Almanac Weekly #26 2019

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

A miscellany of Hudson Valley art, adventure and ideas | Calendar & Classifieds | Issue 26 | June 27 – July 4

Fireworks near you

SummerScape begins


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

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June 27, 2019


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

CHECK IT OUT

100s

Leaving the house can be a wild ride...

of things to do every week

DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

Hudson Valley fireworks guide

H

ere’s a list of 2019 Independence Day-related events, painstakingly compiled by Donna Keefe. Since all these pyrotechnic events are subject to change based on the weather, it would be wise to confirm the activity with the sponsoring organization. For an interactive map of the festivities, visit our HV1 website: https://bit.ly/2NdSPWM.

FIREWORKS

games, giveaways, a Stallions baseball game at 7 p.m., followed by fireworks at dusk. Cantine Memorial Field, Saugerties. Bear Mountain State Park Fireworks. Arrive early to secure a spot. Food and beverages available for purchase starting at 6 p.m., followed by fireworks at dusk. Parking costs $10. Bear Mountain State Park, 3020 Seven Lakes Drive, Bear Mountain.

FRIDAY, JUNE 28

SATURDAY, JUNE 29

Accord Speedway’s Fireworks Extravaganza & Chicken BBQ. Festivities begin at 5 p.m. Satisfy your need for speed and fireworks with a special holiday weekend race! Fireworks will follow the race at dusk. Fireworks rain date July 5. Accord Speedway, 299 Whitfield Rd., Accord. www.accordspeedway.com.

Middletown: Party in the Park, Activities will begin at 5 p.m. including live entertainment at 7 p.m. Fireworks

Saugerties: Annual Summer/Independence Day Kickoff Party. Shindig will kick off at 5:30 p.m. Free hot dogs, plus beverages, face-painting,

will be held at dusk. Held at 130 Lake Ave., Middletown. Beacon: Independence Day Party. Festivities will include food and music at 5 p.m., followed by fireworks at dusk. Memorial Park, Robert Cahill Dr., Beacon.

Park, Monroe. Hunter: Fireworks Celebration. Celebrating the Fourth of July a day early with a barbecue at 6 p.m., followed by an ice cream party, lawn games and fireworks at dusk. Scribner’s Catskill Lodge, Hunter. Info: Scribner’s Catskill Lodge, (518) 628-

WEDNESDAY, JULY 3

Village of Monroe Independence Celebration at the Mill Ponds. Festivities begin with a Street Fair at 5 p.m. Entertainment by Matt Mulhare from 6:45 to 9:45 p.m. on the Main Stage on Millpond Parkway and fireworks at 9 p.m. Rain date: July 5. Millpond

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from the Greene Food Mart and winds its way down to the Village Hall on Main Street, where there will be music at Rip Van Winkle Lake, followed by fireworks at dusk. Info: (518) 5895850.

Port Jervis: Independence Day Celebration. Tastings from local restaurants, ice cream parlors, cafÊs, wineries and breweries from 6 to 8 p.m., followed by fireworks at dusk. Tickets can be purchased at the City Clerk’s Office (20 Hammond St.) or at the Youth Center (134 Pike St.). Tickets cost $20 for adults, $10 for 5-to12-year-olds. Only 500 tickets available. Held at Riverside Park. Town of Newburgh: Independence Day Celebration. Party begins at 6 p.m., featuring local fire company displays, food, games and fireworks at dusk. Cronomer Hill Park, Newburgh. Info: (845) 564-4552. THURSDAY, JULY 4

Cornwall: Independence Day Celebration. A full day of festivities starting with breakfast at 7 a.m. Daylong festivities will include a pet show, children’s art show, inflatable rides, games, music, magic show, lobster sale, pie-eating contest, entertainment and a parade. Celebration ends with fireworks at 9:30 p.m. Cornwall Town Hall Park, 183 Main St., Cornwall. City of Poughkeepsie: Annual Fourth of July Spectacular. Fireworks will begin at dusk (approximately 9 p.m.) and can be viewed from the waterfront or the Walkway over the Hudson. Admission costs $12.50, free for age 10 and under. Registration and tickets are required for the Walkway over the Hudson, free at Waryas Park. Parking is free in municipal parking lots beginning at 5 p.m. and in metered spaces after 6 p.m. Handicapped parking will be available at Waryas Park. Donations are appreciated. Rain date July 5. Waryas Park, 1 Main St, Poughkeepsie. Liberty: Fourth of July Festival. Celebration will kick off with a classic car show at 10:30 a.m., followed by

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est Point’s fireworks had better be good, right? And the band full of brassy brio? And they are, they are. The US Military Academy at West Point hosts its popular Independence Day Fireworks show and Band Concert on Saturday, July 6 (rain date: July 7). Relax on lawn chairs and blankets for a 90-minute patriotic show capped off by fireworks over the Hudson. The show begins at 7:30 p.m. RSVP at the website. West Point fireworks & concert, Saturday, July 6, Trophy Point Amphitheater, US Military Academy at West Point, www.westpointband.com

a parade at noon, vendors, entertainment, music and activities for children: bouncy houses, face-painting and games; fireworks at dusk. Info at (845) 292-9797. Main St. & La Polt Park, Liberty. http://libertynychamber.com/event/liberty-festival-4thjuly-2019. Saugerties: Independence Day Celebration. Annual parade (organized by the Saugerties Fire Department) will step off at 11 a.m. from the Saugerties High School and end at Cantine Field. Fireworks at Cantine Field at dusk. Info: (845) 246-2800. Cantine Memorial Field, Saugerties. Info: https://villagesaugerties.digitaltowpath.org. Fourth of July Celebration at Mohonk Mountain House. Events run through July 5; times vary. An overnight reservation is required to join in the Fourth of July activities. Events and activities throughout each day. Fireworks at dusk over the lake. Info: www.mohonk.com/events/holidaysat-mohonk/4th-of-july-celebration, (855) 883-3798. Mohonk Mountain

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Ellenville: Fourth of July Parade & Fireworks. Ellenville’s annual oldfashioned parade will step off at noon from Liberty Square. There will be street vendors all along the parade route. Fireworks at dusk behind the Old VAW. building near Joseph Y. Resnick Airport, off Rt. 209, Ellenville. Info: (845) 647-4620, www.ewcoc.com/parades--fireworks.html. Margaretville Field Days & Independence Day Celebration & Chicken BBQ . Festivities will kick off with Margaretville’s annual barbecue beginning at noon – until they sell out! Carnival Pay-One-Price Rides, 1 to 6 p.m., $20 per ticket. Local Craft Beer Tasting from the Catskill Brewery 6 to 10 p.m. Music by DJ Pat Del 6 to 11 p.m. Event is followed by a large fireworks display at 9:30 p.m. Special viewing area available. Margaretville Village Park behind Freshtown Market. Info: http://margaretvillefiredept.org.

Tannersville: Fourth of July Celebration. Parade steps off at 3 p.m.

Shinrin-yoku: the Medicine of Forest Bathing Outdoor workshop w/ John Polemis Sun. Jun 30 Noon-3PM $25/$30*

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An Old-Fashioned Independence Day in Germantown. Celebration will begin at 2 p.m., offering 18 th-century crafts, reenactors, food/refreshments, music and entertainment. View of the Saugerties fireworks over the Hudson River at dusk. Clermont State Historic Site, Germantown. Info: (518) 5376622, www.friendsofclermont.org/ events.

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Kingston: Independence Day Celebration. Food vendors will start serving at 4 p.m. with live music 5 to 9 p.m. The music lineup: Ivory Rose (pop) at 5 p.m., Geezßs Butlers (arena rock) at 6:30 p.m. and Mister Kick (dance rock, R & B and hits) at 8 p.m. After the music performances, mayor Steve Noble will welcome the crowd at 9:15 p.m., followed by a color guard flag presentation and the National Anthem. Fireworks display at dusk, presented by Mainetti & Mainetti, PC and O’Connor & Partners PLLC, will begin at 9:30 p.m. The City of Kingston and UCAT will be offering free shuttle services to the waterfront. Due to maintenance, the Wurts Street Bridge will be closed from Monday to Thursday, July 1 to 4. No pedestrians will be allowed on the Route 9W Bridge from 6 to 10:30 p.m. T. R. Gallo Park, 73 West Strand, Kingston. Info: https://ulstercountyalive.com/calendar/kingstonjuly-fourth-celebration-1. Cairo: Fireworks Celebration. Festivities and live music begin at 5 p.m., followed by fireworks at dusk. Angelo Canna Town Park, Joseph D Spencer Lane, Cairo. Info: https:// townofcairo.com. Highland Falls: Independence Day Celebration. Festivities will include food, games and entertainment starting at 5 p.m. The evening will end with fireworks at 9:15 p.m. Roe Ave., Highland Falls. Info: http://hffd.net. Wallkill: Fourth of July Fireworks. Celebration begins at 6 p.m. Fireworks will be displayed at dusk at the Town of Wallkill Golf Course. Parking at Circleville Elementary School. No parking at the golf course. Info: https://townofwallkill.com. Orange County Speedway Annual Fireworks Extravaganza. Festivities begin at 6 p.m. with live music from Black Dirt Bandits, followed by a set from DJ Jason Jaso. Fireworks take place at dusk. Free grandstand seating for the show with concessions and beverages available. Orange County Fair Speedway, 100 Carpenter Ave, Middletown. Info: www.orangecountyfair.com. Windham: Fireworks Celebration & Parade. An evening parade kicks off at 7 p.m., followed by fireworks at 9 p.m. at Windham Mountain, Windham. City of Newburgh: Fourth of July Celebration. Family Day begins at noon with vendors and artists on the river at Unico Park. Music from 7 to 9 p.m. Fireworks at People’s Waterfront Park at 9 p.m. Newburgh’s Waterfront Unico Park, Front & Fourth Sts., Newburgh. Info: (845) 565-2138; www.


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June 27, 2019 cityofnewburgh-ny.gov. Cornwall: Fourth of July at Bannerman Castle. Cruise from the Beacon waterfront to Bannerman Island! Event includes a guided walking tour of the Island with a Bannerman Castle Trust historian. There will be a sneak peek of the new Bannerman Residence Visitor Center, which is scheduled to open in late July. Light refreshments will be served on this tour and a cruise back to the Beacon waterfront. Event runs from 7 to 9:30 p.m. The Bannerman Castle Trust, Inc., in cooperation with the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, provides a public tour of Bannerman Castle and Pollepel Island. All proceeds will benefit the Pollepel Island and Bannerman Castle preservation. $40. Info: (845) 203-1316, https://bannermancastle. org. Beacon Institute Dock, Beacon. Bethel: Fourth of July Fireworks. Fireworks will begin at dusk overlooking White Lake. Free parking at 3586 Rt. 55, Kauneonga Lake. FRIDAY, JULY 5

Middletown: Orange County Stampede Rodeo Festival & Fireworks. The Orange County Stampede Rodeo Festival runs Friday and Saturday, July 5 and 6 starting at 2 p.m. The event will feature bull-riders competing for a $5K prize. Fireworks will take place at 9:30 p.m. Admission for lawn seats costs $20 for adults and $14 for kids 10 and under; children under 3 get in free. Orange County Fair Speedway, 239 Wisner Ave., Middletown.

Fishkill: Concert & Fireworks. Concert at 7 p.m. and fireworks to follow at 9:15 p.m. Rain date July 7. Held at Hopewell Recreation Park Pavilion, 392 Rt. 376, Hopewell Junction. Wappingers Falls: Hudson Valley Renegades Post-Game Fireworks. The Hudson Valley Renegades will have fireworks following the game (approximately 9 p.m.). Event held at 500 Rt. 9D, Wappingers Falls.

SATURDAY, JULY 6

Town of Wappingers: Independence Community Celebration. Three days of festivities that will include live entertainment, vendors, carnival rides and games. Carnival begins at 11 a.m. Fireworks will take place at dusk. Wappingers Junior High School, 30 Major MacDonald Way, Wappingers Falls. Middletown: Orange County Stampede Rodeo Festival & Fireworks. The event starts at 2 p.m. and will feature bull-riders competing for a $5K prize. Fireworks will take place on Friday from 9:30 to 9:45 p.m. Admission for lawn seats costs $20 for adults and $14 for kids 10 and under. Children under 3 get in free. Orange County Fair Speedway, 239 Wisner

Ave., Middletown. Germantown: Annual Independence Day Celebration. Festivities begin at 4 p.m. with crafters, games, bounce houses, music by Southbound, food and refreshments, fireworks at dusk. Rain date July 7. Palatine Park, 50 Palatine Rd., Germantown. Info: www.germantownny.org. Town of New Paltz: Independence Day Celebration. Food trucks, henna body art, face-painting and musical performances by local performers Wind and Stone and Soul Purpose. Admission is free; bring a chair or a blanket. Grounds open at 5 p.m., fireworks begin after dusk. Held at the Ulster County Fairgrounds, 249 Libertyville Rd., New Paltz. Info: www. townofnewpaltz.org. Modena: Red, White & Blue Fireworks Extravaganza. Event kicks off at 5 p.m. with music, food, glow-sticks and fireworks at dusk. Thomas Felten Memorial Park, 11 Patura Rd., Modena. Info: (845) 883-7331; http://town. plattekill.ny.us.

9:20 p.m., including an intermission that will allow guests to mingle with musicians. Evening ends with a firework display. Bring your own picnic and chairs. Refreshments are also available for purchase. Tickets cost $42 for adults, $2 for children, free for age 5 and under. Rain date (which

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Independence Day Celebration at Boscobel. Gates open for a Symphony Picnic at 6 p.m. The music starts at 7:35 p.m. and will conclude around

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Catskill: Fireworks Celebration. Guilty Pleasures band will perform music from the 1960s at 6 p.m.; fireworks follow at dusk. Dutchman’s Landing Park, 10 Main St., Catskill. Call (518) 943-3830 for more details. Hudson Fireworks Cruise from 8:30 until 10 p.m. View the Catskill fireworks aboard the Hudson-Athens Ferry. For reservations, call (888) 804-9716 or (518) 822-1014; hudsoncruises.com. Highland: Independence Day Celebration & Fireworks. Old-fashioned fun begins at 6 p.m. with DJ Reg, local food vendors, games, bounce castle and fireworks at dusk. Town Field behind Methodist Church at Vineyard Ave. and Main St., Highland. Info: (845) 691-2144, http://townoflloyd. com.

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June 27, 2019

may or may not include fireworks) July 7. Boscobel, 1601 Rt. 9D, Garrison. Tickets and info: (845) 265-3638, https://boscobel.org. West Point’s Music under the Stars Concert Series: Annual Independence Day Celebration & Concert. Performances by the West Point Concert Band, the band’s field music group the Hellcats, the Benny Havens Band. Concert begins at 7:30 p.m. with fireworks to follow. Rain date: July 7. West Point /Trophy Point Amphitheater, West Point. RSVP at https:// westpointband.com; (845) 938-2617. SATURDAY, JULY 27

Montgomery: Freedom Fest Fireworks. Held at Thomas Bull Memorial Park, 211 Rt. 416, Montgomery. Admission is free. The gates open at 4 p.m. and fireworks will be at dusk.

OTHER INDEPENDENCE CELEBRATIONS

MOVIE

JULY 1-5

Fourth of July Celebration at Mohonk Mountain House. Events run through July 5; times vary. An overnight reservation is required to join in the Fourth of July activities. Events and activities throughout each day. Be sure to wear your red, white and blue and join in the fun. Fireworks at dusk on July Fourth (included in the list above). Mohonk Mountain House, 1000 Mountain Rest Rd., New Paltz. Info: www.mohonk.com/events/holidays-at-mohonk/4th-of-july-celebration; (855) 883-3798. JULY 4

Rosendale: Reading of the Declaration of Independence at the Rosendale Theatre Collective. 9:30 to 10 a.m. Hear the words that changed the world forever! Reading is sponsored by the Bluestone Press. Twenty community members will take turns reading the document that changed the world. Followed by coffee and birthday cake. Free. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St. (Rt. 213), Rosendale. Info: (845) 658-8989, info@rosendaletheatre. org, www.rosendaletheatre.org. East Meredith: Independence Day Celebration at Hanford Mills Museum. 10 a.m.to 4 p.m. Old-fashioned family fun. A BYOF celebration – that is, “bring your own frog” for the frog-jumping contests. No frog? No problem. Organizers say that watching the contests is just as much fun. Festivities will feature a fishing derby with prizes for kids, steam power and water power demonstrations in the Museum’s historic sawmill, gristmill and woodworking shop, the Hanford

JAY MAIDMENT | DISNEY

Emily Blunt in Mary Poppins Returns

MOVIES UNDER THE WALKWAY SCREENS MARY POPPINS RETURNS ON SATURDAY

O

rganized by the Millman Harris Romano Foundation, Movies under the Walkway begins its 2019 summer programming with Mary Poppins Returns on Saturday, June 29. The first in a summer series of family-friendly movies in a festive environment, Mary Poppins Returns will be shown on a big screen in Upper Landing Park, with the span of the Walkway over the Hudson as backdrop. The film is only part of the fun. Numerous food trucks will be parked onsite, and there will be live music provided by Crash and Byrne (7 p.m.) and family activities before the show. Guests are encouraged to bring chairs and blankets. Movies under the Walkway, Saturday, June 29, 7-11 p.m., Upper Landing Park, 83 N. Water St., Poughkeepsie, (845) 7906322, https://walkway.org

Mills String Band, field games, children’s activities, food and refreshments available and local vendors. $9 for adults & teens, $7 for seniors and AAA members, $4.50 for retired military. Hanford Mills Museum, 51 County Highway 12, East Meredith. Info: www.hanfordmills.org; (607) 278-5744. Hyde Park: Independence Day Celebration. Annual parade steps off at 10 a.m. from the Hyde Park Cinemas’ parking lot and proceeds north on Rt. 9 to the Hyde Park Town Hall. Roosevelt Theater, 4060 Albany Post Rd., Hyde Park. Info: (845) 229-5111. Independence Day at Knox’s Headquarters. See a small cannon fired at 1 and 4 p.m. Tours offered every hour. Open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Free admission. Info: (845) 561-5498. Independence Day Program at Fort Montgomery. Witness the roar and thunder at the Grand Battery when the fort’s six-pounder cannon “Ana” is fired at noon! Camp activities and military drills will take place through-

out the day. Hours: 12 to 4p.m. Fort Montgomery, 690 Rt. 9W, Fort Montgomery. Info: (845) 446-2134. Info: www.palisadesparksconservancy.org. Independence Day at the New Windsor Cantonment. Military drills and cannon-firing at 2 p.m. and a visitor participatory reading of the Declaration of Independence at 3 p.m. New Windsor Cantonment State Historic Site, 374 Temple Hill Rd., New Windsor. Info: (845) 561-1765, chad.johnson@parks.ny.gov, www.nysparks. com. Fourth of July Celebration at Washington’s Headquarters. Reading at 2p.m.: “Capturing our Past – In the Mid-to-Late 19th Century.” Hear about Washington’s Headquarters’ early years as we approach the 169th anniversary of its designation as the first publicly operated historic site in the nation on July 4,1850! Listen to how and why that happened. Hear about the motivation to save Washington’s Headquarters before so many other sites. Learn what it was like to visit the Site 130 years ago. Compare that period of time with the present as you walk through the same rooms the Washingtons once did. Free with Museum admission, $1 to $6. Washington’s Headquarters State Historic Site, 84 Liberty St., Newburgh. Info: (845) 562-1195. July Fourth Celebration at the Hasbrouck House. Butterfield and

Atticus Farm present a Summer Barbecue at 6 p.m. Advance tickets recommended, $45. Hasbrouck House, 3805 Main St. (Rt. 209), Stone Ridge. Info: (845) 687-0887, (845) 6870736, hello@hasbrouckhouseny.com, www.butterfieldstoneridge.com, bit. ly/2Vz2Z8f. Fourth of July Concert on the Lawn: New York Swing Exchange. Performance from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Bring lawn chairs, blankets and picnic baskets. Refreshments also available on-site. Sugar Loaf Crossing, 1405 Kings Hwy., Sugar Loaf. Info: (845) 469-2713. Kingston: July Fourth Fireworks Cruise on the Hudson. Thunder Ridge featuring Dorraine Scofield & JB Hunt. Cash bar and snacks available on board. Board at 7:30 p.m.; cruise from 8 to 10 p.m. Boat departs from 1 East Strand, Kingston. $30 for adults, $20 for 4-to11-year-olds. Hudson River Cruise/Rip Van Winkle, Rondout Landing, Kingston. Tickets: (845) 340-4700, www. hudsonrivercruises.com. SATURDAY, JULY 6

New Paltz: New Paltz in the War for Independence. Historic Huguenot Street will host a Revolutionary War encampment with the 5th New York Regiment from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Historic Huguenot Street, 81 Huguenot St., New Paltz. Info: (845) 255-1660; frances@huguenotstreet.org.

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June 27, 2019

MOVIE

THE RATIONALE FOR A TOY STORY 4 TO HAPPEN had to be a good one – something beyond guaranteed great box office and merchandising potential. It went through several major rewrites over a period of more than five years, and perhaps it was in contemplating the need for this movie to exist at all that the writers hit on the idea that makes it work.

PIXAR

Woody with Forky in Toy Story 4

Forky’s existential crisis Cast of castoffs makes Toy Story 4 a worthy windup “Generally, by the time you are Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your eyes drop out and you get loose in the joints and very shabby. But these things don’t matter at all, because once you are Real you can’t be ugly, except to people who don’t understand.� – Margery Williams Bianco The Velveteen Rabbit

F

or a work of children’s literature to become “classic,� a number of stars have to align, one of them being said story’s ability to resonate with adults, who are thereby motivated to ensure that their kids are exposed to it. Generations of young readers have fallen in love with The Velveteen Rabbit, the most alert among them perhaps taking notice that the older person reading the book aloud always gets a little choked up during the Skin Horse’s soliloquy. That part, we learn later in life, isn’t truly aimed at children, but at those of us who are growing “loose in the joints and very shabby,� well into our quests to become Real. Makers of movies for audiences aged in the single digits understand this concept well. In the wrong hands, it can go awry, with jokes intended to fly over kids’ heads and amuse their parents missing all targets altogether, or coming across so arch that only damaged middle-schoolers aspiring to sophistication will laugh. That sweet spot between sentimentality and cynicism is not as large as one might wish. The people at Pixar have proven adept at being able to find it pretty consistently, however, and the latest installment

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in the Toy Story franchise is a worthy illustration. The appeal of the Toy Story movies to children is obvious and uncomplicated. Minds not yet closed off to the possible existence of magic can easily get immersed in an alternate reality in which makebelieve is only a matter of perspective, and toys have their own points of view (not to mention priorities that can be in conflict with those of the humans in their environments). When you’re so young that the line between Self and Other has not fully solidified, empathy comes easily. Our playthings’ suffering is our own suffering, their triumphs our triumphs. That the humans in these movies are secondary or tertiary characters does not make the narratives any less relatable, and it certainly helps that the young child characters in particular seem more vulnerable and “developmentally appropriate� than your all-too-common snarky, overly precocious modern movie kid hero. For older viewers, it lends an irony worthy of Greek tragedy to the toy characters’ primary yearning: to be played with by real children. It’s what gives meaning to their existence. Those of us with our “hair loved off � – in the process of discovering that the fear of mortality associated with aging is more about dying before we’ve justified our existences by doing something really meaningful than about simply no longer being alive – will get what these toys are going through,

even more than the kids we bring to the cinema will. Toy Story 3 was long touted as the last of a trilogy, the narrative reaching a natural ending as the boy Andy (John Morris) went off to college and passed his toy collection on to a worthy preschooler, Bonnie (Madeleine McGraw). The rationale for a Toy Story 4 to happen had to be a good one – something beyond guaranteed great box office and merchandising potential. It went through several major rewrites (Stephany Folsom and Andrew Stanton get the final screenplay credit) over a period of more than five years, and perhaps it was in contemplating the need for this movie to exist at all that the writers hit on the idea that makes it work: a brand-new character named Forky (Tony Hale), assembled from a discarded spork and various kindergarten craft-table scraps. From an external point of view, Forky is a tribute to the creative drive in children; on the inside, he believes his only destiny to be rejoining the trash. Woody (Tom Hanks) spends much of the movie trying to thwart his suicidal impulses, recognizing that Bonnie’s love for the toy she made herself is precisely what makes a toy’s life worth living. Reuniting Forky and Bonnie when they become separated on a family road trip makes up most of the zany action of the movie, but Forky’s existential crisis – mirrored in Woody’s lack of a sense of purpose after parting with Andy, and

in the backstory of the primary villain, a doll named Gabby Gabby (Christina Hendricks) who believes that she will find a child to love her if she can only replace her defective voice box with Woody’s functional one – sets its autumnal tone. Ending Toy Story 4 with one character asking “Why am I alive?â€? and another responding “I don’t knowâ€? is as clear a signal as we could ask that there’s no way to continue this series on the big screen without wading too deeply into the mire of post-Nietzschean philosophy. Happily, there’s nothing that feels ponderous about this presumably final animated romp. Knowing what makes Woody and his pals tick gives Toy Story 4 ample heart, just like its predecessors, without risking alienating wannabe-edgy tweens and teens. The franchise’s brand of character-based humor remains fresh even as it tosses out Easter eggs referencing earlier Pixar and Disney products (it’s fun to look closely at the stuff accumulated in the antiques store where several toys are held captive). There are several engaging new characters, including Keanu Reeves as Duke Caboom, a motorcycle daredevil toy Ă la Evel Knievel whose Canadian patriotism becomes a running joke, and the comedy team of Jordan Peele and Keegan-Michael Key as Bunny and Ducky, two stuffed toys sewn together who have long cherished crazed revenge schemes against humans whilst languishing as unclaimed prizes in a carnival game. Perhaps best of all, if you’re among those viewers who always thought that the Toy Story franchise needed more female toy characters front and center, is the return of Bo Peep (Annie Potts), who, we learn, has gone renegade during her long exile from Andy’s toybox. The genteel, fragile porcelain shepherdess has turned thoroughly badass, and pretty well steals the whole movie along with Woody’s heart. Forky may give voice to our vestiges of low self-esteem, but Bo embodies the latent leadership potential in even the shyest among us. If for no other reason, Toy Story 4 is worth a watch and listen just to take in the Randy Newman score. But you’re sure to find plenty of other reasons. Even when its time has come to end, it’s tough to part with a movie franchise this well-honed at delivering the goods. Let’s give Woody and his friends a grateful sendoff. – Frances Marion Platt

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

MUSIC

June 27, 2019

ERICH WOLFGANG KORNGOLD WAS LAUDED AS A GENIUS by the likes of Gustav Mahler and Richard Strauss, had already established a strong reputation in Europe as a composer and pianist before fleeing the rise of Nazism to work in Hollywood. He is credited as the first to bring lush orchestral scores to the silver screen. John Williams credits Korngold’s score for King’s Row as his major influence for the Star Wars scores.

Mining Korngold Bard SummerScape 2019 opens June 29

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hat’s that sound? Live serious music and fully staged opera colliding with exacting scholarship and multidisciplinary synthesis that incorporates film and critical discussion with more than a little late-night louche spectacle and partying? Must be Bard SummerScape, one of the world’s most intensive, integrated and lauded summer music festivals, distributed through Bard College’s unparalleled set of high-character venues, from the crashed Nabooian spacecraft that is Frank Gehry’s Fisher Center to the brilliant surreal nightmare of the Belgian Spiegeltent. Each year, Bard trains its compound lens on the life, times and achievement of a single composer, and then finds a million-and-a-half ways of approaching, contextualizing and extending the subject. This summer, this thematically unified grand buffet of culture and inquiry turns to composer Erich Wolfgang Korngold: not as recognizable a name as the Puccini and Chopin of recent years, but in some ways a man emblematic of the quandaries and opportunities of 20th-century art. It is often said that the best poets and novelists of the second half of the 20th century went to Madison Avenue to sell underwear. Korngold, in his way, represents the plight of the serious, prodigious composer drawn to Hollywood, money and sustainability when faced with both the diminishing

ALMANAC WEEKLY editor contributors

calendar manager classifieds

Julie O’Connor Bob Berman, John Burdick, Will Dendis, Sharyn Flanagan, Leslie Gerber, Mikhail Horowitz, Jeremiah Horrigan, Ann Hutton, Will Lytle, Dion Ogust, Frances Marion Platt, Lee Reich, Lynn Woods 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, Pam Courselle Elizabeth Jackson, Angela Lattrell, Ralph Longendyke, Sue Rogers, Linda Saccoman, Jenny Bella circulation manager.................... Dominic Labate production........................ Diane Congello-Brandes Josh Gilligan, Ann Marie Woolsey-Johnson 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 Donna.ulsterpublishing@gmail.com. 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.

