Almanac Weekly #44 2018

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

A miscellany of Hudson Valley art, adventure and ideas | Calendar & Classifieds | Issue 44 | Nov. 1 – 8 Stage Shawn Colvin at Levon Helm Studios | Thurston Moore at BSP Nature Rockefeller Center tree selected from Hudson Valley property Taste Red Hook & The Chocolate Festival | Hudson Valley Restaurant Week | Community Week at Emerson | Fall Back Festival at Bad Seed Movie Jurassic Park on the big screen at UPAC | The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari at Bard with live jazz score, tap dancer & costume contest

couture to cornstalks: joe eula’s legacy of line

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ILLUSTRATION BY JOE EULA | COURTESY OF HARPER COLLINS


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Protect your home—and your wallet—from fluctuating fuel costs with Main-Care Energy’s no-risk Capped Price Protection Plan, and never again experience sticker shock when you open your heating fuel bill.

Nov. 1, 2018


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

CHECK IT OUT

100s of things to do every week

Rockefeller Center Christmas tree selected from Hudson Valley property

Leaving the house can be a wild ride...

Kingston (845) 514-3998 www.thestorefrontgallery.com

Coleman Craft Fair this weekend The annual Coleman Craft Fair comes to Coleman Catholic High on the weekend of November 3 and 4. Two floors full of craft items will on display and for sale. The hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday. Admission costs $5, $4 for students and seniors. Children aged 12 and under are admitted free.

The next Rockefeller Center Christmas tree, in the center of the photo

Rockefeller Center has announced that the 2018 Christmas tree will come from Wallkill. The Norway Spruce, near the corner of Route 32 and Fostertown Road, will be cut on Thursday, November 8 and arrive at Rockefeller Center on Saturday, November 10. After being wrapped with more than 50,000 multi-colored LED lights and crowned with a brand new Swarovski star designed by architect Daniel Libeskind, the tree will be lit during the live broadcast Christmas in Rockefeller Center on Wednesday, November 28. The Rockefeller Center Christmas tree will be on display until January 7.

Dave Leonard Dance Party on Friday at Colony in Woodstock

A one-day knitting class will be held at Countrywool in Hudson on Sunday, Nov. 4. This course is part of the non-credit offerings from Columbia-Greene Community College.

CRAFT

LEARN TO KNIT A WOOL SCARF IN ONE DAY IN HUDSON

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n partnership with Hudson’s Countrywool, Columbia-Greene Community College presents “Knitting a Scarf with Wool” on Sunday, November 4. This three-hour class teaches the basics of knitting with soft and renewable wool yarn. Topics include casting on, knit stitch, purl stitch, garter stitch, seed stitch, ribbing stitch, cable stitch, joining yarn and casting off. Continental, English or American knitting will be taught, with full support for right- or left-handed knitters. A five-foot scarf with all pattern stitches represented will be the class project. Instructor Claudia Krisniski is the owner of Countrywool and has been teaching facets of the fiber arts for more than 35 years. The required materials packet costs $37. For more information or to register, call (518) 828-4181, extension 3342, or email communityservices@ sunycgcc.edu. “Knitting a Scarf with Wool” class, Sunday, Nov. 4, Noon-3 p.m., $37, Countrywool, 9 Spring Rd., Hudson, http://countrywool.com ( for directions). To register, call (518) 828-4181, ext. 3342, or email communityservices@sunycgcc.edu.

22 Rock City Rd. Woodstock (845) 679-ROCK www.colonywoodstock.com

A Woodstock tradition, Colony hosts a Dave Leonard Dance Party on Friday, November 2. The veteran WDST deejay and host of Radio Unleashed will be joined by deejay Michael Truckpile and other guests as he spins a mix of old soul, Motown, hip hop, alternative ’80s & ’90s and some club and current favorites. Tickets cost $10 in advance, $15 at the door. Dave Leonard Dance Party Friday, Nov. 2 9 p.m. Colony

Antique Post Card Show

(post cards, ephemera & memorabilia)

Special Exhibit

AFTER HALLOWEEN POSTCARD SHOW

Sunday, Nov. 4th, 2018 9 am - 4 pm 467 Broadway, Kingston, NY

Midtown Neighborhood Center next to Rite-Aid

$4 Admission • Door Prize

LARGEST POST CARD SHOW IN UPSTATE NY

Held by Kaaterskill Post Card Club

For more info call 845-383-0061

“Gerrymandering” art show opens Saturday at Storefront Gallery The Storefront Gallery in Kingston’s Rondout District presents “Gerrymandering: Pick Your Shape and Run with It,” a group show in which more than a dozen accomplished artists were asked to interpret the practice of gerrymandering through their art. Critics of the practice often cite

the outlandish shapes that emerge from gerrymandered districts. These shapes and the concept behind it have become the inspiration for all of the participating artists. The opening reception will be held on Saturday, November 3 during Kingston’s popular First Saturday Art Gallery Walk. The exhibition will be on view through November 17. Gallery hours are by appointment and 24/7 through the storefront windows. “Gerrymandering: Pick Your Shape and Run with It” Saturday, Nov. 3 5-8 p.m., Free The Storefront Gallery 93 Broadway

Coleman Craft Fair Saturday/Sunday, Nov. 3/4 10 a.m.-4/3 p.m. $5/$4 Coleman Catholic High School 430 Hurley Ave. Hurley (845) 338-2750 www.colemancatholic.org

Fall Back Festival this Saturday at Bad Seed in Highland Named for the day we turn the clocks back, Bad Seed’s Fall Back Festival is a celebration of the esteemed cider and of the great natural beauty and culture of the Hudson Valley. The ticket price includes unlimited unique, small-batch craft hard ciders made using apples grown in the Hudson Valley exclusively for this event, along with a variety of local beers, totaling 20 taps of options. To round it out, barbecue will be available for purchase, along with such classic fall foods as apple cider doughnuts and homemade pie. Tickets (limited to 200) are available for $35 at the door and at a discount in advance. Bad Seed’s Fall Back Festival Saturday, Nov. 3, 1-5 p.m. $35 Bad Seed Cider Co. 43 Bailey’s Gap Rd. Highland (845) 236-0956 www.badseedhardcider.com/events

Kingston Model Railroad Club 99 Susan St. (off Pine Grove Avenue) Kingston, NY

Every Saturday and Sunday in November

MODEL RAILROAD SHOW A Complete ‘0’ Scale Railroad System in Action! • Scale Models of Steam and Diesel Locomotives • Old Fashioned and Modern Trains • Complete Villages & Scenery Modeled After the Hudson Valley RAILROAD MUSEUM • TROLLEYS • CIRCUS TRAIN THOMAS THE TANK ENGINE®

2018 SHOW DATES Nov. 3rd & 4th, 10th & 11th, 17th & 18th, 24th & 25th Dec. 1st & 2nd

OPEN: 12 noon - 5 p.m. Adults $6.00 - Children $2.00 Further Information: 845-334-8233


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

MUSIC New name, new mission WCO reincarnates as Woodstock Symphony Orchestra

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wo years ago, as the new music director of the Woodstock Chamber Orchestra, Jonathan Handman decided that he had two central missions with the orchestra. The first was to lead the best possible performances. The second was to

MUSIC

Shawn Colvin to perform at Levon Helm Studios in Woodstock enlarge the orchestra’s audience. They were, of course, connected: The better the concerts, the more people they would draw. But Handman also wanted to perform music people would want to hear. The chamber orchestra could play Mozart and Haydn, and maybe Beethoven, but certainly not Schumann, Brahms and Dvorák. It needed to expand.

Mirabai of Woodstock Celebrating 30 Years Gif ts, Book s and Work shops for Serenit y, W isdom and Transformat ion.

Upcoming Events Inside the 7 Veils: Unveiling Your Sacred Color w/ Meredith Narissi Sat. Nov 3 2-4PM $20/$25* Private Sessions: 7 Veils Energy Balancing w/ Meredith Narissi Sun. Nov 4 12-6PM Call for appt/rates Mind Over Matter: Discovering Regeneration Healing w/ Sirriya Din Thurs. Nov 8 6-8PM 20/$25* * Lower price for early reg./pre-payment made at least 48 hrs. in advance

Open 7 Days • 11 to 7 23 Mill Hill Road • Woodstock, NY (845) 679-2100 • www.mirabai.com

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ne of the real luminaries of the confessional singer/songwriter tradition, Shawn Colvin may have arrived a decade or two too late to have enjoyed the peak of the form, but her early records Steady On and A Few Small Repairs are straight-up classics of the genre, both in the literate and quietly transgressive quality of the songs and in their sophisticated, elegant musical settings, which put them in the elite company of the best of Paul Simon and Joni Mitchell. With local star Simi Stone opening, Shawn Colvin performs at the Levon Helm Studios on Friday, November 9. Tickets cost $75 seated, $45 standing. – John Burdick Shawn Colvin, Friday, Nov. 9, 8 p.m., $75/$45, Levon Helm Studios, 160 Plochmann Ln., Woodstock, (845) 679-2744, https:// levonhelm.com

Over Handman’s tenure, the Woodstock Chamber Orchestra has indeed performed Beethoven, Schumann, Brahms and Dvorák, gradually adding more players. By the end of last season, it had become obvious that this was no longer a chamber orchestra. And at the last concert of last season, the orchestra’s executive director, Dana Marks, announced a new mission and a new name: the Woodstock Symphony Orchestra. Within the available season of four concerts, Handman intends to present as wide a variety of music as he can. The opening concert of the 2018/19 season includes music by Suppé, Borodin, Smetana and, yes, Beethoven: the beloved “Pastorale,” Symphony No. 6. It’s something of a “top pops” orchestral concert, and will probably attract a good-sized audience to the Woodstock Playhouse. The remainder of the season, which takes place at four different venues, will include Sibelius’ Second Symphony

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(January 19), Elgar’s Enigma Variations (March 9) and Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto (April 27/28). But it also includes somewhat-lesser-known works, such as Offenbach’s Orpheus in the Underworld Overture and Dvorák’s Eighth Symphony, a masterpiece that is not the “New World” Symphony. In the future, Handman hopes to explore the legacy of past Woodstock Chamber Orchestra commissions by well-known local composers, along with similarly attractive but lesser-known music – music that only a true symphony orchestra can perform. – Leslie Gerber Woodstock Symphony Orchestra debut, Saturday, November 10, 7:30 p.m., $25/$20/$5, Woodstock Playhouse, 103 Mill Hill Road, Woodstock; (845) 266-3517, www.woodstocksymphonyorchestra.org.

Thurston Moore to play BSP in Kingston Mere months after former Sonic Youth bassist and songwriter Kim Gordon led her experimental noise duo Body/ Head to the backroom theater at BSP, Sonic Youth’s guitarist, principal songwriter and nominal frontman does same: Thurston Moore brings New Noise Guitar Explorations to BSP on Friday, November 2. Moore hasn’t slowed down much in the post-SY years. Efforts like 2017’s Rock N Roll Consciousness are

ALMANAC WEEKLY editor contributors

calendar manager classifieds

Julie O’Connor Bob Berman, John Burdick, Erica Chase-Salerno, Will Dendis, Sharyn Flanagan, Leslie Gerber, Mikhail Horowitz, Jeremiah Horrigan, Ann Hutton, Dion Ogust, Frances Marion Platt, Lee Reich, Lynn Woods, Carol Zaloom Donna Keefe Tobi Watson, Amy Murphy, Dale Geffner

ULSTER PUBLISHING publisher ................................. Geddy Sveikauskas executive editor, digital................Will Dendis production/technology director......Joe Morgan advertising director ................. Genia Wickwire advertising.......................Lynn Coraza, Sue Rogers, Pam Courselle, Elizabeth Jackson, Ralph Longendyke, Linda Saccoman, Jackie Polisar, Jenny Bella circulation manager.................... Dominic Labate production.............. Josh Gilligan, Rick Holland, Diane Congello-Brandes Almanac Weekly is distributed in Woodstock Times, New Paltz Times, Saugerties Times and Kingston Times and as a stand-alone publication throughout Ulster, Dutchess, Columbia & Greene counties. We’re located on the web at www.HudsonValleyOne.com. Have a story idea? To reach editor Julie O’Connor directly, e-mail AlmanacWeekly@gmail.com or write Almanac Weekly c/o Ulster Publishing, PO Box 3329, Kingston, NY 12402. Submit event info for calendar consideration two weeks in advance to calendar@ulsterpublishing.com (attn: Donna). To place a classified, e-mail copy to classifieds@ ulsterpublishing.com or call our office at (845) 334-8200. To place a display ad, call (845) 334-8200 or e-mail genia@ulsterpublishing.com.


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

www.liveatthefalcon.com

Fred Eaglesmith this Friday in Stone Ridge Acclaimed Canadian singer/songwriter Fred Eaglesmith performs at Marbletown Multi-Arts in Stone Ridge on Friday, November 2. Known for his colorful narrative songcraft and engaging performances, Eaglesmith claims no fewer than 18 solo records, including 2018’s bizarre and impressive Standard, which alternates between naked, unvarnished performances and trippy production pieces. The Los Angeles Times declared Eaglesmith “one of the genre’s most gifted lyricists and wildly entertaining performers.” Tickets cost $25.

DEUTSCHES FILMINSTITUT

The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari

SCREEN

THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI WITH LIVE SCORE, TAP DANCER & COSTUME CONTEST AT BARD

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ard College and the Catskill Jazz Factory continue the new tradition of setting classic silent films to modern live music on Friday, November 2. The silent horror classic The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari comes to new life, accompanied by the live music of the jazz trombonist and composer Chris Washburne and his ensemble, Rags and Roots, with vocalist Brianna Thomas. Drawing on melodies from 1921, the year the film was released, the score features a live tap-dancer and a jazz septet interacting in real time with a remastered print of the film. There will be an audience costume contest as well. Ticket prices start at $25.

The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari with live music by Chris Washburne, Friday, Nov. 2, 7:30 p.m., $25+, Sosnoff Theater, Fisher Center, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, (845) 758-7900, http://fishercenter.bard.edu

worthy and listenable extensions of Sonic Youth’s innovations: expansive, exploratory guitar rock that teases with pop built off a bed of VU cool, and then takes you as far out into sonic agitations and novel guitar abuse as you care to go. In New Noise Guitar Explorations, Moore focuses on the 12-string guitar. He is joined by James Sedwards (who has been playing in Moore’s band since 2014), by longtime associate Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley and, as if to make this unbearably huge for fans of avantnoise rock, My Bloody Valentine’s Deb Googe. Music critic and spoken-word artist Byron Coley is on hand for some spiel. Tickets cost $20 in advance, $25 at the door.

ming. We book world-class artists, musicians and soloists; young and emerging performers who are on the way; and local musicians.” Join RCMS for a reception with the artists at the conclusion of the concert. General admission costs $25. Student tickets are available for $5 with valid ID.

Thurston Moore Friday, Nov. 2, 8 p.m. $25/$20 BSP Backroom 323 Wall St. Kingston www.bspkingston.com

Falcon presents Bruce Katz this Friday

Äneas Humm & Babette Hierholzer in concert Sunday, Nov. 4 3 p.m. $25/$5 Church of the Messiah 6436 Montgomery St. Rhinebeck (845) 876-2870 www.rcmsmusic.org

JB’s Boogaloo Dance Party at Falcon Underground on Friday It is a groovetastic double bill at the Falcon Underground on Friday, November 2 when local keyboard ace Jeremy Baum and his band headline JB’s Boogaloo Dance Party, joining forces with the world, surf and jam vibe of Boom Boom Shake. Baum’s band for the occasion includes Chris Vitarello on guitar, Jay Collins on sax and flute, Manuel Quintana on drums and Carlos Valdez on percussion. Per usual, there is no cover charge at the Falcon, but generous direct-to-artist donation keeps the good times rolling. JB’s Boogaloo Dance Party with Boom Boom Shake Friday, Nov. 2, 8 p.m. The Falcon 1348 Route 9W Marlboro (845) 236-7970 www.liveatthefalcon.com

Bruce Katz Friday, Nov. 2 8 p.m. The Falcon 1348 Route 9W Marlboro (845) 236-7970

ISABELLA ROSSELLINI LINK LINK CIRCUS A vivid monologue about the brilliance of the animal kingdom.

Äneas Humm, Babette Hierholzer in concert on Sunday in Rhinebeck The Rhinebeck Chamber Music Society (RCMS) presents baritone Äneas Humm and pianist Babette Hierholzer in concert on Sunday, November 4 at the Church of the Messiah in Rhinebeck. Currently under the artistic direction of Hierholzer, RCMS celebrates its 40th year of bringing world-class musicians to the Hudson Valley. Hierholzer says, “We have a three-pronged approach to program-

Chris Vitarello on guitar and vocals. Per usual, there is no cover charge at the Falcon, but generous direct-toartist donation keeps the good times rolling.

Fred Eaglesmith Friday, Nov. 2 8 p.m. $25 Marbletown Multi-Arts 3588 Route 209 Stone Ridge www.cometomama.org

Former Gregg Allman collaborator and keyboard whiz Bruce Katz brings his polyroots blues, soul and groove music back to the Falcon in Marlboro on Friday, November 2. The four-time Blues Foundation nominee has released seven CDs as a leader and appeared on nearly 70 other recordings. He will be joined on this date by the Band’s Randy Ciarlante on drums and

Saturday, November 17 7:30 pm Sosnoff Theater Tickets start at $25

845-758-7900 fishercenter.bard.edu The Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Bard College Annandale-on-Hudson, New York

Photo by Brigitte Lacombe


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

MOVIE Rosendale Theatre screens Lotte Reiniger’s Adventures of Prince Achmed this Sunday

A valiant prince and an imperiled princess, shapeshifting sorcerers and a fairy with magical plumage, a flying horse and a flying palace, a caliph, an emperor, various demons and genies and a poor tailor named Aladdin: All are to be found in the earliest surviving full-length animated film, Lotte Reiniger’s The Adventures of Prince Achmed, based on stories and characters from One Thousand and One Nights. The groundbreaking silent movie took three years to make (19231926), using individual shots of cutout cardboard silhouettes at 24 frames per second, and two years to restore (1998-1999). This exquisite film is rarely seen, so it’s a special treat that the Rosendale Theatre will be screening it a 2 p.m. on November 4 as the latest installment in its monthly Silent Film Sundays series. Marta Waterman will provide live accompaniment on piano. Admission costs $6. To learn more, visit www. rosendaletheatre.org. The Adventures of Prince Achmed Sunday, Nov. 4 2-4 p.m. $6 Rosendale Theatre 408 Main St. Rosendale (845) 658-8989 www.rosendaletheatre.org

SCREEN

Jurassic Park on the big screen at UPAC this Friday

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he Bardavon loves to press the grand theatrical space of the Ulster Performing Arts Center (UPAC) into service as a popular moviehouse at populist prices. Your host also has the good sense not to limit the practice to fashionable oldies. On Friday, November 2, the Bardavon presents a (really) big screen showing of the original Jurassic Park, in which Jeff Goldblum lays down some heavy science about the nature of nature while making an impressive pyramid with his achromachian fingers. And then all Hell breaks loose. All seats cost a mere $6. – John Burdick Jurassic Park, Friday, Nov. 2, 7:30 p.m., $6, UPAC, 601 Broadway, Kingston, (845) 339-6088, www.bardavon.org

Colony to screen The Last Waltz for Levon Helm scholarship

Colony in Woodstock and the Rosendale Theatre kick off a Movie Night Series on Thursday, November 8 with a showing of the locally significant major motion picture The Last Waltz. Martin Scorsese’s film is widely , !

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regarded as one of a small handful of essential concert films. It finds Levon and the Band still in peak form at the end of the long run of the original lineup, supported by a variety of friends and admirers: Muddy Waters, Paul Butterfield, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, Dr. John, Neil Diamond, Eric Clapton and Bob Dylan, to name a few. The suggested donation is $5 to $10. All proceeds benefit the Levon Helm Memorial Scholarship Fund. Free popcorn will be served. The Last Waltz Thursday, Nov. 8 8 p.m.

$5-$10 Colony 22 Rock City Rd. Woodstock (845) 679-ROCK www.colonywoodstock.com

Free screening of Deep Water in New Paltz Willow-based documentarian Tobe Carey has produced an impressive body of work over the years, largely dealing with local history of the Catskills and mid-Hudson region. The saga of the building of the Ashokan and Schoharie Reservoirs, the Shandaken Tunnel and the Catskill Aqueduct is explored in his 45-minute film Deep Water: Building the Catskill Water System.

Narrated by Robb Webb (the voice of 60 Minutes II), Deep Water documents how several Catskill Mountain towns were destroyed and flooded, how immigrant workers built the dams and tunnels and how brilliant engineering and political maneuvering allowed the system to be built. The soundtrack includes music, including reservoir work songs, performed by Abby Newton, Al Petteway and Amy White, Cindy Cashdollar, Zoe Zak, Artie Traum, Bill Keith, Robbie Dupree and John Herald. The New Paltz Historical Society will host a free screening of Deep Water at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, November 7 at the New Paltz Community Center. Producer/ director Carey will be on hand, and refreshments will be served. Screening of Deep Water

ORPHEUM

198 Main St. Saugerties, NY • 845-246-6561 Fri & Sat at 7:20 & 9:30, Sun, Mon, Tues & Thur at 7:30 Jamie Lee Curtis (R)

Fri & Sat at 7:20 & 9:40, Sun, Mon, Tues & Thur at 7:30 Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga

A STAR IS BORN

(R)

Fri & Sat at 7:20 & 9:40, Sun, Mon, Tues & Thur at 7:30 Rami Malek, Ben Hardy (R)

Mon & Thur: All Seats $6 • Closed Wednesday


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

NIGHT SKY

Bucketlist sky phenomena

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ho doesn’t enjoy looking at towering orange cumulus clouds in the late afternoon sun? Or a brilliant meteor flashing across the sky? Or the Milky Way away from city lights? Such sights are common in some seasons, but not others. Towering cumulus clouds are frequent in summer, but rare in winter. The Milky Way is prominent every autumn, but absent in the spring. Meteors are far more prevalent from August through December than during the rest of the year. Yet, other gorgeous sky apparitions can happen anytime and, despite not requiring telescopes, still manage to be rarely observed. Some of these are nearly mythical. So here are my top six sky apparitions that belong on everyone’s bucket list, most of which appear in your own backyard. 6. The Northern Lights If you live in a big city and refuse to travel, forget this one. But if you’re willing to go to Alaska (join us, some year!) or merely have patience, you’ll see the fabled lights. From here, there’s a good display in all rural locations once a decade or so. You’ll see aurora predictions in the media a day in advance, based on sudden solar storms sending material in our direction. But you’re out of luck if the Moon is nearly full. 5. Cloud iridescence This is much more easily seen through sunglasses. Simply look at the white fringes of clouds in the vicinity of the Sun, especially high-altitude clouds. Before too long you’ll observe strange non-spectral colors. Such non-prismatic hues mean colors never seen in a rainbow! We’re talking about an odd brownish yellow-orange, aquamarine, purple, maroon…wow, they can amaze and astound. Such cloud iridescence appears weekly. It’s not rare at all. It’s caused by diffraction: the same process that produces swirly psychedelic colors on oily roadside puddles. 4. The Circumzenithal Arc More vivid than a rainbow, and featuring the same colors, this brilliant arc appears nearly straight overhead and always takes one’s breath away. It’s invariably oriented like a smile, not a frown like the rainbow exhibits. It appears a few times a month. Simply look nearly straight up, directly above the lowish Sun whenever the sky has thin ice layers or thin cirrus clouds. The CZA best appears when the Sun is between 15 and 27 degrees high: a situation seen this month, after Sunday’s clock change, between 1:30 and 3 p.m.

Wednesday, Nov. 7, 7 p.m. New Paltz Community Center 3 Veterans’ Dr., New Paltz

Modified screening & discussion with NOFA executive director at TSL

In Modified: A Food Lover’s Journey into GMOs (2017) a filmmaker and her mother embark on a poignant investigative journey to find out why genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are not labeled on food products in the US and Canada, despite being labeled in 64 countries around the world. Interweaving the personal and the political, the film is anchored in the filmmaker’s relationship to her mom, a gardener and food activist who battled cancer during the film’s production. Their intimate quest for

answers, fueled by a shared love of food, reveals the extent to which the agribusiness industry controls our food policies, making a strong case for a more transparent and sustainable food system. Time & Space Limited will screen Modified at 7:45 p.m. on Friday, November 9, to be followed by a panel discussion featuring the film’s director/ producer, Aube Giroux; Andrianna Natsoulas, executive director of the Northeast Organic Farming Association of New York; and Jody Bolluyt of Roxbury Farm in Kinderhook. General admission costs $9, $7 for students and members. To order tickets, or for more information, visit www.timeandspace.org/calendar/ modified.

