; donations welcome; preregister. Info, 434-2167. Full Dome Planetarium: See September 5. Hayrides to the Pumpkin Patch: Families hitch a wagon ride to the pick-your-own field. Sam Mazza’s Farm Market, Colchester, 10 a.m.4 p.m. Free. Info, 655-3440. Preschool Program: Itsy Bitsy Spiders: Wee ones and families investigate eight-legged creatures with Audubon Vermont. Ages 3 and up. Carpenter-Carse Library, Hinesburg, 10:30 a.m.-noon. Free; preregister. Info, 482-2878. Sam Mazza’s Giant Pumpkin Weigh-In: Oversize gourds battle it out for the heavyweight title. Onlookers enjoy hayrides, apple-cider doughnuts and a corn maze. Sam Mazza’s Farm Market, Colchester, noon-3 p.m. Free. Info, 655-3440. Volunteer Work Day: People of all ages lend their helping hands to care for the museum and its grounds. Sandwiches provided. Birds of Vermont Museum, Huntington, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 434-2167.
27 SUNDAY
Baby & maternity
Burlington Postnatal Yoga: See September 1, 12:15-1:30 p.m. Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 10-11:30 a.m.
community
Better L8 Than Never car show: Speed enthusiasts check out hundreds of cars. Live music, raffles, food and a flea market add to the action. All ages. Bristol Recreation Fields, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Donations to Camp Ta-Kum-Ta. Info, 388-7951.
dance
Auditions for ‘The Nutcracker’: Young ballerinas try out for a role in this magical holiday production. Ages 4-18. Flynn Center for the Performing Arts, Burlington, 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. $15. Info, 253-5151.
Fairs & Festivals 19th-century Apple & Harvest Festival: Visitors churn ice cream, press cider, sample heirloom apples, play old-fashioned games and hike the Lookout Trail at this state historic site. All ages. Justin Morrill Homestead, Strafford Village, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. $5-10 includes lunch. Info, 765-4288. champlain mini maker Faire: See September 26, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Forest Festival Weekend: See September 26. FTK Fall Family carnival: Families delight in a day of games, prizes and free food, and enjoy live performances and a bouncy house, all hosted by For the Kids, a Middlebury College organization founded to spread awareness about childhood illness and raise funds for the Vermont Children’s Hospital. Middlbury College, Forest Lawn, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Free. Info, 615-428-8157. shelburne orchards Pie Fest: Bakers enter their double-crust creations by 11:30 a.m. After judging, spectators’ forks dive in. Shelburne Orchards, 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 864-7528.
Food
stowe Farmers market: See September 6. Winooski Farmers market: See September 6.
Health & Fitness
Essex open Gym: See September 2, 1-2:30 p.m.
Nature & science
Want to to encourage encourage your your students students totobike bike— — Want and give give them them the the skills skills to to do do ititsafely? safely? and We can can help! help! We Kohl’s Kids Bike Smart Smart isis aa free free bike bike skillls skilllseducation education for Vermont Vermont schools schools and andcamps. camps. program for
Library & Books
Burlington stories With megan: See September 14.
music
music for Preschoolers: See September 10, 11 a.m.
www.KohlsKidsBikeSmart.com www.KohlsKidsBikeSmart.com
29 TUESDAY
Arts & crafts
Say you saw it in
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Preschool Art: See September 8.
Baby & maternity
Burlington Postnatal Yoga: See September 1. Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. chace mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. Untitled-21 montpelier Postnatal Yoga: See September 1.
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5/25/12 9:40 AM
Games
Gaming For Teens & Adults: See September 8.
Library & Books
Read to a dog: Pet-loving kiddos share books with registered therapy pooches. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 3:30-4:30 p.m. Free; preregister. Info, 878-4918.
movies
Youth media Lab: See September 1.
music
children’s sing-Along: See September 1. Preschool music: See September 1.
30 WEDNESDAY
Baby & maternity
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:45-7:15 p.m.
Food
middlebury Farmers market: See September 2. Woodstock market on the Green: See September 2.
Book Bingo: Participants play games for prizes and get acquainted with new titles. Ages 8 and up. South Burlington Community Library, 3:15 p.m. Free. Info, 652-7080. colchester Read to Hank the Therapy dog: See September 2. Little Boom VT: See September 2.
Essex open Gym: See September 2.
Library & Books
KidsVT.com September 2015
Nature & science
Programs for Preschoolers: See September 2. Wagon-Ride Wednesdays: See September 2. K
Kids VT
After-school Games: Gamers bring their own Magic, Pokémon or Yu-Gi-Oh! cards, or borrow a deck from the library. Snacks provided.
trailer to your school!