AKG -IMAGES

Erich Wolfgang Korngold, 1916

returns of serious music and the blooming anti-Semitism of Europe. He was not alone. Some contemporaries, like the great Hungarian composer Miklós Rózsa, maintained separate and parallel careers as film and concert music composers, using a pseudonym at first to ensure that the former did not taint the latter. The festival will feature a broad sampling of Korngold’s own music, including childhood masterpieces, rare orchestral and chamber works, excerpts from iconic film scores, a special screening of The Constant Nymph and a semi-staged production of his best-loved opera, Die tote Stadt, to draw the entire seven weeks of SummerScape to a riveting close. Music by many of his compatriots and contemporaries will also be heard, including those who dominated the Viennese music scene in his early years, like Mahler, Strauss, Robert Fuchs, Joseph Marx and his teacher Alexander von Zemlinsky; his fellow conservatives, like Ernst von Dohnányi and Franz Schmidt; those with whom he was unfavorably compared, like Franz Schreker, Ernst Krenek and Paul Hindemith; Broadway legends like Jerome Kern, George Gershwin and Leonard Bernstein; and some of the cinematic giants he influenced, like Max Steiner, Alfred Newman, Bernard Herrmann, Franz Waxman and Miklós Rózsa, several of whom – together with

It is often said that the best poets and novelists of the second half of the 20th century went to Madison Avenue to sell underwear. Korngold, in his way, represents the plight of the serious, prodigious composer drawn to Hollywood, money and sustainability when faced with both the diminishing returns of serious music and the blooming anti-Semitism of Europe. Arnold Schoenberg, Hanns Eisler, Erich Zeisl and Korngold himself – were also Jewish émigrés in Hollywood. The festival features themed concerts and panel discussions, together with a film series exploring “Korngold and the Poetry of Cinema,” and the longoverdue American premiere of the grand opera that the composer considered his masterpiece, The Miracle of Heliane (Das Wunder der Heliane), in a fully staged new production by German director Christian Räth. Daniel Fish’s acclaimed staging of Michael Gordon’s Acquanetta provides an alternative look at Hollywood’s Golden Age, and Evidence, A Dance Company makes its festival debut with the world premiere of Grace and Mercy,

a new SummerScape commission from choreographer and company founder Ronald K. Brown, with live music from Meshell Ndegeocello, Peven Everett and others. Cabaret and jazz highlight a generous program of events in Bard’s authentic and sensationally popular Belgian Spiegeltent. You’ll need the website to make sense of it all and pick your spots, but please do. Musical and cultural programming of this caliber is rare anywhere on the globe. – John Burdick Bard SummerScape, June 29-August 18, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson http://fishercenter.bard.edu/summerscape


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

All systems go at the music chapel in the woods Maverick blasts off with Bill Charlap Trio on Saturday, Shanghai Quartet on Sunday

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hile the Austrian Classical-period master Franz Josef Haydn is credited with developing the string quartet (and the piano trio, and the symphony), it was Papa’s student Beethoven whose towering achievement in the form inspired and/or intimidated all who followed. Beethoven’s 16 quartets, and especially his formally innovative and emotionally stunning late quartets (12 to 16, written while mostly deaf ), are the ones to which the tradition answers… sometimes in numerologically aware ways. Schubert – Beethoven’s young friend on the Vienna scene – stopped at 15 quartets, probably out of respect, and requested that Beethoven’s No. 14 (my favorite too) be the last music he heard on his deathbed. The great 20th-century adopter of the form, Dimitri Shostakovich, also cut himself off at 15. The classically minded Romantic composer Johannes Brahms was slow even to attempt a string quartet, so imposing was his reverence for Beethoven’s. He produced quintets, trios and essentially any kind of chamber music except the string quartet before finally entering the conversation with the two quartets of Op. 51. As the traditional wing of Romanticism (Mendelssohn, Schumann, Brahms, Dvorák et cetera) gave way to Modernism, the symphony and most of the other classical forms handed down from Haydn and Mozart passed from common use. Even so, such pivotal composers as Debussy and Ravel wrote string quartets – one each, with Ravel’s especially becoming a canonical mainstay – and the form is still regarded as an essential and unforgiving test of a composer’s prowess with harmony, four-part “chorale” counterpoint and formal design. And late Beethoven is still the last word. For Woodstock’s Maverick Concerts, the string quartet is bread-and-butter. Each season, the majority of the worldclass talent that Maverick welcomes comes in the form of internationally known touring and recording ensembles dedicated to the performance of string quartets, old and new (for they are still written and commissioned with

DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

This summer, the longest-running chamber music series in America will features a number of the world’s great string quartet ensembles: the Escher, the Harlem, the Jasper, the Jupiter, the Pacifica, the Amernet and, on Sunday, June 30, the Shanghai Quartet.

regularity). This summer, the longestrunning chamber music series in America will features a number of the world’s great string quartet ensembles: the Escher, the Harlem, the Jasper, the Jupiter, the Pacifica, the Amernet and, on Sunday, June 30, the Shanghai Quartet, now in its 26th year of traversing Eastern and Western repertoire. The Shanghai will be presenting the Maverick debut of composer (and recently appointed Bard College dean) Tan Dun’s piece for string quartet, Feng Ya Song. Also on the program are Dvorák’s beloved Quartet No. 10 in E-flat, Op.51 and Beethoven’s Quartet No.12 in E-flat major, Op.127, the first of the late quartets.

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On Saturday, June 29, the Maverick season commences with a performance by Grammy-winning jazz pianist Bill Charlap and his trio. Charlap has worked with numerous titans of jazz: Phil Woods, Tony Bennett, Gerry Mulligan, Wynton Marsalis, Freddy Cole and Houston Person. Charlap’s trio, formed in 1997, is now recognized as one of the leading groups in jazz worldwide. Tickets for both concerts range from $30 to $55, with a

substantial discount for students. – John Burdick Bill Charlap Trio Saturday, June 29 at 8 p.m. Shanghai Quartet Sunday, June 30 at 4 p.m. $30-$55 Maverick Concert Hall 120 Maverick Rd., Woodstock http://maverickconcerts.org

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Youngs Mavericks Festival gets underway this Saturday Maverick Concerts in Woodstock announces its summerlong Young Mavericks Festival lineup of performances for children and families. These concerts are free for all children and cost only $5 for adults. The lineup boasts an impressive array of substantial, challenging music in multiple genres and top-tier, internationally recognized talent. All concerts take place on Saturdays at 11 a.m. in the Maverick’s unique and historic Woodstock hall. On June 29, the New Music 4TET presents “From Maverick to Woodstock: In the Spirit of the ’60s,” led by genre-shredding violinist Gwen Laster, who has worked with the likes of Anthony Braxton and Alicia Keys. Further down the line, concerts include Elizabeth Mitchell & Family (July 6); decorated piano iconoclast Frederick Chiu and storyteller David Gonzalez performing Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf and Camille Saint-Saëns’ The Carnival of the Animals (July 20); and finally, Jazzkids with Grammy-nominated young jazz musician Christian Sands (August 3). For complete information, visit www. maverickconcerts.org.

Falcon presents Scott Sharrard on Saturday The fact that former guitarist, songwriter and Gregg Allman Band guitarist Scott Sharrard has been a fixture at the better local clubs for years makes him no less a special attraction.

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Sharrard is a blues/roots player of a very high order, and magic is likely to happen anytime he picks up his axe. Scott Sharrard returns to one of his regular haunts, the Falcon, on Saturday, June 29. Opening will be the Robert Hill and Joanne Lediger Duo. There is no cover charge at the Falcon, but generous direct-from-audience donation is the law of the land. Scott Sharrard Saturday, June 29, 8 p.m. The Falcon 1348 Rt. 9W, Marlboro www.liveatthefalcon.com

One of the Hudson Valley’s leading musical exports, the horn-powered global pop sensation the Big Takeover, plays a local show in the intimate downstairs space of the Falcon Underground on Saturday, June 29, fresh off another local appearance of sorts: a featured spot at Mountain Jam at Bethel Woods. The band’s latest single is a cover of Sophia George’s 1985 dancehall hit “Girlie Girlie.” Recorded as part of a UK compilation album containing 40 covers of classic Trojan Records hits from artists across the world, it was produced by Manuel Quintana (Rachel Yamagata, Robbie Dupree) and Rob Kissner and mixed

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by Grammy Award-winning engineer Danny Blume. There is no cover charge at the Falcon, but generous direct-from-audience donation is what keeps the good times rolling at Tony Falco’s world-famous music and art multiplex. Big Takeover Saturday, June 29, 8 p.m. The Falcon Underground 1348 Rt. 9W, Marlboro www.liveatthefalcon.com

Rosendale’s Rail Trail Café announcers summer lineup

Big Takeover plays Falcon Underground on Saturday

Working with nature to create beautiful, sustainable and natural landscapes.

June 27, 2019

Perhaps the region’s most organic venue, the Rail Trail Café in Rosendale announces another season of rigorous and substantial trailside music and performance. When the Café first began presenting live music, no one was surprised that the booking choices were adventurous, nor that they attracted many of the area’s premier players and writers. This is, after all, the brainchild of the great world/jazz drummer Brian Farmer, the engine behind Woodstock’s Futu Futu, an early and brilliant proponent of global fusion and one of the greatest live bands that the mid-Hudson Valley has ever produced (an opinion that world music scholar/appropriator Peter Gabriel heartily shared). What may be surprising is the legs this idea has shown: a venue on the migratory path of bikers, hikers, tourists and those without cars who need to get somewhere. And it works. Imagine the joy of stumbling

upon a tango-obsessed saxophone quartet or an actual harpist shredding while on a hike in the woods. Too enchanted, right? Fortunately, the Café is also accessible by car and on purpose. The Café serves on Friday from noon to dusk and Saturdays and Sundays from 9 a.m. to dusk. The young Woodstock singer/songwriter Alyssa Dan performs on Saturday, June 29 at 1 p.m. Later on the same day, the Guzmango Saxophone Quartet, led by tango enthusiast Guzman Blackburn, plays saxophone quartet arrangements of the standard tango repertoire, including such favorites as “La Cumparsita” and “El Choclo,” as well as various pieces by one of tango’s bestknown composers, Astor Piazzolla. On Sunday, June 30, Spero takes the early 1 p.m. shift. The performing alias of Krista Speroni, Spero is a singer/ songwriter whose work is colored by her affection for Afro rhythms and textures. At 4 p.m. on the same day, the Gold Hope Duo will rock the trail: the tireless married duo of Lara Hope and Matthew Goldpaugh. Rockabilly is their home turf, but as writers and interpreters, Lara and Matt can go just about anywhere. On Friday, July 5 at 5 p.m., harpist and songwriter Julia Haines weaves together classical, traditional, improvisation and contemporary influences to create a radiant, original music. On Saturday, July 6 at 1 p.m., the veteran songwriter Steven Michael Pague performs – yet another artist who balances on the razor’s edge between contemporary styles and worldsource roots, which is kind of the “house style” at this venue without a house. On Saturday, July 6 at 6:30 p.m., Hudson Valley Playback Theater presents Sky Above, Earth Below, an improvisational performance of stories told by audience members. Stories from the natural world – a memory, a moment from right now, a vision or hope for the future – will be enacted on the spot by Hudson River Playback Theatre’s performers, along with music. Serving delicious food and drinks, the Rail Trail Café is located right beside the parking lot on Stone Mountain Farm off Springtown Road. For more information, visit www.railtrailcaferosendale.com. – John Burdick

Spiegeltent season begins this weekend at Bard SummerScape The Spiegeltent Cabaret summer series provides the levity and the louche to the otherwise-pretty-damnrigorous lineup of events at Bard’s SummerScape. The Belgian, Weimarera Spiegeltent is a transformative experience in itself: large, psychedelic before they had a name for it, parked

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like a spaceship from and to the past in a field outside the Fisher Center (itself a spaceship of sorts). The Cabaret component begins at 8 p.m. on Saturday, June 29 with a performance by the global soul outfit Lady Moon & the Eclipse and on Sunday, June 30 with a 6 p.m. performance by the storytelling and oral history project known as the Porch. Tickets to both shows cost $20. June 29/30, 8 p.m./6 p.m. Spiegeltent Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, Bard College Annandale-on-Hudson https://fishercenter.bard.edu/spiegeltent

Amanda Anne Platt & the Honeycutters this Friday in Phoenicia

ebrates American independence with a performance by the Greater Newburgh Symphony Orchestra (GNSO). Under the direction of maestro Russell Ger, the program includes works by Ludwig von Beethoven, Wolfgang Mozart, Igor Stravinsky, Piotr Tchaikovsky and Giuseppe Verdi. Following the performance, attendees will enjoy a clear view of the fireworks display from the US Military Academy at West Point, directly across the river from Boscobel. The gates for the Symphony Picnic will open at Boscobel on Saturday, July 6 at 6 p.m. The music starts at 7:35 p.m. and will conclude around 9:20 p.m. Ticket prices for Boscobel members are $33 for adults and $15 for children. The price for non-members is $42 for adults and $23 for children. Admission is free for those under age 5.

Anne Platt and the Honeycutters Friday, June 28, 7:30 p.m. Phoenicia United Methodist Church 29 Church St., Phoenicia https://flyingcatmusic.org

Greater Newburgh Symphony Orchestra performs at Boscobel with fireworks on July 6 Overlooking the Hudson from grassy tiers and garden, the Boscobel House and Gardens in Garrison have made a spectacular seasonal venue for theater and music for years and years. On Saturday, July 6, Boscobel cel-

Rosendale Theatre hosts Robert Burke Warren’s Bowie tribute Acoustic Stardust

The Hudson Valley Chamber Music Circle series at Bard College presents the third of its three chamber music concerts in June on Saturday, June 29. The critically lauded Orion String Quartet will be joined by flutist Tara Helen O’Connor in a performance of Mozart’s Flute Quartet in C Major. The Orion will also perform the legendary violinist/composer Fritz Kreisler’s String Quartet in A Minor and Franz Schubert’s late classic String Quartet No. 14 in D Minor (“Death and the Maiden”). Tickets to this performance cost $30 general admission, $5 for students. Orion String Quartet with Tara Helen O’Connor Saturday, June 29, 8 p.m. Olin Hall, Bard College Annandale-on-Hudson (845) 758-7900 https://fishercenter.bard.edu

$15 for students and seniors. Acoustic Stardust Saturday, June 29, 7:30 p.m. Rosendale Theatre 408 Main St. (Rt. 213), Rosendale www.rosendaletheatre.org

Levon Helm Studios to host Gipsy Kings on Saturday

Saturday, July 6, 7:35 p.m. Boscobel House and Gardens 1601 Rt. 9D, Garrison https://boscobel.org

Hudson Valley Chamber Music Circle hosts Orion String Quartet at Bard this Saturday In one of its first concerts in its more spacious new digs, the storied, rootscentric Flying Cat Music presents Amanda Anne Platt and the Honeycutters at the Phoenicia United Methodist Church on Friday, June 28. The Ashville, North Carolina outfit plays a sweet, melancholic and spunky brand of country/rock, rooted in traditional twang, decorated with elegant pedal steel filigree and committed to the populist emotive appeal of confessional country songcraft. About their self-titled 2017 album, Platt says, “I think it’s just about life and all that that entails, including but not limited to death, strangers, birthdays, money, leaving, arriving, seasons, corruption and love.” Tickets cost $15 in advance, $18 at the door.

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

Robert Burke Warren (photo by M. Salome)

As not only a gifted and willing performer but also a practical scholar of rock, songwriting and culture, Robert Burke Warren has found a wide and welcoming niche as the ringleader of tribute shows. Fancy for him, then, that his sensibilities and talents coincide so neatly with the current trend in live music toward tribute, homage, faithful recreation and radical reinterpretation. Of all the giants that Warren has fêted and roasted (Cash, Cohen, others), it is his acoustic David Bowie tribute that has perhaps drawn best (hard to say, though, as sold out is sold out and there is no way to count the heads looking in the window). The Rosendale Theatre presents Robert Burke Warren’s Acoustic Stardust on Saturday, June 29. Warren will offer intimate versions of Bowie songs, ranging from 1969’s “Space Oddity” to 2016’s “Blackstar,” all in “unplugged” format. Collaborators include pianist/ vocalist Dennis Yerry, bassist/vocalist Mark Lerner (Life in a Blender), percussionist Peter Newell (the Trapps) and vocalists/percussionists Nancy Howell (Rosine), Ann Osmond and wunderkind Cally Mansfield. Tickets cost $20 in advance, $22 at the door,

The imperial nature of fusion usually starts with a modern world perspective and toolset trained on something old, something remote, something weird. When they broke onto the charts, the Gipsy Kings reversed the direction of cultural conquest and appropriation, scoring a massive hit with their fiery reworking of “Hotel California” and backing it with year after year of substantive, serious music. For the group’s recent release, Roots, the core members of the Gipsy Kings settled into a stone villa in the small town of St-Andre-deBueges in the south of France, where they collaborated with producer Craig Street on the Grammy-nominated acoustic release. For the first time in years, the band recorded without a drum kit, synthesizer or electric bass, bringing the music closer to its Flamenco origins. The legendary Gipsy Kings perform at Levon Helm Studios on Saturday, June 29, with Simi Stone opening. Reserved seats cost $125. Standing room costs $75. – John Burdick Gipsy Kings Saturday, June 29 8 p.m. Levon Helm Studios 160 Plochmann Lane Woodstock https://levonhelm.com

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

HISTORY

June 27, 2019

2017

It wasn’t until 2017 that the student body at the Culinary Institute of America reflected this country’s actual demographics, with enrollment of women reaching 51.6 percent.

Meet the two women who founded the CIA

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hen it comes to the culinary arts, a pronounced double standard for gender roles has long prevailed in the US. In the home, with rare exceptions, it’s taken for granted that women will do most if not all of the meal planning, grocery shopping and cooking – even when both spouses are working full-time. And yet celebrity chefs are still preponderantly male. This is partially a legacy of the prestigious cooking schools of Europe, which had originally drawn their recruits from the military and in some cases didn’t admit women until well into the 20th century. Although many classic cookbooks were authored by women, the perception that women could be cooks but not chefs didn’t really begin to break down in earnest until the television success of Julia Child. It wasn’t until 2017 that the student body at the Culinary Institute of America reflected this country’s actual demographics, with enrollment of women reaching 51.6 percent. The little-known irony here is that the CIA was founded, administered and financially sustained through its early years by two women. Few chefs from Europe were emigrating to the US during the turbulent 1930s and 1940s, and a woman named Frances L. Roth believed that the gap could be filled with the help of the GI Bill if America had a top-quality cooking school. A pioneer who had enrolled in New York University Law School at age 17 and become one of the first women admitted into the Connecticut State Bar Association and the first female prosecutor in the New Haven

PHOTOS COURTESY OF CULINARY INSTITUTE OF AMERICA

(Above) Frances Roth and Katherine Angell opened the institute in 1946, determined to establish a school that would become "the culinary center of the nation" and believing that America could have “the best meals on earth.”

city court system, during World War II Roth was put in charge of the Connecticut War Council’s Social Protection Division – which meant keeping tabs on venues where soldiers might contract venereal diseases. Working with businesses in the hospitality industry, she became aware of

the shortage of skilled staff in commercial kitchens. Roth sought the support of Katharine Angell, a wealthy North Carolina widow who had married Yale University president James Rowland Angell in 1932 and maintained a reputation as a high-society hostess and philanthropist long after her h u s b a n d ’s retirement. Angell had lost her eldest son in the war and wanted to do something to help veterans. She and Roth founded what was at first called the New Haven Restaurant Institute (NHRI) in 1946 – with an inaugural class of 43 men and one woman – in a building that had formerly been a tavern. Angell soon found the school a larger and more respectable building next to the Yale Divinity School campus, Betts House, and arranged for student aid

funds to become available. Since the program was seen as a trade school rather than an accredited university, GI Bill tuition funding was difficult to obtain, and Roth had to lobby Congress to streamline t h e Ve t e r a n s Administration bureaucracy for her students. Some politicians were dubious about the fact that NHRI students were eating seven-course lunches daily – the products of their own labor – but Roth was able to convince them that this was both educationally and economically prudent, rather than evidence of a generous endowment or a privileged student population. The school changed names several times, eventually becoming known as the Culinary Institute of America in 1951. The student body gradually became more diverse, although from 1966 to 1970, newly enrolled women were only

Few chefs from Europe were emigrating to the US during the turbulent 1930s and 1940s, and a woman named Frances L. Roth believed that the gap could be filled with the help of the GI Bill if America had a topquality cooking school.


13

ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

Keith Karchner & Matt Maley’s channel zeitgeist in graphic short-story collection Nonsecal

PHOTOS COURTESY OF BOSTON HERALD

When this photo first appeared in the Boston Herald, this was its caption: “Hopkinton, Mass, April 19, 1967: Who says chivalry is dead? When a girl listed as ‘K. Switzer from Syracuse’ found herself about to be thrown out of normally all-male Boston Marathon today, husky companion Thomas Miller of Syracuse threw a block that tossed race official out of the running instead. Sequence shows Jock Semple, official, moving in to intercept Miss Switzer, then being bounced himself by Miller. Photos by Harry Trask of Boston Traveler.”

EVENT

TALK WITH MARATHONERS KATHRINE SWITZER & ROGER ROBINSON AT ROUGH DRAFT ON MONDAY

A

novel bar and bookstore in historic Uptown Kingston, Rough Draft continues to expand its cultural and community programming in imaginative and inclusive ways. In the next few weeks, for example, Rough Draft partners with the Kingston Writers’ Studio for a Sip & Write Night (Tuesday, July 9 at 6 p.m.) where the skullbound act of writing is reimagined as something if not communal, then at least public and not quite so maddeningly isolated (or sober). On Friday, June 28, Rough Draft hosts a pizza party to celebrate its partnership with Aaron Quint’s Kingston Bread Lab (read all about that on our HV1 site: https://bit.ly/2ZIGAmD). Quint has set up shop in Rough Draft’s kitchen, and distributes his fresh-baked artisanal loaves to members of his weekly bread share/CSA every Saturday. Extra loaves are also available for purchase to non-subscribers, while supplies last. The pizza party begins at 6 p.m. Finally, in a kind of event right on target for a bar and bookstore, Rough Draft hosts a book-signing and discussion with the husband-and-wife team of Kathrine Switzer and Roger Robinson on Monday, July 1. Switzer is the first woman to officially register and run the Boston Marathon (and the subject of a very famous photograph) and the author of Marathon Woman, which has recently been optioned for a major featurelength film. Robinson is the author of When Running Made History, a new book that redefines the contribution of running to modern society via eyewitness stories from the last 70 years, from the Olympics to New Paltz’s own Mohonk Preserve. Outside magazine’s Amby Burfoot called it “the best running book of all time.” Seats and standing room for this event will be available on a first-come, first-served basis, but those who wish to preorder a book can do so at www.roughdraftny.com/preorder to be guaranteed admission. Books will also be for sale at the event. Kathrine Switzer and Roger Robinson book talk, Monday, July 1, 6 p.m., Rough Draft, 82 John St., Kingston, (845) 8020027, www.roughdraftny.com

allowed to take summer courses because there weren’t enough of them enrolling to support the cost of a separate dormitory. Roth retired as director in 1964; Angell served as president and chair of the board from 1946 to 1966 and continued working with the CIA until her death in 1983 at age 92. The CIA relocated to its current headquarters in Hyde Park in 1972, and has since spun off satellite campuses in Napa, San Antonio and Singapore. And now, 71 years after its founding, the cooking school is majority female for the first time ever. Surely, one of their number is the next Alice Waters. – Frances Marion Platt

Talk on Ulster County railroad history in New Paltz on Wednesday The New Paltz Historical Society welcomes author, local historian and archivist Steve Ladin as its July guest speaker. This illustrated talk by the former administrator of the Kingston Trolley Museum tells and interprets the history of the railroads of Ulster County using multiple lenses. At one time, five railroads ran through parts of Ulster County, including the Central New England Railway, the New York Central’s West Shore Railroad, the New York, Ontario & Western Railway, the Wallkill Valley Railroad and the Ulster & Delaware Railroad. The story of the railroads is multifaceted. It’s about the machinery: where it traveled, how it got there, what it

carried. Just as important and probably more interesting are the people associated with the railroads: the owners, managers, workers and passengers, as well as the economic and historical developments that are inextricably tied to the rise of rail travel. This event is free and open to the public.

400 Sam’s Point Rd., Cragsmoor (845) 647-7989

Oblong Books in Rhinebeck presents Rebecca Godfrey, Gary Shteyngart on Saturday

History of local railroads Wednesday, July 3, 7 p.m. New Paltz Community Center 3 Veterans’ Dr., New Paltz

Guided expedition to Shingle Gully at Minnewaska on July 6 The rugged, protected landscape of Minnewaska State Park’s Shingle Gully ice caves is accessible only on guided tours led by park staff and volunteer docents. The curious, hardy and intrepid can enjoy an all-day strenuous adventure to Shingle Gully on Saturday, July 6. The hike ascends and descends over 1,500 feet, includes off-trail bushwhacking and steep rock scrambles, and is only appropriate for experienced hikers. Preregistration is required by calling Sam’s Point by July 1. The fee for parking is $10 per vehicle, or a valid Empire Pass may be used. Hike to Shingle Gully ice caves Saturday, July 6, 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Sam’s Point Visitor Center

Under the Bridge author Rebecca Godfrey will appear in conversation with New York Times best-selling author Gary Shteyngart at Oblong Books in Rhinebeck on Saturday, June 29. The pair will discuss the new edition of Godfrey’s acclaimed true crime classic: a shocking account of a group of teenagers who savagely beat a classmate to death and then tried to cover up the crime. First published in 2005, Under the Bridge remains timely and important with its look at high school violence and the hidden anger and desires of young girls. Saturday, June 29, 6 p.m. Oblong Books & Music 6422 Montgomery St., Rhinebeck http:// oblongbooks.com

Composers of symphonies consider the string quartet the most essential and least forgiving form in which to demonstrate mastery. Novelists, as you learn early in your literary studies, regard the short story as the purest expression and test of the storyteller’s art, a credential to be refreshed throughout a career. And now, in an age in which the endless comic serials of yore account for nearly all of the larger culture’s most profitable and resonant narratives, writer Keith Karchner and visual artist Matt Maley deliver Nonsecal, a terse but madly imaginative collection of nine graphic pieces that fall somewhere between short story, poetry/song and conceptual meme design. The ’zine age, as well as the work of such cartoon memoirists as Linda Barry, has demonstrated that the graphic narrative form is well-suited to intimate miniatures (if Edward Gorey hadn’t already made the point), but Nonsecal is something else entirely; it is short but grand and maximalist, visually and conceptually. Essentially, it is modern mythmaking. The two Hudson Valley residents draw on a lifelong friendship and a history of collaboration, and it is sometimes hard to believe that Nonsecal is not the work of a single opulent-but-unsteady mind – a complicated mind, death-obsessed, given to fever dreams, dystopian visions, absurd what-if scenarios followed through to the finest practical details, irrational allegory and vertiginous philosophical speculation, none of which ends particularly well for anyone. The opening segment, “Bones for the Dog,” exemplifies Nonsecal’s perilous balance of surreal, noirish grit (Karchner is an avowed fan of Harlan Ellison and William S. Burroughs) and oblique, nihilistic allegorical intent. It’s a fluid monologue about a dog that won’t stop barking. It ends with the dog’s rakish owner shooting the Moon, and time and tides going out of whack. From “Bones for the Dog”’s busy, nonlinear spirals, we move directly to the crisp, conceptual design of “Pavlov’s Advice,” a ’50s-sitcom riff in which an ideal mom prescribes, step-by-step, an almost Zen program for the eradication of the ego and the abdication of a hollow materialist self. Black-and-white or color, panelbased or free-flowing, florid or stark, Maley’s ad hoc designs track Karchner’s crisp and surprising language with rhythmic empathy and a willingness to manifest their weirdest implications and obsessions. Some stories – the science fiction “The Rotbot Blues,” for example – are told almost entirely in image, while the piece that is arguably Nonsecal’s centerpiece, “Carson’s Bullfrog Farm,” is a conventional-if-certifiably-mad narrative told in a stock, folksy voice. Mixed in are a few single-concept one-


14

ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

NIGHT SKY

This week’s total eclipse

I

t may sound like a broken record. Ever since 1974 I’ve been urging, begging, cajoling Night Sky readers and my students to experience the greatest spectacle the human eye can behold. Sure, a major display of the Northern Lights is not chopped liver. And if you’ve ever seen an exploding meteor, you’ve never forgotten it. There are all sorts of earthly destinations that travel writers insist should not be missed. I love them too, having spent five years of my life overseas. If you’ve seen the Great Pyramids, Machu Picchu, the Grand Canyon, the Taj Mahal, the Atacama Desert, the Himalayas and maybe even rented a houseboat on Lake Powell, is there any sight that can top all these? Yes. A total solar eclipse. Not a lunar eclipse. And certainly not a partial solar eclipse. After the totality in August 2017 in places like Wyoming, I returned to find a bunch of correspondence from people who’d seen the partial eclipse that had been visible everywhere. Folks sent their photographs showing the Sun as a sliver, looking like a crescent Moon. I’m afraid I was rude. I did not reply saying, “That’s a great photo you took!” Instead, I sent condolence messages: “I’m so sorry you missed totality. Next time, really try to see one.” This is my tenth time leading groups to solar totalities: Egypt, Australia, eastern India, Romania – it started in 1970, when I was fresh out of college. Thanks to extraordinary good luck or blessings, our groups were clouded out of none of them. My good fortune must end sometime, and I hope it won’t be this coming week. This time the path of totality runs through Chile, through a part of that country I go to every single year anyway – so it’s kind of a neighborhood event, except now there will be international crowds and maybe even traffic jams. We have secured a private mountaintop observatory just for our group of 40 people. The weather prospects this time are about 50/50. If I could press a button so that the group sees the eclipse, but I miss it, I would certainly do it. This is the only celestial event that makes people weep. Happens every time: not every person, but some of them. You see flames leaping from the Sun’s edge. You watch the Moon discernibly moving in its orbit, like in a sci/fi movie. You see the Sun’s atmosphere, its corona, displaying intricate filamentary structure as it splays far across the sky, making visible the Sun’s awesome magnetic field, the largest structure in the solar system. Stars come out. It’s all too much. Since you’re reading this, I assume you’re not going to Chile. But perhaps you’re wondering where the next few total solar eclipses can be observed. You probably know you can’t just stay at home and wait for one to come to you; for any given location, they only happen every 360 years on average. Here in the Kingston/Saugerties/Woodstock/ New Paltz region, we’ve beaten the odds: We had one under clear skies on June 16, 1806, then saw another in cloudless conditions on January 24, 1925. Beating the odds once again, our region does not have to wait the normal 360 years, but will get the next on May 1, 2079. Our kids may see that one. For the rest of us, here’s what happens the next five years: The next totality after this week’s event will occur on December 14, 2020 in Patagonia.

pagers: a homage to the evangelical tract writer Jack Chick; “The Pauper King,” a mock, polluted medieval verse. One finishes Nonsecal with a quiet sense of wonder over the diversity that it manages to squeeze into tight spaces, and over its pervasive, consistent and discomfitingly queasy sensibility. I am interested in the process you guys use. Is it strictly text first and pretty linear, or more recursive? Matt, do you edit text as you work, or request much in the way of revision from Keith as you develop the visual? (From a writer’s perspective, telling stories this way seems to require haikulike efficiency and I am wondering if you are involved in a boiling-down reduction of language as you head toward the final state). Keith: Usually we start with text, and the process is very interactive and enjoyable, with our collaboration following a rocket’s trajectory. Once we are close to the end, there’s tweaking until we both agree that the story is done. Matt: Keith is an incredible partner to work with. Our creative process is very fluid, very collaborative because we leave our egos at the door. Keith might recommend a character appearance or sketch out his thoughts on a page layout. And he has always been open to me adding or tweaking dialogue, changing the sequencing et cetera. It’s the kind of creative partnership that keeps a project from imploding under competing narcissism. One thing I really dig about it is the variety of forms and story styles and

references employed. There’s a disjunctive variety in narrative mode from piece to piece, and yet the overall effect is singular and consistent. Tell me about the way you use so many formats and design aesthetics in such a short and tight collection. Keith: I am always very excited to see how Matt has interpreted the text. I’m always amazed and thrilled at how he can take the subject matter and make it so accessible and exciting. Matt: As a kid, I never had the patience to get through a typical superhero comic book. They were always too wordy and overly descriptive for me. I was always attracted to more visually driven comics, like in Mad Magazine, Cracked and Heavy Metal. Highlights for Children was also a big influence. Keith’s stories are already so visual. He’ll construct and stack a story into a very poetic form, which makes it so much easier to break apart lines into panels and splash pages. The variety of styles really came about because we worked on it for 26 years. Styles change and evolve. And I’ve always been a chameleon with my artwork. I enjoy changing the visual look to match the mood or theme of the storyline. A lot of the advance press seems to call out the fantasy-enhanced noir quality of the stories: the Tom Waits of “What’s He Building in There?” invoked as a touchstone. Did Keith’s mind dictate this direction? Or is that really a shared fascination and reference point? Keith: Our style has always been an amalgam of our two very different personalities, which have been interwoven

The most recent solar totality, captured in Wyoming by Bob’s colleague Matt Francis.