FRI. 11/02>THURS. 11/08

FREE SOLO

Beautiful Boy

BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY

A Star is Born

Saturday, November 3, 4-6 PM: Exhibition Opening Reception ARTISTS OF THE HUDSON VALLEY FEATURING THE WORK OF AUDREY FRANCIS, ROBERT HITE, ROXIE JOHNSON, NORM MAGNUSSON & NADINE ROBBINS

THEMOVIEHOUSE.NET

JOHN C. OLSEN

3. Mammatus clouds These dramatic bulging clouds hang below storm clouds. If the sunlight angle is low, they can be mind-blowing. They appear a few times a year for those who regularly watch the sky. 2. The Green Flash The final speck of the red setting Sun sometimes turns vivid emerald-green for a few seconds before it too has set. It’s best-seen when the Sun is vanishing below a true horizon, like at sea or through a jet window. I’ve looked for it at sunset for decades, perhaps 300 times, and seen it about 30 times. If my experience is typical, expect success during ten percent of all sunsets. Don’t expect an actual flash. I did see that once, but normally the green is a quiet metamorphosis that could be missed if you’re not looking carefully. 1. The total solar eclipse Because it is the most magnificent of all of these, it’s the ultimate bucket-list apparition. It’s the rarest of these phenoms by far. It appears in your backyard once every 360 years, on average. There’s usually one a year somewhere on Earth, confined to a narrow strip. The next three will happen in Chile in 2019, Chile again in 2020 and Antarctica in 2021. The next one around here will take place on April 8, 2024, visible from Buffalo, Syracuse and Burlington. Our immediate region will then see a partial eclipse: a common phenomenon that cannot be looked at directly and doesn’t make our list. – Bob Berman Want to know more? To read Bob’s previous columns, visit our Almanac Weekly website at HudsonValleyOne.com. Check out Bob‘s new podcast, Astounding Universe, co-hosted by Pulse of the Planet’s Jim Metzner.

Timothy Greenfield-Sanders: The Trans List THE

DORSKY

Curated by Anastasia James

Modified screening Friday, Nov. 9, 7:45 p.m. $9/$7 Time & Space, Ltd, 434 Columbia St., Hudson (518) 822-8100 www.timeandspace.org

408 Main Street, Rosendale • rosendaletheatre.org

FAHRENHEIT 11/9, THUR 11/1, 1pm & 7:15pm COLETTE, FRI 11/2 – MON 11/5 & THUR 11/8, Main Street, Millerton, NY 518-789-3408

Mammatus clouds

7:15pm. $6 MATINEES WED & THUR, 1pm SUNDAY SILENTS: THE

ADVENTURES OF PRINCE ACHMED

Piano, Marta Waterman. SUNDAY 11/4, $6, 2pm

SPIRIT: THE SEVENTH FIRE

Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, Laverne Cox, 2015, inkjet print, courtesy the artist

August 29 – December 9, 2018

Through December 9, 2018 Opening reception: Saturday, September 15, 5–7 p.m.

WEDNESDAY 11/7, 7:15pm

THE HAPPY PRINCE FRIDAY 11/9 – MONDAY 11/12 & THURSDAY 11/15, 7:15pm. WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY, $6 MATINEES, 1pm

WHY CAN’T WE SERVE TUESDAY 11/13, $10/$8, 7:15pm

845.658.8989

MOVIES $8 MEMBERS $6

SAMUEL DORSKY MUSEUM OF ART STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT NEW PALTZ

www.newpaltz.edu/museum Open Wed. – Sun. 11 am – 5 pm | 845/257-3844


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

STAGE Love at the edge of reason Hudson Hall to present Storyhorse Documentary Theater’s The Face of It

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big part of the excitement over Midtown Kingston’s transformation into an arts hub over the past couple of years has hinged on the redevelopment of the former MetLife building on Greenkill Avenue into a film production and postproduction facility, “makerspace” and vocational training center called Stockade Works. The brains behind Stockade Works are actor/directors Mary Stuart Masterson and Jeremy Davidson. Busy as that project has been keeping them, the couple have somehow managed to continue developing new stagework via their Storyhorse Documentary Theater. Recent projects have included celebrating family farmers in Good Dirt in 2016 and unraveling a truelife local murder mystery in The Curious Murder of Frank L. Teal this past spring. Storyhorse’s latest effort is a cluster of three new one-act documentary plays about love at the edge of reason, inspired by real conversations with Hudson Valley residents, collectively titled The Face of It. The three playlets are The Call of the Sasquatch, based on recorded Sasquatch hunts with Gayle Beatty and psychic medium Johnny Angel; In Her Shoes, in which Ulster County BOCES principal Gary Suraci and Genna Suraci visit their mother Lena in a Poughkeepsie nursing home and step into a new stage of life together; and The Weight, wherein a young woman from Ballston Lake is forced to make an impossible choice that challenges her relationship to God and family. Mary Louise Wilson (Tony Award

DEBORAH LOPEZ-LYNCH

Storyhorse Documentary Theater co-creators, Jeremy Davidson and Mary Stuart Masterson

The Face of It Friday/Saturday, Nov. 9/10, 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 11, 3 p.m. $30/$25 Hudson Hall 327 Warren St. Hudson (518) 822-1438 https://hudsonhall.org

Pedro Infante: Cién Años Pienso en Tí at Old Dutch Church

Kingston. The play offers a new twist on the life of Mexican immigrants living in the US and features eleven classic songs from the repertory of the “Frank Sinatra of Mexico,” Pedro Infante, the universally adored Mexican actor and singer who died in 1957. The play comes to the Hudson Valley after a year in New York City and its international tour to Ciudad Juarez, México. There will be a question-andanswer session after the performance with director Germán Jaramillo and playwright Toby Campion. General admission costs $20. Proceeds will benefit La Voz magazine. Bard’s Spanish-language publication covering Hispanic cultures and news for the more than 140,000 Latinx living in Dutchess, Ulster, Orange, Columbia and Sullivan Counties. Starting at 1 p.m. will be a Day of the Dead altar, traditional children’s activities, Spanish storytelling, food vendors and more. Free transportation is available from Poughkeepsie, thanks to Radio Kingston. Pedro Infante: Cién Años Pienso en Tí Saturday, Nov. 3. Play starts at at 6 p.m. Day of the Dead events begin at 1 p.m. $20 Old Dutch Church 272 Wall St. Kingston (845) 752-4739

Jessica Lang Dance performs at Kaatsbaan this Saturday

Actor Mary Louise Wilson (photo by Dion Ogust | Almanac Weekly)

for Grey Gardens), Denny Dillon (Tony nominee for My One and Only, Saturday Night Live cast member) and Tim Guinee (Homeland, Hell on Wheels, Elementary) are among the cast members. The Face of It will be performed at 7 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, November 9 and 10 and at 3 p.m. on Sunday, November 11 at Hudson Hall, located in the Hudson Opera House at 327 Warren Street in Hudson. Tickets cost $25 in advance, $30 at the door and can be purchased at https://hudsonhall.org or by phone at (518) 822-1438.

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with keynote speaker Col. Chris Gibson and special honored guests.

Jessica Lang Dance, The Calling (photo by Takao Komaru)

Photo of Museo Pedro Infante by Octaviusmex

La Voz magazine and iD Studio Theatre present Pedro Infante: Cién Años Pienso en Tí, a one-act HOLA Awardwinning play in Spanish with English subtitles at the Old Dutch Church in

The Kaatsbaan International Dance Center in Tivoli welcomes Jessica Lang Dance (JLD) to its stage on Saturday, November 3. Since its inception in 2011, JLD has been presenting a diverse repertoire of original works created by Bessie Award-winning artistic director Jessica Lang that embodies a genre-bending contemporary movement. Lang was hailed as “a master of visual composition” by Dance Magazine. The evening’s program offers a panoramic view of Lang’s work


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

Piscopia at 5:30 p.m. in the Class of 1951 Reading Room. At 7:30 p.m., the Cornaro Room will host a performance of The Most Learned Woman, an original theater piece in spoken word and music that was developed by Laura Caparrotti, artistic director of the Kairos Italy Theater. Both events are free and open to the public. To reserve tickets, e-mail boxoffice@vassar.edu or visit https://vassarpresents.tix.com. The Most Learned Woman, Friday, Nov. 9, 5:30 p.m. lecture, 7:30 performance, Free (by reservation), Thompson Memorial Library, Vassar College, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie, (845) 437-5370, boxoffice@vassar.edu, www. vassar.edu, https://vassarpresents.tix. com CLAIRVOYANT ; PSYCHIC ; MEDIUM

A Psychic Reading by Rose

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Andrew Schneider’s Nervous/System at Catskill’s Lumberyard

I

nteractive media artist Andrew Schneider presents Nervous/System at the Lumberyard in Catskill on the weekend of November 3 and 4. Schneider and his collaborators invite the audience to look down, literally, into all-toofleeting revelations, narratives and emotional interactions flooding our bodies and brains every second of every day. The New York Times called Schneider’s work “inventive…astounding…continually finds new ways to challenge and engage its viewers.” Nervous/System is commissioned and developed in part by BAM for the 2018 Next Wave Festival, Live Arts Bard at the Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Bard College and the MIT Center for Art, Science & Technology. Performance times are Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. Ticket prices begin at $45.

Andrew Schneider’s Nervous/System, Saturday/Sunday, Nov. 3/4, 7 p.m./2 p.m., $45+, Lumberyard, 62 Water St., Catskill, https://bit.ly/2PwYRll

over the past twelve years. Tickets cost $10. Jessica Lang Dance Saturday, Nov. 3 7:30 p.m. $10 Kaatsbaan International Dance Center 120 Broadway Tivoli (845) 757-5106 https://kaatsbaan.yapsody.com

notice a scandalous development that was happening back across the Pond: For the first time in history, a woman was winning her doctoral degree. On June 25, Elena Lucrezia Cornaro Piscopia, scion of a Venetian patrician family, brilliantly defended her dissertation in front of university professors, political dignitaries and common folks. This milestone has been immortalized in the central stained-glass window of the Freder-

ick Ferris Thompson Memorial Library at Vassar College. On Friday, November 9, Vassar will celebrate the 340 th anniversary of Cornaro Piscopia’s achievement in the same library with a lecture and theatrical performance dedicated to her life. Professor Patrizia Bettella of the University of Alberta, an expert on female academicians of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, will give a talk based on her research about Cornaro

Portrait of Elena Lucrezia Cornaro Piscopia, 1646-1684, painter unknown

In 1678 in the Hudson Valley, Huguenot refugees settled the community that would come to be known as New Paltz. So busy were they clearing land, building houses and trying to patch up relations with the indigenous people with whom they’d recently been at war that they failed to

INTERNATIONAL DANCE CENTER TIVOLI NY

Lecture, original theater piece in Poughkeepsie honors first woman to obtain a doctorate

KAATSBAAN

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10

ALMANAC WEEKLY

ART

Nov. 1, 2018

THIS WAS AN ERA WHEN LARGE, CLUNKY CAMERAS were not allowed into small, intimate Paris haute couture salons, so correspondents had to bring artists with them, and the ability to sketch very quickly was at a premium.

The beauty of couture and corn

Eula: Master of 20th-Century Fashion Illustration, recounts a notorious fashion-industry tale of “when he went to a Saint Laurent couture show, but after three looks he got up and said, ‘This sucks,’ and it caused a huge scandal… But…they still stayed friends.” Another thing that Eula unabashedly hated, and said so, was the look of Davenport Farms’ roadside advertising. So he offered to paint them some new signs, and with a few well-placed brushstrokes,

Joe Eula’s design gift to Davenport Farms

O

n our harvest-season road trips, we’re typically in quest of the most sublime cider donut, our favorite fleeting heirloom variety of apple, a perfectly carvable pumpkin, the weirdest, squiggliest ornamental gourds to arrange as a centerpiece. Spotting business advertising with outstanding graphic design is generally not a prime motivating factor. But when one drives past Davenport Farms’ stand at the corner of Route 209 and Cottekill Road in Stone Ridge, it’s tough not to be arrested by the stylishness of the signage. The boldly sketched black-on-white images change seasonally; perhaps the most iconic is that half-shucked ear of corn (Davenports’ sweet corn being a perennial contender for the crown of Best in the Hudson

COURTESY OF HARPER DESIGN | HARPER COLLINS

Halston fitting Lauren Bacall, by Joe Eula, 1973 (above), and Polaroids of Joe Eula by Andy Warhol, 1977 (below), from the book Joe Eula: Master of Twentieth-Century Fashion Illustration by Cathy Horyn (left). Ezamples of Eula’s graphic gifts to Davenport Farms on the right.

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Valley). Clearly, this was no routine job by some mundane sign-painter. Does the highly evocative, dashed-off quality of that corn painting jog some association in the back of your mind? Perhaps of fashion illustration? Bingo. One of the most influential artists

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in that field, the late Joe Eula (19252004), long kept a country house in nearby Lomontville. According to Bruce Davenport, Eula had been a friend of his father for many years, and got to know Bruce in the 1990s. By all accounts, Eula was a man who was not at all shy about letting it be known, quite loudly, whether he loved or hated something, aesthetically speaking. Cathy Horyn, in her 2014 biography Joe

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a local, family-run agriculture operation was rebranded as a weekend destination. Joe Eula led a remarkable life. Raised in hard times by a widowed Connecticut storekeeper, he won a Bronze Star chasing Nazis on skis in the Apennines as part of the fabled 10th Mountain Division during World War II. (His nickname for his mother, captured in his wartime letters home, was Fatty.) Success in the fashion world came quickly after his return stateside; Town & Country magazine and Saks Fifth Avenue were already buying his illustrations while he was still enrolled in the Art Students’ League in the latter half of the 1940s. By the mid-’50s he was a regular illustrator for Eugenia Sheppard’s influential column Inside Fashion, which appeared in the New York Herald Tribune and was syndicated to more than 80 newspapers. The works of Dior, Chanel, Givenchy, St. Laurent, Versace, Lagerfeld and all the other rising star designers of the mid-20 th century were his subject matter. This was an era when large, clunky cameras were not allowed into small, intimate Paris haute couture salons, so correspondents had to bring artists with them, and the ability to sketch very quickly was at a premium. His obituary in the Guardian quoted Eula as having claimed, “I was considered the fastest pencil in the field.” He once managed

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

In the 1980s, Eula began spending more of his time at his country home, doing drawings and watercolors of flowers and vegetables. A line of china with flower and animal motifs that he designed for Tiffany is still in high

Eula summarized his less-is-more aesthetic approach with the comment, “If you could do it with one line, why put down 50?”

Joe Eula illustration of Toni Hollingsworth, 1960s

COURTESY OF HARPER DESIGN | HARPER COLLINS

By the 1950s, Eula was already swept up into a world of glamour and celebrity and decadent partying. He became friends and later operated a joint studio with photographer Milton Greene, known largely for his sessions with Marilyn Monroe. Together they hung out in jazz clubs, and Eula went on to design the album cover for Miles Davis’ Sketches of Spain. Concert posters became an area of interest, beginning with Davis; his designs for the Supremes and for Liza Minelli’s Liza with a Z tour are among his best-known. Lauren Bacall was a frequent subject. Impressed by Eula’s posters for a National Farm Workers’ Union benefit, choreographer Jerome Robbins invited him to design costumes for his ballets Dances at a Gathering and Goldberg Variations. Later on, Eula became a fixture of the glittery club scene at Studio 54. Eula got to know Andy Warhol quite early in the latter’s career as a shoe designer. According to biographer Horyn, “Warhol once called Eula ‘the most important person’ in New York, saying, ‘He knows everybody who’s anybody…all the really chic people.’” The illustrator is also credited with having introduced Warhol to the designer Halston, for whom Eula served as creative director throughout his 1970s heyday, playing a huge role in shaping the Halston label’s flowing, unfussy signature look. His New York Times obituary terms Eula an “instigator and provocateur” during his decade with Halston: a heady time when the fashion house was even redesigning jets for Braniff International Airways.

s Eula operated a joint studio with photographer Milton Greene, and he designed many concert posters as well as the cover of Miles Davis’s Sketches of Spain. He is also credited with having introduced Warhol to the designer Halston, for whom Eula served as creative director throughout his 1970s heyday, playing a huge role in shaping the Halston label’s flowing, unfussy signature look.

to capture a strictly forbidden sketch of Coco Chanel before she could walk over to him and snatch his drawing pad away. But more than that, Eula’s drawings distill the essence of a look

very pungently in a few short strokes. He summarized his less-is-more aesthetic approach with the comment, “If you could do it with one line, why put down 50?”

demand. And that ear of corn and other rural images that he painted for Davenport Farms in his retirement years can be found on tee-shirts and coffee mugs sold at the farmstand. “Joe loved to teach his way of looking at the world, and he changed the way I see things. I had the honor of getting a full scholarship to the School of Joe,” writes Bruce Davenport. “He was a good man, generous with his talents and I’ll never forget him.” To order the Joe Eula biography by Cathy Horyn, visit https://bit. ly/2EPdUT9. To read more of Bruce Davenport’s reminiscences about the eminent illustrator, visit https://bit. ly/2AAFLma. – Frances Marion Platt

MUROFF KOTLER VISUAL ARTS GALLERY ERNEST SHAW: THE FORM OF SHADOWS November 16 – December 14 Opening Reception: November 16 5:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m.

Local resident Ernest Shaw will be exhibiting recent photography in his show, THE FORM OF SHADOWS. This exhibit is primarily focused on photography, a “new” medium in his 50 year career with sculpture, paintings, and drawings. The photographs integrate his lifelong concerns with mortality, the nature of the “self” and shadow, and the relentless search for integration and wholeness, particularly in the consequences of action and gestures, of moments and eons. One of these series, ‘Are we flesh or wood?’ explores our fundamental unity and relatedness with the natural world, of life with death. The photographs, primarily visual, are also deeply grounded in our psychological condition, our relationship to ever changing time and place. These themes resonate with Shaw’s other career as psychiatrist, psychotherapist, and long-time teacher of mindfulness meditation practices. As Shaw has written, “articulate compassion is common... silence is the dialogue of centuries.” This body of work asks, “are we one, or two... or none?” This event is free.

For more information: 845-687-5113 • www.sunyulster.edu


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

TASTE Hudson Valley Vegfest in Poughkeepsie

DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

Ready to hop off the top of the food chain? Or are you already a vegan, and looking to network with likeminded souls or connect with local resources that support your dietary choices? The second annual Hudson Valley Vegfest, coming to Gold’s Gym in Poughkeepsie, is the place for you to be this weekend, November 3 and 4 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. This event will highlight game-changing vegan businesses, organizations, great speakers, filmmakers, vegan chefs, authors, musicians and innovators, both local and from around the country. The most recognizable name in the lineup is probably poet Gretchen Primack, who will be doing a reading at 12:50 p.m. on Saturday. You can check out the full schedule at www.hvvegfest.org/ weekendschedule. Admission costs $10 per day, $15 for a two-day pass. Children under 10 years old get in free. Tickets can be purchased at the door, or online at https://bit.ly/2P1bwO3. Gold’s Gym is located at 258 Titusville Road in Poughkeepsie. For more info, e-mail hvvegfest@gmail.com or visit www.hvvegfest.org

Brasserie 292 in Poughkeepsie

TASTE

Hudson Valley Restaurant Week

I

t’s that lovely time of year again that happens each spring and fall: the fortnight known, with less-than-strict accuracy, as Hudson Valley Restaurant Week. For a prix fixe of $32.95 for dinner or $22.95 for lunch (tax, beverage and gratuity not included), you get a three-course meal at some of the region’s finest restaurants (including at the Culinary Institute of America). It’s such a great opportunity to sample the culinary offerings at some of the eateries that you’ve been meaning to check out forever. Participating restaurants can be found in eight New York counties, plus one outlier in Greenwich, Connecticut. In Ulster County, your choices include Dino’s Vigneto Café and the Would in Highland; the Perch in Marlboro; Henry’s at the Farm and the Ship Lantern Inn in Milton; À Tavola Trattoria and the Village Tearoom in New Paltz; the Dutch Ale House in Saugerties; and Butterfield in Stone Ridge. Dutchess County offers the following options: Troutbeck in Amenia; Café Amarcord, the Pandorica and the Roundhouse in Beacon; the Eleven 11 Grille, Farm to Table Bistro, Hudson’s Ribs & Fish, Sapore and Trattoria Locanda in Fishkill; American Bounty, Bocuse and Ristorante Caterina de’ Medici in Hyde Park; the Artist’s Palate, Brasserie 292, Cosimo’s Trattoria, Farmers & Chefs, the Mill House Brewing Company and Shadows on the Hudson in Poughkeepsie; Terrapin in Rhinebeck; and Aroma Osteria and Heritage Food + Drink in Wappingers Falls. Hudson Valley Restaurant “Week” started on October 29 and runs through November 11. Reservations are strongly suggested at any of the participating venues. Not all offer both lunch and dinner, and some have day-of-the-week limitations, so make sure you check out the website at www.valleytable.com/hvrw. Bon appetit! Hudson Valley Restaurant Week, Monday-Sunday, Oct. 29-Nov. 11, $32.95/$22.95, Various restaurants throughout the Hudson Valley, www.valleytable.com/hvrw

Hudson Valley Vegfest Saturday/Sunday, Nov. 3/4

Help Us Make 2018 a Meaningful Year In honor of our 150th Anniversary, each month we will be collecting donations for a non-profit charity in our community. Please help us reach our goals.

November 2018

Fifth annual Red Hook & the Chocolate Festival this Saturday

For the month of November, we will be collecting canned food for the Claudio Cares Foundation. They inspire young adults to achieve greatness es and in others. and make changes in their lives You can drop off your donationn at any one of our 7 locations.

Dividends to the Community Through our ‘Dividends to the Community’ program we commit 10% of our annual earnings back to the communities we serve. We are proud to support our neighborhoods to help them remain great places to work, live, and raise a family.

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(845 ) 331-0073 www.RondoutBank.com

11 a.m.-6 p.m. $15/$10 Gold’s Gym 258 Titusville Rd. Poughkeepsie www.hvvegfest.org https://bit.ly/2P1bwO3

Y

E AR S

Saugerties has garlic, Rosendale has pickles, Margaretville has cauliflower, Monticello has bagels: annual food festivals that have become part and parcel of these communities’ tourism branding. But how lucky is Red Hook, to have been the home of Walter H. Baker, founder in 1888 of a once-thriving chocolate company?

The Chocolate Factory building is now repurposed as office and retail space, but the village celebrates its sweet heritage with a gathering each fall called Red Hook & the Chocolate Festival, sponsored by the Red Hook Area Chamber of Commerce. It returns for the fifth time this Saturday, November 3 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Billed as offering “more variations of chocolate and surprises than ever before,” the day’s events include the Chocolate Wars dessert-making competition; a Chocolate Fun-Do at the historic Elmendorph Inn; the Chocolate Olympics and a Chocolate Gaming Arcade at the Red Hook Public Library; chocolate tastings all over the village; theatrical presentations featuring W. H. Baker and a wandering Willy Wonka; hayrides, live music and lots more. To find out more, visit www. facebook.com/redhookchocolatefest. Red Hook & the Chocolate Festival Saturday, Nov. 3 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Free 7346 South Broadway & vicinity Red Hook www.facebook.com/redhookchocolatefest


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

THE DEAD BEAT

If Vaux could talk Considering the other half of the Central Park design team No one dies without leaving a story for us to discover and savor. The Dead Beat intends to search out, find and report those stories. The story may reside in a survivor’s heart or a victim’s last words. It may be legend or it may be fact. It may be recorded in stone or on yellowing newsprint. It may warm the heart or break it. It may explain a lifetime or illuminate a single moment in that lifetime. It may tell us more about the living than the dead, more about ourselves and the way we live than the way that others have died.