Essex open Gym: See September 2.
28 MONDAY
Games
biketrailersmart to your school!
Health & Fitness
Health & Fitness
Burlington Prenatal Yoga: See September 1, 5:45-7:15 p.m. chace mill Prenatal Barre: See September 7. chace mill Prenatal Yoga: See September 1. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Pee Wee Pilates: See September 7.
e
Kohl’s Kids
Grades 3 and up. Dorothy Alling Memorial Library, Williston, 3-4 p.m. Free. Info, 878-4918.
Full dome Planetarium: See September 5. Hayrides to the Pumpkin Patch: See September 26.
Baby & maternity
th Bring
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PRESENTS
A Talent Show for Vermont’s Rising Stars
Audition for the Kids VT Spectacular Spectacular —a talent show for Vermont’s rising stars at Higher Ground in December 2015. To participate you must try out in front of a panel of judges.
LIVE AUDITIONS
Saturday, November 7
Register your act at kidsvt.com/talentshow
SPONSORED BY:
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Kids VT
September 2015
kidsvt.com
CASTING CALL!
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✱ HABITAT B Y SAR A H GA L B RAIT H PHOTOS: TRISTAN VON DUNTZ
Cider collects in a stainless-steel pot
The press in action
Parents: Hal Ellms and Sally Fox Sons: Hayden, 14, and Bridger, 12
Backyard Cidery
• For a twist on traditional apple cider, try adding berries or pear slices to the apples before grinding.
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“Habitat” celebrates places where Vermont families live and play. Got a sweet space you’d like us to see? Email us at ideas@kidsvt.com.
SEPTEMBER 2015
estimates that the party produces 15 to 20 gallons of fresh apple cider for his family and friends to enjoy every year. “It’s a lot of fun because it brings people together in a participatory fashion,” he says. And because everyone gets to drink fresh cider on the spot — and take some home. Ellms and his family enjoy the sweet stuff cold or warm with cinnamon; they reserve a few gallons for their freezer, too. “A lot of people are amazed that that’s all cider is,” says Ellms. “They think of cider from the store and don’t realize it’s made from just squeezing the apples.”
• A wooden press doesn’t need much care, but it should be cleaned and moisturized with olive oil before it’s stored for the season.
KIDSVT.COM
THE WOODEN CIDER PRESS tucked into the corner of Hal Ellms’ and Sally Fox’s Middlesex garage comes out just once a year. It’s the centerpiece of the family’s annual backyard cider-making party in early October. Thirty to 40 of their friends attend, bringing apples —anywhere from a bagful to a carload, some harvested from their own yards. They form an assembly line around the press. Kids and adults wash the apples, chop them in half, load them into the grinder and begin pressing cider. The peels stay on; they’re responsible for the cider’s zingy flavor. Here’s how it works: The press sits atop a wooden frame, a few feet off the ground so a bucket fits underneath. Cider makers turn a hand-crank grinder to mash the halved apples. From there, the mash goes into a lidded wooden barrel, where someone squeezes out the juice using a hand-crank auger. Cider pours out of a hole at the bottom of the press, is strained through a sieve and collects in a stainless-steel pot. Once the batch is done, the leftover mash is loaded into a wheelbarrow and dumped on a compost pile. Ellms, who bought the used cider press 12 years ago,
• Used cider presses are often for sale in classified ads, at tag sales or in local bulletins. They typically range in price from $200 to $300; Hal Ellms scored his for $125.
HANDS ON
Book-Inspired Contest Sponsored by
Calling all bookworms!
Send us a drawing and caption inspired by the book for the chance to win some literary loot.
Your child. Your orthodontist.
ORTHODONTICS
DRS. DRS.PETERSON, PETERSON,RYAN RYAN & & EATON EATON
Whether you’re considering clear aligners, retainers or today’s braces, an orthodontist is the smart choice. Orthodontists are specialists in straightening teeth and aligning your bite. They have two to three years of education beyond dental school. So they’re experts at helping you get a great smile—that feels great, too.
In Miss Bindergarten Gets Ready for Kindergarten by Joseph Slate, a canine teacher and her animal students prepare for the first day of school. What was your favorite thing about the first day of school? Write about it, then draw a picture that shows the best part of the day.
Braces for Children & Adults — champlainortho.net ST. ALBANS OFFICE 80 Mapleville Depot 527-7100 k4t-ChamplainOrtho0215.indd 1
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Together, we can develop a lifetime of healthy habits for your family through nutrition counseling, breastfeeding help, healthy foods, and more. You may be surprised at who can join.