I think there may be two places left in that almost-sold-out tour: Go to https:// specialinteresttours.com and check it out. After that, the next happens on December 4, 2021, but the Moon’s shadow falls exclusively in the Antarctic – a tough eclipse with dismal weather prospects, and we may pass on it. There are no solar totalities in 2022. Then we’ve got April 20, 2023 in the sea off Australia and Bali; yes, we have arranged a private ship for that. And that brings us to April 8, 2024, when the moon’s shadow will sweep across Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, Burlington and then across New Hampshire. You can drive to that one – although we’ve reserved six yachts sailing off Mazatlán, where the sky is most likely to be clear. That’s the story for the next five years. Please do it! – Bob Berman Want to know more? To read Bob’s previous columns, visit our Almanac Weekly website at HudsonValleyOne.com. Check out Bob’s podcast, Astounding Universe, co-hosted by Pulse of the Planet’s Jim Metzner.

for almost 30 years. I can offer up my influences to point to some sources of the directions I’ve taken. Alphabetically, I’d cite William S. Burroughs, Mikhail Bulgakov, Albert Camus, Philip K. Dick, Harlan Ellison, Franz Kafka, John Steinbeck, Hunter S. Thompson and Kurt Vonnegut. My source material has been my disability (I was born with cerebral palsy), my mother’s alcoholism and schizophrenia and my own struggles with addiction. What we create is always informed by the obsessive confronted by the depressive and answering with the excessive, all filtered through Matt’s amazing mind and hand and illustrative genius. Matt: Keith has always been very open with me about how his life has influenced his art. That transparency allows light into places that can be extraordinarily painful. But it definitely lends itself to a creative and collaborative process that’s cathartic and beautiful. That kind of raw honesty allowed us to produce some rich, layered storytelling. Is it safe to say that this narrative form – graphic storytelling – is still ascendant in the culture? I remember first hearing of Maus in the ’90s and becoming aware of an adult audience for that tradition. Persepolis of course was a landmark in academic and popular circles. And the highest-grossing stories in our era are all derived from the graphic narrative tradition. What kind of audience is available for a short, experimental work like Nonsecal? What are your plans going forward? Keith: The Internet seems to have honed

the public’s appetite for short, exciting bursts of ideas, and Nonsecal was always intended to be as concise as possible, so there’s always the hope that our work will be easily digestible and varied enough to spark interest in all ages. I’m incredibly excited to work on Nonsecal2, and we have plans for Nonsecal3, and also a comic anthology of non-fiction stories. Our collaboration process and Matt’s art have always encouraged me to push myself past my comfort zones and tell the truth, no matter what. Matt: Much of today’s media are built around “three-minute reads,” Top 20 lists and Netflix serials. So it feels like Nonsecal is dropping in at the right time. Self-publishing is challenging. You can’t rely on a big distributor. You’re fighting for visibility on Amazon and shelf space in local independent retailers. You have to have constant, daily marketing tenacity – all while continuing our day jobs, freelancing, pushing my other titles and of course family. Nonsecal seems to be connecting with a broad audience because the protagonists represent all of us. Fear of aging, anxiety, obsessiveness, bigotry: Spinning these dark subjects we all encounter into something we can relate to, or even laugh at, empowers the reader. We’ll continue to create and put it out there. If anything, it’s great self-therapy. Learn more at www.monsecal.com. Track Nonsecal down at Amazon or find it locally at Barner Books, Inquiring Minds, October Country and Roost Studios in New Paltz. – John Burdick


15

ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

CALENDAR Thursday

6/27

8am-5pm One Week Arts Immersion Program for Children. Children ages 4-8 are invited for 5 fun-filled days of P.L.A.Y: Peace.Love.Arts. You at Bethel Woods Center for the Arts. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter. org. per week. 9am-4pm Woodstock Summerstage. Edie’s Fairytale Theatre presents a one week summer camp for kids 5-15 where we create an original musical adaptation of Peter Pan. The Byrdcliffe Barn, 485 Upper Byrdcliffe Rd., Woodstock. ediesfairytaletheatre.com. weekly fee M-F 9-4p. Aftercare 6pm $75. 9am-10am Woodstock Senior Senior Feel Good Fitness with Diane Collelo. All aspects of fitness: flexibility, balance, strength and aerobic capacity done to music from many decades that makes us feel like dancing. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock

residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock.

Info: 845-343-1000, info@tara-spayneuter.org, tara-spayneuter.org. Cost varies.

9:30am Tennis at Woodstock Tennis Club. Morning tennis drills with Tennis Pro on clay courts. Players should be able to hit ground strokes and move around the court. Membership not required. Meets M - T - W - TH - F, 9:30am. No reservation necessary. $20. More info: nytennis40@gmail.com; 845-679-5900. WTC located near corner of Zena and Sawkill, next to Shakti Yoga. Woodstock Tennis Club, 1703 Sawkill Rd, Woodstock.

10am-11:30am Parkinson’s Dance & Exercise Class. Led by Anne Olin. Gfor PD patients, caregivers and friends to address the symptoms of PD and other neurological disorders. Balance, gait, muscle strengthening, improving flexibility & fluidity and having fun are all included. Weekly, on-going group meets every Thursday at 10am. Info: Anne Olin, 845-679-6250; anneolin.com. St joSt. John’s Episcopal Church, 207 Albany Ave, Kingston. $12 for one or $22 for two.

10am-2pm Hooks & Needles, Yarns & Threads. Informal weekly social gathering for rug hookers, knitters, crocheters, and all other yarn crafters. Drop-in. Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. Info: 845-757-3771, tivoliprograms@gmail.com, tivolilibrary.org/. Bring a snack to share.

11am-5pm Art Exhibit: Mid-Summer Salon. Works by Betsy Jacaruso and Cross River Artists. Exhibit will display July & August at The Courtyard, 43-2 E. Market St, Rhinebeck. Hours: Thurs-Sat 11am-5pm, Sun 11am-4pm. 845-5164435; betsyjacarusoartist.com. Free admission.

10am-2pm Low-Cost Vaccine Clinic. For previously spayed/neutered cats and dogs only. No appointment needed. Dogs must be leashed and cats in carriers. TARA (The Animal Rights Alliance, Inc.), 60 Enterprise Place, Middletown, NY.

toniou. Free. Info: 800-272-3900; info@hudsonvalleyalz.org. Braemar at Wallkill, 21 Riverside Dr, Middletown. hudsonvalleyalz.org. 11am-12pm Woodstock Senior Level One (Moderate) Yoga with Susan Blacker. Centering, warm-ups, posture flow, relaxation and

11am-12pm Something for Alz: Art Therapy: Middletown. Join us for a program for people with early- to middle-stage dementia and their family caregivers with Art Therapist Lisa Papan-

If you or your loved one are looking for help for alcohol and/or drug addiction... Come visit VILLA VERITAS and experience the LOVE and FAMILY ATMOSPHERE of recovery for healing and hope for yourself or your loved one trapped by addiction. Call admissions for a tour...lunch included!

Daytime Call Admissions

845-626-3555

Evenings and after hours call

845-532-2418

HEAL WITH LOVE! FEEL THE DIFFERENCE!

12 Award-Winning Solo Shows! First Solo Show Festival Ever in the Hudson Valley! Story-Telling, Performances & Some “Fringier” Stuff That You’ll Just Have to Experience For Yourself For Schedule and Show Info

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Jamie Brickhouse Amanda Nicastro

4-Time Moth StorySlam Champion Audience Choice Award, Frigid Fest NYC

Plus 6 More Incredible Performers!

Buy 2 Shows get 3rd for $10


16

ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

Day trips & destinations in the Hudson Valley TOWN TINKER TUBE RENTAL

Ferncliff Forest Rhi b k’ number Rhinebeck’s b one ffree attraction, tt offering an amazing view of Hudson Valley from our Observation Tower. Enjoy hiking, picnics, camping or just walk your dog in our wonderful 200 acre Forest Preserve. Open all year 68 Mount Rutsen Rd., Rhinebeck, NY

PHOENICIA, NY

845-688-5553

845-876-3196 for additional information ferncliffforest.org

www.towntinker.com

CCS Bard and Hessel Museum of Art Annandale-On-Hudson, NY 12504

New Exhibitions

CLERMONT STATE HISTORIC SITE

on view   June 22– October 13, 2019

Mansion tours, festivals, weddings on the Hudson River in Germantown, NY.

Check out our 2019 calendar at: FriendsOfClermont.org nysparks.com • (518) 537-4240

n Museum Open Weekends 10a-4:30p 23 Mohonk Rd, High Falls Grady Park Flea Market Sundays 9a-4:30p www.canalmuseum.org info@canalmuseum.org 845-687-2000

Strawberries Home-Grown & Delicious!

Free and open to the public ccs.bard.edu

Pick -Your-Own Every Day 9 am - 5 pm

FREDERIC CHURCH’S

4640 Route 32 Catskill, NY 12414

OLANA

Story Farms

518-678-9716

Finest Homegrown Fruits & Vegetables

FIREWORKS CRUISE Friday, July 5 8 - 10pm

Sa

A NEW YORK STATE HISTORIC SITE AND NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK

il

ay w A

Wi t h

... s U

• Sight-Seeing Tour Cruises Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday 1pm • Lighthouse Tours Saturday, July 13 • Hudson-Athens Ferry Friday, Saturday 5-10:30pm

Ticket Reservations — 518.500.2524

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CRUISES, INC. hudsoncruises.com

For Special Event Planning — 518.822.1014

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OLANA.org

JUNE 20-JULY 28

on the Vassar Campus

For a complete season schedule and to purc hase tic ket s v isit

powerhouse.vassar.edu


17

ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

Day trips & destinations in the Hudson Valley

TWILIGHT ON THE RAILS SATURDAY, JULY 6 • 6:30 PM FEATURING THE

Blues Maneuver

For more information, visit www.durr.org | Arkville, NY 12406 |845.586.3877

STORMVILLE AIRPORT

BETHEL WOODS CENTER FOR THE ARTS

ANTIQUE SHOW & FLEA MARKET

A Season of Song & Celebration.

OVER 600 EXHIBITORS TO

4 PM

RAIN OR

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ry Pic

ki ng

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Exhibitor space available Free Admission & Parking • No Pets 428 Rte. 216, Stormville, NY • 845-221-6561 www.stormvilleairportfleamarket.com

Celebrate the 50th Anniversary where it happened, where it’s happening still. June 27 A Royal Affair: Yes, Asia, John Lodge (of The Moody Blues), and Carl Palmer’s ELP Legacy June 30 Peter Frampton Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Evening

8am – 8pm Every Day

227 PITCHER LANE, RED HOOK, NY 12571 WWW.GREIGFARM.COM

July 7 Diamondback Motocross of East Durham

July 29 Heart Sheryl Crow & Elle King July 30 Joe Bonamassa August 1 & 2 Gordon Lightfoot Event Gallery

July 5 Shinedown Badflower, Dinosaur Pile-up, & Broken Hands

August 8 Alice Cooper & Halestorm Motionless in White

July 6 Jackson Browne Lucius

August 9 Nelly, TLC, & Flo Rida

July 11 The Klezmatics Event Gallery

Upcoming Events

July 27 Train & The Goo Goo Dolls Allen Stone

August 15 (SOLD OUT) Film on the Field with Arlo Guthrie

July 20 Elvis Costello & The Imposters and Blondie July 26 (SOLD OUT) Chris Stapleton Margo Price & The Marcus King Band

August 16 Ringo Starr & His All Starr Band Edgar Winter Band & Blood, Sweat & Tears

August 17 Santana The Doobie Brothers

September 21 Chris Thile Event Gallery

August 18 John Fogerty Tedeschi Trucks Band & Grace Potter

September 29 Jimmie Vaughan Event Gallery

August 25 Pat Benatar & Neil Giraldo + Melissa Etheridge

October 5 Wine Festival October 12 Craft: Beer, Spirits & Food Festival

August 30 Bush & +Live+ Our Lady Peace

October 19 John Sebastian Event Gallery

August 31 Pentatonix Rachel Platten

November 7 David Sanborn Jazz Quintet Event Gallery

Sundays Sept. 1-29 (Free) Harvest Festival September 12 Luke Bryan Cole Swindell & Jon Langston September 13 Canned Heat Event Gallery

November 24 Max Weinberg’s Jukebox Event Gallery December 7 & 8 (Free) Holiday Market ® NYSDED

July 6th & 7th

8 AM

13 Athens Street Festival 14-20 Catskills Irish Arts Week, East Durham 18-21 Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival, Oak Hill

2019 Special Exhibit - THRU December 31

We Are Golden:

Reflections on the 50th Anniversary of the Woodstock Festival and Aspirations for a Peaceful Future.

20-21 Mountain Brauhaus Festival, 27-28 Round Top

August 3 12th Annual “Tour of the Catskills” Pro-Am Bicycle LET US BE YOUR Road Race

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16-18 Rats Nest Run-In

To experience you Greatest-Of-All-Time event please visit greatcatskillsevents.com escapegoat | 1-800-355-2287 #greatcatskillsevents.com

To learn more, purchase tickets , and see a complete list of programs and events visit BethelWoodsCenter.org. Follow Us Special 50th anniversary events and activities are supported in part by donors to Bethel Woods Center for the Arts and by a grant awarded to Bethel Woods by Empire State Development and New York State’s Division of Tourism/I LOVE NY under Governor Andrew Cuomo’s Regional Economic Development Council Initiative. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts is a 501c3 nonprofit cultural organization that inspires, educates, and empowers individuals through the arts and humanities.


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

meditation. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville.

Timothy Liu. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/30 minutes.

12:15pm Fine Arts Recitals. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston.

12:30pm-1:30pm Lunch & Learn: FDR’s INFAMY, Japanese Internment in WWII. Registration is REQUIRED for this program. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck.

12:30pm-6pm I Ching Oracle and Tarot Card Readings with esoteric scholar and author

June 27, 2019

1pm-3pm Summer Reading Challenge Kickoff. Register for D.R. Evarts Library’s Summer Reading Challenge-- and see the mobile planetarium, this summer’s prizes. Free ice cream for kids! D.R. Evarts Library, 80 Second St, Athens. Info: 518-945-1417, staff@drevartslibrary.org, drevartslibrary.org. 1pm-2pm Woodstock Senior Intro to Sun Style Tai Chi with Celeste Graves. Improve

balance, relax your body, calm your mind. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation. Open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 1pm-4pm Visit Mount Gulian Historic Site. Tours of the historic home, 18th century Dutch barn, and restored garden will be given every

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

submission policy contact

e-mail Donna.ulsterpublishing@gmail.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.

Sunday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday through October 27! Tours start at 1pm and the last tour 4pm. $8/adults; $6/srs, and $4/children (6-18 years of age). Info: 845-831-8172; info@mountgulian.org; mountgulian.org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon. Info: 845-831-8172, info@mountgulian. org, mountgulian.org. 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. 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. 1:30pm-3pm Middle-Stage Music Social. Music socials are open to all individuals with Alzheimer’s disease and their family care partners – no matter their county of residence. Free. Info: 800-2723900; info@hudsonvalleyalz.org. Action Toward Independence, 309 East Broadway, Monticello. hudsonvalleyalz.org. 2pm-4pm Free Crisis Long-Term Care Planning Workshop. Learn more about utilizing Medicaid benefits to pay for the high costs of long-term care, while protecting your home and savings. BSR&B Education Center, 10 Matthews Street, Goshen. mid-hudsonlaw.com/. 3pm Reading and Meditation. Ongoing every Sunday night at 3pm. Info: matagiri.org; 845-679-8322. Matagiri Sri Aurobindo Center, 1218 Wittenberg Rd, Mt. Tremper. 3:30pm-10pm A Royal Affair. Featuring Yes, Asia, John Lodge (of the Moody Blues) and Carl Palmer’s ELP Legacy. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@ bethelwoodscenter.org. General Ticket. 3:30pm-4pm Free Step Class. A high energy class. Ongoing. Saugerties Public Library, 91 Washington Ave, Saugerties. saugertiespubliclibrary.org. 3:30pm-6:30pm Free Math Tutoring. Algebra, Geometry, Precalculus, Trigonometry, and SAT/ ACT Prep. Call to sign up 845-255-1255. Meets every Thursday at 3:30pm. Gardiner Library, 133 Farmer’s Turnpike, Gardiner. MathTutoringwithMisha.com. Free. 4pm-5pm Fitness Hour. Drop in for a workout on Mondays at 4:30pm & Thursdays at 4pm. Class will be an aerobic warm-up followed by a combination of band and body work. Instructed by Connie Scuitto. Connie is an RN and certified Reiki Master. 845-246-4317. Saugerties Public Library, 91 Washington Ave, Saugerties. saugertiespubliclibrary.org. 5pm-7pm Teens Give New Paltz Access to Homemade Farm-to-Table Pizza. Teens make and sell homemade pizza to local community. Parking lot across from 29 Main Street, New Paltz. Free. Info: andrew@edenvillagecamp.org. 5pm-6:30pm New Paltz Climate Action Coalition Meeting. Meets every Thursday. New Paltz Village Hall, Plattekill Ave, New Paltz. newpaltzclimateaction.org. 5:30pm-8pm Tennis at Woodstock Tennis Club. Doubles and mixed doubles, Round Robin mixer on clay courts. Lower Intermediate level and up. All Welcome. Membership not required. Meets every Thursday. Just drop in. $20. more info: nytennis40@gmail.com; 845-679-5900. WTC located near corner of Zena and Sawkill, next to Shakti Yoga. Woodstock Tennis Club, 1703 Sawkill Rd, Woodstock. 5:30pm Woodstock Ultimate Disc. A free, casual, co-ed pickup game. Ongoing games Tuesdays & Thursdays at 5:30pm; & Sundays at 3pm. See WoodstockUltimate.org for details. Athletic Fields, 98 Comeau Drive, Woodstock. woodstockultimate.org/. 6pm-10pm Annual Warwick Firemen’s Carni-

val. Wristbands available for purchase to ride all night for one price. Fireworks on Sat Jun 29 at 10 pm. Rain date for fireworks is Sun Jun 30. Info: 845-986-4000. 6pm-11pm Knights of Columbus Family Carnival. Live bands, great food, rides, games and fun for the entire family! 126 Stringham Road, Lagrangeville. lagrangekofc.com. 6pm-7pm Tarot Club. Are you a seasoned tarot reader or just interested in learning about tarot cards? Join us for Tarot Club on every 2nd & 4th Thursday w/Sabra. Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. Info: 845-757-3771, tivoliprograms@gmail.com, tivolilibrary.org/. Free. 6pm Wine Night - Thirsty Thursday. Celebrate every Thursday at Woodnotes Grille with the Wine Club! Enjoy 25% off all bottles of wine and special selections from the cellar by the glass. Info: 845-688-2828; emersonresort.com. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper. 6:30pm-8pm Free Steps of Meditation. Weekly classes. Learn the fundamentals for an effective meditation experience. Info: 518-589-5000 or peacevillage@bkwsu.org. Peace Village Retreat Center, 54 O’Hara Rd, Haines Falls. bkwsu.org. 7pm-9:30pm Rough Draft Trivia with Rich. Every Thursday* at Rough Draft is trivia night with Rich Morrison—a fun-filled night of teamwork, friendly competition, and lots of laughs! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail. com. 7pm Hudson Valley Community Power. Public Q&A and Open House to learn how this Community Choice Aggregation and Community solar program is becoming a reality in the Hudson Valley now. Light refreshments will be served. Information: 845-859-9099; hudsonvalleycommunity power.com; info@hudsonvalleycommunitypower.com. Events hosted by program partners: Joule and Hudson Valley Energy. New Paltz Community Center, 3 Veterans Dr /32 North, New Paltz. 7pm Live @ The Falcon: Tribal Harmony: Featuring Will Ruiz & Min Xiao-Fen. Celebrate Native American Culture. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 7pm-8pm Summer Reading Kickoff ! Traveling Lantern Theatre Company presents- My Mother the Astronaut. After the show sign up for the Summer reading game! Sarah Hull Hallock Free Library, 56-58 Main St, Milton. miltonlib.org/. 7pm-11pm Mark Donato, Peter Naddeo, Sammi Niss. Singer Songwriter/Indie/Pop. Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. bit.ly/2MDQ5BJ. Donation. 7pm-8pm Gardiner Library Knitting Group. Sit and knit. Gardiner Library, 133 Farmer’s Turnpike, Gardiner. Info: 845-255-1255, nlane@rcls. org, gardinerlibrary.org. 7pm-9:30pm Geeks Who Drink Weekly Pub Quiz. Rough Draft invites you to its fun-filled weekly trivia series, hosted by Geeks Who Drink and local celebrities Mark & Emily. Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. bit. ly/2xTr2TX. 7pm Old Dutch Choir. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 7:30pm Men’s Support Group. The Male Room is a safe environment where men gather to discuss issues of importance in their lives. Meets on the second and fourth Thursday of each month in the Woodstock Library at 7:30 pm. Info: Gary @ 908-754-1101; scribeny@aol.com. 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-10pm Mashup. Emily Beck, John Holt,

and Ryan Martin will peform. Green Kill, 229 Greenkill Avenue, Kingston. Info: 347-46892323, 229greenkill@greenkill.org. at door or on eventbrite.com. 8pm The Bandaged Place. From New York Stage and Film Founders’ Award recipient Harrison David Rivers. Directed by David Mendizábal. Powerhouse Theater, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie, NY. Info: 845-437-5370, bit. ly/2QTRvqu. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Latin Jazz Express. The Music of Tito Puente & Eddie Palmieri. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com.

Friday

6/28

8am-5pm One Week Arts Immersion Program for Children. Children ages 4-8 are invited for 5 fun-filled days of P.L.A.Y: Peace.Love.Arts. You at Bethel Woods Center for the Arts. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter. org. per week. 8:30am-9:30am Aquoga Aquatic Yoga & Cardio Class. Arrive 10 mins early to register. Monday & Friday mornings through 8/9. Note: No Class on: 7/12 & 7/15. Moriello Pool, 40 Mulberry St, New Paltz. facebook.com/aquoga. or buy 10 class card for 10% off. 9am-4pm Woodstock Summerstage. Edie’s Fairytale Theatre presents a one week summer camp for kids 5-15 where we create an original musical adaptation of Peter Pan. The Byrdcliffe Barn, 485 Upper Byrdcliffe Rd., Woodstock. ediesfairytaletheatre.com. weekly fee M-F 9-4p. Aftercare 6pm $75. 9:30am Tennis at Woodstock Tennis Club. Morning tennis drills with Tennis Pro on clay courts. Players should be able to hit ground strokes and move around the court. Membership not required. Meets M - T - W - TH - F, 9:30am. No reservation necessary. $20. More info: nytennis40@gmail.com; 845-679-5900. WTC located near corner of Zena and Sawkill, next to Shakti Yoga. Woodstock Tennis Club, 1703 Sawkill Rd, 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 Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville. 10am-5pm Goshen Farmers’ Market. Info: 845-294-5557; goshennychamber.com. Goshen’s Village Green, Goshen. 11am-3pm Escape Room: Altered Zone NY. The escape room escapade is limited to 15 mins and the team that has the shortest time will win a special prize. Suitable for age 6+. Hudson Area Library, 51 North 5th Street, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1792, brenda.shufelt@hudsonarealibrary.org, hudsonarealibrary.org. 11am-6pm Woodstock Art Exchange - Larger Than Life Exhibit. Portraits by Bennett Harris Horowitz will display through July 29th. Art and glass gallery/gift shop Hand-blown glass and gifts. Artist reception Saturday, June 29. 5—7pm. Open Friday through Sunday 11am–6pm; Mondays 10am–4pm. Refreshments served. Info: 914-8063573. Woodstock Art Exchange, 1396 Rte 28, West Hurley. 11:30am-12:30pm Free Chair Yoga. An hour of chair yoga and Sound Bath meditation! This activity is made possible with a grant from the Catskill Fortnightly Club. Info: mountaintoplibrary.org. Mountain Top Library, 6093 Main St, Tannersville. Free. 12:05pm-1pm Woodstock Senior Basic Pilates with Christine Anderson. A floor work course promoting improvement of balance, coordination, focus, awareness breathing, strength and flexibility. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville. 12:30pm-6pm Crystal Readings, Tarot Readings and Chakra Attunement every Friday with Owl Medicine Woman Mary Vukovic. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/25 minute reading. 1pm-3pm Scrabble Club. Join us for our new Scrabble Club! Bring your extensive vocabulary and your enjoyment for games to our Scrabble events. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port

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Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@ gmail.com, esopuslibrary.org. 1:30pm-3:30pm Woodstock Senior Citizens Club Game Day. Every Friday. They have scrabble, Monopoly, Jenga, Bridge, etc. Info: 845-6798537. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 5pm Accord: Speedway, Fireworks Extravaganza & Chicken BBQ. Satisfy your need for speed and fireworks with a special holiday weekend race! Fireworks follows the race at dusk. Fireworks rain date 7/5. Accord Speedway, 299 Whitfield Rd, Accord. accordspeedway.com. 5:30pm-9:30pm Saugerties: Annual Summer / Independence Day Kick-off Party. Free hot dogs, free beverages, face painting, games, giveaways, free admission to the Stallions game at 7pm and fireworks at dusk. Cantine Memorial Field, Saugerties. 6pm-9pm Pizza Party with Kingston Bread Lab. Making naturally leavened pizzas* to order. Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail. com. 6pm-9pm Bear Mountain State Park: Fireworks. Arrive early to secure a spot. Food and beverages available for purchase starting at 6pm. Parking costs $10. Fireworks at dusk. 3020 Seven Lakes Drive, Bear Mountain. 6pm-10pm Annual Warwick Firemen’s Carnival. Wristbands available for purchase to ride all night for one price. Fireworks on Sat Jun 29 at 10 pm. Rain date for fireworks is Sun Jun 30. Info: 845-986-4000. 6pm-11pm Knights of Columbus Family Carnival. Live bands, great food, rides, games and fun for the entire family! 126 Stringham Road, Lagrangeville. lagrangekofc.com. 6pm Heart Essence of the Vast Expanse. An introduction, teachings and practice on the Longchen Nyingthig. Presented by Khedrup Rinpoche. For details, confirm times and location contact 917-612-9503 or 615-693-9416. $185/ suggested contribution. 6:30pm Sparrow and Friends: An Evening of Poetry and Song in Defense of Julian Assange. Whose extradition from the UK to face charges in the US of espionage are seen by the ACLU as a direct assault on journalism and the First Amendment. The event is free; donations will be accepted for the ACLU. Inquiring Minds Saugerties Bookstore, 65 Partition Street, Saugerties. 6:30pm-7:30pm Intermediate Swing Dance Workshop. Hand-to-Hand Charleston. We’ll be teaching a rarely-seen way to get into this fun pattern along with a couple of variations. Poughkeepsie Tennis Club, 135 S. Hamilton St., Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-454-2571, hudsonvalleycommunitydances@gmail.com, hudsonvalleydance.org. $20. 6:45pm-8:30pm Children & Teen Ministries. Meets Fridays: 6:45-8:30pm. Class for adults also offered. Info: 845-876-6923 or cdfcirone@ aol.com. Grace Bible Fellowship Church, Rt9 & Rt9G, Rhinebeck. 7pm-10pm Enjoy live music and fireworks. Frederick Meyers Veteran’s Memorial Park, Maybrook. 7pm-11pm Jimmy Madison Trio. Jimmy Madison - Drums Tim Regusis - Piano Alex Coté - Bass Drummer Jimmy Madison has performed with the greats of Jazz and Funk. Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-6373, mark@lydiasdeli.com, bit.ly/31pDd5K. Donation. 7pm-8pm Open Mic Night. Bring your talent! Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 7pm Weekly Senior Citizen’s Bingo. Ongoing every Wednesday at 1:30pm & Friday at 7pm. 50/50 tickets available at 3 tickets/$2. Halftime complementary refreshments. Shawangunk Senior Center, 70 Main St, Napanoch. 7:30pm-11pm Swing Dance to the El Dorados.

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20

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Rockabilly, Swing and Blues. No partner needed. Beginner lesson 7:30 - 8pm. Poughkeepsie Tennis Club, 135 S. Hamilton St., Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-454-2571, hudsonvalleycommunitydances@ gmail.com, hudsonvalleydance.org. $15, or $10 for students. 7:30pm Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde. Tri-County Tour of Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde. Three Dates. Three Counties. Three Trials. Hyde Park’s The New Deal Creative Arts Center is honored to bring the story of Oscar Wilde and the circumstances of his criminal conviction for “gross indecency” and imprisonment to audiences throughout the Hudson Valley. Tickets available at the door or newdeal-oscarwilde.eventbrite.com. Safe Harbors Lobby at the Ritz, 107 Broadway, Newburgh, NY 12550, Newburgh. $20. 7:30pm-9pm Kabbalat Shabbat Services. Friday evening services. Woodstock Jewish Congregation, 1682 Glasco Turnpike, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-2218, info@wjcshul.org, wjcshul.org. 8pm-10pm Elka Bong / Matt Luczak / Craig Chin. A night of Experimental music! The Kingston Artist Collective & Cafe, 63 Broadway, Kingston. Info: 845-399-2491, kidbusy@gmail.com. Suggested Donation. Everyone Welcome! 8pm-10pm The Secret Garden. Musical based on Francis Hodges Burnett’s children’s novel. Presented by Rhinebeck Theatre Society. Info: 845-876-3080. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. Info: hermitsong@hotmail.com, bit.ly/2XEZk5W. $27. 8pm The Bandaged Place. From New York Stage and Film Founders’ Award recipient Harrison David Rivers. Directed by David Mendizábal. Powerhouse Theater, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie, NY. Info: 845-437-5370, bit. ly/2QTRvqu. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Vito Petroccitto & Little Rock. Swamp rock & satire. Opener: Olivia Frances. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@ thefalcon.com. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Cuboricua! Salsa. Latin Dance! Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@ thefalcon.com.