H

e was a farmer working 125 acres on the south shore of Staten Island. It wasn’t his strong suit. He’d worked several other farms unsuccessfully, after having been an apprentice merchant seaman. He was best-known as a travel writer and horticultural expert. But there wasn’t much money in writing, so he’d turned once again to farming. And if it hadn’t been for a fortuitous meeting in 1857 with an ambitious young British architect at a party in Newburgh, he always said that he’d have remained a farmer all his life. The Staten Island farmer’s name was Frederick Law Olmsted, the visionary landscape architect whose name is forever associated in the popular imagination with New York’s Central Park. But Olmsted had a partner in creating Central Park: the Newburgh partygoer who rescued him from anonymity. His name was Calvert Vaux – a name largely and unjustly forgotten both then and now, though many argue that his genius was at least the equal of his friend Olmsted’s. Vaux lies buried in Kingston’s Montrepose Cemetery beneath a stone marker as modest as was the man. If Vaux (rhymes with “hawks”) did nothing more than rescue Olmsted from obscurity and into a career as America’s best-known landscape architect, he would deserve the world’s appreciation. But he did much more than that. Vaux was an up-and-coming architect and landscape designer, the friend, student and ultimately the business partner of Andrew Jackson Downing, mid-19th-century America’s preeminent landscape architect and horticulturalist. Downing, who lived and worked in Newburgh, was also a mentor of Olmsted’s, whose book on horticulture he admired. Vaux met Olmsted at Downing’s Newburgh home, and the two men got on smashingly. (This was also where Vaux met his wife, Mary McEntee of Kingston, sister of Hudson River School painter Jervis McEntee.) Vaux had been impressed with Olmsted’s horticultural studies and writings about English landscaping traditions. Both men favored a “naturalistic” approach to the nascent practice of landscape architecture. Vaux became convinced that, though his new friend had no training in design or architecture, his charismatic presence and political and social connections would perfectly match his own talents and abilities – especially when it came to convincing the city fathers of the need for such a park. Though at first dubious, Olmsted agreed. The men’s “Greensward Plan” for a grand English-style park in a 778-acre no-man’s-land of pig farms, quarries and swamps between the ever-growing city of New York and the tiny village of Harlem was launched in 1858. Together, the two young men would make Vaux’s – and Downing’s – dream come true. It was a dream that faced enormous obstacles, some natural and some man-made. Several hundred thousand trees were planted and more than three million cubic yards of soil moved, according to the park’s website. Pedestrian and carriage roads wound through large meadows, past several lakes and a large reservoir. The project employed 20,000 laborers over the course of 15 years. Vaux, who had moved from Newburgh to New York with his wife and four children, was Central Park’s anchor. He had constant battles with petty bureaucrats and the City’s gentry, who wanted to make the park their private domain. According to an essay by Suzanne Spellen in Brownstoner, Olmsted’s deep Yankee roots and talent for public speaking made him the project’s frontman. Though Vaux had become an American citizen, Spellen contends that he was still “a Brit,” the subject of much Yankee suspicion. As a result, Olmsted became the face of the project: a fact that likely explains at least in part why Vaux’s name and contribution may have been lost to the popular imagination.

Community Week at Emerson offers free Kaleidoshows, activities & discounts for locals

DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

During its annual Community Week, the Emerson Resort & Spa invites the local community to enjoy lectures, book-readings and -signings, a musical performance and on-site activities that are either complimentary or at a discount to the public. An Open Mic Night kicks off this

year’s fun in the Great Room on Tuesday, November 6 at 7 p.m. Team up to compete on Trivia Night, Wednesday, November 7 at 7 p.m. in the Woodnotes Grille Bar. Pushcart Prize-nominated local author Will Nixon reads from and discusses his book Walking Woodstock in the Great Room on Thursday, November 8 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Weekend activities begin with pedal steel and acoustic guitar music from Jude Roberts with Rob Stein in the Great Room from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. on Friday, November 9. There are two community events in the Great Room on Saturday, November 10: From 1:30 to 3 p.m., Kathryn J. Schneider will give a presentation and discussion on “Birding the Hudson Valley.” And from 3 to 5 p.m., Bill Horne will offer a presentation and book-signing of his local history, The Improbable Community: Camp Woodland and the American Democratic Ideal. Camp Woodland veteran and folk musician Mickey Vandow will perform live.

JULIE O'CONNOR| ALMANAC WEEKLY

Calvert Vaux (below) and his grave (above) at Montrepose Cemetery in Kingston

The two men founded the partnership of Olmsted, Vaux and Company in 1865. It lasted seven years, during which time they created an astonishing number of city parks, all following the same architectural and horticultural principles on which they drew for Central Park. They designed Prospect Park and Fort Greene Park in Brooklyn. They designed three parks in Buffalo, including Delaware, Front and what is now Martin Luther King, Jr. Park. And in 1871, near the end of their official partnership, they returned to the Hudson River region to design the grounds for Poughkeepsie’s Hudson River State Hospital for the Insane. Vaux dissolved the partnership in 1872, but the two remained friends for the rest of their lives. If Vaux resented the glowing reputation that his partner enjoyed over the years, he never made it public. Vaux remained in New York, where he continued to practice architecture, designing buildings throughout the 1880 and ’90s. Though many of those buildings were admired in their day, none could ever hope to match his vast, sweeping work with Olmsted. Though the dream of Central Park had long been a reality, Vaux – sometimes joined by Olmsted – had to wage many difficult battles with city politicians and bureaucrats eager to “improve” on that dream. In 1889, the two men agreed to donate their services to the City of Newburgh to create a 35-acre park on a single condition: that the park be named after their friend and mentor, Andrew Jackson Downing. It was their final project together. In 1895, Vaux drowned in Brooklyn’s Gravesend Bay, the same year that Olmsted was forced to retire from his practice due to “senility.” He died at a psychiatric hospital outside of Boston in 1903. It might have seemed laughable at the beginning of their partnership that an unsuccessful farmer would one day eclipse the accomplishments of the dazzling young Brit who had convinced him to put down the plow. Stranger legends have been born of lesser men, but few have ever produced such glories as the works of Olmsted and Vaux and Company. – Jeremiah Horrigan To learn more about Calvert Vaux and his work in the Hudson Valley, which includes Olana, Wilderstein and the Hoyt House, check out the Calvert Vaux Preservation Alliance at https://www.calvertvaux.org.

Community Week wraps up with three events on Sunday, November 11, all in the Great Room. From 1 to 3 p.m., Mary Anne and Richard Erickson will do a book presentation and tasting from Feel Good Food: Recipes from the Hudson Valley’s Blue Mountain Bistroto-Go. From 3 to 4 p.m., there will be two readings: Henry David Thoreau’s Autumnal Tints, by Brett Barry, and Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Nature, by Dr. David Tully. Finally, from 4 to 6 p.m., local documentarian Tobe Carey will screen The First Artist in America: The Life and Times of John Vanderlyn. Throughout Community Week, residents of Ulster, Delaware and Greene counties with ID are also entitled to a variety of discounts on lodging, shop items, spa treatments and classes, free desserts with a meal, complimentary nature walks and Kaleidoshows daily. For more information, call (845) 6882828 or visit http://emersonresort.com. The Emerson Resort & Spa is located at 5340 Route 28 in Mount Tremper.

Community Week at the Emerson Tuesday-Sunday, Nov. 5-11 Free/discounted with local ID Emerson Resort & Spa 5340 Route 28, Mount Tremper (845) 688-2828, http://emersonresort.com

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Parent-approved

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

KIDS’ ALMANAC

Take the kids Family events hand-picked by Erica Chase-Salerno, kidsalmanac@ulsterpublishing.com

Día de los Muertos celebrations in Goshen, Kingston, New Paltz, Poughkeepsie DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

KIDS' ALMANAC

KINGSTON MODEL RAILROAD CLUB OPEN HOUSE, HUDSON VALLEY RAILROAD SOCIETY EXPO

T Did 2017’s delightful Pixar animated film Coco pique your interest in el Día de los Muertos (the Day of the Dead), Latin America’s upbeat folkloric celebration of deceased loved ones that combines elements of Halloween and All Souls’ Day? Maybe you’re not quite ready to build an ofrenda in your own living room, look up recipes for pan de muerto or play mariachi music at your grandparents’ gravesite, but you have a variety of opportunities in the region this week to participate in organized Día de los Muertos activities that’ll give you tastes of the holiday’s authentic flavor. Here, in chronological order, are some places to start learning about how to do it right: Día de los Muertos Goshen (bring family photos) Thursday, Nov. 1 6-8 p.m. Free 890 Pulaski Hwy. Goshen Día de los Muertos Kingston (ofrenda-building, craft activities) Friday, Nov. 2 4-7 p.m. Catholic Charities Gymnasium 6 Adams St, 3rd floor Kingston

oy trains still exert a fascination over the young and the young-at-heart. Want to meet up with other model railroad enthusiasts, or take your kids to see a really amazing layout and stoke the furnace of a potential lifelong hobby? Here are a few options to pursue over the next few weeks: On weekend afternoons through November and into early December, the 81-year-old Kingston Model Railroad Club will be hosting an Open House featuring a complete O-scale railroad system in action; scale models of steam and diesel locomotives; old-fashioned and modern trains; complete villages and scenery; a railroad museum; trolleys; a circus train; and for the littles, Thomas the Tank Engine, of course. Admission costs $6 for adults, $2 for children under 12. Kingston Model Railroad Club Open House, Saturdays/Sundays through Dec. 2, noon-5 p.m., $6/$2, Kingston Model Railroad Club, Susan St., Kingston, (845) 334-8233, https://bit.ly/2Jqjpq3

T

hen, on Sunday, November 11 from 10 to 3 p.m., the Hudson Valley Railroad Society (HVRRS) hosts its 47th annual Railroad Exposition at the Mid-Hudson Civic Center. On display at the expo, you’ll see 20,000 square feet of operating scale-model train layouts, ranging from the tiny Z to the big 1½ inch-scale that kids love to sit in to have their picture taken. Also on view are N, HO, O and G scales, Lionel, trolleys, slot-car tracks, railroad clinics, film screenings, a flea market…and, of course, Thomas. Tickets cost $6 for adults, $3 for ages 11 and under at the door. All proceeds benefit the ongoing restoration and operation of the 1914 Hyde Park Railroad Station Museum, which has National Historical designation and turns 104 years old this year. For more info, visit the HVRRS website at www.hydeparkstation.com/hvrsshow.html or call (845) 518-0635. Hudson Valley Railroad Society Railroad Exposition, Sunday, Nov. 11, 10-3 p.m., $6/$3, Mid-Hudson Civic Center, 14 Civic Center Plaza, Poughkeepsie, (845) 518-0635, https://bit.ly/2Sx5GBZ

68 Mountain Rest Road New Paltz (845) 255-1559 https://bit.ly/2zero58

like to your cheek? EEK is a sound that I make when I am surprised. What makes you shriek “Eek!” on your walk? NESTS are easier to see as the leaves fall. Can you spy a bird or squirrel nest that was hidden during spring or summer?

Día de los Muertos Poughkeepsie Saturday, Nov. 3 6-9 p.m. Historic Glebe House 635 Main Street Poughkeepsie

Why you want an exchange student in your life

Take a family fall walk

Day of the Dead Celebration at Unison Saturday, Nov. 3 Sugar Skull Workshop 4:30 p.m. $10 (preregister) Party with live mariachi music by Viva la México 6 p.m. $20 Unison Arts Center

In honor of waning light and chilled air, I invite you and your family to enjoy a fall walk together. You could plan a daytime stroll, an evening saunter or a nighttime ramble, whether along a trail, neighborhood or your own backyard. Flashlights and magnifying glasses can make nature experiences even more fun. Here’s a Halloween-inspired acrostic to get started on your

KIWANIS ICE ARENA Open 7 days a week with various times for public skating

Public Open Skating Admissions $6 for Adults, $4 for Children 6-18, Children 5 & Under are Free. Public Drop In Hockey/Sticks & Pucks $8 for Adults, $6 for Children Skate Rentals - $3 a pair. Hockey and Figure Skates available. Skate Sharpening - $5 a pair

Visit our website for the skate times for every public session

BIRTHDAY PARTIES • PRO SHOP 845-247-2590 | kiwanisicearena.com | 6 Small World Ave, Saugerties

“Wait – cookie dough comes in a tub?” – Excited exchange students everywhere

own path of nature. Happy adventuring! HEARING nature can lead to even more discoveries. Remaining still, do you hear soft sounds? Loud? One sound? Many? ANIMAL sightings can be fleeting or slow. How many can you count as you walk around? LEAF textures and colors have a wide range. What do you notice about a leaf that you can see or touch now? What’s under it? LITTLE treasures are everywhere. What’s a tiny discovery you found during your walk? ORANGE illuminates the seasonal skies. What’s something orange that you can touch? WEEDS sway in the breeze, rustling, sometimes even tickling. What are the weeds like in your wanderings? EVERGREEN trees stay the same color year-round. What does a pine needle feel

[Munch munch] Eating is a common sound at our house, but things ramped up because we had an exchange student with us this weekend. Me: Want to check out an American grocery store? Student: Sure. [three bags later] Student: Wow! [unpacks delicious, sugary carbs] My embittered family suddenly offline: How come we never get tubs of cookie dough? [scarfs down large bites before the supply line gets cut off by the purveyor] For one year, we get to experience life with a teen from Europe. Over the past eight years since we hosted our last student, a lot has changed – like tightened travel requirements, the election of Barack Obama and the releases of Deadpools 1 and 2. Our student has a dedicated space, she’s motivated to learn her studies and about the world and she feels like a part of our family already. Her language skills happen to be terrific, and better than any of ours. Today we stumbled upon krankenwagen,


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

FABULOUS FURNITURE

2018 JOHN A. COLEMAN Annual Christmas Arts & Craft Show Saturday Nov. 3rd • 10 am – 4 pm Sunday Nov. 4th • 10 am – 3 pm

Adults $5 Students & Seniors $4 Under 12 FREE

Coleman High School 430 Hurley Avenue, Hurley, NY 845-338-2750 $2 off with this coupon 10 minutes from Woodstock!

Nov. 1, 2018

which means “ambulance.” It’s such a fun word to say; try it and go full-throttle guttural: “Kronk-en-vogg-en.” Food is an easy topic to explore, because we all need to eat. For example, as many of you already know, Smarties in Canada are terrible counterfeit M&Ms, as opposed to the delicious sweet-and-sour delights of US Smarties. Everyone in our household seems to agree on the perfection of Nutella and cookie dough. But even more than food, the cultural sharings continue to enrich our family. Exchange students and host families are gifted with an intimate opportunity to see life through someone else’s viewpoint, such as why some of us don’t just pick up and drive to Barcelona, or why our drinking age minimums are so different. I dream of my kids being immersed in

another country like my parents provided for me, and hosting can be one step toward giving it a go. Studying abroad can demonstrate independence for college and job applications, reinforce language studies or introduce a new one, and provide lifelong memories not achievable any other way. Challenges to hosting an exchange student include accepting an additional person into our living space. We don’t have a large home, and we cannot access certain areas while our student is here, so we work around it. Rhythms take time to establish, such as our family’s mealtimes, which are all over the place and can be hard for a guest to adjust to. Some friendships just take a while. My dog barks – a lot, especially for our student who lives with six cats. I think the most difficult aspect of hosting an exchange student involves any homesickness they have, despite the creature comforts and ample chocolate supplies. Actually, for me, the truly hardest part is saying goodbye at the end. Exchange programs can be done independently, through American Field Service (contact me to refer you to a local person for AFS) and many other opportunities, as well as for various of lengths of time. I think a year can be intimidating for some, in which case a shorter time frame might work great for

Fine Food • Great Beer Good Friends • Live Music

THE BEST

LIVE MUSIC!

NOVEMBER O’Solo Vito

11/2 11/3 11/9 11/10 11/16 11/17 11/21 11/23 11/24 11/30

Chris Raabe Jeremy Langdale Bryan Gordon Kevin Kennedy Danni Dae Duo Juke Box Junkies Thanksgiving Eve! TBD Blank Canvas TBD W

e Have

NFL Tickthe et! Join Us fo r

Sunday Brunch!

4076 Albany Post Road Hyde Park, NY • 12538 845-229-TAPS (8277) www.hydeparkbrewing.com

COME EXPLORE THE HAUNTS OF RIP VAN WINKLE

STREAMLINER SATURDAYS 11/3 • 11/10 • 11/17

LUNCH ON THE FLYER OR TRAIN RIDES Check our website for our schedules!

Open Saturdays. For more information: (845) 586-3877 We operate rain or shine! We’re a good place to be on a rainy day.

http://durr.org/index.php/events

TRAIN RIDES FOR UPCOMING EVENTS OR PRIVATE CHARTERS:

43510 STATE HIGHWAY 28 | ARKVILLE, NY 12406 800.225.4132 | www.durr.org

in New York’s Legendary Catskill Mountains An Adventure Everyone Will Enjoy!


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018 some families. Participants need not be wealthy to host, and most students have budgets built into their programs that include extra costs for field trips and more. “Cynics always say ‘No.’ But saying ‘Yes’ begins things. Saying ‘Yes’ is how things grow. Saying ‘Yes’ leads to knowledge. ‘Yes’

is for young people. So, for as long as you have the strength, say ‘Yes.’” – Stephen Colbert Still on the fence? Say it with me: “Krankenwagen.” – Erica Chase-Salerno

Stanley Alexandrowicz at ASK Internationally acclaimed classical guitarist

Concert: November 9, 7.30pm - $20 Master Class: November 10, 1pm - $50 Details at www.askforarts.org

Relax Your Body & Mind with the sounds of windchimes...

®

Woodstock Chimes WAREHOUSE SALE!

97 Broadway, Kingston NY | 845.338.0331 | askforarts.org

off Rt. 28 in Shokan, NY

Veterans Day Weekend 5 Day Sale!

Thurs, Fri, Sat, Sun & Mon 9am - 5pm

Nov. 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 UP TO 80% OFF

MANY ITEMS BELOW WHOLESALE! * One O of a kind Chimes * In-stock Chimes * Crystal Chimes * Fountains * Drums * Gongs

* Guitars * Garden Bells * Hanging Bells * Kid’s Instruments * Discontinued Products * ... and much more!

DAVID WILL SANCIOUS CALHOUN

OPEN SECRET SATURDAY NOVEMBER, 10TH BEARSVILLE THEATER bearsvilletheater.com

Directions: From the Kingston roundabout, west on Rt. 28, 1 miles to 167 DuBois Road, Shokan, NY. Follow the signs. s. 10.5

www.chimes.com/sale

“No American play describes more powerfully how we imagine ourselves.” - New York Daily News NOVEMBER 2, 3, 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 2018

Written by Thornton Wilder | Directed by Matt Andrews 61st Season Sponsor

BOX OFFICE

845-298-1491 | countyplayers.org Wappingers Falls, NY

At the Falls Theatre

“INVENTIVE...ASTOUNDING... CONTINUALLY FINDS NEW WAYS TO CHALLENGE AND ENGAGE ITS VIEWERS, TO SURPRISE AND MYSTIFY US." -NEW YORK TIMES

ANDREW SCHNEIDER NERVOUS /SYSTEM NOVEMBER 3-4

CENTER FOR FILM AND PERFORMING ARTS


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

CALENDAR Thursday

11/1

8am-9am Woodstock Senior Senior Feel Good Aerobics with Diane Collelo. Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 9am-9:50am Joint Lubricating Qi Gong with Marilyn St. John. Uses gentle movement and relaxation to circulate the life energy. All ages and fitness levels. A reduced-price class. Woodstock Yoga Center, 6 Deming St, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-8700, woodstockyogacenter.com. $10. 9:30am-10:30am Woodstock Senior Flex and

Stretch with Diane Colello. Movement for balance and breath, weight-training for bone health, and mat work for flexibility and core strengthening. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 10am-11am Gentle Yoga with Kate Hagerman. This is a perfect place for beginning your yoga practice. This class encourages spiritual practice while enhancing health and well-being. Woodstock Yoga Center, 6 Deming St, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-8700, http://woodstockyogacenter.com. $10. 11am Free Line Dancing Class. Sponsored by the Town of Rochester Recreation. Classes will be held at 11am each Thursday, through Nov. 15, at the Community Center, 15 Tobacco Road, Accord. Info: 845-626-2115 or 845-626-2530. 11am-12pm Woodstock Senior Level One (Moderate) Yoga with Susan Blacker. Centering, warm-ups, posture flow, relaxation and meditation. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55

Foster

submission policy contact

e-mail calendar@ulsterpublishing.com. postal mail: Almanac Calendar Manager Donna Keefe c/o Ulster Publishing, PO Box 3329, Kingston, NY 12402 phone: (845) 334-8200 ext. 104, fax at (845) 334-8809. when to send

Almanac’s Calendar is printed on Tuesdays. We must receive all entries no later than the previous Friday at noon. what to send

The name of the event, time, date, location of event, a telephone number (for publication) and admission charge (specify if free). A brief description is helpful, too. how it works

Instructional and workshop listings appear in the calendar when accompanied by a paid display ad or by a paid individual calendar listing. Community events are published in the newspaper as a community service and on a spaceavailable basis.

and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock.

Love

As a KidsPeace foster parent, you can make all the difference in the life of a child. fostercare.com 845-331-1815 200 Aaron Court Kingston, NY 12401

12:15pm-12:45pm Fall Fine Arts at Old Dutch Concert: Randi Fater & Andrea Shaut, Vocals & Piano. Part of the Uptown Fine Arts Music Series! Info: 845-338-6759. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 1pm-3pm Game and Card Day. Board games, Mah-jong and cards are available, or bring your own. Bring a friend or come and meet people. $1 donation suggested to cover cost of refreshments. Ongoing every Thursday. Red Hook Community Center, 59 Fisk St, Red Hook.

We respect our clients’ privacy. The models represented in this publication are for illustrative purposes only and in no way represent or endorse KidsPeace. © 2015 KidsPeace.

1pm-4pm Woodstock Senior Duplicate Bridge with John Stokes. The Woodstock Bridge Club offers a short lesson and a game of Duplicate

Bridge. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Rescue Squad, 222 Tinker St, Woodstock. 3pm Woodstock Ultimate Disc. A free, casual, co-ed pickup game. Ongoing games - Sundays at 3pm. See WoodstockUltimate.org for details. Athletic Fields, 98 Comeau Drive, Woodstock. http://woodstockultimate.org/. 3:30pm-6:30pm Free Math Tutoring. Algebra, Geometry, Precalculus, Trigonometry, and SAT/ ACT Prep. Call to sign up 845-255-1255; MathTutoringwithMisha.com. Gardiner Library, Gardiner. 3:30pm-4pm Free Step Class. A high energy class. Ongoing. Saugerties Public Library, 91

Packed to the rafters with fun, practical & hard-to-find merchandise Minnetonka Moccasins | Homemade Fudge | Jewelry Local Books & Maps | Old-Fashioned Candies Old Time Games | Souvenirs & So Much More!

Come visit us for a unique shopping experience 84 Main St, Phoenicia, NY | 845.688.5851 | www.nesteggshop.com

Comedy NIGHT

— AT THE —

PHOENICIA PLAYHOUSE SHERRY DAVEY

HEADLINER HEN X CO

MA

VICK Y KU PERM AN

Saturday Satu day

November N b 3 7PM & 9P 9PM — TICKETS — $20 online or $25 at the door

Join Us & The Rescued Farm Animals!

We’re Open in November! Come Visit! bit.ly/Catskill-Fall

As Featured on: Comedy Central, AXS TV, NickMom, Nickelodeon, TV Guide Channel, Paramount Network, SiriusXM & More! https://phoeniciaplayhouse.com/

10 Church St, Phoenicia, NY 12464


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

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premier listings Contact Donna at calendar@ulsterpublishing.com to be included Indian Classical Vocal Concert (11/11, 3-5pm). Pandit Shantanu Bhattacharyya: Hindustani Vocal and Harmonium Smt. Durba Bhattacharyya: Vocal and Harmonium Pandit Ashis Sengupta: Tabla. Shantanu and Durba Bhattacharyya are representatives of the North Indian vocal tradition who will complete their two month tour of the US and Canada

at Matagiri Sri Aurobindo Center. They have trained under a number of masters in their tradition from an early age. Durba’s devotional chants invoke an atmosphere which contains both inspiration and peace. Accompanied by Pandit Ashis Sengupta, a renowned tabla player from Banaras Gharana. Ashish is the author of two books on tabla and recipient of ‘Taal Mani’

Award. At present he is a member of the Faculty of Music and Fine Arts, University of Delhi. Matagiri, 1218 Wittenberg Rd, Mt.Tremper. Reservations encouraged. Call 845-679-8322; info@matagiri.org. $20 suggested donation. Comedy Night at The Phoenicia Playhouse! (11/03, 7-8:30pm). It’s

Washington Ave, Saugerties. saugertiespubliclibrary.org.

New Paltz Community Center, 30 N. Chestnut St, New Paltz. $10.

5:30pm-7:30pm Opening Reception. The Thompson Memorial Library at Vassar College will present a solo exhibition of works by the artist Raquel Rabinovich. Show will exhibit through December. Thompson Memorial Library at Vassar College, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-437-5632.

7pm-8pm Book Signing & Reading: Dead Shrinks Don’t Talk. By Sandra Gardner. Elting Memorial Library, 93 Main Street, New Paltz. http://www.eltinglibrary.org/. Free.