KIDS VT
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_______________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________ We’ll pick the four most creative entries and publish one of them in the next issue. Winners receive a $25 gift certificate to Crow Bookshop. Deadline to enter is September 15. Send your entries to: Kids VT, attn: Book Review, P.O. Box 1184, Burlington, VT 05402.
SEPTEMBER 2015
KIDSVT.COM
Burlington Williston St. Albans 862-6721 878-5323 527-7100 www.champlainortho.net
Join Today. 1.800.649.4357 www.HealthVermont.gov/WIC
New Books, Used Books, Remainders at GREAT PRICES!
Name ________________________________ Age __________________________________ Town ________________________________ Email ________________________________ Phone ________________________________
14 Church Street Burlington crowbooks.com 862-0848
ANSWERS P.51
PUZZLE PAGE Jumble
Birthday Club These winners get gift certificates to:
BY DAVID L. HOYT & JEFF KNUREK
The letters of these crazy words are all mixed up. To play the game, put them back into the right order so that they make real words you can find in your dictionary. Write the letters of each real word under each crazy word, but only one letter to a square.
Congratulations ASHA lives in Burlington and turns 8 on September 4. She loves swimming and ice cream. Minecraft is her favorite video game. Asha wins a birthday-party package for up to 10 kids.
to our September Birthday Club winners!
Join the Club!
To enter, submit information using the online form at kidsvt.com/birthday-club.
You are now ready to solve this month’s Jumble For Kids. Study the picture for a hint. Then play around with the letters in the circles. You’ll find you can put them in order so that they make your funny answer.
Print your answer here:
AVA lives in South Hero and turns 7 on September 5. She’s a funny, caring, adventurous and outgoing kid who loves to swim and dance. Her favorite subject in school is math.
Maze Puzzles4Kids
BY HELENA HOVANEC
Riddle Search — Places to live
RILEY lives in Newport and turns 8 on September 19. She enjoys volunteering in her school’s garden, participating in obstacle races and spending time outside.
More to do under one roof than anywhere in VT! MINI-GOLF • GIANT PLAY STRUCTURE PIZZA • CAKES • LASER TAG ARCADE • BATTING CAGES BIRTHDAY CROWN OR TIARA
49
1205 Airport Pky • So. Burlington (802) 862-7888
KIDS VT
Riddle Answer:
turns 13 on September 14. She has a flair for fashion and design and is a voracious reader of novels. She also enjoys writing poetry, snowboarding and computer programming.
VT’S BIRTHDAY CAPITAL
SEPTEMBER 2015
HUT IGLOO PALAZZO PENTHOUSE TENT TEPEE TRIPLEX VILLA
MARYAM lives in Montpelier and
Ava, Maryam and Riley each win a player’s pass.
KIDSVT.COM
Search up, down and diagonally, both forward and backward to find every word on the list. Circle each one as you find it. When all the words are circled, take the UNUSED letters and write them on the blanks below. Read from left to right, top to bottom to answer this riddle: Where do supernatural creatures live?
APARTMENT BARN BUNGALOW CABIN CHALET CONDO CO-OP COTTAGE DORM HIGH-RISE
Just give us your contact info, your children’s names and birth dates, and a photo, and they’re automatically enrolled.
COLORING CONTEST! Three winners will each receive a one-day pass to Petra Cliffs. Send Kids VT your work of art by September 15. Be sure to include the info at right with your submission. Winners will be chosen in the following categories: (1) ages 5 and younger, (2) ages 6-8 and (3) ages 9-12. Winners will be named in the October issue of Kids VT. Send your high-resolution scans to art@kidsvt.com, or mail a copy to Kids VT, P.O. Box 1184, Burlington, VT 05402.
HANDS ON Title _______________________________________________ Artist _____________________________________________ Age _______________________________________________ Town _____________________________________________ Email _____________________________________________
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KIDS VT
SEPTEMBER 2015
KIDSVT.COM
Phone _____________________________________________
✱ USE YOUR WORDS B Y KIM B E RLY HARRIN G TON
School Year’s Eve
Back to School
Resolving to embrace the wild ride
SEPTEMBER 2015
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“Use Your Words” is a monthly essay in which writers reflect on parenting and childhood. Got a story to share? Email us at ideas@kidsvt.com.
PUZZLE PAGE ANSWERS
JUmbLES bug. shed. test. warm.