Saturday

6/29

9am-4pm Free Family Fun Festival at FDR Museum. Circus! Petting zoo! Music! Food trucks! Free admission to FDR Museum. Info: FDRLibrary.org. Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site, 4097 Albany Post Rd, Hyde Park. FDRLibrary.org. Free. 9am-2pm Third Annual Warren Family Blood Drive. Please sign up at redcrossblood. org. Sponsor Code: HurleyRef (one word.) Or call 607-857-9987 or djudy432@gmail.com. Hurley Reformed Church - Schadewald Hall, 11 Main St, Hurley. 9am-3pm Pine Street African Burial Ground Talk at the Persen House. Meet & greet members from Kingston Land Trust who will have information about the newly acquired Pine Street African Burial site. Matthewis Persen House, 74 John St, Kingston. bit.ly/persenhouse. 9am-12pm Comforter Cobblestone Thrift Store. More space has been added for more items! Store hours: Every Saturday 9-12 April through December. Located in basement of church. Take steps to the left of white church doors. Info: comfortercobblestonethrift26@ gmail.com. Comforter Cobblestone Thrift Store. 9am-1pm Free Handgun Safety Course. Course held in two different locations: Kingston & Phoenicia. Info & signup: gosafetycourse.cf; pfgsafetycourse.cf. Gander Outdoors, 705 Frank Sottile Boulevard, Kingston. Info: 845-605-2767, president.pfg@gmail.com, gosafetycourse.cf. 9am-2pm Pine Bush Farmers’ Market. Info: 845-217-0785; pinebushfarmersmarket.com. 62 Main St, Pine Bush. 9am-1pm Hudson Farmers’ Market. 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. 9am-1pm Free Tech Help. Teen tech expert Samantha will help solve your computer quandries. Info: 845-266-5530. Drop-ins welcome. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 9:30am-10:30am Centering Prayer and Meditation. A receptive method of silent prayer. People of all faiths are welcome and no previous meditation experience is required. St Gregory’s Church, 2578 Route 212, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-8800, matthew.stgregorys@gmail.com. free.

10am-12pm CFD Death Café with Presentation. Each conversation is preceded with a brief presentation to expand our understanding of different topics related to dying and death. Come and learn together! This month we are joined by local legend and organ donation advocate, Butch Dener. In this brief presentation, The Gift of Organ Donation, attendees will experience and further expand their knowledge on the life saving effort of being an organ donor. CFD Death Café is a safe space to openly discuss thoughts, feelings, and experiences regarding dying and death. It is not a grief support group. No registration is required, and there is no fee to attend. Facebook @CFDDeathCafe; cfdhv.org. Saugerties Senior Center, 207 Market St, Saugerties. 10am Heart Essence of the Vast Expanse. An introduction, teachings and practice on the Longchen Nyingthig. Presented by Khedrup Rinpoche. For details, confirm times and location contact 917-612-9503 or 615-693-9416. $185/ suggested contribution. 10am-12pm Studio at the Woods for Families. Explore your inner artists in a variety of hands-on art making. Every week offers a new theme led by Bethel Woods Teaching Artists. Exhibit will display through 7/20. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter.org. Donation appreciated. 10am-3pm Coffee’s Ready with Polly. Weekly baked goodies + good conversation. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. 10am-12pm New Baby - Saturday Social Circle. Ongoing every Saturday, 10am-12pm. Info: 845-255-0624. This group is for mamas looking to meet other mamas, babies and toddlers for activities, socialization and friendship. Whether you are pregnant, have a new baby or older kids. There is time for socialization so you can connect with old friends and get to know new ones. New Baby New Paltz, 264 Main St, New Paltz. 10am-12pm Shabbat Morning Services. Music filled services and Torah study. Connect to tradition and open your heart. Family’s welcome. Woodstock Jewish Congregation, 1682 Glasco Turnpike, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-2218, info@ wjcshul.org, wjcshul.org. 10:30am-4pm Woodstock Animal Sanctuary Visiting Season. Saturdays and Sundays through October. Weekend Tour Times (hourly, starting at 11am with the last tour at 2pm). Be prepared to move-about in the open air for about a mile and half. Tours run for about 55-60 minutes. Suggested donation: $10/adults, $5/4-12 yrs old, 65 & up & Vets and Active Service; free/ 3 & under. Info: 845-247-5700. Woodstock Animal Sanctuary, 2 Rescue Rd, High Falls. 10:30am-11:30pm Saturday Sing with your Baby. Music, finger plays, movement, and instrument play for children ages 0 – 2, with Happy Dan! Meets every Saturday morning through 6/30 from 10:30-11:30am. Info: 845-633-2060; happydanmusic@gmail.com. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. $5 - $15 donation. 10:30am-11:30am Silent Vigil for Global Peace & Non-Violence. Sponsored by The Kingston Women in Black. Meet outside Cornell St PO. Cornell St PO, Kingston. 11am-3pm Hudson Highland Nature Museum: International Mud Day. Welcome summer with a mud-riffic day of play in Grasshopper Grove! Thousands of children in dozens of countries worldwide celebrate Mud Day as a chance to appreciate nature and the great outdoors by getting muddy. Mud pies + mud pools + mud art + mud slides = MUD FUN! Bring a towel or a change of clothes, and a bundle of laughter to enjoy this afternoon of summertime play. Info: 845-534-5506. Hudson Highlands Nature Museum/Outdoor Discovery Center, Cornwall. hhnm.org. $5/2 & above/adult. 11am The Tail Winds Music Fest. Chris Robinson Brotherhood will headline this music fest and will be joined by Black Stone Cherry, Geoff Tate (Official)’s Operation: Mindcrime, King’s X and Sass Jordan along with a couple of other opening acts. A variety of food trucks, craft beer breweries, as well as other beverage vendors, sponsor displays, an exclusive VIP Experience, tent alley, Helicopter rides, mobile lockers. Proceeds from this all day music fest will go towards the Miles of Hope Breast Cancer Foundation. Hudson Valley Regional Airport, Wappingers Falls. tailwindsmusicfest.com. 11am-5pm Art Exhibit: Mid-Summer Salon. Works by Betsy Jacaruso and Cross River Artists. Exhibit will display July & August at The Courtyard, 43-2 E. Market St, Rhinebeck. Hours: Thurs-Sat 11am-5pm, Sun 11am-4pm. 845-5164435; betsyjacarusoartist.com. Free admission. 11am-12:30pm Young Mavericks Festival. Gwen Laster & New Muse 4tet. Maverick Concert Hall, 120 Maverick Rd, Woodstock. maverickconcerts.org. Under 16 free; Adults $5. 11am Catskill Animal Sanctuary Tour. Meet rescued animals and hear their stories. Understand what caring for these amazing animals has taught us. Learn about the plight of farmed animals and how you can help. Seasonal Weekend Tours offered on Saturday and Sunday through November. Tour Times: 11am, 12pm, 1pm, 2pm, 3pm (each tour is approximately 90 minutes). Family-Focused Tour is once a day at 11am (this tour is 60 minutes). You can purchase tickets in the Welcome Hut. Tix: $12/adults, $8/age 12 &

under & srs, & free/ 2 & under. Info: 845-3368447. Catskill Animal Sanctuary, 316 Old Stage Rd, Saugerties. 11am-6pm Woodstock Art Exchange - Larger Than Life Exhibit. Portraits by Bennett Harris Horowitz will display through July 29th. Art and glass gallery/gift shop Hand-blown glass and gifts. Artist reception Saturday, June 29. 5—7pm. Open Friday through Sunday 11am–6pm; Mondays 10am–4pm. Refreshments served. Info: 914-8063573. Woodstock Art Exchange, 1396 Rte 28, West Hurley.

June 27, 2019 Ritz 107 Broadway, Newburgh. safe-harbors.org. 4:30pm-5:30pm Artists on Olana: Casey Robertson. Navigating Subjective Landscapes: A Cinematic Olana Photographer Casey will present a series of films responding to Olana’s landscape. Olana State Historic Site, 5720 St Rt 9G, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1872, education@olana.org, olana. org/artists-on-olana. $10 for Members of The Olana Partnership.

11am-1pm Teen Gaming. Three computers with League of Legends installed. Bring your own laptop. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@ gmail.com, esopuslibrary.org.

5pm-7pm Artist Reception Larger Than Life @ Woodstock Art Exchange Exhibit. Portraits by Bennett Harris Horowitz will display through July 29th. Art and glass gallery/gift shop Hand-blown glass and gifts. Open Friday through Sunday 11am–6pm; Mondays 10am–4pm. Refreshments served. Info: 914-806-3573. Woodstock Art Exchange, 1396 Rte 28, West Hurley.

12pm-2pm Memoir Writing Workshop. Sparrow, the Phoenician poet and essayist, will lead a 3-session workshop on personal writing. Sign up at 845-688-7811. Phoenicia Library, 48 Main St, Phoenicia. Info: 845-688-7811, phoenicialibrary.org.

5pm-8pm Closing Reception for Peter BradleyNew Work. Color filed abstract artist and curator of first racially integrated art show in US. Emerge Gallery, 228 Main St, Saugerties. Info: 845-2477515, emergegalleryny@gmail.com, EmergeGalleryNY.com.

12pm Kitten Season - Fosters Needed. Reach out via Facebook or call 845-778-5115, everything needed will be provided to you as well as education & a 24/7 contact. Humane Society of Walden, 2489 Albany Post Rd, Walden. Info: vc@waldenhumane.org, waldenhumane.org/foster.

5pm-10pm Beacon: Independence Day Party. Beacon’s fireworks event will include food and music with fireworks at dusk. Memorial Park, Robert Cahill Dr, Beacon.

12:30pm-6:30pm Expert Tarot Readings with Stephanie. Every Saturday at Mirabai. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/30 minutes. 12:45pm-1:30pm New Paltz Women in Black Vigil for Peace. Held in front of the Elting Library, corner of Main and North Front Streets. Vigil is in its 15th year of standing for peace and justice. New Paltz. 1pm-6pm Hudson Valley Craft Beer & Food Festival. Enjoy great food, craft beer, amazing music and spectacular Hudson Valley views. Mayor’s Park, 105 Fair St, Cold Spring. eventbrite. com/e/hudson-valleyny-craft-beer-food-festivalcold-springny-june-29-tickets-60830015213. 1pm-2:45pm From Farms to Incubators. A work-in-progress screening and discussion about women at the forefront of science and farming. Free. Donations taken at the door will go toward the completion of the film. Info: 845-876-4546; info@upstatefilms.org. Upstate Films - Rhinebeck, 6415 Montgomery St, Rhinebeck. upstatefilms.org. 1pm-4pm Rhinebeck Theatre Society’s Audition Notice: The Fantasticks. RTS invites performers of all ethnicities (ages 18+) to audition for this classic musical. Cast breakdown available online. Call backs 6/30 at 7pm & 7/1 at 7pm. The CENTER for Performing Art at Rhinebeck, 661 Route 308, Rhinebeck. Info: 845-214-7932; TinaReillyYoga@gmail.com; Dorothyluongo@gmail. com; centerforperformingarts.org/audition/item/ audition-fantasticks. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. 1pm-4pm Visit Mount Gulian Historic Site. Tours of the historic home, 18th century Dutch barn, and restored garden will be given every Sunday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday through October 27! Tours start at 1pm and the last tour 4pm. $8/adults; $6/srs, and $4/children (6-18 years of age). Info: 845-831-8172; info@mountgulian.org; mountgulian.org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon. Info: 845-831-8172, info@mountgulian. org, mountgulian.org. 2pm-4pm Opening Reception: Woodstock Music: In Tune with the Times, 1600-Present. The Grand Opening of the Historical Society of Woodstock’s exhibit! Music by Rennie Cantine and Sabrina Miller. Homemade refreshments will be available. The HSW exhibit travels through time from the music of the Northern Delaware tribes of the 1600’s to the musicians of today. Exhibit will display through 9/1, open Saturdays and Sundays from 1-5 pm. Info: historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org. Eames House, 20 Comeau Drive, Woodstock, NY. 2pm-4pm Film: The Bus Movie, Episode 1: Journey to the East. In the summer of 1964, Ken Kesey and his friends, known as the Merry Pranksters, undertook an epic cross-country bus trip. Woodstock Artists Association & Museum, 28 Tinker ST, Woodstock. Info: info@woodstockart.org, woodstockart.org. Free. 2pm-4pm 2019 Youth Ambassador Presentations. The 2019 Maya Gold Foundation Youth Ambassadors will be presenting on their recent cross cultural exchange trip to Nepal. SUNY New Paltz Old Main B125, Tricor Avenue, New Paltz. Info: 845-418-5227, info@mayagoldfoundation. org, bit.ly/2YygkuK. Free. 2pm The Bandaged Place. From New York Stage and Film Founders’ Award recipient Harrison David Rivers. Directed by David Mendizábal. Powerhouse Theater, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie, NY. Info: 845-437-5370, bit. ly/2QTRvqu. 2pm-8pm This Royale Life. Music & Interactive Gaming Festival. Newburgh Waterfront at People’s Park, 1 Washington St, Newburgh. Info: 305-894-6073, info@jnfeglobal.com, thisroyalelife.com. $22. 3pm-6pm Newburgh Open Movement. Workshop • 3 - 4 p.m. with Ophra Wolf Open Jam • 4 - 6 p.m. with live music Safe Harbors Lobby at the

5pm-11pm Knights of Columbus Family Carnival. Live bands, great food, rides, games and fun for the entire family! 126 Stringham Road, Lagrangeville. lagrangekofc.com. 5pm Stars and Stripes Celebration. Party in the park from 5-7 pm. Live entertainment begins 7 pm. Fireworks at Dusk. Info: 845- 343-8075. Fancher-Davidge Park, 130 Lake Ave, Middletown. middletownbid.org/new.html. 5pm Gender Bender Cabaret. In honor of Gay Pride Month! A night of Pop and Broadway tunes with a twist! 2nd performance at 8pm. $20. Info; 845-206-9074. Boughton Place, 150 Kisor Rd, Highland. Info: (845) 224-3350, 90milestheatercompanyinc@gmail.com, 90milesny.com. Limited seating. Purchse tickets at brownpapertickets.com. 5pm-8pm Orange County Summer Concert Series - Somerville. Featuring some of the top bands in the Hudson Valley. Eight separate shows will be held from 5:pm to approx. 7pm on Saturdays. Gates open at 3:30pm. Food and Beer Vendors ready to sell at 4pm. Algonquin Park, Power Mill Rd, Newburgh. 6pm Opening Reception: Derivations. Photographic Art by Lauree Feldman featuring 40 digitally abstracted images of nature-a collection of diverse, square-format, ink on canvas prints: some pieces are a riot of colors! Show exhibits throug 7/21. Roost Studios & Art Gallery, 69 Main St, New Paltz. Info: 845-568-7540, Chirp@roostcoop.org, roostcoop.org. Free. 6pm-10:30pm Annual Warwick Firemen’s Carnival. Wristbands available for purchase to ride all night for one price. Fireworks on Sat Jun 29 at 10 pm. Rain date for fireworks is Sun Jun 30. Info: 845-986-4000. 6pm-8pm Opening Reception: Derivations. A collection of digitally abstracted photography, printed with ink on canvas in a square format. by Lauree Feldman. Exhibit will display through 7/21. Roost Studios & Art Gallery, 69 Main St, New Paltz. Info: 8455687540, marcy@roostcoop. org, roostcoop.org/. 6pm-10pm Party in the Stacks. Come help us celebrate the 60th birthday of the Hudson Area Library with dinner, dancing to live music, cake and plenty of fun surprises! Hudson Area Library, 51 North 5th Street, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1792, brenda.shufelt@hudsonarealibrary.org, bit. ly/2W89H4x. $150. 6:30pm-11pm PS21 Celebrates Summer With An Exciting Opening Night Revue. PS21 presents a night with the Jamal Jackson Dance Company, Dance Heginbotham, Parsons Dance, Jeremy Kittel, & comedian Hilary Chaplain. PS21: Performance Spaces for the 21st Century, 2980 Rt 66, Chatham. ps21chatham.org/. Advance tickets for the PS21 Opening Night Revue on Saturday, June 29 are $50 general admission, $45 for PS21 members, and $10 for students. Tickets at the door: $55, $50, and $10. 6:30pm-8:30pm Poetry Reading & Open Mic Night. Read your own poems and/or those of your favorite Poets! Hosted by, Laura Lonshein Ludwig. Readings are held the last Saturday of every month. All Poets, Writers and Musicians of all ages welcome. Info: 845-246-5775. Inquiring Minds Saugerties Bookstore, 65 Partition Street, Saugerties. 7pm Live @ The Falcon: The Big Takeover. Neo Reggae Stars. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@ thefalcon.com. 7pm-11pm Metropolitan Hot Club. Michael Boyle - Guitar Michael Snow - Violin Aaron Lieberman - Guitar, Vocals Charles Frommer Bass, Clarinet, Vocals GYPSY JAZZ. Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-6373, mark@lydiasdeli.com, bit.ly/2WsTvHd. Donation. 7pm Live @ The Falcon: Scott Sharrard. Gregg Allman’s Guitarist & band. Opener: Robert Hill & Joanne Lediger Duo. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 7pm-10pm Movies Under the Walkway: Mary


premier listings Contact Donna at Donna.ulsterpublishing@gmail.com to be included Community Playback Theatre at Boughton Place (7/5, 8pm). Audience stories brought to life onstage. Boughton Place, 150 Kisor Road, Highland. $10/suggested donation. Info: 845-883-0392. Upcoming performances: Fridays, 8pm: 7/5,10/4, 11/1, 12/6; Sundays, 3pm: 8/4, 9/8, 1/5/2020. CFD Death Café (6/29,10am-12pm).

Each conversation is preceded with a brief presentation to expand our understanding of different topics related to dying and death. Come and learn together! This month we are joined by local legend and organ donation advocate, Butch Dener. In this brief presentation, The Gift of Organ Donation, attendees will experience and further expand their knowledge on the life saving effort of being an organ donor. CFD Death Café is a safe space to openly discuss thoughts, feelings, and experiences regarding dying and death. It is not a grief support group. No registration is required, and there is no fee to attend. Facebook @CFDDeathCafe; cfdhv.org. Saugerties Senior Center, 207 Market St, Saugerties. Hudson Valley Community Power Meeting (6/27, 7pm). Public Q&A and Open House to learn how this Community Choice Aggregation and Community solar program is becoming a reality in the Hudson Valley now. Light refreshments will be served. Held at the New Paltz Community Center at 3 Veterans Drive in New Paltz. Infor-

mation: 845-859-9099; hudsonvalleycommunity power.com; info@hudsonvalleycommunitypower.com. Events hosted by program partners: Joule and Hudson Valley Energy. Colonists, Warriors, and Witches (6/29, 7:30pm). A multi-media presentation of the early history of music in Woodstock. Katie Jeannotte of the “Bows and Chords” music studio in Shokan will direct a musical ensemble of adults and children, and the Gnomon Shadow Theater, under the direction of the Rowan family from Saugerties, will tell a story with shadow puppets. Visuals and special effects will enhance the experience. Come sing along! $5 donation benefits the Historical Society of Woodstock. Info: historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org/. The performance celebrates the opening of HSW’s summer exhibit, Woodstock Music: In Tune with the Times, 1600’s- Present, 6/29-9/1, Saturdays and Sundays 1-5pm. Held at the Eames House, 20 Comeau Dr, Woodstock. Strength & Serenity. The utilization of internal martial arts including Tai Chi. Build Strength and confidence to improve your health and wellness. Led by Jing Shuai, a 16th generation protégé to the ancient Chinese Wu Dang San Feng martial arts lineage, and a Tai Chi instructor who is certified by the Mainland China Martial Arts Association. Born in Szechuan, China, she was deeply influenced by the Chinese traditional fine arts. Meets on Wednesdays, 2-3pm. $15 per class.

Info: taotaichistudio.com. Fan Your Talents - Fan Painting (1st Wednesday of each month, 5-6pm). Finding your way-the Tao of creativity through fan painting with Jing Shuai. The classes incorporate elements of Taoist philosophy which is seeking simplicity through the laws of nature as a way to help participants channel their inner creativity. Workshop takes place the 1st Wednesday from 5-6pm each month! Roost Studios & Art Gallery, 69 Main St, New Paltz. Find more details at the project page: FanYourTalents.com. Save the Date: 15th Annual Woodstock Volunteer’s - Day of Gratitude (8/17, 2pm). All volunteers both current and retired are treated to lunch, a concert & children’s activities. Fireworks will follow the festivities at dusk. This is an opportunity for the community to show their support and celebrate with all of the Woodstock volunteers! SST Shandaken Studio Tour (7/27 &

7/28, 10am-5pm). Engulf yourself in a baker’s dozen of deep-woods Artist lairs. Green immersion and reward for those who Art Trek. New gallery spaces in “P Town” and a major drive-by Art Park in Mount Tremper. Pull over and get face to face with big art along the railroad tracks on 28 at Rail Explorers tiny railroad station between Emerson and Phoenicia Diner. Grab a Whole Arts Catalog for the inside scoop. Opening party at Phoenicia Arts &

Poppins Return. Pre-show: Crash and Byrne. Bring blankets and chairs. Free parking at the Mid-Hudson Children’s Museum & & Metro North. Free family friendly movie under the Walkway at Upper Landing Park, 83 N Water St, Poughkeepsie. Info: mhrfoundation@aol.com.

Fischer. A monthly gentle morning yoga practice, imaged in the beauty of Frederic Church’s expansive Hudson River views. Olana State Historic Site, 5720 St Rt 9G, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1872, education@olana.org, bit.ly/yogaatolana. Donation Based.

7pm-8pm Latin Dance for Everyone. Meets every Saturday, 7-8pm.$5/suggested donation. Info: 845-331-5300; LGBTQCenter.org. Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center, 300 Wall St, Kingston. lgbtqcenter.org.

9am-4pm D&H Canal Historical Society’s Flea Market. Art, Antiques & Collectibles. Open Air Market Sundays through 10/27. Free admission. Info: 845-810-0471. Grady Park, 23 Mohonk Rd & Rt 213, High Falls. canalmuseum.org/. to the public.

7:30pm Presentation -Woodstock Music: Colonists, Warriors, Witches. Celebrating the opening of the Historical Society of Woodstock exhibit, Woodstock Music: In Tune with the Times<, 1600’s – Present, The presentation uses instruments, song, special effects and shadow puppetry to explore the music history of the Woodstock area from the 1600’s through the early 1900’s. Exhibit will display through 9/1, open Saturdays and Sundays from 1-5 pm. Info: historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org. Eames House, 20 Comeau Drive, Woodstock, NY. 7:30pm Music Under the Stars Concert Series: West Point Block Party. Featuring the West Point Band’s Benny Havens Band. Free and open to all. RSVP atvisitingwestpointband.eventbrite. com; 845-938-2617. West Point /Trophy Point Amphitheater, West Point. westpointband.com. 7:30pm Acoustic Stardust: An Intimate David Bowie Tribute with Robert Burke Warren & Friends. Hudson Valley’s own RBW rearranges Bowie hits for this unplugged evening, turning the theater into a cross between a cabaret and a Folk club. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St, Rosendale. Info: 845-658-8989, info@rosendaletheatre.org, robertburkewarren.com. $22/$20 adv:brownpapertickets.com/event/4257937. 8pm-10pm The Secret Garden. Musical based on Francis Hodges Burnett’s children’s novel. Presented by Rhinebeck Theatre Society. Info: 845-876-3080. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. Info: hermitsong@hotmail.com, bit.ly/2XEZk5W. $27. 8pm-10pm Trivia Night At Chic’s Restaurant and Bar. Chic’s Restaurant and Bar, 226 Kingston Plaza, Kingston. 8pm-10pm Jazz at the Maverick. Bill Charlap Trio. Maverick Concert Hall, 120 Maverick Rd, Woodstock. maverickconcerts.org. $5/$30/$55.

Sunday

21

ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

6/30

Oncology Support Programs of Health Alliance Hospital. WMC Health offers emotional support, wellness, integrative and healing arts programs for people affected by cancer including cancer support groups for women of all ages, young women, men, caregivers, women with ovarian cancer, & people living with metastatic. Info, times and dates: 845-339-2071; oncology. support@hahv.org; hahv.org/service/cancersupport-program. Herbert H. and Sofia P. Reuner Cancer Support House, 80 Mary’s Ave, Kingston. 9am-10am Yoga of the Earth. Led by Stephanie

10am-2pm Talk: Richie Rosencrans presents - Daniel Gomez: 1719 & Beyond. Call 845-2363126 to sign up. Gomez Mill House, 11 Mill House Rd, Marlboro. 10am Heart Essence of the Vast Expanse. An introduction, teachings and practice on the Longchen Nyingthig. Presented by Khedrup Rinpoche. For details, confirm times and location contact 917-612-9503 or 615-693-9416. $185/ suggested contribution. 10:30am-4pm Woodstock Animal Sanctuary Visiting Season. Saturdays and Sundays through October. Weekend Tour Times (hourly, starting at 11am with the last tour at 2pm). Be prepared to move-about in the open air for about a mile and half. Tours run for about 55-60 minutes. Suggested donation: $10/adults, $5/4-12 yrs old, 65 & up & Vets and Active Service; free/ 3 & under. Info: 845-247-5700. Woodstock Animal Sanctuary, 2 Rescue Rd, High Falls. 11am-12:30pm Kids In The Kitchen. Come and cook with Cooper Boone at Foundry42! Class includes use of apron and chef ’s hat. Ages 6 – 12. Tickets on website. Info: 845-858-4942; cooper@f42home.com. The Loft at Foundry42, 42 Front St, Port Jervis. f42home.com/calendar/2019/6/30/kids-in-the-kitchen-with-cooper. $35. 11am-2pm Sunday Brunch @ the Falcon: Saints of Swing. Swing & more! Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 11am-3pm Beer Geek Sundays @ the Anchor. Meets every Sunday, 11-3pm. The Anchor, 744 Broadway, Kingston. 11am-4pm Hudson Valley Free Day. Dia:Beacon offers complimentary admission with identification to Hudson Valley residents the last Sunday of every month. Please present identification and proof of residence at the admissions desk. Gallery displays rotate regularly. Last Sundays at Dia: Beacon are made possible by Kiki McMillan, Charlie Pohlad, and the Pohlad family. Info: 845-440-0100; beaconprograms@diaart. org; diaart.org. Dia:Beacon, 3 Beekman Street, Beacon. 11am Catskill Animal Sanctuary Tour. Meet rescued animals and hear their stories. Understand what caring for these amazing animals has taught us. Learn about the plight of farmed animals and how you can help. Seasonal Weekend Tours offered on Saturday and Sunday through November. Tour Times: 11am, 12pm, 1pm, 2pm, 3pm (each tour is approximately 90 minutes). Family-Focused Tour is once a day at 11am (this

Antiques at 41 Main St in Phoenicia on Friday 7/26 6-10pm. Sunday will offer a Skinflower party on the boardwalk all afternoon, party will include live bands. Info: 845-688-2977; dave@shandakenart.com; dave@esopuscreek.com. Create! Summer Art Camp for 5-8th graders (7/1, 9:30am-3:30pm). Summer Arts Camp, for 4th to 8th graders with Katalin Pazmandi! 4 different art sessions Create Puppets, Instruments, Drawings, Music! Monday through Thursday or Friday sessions - Art in The Woods. Every week in the month of July. $225 per session. Info: 845-687-3312; fufaeg@ gmail.com; Createsummer.weebly.com. Rhinebeck Theatre Society’s Audition Notice: The Fantasticks (6/29, 1-4pm). RTS invites performers of all ethnicities (ages 18+) to audition for this classic musical. Cast breakdown available online. Call backs 6/30 at 7pm & 7/1 at 7pm. The CENTER for Performing Art at Rhinebeck, 661 Route 308, Rhinebeck. Info: 845-2147932; TinaReillyYoga@gmail.com; Dorothyluongo@gmail.com; centerforperformingarts.org/audition/item/ audition-fantasticks. Kitten Season - Fosters Needed. Reach out via Facebook or call 845-778-5115, everything needed will be provided to you as well as education & a 24/7 contact. Humane Society of Walden, 2489 Albany Post Rd, Walden. Movies Under the Walkway (starting 6/29, 7-10pm). Pre-show before each screening! Bring blankets and chairs. Free parking at the MidHudson Children’s Museum & & Metro North. Free family friendly movie under the Walkway at Upper Landing Park, 83 N Water St, Poughkeepsie.

tour is 60 minutes). You can purchase tickets in the Welcome Hut. Tix: $12/adults, $8/age 12 & under & srs, & free/ 2 & under. Info: 845-3368447. Catskill Animal Sanctuary, 316 Old Stage Rd, Saugerties. 11am-6pm Woodstock Art Exchange - Larger Than Life Exhibit. Portraits by Bennett Harris Horowitz will display through July 29th. Art and glass gallery/gift shop Hand-blown glass and gifts. Artist reception Saturday, June 29. 5—7pm. Open Friday through Sunday 11am–6pm; Mondays 10am–4pm. Refreshments served. Info: 914-8063573. Woodstock Art Exchange, 1396 Rte 28, West Hurley. 11am-3pm Sunday Funday. Open Recreation! Pool Table, Foosball and Ping Pong. Meets every Sunday. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. FREE. 11am-12pm Conversations over Coffee. An open forum for discussions and opinions of topics relevant to the world around us. The Crafted Kup, 44 Raymond Ave, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-242-6546, cocpoughkeepsie@gmail. com, bit.ly/2xYW0bq. 12pm-3pm Shinrin-yoku. an afternoon of Forest Bathing with John Polemis, forest therapy guide and founder of Hudson Valley Forest Therapy. Please bring your own seating for outdoors and feel free to pack a lunch for afterwards if you wish to linger, mingle or enjoy the outdoors afterwards. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30. 12:30pm-6pm Astro-Tarot Readings with angelic scholar and astrologer Diane Bergmanson. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appt. $75 for couples. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $60/1 hour, $30/30 minutes. 1pm-4pm Visit Mount Gulian Historic Site. Tours of the historic home, 18th century Dutch barn, and restored garden will be given every Sunday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday through October 27! Tours start at 1pm and the last tour 4pm. $8/adults; $6/srs, and $4/children (6-18 years of age). Info: 845-831-8172; info@mountgulian.org; mountgulian.org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon. Info: 845-831-8172, info@mountgulian. org, mountgulian.org. 1pm Elting Library Scrabble Club Meeting. Scrabble sets and the Official Scrabble Player’s dictionary are provided. This club is intended for adult players 18 or older. Meets every Sunday, 1pm in a study room of the library. Elting Memorial Library, 93 Main Street, New Paltz. 1pm-2pm Silent Peace Vigil by Woodstock Women in Black. Village Green/Woodstock, Woodstock. 1:30pm-4pm Opening Reception: In India, I Am Home. Presenting the Photography of Ken Davis. Show exhibits through 7/21. Gallery at 46 Green Street, 46 Green St, Hudson. Info: 518-303-6446, gallery@46greenstreetstudios. com. 2pm-4pm Art-B-Q and Movement Research. Movement-based artists question personal history and cultural identity through move-