5:30pm-6:30pm Garden Club Meeting. Join a group of interested gardeners who would like to volunteer to help create and maintain the library’s lovely gardens. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@gmail.com, www.esopuslibrary.org. 6pm-7pm DEC Public Meeting. The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) announced that it is seeking public input on the Sundown Wild Forest and the Vernooy Kill State Forest Draft Unit Management Plan (UMP). The UMP encompasses 34,568 acres of land in the towns of Denning, Olive, Rochester, and Wawarsing in Ulster County and the town of Neversink in Sullivan County, New York. A public meeting is scheduled to provide the public with an opportunity to learn more about the proposed management actions in the draft UMP and to encourage comment on the proposals. During the Public Availability Session, DEC will be available to talk one-on-one with the public. Ellenville Public Library, 40 Centre St, Ellenville. 6pm The City of Kingston and Kingston Land Trust Informational Meeting. Kingston Point Rail Trail and Hasbrouck-Delaware Parklet will begin construction this month! This milestone for the Kingston Greenline was made possible by years of hard work and collaboration between community members, the Kingston Land Trust, and The City of Kingston. The purpose of the meeting is to inform residents, particularly those individuals who live near the project areas, about current and upcoming construction activities and the overall construction schedule for the coming year. Held at City Hall, 420 Broadway, Kingston. 6pm-7:30pm Local News to Local History: Hudson Neighbors w/ Lance Wheeler. History of Hudson Talk by Newsman Lance Wheeler. Hudson Area Library, 51 North 5th Street, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1792, brenda.shufelt@ hudsonarealibrary.org, http://hudsonarealibrary. org. free. 6pm-8pm 6-Week Reset: Rediscover Feeling Great. In this six-week course, Dee Pitcock guides you through a deep dive into the diet, lifestyle, and exercise practices. Woodstock Healing Arts, 83 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. Info: 845-393-4325, ino@woodstockhealingarts.com, www.woodstockhealingarts.com. $540. 7pm Fermentation and Jews, a Workshop. Explore the connections between fermentation and Judaism, and you’ll learn to pickle anything and everything. Each participant will take home custom jars of pickles and kraut. Reservations required. Open to members and their guests. Info: 845-255-9817. Jewish Congregation of

7pm-9pm Wimpy Kid Live - The Meltdown Show. In celebration of the launch of Diary of a Wimpy Kid #13: The Meltdown. Evening hosted by Jeff Kinney! Stissing Mountain High School, 2829 Church St, Pine Plains. Info: 845-876-0500, events@oblongbooks, http://bit.ly/2CLMpbu. Chaperones and children under 6 are free. Kids over 6 require a ticket. 7pm-9pm Free Holistic Self-Care Class: The Timeless Gifts of the Lover Archetype, with Rosine Kushnick. The Lover Archetype, one of four divine Archetypes, is the gate keeper for relationship dynamics that support, nurture and strengthen us. Marbletown Community Center, 3564 Main St.(Route 209), Stone Ridge. Info: info@rvhhc.org, www.rvhhc.org. 7pm Reformed Church of Saugerties’ Fall Education Series: NOMA Discussions. Info: 845-246-2867. Reformed Church of Saugerties, 173 Main St., Saugerties. 7:30pm It Was The Best of Times, It Was The Worst of Times. Improvisational theatre based on your stories, with Hudson River Playback Theatre. All welcome. Admission by donation. New Paltz Community Center, 3 Veterans Dr /32 North, New Paltz. hudsonriverplayback.org. 7:30pm Reading and Meditation. Ongoing every Thursday night at 7:30pm. Info: matagiri.org; 845-679-8322. Matagiri Sri Aurobindo Center, 1218 Wittenberg Rd, Mt. Tremper. 7:30pm-9pm Weekly Thursday Nite EFT Healing Circle & Recovery Workshop. Bring your physical, emotional, & spiritual challenges and issues, and have them quickly, effectively resolved and healed in a safe supportive environment. Ongoing. 845-706-2183. Family of Woodstock/Kingston, 39 John St, Kingston. Free, $5 donation welcome. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Andy Stack’s American Soup. American Classics from Duke Ellington to Hank Williams. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Brad Cole’s Bossa Blue “Tribute to The James Taylor Songbook”. James Taylor ala Bossa Nova! Info: 845-2367970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com.

Friday

11/2

8am-5:30pm Blood Drive @ Rondout Valley High School. The students at the high school will host their blood driveat the high school new gymnasium . Community members need photo ID

Saturday night, so it’s time to have fun! Come out for an evening of hilarious stand-up comedy. Recommended for ages 18+. Phoenicia Playhouse at 10 Church St in Phoenicia. Info: 845-6882279; info@phoeniciaplayhouse.com; phoeniciaplayhouse.com. The ticket link is: eventbrite.com. Kingston Proud Award. Nominate someone or a business you know in Kingston who has achieved great success to win this award. Visit our page for more information. John H. Fisher, 278 Wall Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0047; support@fishermalpracticelaw.com.

upon donation. RVHS received a 2017 Gold Award from the New York Blood Center for 150 blood donations and outstanding participation in the Blood Donor Program over the past year.For more information, contact Richard Gohl at 845-6872400; rgohl@rondout.k12.ny.us. Rondout Valley Middle School, Stone Ridge. 9:30am-11am Vinyasa Level I-II with Alison Sinatra. This class is ideal for students transitioning from beginners to intermediate yoga. Basic poses are explored with increasing detail interspersed with a flowing sequence. $18 drop-in. Woodstock Yoga Center, 6 Deming St, Woodstock. 9:45am-10:45am Woodstock Senior Chi Kung with Corinne Mol. Meditative, healing exercise consisting of 13 movements. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 11:30am-4:30pm Private Angelic Channeling and Past Life Regression. Sessions with past life therapist and angelic channel Margaret Doner. Please call for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. $125 for 90 minute session. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. 11:30am-1:30pm Friday Soups & Salad. Homemade soups and salad. Two varieties of soup, with a vegetarian choice, salad, & desserts. New Paltz United Methodist Church, 1 Grove Street, New Paltz. Info: 845-419-5063, sharon.jean.roth@ gmail.com, http://newpaltzumc.org/. 12:05pm-1pm Woodstock Senior Basic Pilates with Christine Anderson. A floor work course promoting improvementof balance, coordination, focus, awareness breathing, strength and flexibility. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 12:30pm-6pm Expert Crystal Readings and Chakra Energy Attunements. Meets every Friday at 12:30-6pm. Walk-ins welcome. $30 for 25 minute reading; $50 for 45 minute reading and chakra attunement; $85 for one hour crystal lay-out energy session. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $50/45minutes & chakra energy attunement, $30/25 minutes. 1pm-2pm Chair Yoga. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. http:// clinton.lib.ny.us/. 2pm County Players present Our Town . Our Town transports us to Grover’s Corners, a small New England town of dreams and disappointments, loves and losses, and where the people are eerily like the ones in our own lives. Our

s

Low-Cost Spay/Neuter Stationary Clinic for Dogs. Every Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. $95 and up; includes spay/neuter, rabies vaccine, and cone collar. All surgeries performed by appointment only; Also, Low-Cost Spay/Neuter Mobile Clinic for Cats( call for location and dates). $70 per cat includes spay/ neuter, rabies vaccine, ear cleaning, nail trim. All surgeries performed by appointment only; & Low-cost vaccine & dental Clinics available. The Animal Rights Alliance (T.A.R.A.), 60 Enterprise Pl, Middletown. Info: 845-3431000, tara-spayneuter.org.

Town illuminates the powerful bonds that hold communities together through everyday life and in moments of crisis, as it follows the romance of George Gibbs and Emily Webb into one of the most famous scenes in the American theatre. $20 adults; $15 Senior 60+/Military/Children under 12. Box office 845-298-1491. County Players Falls Theater, 2681 W. Main Street, Wappingers Falls. 4pm-5:30pm Film-Making Class for Kids with Allyson Ferrara. Students will work together as a team, both crew and actors, in order to create their own short movie with instructor Allyson Ferrara. Unison Arts Center, 68 Mountain Rest Rd, New Paltz. https://bit.ly/2Qm47Wm. $180. 5pm-8pm Opening Reception: On the Horizon. Emerge Gallery is pleased to collaborate with Win Morrison for “On the Horizon”. The exhibition includes landscapes and seascapes by 6 artists. Show exhibits through 12/3. Win Morrison, 232 Main St, Saugerties. Info: 845-247-7515, emergegalleryny@gmail.com, www.emergegalleryny. com. 5pm-7pm Opening Reception: Small Works. LongReach Arts will display a wide variety of small works. Gallery hours: Thurs 2-5pm, Fri 3-8pm, Sat 1-5pm, exhibit will display through the end of November. Info: 845-658-8108; longreacharts@gmail.com: staats@hvc.rr.com. Longreach Arts at Gallery 330, 330 Main St, Poughkeepsie. 5:30pm-7pm Opening Reception: Esopus Artist Group. Exhibits through 11/30. Info: 845-338-5580. Duck Pond Gallery, Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal Street, Port Ewen. 5:30pm Restorative Yoga with Barbara Boris. Restorative yoga is a gentle, completely supportive practice that is designed to bring stillness to the body and the mind. Dress in layers, wear socks and bring an eye pillow if you have one. $18 dropin, discounted with class card or membership. Woodstock Yoga Center, 6 Deming St, Woodstock. 5:30pm-7pm Art Opening: Cross River Artists. The Duck Pond Gallery will showcase multiple watercolor artists through the month of November. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@ gmail.com, www.esopuslibrary.org. 6pm-7:30pm “First Friday” Shabbat Dinner. Family-friendly Kiddush, candle-lighting, singing, and blessings. Dairy/Vegetarian Potluck Dinner. Woodstock Jewish Congregation, 1682 Glasco Turnpike, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-2218, info@ wjcshul.org, http://www.wjcshul.com. 7pm-8:30pm A Turn of the Screw. Henry James’s classic ghost story about an inexperienced governess and two small orphans trapped in a house

FALL OPEN HOUSE 2018 & SUNY FINANCIAL AID DAY

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17 - 9 AM TO 2 PM Academic Program and College Services Info Fair Make connections with SUNY Ulster faculty, staff and current students to find the answer to all your questions! Representatives will be available to talk to you about our academic programs, services, resources, scholarships, exciting opportunities, campus life, student activities, athletics and much more.

SUNY Financial Aid Day Hands-on Assistance Completing the FAFSA SUNY’s Statewide Financial Aid Days are offered as a service to all prospective college students and their families to provide assistance on the financial aid application, types of aid available, and the award process. To Register: www.sunyulster/visit

Call: 1.800.724.0833 x 5022 or 845.687.5022 Email: admissions@sunyulster.edu/visit


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

that’s haunted.. or is it? Doctorow Center for the Arts, 7979 Main Street. KATactors.com. Cash only; no credit cards. 7pm-10pm Vassar Devils A Cappella. A co-ed a cappella group from Vassar College. Opener: New Paltz High School A Cappella. Unison Arts Center, 68 Mountain Rest Rd, New Paltz. https:// bit.ly/2ONMspI. $22 Seniors, $20 Members, $10 Students. 7pm Weekly Senior Citizen’s Bingo. Seniors 50 and older. Ongoing every Wednesday at 1:30pm & Friday at 7pm. 50/50 tickets available at 3 tickets/$2. Half-time complementary refreshments. Shawangunk Senior Center, 70 Main St, Napanoch. 7:30pm The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. Chris Washburne’s Rags & Root perform a live, original score alongside a screening of the classic horror, featuring vocalist Brianna Thomas. Bard Richard B. Fisher Center, 60 Manor Ave, Annandale. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@bard.edu, http:// bit.ly/2NOlflh. $25–45. 7:30pm The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari . The classic silent horror film comes to new life accompanied by the live, original music of jazz genius Chris Washburne and his ensemble, Rags and Roots with vocalist Brianna Thomas. The score features a live tap dancer and a septet of top jazz artists accompanying and interacting in real time with a newly remastered print of the film. There will be a spooky-themed audience costume contest for this one-night-only special screening. Info: 845-7587900. Bard College, Sosnoff Theater, Annandaleon-Hudson. fishercenter.bard.edu. $25.

HAVILAND-HEIDGERD HISTORICAL COLLECTION | ELTING MEMORIAL LIBRARY

Soldiers marching down Main Street in New Paltz in 1917.

HISTORY

8pm-11pm Acclaimed singer-songwriter Fred Eaglesmith. Marbletown Multi-Arts Center, 3588 Main St, Stone Ridge. cometomama.org. 8pm County Players present Our Town . Our Town transports us to Grover’s Corners, a small New England town of dreams and disappointments, loves and losses, and where the people are eerily like the ones in our own lives. Our Town illuminates the powerful bonds that hold communities together through everyday life and in moments of crisis, as it follows the romance of George Gibbs and Emily Webb into one of the most famous scenes in the American theatre. $20 adults; $15 Senior 60+/Military/Children under 12. Box office 845-298-1491. County Players Falls Theater, 2681 W. Main Street, Wappingers Falls. 8pm-10pm Pedro Infante: Cien años Pienso en ti. La Voz magazine and iD Studio Theatre present: Pedro Infante: Cien años Pienso en ti. Chapel of the Holy Innocents, Bard College, Annandale-On-Hudson. High school and college students with school ID $5. 8pm Bruce Katz Band Perform at the Falcon Before Midwest Tour. Bruce Katz, renowned Hammond B-3 organist/keyboardist, at The Falcon, Friday, November 2. 8pm. $20. Suggested Donation. (845) 236-7970. The Falcon, 1348 Rt. 9W, Marlboro. Info: (845) 236-7970, dougdeutschpr1956@gmail.com, https://www.liveatthefalcon.co. $20. Suggested Donation. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: JB’s Boogaloo Dance Party with Boom Boom Shake. Soul-jazz sounds of the late 60s. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@ thefalcon.com. 8pm Hudson Valley Folk Guild’s Friends of Fiddler’s Green Chapter: Flash Company. Info: 845-758-2681. Hyde Park United Methodist Church, Rt. 9 and Church St, Hyde Park. hudsonvalleyfolkguild.org. $12, $10/senior.

Saturday

11/3

8am-5pm Saturday at the Woods. Held at The Conservatory at Bethel Woods, the program offers sequential, arts based explorations that develop artistic skills. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts,

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100 years ago

“O

n September 28, 1917, about 400 people of New Paltz gathered to bid farewell to our first drafted men, Edward R. Platz, Clinton Bell, Myron Simpson and Ervie S. Smith. The general committee led by Troop B of Albany, at that time doing guard duty along the aqueduct, escorted them to the Opera House. A local drum corps furnished marching music. Appropriate exercises were held, consisting of music and an address by John Eckert of Kingston, and a plea for everyone to buy Liberty Bonds. A collection of over $400 was secured to supply the conscripts with tobacco and other comforts not supplied by the government. Our local fire department presented each man with a carton of cigarettes. These exercises were followed by a dance, which was enjoyed by all.” “Again, ten months later, another reception was given by the Firemen to the boys drafted at this time. Refreshments were served, patriotic songs sung and speeches made. A farewell demonstration was given to the selected men, consisting of a parade of citizens, the fire company and New York guards. A large flag was carried into which money was thrown along the march. This money was given to the boys. The next day, July 24, 1918, the boys were taken by automobiles to Kingston and inducted into service at the Kingston Armory.” Carol Johnson and Margaret Stanne of the Haviland-Heidgerd Historical Collection at the Elting Memorial Library in New Paltz will give a talk on “New Paltz in World War I,” describing what life was like at home and on the front lines. Included will be excerpts from soldiers’ letters home, photographs of soldiers guarding the aqueduct from terrorists, and the work of the New Paltz Chapter of the Red Cross. World War I, also called the First World War or the Great War, was an international conflict that from 1914 to 1918 embroiled most of the nations of Europe along with Russia, the US, the Middle East and other regions. The war pitted the Central Powers – Germany, Austria-Hungary and Turkey – against the Allies: France, Great Britain, Russia, Italy, Japan and, beginning in 1917, the US. It ended with the defeat of the Central Powers. The war was virtually unprecedented in the slaughter, carnage and destruction that it caused. World War I also brought about massive social upheaval, as millions of women entered the workforce to support men who went to war and to replace those who never came back. The first global war also helped to spread one of the world’s deadliest global pandemics: the Spanish flu epidemic of 1918, which killed an estimated 50 million people. The program will be held in Steinberg Room at the Elting Memorial Library at 4 p.m. on Sunday, November 4. The Elting Library is located at 93 Main Street in New Paltz. The program is free and open to the public. For more information, call (845) 255-5030.

Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 1-866-781-2922, info@ bethelwoodscenter.org. 8:30am-9:30am Yoga Level I-II with Aaron Dias. An energetic class that focuses on the breath as it relates to body alignment. Great for kickstarting the weekend. Come be inspired and move! Woodstock Yoga Center, 6 Deming St, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-8700, http://woodstockyogacenter.com. $18. 9am-4pm Davenport Flea Market. Vintage Collectibles, Antiques, Toys, Primitives, Pottery, Art. You name it-we got it-cheap! Davenport Farms, Rt 209, Stone. 9am-3pm Holiday Bazaar and Fashion Boutique. Handcrafts, Jewelry, Clothing, Holiday Items, Baked goods, White Elephant, Books galore and so much more. Lunch Available 11-2. Redeemer Lutheran Church 104 Wursts St Kingston. Info: 845-336-6603. 9am-12pm Comforter Cobblestone Thrift Store. Open Every Saturday 9am - 12noon. Featuring previously enjoyed clothing for men, women, children, household, jewelry, and misc

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items. Open through December 29th. Closed for the winter January-March. Re-opening the first Saturday in April. Take basement stairs to left of church steps. Comforter Cobblestone Thrift Store, 26 Wynkoop Pl, Kingston. 9am-5pm Family of Woodstock Fall Hotline Volunteer Training. Youth Mental Health First Aid. Are you interested in helping both your local and wider community? Info: 845-679-2485. Family of Woodstock/Kingston, 39 John St, Kingston. familyofwoodstockinc.org. 9am Hudson Farmers’ Market. 30 vendors will be offering farm fresh goods and products including vegetables, fruit, herbs, honey, nuts, mushrooms, cheese, eggs, meat, poultry, fish, cut flowers, plants, medicinal herb and body care products, bread, baked goods and a host of prepared foods. Rain or Shine! Info: hudsonfarmersmarketny.com. 6th Street & Columbia, Hudson. 9am-2pm Kingston’s Uptown Farmers’ Market. Featuring 46 local food growers/makers and live music every week. Info: 347-721-7386; kingstonfarmersmarket.org. Wall Street between John St and Main St, Kingston. 9:30am-3pm Minnewaska Preserve: Backcountry Hike. Approximately six-mile hike. Participants should pack water and food and wear appropriate footwear for hiking. Meet at the Minnewaska Nature Center. Pre-registration is required. Info: 845-255-0752. Minnewaska Preserve, Gardiner. 10am-2pm Saugerties Public Library’s Geek Con. Join your family and friends for a day of meeting local artists and authors, playing retro video games, writing tips, geeky trivia and more! Info: 845-246-4317;cpacuk@saugertiespubliclibrary.org; smcelrath@saugertiespubliclibrary. org. Saugerties Senior Center, 207 Market St,

Saugerties. 10am-4pm Riding the Rapids of Sorrow, Loss and Gratitude: A Circle of Courage Retreat. Come for one or both Saturdays for a facilitated conversation about losses (losing a loved one and other losses, healing and grace.) November 3rd and November 17th. Info: 845-687-9414; church@ctkstoneridge.org. Christ the King Episcopal Church, 3021 NY-213, Stone Ridge. ctkstoneridge.org. $35 per day (includes lunch). 10am-12pm Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Survey Training. Participants will be trained on the identification and survey protocols for the invasive pest Hemlock Woolly Adelgid. Minnewaska Preserve, Gardiner. Info: 845-561-1765, chad. johnson@parks.ny.gov, https://parks.ny.gov/ events/ev. 10am-11:30am Free Public Walking Tours of Vassar College. Highlights will include such historic locations as Main Building, Thompson Memorial Library, and the Vassar Chapel. Offered Saturdays in October and November. Vassar College, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie. 10am-11am All-Level Yoga. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. http:// clinton.lib.ny.us/. 10am-3pm John A. Coleman Christmas Craft Fair. Juried Arts & Crafts shows in the Hudson Valley offers a jumpstart for holiday shopping! John A. Coleman, 430 Hurley Ave, Hurley. Info: 845-532-1549, mbanks@catskillcsd.org. $5 Adult, $4 Seniors& Students, Under 12 free. 10am-11:30am Iyengar Yoga Level I with Barbara Boris. For students new to Iyengar, the basis of the method is taught in standing poses. Taught by Certified Iyengar Yoga Instructor Barbara Boris. Woodstock Yoga Center, 6 Deming St, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-8700,


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

GARDENER’S NOTEBOOK

Cyclamen and bluestem reward patience

I

’ll admit to being an addict. But my addiction – to propagating plants – is benign. It pains me to throw away an interesting seed or pruned-off stem; either can grow into a whole new plant: anything from a charming little flower to a towering tree. Case in point are some cyclamen seeds I collected and sowed a couple of years ago. The mother plant is Cyclamen hederifolium, a species that differs from the large potted cyclamens that you now see offered in garden centers, hardware stores, even supermarkets. Cyclamen hederifolium is cold-hardy here, so it comes back year after year when planted outdoors; and it’s a dainty plant, with small flowers and commensurately small leaves. Otherwise it looks just about the same as the widely sold commercial species: the pink or white flowers hovering like butterflies on thin stalks above the whorls of variegated leaves. Following those flowers are seed capsules: mostly-hollow balls the size of small marbles, each attached to the plant by a stem that is wound up like a spring. It was in the beginning of the growing season two years ago that I sowed the seeds in a seedtray filled with sterilized potting mix. (I don’t usually sterilize my potting mixes, but I didn’t want weeds to interfere with the slow-germinating seeds.) Eventually the seeds sprouted, and I kept them watered as needed for good, albeit slow, growth. Hardy cyclamen’s flowers fade and leaves melt into the ground as plants ease into dormancy with the approach of winter. Not my seedlings, though. I learned, years ago, not to push them into dormancy; instead, keep them growing as long as they want to, until they’re ready to start storing energy – which I did, with plenty of light and, as before, water as needed. This summer, the plants were still growing (and still small), and I noticed some swelling beneath each plant. The youngsters finally were growing tubers: small bulblike structures that will, in the future, store energy to carry the plants, dormant and leafless, through winter. This time next year I expect my plants will be officially adult, with flowers as testimony to their maturity. In her youth, my daughter periodically entered the world of Laura Ingalls Wilder, so the one-acre adjoining field we acquired became “the prairie.” Moving the playhouse that I built out to the field would have completed the picture of “little house on the prairie.” The playhouse never got out there, but the “prairie” – or hayfield, as I usually refer to it – has remained as such. My affection for prairies came from my living 12 years in Wisconsin (and studying the rich soils – the richest in the world – underlying prairies). My daughter has long outgrown her prairie phase, but I’m going to make my “prairie” more prairielike. One plant for that purpose would be big bluestem (Andropogon gerardii), the star of the Big

woodstockyogacenter.com. $18. 10am Qigong Classes. All level class including chair Qigong led by Steven Michael Pague. Ongoing every Saturday at 10am. Classes meet by the back door to the library. In case of inclement weather, class will be held in the Community Room. Info: 845-876-4030. Starr Library, 68 West Market St, Rhinebeck. 10:30am-12:30pm Ukulele Lesson & Jam. All are welcome to join for a good old uke lesson & jam, from beginners to more advanced players. We have ukes to borrow! Phoenicia Library, 48 Main St, Phoenicia. Info: 845-688-7811, www. phoenicialibrary.org. FREE. 11am-6pm Hudson Valley Veg Fest. Showcasing and celebrating the vegan lifestyle, compassion and conscious Living in New York State’s Hudson Valley. $10/adults, $15/two day pass, $5/Veterans, free/ 10 & under. Gold’s Gym (in “The Net” Event Space), 258 Titusville Rd, Poughkeepsie. Info: hvvegfest.org. 11am-4pm Red Hook & The Chocolate Festival. Chocolate Tastings, Vendors, Special events in the Stores & Restaurants, Cooking demos, History, Live Music, Theatre, and loads of chocolate. Free admission. Hosted by the Red Hook Area Chamber Of Commerce. 11am-3pm Repair Cafe. Bring your item to our Repair Café where volunteers will help you fix it! Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@ gmail.com, www.esopuslibrary.org. 11am-3pm Hudson Highlands Nature Museum: “I Spy” Halloween Trail. Families looking for a fun but not-so-spooky Halloween adventure can drop in at any time between 11am-3pm. Brave adventurers will discover which items belong in nature, like skulls and bones, and which ones do not. Find them all and earn a prize. See live animals in the “Creepy Crawly” room, play a game or make a spooky craft. 120 Muser Drive, Cornwall. 845-534-5506 ext. 204. Hudson Highlands Nature Museum/Outdoor Discovery Center, Cornwall. 12:30pm-6:30pm Expert Tarot Readings with Stephanie. Meets every Saturday from 12:306pm. Walk-ins welcome. Info: 845-679-2100. $30 for half hour reading. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30. 1pm-3pm Mindful Walker Tour: Kingston’s Dynamic Rondout. Explore the Rondout’s archi-

tectural gems, stories of places and people, and history. Enhance your own appreciation as we walk. Info: 347-628-2457, mindful@mindfulwalker.com, https://bit.ly/2JlUzpF. 15 per person. 2pm Ashokan Reservoir: How’d They Build That. Presented by Friends of Historic Saugerties. Join guest presenter, Frank Almquist, retired IBM engineer and student of history for a talk on the Olive Bridge dam construction, the east and the west basins as well as some information on the Catskill aqueduct. He will use vintage postcards and other source images to illustrate his talk and will include some images of the towns that were inundated by the water storage. Info: 845-2464317. Saugerties Public Library, 91 Washington Ave, Saugerties. 2pm-4pm Book Signing - A Woman of a Certain Age at Crafts People. Woodstock Poet Mary K. O’Melveny, author of her new Poetry Collection A Woman of a Certain Age. Cover artist Edward Welch will also be there. Info: 845-331-3859. Crafts People, 262 Spillway Rd, West Hurley. 2pm-4pm Inside the 7 Veils: Unveiling Your Sacred Veil. In this workshop with polarity therapist Meredith Narissi, you will learn who you are “unveiled,” a psycho-spiritual expansion reaching toward a higher understanding of love and deepening your spiritual practice. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $25. 2pm-3:30pm Book Signing: Beth Moon - Literary Chickens. Book signing only - no presentation. The purchase of a book by the author from Oblong is required to join the signing line. Oblong Books & Music Rhinebeck, 6422 Montgomery Street, Rhinebeck. Info: 845-876-0500, events@ oblongbooks, http://bit.ly/2EoL4ZV.