We’ll make it to Thursday, at least, before we wash up on the shores of Pizza Night yet again.
calendar
RIDDLE ANSWER: they knew the carpenter had been there because they — SAW DUSt
NGTON
Learn to cook? Unrealistically ambitious much? But I did get clued into a couple of simple dinner ideas that made me feel like a legit mother who occasionally cooks for her Submit your info kids instead of just being the Official Opener of the Box of Mac and Cheese. by the 15th of the Work out and look like a bikini model by June? Er, month online at negative Ghost Rider, the pattern is full. Six years into kidsvt.com or to freelancing, I let the expectation of working out during my kid-free days die for good. Despite calendar@kidsvt.com having more energy in the morning than I have at night, I forced myself to head out the door to exercise once my husband returned home. Did I 100 percent drop it once summer started because, well, summer? You bet. But I know I’ll get back to it once school starts because I finally figured out what works for me (and my work). Did I take a three-hour screen break every afternoon? Yes and K-UYW-calendar.indd 1 8/28/15 10:46 AM no. Once the year was rolling, my kids were busier than I was — with homework, piano practice, reading, (see p.49) chores. And that would have made my sitting around, staring at them with an expectant expression, kind of weird. Those times were perfect for responding to emails, invoicing, phone calls — the miscellaneous duties of a freelancer. When we could swing it, we took off for the beach in early September, went for long drives, and picked sunflowers and raspberries. As the weather cooled, we hit apple orchards and stuffed our faces with cider doughnuts. In other words, when we could, we’d carpe the heck out of those diems. As I work on my list of resolutions for this school year, there’s one I’ll be making for sure. It’s to feel grateful for the frenzy. To know that it won’t always be like this, life bursting with the mechanics of running a young family. To settle in, knowing half of my kids’ years at home are already behind us. There are only so many summers left for School Year Resolutions. So, together, let’s resolve to embrace the wild ride. To make it a year to jump in, to feel like we’re good at something, to cut loose what makes us feel like we’re failing. To appreciate that the school year always goes by faster than we think, even though in February it feels like time starts to move in reverse. Let’s make it a year to respect work, because without it there wouldn’t be any money for all of that summer stuff. A year to keep trying, to celebrate the small victories, to be ok with ok. And finally, a year that we’ll all look back on next June and say, “Hey, not too shabby.”
RIDDLE SEARCH ANSWER: In a ghost town.
COURTESY OF KIMBERLY HARRI
List your events for free in the Kids VT monthly calendar.
KIDSVT.COM
WHEN MY HUSBAND AND I MOVED to Vermont from Oregon 12 years ago, it was impossible to miss the frenzy of summer. It felt like a starting gun went off on Memorial Day weekend; every car we passed was bungeed within an inch of its life with bikes, grills and canoes. And that was before our kids, Walker, 11, and Hawthorne, 9, were born. Late August is like the December of summer: So much to do, so little time, but how can you say no to anything? Responsibilities slide and hangovers (literal, emotional and professional) abound. So inevitably we make promises as the clock strikes midnight before the first day of school. I call them School Year Resolutions. Last August I resolved to learn how to cook, a resolution I make every school year despite the fact that cooking is my straight up idea of hell. I resolved to take a break from all screens from the time my kids walked in the door from school until I made yet another horrible dinner. I resolved to work out. How many years have I made this promise to myself? How long ago was 1996, again? The list stretched to an infinity point on the horizon, and it all added up to this: We will be better this year. We will slice through the week like a hot knife through butter. We’ll make it to Thursday, at least, before we wash up on the shores of Pizza Night yet again. But those annual promises — just like most New Year’s resolutions — are often left in the dust within weeks. Months later, as the end of the school year approached, I was fully prepared to accept that I had failed. Again. But the experience I had with my actual New Year’s resolutions changed my mind. I made about a dozen of them and wrote them down, determined. Did I fulfill all of them? Nope. But the ones I did stick to had a profound effect on my year. I resolved to focus on my personal writing for the first time in two decades. And that one resolution sprouted a bunch of specific sub-resolutions. The results? My work was published on McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, Huffington Post and Medium; one piece, “How to Talk to Your Kids About Bernie Sanders,” went viral; and with a good friend I launched a new parenting humor site, RAZED. The New Year’s resolutions I didn’t uphold — and there were many — were a lot easier to let go of in the face of that success. With that spirit of high fiving myself for what I had achieved (and letting go of what I hadn’t), I looked back at my School Year Resolutions.
Planning a kids’ event?
ESSEX • SOUTH BURLINGTON • WILLISTON Hours of Operation: Monday – Friday 7:45am – 5:30pm
Openings at all three Kids & Fitness Locations for fall. NEW HALF-DAY PRESCHOOL PROGRAM PROUD TO BE A PRE-QUALIFIED EARLY LEARNING PARTNER
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Essex | 879-7734 ext. 1113 AlexandraD@edgevt.com kfp-TheEdge0815.indd 1
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Williston | 860-3343 ext. 1312 MichelleR2@edgevt.com 7/23/15 12:33 PM