Info: mhrfoundation@aol.com. Jewish Story Slam-Call for Submissions. Woodstock Jewish Congregation holds Jewish Story Slam 8/18. Submission deadline is 6/25. Contact Stacy Brooks 845-246-0307; info@ wjcshul.org. Held at 1682 Glasco Turnpike, Woodstock. Antique Fair and Flea Market (8/3 & 8/4). Old-Fashioned Antique Show featuring 200+ dealers, free parking and food. $4/admission,65+ $3, 16 & under/ free). Info: 518-331-5004. Washington County Fairgrounds, Rt 29, Greenwich. Woodstock Art Exchange - Larger Than Life (Friday 6/28 - Monday 7/1). Portraits by Bennett Harris Horowitz will display through July 29th. Art and glass gallery/gift shop Hand-blown glass and gifts. Artist reception Saturday, June 29. 5—7pm. Open Friday through Sunday 11am– 6pm; Mondays 10am–4pm. Refreshments served. Info: 914-806-3573. Woodstock Art Exchange, 1396 State Route 28, West Hurley, NY. Free. For more info, call 914-806-3573. 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.

ment, voice, and song. Followed by a BBQ in the garden. Mount Tremper Arts, 647 South Plank Rd, Mount Tremper. Info: info@mttremperarts. org, bit.ly/2K0fZ0E. Includes meal. 2pm-6pm Sunday Jazz - J. Drechsler Quartet/ Septet. Daily featured composers and guest artists all with theme based selections. Sign up at 3:30pm to sit in with the band at 4pm. All musical levels given time! Coffee & baked goods available. No cover! Info: 845-633-8287. Cafeteria Coffeehouse, 58 Main St, New Paltz. 3pm-5pm Norm Magnusson: Catskill Zombies. Join artist, writer, comedian Norm Magnusson for two new monologues, Swipe Right and Kill the head. Woodstock Artists Association & Museum, 28 Tinker ST, Woodstock. Info: info@woodstockart.org, woodstockart.org. Free. 3pm Woodstock Ultimate Disc. A free, casual, co-ed pickup game. Ongoing games - Sundays at 3pm; & Tuesdays & Thursdays at 5:30pm. See WoodstockUltimate.org for details. Athletic Fields, 98 Comeau Drive, Woodstock. woodstockultimate.org/. 4pm-6pm Maverick Concert: Chamber Music Festival. Shanghai Quartet. Maverick Concert Hall, 120 Maverick Rd, Woodstock. maverickconcerts.org. $5/$30/$55. 4pm-8pm Sunday Supper. Remember the good old days when the family gathered around the table every Sunday for dinner? Carry on the tradition with Sunday Supper at Woodnotes Grille. Enjoy house made selections ranging from Prime Rib dinner, seasonal roasts, or chicken and dumplings for $21 per person! Call 845-688-2828 for reservations. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper. 4pm-6pm Woodstock Community Drum Circle. Sponsored by Birds of a Feather and Timekeeper Drums. Broadcast - Woodstock 104 at 8pm. All drummers, dancers are welcome. Meets every Sunday, 4-6pm. Admission is free, donations appreciated. At the community center when raining or cold, on the green when warm. Village Green/Woodstock, Woodstock. 5pm-7pm How Could She - Reading & Signing with Lauren Mechling. Author Lauren Mechling will read from her new book. Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 6pm-7pm Meditation Session. Meets every Sunday at 6pm. Free and open to the public. Info: skylake.shambhala.org. Sky Lake Shambhala Meditation & Retreat Center, 22 Hillcrest Ln, Rosendale. 6:30pm-10:30pm Roger’s Folly | Dancing Under The Stars with La Familia. Swing, Blues, Waltz, or Dance your own style - No Experience Needed! Swing Dance Lesson at 6:30pm. Tickets via Facebook: @Roger’s Folly. The Inn And Spa At Beacon, 151, Beacon. Info: 845-205-2900, info@ innspabeacon.com. $20 At The Door. 6:30pm-8pm Annual Music at The Park. The Greater Cornwall Chamber of Commerce proudly presents the 4th Annual Music at the Park series. Every Sunday from 6:30-8pm there will be a concert on the lawn in front of Town Hall. Bands will play classic rock, acoustic pop,


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country, folk rock, swing, bluegrass and more. Free admission. Town Hall Lawn, 183 Main Stm Cornwall. Info: 845-675-5014; cornwallchamber. org/events/music-at-the-park. 7pm The Bandaged Place. From New York Stage and Film Founders’ Award recipient Harrison David Rivers. Directed by David Mendizábal. Powerhouse Theater, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie, NY. Info: 845-437-5370, bit. ly/2QTRvqu. 7pm-9pm Opening Reception: Images and Stories of Nepal. A gallery show of photographs from the Maya Gold Foundation 2019 Heart of Gold Adventures Trip to Nepal. Show exhibits through 7/31. The Bakery, 13a North Front St, New Paltz. Info: 845-418-5227, info@mayagoldfoundation.org, mayagoldfoundation. Free. 7pm Storytelling with Janet Carter. Info: 845-246-5775. Free admission. Inquiring Minds Saugerties Bookstore, 65 Partition Street, Saugerties. 7:15pm-9pm 2019 Youth Ambassador Presentations. The 2019 Maya Gold Foundation Youth Ambassadors will be presenting on their recent cross cultural exchange trip to Nepal. Presentations 7:15 & 8:15pm. The Bakery, 13a North Front St, New Paltz. Info: 845-418-5227, info@ mayagoldfoundation.org, bit.ly/2YygkuK. Free. 7:15pm Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blache. Pamela Green’s energetic film about Alice Guy-Blaché, a true moviemaking pioneer, narrated by Jodie Foster. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St, Rosendale. Info: 845-658-8989, info@ rosendaletheatre.org, rosendaletheatre.org. $8. 7:30pm Peter Frampton’s Farewell Tour with Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Evening. Celebrating the 43rd anniversary of his fifth solo album! Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter.org, bethelwoodscenter.|bethelwoodscen ter. $38.50 Lawn|$38.50 Lawn. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Paul McCandless + Charged Particles. Jazz virtuosos celebrate 25 years! Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com.

Monday

7/1

7am-7pm Images and Stories of Nepal. A gallery show of photographs from the Maya Gold Foundation 2019 Heart of Gold Adventures Trip to Nepal. Show exhibits through 7/31. The Bakery is open every day 7am - 7pm. The Bakery, 13a North Front St, New Paltz. Info: 845-418-5227, info@mayagoldfoundation.org, mayagoldfoundation. Free. 8:30am-9:30am Aquoga Aquatic Yoga & Cardio Class. Arrive 10 mins early to register. Monday & Friday mornings through 8/9. Note: No Class on: 7/12 & 7/15. Moriello Pool, 40 Mulberry St, New Paltz. facebook.com/aquoga. or buy 10 class card for 10% off. 9am-11am NED Corps Community Action (by appointment). Finanacial Assistance,Health Care Access, Ongoing Support. 9am-4pm P.L.A.Y: Theater. A 3-week exploration of Music Theater Performance and Production for regional youth age 9-15. Through 8/19. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter.org. per 3 week session. 9am-10am Gentle Yoga Class. With Kathy Carey! A fun class, lightly paced. $3/class. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. $3. 9am-9:50am Woodstock Senior Fit Dance with Adah Frank. Dance and movement for 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. 9:30am Tennis at Woodstock Tennis Club. Morning tennis drills with Tennis Pro on clay courts. Players should be able to hit ground strokes and move around the court. Membership not required. Meets M - T - W - TH - F, 9:30am. No reservation necessary. $20. More info: nytennis40@gmail.com; 845-679-5900. WTC located near corner of Zena and Sawkill, next to Shakti Yoga. Woodstock Tennis Club, 1703 Sawkill Rd, Woodstock. 9:30am-3:30pm Create! Summer Arts Camp in Cottekill. For 4th to 8th graders with Katalin Pazmandi! 4 different art sessions Create Puppets, Instruments, Drawings, Music! Monday through Thursday or Friday sessions - Art in The Woods. Every week in the month of July. $225 per session. Info: 845-687-3312; fufaeg@gmail.com; Createsummer.weebly.com. Owl Spirit Garden, 61 Coxing Rd, Cottekill. Info: 8456873312, Fufaeg@gmail.com, Createsummer. weebly.com. Per session. Includes material fee. Discount available for siblings. 9:30am-12pm Weekly Bridge Game. For intermediate level players. Meets weekly on Mondays, 9:30am-12pm and Wednesdays, 1:304pm. For info, contact Neale Tracy at 845-2470094. Saugerties Senior Center, 207 Market St, Saugerties. 9:30am Settled and Serving in Place (Kingston Chapter). A social self-help group for seniors who want to remain in their homes and community.

Info: 845-303-9689. Olympic Diner, Washington Ave, Kingston. ssipkingston.org. 10am-5pm Get Your Kicks on Route 66. A fine art photography exhibit of historic Route 66 by Lee Courtney and John A Verner, Exhibit displays through 8/31. Montgomery Row Art Exhibition Space, 6423 Montgomery Street, Second Floor, Rhinebeck. clearlotusphoto.com. Free. 10am-4pm Woodstock Art Exchange - Larger Than Life Exhibit. Portraits by Bennett Harris Horowitz will display through July 29th. Art and glass gallery/gift shop Hand-blown glass and gifts. Artist reception Saturday, June 29. 5—7pm. Open Friday through Sunday 11am–6pm; Mondays 10am–4pm. Refreshments served. Info: 914-8063573. Woodstock Art Exchange, 1396 Rte 28, West Hurley. 10am-12pm Woodstock Senior Drama with Edith Lefever. Comets of Woodstock focuses on improvisation, acting exercises, monologues and scenes, and offers public performances. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 10:30am-11:30am Gentle Hanna Somatics at The Living Seed. Join Carisa Borrello for Hanna Somatic Education® weekly clinical classes that will teach you to reverse chronic muscle pain. The Living Seed Yoga & Holistic Health Center, 521 Main St (Rt 299), New Paltz. Info: 845-255-8212, contact@thelivingseed.com, bit.ly/2K8mlZ2. $16-$18. 11am Fourth of July Celebration at Mohonk Mountain House. Events and activities throughout each day. Be sure to wear your red, white and blue and join in the fun! Fireworks at dusk on July 4th.An overnight reservation is required to join in the 4th of July activities. Event starts 7/1-7/5 - times vary. Info: mohonk.com/events/ holidays-at-mohonk/4th-of-july-celebration/; 855-883-3798. Mohonk Mountain House, 1000 Mountain Rest Rd, New Paltz. 12pm-1pm Senior Strength and Stamina with Linda Sirkin. Low impact aerobics performed with light weights. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville. 12:30pm-6pm Crystal Readings, Tarot Readings and Chakra Attunement every Monday with Owl Medicine Woman Mary Vukovic. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appt. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/25 minute reading. 1pm-2pm Mahjong Club at the Mountain Top Library. Everyone is Welcome! Want to learn how to play? Contact us at the library and we will connect you with the host of our Mahjong Club! Mountain Top Library, 6093 Main St, Tannersville. Info: 518-589-5707, directormttoplib@ gmail.com, mountaintoplibrary.org. free. 1pm-2pm Needlework Group. Knitters, crocheters, rug hookers & stitchers of all types and beginners welcome. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@gmail.com, esopuslibrary.org. 2pm-3pm Tai Chi Easy – Mind Body Medicine. A carefully designed method that makes it easy and fun to learn. Rapidly access the spectrum of mind body benefits. New Paltz United Methodist Church, 1 Grove Street, New Paltz. suggested donation. 2:30pm-3:30pm Living with Alzheimer’s: For Early-Stage Care Partners-Part 1. Part one of a three-part free educational program, with practical answers to the questions that arise in the early stage. Info: 800-272-3900; info@hudsonvalleyalz.org. Dutchess County Office for the Aging, 114 Delafield St, Poughkeepsie. hudsonvalleyalz.org. 3pm-6:30pm Poughkeepsie Waterfront Market. Weekly Farmer’s Market in a fully covered open-air pavilion on the Hudson. SNAP and WIC accepted. Live music, free kids activity & parking. Info: djordan@mhcm.org. Mid-Hudson Children’s Museum, 75 North Water St, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-471-0589, lproscia@mhcm. org, mhcm.org/. Free. 3:30pm-4:30pm Amateur Guitar Jam. Join this casual gathering of acoustic musicians. Bring your own guitar. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@gmail.com, esopuslibrary.org. 4pm-5:15pm Healthy Back Class w/ Anne Olin. Led by Anne Olin. Exercises to strengthen back and abdominal muscles and increase flexibility and range of motion with attention to your special needs. Class is on-going and meets on Mondays at 4pm. $12. Info: 845-679-6250;anneolin.com. 28 West Gym, Maverick Rd & Rt 28, Glenford. $12. 4:30pm-5:30pm Fitness Hour. Drop in for a workout on Mondays at 4:30pm & Thursdays at 4pm. Class will be an aerobic warm-up followed by a combination of band and body work. Instructed by Connie Scuitto. Connie is an RN and certified Reiki Master. 845-246-4317. Saugerties Public Library, 91 Washington Ave, Saugerties. saugertiespubliclibrary.org. 6pm-7:30pm Mueller Monday: BBQ & Community Reading. Community BBQ & Reading of The Mueller Report. Free admission / Suggested Donation for Supper. Copies of Report available. Time & Space Limited, 434 Columbia St, Hudson. Info: 518-822-8100, fyi@timeandspace. org, bit.ly/2Xpw4D7. Free / Suggested Donation

June 27, 2019

for Supper. 6pm-9pm Create Stuff & Nonsense. On the first and third Mondays of each month at 6pm, join a varied and amazing group at House Rules Cafe for craft night! House Rules Cafe, 757 Columbia St., Hudson. 6pm-9pm Knitting Night. Think knitting is just for grandmas? Think again! Darkside Records and Knitting is Metal present Stitch N’ B*tch! All welcome. Admission free. Darkside Records, 611 Dutchess Turnpike, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-4528010, info@darksiderecords.com, darksiderecords.com/InStore. 6:30pm-8:30pm Model Monday. Open Studio Life Drawing. Gesture, long and short poses. time keeper, no instruction, Bring your materials. Donation based. Roost Studios & Art Gallery, 69 Main St, New Paltz. Info: 845-568-7540, Chirp@ roostcoop.org, roostcoop.org. 6:30pm Music - Mendelssohn Club Meeting. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 7pm-9pm Marathon Woman Kathrine Switzer & Roger Robinson Book Signing. Kathrine Switzer, the first woman to officially register and run the Boston Marathon! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-8020027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 8pm-11pm All Ages Ecstatic Dance Party. Family-friendly dance party. Every third Saturday of each month. Info: 845-658-8319; hranajanto@ hranajanto.com. Marbletown Multi-Arts Center, 3588 Main St, Stone Ridge. $10, $5/seniors & teens, free/under 13. 8:30pm-10pm Outdoor Films: Bonnie & Clyde. Historical figures Bonnie and Clyde transformed into symbols of anti-establishment counterculture in the 1967 ground breaking film. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter. org. General Ticket.

Tuesday

7/2

9am-4:30pm Colonial Game Days at the Persen House. Bring your family and see how different or perhaps similar games and toys were in the 18th century as compared to those of today! Matthewis Persen House, 74 John St, Kingston. Info: 845-340-3040, countyclerk@co.ulster. ny.us, bit.ly/persenhouse. 9am-4pm P.L.A.Y: Theater. A 3-week exploration of Music Theater Performance and Production for regional youth age 9-15. Through 8/19. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter.org. per 3 week session. 9am-10am Free Weekly Community Meditation. On-going on Tuesdays 9-10am. All are welcome for silent sitting and walking meditation. For optional beginner instruction, please arrive 10 minutes early. Drop-in attendance welcome. Cushions, back-jacks, and chairs available. Check website for cancellations: wellnessembodiedcenter.com. Wellness Embodied Community Education Annex, 126 Main St, New Paltz. 9am-10am Woodstock Senior Dance with Inyo Charbonneau. The emphasis is on fun while benefiting from strengthening and aerobic exercise and celebrating life. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 9:30am Tennis at Woodstock Tennis Club. Morning tennis drills with Tennis Pro on clay courts. Players should be able to hit ground strokes and move around the court. Membership not required. Meets M - T - W - TH - F, 9:30am. No reservation necessary. $20. More info: nytennis40@gmail.com; 845-679-5900. WTC located near corner of Zena and Sawkill, next to Shakti Yoga. Woodstock Tennis Club, 1703 Sawkill Rd, Woodstock. 9:30am The Saugerties Seniors Meeting. Settled and Serving in Place (SSIP) is a social self-help group for seniors who want to remain in their homes and community. Village Diner, Main St, Saugerties. 9:30am Serving and Staying in Place – SSIP/ New Paltz. Regular Tuesday social breakfast meeting for seniors who want to remain in their own home and community. Info: 845-255-0609. Plaza Diner, New Paltz Plaza, New Paltz. 10am-12pm The Family Collective. Get together to learn new, interesting things and spend time together. This is a souped up Mothers group that isn’t just for mothers. The group is a birth and parenting information collective with the intention of bringing a new outlook to learning about what it means to give birth, become a family and raise children! New topics each session! Group meets each week on Tuesday from 10am-12pm. Free admission, donations appreciated. Facebook: @woodstockparent. Mountain View Studio, 20 Mountain View Ave, Woodstock. 10am-12pm Knitting for Charity. Group meets on the first Tuesday of every month at 10am. The group is open to knitters and crocheters of all abilities. Olive Free Library, 4033 Rte. 28A, West Shokan. Info: 845-657-2482, programs@olivefreelibrary.org, bit.ly/2xuq5Qj. Free. 10am-12pm Comforter Fiber Connection Knit and Crochet Group. Learn, share, donate

to local agencies. Tuesdays 10am-12 noon. Contact: ewepurlly@hotmail.com; 845-9015330. Reformed Church of the Comforter, 26 Wynkoop Pl, Kingston. 10am The Country Scrappers & Stampers Meeting. Come for the whole day or drop by for an hour or two. New members are welcome and encouraged to attend. Ongoing. Walker Valley Schoolhouse, 1 Marl Rd, Walker Valley. 11am Fourth of July Celebration at Mohonk Mountain House. Events and activities throughout each day. Be sure to wear your red, white and blue and join in the fun! Fireworks at dusk on July 4th.An overnight reservation is required to join in the 4th of July activities. Event starts 7/1-7/5 - times vary. Info: mohonk.com/events/ holidays-at-mohonk/4th-of-july-celebration/; 855-883-3798. Mohonk Mountain House, 1000 Mountain Rest Rd, New Paltz. 12:05pm-1pm Woodstock Senior Basic Pilates (Introductory Level) with Christine Anderson. A floor work course promoting improvement of balance, coordination, focus, awareness breathing, strength and flexibility. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville. 12:30pm-6pm Intuitive Guidance, Angelic Oracle Readings and Reiki Healing Sessions every Tuesday with Reiki Master Maureen Brennan-Mercier. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. $75 for one hour Reiki Healing session. Maureen also offers Reiki I, 2, 3 and Master Level Reiki Attunements and Certification at Mirabai. Inquire with Mirabai for scheduling and rates. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $50/1 hour, $30/30 minutes. 1pm-3:30pm Esopus Artist Group. Ongoing session of art making. Bring your own supplies. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@gmail. com, esopuslibrary.org. 1:30pm-4:30pm Play Bridge. New Paltz Community Center, 3 Veterans Dr /32 North, New Paltz. Free. 2pm-3pm Building Your Family Tree. With Moe Lemire. Learn the tips and tools available to research and build your family tree. Bring a laptop computer if you own one. Free. Info: 845-2545469. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. free. 4pm-6pm Scrabble. Test your vocabulary against your family and friends - all ages welcome. Meets every Tuesday, 4-6pm. Info: 845-246-4317. Saugerties Public Library, 91 Washington Ave, Saugerties. 5:30pm Woodstock Ultimate Disc. A free, casual, co-ed pickup game. Ongoing games Tuesdays & Thursdays at 5:30pm; & Sundays at 3pm. See WoodstockUltimate.org for details. Athletic Fields, 98 Comeau Drive, Woodstock. woodstockultimate.org/. 6pm-8pm Supporting Pollinators: Flowers, Birds and Bees. New Paltz Climate Smart Solutions Meetup: learn about the fascinating variety of pollinators that you can plant for the benefit of bees. Free. Info: 920-883-1788; janellepeotter@ gmail.com. Kalleco Nursery, 801 NY 32, Tillson. 6pm Margaretville Field Days. Carnival & Rides. Carnival Days runs 7/2–7/7. Margaretville Village Park behind Freshtown Market. 6:30pm-8:30pm Drag Queen Bingo. Meets the 1st Tuesday of each month from 6:30-8:30pm. Info: 845-331-5300; LGBTQCenter.org. Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center, 300 Wall St, Kingston. lgbtqcenter.org. 6:30pm-8pm The Creative Seed Artist Group. A support group for artists to have a space to develop & share their work in progress- Actors, poets, playwrights & musicians welcome. Every Tuesday. Info: 203-246-5711. By donation. Call ahead. Blue Mountain Co-op Retreat Center, Woodstock. 7pm-10pm Blues and Dance Party with Big Joe Fitz and The Lo-Fis. For nearly 30 years Big Joe Fitz has been one of the leading personalities on the Hudson Valley music scene. High Falls Cafe, 12 Stone Dock Road, High Falls. Info: 845-6872699, highfallscafe@earthlink.net, highfallscafe. com. Pass the basket. 7pm-8pm Life & Money: Making Investment Decisions After Emotional Abuse for Men & Women. Monthly meeting will address making investment decisions after emotional abuse. Gardiner Library, 133 Farmer’s Turnpike, Gardiner. Info: 845-255-1255, nlane@rcls.org, bit.ly/2BWQlUH. 7pm-10pm Open Mic Night. Join host Ben Rounds and take your shot at becoming the next Catskills Singing Sensation! Woodnotes Grille No Cover. Info: 845-688-2828. Woodnotes Grill - Emerson Resort, Rt 28, Mt. Pleasant. emersonresort.com. 7pm-8pm Scrabble Night. Every Tuesday! Bring snacks to share starts 7pm. All welcome. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. free. 7pm Ashokan-Pepacton Watershed Chapter of Trout Unlimited #559 Board Meeting. The chapter’s board of directors meet the first Tuesday of every month, and members are welcome to attend but should notify our secretary beforehand. Info: 845-657-8500. Boiceville Inn, Rt 28,


Boiceville. 8pm The Bandaged Place. From New York Stage and Film Founders’ Award recipient Harrison David Rivers. Directed by David Mendizåbal. Includes post-show discussion. Powerhouse Theater, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie, NY. Info: 845-437-5370, bit.ly/2QTRvqu.

Wednesday

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June 27, 2019

7/3

P.L.A.Y. After Dark: Counter Culture. P.L.A.Y. After Dark gives guests 21+ late night access to The Museum at Bethel Woods and our special exhibitions. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@ bethelwoodscenter.org. Oncology Support Programs of Health Alliance Hospital. WMC Health offers emotional support, wellness, integrative and healing arts programs for people affected by cancer including cancer support groups for women of all ages, young women, men, caregivers, women with ovarian cancer, & people living with metastatic. Info, times and dates: 845-339-2071; oncology. support@hahv.org; hahv.org/service/cancersupport-program. Herbert H. and Sofia P. Reuner Cancer Support House, 80 Mary’s Ave, Kingston. 9am-4:30pm Colonial Game Days at the Persen House. Bring your family and see how different or perhaps similar games and toys were in the 18th century as compared to those of today! Matthewis Persen House, 74 John St, Kingston. Info: 845-340-3040, countyclerk@co.ulster. ny.us, bit.ly/persenhouse. 9am-4pm P.L.A.Y: Theater. A 3-week exploration of Music Theater Performance and Production for regional youth age 9-15. Through 8/19. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter.org. per 3 week session. 9am-10am Woodstock Senior Gentle (chair) Yoga with Susan Blacker. A gentle yoga class with each student encouraged to move and stretch at his or her own pace. Includes warmups, poses for strength and balance and breath work for relaxation. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville. 9:30am Tennis at Woodstock Tennis Club. Morning tennis drills with Tennis Pro on clay courts. Players should be able to hit ground strokes and move around the court. Membership not required. Meets M - T - W - TH - F, 9:30am. No reservation necessary. $20. More info: nytennis40@gmail.com; 845-679-5900. WTC located near corner of Zena and Sawkill, next to Shakti Yoga. Woodstock Tennis Club, 1703 Sawkill Rd, Woodstock. 10:30am-1:30pm Town of Cornwall Farmers’ Market. Shop for fresh, local, healthy and natural goods from a variety of vendors. Meets weekly on Wednesdays. Info: 845-534-2070; marketmanager@cornwallny.gov. Munger Cottage, Cornwall. cornwallny.com. 10:30am-11:30am Woodstock Senior Weights and Bands with Linda Sirkin. Improve muscle tone, protect bones and enhance balance. Fire Co. #1, Route 212. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville. 11am Fourth of July Celebration at Mohonk Mountain House. Events and activities throughout each day. Be sure to wear your red, white and blue and join in the fun! Fireworks at dusk on July 4th.An overnight reservation is required to join in the 4th of July activities. Event starts 7/1-7/5 - times vary. Info: mohonk.com/events/ holidays-at-mohonk/4th-of-july-celebration/; 855-883-3798. Mohonk Mountain House, 1000 Mountain Rest Rd, New Paltz. 12pm Woodstock Senior Citizens Club. There will be an ice cream social. Info: 845-679-8537. Woodstock Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville. 12pm-6pm Karmic Clearing and Shamanic Reiki Private Sessions with shamanic healer Jenn Bergeron. First Wednesday of every month at Mirabai. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $75/1 hour, $40/30 minutes. 12:30pm-5pm Expert Tarot Readings with Malley every Wednesday. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $50/1 hour, $30/30 minutes. 1pm-3pm Pinochle. Card Game every Wednesday! Looking for a 4th player. Anyone interested - email info@pinehillcommunitycenter.org. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. FREE. 1pm-3pm Social Circle. Good conversation! Every Wednesday. Everyone welcome. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. 1pm Kingston Community Singers Meetup New Members Welcome. Open to all men and women. No auditions necessary. Info: 856-3051546. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 1:30pm Weekly Senior Citizen’s Bingo. Ongoing every Wednesday at 1:30pm & Friday at

7pm. 50/50 tickets available at 3 tickets/$2. Halftime complementary refreshments. Shawangunk Senior Center, 70 Main St, Napanoch. 2pm-3pm Strength & Serenity. The utilization of internal martial arts including Tai Chi. Build Strength and confidence to improve your health and wellness. Led by Jing Shuai, a 16th generation protÊgÊ to the ancient Chinese Wu Dang San Feng martial arts lineage, and a Tai Chi instructor who is certified by the Mainland China Martial Arts Association. Born in Szechuan, China, she was deeply influenced by the Chinese traditional fine arts. Meets on Wednesdays, 2-3pm. Roost Studios & Art Gallery, 69 Main St, New Paltz. taotaichistudio.com. $50 for 5 classes (3 months expiration). 3:30pm Woodstock Farm Festival. Pick up fresh vegetables and fruits, baked goods, eggs, meats, sweet treats, honey and maple syrup from local farmers, ranchers and bakers. Catch up with your friends and enjoy great live music while you eat a falafel, wood-fired pizza, charbroiled burger or hotdog. Events include pie contests, kids activities & cooking demos. Info: woodstockfarmfestival. SNAP, WIC & FMNP vouchers accepted. Houst Parking Lot, 6 Maple Ln, Woodstock. 4pm-11pm Village of Monroe Independence Celebration at the Mill Ponds. Street Fair 5pm. Fireworks 9pm. Performing Originals & Covers: Matt Mulhare 6:45pm-9:45pm at the Main Stage on Millpond Parkway Rain date: July 5. Millpond Park, Monroe. 4pm Family Lego. Info: 845-876-4030. Starr Library, 68 West Market St, Rhinebeck. starrlibrary.org. 4:30pm-5:30pm Weekly Art Hour. Meets every Wednesday! Fun for ages 3 to 103! From paper flowers to crazy critters, we are always up to something creative. Phoenicia Library, 48 Main St, Phoenicia. Info: 845-688-7811, phoenicialibrary. org. FREE. 5pm-7pm Tivoli Free Library Summer Reading Kickoff Event featuring Animal Embassy. A journey through the world of nocturnal creatures with Animal Embassy (ages 4+)! Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. tivolilibrary.org. Free. 5pm-6pm Fan Painting. Finding your way-the Tao of creativity through fan painting.Workshop takes place the 1st Wednesday from 5-6pm each month! Find more details at the project page: FanYourTalents.com. Roost Studios & Art Gallery, 69 Main St, New Paltz. fanyourtalents. com. Admission fee is $60 for 2-3 people , $80/ 4 -5 people. (Brushes, paints are free to use in the workshop, and a free painting fan is included. Each additional fan is $12 if you need more. Free admission to attend the following event Fan Fair). 5pm-9pm Wallkill Fire Dept Bingo. Doors/ Kitchen Open at 5pm, selling starts @ 6pm & calling begins @ 7pm. Bingo held every Wednesday Night! Wallkill Fire Dept, 18 Central Ave, Wallkill. min admission. 5pm-6:30pm Hudson Valley LGBTQ’s Community Accupuncture Clinic. Reserve your spot today! Weekly community acupuncture takes place every Wednesday, 5-6:30pm in a relaxed and low-lit group setting using points on the ears, hands and feet. RSVPs highly suggested, though walk-ins will be welcomed when space is available. Reserve your spot at //bit.ly/LGBTQacupuncture. $5 suggested donation, no one turned away for lack of funds. Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center, 300 Wall St, Kingston.