Four of grasses native to the tallgrass prairies – the other three being indiangrass (Sorghastrum nutans), switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) and little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium). Big bluestem is the tallest of the lot, towering six to ten feet high. It’s also good for hay and wildlife, and tolerates drought. A few years ago I bought some big bluestem seeds and ended up with just a few plants. Those plants are now producing seed, which (I can’t help myself ) I’ve collected. Not that some of the seeds wouldn’t selfsow near the mother plans, but seedlings that do sprout under natural conditions are subject to competition for light, nutrients and water from other plants. Like many fall-ripening JESSICA BOLSER | USFWS seeds, big bluestem seeds (Above) Big bluestem (Andropogon gerardii) is the star of won’t sprout as soon as they the Big Four of grasses native to the tallgrass prairies – hit the ground; otherwise the other three being indiangrass (Sorghastrum nutans), winter cold would do switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) and little bluestem them in. So they need (Schizachyrium scoparium). “stratification”: a false (or real) winter. For many seeds, cool, moist conditions – such as a few weeks’ residence in a mix of moist peat and perlite in a plastic bag in the refrigerator – will do the trick. Big bluestem can also be coaxed out of its winter slumber with cool, dry conditions. Perhaps I’ll try both ways. My present tallgrass prairie is only about four square feet, from two seedlings that I originally planted plus their slow underground spread with rhizomes. Over time, with my additional plantings and help – a once-a-year late-winter mowing (taken care of under natural conditions with fire) – my prairie will swell. A prairie takes time – as does, though less is needed, raising cyclamen to flower from seed. That time element itself brings with it certain satisfactions, both with the process and the result. That’s fortunate, since patience is an important element in successful propagation of plants. – Lee Reich Any gardening questions? E-mail Lee at garden@leereich.com and he’ll try answering them directly or in his Almanac Weekly column. To read Lee’s previous “Gardener’s Notebook” columns, visit his garden at www.leereich.com/blog.

3pm-5pm Circle of Trauma Parent Training Workshop. Contact Amy Drayer for info at 646-688-4321 or amy@affcny.org. Delhi Public Safety Building, 280 Phoebe Lane, Delhi. Info: 845-679-9900, info@affcny.org. free. 4pm-9pm First Saturday Artist Reception: One Man Show. Artist Ron Denitto. Exhibit will display through 11/28. Gallery hours Friday - Monday, 12-5pm. Info: 845-481-5402. The Lace Mill Gallery, 165 Cornell St, Kingston. 4pm-6pm Opening Reception: Focus - Looking Real / Really Looking. & Ginnie Gardiner - The Color Prophecies. The final of three exhibits that comprise our FOCUS series. The FOCUS series features the work of ten artists in theme-based exhibitions. The last FOCUS exhibit of this year investigates the notion of the real in art. Show exhibits through 11/25. Woodstock Artists Association & Museum, 28 Tinker St, Woodstock. Info: info@woodstockart.org, www.woodstockart.org. 4:30pm-6:30pm Annual Pre-Election Day Dinner -Roast Pork Dinner. For reservations, call 845-331-4121 or 845-687-4006. Hurley Church, Main St, Hurley. Info: 8453314121. Per Person. 5pm-8pm Opening Reception: Petit: A Group Exhibition of Smaller Sized Art. Over 50 local artists from the Hudson Valley and NY Metro area are participating in this exhibition of work 12” x 12” and under. Info: 845-247-7515. Emerge Gallery, 228 Main St, Saugerties. Info: 845-247-7515, emergegalleryny@gmail.com, www.emergegalleryny.com.

5pm-8pm Opening Reception - Gerrymandering: Pick Your Shape and Run with It. In the group show artists were asked to interpret the practice of gerrymandering through their art. A Group Show. Show exhibits through 11/17. The Storefront Gallery, 93 Broadway, Kingston. Info: 845-514-3998, Thestorefrontgallery93@gmail. com, www.thestorefrontgallery.com. 5pm-6pm Woodstock Library Forum: The Library Book by Susan Orlean. A Discussion by Woodstock writers. Sponsored by The Friends of the Woodstock Library. Writers Michael Belfiore, Laura Claridge, Sheila Isenberg, Claire Lambe, Alan Sussman, and surprise guests will discuss how a library/book/library book changed their lives. Free to the general public. Refreshments served. Woodstock Library, 5 Library Lane, Woodstock. 5pm-7pm Time, A Family of Artists. A family exhibition of Douglas James Maguire, Anna Contes Maguire, Alethea Maguire-Cruze and Carlos Cruze. Green Kill, Kingston. Info: 347-4689-2323, 229greenkill@greenkill.org, http://www.greenkill.org. 5pm-6pm Artist on Art Tours Inside Olana. Artists offer a unique lens with which to “read” an artist’s home & landscape, partnered with the Institute for Arab and Islamic Art in NYC. Info: olana.org/calendar/. Olana State Historic Site, 5720 St Rt 9G, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1872, education@olana.org. $15. 5:30pm-7:30pm Star Party to benefit Sinterklaas. An Old Dutch Tradition in the Hudson

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22 Valley. Their most elegant gathering of the year at which the Snow King and Queen bring the Celestial Flame to light the First Star that is presented by the Star Child. Witness the first appearance of this year’s Honored Animal (the butterfly) and the unveiling of the new Sinterklaas Star. Stories, dances, live music, prizes! Libations and Hors d’oeuvres are served. In the Ballroom. All welcome! Beekman Arms, 6387 Mill St, Rhinebeck. sinterklaashudsonvalley.com. $50. 6pm-9pm Opening Reception- Fifty Years of Painting: 1968-2018, Sadie Penzato-Stellefson. The exhibition is a retrospective of Dr. Penzato-Stellefson’s paintings, pastels and drawings. Complimentary wine and refreshments will be served. Exhibits through November 30. Open from 12-9pm on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Sundays, and 12-10pm on Fridays and Saturdays. Knaus Gallery & Wine Bar, 76 Vineyard Ave, Highland. knausgalleryandwinebar.com. 6pm-10pm Center for Spectrum Services’ Harvest Hop. Back by popular demand, and now being held at the Chateau in Kingston! Join us for a bountiful night of fun, frolic, and friends. The Chateau, 240 Boulevard, Kingston. Info: 845-336-2616 - EXT. 165, djuhren@centerforspectrumservices.org, https://bit.ly/2uxB7BO. Check website for updates! 6:30pm-8:30pm Forget Me Not – Exhibit Opening and Artist Reception. This exhibit is an exploration of art produced by three generations of American veteran-artists. The exhibition was curated by Virginia Walsh and will be on view through Saturday, January 5, 2019. Ann Street Gallery, 104 Ann St, Newburgh. www.safeharbors.org. 7pm The Kingston Chapter of the Hudson Valley Folk Guild Coffeehouse Series: Bruce Hildenbrand. The coffeehouse performances start at 7:30 pm with an open mic format (signup 7pm) before and after the featured performer. Info: 845-336-7797. Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Catskills, 320 Sawkill Rd, Kingston. $6. 7pm Pedro Infante: Cien Años Pienso en ti. La Voz magazine and iD Studio Theatre present: Pedro Infante: Cien años Pienso en ti, an HOLAaward nominated one-act play.. Old Dutch Church, Kingston, 272 Wall St, Kingston. High school and college students with school ID $5. 7pm-10pm Scheps - Tanksley Quartet. Internationally acclaimed jazz musicians Rob Scheps and Francesca Tanksley joined by bassist David Kingsnorth and drum legend Eliot Zigmund. Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-6373, mark@lydiasdeli.com, lydias-cafe. com. Call, visit website or at door. 7pm-10:30pm English Country Dance. Tom Amesse will teach and call traditional English Dances. Music by Tidley Pom. Workshop at 7pm. Potluck Refreshments. Reformed Church of Port Ewen, Salem Road, Port Ewen. Info: 845-4542571, hudsonvalleycommunitydances@gmail. com. adults $10, full time students $5. 7pm-8:30pm Comedy Night at The Phoenicia Playhouse. It’s Saturday night, so it’s time to have fun! Come out for an evening of hilarious stand-up comedy. Recommended for ages 18+. Info: 845-688-2279; info@phoeniciaplayhouse. com; phoeniciaplayhouse.com. The ticket link is: eventbrite.com. Phoenicia Playhouse, 10 Church

ALMANAC WEEKLY St, Phoenicia. Info: 845-688-2279, onfo@phoeniciaplayhouse.com, https://www.eventbrite. com/e/c. 20/advance online / 25door. 7pm-8:30pm A Turn of the Screw. Henry James’s classic ghost story about an inexperienced governess and two small orphans trapped in a house that’s haunted.. or is it? Doctorow Center for the Arts, 7979 Main Street. Info: 917-687-6646, kaaterskillactors@yahoo.com, KATactors.com. Cash only; no credit cards. 7pm-8:30pm New Moon Crystal Sound Healing. Crystal vibrations reduce stress and help restore balance, and align our mind-heart-cosmic connection. With Lea Garnier. Sage Academy of Sound Energy, 6 Deming Street, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-5650, sagehealingcenter@gmail. com, http://sageacademyofsoundenergy.com. $20 exchange. 8pm County Players present Our Town . Our Town transports us to Grover’s Corners, a small New England town of dreams and disappointments, loves and losses, and where the people are eerily like the ones in our own lives. Our Town illuminates the powerful bonds that hold communities together through everyday life and in moments of crisis, as it follows the romance of George Gibbs and Emily Webb into one of the most famous scenes in the American theatre. $20 adults; $15 Senior 60+/Military/Children under 12. Box office 845-298-1491. County Players Falls Theater, 2681 W. Main Street, Wappingers Falls. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: The Greyhounds. Straight ahead roots rock n’ roll. Info: 845-2367970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Joni Mitchell: “Shadows & Light” A Tribute. The timeless music of a genius. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm-11pm Datura Road. Founding members Matt Nobile, Raphael Garritano, David Budd, and Peter Nobile create an experience that breaks away from the ordinary. High Falls Cafe, 12 Stone Dock Road, High Falls. Info: 845-687-2699, highfallscafe@earthlink.net, www.highfallscafe.com. Pass the basket. 8pm-9:30pm Vassar College Women’s Chorus. Works by Ysaye Barnwell, Abbie Betinis, David Lang, Dale Trumbore, and Jocelyn Hagen. Christine Howlett, conductor and Susan Brown, piano. Skinner Hall at Vassar College, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-437-5632. 8pm-9pm Small Plates Choreography Festival. Safe Harbor of the Hudson hosts a Plates class. Event held in the Lobby at the Ritz Theater. Lobby at the Ritz Theater, 107 Broadway, Newburgh. safe-harbors.org. Buy online, $10 with student ID. 8pm-10pm The Orchestra Now presents “Copland’s Lincoln Portrait” conducted by Leon Botstein. Ives: Decoration Day from the Holidays Symphony Carter: Concerto for Orchestra Walter Piston: Symphony No. 2 Copland: Lincoln Portrait. Bard Richard B. Fisher Center, 60 Manor Ave, Annandale. https://bit. ly/2KG3l3p. 25 – 35. 8pm-11pm Jimmy Webb. Songwriter, composer and singer. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 1-866-781-2922, info@ bethelwoodscenter.org.

Sunday

Nov. 1, 2018

11/4

8:30am-9:30am Sunday Flow with Deborah Adams. Open and approachable class for all levels. Breath and movement are linked to calm the nervous system and energize the body. Expect to move, try something new and participate in your own personal well-being. Woodstock Yoga Center, 6 Deming St, Woodstock. Info: 845-6798700, www.woodstockyogacenter.com. drop in rate. 9am-4pm Davenport Flea Market. Vintage Collectibles, Antiques, Toys, Primitives, Pottery, Art. You name it-we got it-cheap! Davenport Farms, Rt 209, Stone. 9am-4pm Kaaterskill Post Card Club. $4 Admission, Door Prize. Info: 845-383-0061. Midtown Neighborhood Center, 467 Broadway, Kingston. 9am-2pm Warwick Valley Farmer’s Market. Every Sunday through 11/18. Info: 845-986-2720. South Street Parking Lot, Warwick. warwickcc. org. 10am-1pm Falling Gracefully: Healing Constellations. We were born to live the good life, but traumas and life experiences and everyday stressors can impede that. Join us for a day of healing! Woodstock Healing Arts, 83 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. Info: 845-393-4325, ino@woodstockhealingarts.com, www.woodstockhealingarts.com. Single/Group. 10am-2pm Highland Falls Art Walk and Farmers Market. Ongoing display of sculpture and art installed along Main Street. Pair with a visit to the Highland Falls Farmers Market on Sundays from 10am-2pm. Village of Highland Falls. Info: highlandfallsartwalk.org. 10am-11:30am Iyengar Yoga Level II with Barbara Boris. For students who are wellpracticed in Iyengar Level I. Taught by Certified Iyengar Yoga Instructor Barbara Boris. Woodstock Yoga Center, 6 Deming St, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-8700, http://woodstockyogacenter.com. $18. 10:30am-12:30pm Free Meditation Class. Info: 845-658-8556. Sky Lake Shambhala Meditation & Retreat Center, 22 Hillcrest Ln, Rosendale. 11am-6pm Hudson Valley Veg Fest. Showcasing and celebrating the vegan lifestyle, compassion and conscious Living in New York State’s Hudson Valley. $10/adults, $15/two day pass, $5/Veterans, free/ 10 & under. Gold’s Gym (in “The Net” Event Space), 258 Titusville Rd, Poughkeepsie. Info: hvvegfest.org. 11am-2pm Sunday Brunch @ The Falcon: Big Joe Fitz & The Lo-Fis. Soulful, swinging, prerock era blues. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@ thefalcon.com. 11am-3pm Hudson Highlands Nature Museum: “I Spy” Halloween Trail. Families looking for a fun but not-so-spooky Halloween adventure can drop in at any time between 11am-3pm. Brave adventurers will discover which items belong in nature, like skulls and bones, and which ones do not. Find them all and earn a prize. See live animals in the “Creepy Crawly” room, play a game or make a spooky craft. 120 Muser Drive, Cornwall. 845-534-5506 ext. 204. Hudson Highlands Nature Museum/Outdoor Discovery Center, Cornwall. 12pm-6pm Private 7 Veils Energy Balancing Sessions with polarity therapist Meredith Narissi. Please call for available times and to book an appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $75/1 hour, $40/half hour. 12pm Reformed Church of Saugerties’ Fall Education Series: NOMA Discussions. Info: 845-246-2867 Sept. 13, 27, Oct. 11, 18 and Nov. 1 - Thursdays at 7:00 pm 173 Main St., Saugerties - 845-246-2867. Reformed Church of Saugerties, 173 Main St., Saugerties. 12:30pm-6pm Voyager Tarot Readings with psychic reader Sarvananda. Walk-ins warmly welcome. MInfo: 845-679-2100. $30 for half hour reading; $50 for one hour in-depth. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. 1pm-3pm New Paltz Chavurah. First organizational meeting for a new secular Jewish “chavurah” in the New Paltz area. We seek to create an informal group of secular Jews who seek a spiritually elevated form of Judaism that is not beholden to a “God-obedience” paradigm for our spiritual and moral guidance. Free. Limited seating. RSVP: newpaltzhavurah@gmail.com. 343 Old Kingston Rd, New Paltz. 1pm-3pm Yiddish Folk-Songs Concert. French violinist and singer Eleonore Biezunski joined by Lauren Brody (vocals, accordion) explore the heritage of women’s Yiddish folksongs. Woodstock Jewish Congregation, 1682 Glasco Turnpike, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-2218, info@wjcshul. org, www.eleonorebiezunski.com. Suggested donation $10/WJC Members, $20/General. 2pm-3:30pm John Quitman: Rhinebeck Resident to Confederate Army General. A Talk by Reverend Dr. Mark Isaacs. In the Starr Library Local History Room. Info: 845-554-6331; museumofrhinebeckhistory@gmail.com. Starr Library, 68 West Market St, Rhinebeck. starrlibrary.org.

2pm-3:30pm Sufi Whirling Workshop with Juliet Rabia Gentile. Through body-centered movement, breathing exercises, vocalizations and drumming, we focus on awakening our spiritual heart. Sage Academy of Sound Energy, 6 Deming Street, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-5650, sagehealingcenter@gmail.com, sageacademyofsoundenergy.com. $35. 2pm Sunday Afternoon Concerts: Guitarist Eric Roth. A performance of 19th century guitar music. Roth will perform on a beautiful, authentic reproduction instrument modeled after one built in 1830. Info: 845-687-7023. Stone Ridge Library, 3700 Main St, Stone Ridge. stoneridgelibrary.org. 2pm-3:30pm A Turn of the Screw. Henry James’s classic ghost story about an inexperienced governess and two small orphans trapped in a house that’s haunted.. or is it? Doctorow Center for the Arts, 7979 Main Street. Info: 917-687-6646, kaaterskillactors@yahoo.com, KATactors.com. Cash only; no credit cards. 2pm-6pm Sunday Jazz. J. Drechsler Quartet/ Septet with special guest artists in concert at 2pm. Daily featured composers and theme based selections. Sign up at 3:30pm to sit in with the band at 4pm. All musical levels given time! Great coffee, baked goods, friendly service, relaxed atmosphere. No worries. No cover! Info: 845-633-8287. Cafeteria Coffeehouse, 58 Main St, New Paltz. 2pm-4pm Lotte Reiniger’s Adventures of Prince Achmed. A handsome prince rides a flying horse to far-away lands and embarks on magical adventures. Silent, animated film with live accompaniment. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St, Rosendale. Info: 845-658-8989, info@ rosendaletheatre.org, www.rosendaletheatre.org. General Admission. 2pm-3pm Pamela Badila’s Folktales & Stories. Material is for children 6-11 years old. All are welcome to come hear stories from around the world. Hudson Area Library, 51 North 5th Street, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1792, brenda.shufelt@ hudsonarealibrary.org, https://bit.ly/2Pg3c8J. 2pm-4pm The Orchestra Now presents “Copland’s Lincoln Portrait” conducted by Leon Botstein. Ives: Decoration Day from the Holidays Symphony Carter: Concerto for Orchestra Walter Piston: Symphony No. 2 Copland: Lincoln Portrait. Bard Richard B. Fisher Center, 60 Manor Ave, Annandale. https://bit. ly/2KG3l3p. $25-35. 2pm-4pm The Art and Craft of Catskill Leather. Ryan Trapani, Director of Forest Services for the Catskill Forest Association, will discuss the impacts of the hemlock bark tanning industry on Catskill communities and forests. He will also describe how he uses hemlock bark today to convert deerskins into leather. Light refreshments are included. Info: 845-985-7700. Time and the Valleys Museum, 332 Main Street, Grahamsville. Info: 845-985-7700, info@timeandthevalleysmuseum.org. Members: FREE, non members: $3. 3pm 43rd Annual Interfaith Music Festival - Praise. Hosted by The Dutchess County Interfaith Council. Info: 845-229-0179; dutchesscountyinterfaith.org. Freedom Plains United Presbyterian Church, 1168 Rt 55, Lagrangeville. 3pm-4:30pm Faculty and Guest Recital. This husband and wife team will present a concert of contemporary music arranged for the pianopercussion combination as well as solo work. Skinner Hall at Vassar College, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-437-5632. 4pm Talk: New Paltz During World War I. The program will be held in Steinberg Room. Free and open to the public. For further information call 845-255-5030. 5pm-6:30pm The Set-Up: Honest Talk About Tough Issues. The Maya Gold Foundation Presents a frank, unconventional discussion on issues affecting teens today. For 15-18 year old only. DENIZEN Theatre, 10 Main St, New Paltz. Info: 845-418-5227, info@mayagoldfoundation. org, www.mayagoldfoundation.org. 5pm Small Plates Choreography Festival. Safe Harbor of the Hudson hosts a Plates class. Event held in the Lobby at the Ritz Theater. Lobby at the Ritz Theater, 107 Broadway, Newburgh. safeharbors.org. Buy online, $10 with student ID. 5pm-6:30pm Restorative Yoga with Barbara Boris. Restorative yoga is a gentle, completely supportive practice that is designed to bring stillness to the body and the mind.Dress in layers, wear socks and bring an eye pillow if you have one. $18 drop-in, discounted with class card or membership. Woodstock Yoga Center, 6 Deming St, Woodstock. 6:30pm-8:30pm Hope on the Hudson. A screening of the short documentary trilogy and a talk by the film director Jon Bowermaster. At the Sangha House. Free. Info: dharmaaction@mro. org. Zen Mountain Monastery, 871 Plank Rd, Mount Tremper. hudsonriverstories.com. 7pm-9pm Shadows Of The 60’s-Tribute to Gladys Knight and The Temptations. The best of Motown. Paramount Hudson Valley Theater, 1008 Brown St, Peekskill. https://bit.ly/2CQYBqt. $30 - $52. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Pedro Giraudo Sextet “An Argentinian in NY”. Impeccably executed pan-Latin Jazz. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@ thefalcon.com.


ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

legal notices LEGAL NOTICE Notice Is Hereby Given Pursuant to Section 4-118 of the Election Law of the State of New York that the following Polling Places are open Tuesday, November 6, 2018, from 6am to 9pm:

Member of Assembly 102nd District Member of Assembly 103rd District Member of Assembly 104th District Ulster County Sheriff Village of Ellenville Village Justice Village of Ellenville Village Trustee Town of Plattekill Town Justice Town of Saugerties Town Justice Town of Saugerties Town Councilman Town of Wawarsing Town Clerk Town of Wawarsing Town Councilman Town of Woodstock Town Councilman Propositions for Ulster County, Town of Marlborough, Town of Olive, Town of Shandaken and the Town of Woodstock. Notice is further given, Any voter wishing for copies of the aforementioned propositions may contact the Ulster County Board of Elections, 284 Wall Street, Kingston, New York 12401. Given under the hands of the Commissioners of Election and the Seal of the County of Ulster Board of Elections on, October 22, 2018

Thomas F. Turco, President

Ashley Dittus, Secretary

Names and Addresses of the Candidates nominated are available at the Ulster County Board of Elections, 284 Wall Street, Kingston, New York 12401 or by calling 845-334-5470. Given under the hands of the Commissioners of Election and the Seal of the County of Ulster Board of Elections on, October 22, 2018

Thomas F. Turco, President LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following report is available for public inspection: 2017 Federal Single Audit with the following reports herewith: Independent Auditors’ Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting and on Compliance and Other Matters Based on an Audit of Financial Statements Performed in Accordance with Government Auditing Standards Independent Auditors’ Report on Compliance for Each Major Federal Program and Report on Internal Control over Compliance in Accordance with the Uniform Guidance SAID INFORMATION will be available for public inspection during normal business hours, in the Office of the Clerk of the Ulster County Legislature at 244 Fair Street, Kingston, New York. DATED: October 25, 2018 Ulster County Legislature Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk

Ashley Dittus, Secretary Kingston, New York LEGAL NOTICE Notice of General Election: Pursuant to section 4-120 of the New York State Election Law, notice is hereby given that a General Election will be held throughout the County of Ulster on Tuesday, November 6, 2018. Hours for voting are 6:00AM to 9:00PM. The Public Offices and Propositions to be voted for are as follows: Governor Lieutenant Governor Comptroller Attorney General United States Senator State Supreme Court Justice 3rd Judicial District Representative in Congress State Senate 39th District State Senate 42nd District State Senate 46th District State Senate 51st District Member of Assembly 101st District

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ULSTER COUNTY APPLICATION FOR U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT FUNDS (CDBG) ADMINISTERED BY THE NEW YORK STATE OFFICE OF HOMES AND COMMUNITY RENEWAL Citizens are advised that Ulster County is considering an application for Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds administered by the New York State Office of Community Renewal (OCR). OCR will make 12 million dollars in CDBG funds available for housing activities including housing rehabilitation, homeownership, manufactured housing rehabilitation or replacement, well and septic replacement, and lateral connection assistance that primarily benefit low and moderate income persons. For the 2018 Program Year Ulster County is eligible to apply for up to $1,000,000.00 A public hearing on Ulster County’s Community Development Block Grant Program will be held on November 13, 2018 at 6:10 PM or soon thereafter as the public may be heard, in the County Legislative Chambers, 6th Floor, 244 Fair St. Kingston, New York. The hearing will provide further information about the CDBG program and will allow for citizen participation in the development of any proposed grant applications and/or to provide technical assistance to develop alternate proposals. Comments on the CDBG program or proposed project(s) will be received at this time. The hearing is being conducted pursuant to Section 570.486, Subpart I of the CFR and in compliance with the requirements of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, as amended. Citizens are urged to express their views on the direction of Ulster County’s CDBG Program. CDBG funds are available for housing activities including housing rehabilitation, well and septic replacement, and lateral connection assistance that primarily benefit low-and moderate-income persons. Written comments should be directed to Dennis Doyle, Director, Ulster County Planning Department, County Office Building, 244 Fair Street, Box 1800, Kingston, New York, 12402 and shall be received no later than November 16, 2018. Copies of supporting documentation are available for viewing at the offices of the Ulster County Planning Department, 244 Fair Street, County Office Building, Kingston, NY. The Ulster County Legislature is committed to making its Public Meetings accessible to individuals with disabilities. If, due to a disability, you need an accommodation or assistance to participate in the Public Hearing or to obtain a copy of the transcript of the Public Hearing in an alternative format in accordance with the provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act, please contact the Office of the Clerk of the Legislature at 340-3666. Dated: November 1, 2018 Kingston, New York Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the resolution published herewith has been adopted by the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York, on October 23, 2017 and approved by the County Executive on October 24, 2017, and the validity of the obligations authorized by such resolution may be hereinafter contested only if such obligations were authorized for an object or purpose for which said County is not authorized to expend money, or if the provisions of law which should have been complied with as of the date of publication of this notice were not substantially complied with, and an action, suit or proceeding contesting such validity is

23 commenced within twenty days after the date of publication of this notice, or such obligations were authorized in violations of the provisions of the Constitution. Dated: November 1, 2018 Kingston, New York Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Resolution No. 395 October 23, 2017 Authorizing The Renovation Of The Business Resource Center, In And For The County Of Ulster, New York, At A Maximum Estimated Cost Of $9,246,410.00, And Authorizing The Issuance Of $7,963,910.00 Additional Bonds Of Said County To Pay The Cost Thereof Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairman Gerentine and Legislators Briggs, Allen, Bartels, Belfiglio, Maio and Maloney) Chairman of The Special Committee to Oversee the Ulster County Family Court Relocation, Herbert Litts, III, and Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, Richard A. Gerentine, offer the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 394 dated and duly adopted on the date hereof, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has amended Capital Project No. 494 for the renovation of the Business Resource Center to accommodate Family Court for the Department of Public Works (Buildings and Grounds Division); and WHEREAS, the capital project hereinafter described, as proposed, has been determined to be a Type II Action pursuant to the regulations of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation promulgated pursuant to the State Environmental Quality Review Act, which regulations state that Type II Actions will not have a significant adverse effect on the environment; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the financing of such capital project; now, therefore be it RESOLVED, by the affirmative vote of not less than two-thirds of the total voting strength of the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York, as follows: Section 1. The renovation of the Business Resource Center to accommodate Family Court, in and for the County of Ulster, New York, including original furnishings, equipment, machinery, appurtenances, apparatus, and incidental improvements and expenses in connection therewith, is hereby authorized at a maximum estimated cost of $9,246,410.00 Section 2. It is hereby determined that the plan for the financing of the aforesaid maximum estimated cost is as follows: a. By the issuance of the $1,260,000.00 bonds of said County authorized to be issued pursuant to a bond resolution dated and duly adopted January 10, 2017; and a. By the issuance of the $22,500.00 bonds of said County authorized to be issued pursuant to a bond resolution dated and duly adopted June 20, 2017; and c. By the issuance of the additional $7,963,910.00 bonds of said County hereby authorized to be issued therefor pursuant to the provisions of the Local Finance Law. Section 3. It is hereby determined that the period of probable usefulness of the aforesaid specific object or purpose is twenty-five years, pursuant to subdivision 12(a)(1) of paragraph a of Section 11.00 of the Local Finance Law, calculated from the date of issuance of the first obligations issued for the aforesaid specific object or purpose, no previous obligations having been heretofore issued. It is hereby further determined that the period of probable usefulness of preliminary planning, design and related expenses heretofore authorized by prior bond resolutions dated January 10, 2017 (Bond Resolution No. 6 for $1,260,000.00) and dated June 20, 2017 (Bond Resolution No. 263 for $22,500.00) adopted for Capital Project No. 494 are hereby determined to be twenty-five years pursuant to said subdivision 12(a)(1) and said bond resolutions are hereby amended accordingly. The maximum estimated cost of the specific object or purpose herein authorized, including said preliminary expenses, is now determined to be $9,246,410.00 as provided herein. Section 4. The faith and credit of said County of Ulster, New York, are hereby irrevocable pledged for the payment of the principal of and interest on such bonds as the same respectively become due and payable. An annual appropriation shall be made in each year sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on such bonds becoming due and payable in such year. There shall annually be levied on all the taxable real property of said County, a tax sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on such bonds as the same become due and payable. Section 5. Subject to the provisions of the Local Finance Law, the power to authorize the issuance of and to sell bond anticipation notes in anticipation of the issuance and sale of the bonds herein authorized, including renewals of such notes, is hereby delegated to the Commissioner of Finance, the chief fiscal officer. Such notes shall be of such terms, form and contents, and shall be sold in such manner, as may be prescribed by said Commissioner of Finance, consistent with the provisions of the Local Finance Law. Section 6. All other matters except as provided herein relating to the serial bonds herein authorized including the date, denominations, maturities and interest payment dates, within the limitations prescribed herein and the


24 manner of execution of the same, including the consolidation with other issues, and also the ability to issue serial bonds with substantially level or declining annual debt service, shall be determined by the Commissioner of Finance, the chief fiscal officer of such County. Such bonds shall contain substantially the recital of validity clause provided for in Section 52.00 of the Local Finance Law, and shall otherwise be in such form and contain such recitals, in addition to those required by Section 51.00 of the Local Finance Law, as the Commissioner of Finance shall determine consistent with the provisions of the Local Finance Law. Section 7. The validity of such bonds and bond anticipation notes may be contested only if: 1) Such obligations are authorized for an object or purpose for which said County is not authorized to expend money, or 2) The provisions of law which should be complied with at the date of publication of this resolution are not substantially complied with, and an action, suit or proceeding contesting such validity is commenced within twenty days after the date of such publication, or 3) Such obligations are authorized in violation of the provisions of the Constitution. Section 8. This resolution shall constitute a statement of official intent for purposes of Treasury Regulations Section 1.140 2. Other than as specified in this resolution, no monies are, or are reasonably expected to be, reserved, allocated on a long term basis, or otherwise set aside with respect to the permanent funding of the object or purpose described herein. Section 9. This resolution, which takes effect immediately, shall be published in summary form in the official newspaper(s) of such County, together with a notice of the Clerk of the County Legislature in substantially the form provided in Section 81.00 of the Local Finance Law. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the resolution published herewith has been adopted by the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York, on October 16, 2018 and approved by the County Executive on October 23, 2018, and the validity of the obligations authorized by such resolution may be hereinafter contested only if such obligations were authorized for an object or purpose for which said County is not authorized to expend money, or if the provisions of law which should have been complied with as of the date of publication of this notice were not substantially complied with, and an action, suit or proceeding contesting such validity is commenced within twenty days after the date of publication of this notice, or such obligations were authorized in violations of the provisions of the Constitution. Dated: November 1, 2018 Kingston, New York Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Resolution No. 393 October 16, 2018 Authorizing The Issuance Of An Additional $315,000.00 Bonds Of The County Of Ulster, New York, To Pay Part Of The Cost Of Preliminary Engineering And Design For The Fire Training Center, In And For Said County Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairman Gerentine and Legislators Archer, Bartels, Lopez, Maio, James Maloney, Joseph Maloney, and Petit) Chairman Kenneth J. Ronk, Jr. offers the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 392 dated and duly adopted on October 16, 2018, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has amended Capital Project No. 483 for certain engineering and design expenses with regard to the Fire Training Center for the Department of Public Works; and WHEREAS, said capital project, as proposed, has been determined to be an Unlisted Action pursuant to the regulations of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation promulgated pursuant to the State Environmental Quality Review Act, which it has been determined will not have any significant adverse impact on the environment; and WHEREAS, by a bond resolution dated August 16, 2016, duly adopted on said date, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York, authorized the issuance of $152,000.00 bonds of said County to pay the preliminary engineering and design for the Fire Training Center, including incidental expenses in connection therewith, in and for said County, and WHEREAS, it has now been determined that the maximum estimated cost of such specific object or purpose is $467,000.00, an increase of $315,000.00 over that previously authorized; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the issuance of an additional $315,000.00 bonds of said County for such specific object or purpose; now, therefore be it RESOLVED, by the affirmative vote of not less than two-thirds of the total voting strength of the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York, as follows: Section 1. For the specific object or purpose of paying additional costs of the preliminary engineering and design for the Fire Training Center, including incidental expenses in connection therewith, in and for said County of Ulster, New York, there are hereby authorized to be issued an additional $315,000.00 bonds of the County of Ulster, New York, pursuant to the provisions of the Local Finance Law. Section 2. It is hereby determined that

ALMANAC WEEKLY the maximum estimated cost of such specific object or purpose is now determined to be $467,000.00, which specific object or purpose is hereby authorized at said maximum estimated cost, and that the plan for the financing thereof is as follows: a. By the issuance of the $152,000.00 bonds of said County authorized to be issued pursuant to a bond resolution dated and duly adopted August 16, 2016 as described in the preambles hereof; and b. By the issuance of the additional $315,000.00 bonds of said County authorized to be issued pursuant to this bond resolution. Section 3. It is hereby determined that the period of probable usefulness of the aforesaid specific object or purpose is five years, pursuant to subdivision 62(2nd) of paragraph a of Section 11.00 of the Local Finance Law, calculated from the date of issuance of the first serial bonds/bond anticipation notes for said specific object or purpose. Section 4. Subject to the provisions of the Local Finance Law, the power to authorize the issuance of and to sell bond anticipation notes in anticipation of the issuance and sale of the bonds herein authorized, including renewals of such notes, is hereby delegated to the Commissioner of Finance, the chief fiscal officer. Such notes shall be of such terms, form and contents, and shall be sold in such manner, as may be prescribed by said Commissioner of Finance, consistent with the provisions of the Local Finance Law. Section 5. All other matters except as provided herein relating to the serial bonds herein authorized including the date, denominations, maturities and interest payment dates, within the limitations prescribed herein and the manner of execution of the same, including the consolidation with other issues, and also the ability to issue serial bonds with substantially level or declining annual debt service, shall be determined by the Commissioner of Finance, the chief fiscal officer of such County. Such bonds shall contain substantially the recital of validity clause provided for in Section 52.00 of the Local Finance Law, and shall otherwise be in such form and contain such recitals, in addition to those required by Section 51.00 of the Local Finance Law, as the Commissioner of Finance shall determine consistent with the provisions of the Local Finance Law. Section 6. The faith and credit of said County of Ulster, New York, are hereby irrevocable pledged for the payment of the principal of and interest on such bonds as the same respectively become due and payable. An annual appropriation shall be made in each year sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on such bonds becoming due and payable in such year. There shall annually be levied on all the taxable real property of said County, a tax sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on such bonds as the same become due and payable. Section 7. The validity of such bonds and bond anticipation notes may be contested only if: 1) Such obligations are authorized for an object or purpose for which said County is not authorized to expend money, or 2) The provisions of law which should be complied with at the date of publication of this resolution are not substantially complied with, and an action, suit or proceeding contesting such validity is commenced within twenty days after the date of such publication, or 3) Such obligations are authorized in violation of the provisions of the Constitution. Section 8. This resolution shall constitute a statement of official intent for purposes of Treasury Regulations Section 1.150 2. Other than as specified in this resolution, no monies are, or are reasonably expected to be, reserved, allocated on a long term basis, or otherwise set aside with respect to the permanent funding of the object or purpose described herein. Section 9. This resolution, which takes effect immediately, shall be published in full in the official newspapers of such County, together with a notice of the Clerk of the County Legislature in substantially the form provided in Section 81.00 of the Local Finance Law. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the resolution published herewith has been adopted by the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York, on October 16, 2018 and approved by the County Executive on October 23, 2018, and the validity of the obligations authorized by such resolution may be hereinafter contested only if such obligations were authorized for an object or purpose for which said County is not authorized to expend money, or if the provisions of law which should have been complied with as of the date of publication of this notice were not substantially complied with, and an action, suit or proceeding contesting such validity is commenced within twenty days after the date of publication of this notice, or such obligations were authorized in violations of the provisions of the Constitution. Dated: November 1, 2018 Kingston, New York Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Resolution No. 391 October 16, 2018 Authorizing The Issuance Of An Additional $52,000.00 Bonds Of The County Of Ulster, New York, To Pay Part Of The Cost Of Slope Stabilization On Various County Roads, In And For Said County Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairman Gerentine and Legislators Archer, Bartels, Lopez, Maio, James Maloney, Joseph

Maloney, and Petit) Chairman of the Public Works and Capital Projects Committee, Dean J. Fabiano, offers the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 390 dated and duly adopted on October 16, 2018, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has amended Capital Project No. 475 for slope stabilization on various County roads for the Department of Public Works (Highways and Bridges); and WHEREAS, said capital project, as proposed, has been determined to be a Type II Action pursuant to the regulations of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation promulgated pursuant to the State Environmental Quality Review Act, which regulations state that Type II Actions will not have any significant adverse impact on the environment; and WHEREAS, by a bond resolution dated March 15, 2016, duly adopted on said date, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York, authorized the issuance of $780,000.00 bonds of said County to pay the cost of slope stabilization on various County roads, including incidental improvements and expenses in connection therewith, in and for said County, and WHEREAS, by a bond resolution dated April 17, 2018, duly adopted on said date, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York, authorized the issuance of $392,480.00 additional bonds of said County to pay the cost of slope stabilization on various County roads, including incidental improvements and expenses in connection therewith, in and for said County, and WHEREAS, it has now been determined that the maximum estimated cost of such class of objects or purposes is $1,224,480.00, an increase of $52,000.00 over that previously authorized; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the issuance of an additional $52,000.00 bonds of said County for such class of objects or purposes; now, therefore be it RESOLVED, by the affirmative vote of not less than two-thirds of the total voting strength of the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York, as follows: Section 1. For the class of objects or purposes of paying additional costs of slope stabilization on various County roads, including incidental improvements and expenses in connection therewith, in and for said County of Ulster, New York, there are hereby authorized to be issued an additional $52,000.00 bonds of the County of Ulster, New York, pursuant to the provisions of the Local Finance Law. Section 2. It is hereby determined that the maximum estimated cost of such class of objects or purposes is now determined to be $1,224,480.00, which class of objects or purposes is hereby authorized at said maximum estimated cost, and that the plan for the financing thereof is as follows: a. By the issuance of the $780,000.00 bonds of said County authorized to be issued pursuant to a bond resolution dated and duly adopted March 15, 2016 as described in the preambles hereof; b. By the issuance of the additional $392,480.00 bonds of said County authorized to be issued pursuant to a bond resolution dated and duly adopted April 17, 2018 as described in the preambles hereof; and c. By the issuance of the additional $52,000.00 bonds of said County authorized to be issued pursuant to this bond resolution. Section 3. It is hereby determined that the period of probable usefulness of the aforesaid class of objects or purposes is five years, pursuant to subdivision 35 of paragraph a of Section 11.00 of the Local Finance Law, calculated from the date of issuance of the first serial bonds/bond anticipation notes for said class of objects or purposes. Section 4. Subject to the provisions of the Local Finance Law, the power to authorize the issuance of and to sell bond anticipation notes in anticipation of the issuance and sale of the bonds herein authorized, including renewals of such notes, is hereby delegated to the Commissioner of Finance, the chief fiscal officer. Such notes shall be of such terms, form and contents, and shall be sold in such manner, as may be prescribed by said Commissioner of Finance, consistent with the provisions of the Local Finance Law. Section 5. All other matters except as provided herein relating to the serial bonds herein authorized including the date, denominations, maturities and interest payment dates, within the limitations prescribed herein and the manner of execution of the same, including the consolidation with other issues, and also the ability to issue serial bonds with substantially level or declining annual debt service, shall be determined by the Commissioner of Finance, the chief fiscal officer of such County. Such bonds shall contain substantially the recital of validity clause provided for in Section 52.00 of the Local Finance Law, and shall otherwise be in such form and contain such recitals, in addition to those required by Section 51.00 of the Local Finance Law, as the Commissioner of Finance shall determine consistent with the provisions of the Local Finance Law. Section 6. The faith and credit of said County of Ulster, New York, are hereby irrevocable pledged for the payment of the principal of and interest on such bonds as the same respectively become due and payable. An annual appropriation shall be made in each year sufficient to pay the principal of and interest

Nov. 1, 2018

on such bonds becoming due and payable in such year. There shall annually be levied on all the taxable real property of said County, a tax sufficient to pay the principal of and interest on such bonds as the same become due and payable. Section 7. The validity of such bonds and bond anticipation notes may be contested only if: 1) Such obligations are authorized for an object or purpose for which said County is not authorized to expend money, or 2) The provisions of law which should be complied with at the date of publication of this resolution are not substantially complied with, and an action, suit or proceeding contesting such validity is commenced within twenty days after the date of such publication, or 3) Such obligations are authorized in violation of the provisions of the Constitution. Section 8. This resolution shall constitute a statement of official intent for purposes of Treasury Regulations Section 1.150 2. Other than as specified in this resolution, no monies are, or are reasonably expected to be, reserved, allocated on a long term basis, or otherwise set aside with respect to the permanent funding of the object or purpose described herein. Section 9. This resolution, which takes effect immediately, shall be published in full in the official newspapers of such County, together with a notice of the Clerk of the County Legislature in substantially the form provided in Section 81.00 of the Local Finance Law. LEGAL NOTICE COUNTY OF ULSTER NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PURSUANT TO SECTION 1411 (d) OF THE NOT-FORPROFIT LAW OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK REGARDING THE SALE AND/OR TRANSFER OF COUNTY PROPERTY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a Public Hearing will be held pursuant to Section 1411(d) of the Not-for-Profit Law of the State of New York regarding the authorization of the sale and/or transfer of a .18 acre portion of property between Cornell and O’Neil Streets in the City of Kingston to the Ulster County Economic Development Alliance, Inc., a local development corporation, on Tuesday, November 13, 2018 at 6:15 PM or as soon thereafter as the public can be heard, in the Legislative Chambers, Ulster County Office Building, 244 Fair Street, Kingston, New York. PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE that all persons and citizens interested shall have an opportunity to be heard on said sale and/or transfer at the time and place aforesaid. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to the requirements of the Open Meetings Law of the State of New York, that the Ulster County Legislature will convene in public meeting at the time and place aforesaid for the purpose of conducting a public hearing on the sale and/ or transfer as described above and, as deemed advisable by said Ulster County Legislature, taking action on the enactment authorizing the sale and/or transfer. Dated: November 1, 2018 Kingston, New York Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS ON PROPOSED 2018 ULSTER COUNTY BUDGET AND THE PROPOSED 2019 – 2024 CAPITAL PROGRAM NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the Ulster County Legislature will meet in the: Ulster County Legislative Chambers, County Office Building, 244 Fair Street, Kingston, NY 12401 at 6:00 PM on Tuesday, November 13, 2018; and BOCES, Conference center East, 175 Rte 32 N, New Paltz, NY 12561 at 6:00 PM on Wednesday, November 14, 2018; and Town of Marbletown Town Hall, Room M-1, 1925 Lucas Ave., Cottekill, NY 12419 at 6:00 PM on Thursday, November 15, 2018 for the purpose of holding Public Hearings on the Proposed 2019 Ulster County Budget and the Proposed 2019 – 2024 Capital Program of said County for the fiscal year beginning January 1, 2019. FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that copies of said Proposed 2019 Ulster County Budget and the Proposed 2019 – 2024 Capital Program are available at the Office of the Clerk of the Ulster County Legislature, County Office Building, Kingston, New York, where they may be inspected or procured by any interested person during normal business hours, Monday through Friday. The Proposed 2019 Ulster County Budget can also be found online at http://ulstercountyny. gov/budget/ Pursuant to Section 359 of the County Law, the maximum salaries that may be fixed and payable during the ensuing fiscal year to members of the County Legislature and to the Chairman, Majority Leader and Minority Leader respectively, are hereby submitted and specified as follows: Chairman of the County Legislature $23,500; Majority Leader of the County Legislature $16,000; Minority Leader of the County Legislature $16,000; Members of the County Legislature $14,000. ACCESSIBILITY: The hearings are accessible to persons with a mobility impairment. Dated: November 1, 2018 Kingston, New York Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature


25

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

CLASSIFIEDS

“Happy hunting!�

100Â

Help Wanted

to place an ad: contact

e-mail

Call 334-8200. For regular line ads, ask for Tobi or Amy; real estate display ads or help wanted display, Genia; automobile display, Ralph. Hours: MWThF 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday: 9-11 a.m. classifieds@ulsterpublishing.com

website

Classified line ads can be placed at www.ulsterpublishing.com

fax

Our fax-machine number is 845-334-8809 (include credit card #)

drop-off

Sunflower Health Food store, Bradley Meadows, Woodstock; 29 South Chestnut Street, New Paltz, NY; 322 Wall St., Kingston.

telephone

deadlines phone, mail drop-off

The absolute final deadline is Tuesday at 11 a.m. Monday at 11 a.m. in Woodstock and New Paltz; Tuesday in Kingston.

rates

4FSWJDF 5FDIOJDJBO–Full Time Excellent career opportunity with a 100% Employee Owned Company

weekly

$20 for 30 words; 20 cents for each additional word.

special deals

$72 for four weeks (30 words); $225 for 13 weeks; $425 for 26 weeks; 800 for a year; each additional word after 30 is 20 cents per word per week. Future credit given for cancellations, no refunds.

policy errors payment

Proofread before submitting. No refunds will be given, but credit will be extended toward future ads if we are responsible for any error. Prepay with cash, check, Visa, MasterCard or Discover.

reach

Primary Job Functions: • 1FSGPSN "OOVBM QSFWFOUBUJWF .BJOUFOBODF DIFDL BOE 5VOF VQT • %JBHOPTF BOE SFQBJS TFSWJDF JTTVFT XJUI /BUVSBM (BT 1SPQBOF BOE 'VFM 0JM GJSFE )FBUJOH BOE 8BUFS )FBUJOH FRVJQNFOU • %JBHOPTF BOE SFQBJS TFSWJDF JTTVFT XJUI DFOUSBM " $ BOE NJOJ TQMJU TZTUFNT • 1FSGPSN )7"$ TZTUFN JOTUBMMBUJPOT • 1FSGPSN 5BOL 4VSF 8BSSBOUZ UBOL UFTUJOH • ,FFQ DPNQBOZ WFIJDMF BOE DVTUPNFShT XPSL BSFB DMFBO BOE TBGF

QualiďŹ cations:

• :FBST PG )7"$ FYQFSJFODF JO TFSWJDF BOE JOTUBMMBUJPOT • (SFBU "UUJUVEF • $MFBO %SJWJOH 3FDPSE • 1SPQBOF $&51 DFSUJGJDBUJPO B QMVT • (SFBU $PNNVOJDBUJPO 4LJMMT BeneďŹ ts Include: • • • • • • • •

.FEJDBM *OTVSBODF %FOUBM *OTVSBODF 7JTJPO *OTVSBODF $PNQBOZ NBUDIFE , 1BJE 7BDBUJPO 1BJE 4JDL 5JNF 1BJE )PMJEBZT 0GG $PNQBOZ 4QPOTPSFE &NQMPZFF 0XOFSTIJQ 1MBO

To apply to this position, please call or email Gary Smith at

1-800-542-5552 Ext 1102 Careers@MainCareEnergy.com We Are Proud To Be A Drug Free Workplace

print

Almanac’s classified ads are distributed throughout the region and are included in Woodstock Times, New Paltz Times, Saugerties Times and Kingston Times. Over 18,000 copies printed.

web

Almanac’s classified ads also appear on ulsterpublishing.com, part of our network of sites with more than 60,000 unique visitors.