6:30pm-8pm The Holy and Powerful Practice of Remembrance. A deep form of prayer which connects you with the Divine within. For new and experienced, inhabit your divinity, your true self. The Center is the Home of Flowing Spirit Healing and the Woodstock Sufi Center. Free, donations appreciated. Catskills Spiritual Healing Center, 1314 State Rt 28, West Hurley. Info: 845.679.8989, jwalzer@flowingspirit.com, flowingspirit.com/Events. 6:30pm Gurdjieff Study Group. Meets on Wednesdays, 6:30pm in Stone Ridge. For information and directions, respond to Jim by email: gstudygroup@gmail.com. 7pm Live @ The Falcon: Acoustic Open Mic Sessions. Singer-Songwriters’ Sessions. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 7pm-9pm Writers Speak Easy in Kingston. Do you love the spoken word? Writers Speak Easy is a monthly open-mic roundtable. Participants are encouraged to perform their work! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 7pm-10:30pm Heartbeat Music Hall of Grahamsville Open Mic. Every Wed. No charge,down home hospitality. Donations welcome. Info: 845-985-2731; davidtrestyn@yahoo.com. Heartbeat Music Hall of Grahamsville, 304 Main St, Grahamsville. 7pm-10pm Trivia Night. Calling all trivia nerds ~ flex your mental muscles and compete for prizes. Play solo or as part of a team. Info: 845-688-2828; emersonresort.com. Woodnotes Grill - Emerson Resort, Rt 28, Mt. Pleasant. emersonresort.com. 7pm-8:30pm Actors & Musician Creative Seed Support Group. Come share your work in progress! Weds nights 7 - 8:30pm. Admission by donation. Info: reikyogachant.com; 203-2465711. Reiki Yoga Chant Healing Arts Center, Stone Ridge. 7pm-11pm Chess Night. Free every Wednesday. Players should bring their own boards & pieces. Info: 845-658-9048. Rosendale Cafe, Main St, Rosendale. 7pm-9pm Volleyball Game. A pickup volleyball game. Ongoing every Wednesday, 7-9pm. Enter the Center at the entrance on the left side, as you face the school from Lucas Ave. 845-6160710. Rondout Municipal Center, 1915 Lucas Ave, Cottekill. $6. 7pm-8:30pm Introduction to Tibetan Buddhism Class. Free 90-minute program includes 30 min of Quiet Sitting Meditation followed by 1 of 8 lectures on the history, practices & principles of the Karma Kagyu tradition of Tibetan Buddhism. 845-679-5906 for more info. Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, 335 Meads Mountain Rd, Woodstock. 7:30pm The Poughkeepsie Newyorkers Barbershop Chorus. An all male a Cappella group, that sings in the uniquely American “Barbershop Style� of close four-part harmony. Guests are always welcome. Sight-reading not required. Meets every Wednesday at 7:30pm. Crown Heights Clubhouse, 34 Nassau Rd, Poughkeepsie. newyorkerschorus.org.

8pm Live @ The Falcon: Missy Andersen. Award-winning Soul Blues Female Artist. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro.

Thursday

7/4

7am-10pm Cornwall: Independence Day Celebration. A full day of festivities including breakfast, pet show, children’s art show, inflatables, games, music, magic, lobster sale, pie eating contest, entertainment, and parade. Celebration ends with fireworks at 9:30pm. Cornwall Town Hall Park., 183 Main St, Cornwall. 9am-4pm P.L.A.Y: Theater. A 3-week exploration of Music Theater Performance and Production for regional youth age 9-15. Through 8/19. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter.org. per 3 week session. 9:30am-10am Reading of The Declaration of Independence at The Rosendale Theatre Collective. Hear the words that changed the world forever! A reading of the Declaration of Independence sponsored by The Blue Stone Press. Twenty community members will take turns reading the document that changed the world. Followed by coffee & birthday cake. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St, Rosendale. Info: 845-658-8989, info@rosendaletheatre. org, rosendaletheatre.org. Free. 9:30am Create! Summer Arts Camp in Cottekill. For 4th to 8th graders with Katalin Pazmandi! 4 different art sessions Create Puppets, Instruments, Drawings, Music! Monday through Thursday or Friday sessions - Art in The Woods. Every week in the month of July. $225 per session. Info: 845-687-3312; fufaeg@gmail.com; Createsummer.weebly.com. Owl Spirit Garden, 61 Coxing Rd, Cottekill. Info: 8456873312, Fufaeg@ gmail.com, Createsummer.weebly.com. Per session. Includes material fee. Discount available for siblings. 10am-4pm Independence Day Celebration at Hanford Mills Museum. Old-fashioned family fun! It’s going to be a BYOF celebration at Hanford Mills Museum on July 4th. That’s bring your own frog for the frog jumping contests. No frog? No problem. Organizers say that watching the contests are just as much fun. The Independence Day Celebration, which runs 10 am to 4 pm on July 4, also features a fishing derby with prizes for kids, steam power and water power demonstrations in the Museum’s historic sawmill, gristmill and woodworking shop, the Hanford Mills String Band, field games, children’s activities, food & refreshments available, and local vendors. $9/ adults and teens, $7/seniors and AAA members, & $4.50/retired military. Info: hanfordmills.org; 607.278.5744. Hanford Mills Museum, 51 County Highway 12, East Meredith. 10am-1pm Hyde Park: Independence Day Celebration. Annual parade and festivities. Steps off at 10am form the Hyde Park Cinemas’ parking lot. Info: 845-229-5111. Roosevelt Theater, 4060 Albany Post Rd, Hyde Park. 10am-4pm Independence Day at Knox’s Head-

5:30pm-6:30pm Chess Club. A weekly drop-in chess club, guided by instructor Alec Butterfield. Come to learn the game, refresh your skills, and engage in play with your community. Beginners and more accomplished players are welcome. Sets provided, or bring your own. Ages 7-adult. Free. Info: 518-822-1438; hello@hudsonhall.org. Hudson Hall, 327 Warren St, Hudson. hudsonhall.org. 5:30pm-6:30pm Woodstock Informal Service. Followed by reflections and spiritual discussions. Everyone welcome. 845-679-9534. First Church of Christ, 85 Tinker St, Woodstock. 5:30pm-7:30pm Prenatal Class. Ongoing on Wednesdays. 845-563-8043 for more info. Mackintosh Community Room, 147 Lake St, Newburgh. 6pm-10pm Hunter: Fireworks Celebration. Celebrating the Fourth of July a day early with a BBQ. Followed by an ice cream party, lawn games, and fireworks at dusk. Scribner’s Catskill Lodge, Hunter. Info: Scribner’s Catskill Lodge; 518-6285130; scribnerslodge.com. 6pm-10pm Port Jervis: Independence Day Celebration. Tastings from local restaurants, ice cream parlors, cafes, wineries and breweries from 6-8pm. Fireworks at dusk.Tickets can be purchased at City Clerk’s Office (20 Hammond St.) or at the Youth Center (134 Pike St.). Tickets cost $20 for adults and $10 for kids ages 5 to 12. Only 500 tickets available. Held at 4th St, Port Jervis.

PARTY LIKE ITS 1969

50 years of Celebrations & Festivals throughout the Hudson Valley Reach your target customers

6pm-10pm Town of Newburgh: Independence Day Celebration. Party begins at 6pm featuring local Fire Company displays, food, games and fireworks at dusk. Cronomer Hill Park, Newburgh. Info: 845-564-4552. 6pm-10pm Margaretville Field Days. PayOne-Price Rides.$17/per ticket. Carnival Days runs 7/2–7/7. Margaretville Village Park behind Freshtown Market.

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7/18

Deadline. Published 7/16.

#ATSKILL Tannersville

Margaretville

845-334-8200

Saugerties 7OODSTOCK Kingston

Ellenville

2HINEBECK

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Poughkeepsie

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24

ALMANAC WEEKLY

quarters. See a small cannon fired at 1 & 4pm. Tours on the hour. Free admission. Info: 845-5615498. State Museum of New York, Albany. Info: 845-561-1765, chad.johnson@parks.ny.gov, nysparks.com. 10:30am-4:30pm Liberty: 4th of July Festival. Celebration will kick-off with a classic car show at 10:30 a.m., followed parade at noon, vendors, entertainment, music, and activities for the children - bouncy houses, face painting, games, and fireworks at dusk. Info: 845-292-9797. Main St & La Polt Park, Liberty. libertynychamber.com/ event/liberty-festival-4th-july-2019. 11am Saugerties: Independence Day Celebration. Annual parade (organized by the Saugerties Fire Department) will step off at 11 a.m. from the Saugerties High School and end at Cantine Field. Fireworks at Cantine Field at dusk. Info: 845-246-2800. Cantine Memorial Field, Saugerties. Info:villagesaugerties.digitaltowpath. org. Cantine Memorial Field, Saugerties. villagesaugerties.digitaltowpath.org:10064/content/ Generic/View/123. 11am-5pm Art Exhibit: Mid-Summer Salon. Works by Betsy Jacaruso and Cross River Artists. Exhibit will display July & August at The Courtyard, 43-2 E. Market St, Rhinebeck. Hours: Thurs-Sat 11am-5pm, Sun 11am-4pm. 845-5164435; betsyjacarusoartist.com. Free admission. 11am Fourth of July Celebration at Mohonk Mountain House. Events and activities throughout each day. Be sure to wear your red, white and blue and join in the fun! Fireworks at dusk on July 4th.An overnight reservation is required to join in the 4th of July activities. Event starts 7/1-7/5 - times vary. Info: mohonk.com/events/ holidays-at-mohonk/4th-of-july-celebration/; 855-883-3798. Mohonk Mountain House, 1000 Mountain Rest Rd, New Paltz. 12pm Ellenville: 4th of July Parade & Fireworks. Ellenville’s annual An Old-fashioned parade will step-off at noon from Liberty Square. There will be street vendors all along the parade route. Fireworks at dusk behind the Old V.A.W. building near Joseph Y. Resnick Airport, off Rt 209, Ellenville. Info: 845-647-4620l ewcoc.com. 12pm-10pm City of Newburgh: 4th of July Celebration. Family Day begins at noon with vendors and artists on the river at Unico Park. Music from 7-9 pm. Fireworks at People’s Waterfront Park at 9pm. Newburgh’s Waterfront Unico Park, Front St & Fourth St, Newburgh. Info: 845-565-2138; cityofnewburgh-ny.gov. Newburgh’s Waterfront Unico Park, Front St & 4th St, Newburgh. 12pm-4pm Independence Day Program at Fort Montgomery. Witness the ROAR and THUNDER at the Grand Battery when the fort’s 6-pounder cannon “Ana” is fired at noon! Camp activities and military drills will take place throughout the day. Info: 845-446-2134. Fort Montgomery, 690 Route 9W, Fort Montgomery. palisadesparksconservancy.org. 12pm-10pm Margaretville Field Days & Independence Day Celebration. Festivities will kickoff with Margaretville’s annual BBQ beginning at noon - until they sell-out! Carnival Pay-One-Price Rides, 1–6 p.m, $20/per ticket. Local Craft Beer Tasting from the Catskill Brewery 6-10 p.m. Music by DJ Pat Del from 6–11 p.m. Event is followed by a large fireworks display at 9:30 p.m. Special Viewing area available. Margaretville Village Park behind Freshtown Market. Info: margaretvillefiredept.org. Margaretville Village Park behind Freshtown Market. 12:30pm-6pm I Ching Oracle and Tarot Card Readings with esoteric scholar and author Timothy Liu. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/30 minutes. 2pm 4th of July Celebration at Washington’s Headquarters. Reading at 2.p.m -Capturing our Past - In the Mid to Late 19th Century. Hear about Washington’s Headquarters’ early years as we approach the 169th anniversary of it’s’ designation as the first publicly operated historic site

Effective June 1, 2019, due to increased costs, every legal notice printed in Ulster Publishing’s newspapers Almanac Weekly, Kingston Times, New Paltz Times, Saugerties Times and Woodstock Times will have a $25 affidavit fee in addition to the government mandated rate for publication itself. UP Ulster Publishing

in the nation on July 4, 1850! Listen to how and why that happened. Hear about the motivation to save Washington’s Headquarters before so many other sites. Learn what it was like to visit the Site 130 years ago. Compare that period of time with the present as you walk through the same rooms the Washington’s once did. Free with Museum admission$1-$6. Info: 845-562-1195. Washington’s Headquarters State Historic Site, 84 Liberty St., Newburgh. Washington’s Headquarters State Historic Site, 84 Liberty St., Newburgh. 2pm-10pm An Old-Fashioned Independence Day in Germantown. Celebration will begin at 2 p.m. offering 18th century crafts, reenactors, food/refreshments, music and entertainment. View of the Saugerties fireworks over the Hudson River at dusk. Info: 518-537-6622. Clermont State Historical Site, Germantown.friendsofclermont.org/events. Clermont State Historical Site, Germantown. friendsofclermont.org/events. 2pm-3:30pm Independence Day at the New Windsor Cantonment. Military drills and cannon firing at 2 p.m. and a visitor participatory reading of the Declaration of Independence at 3 p.m. New Windsor Cantonment State Historic Site, 374 Temple Hill Rd, New Windsor. Info: 845-561-1765, chad.johnson@parks.ny.gov, nysparks.com. New Windsor Cantonment State Historic Site, 374 Temple Hill Rd, New Windsor. Info: 845-561-1765, chad.johnson@parks.ny.gov, nysparks.com. 3pm Tannersville: 4th of July Celebration. Parade steps off at 3 p.m. from the Greene Food Mart and winds its way down to the Village Hall on Main Street, where there will be music at Rip Van Winkle Lake, followed by fireworks at dusk. Info: 518-589-5850. 4pm-9:30pm Kingston: Independence Day Celebration. Food vendors will start serving at 4 p.m., with live music from 5-9pm. The music lineup: Ivory Rose (pop) at 5pm.; Geezüs Butlers (arena rock) at 6:30pm.; and Mister Kick (dance rock, R&B and hits) at 8pm. After the music performances, Mayor Steve Noble will welcome the crowd at 9:15pm, followed by a color guard flag presentation and the national anthem. Followed by the fireworks display at dusk, presented by Mainetti & Mainetti, PC and O’Connor & Partners PLLC, will begin at 9:30pm. The City of Kingston and UCAT will be offering free shuttle services to the Waterfront. Due to maintenance, the Wurts Street Bridge will be closed from Monday, July 1 to Thursday, July 4. No pedestrians will be allowed on the Route 9W Bridge from 6-10:30pm. T.R. Gallo Park, 73 West Strand St, Kingston. ulstercountyalive.com/calendar/kingston-july-fourth-celebration-1. 5pm-10pm Cairo: Fireworks Celebration. Festivities and live music begins at 5pm, followed by fireworks at dusk. Angelo Canna Town Park, Joseph D Spencer Lane, Cairo. Info: townofcairo. com. 5pm-9:30pm Highland Falls: Independence Day Celebration. Festivities will include food, games and entertainment starting at 5 p.m. The evening will end with fireworks at 9:15 p.m. Roe Avenue, Highland Falls. Info: hffd.net. 6pm Wallkill: 4th of July Fireworks. Fireworks will be displayed at dusk at the Town of Wallkill Golf Course. Parking at Circleville Elementary School. No parking at the golf course. Info: townofwallkill.com. 6pm-10pm Orange County Speedway Annual Fireworks Extravaganza. Festivities begin at 6pm with live music from Black Dirt Bandits, followed by a set from DJ Jason Jaso. Fireworks take place at dusk. Free grandstand seating for the show with concessions and beverages available. Info: orangecountyfair.com. Orange County Fair Speedway, 100 Carpenter Ave, Middletown. 6pm-9pm July 4th Celebration at the Hasbrouck House. Butterfield and Atticus Farm present a Summer BBQ. $45. Info: butterfieldstoneridge.com; 845-687-0887. Info: 845-6870736, hello@hasbrouckhouseny.com,bit. ly/2Vz2Z8f. Advance tickets recommended. Hasbrouck House, 3805 Main St, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-0736, hello@hasbrouckhouseny. com, bit.ly/2Vz2Z8f. Advance tickets recommended. 6pm Wine Night - Thirsty Thursday. Celebrate every Thursday at Woodnotes Grille with the Wine Club! Enjoy 25% off all bottles of wine and special selections from the cellar by the glass. Info: 845-688-2828; emersonresort.com. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper. 6:30pm-8:30pm 4th of July Concert on the Lawn: New York Swing Exchange. Bring lawn chairs, blankets, and picnic baskets. No glass please. Refreshments also available on site. Info: 845-469-2713. Sugar Loaf Crossing, 1405 Kings Hwy, Sugar Loaf. 7pm-9:30pm Rough Draft Trivia with Rich. Every Thursday* at Rough Draft is trivia night with Rich Morrison—a fun-filled night of teamwork, friendly competition, and lots of laughs! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail. com. 7pm-9pm Windham: Fireworks Celebration & Parade. An evening parade kicks-off at 7pm, followed by fireworks at 9pm at Windham Mountain, Windham. 7pm-9:30pm 4th of July at Bannerman Castle. Cruise from the Beacon Waterfront to Bannerman

June 27, 2019

Island! Event includes a guided walking tour of the Island with a Bannerman Castle Trust historian. There will be a sneak peek of the new Bannerman Residence Visitor Center, which is scheduled to open in late July. Light refreshments will be served on this tour and a cruise back to Beacon waterfront. The Bannerman Castle Trust Inc., in cooperation with the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation, provides a public tour of Bannerman Castle and Pollepel Island. All proceeds will benefit the Pollepel Island and Bannerman Castle preservation. $40. Info: 845-203-1316; bannermancastle.org. Beacon Institute Dock, Beacon. 7:30pm-10pm July 4th Fireworks Cruise on the Hudson. Thunder Ridge featuring Dorraine Scofield & JB Hunt. Cash bar & snacks available on board. Board at 7:30pm; Cruise from 8-10pm. Boat departs from 1 East Strand St, Kingston. $30/adults, $20/4-11 yr olds. Tickets: 845-3404700; HudsonRiverCruises.com. Hudson River Cruise/Rip Van Winkle, Rondout Landing, Kingston. hudsonrivercruises.com. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Soul Sacrifice. Joyous blues, funk & soul arrangements. Info: 845-2367970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm 4th of July Concert - Live @ The Falcon: Dylan Doyle Band. Imaginative, original young guitarist. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8:30pm City of Poughkeepsie: Annual 4th of July Spectacular. Fireworks will begin at dusk and can be viewed from the waterfront or the Walkway Over the Hudson. Admission Price: $12.50, Free/ 10 & under. Registration and tickets are required for the Walkway Over the Hudson; Free at Waryas Park. Parking is free in municipal parking lots beginning at 5pm and in metered spaces after 6pm. Handicapped parking will be available at Waryas Park. Donations appreciated. Rain date July 5. Waryas Park, 1 Main St, Poughkeepsie. 9pm Bethel: 4th of July Fireworks. Fireworks will begin at dusk overlooking White Lake! Free parking at 3586 Route 55, Kauneonga Lake.

Friday

7/5

Create! Summer Arts Camp in Cottekill. For 4th to 8th graders with Katalin Pazmandi! 4 different art sessions Create Puppets, Instruments, Drawings, Music! Monday through Thursday or Friday sessions - Art in The Woods. Every week in the month of July. $225 per session. Info: 845-687-3312; fufaeg@gmail.com; Createsummer.weebly.com. Owl Spirit Garden, 61 Coxing Rd, Cottekill. Info: 8456873312, Fufaeg@gmail. com, Createsummer.weebly.com. Per session. Includes material fee. Discount available for siblings. 8:30am-10pm Hudson: Fireworks Cruise. View Catskill Fireworks aboard the Hudson-Athens Ferry For reservations, call 888-804-9716;518822-1014; hudsoncruises.com. 8:30am-9:30am Aquoga Aquatic Yoga & Cardio Class. Arrive 10 mins early to register. Monday & Friday mornings through 8/9. Note: No Class on: 7/12 & 7/15. Moriello Pool, 40 Mulberry St, New Paltz. facebook.com/aquoga. or buy 10 class card for 10% off. 9am-4:30pm Colonial Game Days at the Persen House. Bring your family and see how different or perhaps similar games and toys were in the 18th century as compared to those of today! Matthewis Persen House, 74 John St, Kingston. Info: 845-340-3040, countyclerk@co.ulster. ny.us, bit.ly/persenhouse. 9am-4pm P.L.A.Y: Theater. A 3-week exploration of Music Theater Performance and Production for regional youth age 9-15. Through 8/19. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter.org. per 3 week session. 9:30am Tennis at Woodstock Tennis Club. Morning tennis drills with Tennis Pro on clay courts. Players should be able to hit ground strokes and move around the court. Membership not required. Meets M - T - W - TH - F, 9:30am. No reservation necessary. $20. More info: nytennis40@gmail.com; 845-679-5900. WTC located near corner of Zena and Sawkill, next to Shakti Yoga. Woodstock Tennis Club, 1703 Sawkill Rd, Woodstock. 9:30am-3:30pm Create! Summer Arts Camp in Cottekill. For 4th to 8th graders with Katalin Pazmandi! 4 different art sessions Create Puppets, Instruments, Drawings, Music! Monday through Thursday or Friday sessions - Art in The Woods. Every week in the month of July. $225 per session. Info: 845-687-3312; fufaeg@gmail.com; Createsummer.weebly.com. Owl Spirit Garden, 61 Coxing Rd, Cottekill. Info: 8456873312, Fufaeg@gmail.com, Createsummer. weebly.com. Per session. Includes material fee. Discount available for siblings. 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 Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville. 10am-5pm Goshen Farmers’ Market. Info:

845-294-5557; goshennychamber.com. Goshen’s Village Green, Goshen. 11am Fourth of July Celebration at Mohonk Mountain House. Events and activities throughout each day. Be sure to wear your red, white and blue and join in the fun! Fireworks at dusk on July 4th.An overnight reservation is required to join in the 4th of July activities. Event starts 7/1-7/5 - times vary. Info: mohonk.com/events/ holidays-at-mohonk/4th-of-july-celebration/; 855-883-3798. Mohonk Mountain House, 1000 Mountain Rest Rd, New Paltz. 11:30am-4:30pm Past Life Regression and Private Angelic Channeling Sessions with therapist and angelic channel Margaret Doner. Past Life Regression recovers memories of past lives, a profoundly effective healing process that assists in uncovering the karma and motivations that guide your present life. An Angelic Channeling session opens up a dialogue for you to interact with entities of the angelic realm from which in-depth information is transmitted through Margaret on your unique soul’s purpose, karmic history. Gain clear and direct access to your Higher Self. First Friday of every month at Mirabai. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $125/90 minute session. 11:30am-12:30pm Free Chair Yoga. An hour of chair yoga and Sound Bath meditation! This activity is made possible with a grant from the Catskill Fortnightly Club. Info: mountaintoplibrary.org. Mountain Top Library, 6093 Main St, Tannersville. Free. 12pm-5pm Abstrakt: A Group Exhibition of Abstract Art. Includes work by forty four artists that create a wide range of abstract work using various mediums. Show exhibits through 7/28, Friday-Sunday, 12-5pm. Emerge Gallery, 228 Main St, Saugerties. Info: 845-247-7515, emergegalleryny@gmail.com, emergegalleryny.com. 12:05pm-1pm Woodstock Senior Basic Pilates with Christine Anderson. A floor work course promoting improvement of balance, coordination, focus, awareness breathing, strength and flexibility. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville. 12:30pm-6pm Crystal Readings, Tarot Readings and Chakra Attunement every Friday with Owl Medicine Woman Mary Vukovic. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/25 minute reading. 1pm-3pm Scrabble Club. Join us for our new Scrabble Club! Bring your extensive vocabulary and your enjoyment for games to our Scrabble events. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@ gmail.com, esopuslibrary.org. 1:30pm-3:30pm Woodstock Senior Citizens Club Game Day. Every Friday. They have scrabble, Monopoly, Jenga, Bridge, etc. Info: 845-6798537. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 2pm-3pm Book Journaling. Experience the process of book journaling. Make the books you read more memorable by creating an artistic journal. Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. Info: 845-757-3771, tivoliprograms@gmail.com. Must sign up to attend, as space is limited. This is a free event. For ages 11-16. 2pm-9:45pm Middletown: Orange County Stampede Rodeo Festival & Fireworks. The Orange County Stampede Rodeo Festival runs Friday, July 5 and Saturday, July 6. The event will feature bull riders competing for a $5,000 prize. Fireworks will take place on Friday from 9:30 to 9:45pm. Admission for lawn seats are $20 for adults and $14 for kids 10 and under. Children under 3 are free. Orange County Fair Speedway, 239 Wisner Ave, Middletown. 3pm-9pm Shinedown with special guests Badflower, Dinosaur Pile-up and Broken Hands. Each of Shinedown’s 24 charting singles on Billboard’s Mainstream Rock Songs Chart has reached the top five – an unparalleled feat. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter. org. General Lawn. 5pm-10pm Town of Wappinger’s: Independence Community Celebration. Three days of festivities - live entertainment, vendors and a carnival full of rides and games. The fireworks will take place on Saturday, July 6 at dusk. Wappingers Junior High School, 30 Major MacDonald Way, Wappingers Falls. 5pm-6pm Families Dance Together. This intergenerational class is an opportunity for children and adults to experience the joy of creating simple dances together. Jacob’s Pillow, 358 George Carter Rd, Becket, MA. bit.ly/2u0exjg. Adults $7, Children $4. 5pm-8pm Saugerties First Friday. Every month in the village of Saugerties, businesses extend their hours to visitors and provide various offerings such as pop up shops, tastings, gallery openings & special deals. Partition, Market and Main streets in Saugerties. 6pm-9pm Catskill: Fireworks Celebration. A Beach Boys Tribute Band will set the mood at 6pm and fireworks at dusk. Dutchman’s Landing


June 27, 2019 Park, Main St, Catskill. 6pm-10pm Highland: Independence Day Celebration & Fireworks. Old-fashioned fun, DJ Reg, local food vendors, games, bounce castle. Town field behind Methodist Church, Vineyard Avenue and Main Street, Highland. Info: 845-691-2144; townoflloyd.com. 6pm-8pm Summer Concerts. Bring your own picnic & lemonade, live music. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 6pm-10pm Margaretville Field Days. Carnival & Rides. Annual MFD Antique Car Show. Music: The Roundhouse Rockers. Field Days run through 7/7. Margaretville Village Park behind Freshtown Market. 6pm-7:30pm “First Friday” Shabbat Dinner. Family-friendly Kiddush, candle-lighting, singing, and blessings. Dairy/Vegetarian Potluck Dinner. Woodstock J, 1682 Glasco Turnpike, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-2218, info@wjcshul. org, wjcshul.org. 6:30pm-8:30pm Friday Night Music Series: N.A.S.H. Bring your lawn chairs and dancing shoes and enjoy live music. For more info call the Village Office: 845-457-9661. Downtown Montgomery, Clinton St, Montgomery. 6:30pm-8:30pm Jewish Renewal Shabbat

legal notices LEGAL NOTICE ASSISTANCE PROJECT FOR 2019 FISCAL YEAR PUBLIC NOTICE 5339 CAPITAL ASSISTANCE PROJECT FOR 2019 FISCAL YEAR Public notice is hereby made that Ulster County is applying for federal and state financial assistance to administer and maintain a public transit program including late evening and early commuter service for rural and urban areas in Ulster County and connecting service to Orange and Dutchess Counties. The transportation service will be available to the general public during all hours of operation. The program is expected to be financed by Federal Section 5339 public transportation funds with additional funds to be provided from New York State Department of Transportation and Ulster County funds. The total federal share is expected to be $932,250.00. Comments on the proposed project are invited from the general public, private bus and taxi companies, other public transportation providers and human service agencies. Interested parties may comment on the project or obtain more details about the project by writing to: Carol Hargrove, Director of Public Transportation, 1 Danny Circle, Kingston, NY 12401, phone number: (845) 340-3335. The project is available for review at the Ulster County Transit Center, 1 Danny Circle, Kingston, NY 12401, phone number: (845) 340-3333. The projects are as follows: 2- 26’ Low Floor Cutaway Buses and 2- 35’ Low Floor Diesel Buses Human service agencies that receive assistance from other federal agencies for non-emergency transportation services are encouraged to participate and coordinate with the provider in the planning, design and delivery of transportation services. Agencies may obtain copies of the service proposal and submit proposals for service coordination. Private bus and taxi operators may request copies of the project service description from the above-named person and may submit comments on the service as described. If you wish to comment on any aspect of the proposed project, submit a proposal or a request for service coordination or request a public hearing on the project, you must make your interest known in writing within ten days of the date of this publication and provide your comments within ten days of your receipt of the project service description. Your requests and/ or comments must be forwarded to the abovenamed person. If there are no changes to this program of projects, this notice will be the final program of projects. If there are any changes to the program, a public notice will be reissued for the amended program. LEGAL NOTICE ASSISTANCE PROJECT FOR 2019 FISCAL YEAR PUBLIC NOTICE 5307 CAPITAL ASSISTANCE PROJECT FOR 2019 FISCAL YEAR Public notice is hereby made that Ulster County is applying for federal and state financial assistance to administer and maintain a public transit program including late evening and early commuter service for rural and urban areas in Ulster County and connecting service to Orange and Dutchess Counties. The transportation service will be available to the general public during all hours of operation. The program is expected to be financed by Federal Section 5307 public transportation funds with additional funds to be provided from New York State Department of Transportation and Ulster County funds. The total federal share is expected to be $464,134.00. Comments on the proposed project are invited from the general public, private bus and taxi companies, other public transportation providers and human service agencies. Interested parties may comment on the project or obtain more details about the project by writing to: Carol Hargrove, Director of Public Transportation, 1 Danny Circle, Kingston, NY 12401, phone number: (845) 340-3335. The project is