Job Fair

Wednesday, November 7th, 2018 From 3:00pm to 7:00pm Join TEAM Hunter! :H DUH LQ WKH EXVLQHVV RI IXQ DQG DGYHQWXUHÂŤVRXQG LQWHUHVWLQJ" Please come to our Job Fair event! Immediate interviews will be conducted in the Base Lodge for openings in the following departments: x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x

Snowmaking-- day & night shifts Equipment Rentals Cashiers & Technicians Terrain Park Staff Hotel Front Desk, Reservations & Valet Lift Operators Child Caregivers Ski & Snowboard Instructors Grooming Equipment Operators Building Maintenance Snow Tubing Attendants Equipment Repair Shop Ski Check/ Bag Check/Parking Attendants Ticket Sales Agents Retail Shop Sales Associates Line Cooks Wait staff Ski Patrol Cashiers Bartenders Shuttle Bus Driver

Employee benefits include Skiing/Riding, Lessons, and Equipment Rental privileges - Food, Retail, and Child Care Discounts Âą Employee referral bonus.

Join the Mohonk team! We have Jobs at Mohonk Mountain House, both Seasonal and Year Round Please look on-line and apply at MOHONKJOBS.com

Apply in person at Hunter Mountain Ski Bowl, 64 Klein Ave. Hunter, NY 12442 **Hunter Mountain is a drug free workplace** ULSTER PUBLISHING POLICY It is illegal for anyone to: ...Advertise or make any statement that indicates a limitation or preference based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, handicap (disability), age, marital status or sexual orientation. Also, please be advised that language that indicates preference (i.e. “working professionals,� “single or couple,� “mature...professional,� etc.) is considered to be discriminatory. To avoid such violations of the Fair Housing Law, it is best to describe the apartment to be rented rather than the person(s) the advertiser would like to attract. This prohibition against discriminatory advertising applies to single family and owner-occupied housing that is otherwise exempt from the Fair Housing Act.


26

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

300Â

100Â

Real Estate

ADVERTISING SALES REPRESENTATIVE US: Ulster Publishing is an independent, locally owned media company. It began in 1972 with the Woodstock Times, and now publishes the New Paltz Times, Kingston Times and Saugerties Times, plus Almanac Weekly, an arts & entertainment guide, and Hudson Valley One, a regional news and entertainment site. Ulster Publishing has a mission: to reect and enrich our communities. Our content is 100-percent local – locally written, photographed, edited, printed and distributed. We publicize local businesses and encourage our readers to shop local. We publicize local events because we want our communities to be vibrant places where people come together. We don’t just write about the controversy, but the good news too, because we love these communities and we want readers to know about the great people who live here. We don’t just write about our communities, we’re part of them. YOU: A self-motivated and energetic person who cares about local businesses and wants to help them succeed because thriving local businesses are part of what makes the Hudson Valley (or any place) special. You like to shop locally and eat at locally-owned restaurants. You tend to feel invested in the success of these enterprises, sometimes thinking of ways they could better promote themselves and reach more potential customers.

LOCAL EXPERTS

the

Help Wanted

VILLAGE GREEN REALTY

#

1 in Homes Sold 2011-2017 *

NATURE RETREAT

If you are looking for a completely private ,31' >c! #'!<ধ (<ÂŁÂŁ@ ÂŁ!2&9$!6'& @!8&T ;8'' ÂŁ-2'& &8-='>!@ { ! 633ÂŁT ;,'2 ;,-9 -9 (38 @3<W 'ÂŁÂŁ 1!-2;!-2'& { ÂŁ3=-2+ÂŁ@ $!8'& (38 ;,-9T ‰ c ‰ 3ø '89 !2 -2=-ধ 2+ 36'2 * 338 6ÂŁ!2 { +38f +'3<9 #'!1'& $'-ÂŁ-2+9W !<+'8ধ '9 $319,000

TUCKED IN THE TREES ,-9 <2-7<' ,31' (''£9 £-0' ! ;8''f,3<9'T >c ! >33&'2T 96-8!£ 9;!-8$!9' { 90@£-+,;9W >3 &'$09 { 9$8''2'& -2 638$, +-=' @3< 96!$' ;3 '2/3@ 2!;<8'W ( 6'!$' !2& 7<-'; -9 >,!; @3< !8' £330-2+ (38 ;,'2 @3<Z=' (3<2& @3<8 1!;$,W !<+'8ধ '9 $249,000

You believe in community journalism and want it to succeed as well because, like local business, it helps preserve a sense of place. In a time of media consolidation and fake news, there’s something charming and essential about an independent local media company with fact-checked writers on the ground and in the trenches.

LOCATION: OfďŹ ce in Uptown Kingston, but we are exible. AREA: Mostly Ulster and Dutchess counties, as well as some adjacent areas. COMPENSATION: Base + commission. Pay commensurate with experience. Interested? Send a resume to genia@ulsterpublishing.com

100Â

Help Wanted

Caregiver: Help Needed for elderly woman in Woodstock Wednesday & Sunday 9 a.m.-1 p.m. and possible overnight Fridays 7 p.m.9 a.m. Also, 2 hour lunch shifts avail. $15$20/hour. Please contact 679-0049 Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday (Times to call about job) 9 a.m.-12 p.m. References required. Someone to Assist with Cats at Diana’s Cat Shelter in Accord. Reliable, trustworthy person to work Part-time weekdays &/or weekends as needed. Experience with cats helpful. Able to work independently as well as with a team. Call 845-626-0221. Senior Spanish speaking woman Looking for Spanish speaking person for Cleaning 2x/week. Cat friendly. Call 845-443-5566 for details.

145Â

300Â

Real Estate

Mav Knolls Condo: 3-BR, 2-story Condo: very well run HOA. First floor: extra room with closet, full bath; kitchen, DR, LR open plan. 2nd floor: 3-BRs, 2 full Baths. Ten closets; freshly repainted, Seller will buy new stove or contribute $600. Attached garage. Available now. Call 845-943-0472 to see unit. $314,900.

PORT EWEN

Woodstock, South of Kingston

HUDSON RIVERFRONT CONDO Upscale. 2-bedrooms, 3 baths. Now Vacant. Unique, free access river rights. PRICE CUT $295K Photos/Maps 239-549-1657

RENOVATED 1969 CENTER HALL COLONIAL w/rocking chair porch. 5-bedrooms, 3 full baths (1 w/laundry), den w/ fireplace, 3-season porch, hot-tub, 2-car garage, marble kitchen w/SS appliances, wood floors. Short walk to Zena Rec, NYC bus & village of Woodstock w/all it’s amenities. $595,000. Call Mary Ellen, Win Morrison Realty- 845-901-3135.

Adult Care

320Â

Land for Sale

CERTIFIED AIDE LOOKING FOR PRIVATE CARE for elderly. 10 years experience. Live-in or hourly. References available. Ulster County area.

(845)706-5133

225Â

Party Planning/ Catering

POTTIE FOR YOUR PARTY! HAVING A PARTY? TLK LLC. PORTABLE TOILET RENTALS. Weekend, Weekly, Monthly Rentals. We have Gray, White, Blue, Tan, Green (pine-scented), Pink (rose-scented),

WOODSTOCK: Lovely, private 3.3 ACRE PARCEL. Seasonal mountain views & with clearing would be year round vistas. Build your dream home. Only $67,000. Richard Miller, Win Morrison Realty, 845-3897286.

350Â

Commercial Listings for Sale

Fully licensed and reputable Ulster County Electric Services Business FOR SALE. Owner retiring to spend more time w/family and traveling. Great opportunity for licensed electrician or existing con-

COUNTRY CHIC 3 '?6'29' >!9 96!8'& >,'2 8'23=!ধ 2+T 1!-2;!-2-2+ { 683('99-32!££@ £!2&9$!6-2+ ;,-9 !;90-££ 13<2;!-2 +';!>!@W '!<ধ (<£ 9;32' >!££9T >!£0>!@9 !2& 6!ধ 39 >'£$31' @3< !9 @3< !6683!$, ;,-9 9;<22-2+ $'&!8 ,31' ;,!; #38f &'89 9;!;' 683;'$;'& £!2&W '>'ħ $799,000

LIST WITH US - CALL TODAY TIME TO SELL

uch e M How r Hom ou ? Is Y Worth

USE THE TOOL AT VillageGreenRealty.com/ homevalue

FOR A FAST, EASY, FREE ESTIMATE OF YOUR HOME’S VALUE

villagegreenrealty.com Kingston 845-331-5357 Catskill 518-625-3360 New Paltz 845-255-0615 Rhinebeck 845-876-4535 Windham 518-734-4200 Woodstock 845-679-2255

BRAT LE

27

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Need Detailed Oriented Person to assist property manager full-time in daily operations of 2 Section 8 properties for senior citizens in Kingston, NY. Should have some experience working in a property management office. Must be proďŹ cient on computer w/strong phone/interpersonal skills, upbeat, fast learner, able to multi-task. Reliable person who works well under pressure. Fun environment and never boring. $15 per hour. Fax resume to 338-9013 or e-mail: francesca@mgt26.com

Red & Blue Handicap Accessible. (We also have a few w/sinks). Great for Construction/Building Sites, Sporting Events, Concerts, Street Festivals, Parks, Outdoor Weddings, Campsites, Flea Markets, Party Events, etc. Call 845-658-8766, 845-4176461 or 845-706-7197. e-mail: TLKportables@gmail.com

LOVELY LOCATION 2/3@ ;,-9 #'!<ধ (<ÂŁÂŁ@ 1!-2;!-2'& #8-$0 ,31'T >cŠ 96!$-3<9 #'&83319 { 8'!ÂŁ ,!8&>33& * 3389W ,' ) 2-9,'& ÂŁ3>'8 ÂŁ'='ÂŁ ,!9 !2 '?;8! #'&f 8331 { 9'6!8!;' '2;8!2$'T 6'8('$; (38 +<'9;9R ÂŁÂŁ $316ÂŁ';' >c#'!<ধ (<ÂŁ 13<2;!-2 =-'>9 8-+,; (831 ;,' ÂŁ-=-2+ 8331W -+,ÂŁ!2& $279,000

CE

You’re aware that advertising options have multiplied for local businesses, but believe local media can offer something unique. You can sum up the pros and cons of those options and explain where a hyperlocal print and digital media campaign ďŹ ts in. (That’s what you’re selling.)

YEARS

*According to Hudson Valley Catskill Region MLS. Š2016 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully 9<6638;9 ;,' 68-2$-6ÂŁ'9 3( ;,' !-8 3<9-2+ $;W !$, ă $' 9 2&'6'2&'2;ÂŁ@ >2'& 2& 6'8!;'&W 3ÂŁ&>'ÂŁÂŁ !20'8 !2& ;,' 3ÂŁ&>'ÂŁÂŁ !20'8 3+3 are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.

tracting company to take over this sustainable and thriving business. The company has been providing electrical services to residential/commercial clients in the Mid-Hudson region for over 28 years & currently has over 3,000 active clients. The technical team is comprised of a master electrician, journeyman, and apprentices who have been w/the company an average of 10-20 years. The company experienced 15% growth for the last three years and is expected to exceed $1.3 million in revenues in 2018. Facilities include office, owned by the principal owner of the business and available for sale or long-term lease agreement. Owner is also available to stay w/business for up to one year to assist during the transition period, but terms are negotiable. Some owner financing could also be available to qualified buyer. e-mail: wmnegron3@gmail. com or call 845-430-3073.

360Â

Office Space/ Commercial Rentals

Shared Workspace: The beautiful Wellness Cottage at Boughton Place in Highland is now booking space for professionals to see clients/work in a quiet and private space. 5 minutes from New Paltz thruway exit. Perfect for Psychotherapy, Massage, Creative Arts, Reiki, Health Coaching, Writing, etc. Rent $200/month for one full day (9am9pm) per week, everything included. For more info: boughtonplace@gmail.com or (845)691-7578.

Beauty Salon for rent. Fully equipped, with parking. Will renovate for other use. 10 S. Chestnut Street New Paltz. 820 square feet. Please call Wayne 845-399-9697

380Â

Garage/ Workspace/ Storage

ASHOKAN STORE-IT Ask About Our Long Term Storage Discount

5x10 $40 10x15 $90

5x15 $50 10x10 $70 10x20 $110 10x30 $150

845-657-2494 845-389-0504 1 Ridge Rd., Shokan, NY 12481

420Â

Highland/ Clintondale Rentals

HIGHLAND: 1-BEDROOM end unit. $925/month heat & hot water included. Private, quiet neighborhood. Private parking in front of unit. Next to Highland Town Hall/ Court on Church Street, near Rt. 9W. Minutes to SUNY New Paltz, Poughkeepsie


index

486 490 500 510

Entries in order of appearance (happy hunting!)

100 120 130 140 145 150 200 210 215 220 225 230 235 240 245 250 260 265 280 299

27

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

Help Wanted Situations Wanted Housesitting Services Opportunities Adult Care Child Care Educational Programs Seasonal Programs Workshops Instruction Catering/ Party Planning Wedding Directory Photography Events Courier & Delivery Car Services Entertainment Editing Publications/Websites Real Estate Open Houses

300 301 320 325 340 350 360 380 390 400 405 410 415 418

Real Estate Affordable Home Land for Sale Mobile Home Park Lot Lease Land & Real Estate Wanted Commercial Listings for Sale Office Space/ Commercial Rentals Garage/Workspace/ Storage Garage/Workspace/ Storage Wanted NYC Rentals & Shares Poughkeepsie/Hyde Park Rentals Gardiner/Modena/ Plattekill Rentals Wallkill Rentals Newburgh Rentals

420 425 430 435

438 440 442 445 450 460 470 480 485

Highland/Clintondale Rentals Milton/Marlboro Rentals New Paltz Rentals Rosendale/Tillson/ High Falls/ Stone Ridge Rentals South of Stone Ridge Rentals Kingston/Hurley/Port Ewen Rentals Esopus/Ulster Park Rentals Krumville/Olivebridge/ Shokan Rentals Saugerties Rentals Rhinebeck/Red Hook Rentals Woodstock/West Hurley Rentals West of Woodstock Rentals Green County Rentals

520 540 545 550 | 560 565 575 580 600 601 602 603 605 607 610 615 620 630 640

Delaware County Rentals Vacation Rentals Seasonal Rentals Seasonal Rentals Wanted Rentals Wanted Rentals to Share Senior Housing Housing Exchange / SWAP Lodgings/Bed and Breakfast Travel Free Stuff New & Used Books For Sale Septic Services Snow Plowing Tree Services Firewood for Sale Property Maintenance Studio Sales Hunting/Fishing Sporting Goods Buy & Swap Musician Connections Musical Instruction &Instruments

645 648 650 655 660 665 670 680 690 695 698 700 702 703

705 708 710 715 717 720

Recording Studios Auctions Antiques & Collectibles Vendors Needed Estate/Moving Sale Flea Market Yard & Garage Sales Counseling Services Legal Services Professional Services Paving & Seal Coating Personal & Health Services Art Services Tax Preparation/ Accounting/ Bookkeeping Services Office & Computer Service Custom Work & Specialty Repairs Organizing/ Decorating/Refinishing Cleaning Services Caretaking/Home Management Painting/Odd Jobs

725

Plumbing, Heating, AC & Electric 730 Alternative Energy Services 738 Locksmithing 740 Building Services 745 Demolition 748 Telecommunications 750 Eclectic Services 755 Repair/Maintenance Services 760 Gardening/ Landscaping 765 Home Security Services 770 Excavating Services 810 Lost & Found 890 Spirituality 900 Personals 920 Adoptions 950 Animals 960 Pet Care 970 Horse Care 980 Auto Services 990 Boats/Recreational Vehicles 995 Motorcycles 999 Vehicles Wanted 1000 Vehicles

300

Real Estate

, ! ION CT U D RE

WOODSTOCK, NY This 3BR 2 ½ BA secluded contemporary is fully handicap accessible and is sure to please the most discerning buyers. Located on a beautiful scenic rd. on a 28-ac. parcel, it is walkable to the Woodstock village! This beautiful home is all on one level. The huge gourmet kitchen is simply amazing with cabinets galore. Additional 1BR 1BA accessory apartment above the huge garage! Call Sylvie Ross or Toby Heilbrunn today. ............ $799,000

NEW PALTZ, NY This classic 5/6-bedroom farmhouse with grand proportions, sturdy bones, hardwood floors, formal dining room, a brick fireplace and an excellent layout is privately sited on 4 acres with a tremendous level back yard--just a quick jump South of the SUNY campus. Large families, investors and Weekenders will find a terrific value in this property which has been well maintained. Call Sean Zimmerman today. ........................................ $299,000

WOODSTOCK, NY Welcome to the picturesque Catskills! Imagine every day coming home to this welcoming two bedroom “Arts & Craft” style home. You will fall in love with this charming sweet home that is only a two-minute walk to the town of Woodstock. Special events and gatherings take place on the Village Green all summer long. If you are a skier, you are about one hour away from several ski slopes. Call Mary Ellen VanWagenen today. ........................................... $192,000

SAUGERTIES, NY With Bamboo floors, spacious living room has Stone wall with Stone fireplace. Woodstove insert for efficient heating. 1st floor BRs with full BA. Spacious kitchen with center island and convenient half bath. Formal dining. Second floor has 2 additional bedrooms plus office and den! Potential Airbnb or convert to two family (with permit). Convenient to Ski Centers, Golf, “Total Tennis” and NY State thruway for easy commute from NYC areas. Call Blanca Aponte today. .............. $499,000

COMM HURLEY, NY ER RENT CIAL Across from the Hurley AL! Mtn. Inn. A commercial space of approx. 1,250+sf. Many possible uses such as; an office space, gym & exercise facility, yoga classes, or a dance studio. Inside has a changing room, storage room & BA. A large open space that can be easily converted to fit your business venture. Call Richard Miller today. .................................................................... $800.00 per/mo. Plus Utilities

Kingston 845.339.1144 / Woodstock 845.679.2929 & 845.679.9444 / Saugerties 845.246.3300 / Phoenicia 845.688.2929 / Olive 845.657.4240 / Catskill 518.800.9999 / Commercial 845.339.9999 Bridge, Metro North, Rt. 9 & hospitals. 1 month security. No smoking. 845-4530047.

425

Milton/Marlboro Rentals

Marlboro; mountain views, 1-BEDROOM, Open floor plan, 800sf Cottage. NonSmokers only. No dogs. $1100/month includes heat, trash, lawn, snow removal. 845795-5778, please leave message #.

430

New Paltz Rentals

3-BEDROOM. Barn/loft, full of great details. $1800/month includes all utilities. No indoor smoking, vaping and no dogs. 5 minutes by CAR outside village, 10 minutes by bike. Please message 845-256-8160. 3-BEDROOM HOUSE. Conveniently located to NYS thruway. 1 mile from campus. $1400/month plus utilities. No pets. Call for more info. 845-255-0557, 845-590-5002. STUDENTS/PROFESSIONALS: ROOMS AVAILABLE. Close to SUNY, New Paltz. Newly renovated, clean, large kitchen, appliances, WiFi/computer access/TV, plenty of parking. $550/month/room, electric & heat included. Available now. 845-7052430.

New Paltz: Southside Terrace Apartments Year round and other lease terms to suit your needs available! Free use of the: Recreation Room, Pool, New Fitness Center & much more! “Now accepting credit cards! Move in & pay your security and deposit with your credit or debit card with no additional fees!”

Call 845-255-7205 for more information ROOM FOR RENT. Can be used as residential or an office. $595/month plus security. Utilities included. Walking distance to everything. Available now. (845)664-0493. NEW PALTZ VILLAGE. 1-bedroom apartment, lovely details, heat included. Sadly,

no pets. Walking distance to Water Street Market. Minimum 1-year lease. $1230/ month. 914-819-2348

NEW PALTZ GARDENS APARTMENTS

21A Colonial Dr., New Paltz. 1 & 2 BR apts. Pets welcome! No security deposit option. 3-12 month leasing terms. Pool, laundry on site.

845-255-6171 SOUTHSIDE TERRACE APARTMENTS offers semester leases for SPRING 2019 and short-term for the Summer! Furnished studios, one & two bedrooms, includes heat & hot water. Recreation facilities. Walking distance to campus and town. 845-2557205. NICE UNFURNISHED ROOMS; Starting at $485/month. Excellent location. Close to SUNY college. All utilities included. Call 845-255-6029 or 914-474-5176, leave message.

435

Rosendale/ Tillson/High Falls/Stone

Ridge Rentals

1-Bedroom Furnished Studio Apartment in Rosendale. Everything included. $800/ month. Close to town and Rail Trail. First, last month and security deposit required. Call: 914-255-5634.

440

Kingston/ Hurley/Port Ewen Rentals

3-Bedroom House For Rent. Kingston’s best street! 3-Bedrooms, 1 office, 1.25 bathrooms. Victorian house on quiet street available now. 1800 sq.ft. Yard with garden & off-street parking. $1700/month, Utilities are not included. 1st and last month’s rent & a one month security deposit are required. Lovely Rondout neighborhood, walk to restaurants and shops. 917-439-2092.

PORT EWEN Newly Remodeled Large 2-Bedroom Apartment Hardwood floors, washer/dryer, Open kitchen & living room, New appliances, full basement, private yard. $1200/month plus utilities.

Call 845-853-5595 STUDIO/EFFICIENCY APARTMENT in uptown Kingston. Near stores & bus route. Off-street parking. Utilities included. No smoking, no pets. Security & references required. 845-338-4574.

442

Esopus/Ulster Park Rentals

Bright, Spacious 4-Bedroom on second floor. In quiet neighborhood. Wood floors. Beautiful, large yard. Rent including utili-


28

ALMANAC WEEKLY

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300Â

Real Estate

Specializing In Real Estate Throughout Ulster County & The Catskills www.MurphyRealtyGrp.com Speak With An Agent today, y, Call: (845) 338-5252 BEAUTIFUL RIVERVIEW CONDO

JUST LISTED

For more info and pictures, Text: M609458

To: 85377

<RX MXVW FDQÂś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

For more info and pictures, Text: M142698

To: 85377

SPACIOUS WEST HURLEY RANCH

JUST LISTED

For more info and pictures, Text: M140662

To: 85377

This immaculate ranch home in West Hurley on a quiet country road is ready for its new owners. This home is located just a short distance from the Village of Woodstock and the New York State Thruway. This home is equipped with 4 large bedrooms, 2 and a half bathrooms, updated windows and a heated garage. The lower level of this home offers a 1,250 square foot rec room with exterior sliding glass doors, a wood stove and half bath. All of this on 1.20 acres with low taxes!!

$296,500

For more info and pictures, Text: M146177

445Â

Krumville/ Olivebridge/ Shokan Rentals

LOCAL EXPERTISE WITH A GLOBAL REACH Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Hudson Valley Properties combines the strongest corporate brand in the world with the Mid-Hudson Valley’s most successful real estate professionals. Coupled with access to the latest marketing tools and resources, our buyer and seller clients have an inside track to realizing their real estate objectives. Our recent merge with Westwood Metes & Bounds Realty significantly expands our presence to the west of the Hudson. Call us today and let us exceed your expectations!

Looking for professional, writer or artists or someone looking for peace and quiet in totally private wooded setting, Tastefully Furnished House rental w/clawfoot soaking tub, sauna, woodstove 2-BRS or studio. Home is currently available for sale- pay less than market value, $2000 month to month, includes utilities, and must be willing to accommodate potential buyer viewings. Call Nate 315-834-0005 for details.

JUST LISTED

470Â

Woodstock/West Hurley Rentals

LARGE 1-BEDROOM, newly renovated w/ skylights, aqua glass bathroom, wood floors, charming kitchen, Bluestone porch, and large screened-in gazebo w/electric. Quiet location. 1 mile to center of town. $1200/ month. Owner 845-417-5282.

PARADISE FOUND - Handsome 4200 SF cedar shingle contemporary with a distinctive Hampton’s ambiance on 10+ gorgeous acres with meadows, stream, POND & 50’ gunite saline LAP POOL! Rambling modern oor plan features ensuite MBR wing w/ ďŹ replace + 3 add’l BRs, 3 full & 2 half baths, Great Room w/ ďŹ replace, FDR, gourmet kitchen, STUDIO, media room, sauna, rec & yoga space w/ ďŹ replace & huge decks everywhere. WOW! .................. $1,250,000

PRIVACY PLUS! - Hidden away on 5 New Paltz acres down a meandering drive, discover this quality built Seakill contemporary clapboard ranch just minutes to vibrant village. The modern open floor plan features vaulted ceilings, skylights, cozy woodburner to chase winter’s chill, ensuite MBR with claw foot tub, 2 add’l. BRs, 2 full baths, central AC, full basement and a covered veranda. Real peace & quiet here! ......................................... $389,900

JUST LISTED

JUST LISTED

STUDIO CABIN. Great eat-in kitchen, bathroom. Parking. Perfect for 1 person. Near town but nicely secluded. $800/ month. Security, deposit, references required. Call 845-417-5282. Owner. No fee. Woodstock: Quaint 1-Bedroom Cottage, large wrap-around decks, overlooking panoramic view of river and woods. $1700/ month. 561-632-2400. Woodstock: Split two level 1-Bedroom space with balconies, wood floors throughout. View of lush grounds and river. $1500/ month. 561-632-2400. QUIET STUDIO & 1-BEDROOM APARTMENTS. Skylights, separate kitchens, private covered decks, hard-wood floors, country setting, Wittenberg Road, near State Park. Free internet. Views. 20 minutes/ Kingston. $825/month & $900/month plus utilities. 914-725-1461.

FARMHOUSE PERFECTION - 1790 Federal style gem on 10 rolling Dutchess Co. acres combines extraordinary period details – wide board floors, 2 brick fireplaces- with respectful updates and a stylish relaxed vibe. Features include 9’ beamed ceilings, 5 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, enormous EI country kitchen, 25’ LR, FDR & den. Superb setting boasts stone patio, stream, POND, antique ice-house & 3-stall red BARN, too! ......................................... $925,000

FIRST OFFERING - Perfectly secluded on 4 Woodstock acres with POND. Handsome & singular custom built Modern New England Saltbox design is move-in ready! Easy open 2100 SF floor plan features vaulted LR w/ gas fireplace, DR area with gas fireplace, EI kitchen w/ granite & butler’s pantry, family/media room, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, French doors, attached heated 2-car garage, patio and deck, too. SO NICE! ..................................... $629,000

BHHSHUDSONVALLEY.COM KINGSTON 340•1920

NEW PALTZ 255•9400

STONE RIDGE 687•0232

WEST HURLEY 679•7321

WOODSTOCK 679•0006

subscribe 334-8200 subscribe

Well-maintained, year-round House for quiet living, non-smoking, single/couple. Mountainside estate, Catskill views. 5 minutes Woodstock. Zoned electric heat, air-tight wood-stove, W/D, fenced lawn, bluestone patios, storage. $1200/month, security. References, credit check, lease. 845679-6430 Beautiful Woodstock In-Town Carriage House Apt. w/2 decks and 2 garden areas, seasonal Mtn. View, a/c, oil heat, woodstove. Gas stove for cooking. Wood & tile floors. 1-bedroom w/walk-in closet, vaulted living room w/patio doors to deck. Kitchen w/door to deck & fenced-in yard facing Comeau property. Tile shower & vanity w/granite top. An oasis in-town w/off-street parking & all Woodstock has to offer. Walk to NYC bus. Entrance area has room for desk, etc. Complete separate laundry room with washer/ dryer & laundry sink. No smokers, no dogs. Perfect for 1 quiet, clean individual w/refs.

A friendly f lifestyle is yours in this charming 3 BR, 2 full & 1 h ha half bath Cape! Located in one of Kingston’s established ne neighborhoods. This 2400+ sq ft home features hardwood flo floors, cozy living room with wood burning fireplace, formal din dining room amazing open kitchen to huge family room with pellet stove. Upstairs you will find a very large and bright Master BR with 2 walk-in closets & newer large master bath, down the hall you will find an additional full bath and 2 nicely sized BRs (hardwood floors throughout the upstairs). The large family room off the kitchen lends itself to large get togethers for Sunday diner or watching your favorite sports teams. The family room opens to large in-ground pool, patio area with large gazebo and firepit! This is the perfect house for entertaining or just relaxing! Corner lot, fully fenced in yard, nice size shed with electric, and 1 car garage with AC and heat. $355,000

RENOVATED UPTOWN KINGSTON HOME

JUST LISTED

ties: $1375/month. Rent and hot water only: $1150/month. Security deposit required. Available to see immediately. Call 845-331-2292.

- 6 9 4 , 9 3@

CHARMING UPDATED BRICK CAPE

JUST LISTED

To: 85377

Wa Walking distance to Uptown Kingston with Farmers Ma Market, shops & restaurants! Picture perfect 2 family is jus just what you are waiting for. First floor has wonderful en entry foyer with LR/DR/ 2 BRs/1 bath! Upstairs has 3 BRs/ 1bath/ huge living room/ sweet breakfast nook! Front and back staircases, off street parking, new windows, new electric, new plumbing, new recessed lighting, refinished hardwood flooring, new kitchens, new kitchen flooring, freshly painted inside and out, new steps and railing, new sidewalk, new furnace both are natural gas fired! All it needs is a new owner not a thing to do here!

$389,900

& credit check. $1400/month plus $400 for oil heat, electric, propane for cooking, water, sewer, garbage/recycling, lawn care, snow plowing of driveway & use of pool during summer. First, last & security. Available 12/1 for 1-year lease. Call 845-901-6628. STUDIO APARTMENT in Carriage House on horse farm in Willow, 15 minutes from Woodstock. By stream. Wood burning stove. (With electric back-up heat). Scenic area. Rent-free in exchange for 2 hours of farm work/day. Utilities not included. 845-6796590. Cottage, 2-Bedroom plus Loft. Woodburning stove. On horse farm. By stream. Willow, 15 minutes from Woodstock. $650/ month plus 2 hours a day farm work. 845679-6590. TOWN OF WOODSTOCK; 3-BEDROOMS. $2300/month includes new washer/dryer, dishwasher, fully renovated home. All wooden floors, fireplace, screened-in porch, 2 slate patios w/Pergola off kitchen, large fenced-in backyard. Firewood storage shed & regular shed. Short or long-term. 718-755-4947. $1600/month; 3-Bedrooms. 3 miles from Woodstock. Fully renovated w/all wooden floors, new slate patios. On 1.2 acres. Beautiful. Must see! Short or long-term. 718755-4947.

480Â

West of Woodstock Rentals

QUIET STUDIO & 1-BEDROOM APARTMENTS. Skylights, separate kitchens, private covered decks, hard-wood floors, country setting, Wittenberg Road, near State Park. Free internet. Views. 20 minutes/ Kingston. $825/month & $900/month plus utilities. 914-725-1461.

500Â

Seasonal Rentals

$1500/3BR HOUSE CLOSE TO TOWN DECEMBER 1 - APRIL 1 Beautiful Woodstock home for rent. Five minutes to center of town. Furnished. Free cable, internet, heat. All new appliances in kitchen. Three bedrooms and home office. Large living/ dining areas and kitchen. Downstairs room great for studio. Beautiful screened in porch.

561-843-7643 — Text or call Cslewispublicity@gmail.com Location, Location!! Special Place=Special Person. Artist Lake Retreat available short-term/long-term. 5 miles from center of Woodstock & Saugerties on 7 private acres. Lake & mountain views within Preserve. Secluded, but easily accessible. Quiet & beautifully landscaped. Tastefully furnished, fully equipped, 1000 sq.ft. Duplex w/private entrance. Great-room w/20’ ceiling, seating area looking out to Japa-


nese garden, separate dining area, kitchen. Upstairs: bedroom w/queen-size bed w/ fine linens. Second bedroom: double bed & large skylight. Tiled, skylit bath w/luxurious Egyptian cotton towels. Duplex is in separate wing of large house that you’ll be sharing w/artist-owner. Pool, canoe, WIFI, TV, plus all utilities included. $2250/month (depending upon length of stay). A MUST SEE! 845-246-7598 or email ruth@redwyng.com

600

PRICE REDUCED! Artic Cat 500cc 4-Wheeler. Has tracks in place of all wheels; comes with original wheels, tires, snowplow, low hours (157hrs). $5100 or OBO. Call 845-657-6357.

601

Portable Toilet Rentals

TLK

LOOKING TO BUY YOUR HIGH QUALITY VINTAGE AND

ULSTER WINDOW CLEANING CO.

Local Collector Seeking

**Estate, **Residential. **Free Estimates, Fully Insured. Call 679-3879

CONTEMPORARY WATCHES

Rolex, Omega, Jaeger-LeCoultre, Vacheron Constantin, Breitling, IWC, Zenith, Panerai, Cartier, Piaget, Patek Philippe, and other quality makers in working and non-working condition.

LLC

Portable Toilet Rentals 845-658-8766 | 845-417-6461 | 845-706-7197

TLKportables@gmail.com tlkportables.com Weekends • Weekly • Monthly

603

Tree Services

HAVE A DEAD TREE..... CALL ME! Dietz Tree Service Inc. Tree Removal, Trimming, Stump Grinding. Seasoned Firewood for Sale. (845)255-7259. Residential, Municipalities.

LAWLESS TREE SERVICE

COUNTRY CLEANERS Homes & Offices • Insured & Bonded

Excellent references.

WANTED-TOP DOLLARS PAID!

For Sale

FULLY INSURED

29

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

We Buy Entire Estates or Single Items. Actively Seeking Gold and Diamond Jewelry of any kind, Sterling, Flatware & Jewelry. Furniture, Antiques through Mid-Century. We Gladly do House Calls. Free Appraisals. We also do Estate/Tag Sales. 35 years experience. One Call Does It All. Call or text anytime 24/7.

617-981-1580

670

Yard & Garage Sales

Yard Sale. Cabinets, clothing, shoes, kitchen items, linens, books, records. LOTS OF STUFF! Friday, 11/2, and Saturday, 11/3. 10am-3pm. Rain or shine. 43 Pond Road, Bearsville. (off Glenford Wittenberg Road.)

695

Professional Services

*Jessica Rice*; Beautiful Images Hair Salon, 123 Boices Lane, Kingston. Hair- 845383-1852; www.beautifulimageshairsalon. com Makeup- 845-309-6860; www.jessicamitzi.com

Call (845)706-1713 or (845) 679-8932 First-time Fall Special . $12/hour for General Housecleaning. 30+ years experience. All Supplies included. Carol: 931-261-3912. CLEAN UPS, CLEAN OUTS. Indoor/ Outdoor. Junk & debris removal. Estates prepared for Moving and Sale. (845)688-2253. Residential, Commercial Cleaning. SPECIAL FOR SENIORS: basic clean 2-bedroom/1 bath- $60. Rentals, All services offered. Green/all natural supplies. Flexible schedule. 7 day service. Insured. Free estimates. FALL CLEANUP- ask about services. 845-235-6701 .

717

Caretaking/Home Management

STUMP GRINDING

Help at Home Available. Animal Care, Gardening, Housekeeping Available. Call Sam at 845-943-9796.

615

Hunting/Fishing Sporting Goods

620

Buy & Swap

702

Art Services

BOTTOM LINE... I pay the HIGHEST PRICES for old furniture, ANTIQUES of every description. Paintings, lamps, rugs, porcelain, bronzes, silver, etc. One item to entire contents. House calls & free appraisals. Richard Miller Antiques (Est. 1972). (845)389-7286. OLD FURNITURE, CROCKS, JUGS, paintings, frames, postcards, glasswares, sporting items, urns, fountain pens, lamps, dolls, pocket knives, military items, bronzes, jewelry, sterling, old toys, old paper, old boxes, old advertisements, vintage clothing, anything old. Home contents purchased, (select items or entire estates purchased.) CASH PAID 657-6252

650

Antiques & Collectibles

WANTED: VINTAGE COMICS Interested in the Golden Age; Silver & Bronze 1930s-1980s

$ CASH $ ON THE SPOT! TOP $ DOLLARS $ PAID! Also Seeking Star Wars Collectibles, Life-Size Advertisement Statues, Vintage Vinyl Records.

Call/Text Any Time 845-901-7379

710

Organizing/ Decorating/ Refinishing

PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZER/HOUSEKEEPER. Help w/everyday problems, special projects; clutter, paperwork, moving, gardening & personal assistant. Affordable. Fully Insured, Confidentiality Assured. MargotMolnar.com; Masters Psychology, former CEO, Certified Hospice Volunteer. margotmolnar1@gmail.com (845)679-6242.

715

Cleaning Services

*CONSCIOUS CLEANING, CONSCIOUS ORGANIZING!* ZEN ENERGY w/a DERVISH APPROACH. ATTENTION TO DETAIL. PUNCTUAL. METHODICAL. LET’S SHIFT THE ENERGY & PUT CLARITY & BEAUTY BACK IN YOUR HOME. ALLERGIC TO CATS. ROSENDALE-KINGSTON-SAUGERTIES-WEST HURLEYWOODSTOCK. ROBYN 845-339-9458.

House & Estate Cleanouts, Junk Removal, Dump Runs. Helping homeowners, realtors and property managers for 20 years. One call, it’s gone! Senior & disabled discounts. 845-247-7365. GarysHauling.com

725

Plumbing, Heating, AC & Electric

Stoneridge Electrical Service, Inc. www.stoneridgeelectric.com

• LED Lighting

• Standby Generators

• Heated bathroom floor tiles

• Service Upgrades • Roof deicing cables

Authorized Dealer & Installer

740

Building Services

720

Painting/Odd Jobs

”ABOVE AND BEYOND” HOUSEPAINTING by Quadrattura, since 1997. 5% EARLY-BIRD WINTER INTERIOR DISCOUNTBOOKING NOW! Decorator Finishes, Restorations, Expert Color Consultation, Plastering, Wallpaper Removal, Light Carpentry. Add value to your home economically. Environmentally conscious work done w/old world craftsmanship and pride. (845)332-7577. Senior Discount. References. Free Estimates. NYS DOT T-12467

Incorporated 1985

TLK LLC. PORTABLE TOILET RENTALS. Weekend, Weekly, Monthly rentals. We have Gray, white, blue, tan, green (pinescented), pink (rose-scented), red & blue handicap accessible. (We also have a few w/ sinks). Great for Construction/Building Sites, Sporting Events, Concerts, Street Festivals, Parks, Outdoor Weddings, Campsites, Flea Markets, Party Events, etc. Call 845-658-8766, 845-417-6461 or 845-7067197. e-mail: TLKportables@gmail.com

Interiors & Remodeling Inc s ’ d e T

.

GUNS WANTED. CASH PAID. Japanese swords, and Militaria. I come to you. Transfers, Estimates and Appraisals. Federal Firearms License. Spartan Trading Co., 90 Dug Hill Rd., Hurley, NY. 914-388-9286

SPORT OF IRON FITNESS- A Culture of Strength. NOW OFFERING $35/MONTH OPEN GYM. *State of the Art Strength Training Equipment* *Powerlifting, Strongman, Olympic Lifting Equipped* *9000 sq.ft. facility including 1400 sq.ft. of turf. Group Training Sessions - Registered Dietician - Youth Programs - Personal Training. 120 State Route 28, Kingston. Call Today 845-853-8189.

HANDYALL SERVICES: *Carpentry, *Plumbing, *Electrical, *Painting, *Excavating & Grading. 5 ton dump trailer. Trees cut. Call Dave 845-514-6503- mobile.

H Z Emergency Generators U \ LICENSED 331-4227 INSURED

GBM TRANSPORTATION SERVICES INC. Professional Moving and Delivery. Residential/Commercial. Local and N.Y.C. Metro areas. N.Y.S. Dot T 12467, Shandaken, N.Y. Call 845-688-2253.

700

EXPERIENCED HANDYMAN WITH A VAN. Carpentry, painting, flatscreen mounting, light hauling/delivery, clean-outs. Second home caretaking. All small/medium jobs considered. Versatile, trustworthy, creative, thrifty. References. Ken Fix It. 845-616-7999.

Low-Rate Financing Available

LET ME HELP YOU ORGANIZE YOUR LIFE. PERSONAL ASSISTANT, 18 years experience. Home Office Admin. Shopping, errands, cooking. Home Organization. Karen Sawdey 845-443-6296. Full or half days available.

Personal & Health Services

917-593-5069

24 Months to Pay, 0% Interest (if qualified)

CERTIFIED ARBORIST • CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES

ALLEN LAWLESS • 845-247-2838 SAUGERTIES, NEW YORK CELL.: 845-399-9659

Gary Buckendorf Painting: Interior - Exterior Plastering, Taping, Structolite Wall coverings, Color Matching Many references in Catskill area and Manhattan garybuckendorf@gmail.com

From Walls to Floors, Ceilings to Doors, Decks, Siding & More.

Reliable, Dependable & Insured Call for an estimate

845-591-8812

www.tedsinteriors.com

4 LEAF CARPENTRY Over 60 yrs. combined Experience No job Too Big or Small All phases of Construction Flooring • Siding • Bath • Roofing • Kitchen • Decks Reasonable Rates, Free Estimates, Fully Insured 845-324-1632 • 4leafcarpentry@gmail.com

• Residential / Commercial • Moving • Delivery • Trucking • Local & NYC Metro Areas

HANDYMAN, HOME REPAIR, Carpentry, Remodels, Installations, Roofing, Painting, Mechanical repairs, etc. Large and small jobs. Reasonable rates. Free estimates. References available. (845)616-7470.

Shandaken, NY 845-688-2253

D AND S IMPROVEMENTS: Home improvement, repair and maintenance, from the smallest repairs to large renovations. Over 50 years of combined experience. Fully insured. www.dandsimprovements.com (845)3393017

Interior Painting & Staining, Sheet Rocking, All Stages of Remodeling Residential & Commercial • Free estimates, fully insured Accepting all major credit cards.

Contact Jason Habernig

845-331-4966/249-8668 Visit my website: Haberwash.com

QUALITY • VALUE • RELIABILITY • SINCE 1980 • Int. & Ext. painting

760

Gardening/ Landscaping

Landscaping /DZQ LQVWDOODWLRQ 3RQGV &OHDQ XSV /DZQ FDUH ...and much more

Excavation Site work 'UDLQ ¿HOGV /DQG FOHDULQJ 6HSWLF V\VWHPV 'HPROLWLRQ 'ULYHZD\V

• Power Washing • Sheetrock & Plaster Repair • Free Estimates Multiple References Available Upon Request Licensed & Insured • ritaccopainting.com

Paramount Contracting & Development Corp.

William Watson • Residential / Commercial

SNOW PLOWING & SANDING Call William, for your free estimate (845) 401-6637


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Down to Earth Landscaping Quality service from the ground up

• • • • •

Specializing in: Hardscape Tree trimming Fences Koi ponds Snow plowing

Benjamin Watson, Owner Phone: (845) 389-3028

950

Animals

SUPER-AFFECTIONATE & COMPANIONABLE CATS WITH DISABILITIES/ SPECIAL NEEDS are seeking permanent loving homes and also foster homes. For more information, please see: www.facebook.com/AffectionateAdoptions or write lovepeaceandrescue@gmail.com! AKC Cocker Spaniels. Beautiful pups. Vet checked, first shots. Also, stud dogs. Breeding 33 years. Visit website: breeders.net (google); email: harmonyhr@aol.com. Call 845-687-7978. Reasonable. Terms available. Harmony ToKalon Kennels. We have wonderful adult cats at the Saugerties Animal Shelter! They’re looking for homes where they’ll be loved, cared for

and given the kindness all animals deserve. In return, you will get unconditional love and a companion of a lifetime. Why adult cats? You know how large or small they’ll be, their temperament which, by the way, only gets sweeter when taken out of the stress of being in a cage in a shelter. Speak to Elly, Morgan, or any of the volunteers to see which one or ones would do best in your home. All adult cats have been spayed/ neutered, up to date w/shots and litter pan trained. ATHENA; 2-year old affectionate black and white tuxedo cat girl. She was a wonderful mama to many kittens; so wonderful that she took in some orphaned babies and loved them like they were her own. Athena does well w/other respectful kitties. BOBBI; approximately 2/3 years old. She’s white w/gray stripes. If you have attention to give, Bobbi will happily be on the receiving end. REBEL; less than a year old handsome boy (all white w/a black tail) & loves other kitties. Do you have a kitty who needs a BFF? MOO; 2-year old black & white cat girl. A laid back gal & was a great mama to her kittens. Now it’s her turn to be loved. BRITTANY; approximately 3-years old mostly black cat girl w/a white bib & muzzle. She’d love a home where she could be the star of the show. CINNAMON; handsome 10-year old orange cat boy who’s had a terrible year. First his caregiver, whom he loved dearly, passed away. Then, in his next home, the resident cat & dog didn’t want another brother and were mean to Cinnamon. Now Cinnamon has been in a cage for many months just waiting to be loved again. Saugerties Animal Shelter can welcome you Tuesday-Saturday, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Call (845)679-0339. MEOW!!!

Nov. 1, 2018

Want to help but can’t adopt a cat? Don’t forget about our Foster Program! Visit our website UCSPCA.org, for details & pictures of cats to foster. Come see us & all of our other friends at the Ulster County SPCA, 20 Wiedy Road, Kingston ( just off the traffic circle). Open 6 days a week, 11:30 a.m.3:30 p.m. (Closed on Mondays.) (845)3315377.

960

970

Horse Care

HORSE BOARDING, 4 STALLS. Full or rough board. Beautiful farm. Saugerties area. Mountain views. 15 years experience. Very fair prices & very caring owner. Call 845-246-2708.

Pet Care

WOULD YOU LIKE AN OUTDOOR CAT? Do you have a barn, garage, shed or outbuilding? Would you like to consider having feral cats? You can help cats in need who will help keep your barn, etc. free of rodents. The cats will be neutered/spayed and up to date w/shots. Please call the Woodstock Feral Cat Project at 347-258-2725.

L&M Pet Sitting Professional pet care visits for cats, dogs, birds, and other exotic species.

Lauren Storm & Michael Steeley (607) 431-3392 LnMpetsitting@gmail.com

999

Vehicles Wanted

CASH PAID FOR USED cars & trucks regardless of condition. Junk cars removed. Call 246-0214. DMV 7107350.

1000

Vehicles

BMW 2006 530XI Sedan; (Woodstock). Great condition inside/out. AWD. Perfect for country driving every season. Very comfortable. Heated steering wheel/seats. Sunroof. 150k. Clean CarFax. Most major mechanical parts that tend to be a problem at this mileage replaced within last year. $6000. ANXIOUS TO SELL. 845-7065450. 2001 Ford E250 Cargo Van. Great work van, 146K miles. One owner. $2150. (845)430-4372, Handymanhenk@aol.com

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ONE DAY UNIVERSITY

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Eight Books that Changed America SAT, NOVEMBER 10 10:00 AM – 12:30 PM Woodstock Playhouse 103 Mill Hill Rd Woodstock, NY

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What 8 books are a must for every lover of literature? And how did each of these groundbreaking works, in its unique way, “change America”? We will discuss such world-renowned classics as Dante’s Divine Comedy and Shakespeare’s Othello, and also cover more recent works including Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird and Presented by Joseph Heller’s Catch 22. Plus four more! Bard College Professor Joseph Luzzi will show how these fascinating works help us understand some of the most pressing concerns today.

To register, visit OneDayU.com or call 800-300-3438

Everything Ulster Publishing now in one place. hudsonvalleyone.com hudsonvalleyone.com


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018

THE TRUCK STOP

THE HUDSON VALLEY’S TRUCK HEADQUARTERS 3667 Route 9G, Rhinebeck

COREY

Sales: (888) 859-4790 • Service: (888) 704-7920 Parts: (888) 859-7161

YOU’RE THE NEXT MVP RUSH IN FOR YOUR HYUNDAI TODAY!

HEALEY HYUNDAI

Route 52 Beacon, NY

845-831-2222 •845-831-1990 OPEN: MON-THURS 9AM-8PM, FRI 9AM-6PM, SAT 9AM-5PM, SUN 11AM-4PM

visit us online: HealeyBrothersHyundai.com

Over 600 vehicles in stock!

RICH

RAY

MATT

FRAN

TEAMS Rhinebeck Healey Ford Hyundai Week of Nov. 4

Sawyer Motors

OAKLAND AT SAN FRANCISCO

SF

SF

OAK

OAK

SF

SF

DETROIT AT MINNESOTA

MIN

MIN

MIN

MIN

MIN

MIN

PITTSBURGH AT BALTIMORE

BAL

BAL

PIT

PIT

PIT

BAL

NY JETS AT MIAMI

MIA

MIA

NYJ

NYJ

MIA

MIA

KANSAS CITY AT CLEVELAND

KC

KC

KC

KC

KC

KC

CHICAGO AT BUFFALO

CHI

CHI

CHI

CHI

CHI

CHI

ATLANTA AT WASHINGTON

WAS

ATL

ATL

WAS

WAS

WAS

HOUSTON AT DENVER

DEN

DEN

DEN

HOU

HOU

DEN

CHARGERS AT SEATTLE

SEA

SEA

SEA

CHG

CHG

SEA

RAMS AT NEW ORLEANS

RAMS

NO

TAMPA BAY AT CAROLINA

CARO

CARO

CARO

TAM

CARO

CARO

LAST WEEK’S TOTALS GRAND TOTAL

9 4 62 50 NE

10 3 73 39 NE

9 4 71 41 GB

9 4 60 52 NE

8 5 63 49 NE

11 2 70 42 NE

52

64

48

49

42

47

TIE BREAKER GREEN BAY AT NEW ENGLAND

Lia Honda Poughkeepsie Thorpe’s GMC of Kingston Nissan

RAMS RAMS RAMS RAMS

CONGRATULATIONS

LIFETIME WARRANTIES ON OUR NEW AND USED CARS! ONLY AT

POUGHKEEPSIE NISSAN ROUTE 9 WAPPINGE RS FA LLS

845-297-4314

www.poughkeepsienissan.com

OPEN 7 DAYS

Since 1930

THIS WEEK’S WINNER

THORPE’S

GMC www.Thorpesgmcinc.com 5964 Main St., Tannersville, NY 12485 • 1-518-589-7142

GREGORY

GREGORY THORPE THORPE’S GMC


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Nov. 1, 2018


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