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ALMANAC WEEKLY Service. Joyful, musical, spiritual, and meditative services open to everyone. Vibrant, heartcentered, and soulful. Meets every first and third Friday night of the month in the Great Room at the Woodland Pond Health Center. Info: 845-4775457; kolhai.org. Woodland Pond, Woodland Pond Circle, New Paltz. Info: 845-477-5457, hello@kolhai.org, kolhai.org. 6:30pm Bannerman Castle - Movie Night: The Wizard of Oz. $40. 845-203-1316; bannermancastle.org/. Long Dock - Beacon Point Park, Long Dock Rd, Beacon. 6:30pm-10pm Beacon Sloop Club Potluck Meeting. Meets every 1st Friday of the month at 6:30pm! Open meeting at 7:30pm, followed by a Song Circle. Everyone welcomed. Beacon Sloop Club, 2 Red Flynn Dr, Beacon. beaconsloopclub. org. Free. 6:45pm-8:30pm Children & Teen Ministries. Meets Fridays: 6:45-8:30pm. Class for adults also offered. Info: 845-876-6923 or cdfcirone@ aol.com. Grace Bible Fellowship Church, Rt9 & Rt9G, Rhinebeck. 7pm-9:30pm Fishkill: Concert & Fireworks. Concert at 7pm and fireworks to follow at 9:15pm. A rain date 7/7. Held at Hopewell Recreation Park Pavilion, 392 Route 376, Hopewell Junction. 7pm-11pm LGBTQ Social, First Fridays. A night

available for review at the Ulster County Transit Center, 1 Danny Circle, Kingston, NY 12401, phone number: (845) 340-3333. The projects are as follows: 1 - 35’ Low Floor Diesel Bus Human service agencies that receive assistance from other federal agencies for non-emergency transportation services are encouraged to participate and coordinate with the provider in the planning, design and delivery of transportation services. Agencies may obtain copies of the service proposal and submit proposals for service coordination. Private bus and taxi operators may request copies of the project service description from the above-named person and may submit comments on the service as described. If you wish to comment on any aspect of the proposed project, submit a proposal or a request for service coordination or request a public hearing on the project, you must make your interest known in writing within ten days of the date of this publication and provide your comments within ten days of your receipt of the project service description. Your requests and/ or comments must be forwarded to the abovenamed person. If there are no changes to this program of projects, this notice will be the final program of projects. If there are any changes to the program, a public notice will be reissued for the amended program. 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 May 21, 2019 and approved by the Acting County Executive on May 29, 2019, 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: June 27, 2019 Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Kingston, New York Resolution No. 204 May 21, 2019 Authorizing Energy Efficiency Improvements To And For The Ulster County Law Enforcement Center, In And For The County Of Ulster, New York, At A Maximum Estimated Cost Of $242,000.00, And Authorizing The Issuance Of $242,000.00 Bonds Of Said County To Pay The Cost Thereof Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairwoman Archer and Legislators Gerentine, Maio, James Maloney, Joseph Maloney, Petit, and Rodriguez) Chairwoman of the Public Works and Capital Projects Committee, Laura Petit, Deputy Chair Dean J. Fabiano offer the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 203, dated and duly adopted on the date hereof, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has amended Capital Project No. 519 for energy efficiency improvements to and for the Ulster County Law Enforcement Center (Department of Public Works); and WHEREAS, said 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 any significant adverse effect on the environment; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the financing thereof; 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:

of LGTBQ pride celebrations, cocktails, food and socializing! Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-6373, mark@lydiasdeli. com, bit.ly/2KkGga9. 7pm Weekly Senior Citizen’s Bingo. Ongoing every Wednesday at 1:30pm & Friday at 7pm. 50/50 tickets available at 3 tickets/$2. Halftime complementary refreshments. Shawangunk Senior Center, 70 Main St, Napanoch. 7pm-8:30pm First Friday Concert Series. Local musicians offer a community benefit concert. Admission by free will donation. Christ’s Lutheran Church, 26 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-2336, bulletin@christwoodstock. org, bit.ly/2gaSj9e. 7pm Star Nations Sacred Circle. A not for skeptics discussion group concerning all things paranormal. Dedicated to acknowledging the extraterrestrial presence on earth. Bring a drink, snack to share & a comfortable lawn chair to sit under the stars afterwards for a UFO watch. Meets monthly on the 1st Friday of each month, 7pm. Info: 845-331-2662 or Symbolic-Studies.org. $5 suggested donation. Center for Symbolic Studies, 475 River Rd. Ext, Tillson. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Yunior Terry & Son de Altura. Authentic Afro-Cuban with NYC attitude. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348

Section 1. Energy efficiency improvements to and for the Ulster County Law Enforcement Center, in and for the County of Ulster, New York, including incidental improvements and expenses in connection therewith, are hereby authorized at a maximum estimated cost of $242,000.00. Section 2. It is hereby determined that the plan for the financing of the aforesaid maximum estimated cost is by the issuance of $242,000.00 serial bonds of the 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 class of objects or purposes is ten years, pursuant to subdivision 13 of paragraph a of Section 11.00 of the Local Finance Law. 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 1.1502. Other than as specified in this resolution, no monies are, or are reasonably expected to be, reserved, allocated on a longterm 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 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,

Route 9W, Marlboro. 8pm Ronald K. Brown/Evidence: A Dance Company - Grace and Mercy. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@bard.edu, bit.ly/2H3bDEt. $25. 8pm-10pm The Secret Garden. Musical based on Francis Hodges Burnett’s children’s novel. Presented by Rhinebeck Theatre Society. Info: 845-876-3080. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. Info: hermitsong@hotmail.com, bit.ly/2XEZk5W. $27. 8pm The Bandaged Place. From New York Stage and Film Founders’ Award recipient Harrison David Rivers. Directed by David Mendizábal. Powerhouse Theater, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie, NY. Info: 845-437-5370, bit. ly/2QTRvqu. 8pm Community Playback Theatre. Audience stories brought to life onstage. $10 suggested donation. Upcoming performances: Fridays, 8pm: 10/4, 11/1, 12/6; Sundays, 3pm: 8/4, 9/8, 1/5/2020. Boughton Place, 150 Kisor Rd, Highland. 9pm Wappingers Falls: The Hudson Valley Renegades Post Game Fireworks. Event held at 500 New York 9D, Wappingers Falls.

New York, on May 21, 2019 and approved by the Acting County Executive on May 29, 2019, 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: June 27, 2019 Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Kingston, New York Resolution No. 215 May 21, 2019 Authorizing The Cost Of Professional Services Relating To The Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster Facilities Master Plan, In And For The County Of Ulster, New York, At A Maximum Estimated Cost Of $110,000.00, And Authorizing The Issuance Of $110,000.00 Bonds Of Said County To Pay The Cost Thereof Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairwoman Archer and Legislators Gerentine, Maio, James Maloney, Joseph Maloney, Petit, and Rodriguez) Chairman of the Legislative Programs, Education and Community Services Committee, James Delaune, and Deputy Chair Heidi Haynes, offer the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 214, dated and duly adopted on the date hereof, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has amended Capital Project No. 491 relating to professional services for the Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster Master Plan; and WHEREAS, said 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 any significant adverse effect on the environment; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the financing thereof; 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. Professional services for the further development of the Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster Facilities Master Plan, in and for the County of Ulster, New York, including incidental expenses in connection therewith, is hereby authorized at a maximum estimated cost of $110,000.00. Section 2. It is hereby determined that the plan for the financing of the aforesaid maximum estimated cost is by the issuance of $110,000.00 serial bonds of the County hereby authorized to be issued therefor pursuant to the provisions of the Local Finance Law; provided, however, that to the extent that any grants-in-aid are received for such specific object or purpose, the amount of bonds to be issued pursuant to this resolution shall be reduced dollar for dollar. 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. 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


26 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 summary form 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 May 21, 2019 and approved by the Acting County Executive on May 29, 2019, 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: June 27, 2019 Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Kingston, New York Resolution No. 219 May 21, 2019 Authorizing The Purchase Of Furniture For Various Ulster County Community CollegeSUNY Ulster Buildings, In And For The County Of Ulster, New York, At A Maximum Estimated Cost Of $300,000.00, And Authorizing The Issuance Of $300,000.00 Bonds Of Said County To Pay The Cost Thereof Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairwoman Archer and Legislators Gerentine, Maio, James Maloney, Joseph Maloney, Petit, and Rodriguez) Chairman of the Legislative Programs, Education and Community Services Committee, James Delaune, and Deputy Chair Heidi Haynes, offer the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 218, dated and duly adopted on the date hereof, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has established Capital Project No. 545 for the purchase of furniture for various Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster buildings; and WHEREAS, said 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 any significant adverse effect on the environment; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the financing thereof; 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 purchase of furniture for various Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster buildings, in and for the County of Ulster, New York, including incidental and expenses in connection therewith, is hereby authorized at a maximum estimated cost of $300,000.00.

ALMANAC WEEKLY Section 2. It is hereby determined that the plan for the financing of the aforesaid maximum estimated cost is by the issuance of $300,000.00 serial bonds of the County hereby authorized to be issued therefor pursuant to the provisions of the Local Finance Law; provided, however, that to the extent that any grants-in-aid are received for such class of objects or purposes, the amount of bonds to be issued pursuant to this resolution shall be reduced dollar for dollar. 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 32 of paragraph a of Section 11.00 of the Local Finance Law. 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 summary form 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 May 21, 2019 and approved by the Acting County Executive on May 29, 2019, 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: June 27, 2019 Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Kingston, New York Resolution No. 198 May 21, 2019 Authorizing The Reconstruction Of The Slope On Old Tongore Road, In And For The County Of Ulster, New York, At A Maximum Estimated Cost Of $532,000.00, And Authorizing The Issue Of $532,000.00 Bonds Of Said County To Pay The Cost Thereof Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairwoman Archer and Legislators Gerentine, Maio, James Maloney, Joseph Maloney, Petit, and Rodriguez) Chairwoman of the Public Works and Capital Projects Committee, Laura Petit, and Deputy Chair Dean J. Fabiano offer the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 197, dated

and duly adopted on the date hereof, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has amended Capital Project No. 543 for the reconstruction of the slope on Old Tongore Road (Department of Public Works); and WHEREAS, said 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 any significant adverse effect on the environment; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the financing thereof; 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 reconstruction of the slope on Old Tongore Road, in and for the County of Ulster, New York, including incidental improvements and expenses in connection therewith, is hereby authorized at a maximum estimated cost of $532,000.00. Section 2. It is hereby determined that the plan for the financing of the aforesaid maximum estimated cost is by the issuance of $532,000.00 serial bonds of the 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 fifteen years, pursuant to subdivision 20(c) of paragraph a of Section 11.00 of the Local Finance Law. 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 1.1502. Other than as specified in this resolution, no monies are, or are reasonably expected to be, reserved, allocated on a longterm 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 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 May 21, 2019 and approved by the Acting County Executive on May 29, 2019, 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

June 27, 2019

of publication of this notice, or such obligations were authorized in violations of the provisions of the Constitution. Dated: June 27, 2019 Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Kingston, New York Resolution No. 200 May 21, 2019 Authorizing The Construction Of ADA Accessible Parking At The Ulster County Fair Grounds, In And For The County Of Ulster, New York, At A Maximum Estimated Cost Of $55,200.00, And Authorizing The Issuance Of $55,200.00 Bonds Of Said County To Pay The Cost Thereof Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairwoman Archer and Legislators Gerentine, Maio, James Maloney, Joseph Maloney, Petit, and Rodriguez) Chairwoman of the Public Works and Capital Projects Committee, Laura Petit, Deputy Chair Dean J. Fabiano offer the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 199, dated and duly adopted on the date hereof, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has established Capital Project No. 544 for the construction of ADA accessible parking at the Ulster County Fair Grounds (Department of Public Works); and WHEREAS, said 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 any significant adverse effect on the environment; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the financing thereof; 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 construction of ADA accessible parking at the Ulster County fair grounds, in and for the County of Ulster, New York, including incidental improvements and expenses in connection therewith, is hereby authorized at a maximum estimated cost of $55,200.00. Section 2. It is hereby determined that the plan for the financing of the aforesaid maximum estimated cost is by the issuance of $55,200.00 serial bonds of the 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 ten years, pursuant to subdivision 20(f ) of paragraph a of Section 11.00 of the Local Finance Law. 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 1.1502. Other than as specified in this resolution, no monies are, or are reasonably expected to be, reserved, allocated on a longterm basis, or otherwise set aside with respect to the permanent funding of


June 27, 2019 the object or purpose described herein. Section 9. This resolution, which takes effect immediately, shall be published in summary form 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 May 21, 2019 and approved by the Acting County Executive on May 29, 2019, 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: June 27, 2019 Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Kingston, New York Resolution No. 211 May 21, 2019 Authorizing The Replacement Of The Gym Wall At Ulster County Community CollegeSUNY Ulster, In And For The County Of Ulster, New York, At A Maximum Estimated Cost Of $293,000.00, And Authorizing The Issuance Of $293,000.00 Bonds Of Said County To Pay The Cost Thereof Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairwoman Archer and Legislators Gerentine, Maio, James Maloney, Joseph Maloney, Petit, and Rodriguez) Chairman of the Legislative Programs, Education and Community Services Committee, James Delaune, and Deputy Chair Heidi Haynes, offer the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 210, dated and duly adopted on the date hereof, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has amended Capital Project No. 466 for the replacement of the gym wall at Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster; and WHEREAS, said 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 any significant adverse effect on the environment; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the financing thereof, 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 replacement of the gym wall at the Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster, in and for the County of Ulster, New York, including incidental improvements and expenses in connection therewith, is hereby authorized at a maximum estimated cost of $293,000.00. Section 2. It is hereby determined that the plan for the financing of the aforesaid maximum estimated cost is by the issuance of $293,000.00 serial bonds of the County hereby authorized to be issued therefor pursuant to the provisions of the Local Finance Law; provided, however, that to the extent that any grants-in-aid are received for such specific object or purpose, the amount of bonds to be issued pursuant to this resolution shall be reduced dollar for dollar. 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. 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

ALMANAC WEEKLY 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 summary form 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 May 21, 2019 and approved by the Acting County Executive on May 29, 2019, 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: June 27, 2019 Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Kingston, New York Resolution No. 213 May 21, 2019 Authorizing The Construction Of The Vanderlyn Pedestrian Bridge At Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster, In And For The County Of Ulster, New York, At A Maximum Estimated Cost Of $100,000.00, And Authorizing The Issuance Of $100,000.00 Bonds Of Said County To Pay The Cost Thereof Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairwoman Archer and Legislators Gerentine, Maio, James Maloney, Joseph Maloney, Petit, and Rodriguez) Chairman of the Legislative Programs, Education and Community Services Committee, James Delaune, and Deputy Chair Heidi Haynes, offer the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 212, dated and duly adopted on the date hereof, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has amended Capital Project No. 468 for the construction of the Vanderlyn Pedestrian Bridge at Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster; and WHEREAS, said 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 any significant adverse effect on the environment; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the financing thereof; 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 construction of the Vanderlyn Pedestrian Bridge at the Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster, in and for the County of Ulster, New York, including incidental improvements and expenses in connection therewith, is hereby authorized at a maximum estimated cost of $100,000.00. Section 2. It is hereby determined that the plan for the financing of the aforesaid maximum estimated cost is by the issuance of $100,000.00 serial bonds of the County hereby authorized to be issued therefor pursuant to the provisions of the Local Finance Law; provided, however, that to the extent that any grants-in-aid are received for such specific object or purpose, the amount of bonds to be issued pursuant to this resolution shall be reduced dollar for dollar. Section 3. It is hereby determined that the period of probable usefulness of the aforesaid specific object or purpose is twenty years, pursuant to subdivision 10 of paragraph a of Section 11.00 of the Local Finance Law. 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 summary form 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 May 21, 2019 and approved by the Acting County Executive on May 29, 2019, 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: June 27, 2019 Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Kingston, New York Resolution No. 217 May 21, 2019 Authorizing Improvement To The Heating Ventilating And Air-Conditioning Systems At Various Ulster County Community CollegeSUNY Ulster Buildings, In And For The County Of Ulster, New York, At A Maximum Estimated Cost Of $200,000.00, And Authorizing The Issuance Of $200,000.00 Bonds Of Said County To Pay The Cost Thereof Referred to: The Ways and Means Committee (Chairwoman Archer and Legislators Gerentine, Maio, James Maloney, Joseph Maloney, Petit, and Rodriguez) Chairman of the Legislative Programs, Education and Community Services Committee, James Delaune, and Deputy Chair Heidi Haynes, offer the following: WHEREAS, by Resolution No. 216, dated and duly adopted on the date hereof, the County Legislature of the County of Ulster, New York has established Capital Project No. 542 for heating, ventilation and air-conditioning improvements at various Ulster County Community CollegeSUNY Ulster buildings; and WHEREAS, said 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 any significant adverse effect on the environment; and WHEREAS, it is now desired to authorize the

27 financing thereof; 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. Heating, ventilating and airconditioning improvements at various Ulster County Community College-SUNY Ulster buildings, in and for the County of Ulster, New York, including incidental improvements and expenses in connection therewith, is hereby authorized at a maximum estimated cost of $200,000.00. Section 2. It is hereby determined that the plan for the financing of the aforesaid maximum estimated cost is by the issuance of $200,000.00 serial bonds of the County hereby authorized to be issued therefor pursuant to the provisions of the Local Finance Law; provided, however, that to the extent that any grants-in-aid are received for such class of objects or purposes, the amount of bonds to be issued pursuant to this resolution shall be reduced dollar for dollar. Section 3. It is hereby determined that the period of probable usefulness of the aforesaid class of objects or purposes is ten years, pursuant to subdivision 13 of paragraph a of Section 11.00 of the Local Finance Law. 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 summary form 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 TO RESPONDERS: Sealed proposals for RFP-UC19-044 ULSTER COUNTY TOURISM ADVERTISING will be received on or before Friday, July 26, 2019 at 4:00 PM at the Ulster County Purchasing Department, 244 Fair Street, 3rd Floor, Kingston, NY. Specifications and conditions may be obtained at the above address or on our website at www. co.ulster.ny.us/purchasing. Ed Jordan, Ulster County Director of Purchasing LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO BIDDERS: Sealed proposals will be received, publicly opened and read at the Ulster County Purchasing Department, 244 Fair Street, 3rd Floor, Kingston, NY 12401 on Friday July 26th, 2019 at 4:00 PM for ULSTER COUNTY WARMING CENTER RFP-UC19-047. Specifications and conditions may be obtained at the above address or on our website at UlsterCountyNY.Gov/purchasing. Ed Jordan, Ulster County Director of Purchasing


HUDSON VALLEY REAL ESTATE GUIDE

JUNE 27, 2019

HUDSON VALLEY REAL ESTATE GUIDE

1

LOCAL EXPERTS

the VILLAGE GREEN REALTY

#

1 in Homes Sold 2011-2018 * OPEN HOUSE

SLEEPY HOLLOW LAKE

WILL DENDIS

Here’s your chance to move into a brand new home and avoid the stresses of having to build yourself. Located in the desirable Sleepy Hollow Lake Community, enjoy the open YoourѴ-m bm |_bv 1om|;lrou-u‹ -r; o7 on a serene .32 acres. Coxsackie $249,500

SAT. JUNE 29TH | 1PM - 3PM

This contemporary sits on 3.5 acres of private land between Woodstock, Kingston, Ĺ&#x; "-†];uা;v (bŃ´Ń´-];Äş "o-ubm] Ć‘Ć’[ 1;bŃ´bm]vġ _-u7‰oo7 Yoouvġ - Ńľ[ v|om; Cu;rŃ´-1;ġ Ć’ !ņ Ć‘ ġ 1;m|u-Ń´ -bu Ĺ&#x; _†]; Cmbv_;7 0-v;l;m|Äş Ć?Ć’Ć• !†vv;Ń´Ń´ mĺġ "-†];uা;vġ + | $450,000

The long hallway originally led to the kitchen, but by filling in the doorway and eliminating the hall (now converted into two closets), the owner was able to install a full wall of cabinets and a long counter (right). The door on the right originally led to a pantry, which she converted into a full bath.

Upsize, downsize, upsize by Lynn Woods

N

MOUNTAINSIDE MODERN

Owning 71 acres on the side of a mountain, is really something. Owning acreage that backs up to nearly 30,000 acres of wild, untamed "|-|; -m7Äľ m ;ˆ;m 0b]];u vol;|_bm]Ä´ ol; check out the views and the 3 acre streamfed swimming pond. Kerhonkson $950,000

WONDERFUL WILDERNESS

THERE’S NOTHING LIKE IT $_bv l-f;vা1 Ć‘Ńľ -1u; ;v|-|; _-v ;ˆ;u‹|_bm] ‹o† 1o†Ѵ7 ‰-m|Ä´ Ć’ ņƒ ġ -m7 b| _-v -m bm1u;7b0Ń´; Ć‘ĹŠv|ou‹ġ Ć‘Ć?Ć?Ć? vt[ lbv_ĹŠ0†bŃ´| 0-um ‰ņu-7b-m| _;-| Ĺ&#x; 1;m|u-Ń´ -buĸ l-h;v =ou - ‰om7;u=†Ѵ -uাv| or yoga studio that can also be easily converted into a guest house. Woodstock $999,000

VILLAGE LIVING IN SAUGERTIES

)_-| l-h;v |_bv 1_-ulbm] Ć?Ć–Ć?Ć?Ä˝v (b1|ouban farmhouse unique? It sits on 52.5 acres of magical, untouched Catskills wilderness ‰b|_ v1;mb1 ˆb;‰v o= Ć” v|-|;vÄš +ġ (;ulom|ġ Conn, NH & Mass; all only 2.5 hours from + -m7 lbmv |o vhbbm]Äş †u_-l $380,000

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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

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come over, we hang out in the kitchen. As we huddle around the small table and my ew folks are moving into lovely dining room remains empty, I can Kingston. They’re taking see the advantage of an open plan. I’ve these old houses and seriously thought about knocking down the top part of the removing walls for wall that separates an “open concept,� the dining room a free-flowing and the kitchen, space in which the but I worry I living room merges might destroy the into the kitchen vintage charm of and there’s a big both rooms, which kitchen island have the original everyone can wainscoting. eat at (as Reese In the 23 years W i t h e r s p o o n’s of living here, character Maddie I have in some did with her family instances adopted in their gorgeous an opposite house overlooking strategy. Whereas Monterey Bay in a millennial would the TV serial Big DION OGUST likely knock down Little Lies). the exterior walls Adaptable house exterior In contrast, my folk of my redundant Victorian house in Kingston’s Rondout is central hall—you can instead walk out of date. It has a separate living room, through doorways in the living room to dining room, and kitchen. When friends Continued on Page 2

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THE VIRTUES OF HAVING MORE HOME THAN YOU NEED

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*According to Hudson Valley Catskill Region MLS. Š2016 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully v†rrou|v |_; rubm1brŃ´;v o= |_; -bu o†vbm] 1|Äş -1_ L1; v m7;r;m7;m|Ѵ‹ ‰m;7 m7 r;u-|;7Äş oŃ´7‰;Ń´Ń´ -mh;u -m7 |_; oŃ´7‰;Ń´Ń´ -mh;u o]o are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.

Specializing In Real Estate Throughout Ulster County & The Catskills www.MurphyRealtyGrp.com Speak With An Agentt today, tod y Call: (845) 338-5252 BEAUTIFUL CAPE UPTOWN KINGSTON

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2

HUDSON VALLEY REAL ESTATE GUIDE

JUNE 27, 2019

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the dining room to the kitchen—I kept the walls and divided the hall in two by erecting a wall of sheetrock midway down the space, thereby creating two closets and eliminating one of the major drawbacks of Victorians. I now have a coat closet that opens into the foyer and a second closet opening to the dining room, which is enormous. I throw all kinds of stuff in there—art supplies and canvases, a stool, French easel, backpacks, a laundry rack, a malfunctioning toaster, a 25-pound bag of bird seed, cleaning supplies—which helps me achieve that spare, clutterfree look of a Copenhagen apartment featured on Houzz. I’m cheating by hiding my stuff in a closet rather than truly deaccessioning, but at least, if I’m feeling energetic and organized, I have the look. Transforming the hall into closets illustrates one of the best attributes of my house: its flexibility. When I first moved in, I was overwhelmed by its high

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BEARSVILLE MID-CENTURY - Stylish c. 1956 one level set high on 1.3 acres just minutes to town. Relax on the breezy screened porch or stroll across the stone patio to the inground POOL for summer fun! The chicly crisp interior features 25’ beamed LR with handsome stone fireplace, gleaming hardwood floors throughout, formal DR, 3 bedrooms, delightful retro eat-in kitchen. Two car garage, too! VACATION AT HOME! ..... $715,000 Dir: Rt 212 toward Bearsville, straight at bridge onto Wittenberg Rd, Shultis Farm Rd is approx. 3 miles on right, #3 is first house Nina K. Schultz Terner, Assoc. RE Bkr m 845.616.1097 Mark Kanter, RE Salesperson m 845.389.6528 24 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock, NY 12498

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3

HUDSON VALLEY REAL ESTATE GUIDE

JUNE 27, 2019 ceilings, tall windows and four bedrooms. But my house has proved to be amazingly adaptable, as I upsize, downsize and upsize again. I raised my son here, had an office, took on roommates, created apartments, and reclaimed my original space—all without having to move. Initially, I rented out the fourth bedroom to a friend whose house had burned down (my son and I each had a bedroom and the third served as my office). The rear half of the basement had been partially finished by the previous owner, and in 2002, after I received insurance money for damage from a tree that came down, I invested some of the cash in creating a studio apartment. I also eliminated the fourth bedroom upstairs by knocking down a wall and adding a window, which became part of the large, much brighter third bedroom. After my son had graduated from college, I rented out one of the bedrooms to a series of roommates (for a short period,

I actually had two roommates). The income helped me pay off my mortgage, saving money on interest payments. Eventually I got tired of sharing my kitchen with a roommate and needed more money, so in 2012 I invested most of my savings into transforming the second floor into a one-bedroom apartment. Because of my house’s hallways and partitioned-off rooms, I was able to do this without destroying the foyer, with its oak front door, original spindled staircase and antique pendant acorn light. I rented it out and converted the basement apartment into my bedroom; the setup wasn’t ideal, since to access the basement I had to go down a set of funky stairs through the unheated utility area—technically the public area of the building—or, in summer, by the stairs extending off my back deck (as I trooped up the stairs every morning in

- 6 9 4 , 9 3@

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JUST LISTED

Continued on Page 4

RIPE FOR RESTORATION - Super opportunity for antique house aficionado. Historic Dutch STONE Colonial c. 1759 on 3.5 acres w/ creek frontage & abundant original and salvageable detail – multiple fireplaces, large beams, wide board floors, cedar shake roof, 28’ living room, dining room, 4 bedrooms & more! Potential showplace for art and antiques as well as gracious streamside country living. More land available.................................. $400,000

Harris L. Safier, Assoc. RE Broker | m 914.388.3351 16 Hurley Avenue, Kingston, NY 12401

COUNTRY MODERN - Refined modernism on nestled on 6+ acres in an enclave of architect designed homes. Exceptional quality construction and attention to detail throughout. Soothing views of the distinct lush landscape at every turn thru walls of glass. Features vaulted ceilings, rich wood floors, open plan LR/DR & gourmet kitchen with cozy woodburner, full floor ensuite MBR with nursery/office & deck. JUST PERFECT!..................................$895,000

VINTAGE FARMHOUSE ON 53 ACRES - Enjoy total seclusion on gorgeous acreage with large meadow & panoramic mountain views! Classic farmhouse offers abundant original charm & detail- wide board floors, beamed ceilings – PLUS a restored vintage barn, too! Features spacious “dine-in” country kitchen with brick fireplace, sunroom, den w/ woodburner, main level BR + 3 more upstairs, 2 full baths and deck. PURE COUNTRY! ......................$699,000

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COUNTRY COMFORT - This classic two-story log home is well sited on 4+ play and pet friendly acres just a short drive to historic Stone Ridge hamlet shops & services. The comfortable floor plan features a spacious 23’ living room, formal dining room, country kitchen opening to terrific screened porch for al fresco dining, 3 upstairs bedrooms, 1.5 baths, full length “rocking chair” porch PLUS inground POOL for summer fun. .....$400,000

Harris L. Safier, Assoc. RE Broker | m 914.388.3351 16 Hurley Avenue, Kingston, NY 12401

COUNTRY COLONIAL - Beautiful setting of 2.6 acres down a long paved drive near Woodstock & Saugerties. Gracious Colonial style home with welcoming “rocking chair” porch features 24’ Living Room w/ fireplace, formal dining room w/ tray ceiling, eat-in kitchen, HW floors on main level, 3 BRs incl. ensuite MBR, all with walk-in closets. Full basement + bonus space over 2-car garage. Huge deck & babbling brook, too! ...........$425,000

Ann “Jean” Semilof, Assoc. RE Broker | o 845.340.1920 x 105 16 Hurley Avenue, Kingston, NY 12401

COUNTRY CAPE - Perfect retreat on 6+ quiet, wooded acres on a private road. Spacious 2500 SF dormered Cape Cod has room for everyone and a great floor plan for entertaining & casual living. Features vaulted LR with cozy brick fireplace, country kitchen with breakfast bar, dining area, desirable main level ensuite MBR + 3 BRs upstairs, 20’ family/media room, office, attached 2 car garage and deck. MUST SEE! ................................................... $535,000

MILLION $$$ VIEWS - Absolutely breathtaking panoramic views all the way to the Berkshires + Catskill views too! Expansive decking invites you to relax and take in the incredible natural beauty of it all. Spacious 2600+ SF Colonial style home with a generously proportioned floor plan offers living room with fireplace, dining room, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms + den or home office, 2.5 baths, central AC & “rocking chair” porch. .....................................$450,000

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, HUNTER, NEW YORK Partially renovated Ski house just steps to Hunter Mountain and Festivals. New kitchen flooring and stainless-steel appliances. Three Bedroom, two Bath with a brand-new game room downstairs. High income potential. House sits down from the main road with a private secluded driveway. This listing brought to you by Karen Stanbrook ..........................$295,000 SAUGERTIES, NEW YORK Completely renovated Colonial with bamboo floors, spacious living room has stone wall with stone fireplace. Woodstove insert for efficient heating. First floor bedrooms with full bath. Also, half bath and laundry room on first floor. Spacious kitchen with center island. Seller will credit 3K towards stove and fridge (with acceptable offer). Formal dining. room convenient to rear deck. Second floor has 2 additional bedrooms plus office, den and full bath. Potential Airbnb or convert to two family (with permit). This listing brought to you by Blanca Aponte ........................................................................................... $459,000

CATSKILL, NEW YORK Lovely 3-bedroom ranch on 4 private acres. There are vaulted ceilings and skylights in the kitchen and living room with tile and hard wood floors throughout. Kitchen and bath are nicely updated. There is electric heat accompanied by a wood stove that can heat the whole house. Also, has a heated garage. Close to skiing and swimming. Great vacation home. This listing brought to you by Angela Galetto and Alan Kessler .............................. $179,000

NEW PALTZ, NEW YORK This Historical property, built in the 1830’s, with roots traceable back to the Huguenots. A commuter’s dream; just a short drive to the NY State Thruway, Adirondack Trailways bus service and Metro North. This is country living at its best with hiking, biking and climbing at nearby Minnawaska State Park, Walkway over the Hudson and the Rail Trail. The house is nestled on over 9 acres of beautiful land. The home maintains many original features such as hand-hewn beams, wide board floors, original doors and a beehive oven in the basement. Newer features include a dining/family room with skylights and French doors. The property also has a 2-story barn with electric for a studio. This property brought to you by Gloria Blackman and Marilyn DeAngelo............$399,000 B HURLEY, NEW YORK REDIG PR Commercial Buy of the Week! High UC ICE TIO visibility, 7,000 sq. ft. building with N! 4 bathrooms and is surrounded by the post office, Stewart’s, Town offices, and the famous Hurley Mountain Inn. Currently there is a truck driver training school occupying one of the 3 commercial spaces. They are on a month to month lease at $2500 per month plus utilities. The other 2 spaces have been left vacant to give the new buyer more options. The other units can rent for another $2500 plus utilities. The $60,000 potential gross income makes the numbers work for the new buyer. The property is zoned neighborhood commercial with an abundance of parking and 2 garages. Large 3.8-acre parcel with creek frontage. First time on the market in over 35 years. This listing brought to you by Richard Miller ...............................$649,000

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


4

HUDSON VALLEY REAL ESTATE GUIDE

my pjs and mussed-up hair, I sometimes could see my neighbors eating breakfast and was tempted to wave). At the time, I was praising the virtues of downsizing. But after a couple of years it began to wear on me. I never got accustomed to sleeping in the basement, and the lack of space meant it was difficult to pursue some of my

interests. Plus, my financial situation had changed: I was now a landlord, the owner of two other two-family houses, yet living in less space than my tenants. I waited until I’d recouped my investment on converting the upstairs to an apartment, then turned my dream into a reality. The basement room went back to being a studio apartment. I

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removed the sheetrock barrier closing off the hall upstairs, took off the locks from the doors to a former upstairs bedroom and the downstairs living room, ripped out the small closet I’d had built in the kitchen and—voilà — had my house back, with all its beautiful bones intact. I went further; I improved it. One drawback of Victorian kitchens that haven’t been ruined by modern updates is the lack of wall space. Mine had three original windows, meaning the sills fall well below counter height, and three doorway openings. The inefficiencies of this had been somewhat mitigated by the pantry, but when I created the upstairs apartment, that was turned into a bathroom. (A very nice bathroom, by

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This private Woodstock compound blends seamlessly into its serene surroundings with both simplicity and sophistication. Earth tones and the ow of water create the Zen of being one with nature whether indoors or out, perched high above the Raybrook Creek as it ows below. The main house, guest house and detached studio each has its own outdoor deck overlooking the creek. Inside, each has custom-dyed wide hickory oors and ceilings. Floor-to-ceiling custom Anderson Eagle windows in every room lend the feeling of being outdoors from within. High end ďŹ xtures and appliances include Flos lighting; Rimadesio glass doors; Valcucine kitchen; Miele appliances; SMEG and Agape master bath. Sleek form meets energy-efďŹ cient function, with solar panels, zoned radiant and central forced air heat & A/C and Energy Star appliances. A bonus room off the carport maintains the same design features as house, guest house and detached ofďŹ ce/studio/meditation room. Groomed wooded acres feature majestic towering pines, natural rock outcroppings and raised organic ower and vegetable beds. Experience the look and feel of this hidden Woodstock gem....$1,850,000

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#! Ă GET#. MORE DONE. !#WONDER 9#! . 98% ÂŚsĂ€ # ! . #9! ./ NO OF MAHINDRA OWNERS 9#3 RECOMMEND . # ! ONE #! 1# WOULD TO A ! #. NEIGHBOR /ÂŽªß¼ ߑåŽ @Ž‘¼eĂ“@  ªßnĂ“ I šª@enĂ“

R ABBIT ISL AND A private getaway, four minute walk to New Hamburg Metro North, less than two hours to Grand Central. From train to cocktails on the river in four minutes. Island privacy, mainland convenience. WEB# UM1562806 18 River Road, New Hamburg | $3,995,000 Presented by: Dianne Minogue M 914.204.7120

1989 RO U TE 52 | E A S T FI S H K I L L , N Y 1253 3

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ROBERT BLOOMER

the way, with subway tiled floor, a clawfooted tub from Zaborski’s Emporium in Kingston and a small pedestal sink.) Now, by closing off the hall, which reduced the doorways to two, I was finally able to install an expansive countertop and a row of IKEA wall cabinets. Besides being more livable, my house is now probably more valuable from a realtor’s perspective, with two full baths (three, including the studio apartment), plenty of closets upstairs and down, and a floor-through, light-filled, loftlike space on the second floor, a legacy of the apartment, in which openings were added to the wall separating the two largest bedrooms. (I use the space as a studio and guestroom. The smaller bedroom in the back, which was originally used by my son and now me, remains intact.) I also changed the look. When I downsized, I had painted all the walls and trim in tasteful, easy-on-the-eye neutrals, that is to say “contractor’s colors,� to make the space feel larger. But now that I had the second floor back, I wanted the downstairs to feel more cozy and to highlight the vintage features that had gotten lost. I wanted to bring back the house’s character and its connection to old Rondout, which was once a tugboat town, a bustling place of corner saloons and trolleys, where steamboats pulled up to the Strand — then walled in with ancient brick warehouses — and armies of men with chisels worked huge slabs of bluestone piled up along the shore of Rondout Creek. When I first brushed the dark blue-green paint on the molding around my kitchen window, it was a shock; maybe evoking the atmosphere of a tugboat wheelhouse was misguided (the color, called Spruce, was also inspired by the traditional cabins and camps of the Catskills). It took a few days for my eyes to adjust and I decided I loved it. I painted the wainscoting in the dining room and the living room built-in bookshelves Cadet blue and the window and door trim a warmer, slightly darker gray. The neutral on the walls was tricky, but I finally found the right one—a warm, creamy hue, which has green overtones. (When I first bought this house, you just couldn’t get colors like this.) And now I’m done. If houses, like forests, reach a climax state, mine’s achieved it. I am exhausted from the years of planning, consulting, constructing, painting, paying, and thoroughly satisfied. My house truly serves my needs, with a little excess space, so that if need be I can accommodate a friend or relative in need, a future partner, another pet. It’s still crowded when my friends gather in my kitchen, but I like the feeling of intimacy as we sit around the small table under the lamplight, the moon shining through the tall window. My house is more than a building, it’s my home, and there’s no place like it.

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28

ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

CLASSIFIEDS 100

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

We have Jobs at Mohonk Mountain House, both Seasonal and Year Round

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.

Please look on-line and apply at MOHONKJOBS.com

deadlines

telephone

Join the Mohonk team!

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

Please make note of our

SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS First Student in Kingston is hosting a School Bus Driver Hiring Event that the whole family can enjoy.

DRIVER HIRING EVENT Saturday, June 29th 10am – 2pm 29 Keiffer Lane Kingston, NY 12401 Don’t miss this opportunity to find out more about our open driving positions. Ask about the competitive starting wage and benefits.

EARLY DEADLINE for our

July 4th issue The advertising deadline for our issue publishing

Refreshments will be served and Village Police Officers will be on hand to perform car seat checks. Join First Student for a burger and an onsite interview. You’ll be glad you did! FirstGroupCareers.com EOE

Age 55+ Workers Wanted! Are you unemployed, age 55+ and looking for work? x Train for available jobs x Serve your community at local nonprofits x Gain updated skills & references x Connect with active employers x Grant funded; no cost to participate x Income restrictions apply

Paid job training and help with job placement Apply at: www.a4td.org For more information, call: (607) 766-1437

$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

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.

errors payment

reach 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.

Wednesday, July 3rd will be

Monday, July 1st Please call your sales representative at (845) 334-8200 for more information. Help Wanted PART-TIME, occasionally for yard work, cleaning & other tasks. $12$15/hour. Saugerties area. 845-763-6355.

REFRESHMENTS ON-SITE INTERVIEWS CAR SEAT CHECKS

weekly

The Town of New Paltz has a Full-Time Position opening for a Municipal Worker I at the New Paltz Reuse and Recycling Center on Clearwater Road. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 8:45am to 5:15pm. The candidate for this position must have a minimum of one (1) year experience working at a transfer station/recycling center and a clean, valid New York State driver’s license. Duties include but are not limited to: Use of lawn equipment including weed-wacker, mowers, rakes, snow plow. Light mechanical repairs, building and equipment maintenance, interaction with the public, knowledge of acceptable solid waste practices and local markets, and ability to write receipts and maintain material logs for annual reporting. Interested candidates should forward a letter of interest and resume to recycling@townofnewpaltz.org or to: Town of New Paltz Recycling Center, P.O. Box 550, New Paltz, NY 12561 by July 8, 2019.

120

Situations Wanted

LOST ART: Looking for Important Artwork that fell off Car Roof. A simulated Stained Glass Mandala of my beloved Golden Retriever dislodged from my car roof driving from the Catskill Interpretive Center to White Pines, Byrdcliffe & back towards Mt. Tremper. The route involved Route 28 to Winnie Rd. to Wittenburg Rd., Streibel Rd., Glasco Tpke. and Upper Byrdcliffe Rd. Returning to Mt. Tremper, it may have fallen in Bearsville, on the right side of Wittenburg between Cooper Lake and Glenford-Wittenburg Rds. This work of art was very precious, painted of a deceased dog who was my partner in work and life for 15 yrs. She was a therapy dog, helping well, sick & disabled people, and the spirit guardian after death of an outdoor contemplative environment, moving to a

new setting. If you found the piece, which is a 4‘ lexan circle; very colorful w/portrait of her head in the middle, please contact Tobi at the Woodstock Times; 845-334-8200, ext. 117, or call 518-965-1127.

140

Opportunities

The Source Woodstock is a new wellness and co-living space. We are offering local yoga and meditation teachers an opportunity to join our growing community, specifically to offer classes Mondays-Fridays. Email for info- sirrproperties@gmail.com

Downstairs Guest w/marble bath. Large brick fireplace, granite hearth. Backyard pond, 3-car garage w/upstairs studio- possible rental. Serene, landscaped, Koi pond, huge deck, wooded, nice backyard, hidden from neighbors. Minutes to Phoenicia, Woodstock, Hunter, Windham. 2.44 acres. No Brokers- Buyer’s Only. $435,000. Evan; 845-688-3222.

Find your ideal house in the ideal setting inside our

220

Instruction

SUMMER TUTORING. 20+ years of Experience. Certified Elementary, Special Education & ENL teacher. Orton Gillingham methods used. Elementary, Secondary & Adult. Reading * Writing * Study Skills. Please call 845-417-4898.

Hudson Valley

REAL ESTATE Guide

225

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), 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

300

Real Estate

FSBO: CHICHESTER MOUNTAINTOP CUSTOM CHALET, Rt. 214. Large open upstairs loft w/mountain views & bath.

It’s own section within Almanac Weekly For Sale By Owner, 3-Bedroom House, Accord. Patio with above ground pool. New kitchen, finished family room with bath. $285,000. 845-253-0396

320

Land for Sale

Two Parcels: 5 Acres, private road, house site, swimming pond, mountain views, $110,000. 1.5 Acres forest land, 300 ft. frontage, $40,000. Hiking, mountain biking, cross-country skiing trails. Saugerties. 845-246-5203.

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.


350

Commercial Listings for Sale

LOCAL SHARPENING BUSINESS and/ or sharpening equipment for sale. $20,000. Call 845-658-3206.

380

Garage/ Workspace/ Storage

& 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

ASHOKAN STORE-IT Ask About Our Long Term Storage Discount

5x10 $40 10x15 $90

29

ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

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

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

410

Gardiner/ Modena/ Plattekill Rentals

1-BR apartment with private entrance and patio. Six miles to SUNY New Paltz. Eat-in kitchen, living room, ample closets, extra storage space. Newly painted, new carpeting. Individual or couple must be nonsmokers, quiet, and comfortable with dogs. Off-road parking for two vehicles. $875/month. Lease, security, references required. Rent includes utilities and A/C. Pets negotiable. Available July 1, 2019. Call (845)255-4371.

430

New Paltz Rentals

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. Monthly rental available, also. Available now. 845-705-2430.

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

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 ROOM FOR RENT. Can be used as residential or an office. $600/month plus security. Utilities included. Walking distance to everything. Available now. (845)664-0493. ROOM FOR RENT. Can be used as residential or an office. $600/month plus security. Utilities included. Walking distance to everything. Available now. (845)664-0493. SOUTHSIDE TERRACE APARTMENTS offers semester leases for FALL 2019 and Short-Term for the Summer! Furnished studios, one & two bedrooms, includes heat

2-BEDROOM APARTMENT, Rosendale. Large living room, dining room/office, eatin kitchen, full bath, porch overlooking Rondout Creek. Includes off-street parking & trash/snow removal. No smoking. No dogs. 2 person max. $1150/month + utilities. First, last & security required. Available 8/1. 845-505-2568.

Woodstock, 17 to Hunter. Renowned trout stream runs through property. Reasonable. Photos available. 845-688-5062.

520

Rentals Wanted

DESPERATELY SEEKING small affordable Cottage/Apartment rental anywhere in the area July 1 for approximately $1000/ month. Local couple, dog & 2 cats. Great references. House-painter. All situations considered. Please call 845-633-0551 ASAP.

601

Portable Toilet Rentals

TLK

450

Saugerties Rentals

Beautiful Brick Home on 3.5 pristine acres in Saugerties, near Palenville. Mountain views, 4-bedrooms, 3 baths, fireplace, new Argon windows and efficient NEST thermostat. Whole house; $2300, or downstairs: 2-bedroom, 2 bath, 1200sf; $1800. Renter pays oil and electric. Cable ready. W/D hookup. (917)667-3970.

470

Woodstock/West Hurley Rentals

RARE WOODSTOCK RENTAL: Easy walk to Village Green. Beautiful 3-bedroom, 2.5 bath w/home office or studio. Character galore! Tucked quietly away in town, deck looks onto private woods & millstream. Modern kitchen w/granite, hardwood floors, fireplace, sunny south windows & huge artist’s north skylight. $2695/month. Year lease. No Smoking. Call 845-679-9717. BEARSVILLE: Newly renovated GUEST COTTAGE w/large windows, brand new bathroom, kitchen. Wonderful grounds. On a private lane. Walking distance to Cub Market. $875/month. Call 845-417-5282. 2-BR CHARMING, Cheery, Woodstock COTTAGE: 2 acres, garden, stream, woodburning stove, spacious eat-in-kitchen, wide wooden floors, washer/dryer, stained-glass door, bathtub. $1400/month + last month + security. No pets/smokers. References. (845)679-2300. 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. 3-BEDROOMS, 1.5 baths, LR, DR, kitchen, deck, glass study room, washer/dryer. On 2 acres. Center of Woodstock. Available September. $1700/month. Call 845-417-5282. MOVE-IN READY! Main house; 3-bedrooms, 2 full baths plus studio apartment plus 1-bedroom apartment. 5 minutes to the center of Woodstock. Contact Toby at Win Morrison Realty for more information 845430-4181. Woodstock- 4-Bedroom, 3 Bath, 2 Kitchens. 2 Working fireplaces. Bright and clean. Private back deck. 1 mile from town. Just renovated. Available July 1st. $2750/month. 845-430-4730. INCREDIBLY RARE FIND! Freshly and immaculately remodeled 1-Bedroom Apartment in the heart of Woodstock w/Village Green views & walk to everything. Kitchen, bedroom, bath all brand new from floor to ceiling. Top floor at 44 Tinker Street where Pleasures Boutique is located & adjacent to Joshua’s Restaurant. $1000/month. Heat, hot water included. Sec. & ref. required. Will rent fast. Call Steve (845)217-7207. CHARMING WOODSTOCK 1-BEDROOM HOUSE on Mink Hollow Road within walking distance to Cooper Lake, 4 miles to center of Woodstock. On 1 acre. All wood floors, newly renovated bathroom. $1200/month. 845-417-5282.

480

West of Woodstock Rentals

GORGEOUS COTTAGE on 150 ACRE ESTATE. 3-Bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace. Hiking, cross country trails throughout. Borders on 700 acres of state land. 13 miles to

LLC

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

TLKportables@gmail.com tlkportables.com We e k e n d s • We e k l y • M o n th l y

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.

FULLY INSURED

LAWLESS TREE SERVICE

CERTIFIED ARBORIST • CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES

STUMP GRINDING

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

615

Hunting/Fishing Sporting Goods

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

620

Buy & Swap

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.

648

Auctions

Carlsen Gallery Auctioneers & Appraisers Carlsen Gallery Inc. Presents

ANTIQUES AT AUCTION

SUNDAY, June 30th at 10:30am EST Call: (518) 634-2466 E-Mail: info@carlsengallery.com 9931 Rt. 32, Freehold, NY • www.carlsengallery.com

670

Yard & Garage Sales

HUGE GARAGE SALE- Unique antique objects, Jiggs Standing Butler, early folk art, furniture, incredible vintage clothing, 19th Century umbrella stand, iron andirons, stacking glass-front bookcases, mirrors and wooden bathtub, early puppets and dancing men, Frank Lloyd Wright tiles, Eames Chairs, Woodstock art, vintage puzzles, old brass letters, wood carvings and forms, backboards, frames, brass machinist objects, handmade iron chain, large iron garden sculptures, brass pul-

leys, art supplies, cribbage boards, great household items, tools, fossils and rocks, iron pole lamps, wonderful small treasures, original WDST tapes, old photographs, vintage jewelry pieces and findings, antique sheet music. Something for everyone, 41 Wittenberg Road, Bearsville, Friday and Saturday, June 28 and 29, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. MOWER’S SATURDAY/SUNDAY FLEA MARKET; Maple Lane, Woodstock. Every weekend & Friday, July 5. Antiques, collectibles, produce & Reusables. 845-6796744. Join us for our 42nd Year! For brochure: woodstockfleamarket@hvc.rr.com GOOGLE US!

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 Got Rot? ... Due to an active water issue? You’re in luck! Got Rot? Is the company for you! Got Rot? Offers a professional wood restoration service targeting Rotten wooden structures primarily due to water issues. In addition to our complete restoration process, we diagnose existing conditions and innovate creative solutions for the best resolve. Stop your Rot now and call Got Rot? Today! 845-389-2549. 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

Personal & Health Services

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.

702

Art Services

Structural and Cosmetic Repair Reclaim an Old Treasured Doll or Stuffed Animal

I Re-string Re-inforce Re-attach Re-stuff Restore

feliciacasey@gmail.com 845.691.7853

Swan Hollow Doll Repair

Highland, NY 12528

705

Office & Computer Service

MANUSCRIPTS, MANUSCRIPTS! Data entry of manuscripts, documents, correspondence, editing, light bookkeeping. LIGHTNING SPEED & ACCURACY! Many years experience; many happy customers. Reasonable rates. Call 845/6797298. You’ll be glad you did.

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)6796242.

715

Cleaning Services

HOUSE CLEANING for a tidy sum. 845658-2073. First-time Summer Special. $12/hour for General Housecleaning. 30+ years experience. All Supplies included. Carol: 931-2613912.


30

ALMANAC WEEKLY

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

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

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

425 430 435

438 440 442 445 450 460 470 480 485

CLEAN UPS, CLEAN OUTS. Indoor/Outdoor. Junk & debris removal. Estates prepared for Moving and Sale. (845)688-2253.

ULSTER WINDOW CLEANING CO. **Estate, **Residential. **Free Estimates, Fully Insured. Call 679-3879

COUNTRY CLEANERS Homes & Offices • Insured & Bonded

Excellent references.

Call (845)706-1713 or (845) 679-8932

CLEAR VIEW

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 NYS DOT T-12467

Incorporated 1985

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

Shandaken, NY 845-688-2253 QUALITY • VALUE • RELIABILITY • SINCE 1980

Window Cleaning

• Int. & Ext. Painting

Power Washing

• Power Washing

Fully Insured • Free Estimates 30+ Years Exp. • (914) 262-2474

IN-HOME CARE GIVING.... Assist with activities of daily living. Errands, meals, laundry, light cleaning, pet care. Valid driver’s license. Reliable transportation. Flexible. Safe. References. Debra 845-658-2073.

HABE HABERWASH PRESSURE WASHING PRE & EXTERIOR PAINTING & STAINING. Residential and Commercial Residentia Specializing in decks, fences, roofs, driveways, patios.

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

917-593-5069

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

702 703

705 708 710 715 717 720

scented), 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

BlueStoneMason.com T¡Ûĉ³É¬ Ŗä°¡ Ŗ(æ ÞÍÉ e ÃÃ¡Č Ŗ«ÍÛ ŖĢĠ ŖČ¡ ÛÞ

845. 334 . 9344 $ Q Q ŖTf QX(CZX Ŗ

Interiors & Remodeling Inc s ’ d e T

Reliable, Dependable & Insured Call for an estimate

Gary Buckendorf

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

700

Multiple References Available Upon Request Licensed & Insured • ritaccopainting.com

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

720

660 665 670 680 690 695 698

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

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

Contact Jason Habernig

Painting/Odd Jobs

620 630 640

645 648 650 655

• Free Estimates

FREE ESTIMATES, FULLY INSURED Accepting All Major Credit Cards

Property Managment of Woodstock offers reliable year round on-call and cohosting services for B&Bs in the greater Woodstock area. Locally based with years of experience to help make your rentals run smoothly. Insured, straightforward and easy work to with. connect@hudsonvalleybnbmanagment.com; 845-2020606

565 575 580 600 601 602 603 605 607 610 615

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

.

717

Caretaking/Home Management

• Sheetrock & Plaster Repair

520 540 545 550 | 560

June 27, 2019

725

Plumbing, Heating, AC & Electric

Stoneridge Electrical Service, Inc. www.stoneridgeelectric.com

• LED Lighting

• Standby Generators

• Landscape Lighting

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

• Wiring for Pools & Spas

• Service Upgrades

Authorized Dealer & Installer Low-Rate Financing Available

H Z Emergency Generators U \ LICENSED 331-4227 INSURED

740

Building Services

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

catskill gardens

Spring is here!!! Are you ready?! We specialize in sustainable, pollinator-friendly landscapes for residential and commercial properties.

Find us on facebook catskillgardens.com or call/text (845) 419-9740

DRIVEWAY STONE Screened Topsoil - Walk & Wall Stone Shale - Mulch - Fill - Compost 845-505-3890 — RBE Materials —

845-591-8812

www.tedsinteriors.com BRIAN’S HOME IMPROVEMENTS Remodeling, Repairs, A-Z, Small/Large jobs. Carpentry, Painting, Tile, Floors, Roofing, Siding, Sheetrock/Tape, Plumbing, Electric, Additions, Kitchens, Baths, etc. Quality work. 40 years plus experience. Insured. Call (845) 658-2264 or (860) 304-0651

HANDYMAN, HOME REPAIR, Carpentry, Remodels, Installations, Roofing, Painting, Mechanical repairs, etc. Large and small jobs. Reasonable rates. Free estimates. References available. (845)616-7470. 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)339-3017

760

Gardening/ Landscaping

Red Cedar Posts, Rails, Branches, Lumber, Slab siding, Wood Chip mulch. Rustic fence and garden materials from Hudson Valley farms and managed forests. Delivery available. 914-263-2210. Landscaping /DZQ LQVWDOODWLRQ 3RQGV &OHDQ XSV /DZQ FDUH ...and much more

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

Paramount

RICK’S NATURAL GARDEN CARE. Let Rick help get your garden ready and keep it the way you want. Pruning, Planting, improvements, short- or long-term organic methods. Master Gardener Trained. (845)616-5410.

810

Lost & Found

LOST ART: Looking for Important Artwork that fell off Car Roof. A simulated Stained Glass Mandala of my beloved Golden Retriever dislodged from my car roof driving from the Catskill Interpretive Center to White Pines, Byrdcliffe & back towards Mt. Tremper. The route involved Route 28 to Winnie Rd. to Wittenburg Rd., Streibel Rd., Glasco Tpke. and Upper Byrdcliffe Rd. Returning to Mt. Tremper, it may have fallen in Bearsville, on the right side of Wittenburg between Cooper Lake and Glenford-Wittenburg Rds. This work of art was very precious, painted of a deceased dog who was my partner in work and life for 15 yrs. She was a therapy dog, helping well, sick & disabled people, and the spirit guardian after death of an outdoor contemplative environment, moving to a new setting. If you found the piece, which is a 4‘ lexan circle; very colorful w/portrait of her head in the middle, please contact Tobi at the Woodstock Times; 845-334-8200, ext. 117, or call 518-965-1127.

Contracting & Development Corp.

William Watson • Residential / Commercial

TLK LLC. PORTABLE TOILET RENTALS. Weekend, Weekly, Monthly rentals. We have Gray, white, blue, tan, green (pine-

725

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

subscribe 334-8200


31

ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

900

Personals

LOST ART: Looking for Important Artwork that fell off Car Roof. A simulated Stained Glass Mandala of my beloved Golden Retriever dislodged from my car roof driving from the Catskill Interpretive Center to White Pines, Byrdcliffe & back towards Mt. Tremper. The route involved Route 28 to Winnie Rd. to Wittenburg Rd., Streibel Rd., Glasco Tpke. and Upper Byrdcliffe Rd. Returning to Mt. Tremper, it may have fallen in Bearsville, on the right side of Wittenburg between Cooper Lake and Glenford-Wittenburg Rds. This work of art was very precious, painted of a deceased dog who was my partner in work and life for 15 yrs. She was a therapy dog, helping well, sick & disabled people, and the spirit guardian after death of an outdoor contemplative environment, moving to a new setting. If you found the piece, which is a 4‘ lexan circle; very colorful w/portrait of her head in the middle, please contact Tobi at the Woodstock Times; 845-334-8200, ext. 117, or call 518-965-1127.

950

Summer Car Care GET READY FOR YOUR SUMMER MER VACATIONS VACAT “YOU’LL FIND IT ALL UNDER ONE RO ROOF!” HAPPY Foreign and Domestic • Wholesale • Retail • Auto & Truck Whatever you drive... We’ve got the parts! 4TH OF JULY!!! SERVING THE AREA FOR OVER 50 YEARS!

• Exhaust Systems • Clutches • Brakes • Shocks • Fuel Pumps rters • Catalytic Converters • Water Pumps • Plugs & Points • Rebuilt Parts ors • Distributors, Rotors ers • Belts, Hoses, Filters • Batteries • Wipers, Lights

Voted #1 Auto Parts Store in the Mid Hudson Valley Choice Awards!

LYNCH

LYNCH AUTO PARTS

AUTO PARTS

39 St. James St., Kingston • (845) 331-7500 Open 6 Days • Closed Sundays

ALWAYS READY SHINE AUTOMOTIVE RESTORATION AND DETAIL CO.

Schedule an appt. today! Serving Ulster and Dutchess Counties Contact: Julio Jackson, Automotive Paint Tech, (845) 397-7134

uly! J f o h t 4 e f a S a e v Ha

Animals

If you’re looking for someone who’ll always be happy to see you & give you unconditional love forever, look no further! That someone could be waiting for you at Saugerties Animal Shelter. QUEENIE; older cat girl. She’s a sweet exotic tiger. QUEENIE would like to be an only pet. BABY; 4-year old tiger striped cat boy. SULLY; female tuxedo w/a heart on her nose! This sweet mama cat had 6 tuxedo babies- now Sully & her kittens are ready to be adopted into loving homes. DAISY; 4-year old tiger cat girl whose caregiver had to go to an assisted living facility. So, sweet Daisy has to deal w/ losing the person who loved her most & finds herself in strange territory; an animal shelter. It’s understandable that Daisy is a bit shy; for now. TURTLE; 6-year old tiger cat boy & one of the sweetest and most loving cats you’ll meet! 2 very shy 1-year old Tortie Cats need a quiet home where they can be given the time they need to trust again. TIGER; very sweet 6-year old brown tabby girl who’d make a perfect addition to your loving family. LILY; 8-year old cat girl came in naked. She lost most of her fur due to a flea allergy. Hair has mostly grown back. Very sweet. Loves to cuddle. No other pets, please. LEXI; beautiful tiger cat girl w/a heart of gold! Lexi was adopted, but was bullied by the resident cat, & now finds herself back at the shelter. If you can give this 3-year old sweetheart the quiet, loving home she needs, she’ll thank you every day! DORIAN; shy, spayed, 2-3 year old female cat who just needs a quiet house to decompress & be loved. Dorian was a lonesome stray. We have MANY ADORABLE KITTENS- (Aren’t they all adorable?) as well as CATS & DOGS of different ages who’ll add tremendous joy to your life. All they ask is to be cared for properly & to be loved. In return, they will give you a lifetime of uncon-

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ditional love. PENELOPE; sweet 8-month old Terrier mix. She weighs 15 pounds. LACY; 7-year old female Pit mix. Very sweet & low energy. She’s a doll! SABRINA; 4-year old Pit mix girl. She’s very sweet & affectionate. Please- no cats. Dogs- males only & need a “meet & greet”. Please visit The Town of Saugerties Animal Shelter, 1765 Route 212 (behind the transfer station) to meet these beautiful beings or call 845679-0339 to answer any questions you may have. Adopt an animal. They will thank you every day.

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Pet Care Check us out on Facebook!

PET CARE... I’M AVAILABLE to care for your pets in your home. Food, walks, litter, love. Let me help you enjoy your vacation by caring for your four-legged children. Lots of love, dependable, reliable, references. New Paltz & surrounding areas. Call Mrs. Doolittle’s Pet Care 845-658-2073. 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.

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

June 27, 2019

16th ANNUAL

PROCEEDS BENEFIT THE SAWYER AUTOMOTIVE FOUNDATION

In the N ortheast

SUNDAY, JULY 7

MAIN & PARTITION STREETS CLOSED TO TRAFFIC

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Smith Hardware Serving the Community for Five Generations


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