ALMANAC WEEKLY
A miscellany of Hudson Valley art, adventure and ideas | Calendar & Classifieds | Issue 32 | Aug. 8 – 15 Music Bethel Woods hosts Alice Cooper, Nelly this weekend, Ringo Starr, Santana/Doobies and John Fogerty next weekend Catskill Jazz Factory | Huichica East | Mining Korngold at Bard Events The art of cider-pouring in New Paltz | Blueberry fest in Ellenville Accidental Presidents book talk with Jigsaw CEO Jared Cohen | Dirty Dancing at Hasbrouck House, Captain Marvel under the Walkway
saugerties artists’ studio tour
MEREDITH MORABITO
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Aug. 8, 2019
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The Farewell is strongly autobiographical, evolving out of a memoir that Wang ďŹ rst iterated as a segment on the NPR radio program This American Life. The Farewell is a lightly ďŹ ctionalized version of that story, starring the rapper/actress AwkwaďŹ na (Ocean’s 8, Crazy Rich Asians) as Billi, Wang’s alter ego.
Bye-bye Nai Nai Chinese-American relearns to appreciate her roots in sublime A Farewell
T
he phenomenal success of Shþgun, James Clavell’s bestselling 1975 novel and 1980 TV miniseries about an English pilot drawn into a power struggle in Japan at the dawn of the 17th century, served to establish a number of beliefs in the American popular consciousness about Asian cultural norms. One of these was the premise that, in a densely populated country where houses have walls made of paper that afford no privacy, pretending that something negative or forbidden isn’t happening is a socially acceptable and often wise way to proceed. The Western ideal that the truth must always come out was depicted as an alien and naïve notion in the Far East. Never having had an opportunity to visit ,
Asia, I didn’t acquire a clear sense in all the subsequent decades of how accurate this picture was, or how well Clavell did his research. I still don’t know if he was right about Japan in the year 1600. But there’s a terrific new indie film out by Lulu Wang, The Farewell, whose central premise firmly reiterates this idea as a core component of Chinese social structure. Maybe it really is an “Asian thing.� T h e Fa r e w e l l is strongly autobiographical, evolving out of a memoir that Wang first iterated as a segment on the NPR radio program This American Life. The director was born in China and emigrated to the US at age 6. In 2013, her beloved grandmother, still living in the northeastern Chinese city of Changchun, was diagnosed with Stage IV lung cancer and expected not to survive more than a few months. A wedding of a family member was hastily arranged
to provide an excuse for a big reunion of relatives who had moved to other countries – without telling their Nai Nai (Mandarin for paternal grandmother) that she was dying. The Americanized Wang was astonished by the elaborate charade that was arranged to spare the elderly woman this unpleasant news. Only by revisiting the city of her birth was she able to make any sense of it. The Farewell is a lightly fictionalized version of that story, starring the rapper/actress Awkwafina (Ocean’s 8, Crazy Rich Asians) as Billi, Wang’s alter ego. Upon breaking the news to Billi, her mother Jian (Diana Lin) explains, “Chinese people have saying: When people get cancer, they die. It’s not the cancer that kills them. It’s the fear.� The role of Billi was a challenging one to take on for Awkwafina, whose onscreen reputation has been built so far on playing
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zany, offbeat characters. Billi, by contrast, is a brooder who never felt quite at home in the US but has absorbed its values. The Farewell requires her to scowl a lot, disapproving of the deception in which even Nai Nai’s doctors are complicit. How will her grandmother know that it’s time to say her farewells, to set her affairs in order? As it turns out, Billi is the one who needs to learn to appreciate the wisdom behind the family’s rallying to make Nai Nai’s presumed last months on Earth as happy as possible. Most of this learning curve occurs during one-on-one interactions between grandmother (veteran Chinese actress Zhao Shuzhen) and her favorite granddaughter, which also serve to familiarize Western audiences with some nuances of life in post-Cultural Revolution China. There’s a scene in which Nai Nai is chivvying the surly Billi to engage with more enthusiasm in a daily exercise routine, which reminded me of a sequence involving tai chi practice in another indie
ORPHEUM
198 Main St. Saugerties, NY • 845-246-6561 All Shows: Fri thru Tues. & Thurs. at 7:30 Fast & Furious presents:
HOBBS & SHAW THE LION KING
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
Free outdoor movie screenings Saturday, Aug. 10, 7-11 p.m. Free Dirty Dancing Hasbrouck House 3805 Main St., Stone Ridge (845) 687-0736 www.hasbrouckhouseny.com Captain Marvel, Upper Landing Park 83 N. Water St., Poughkeepsie
Penelope Skinner’s Meek premieres at Denizen Theatre
Photo by Roselani Goehring
EVENT
Sidra Fest at Twin Star Orchards in New Paltz on Sunday
T
he current Renaissance of hard cider production on Hudson Valley farms has focused, historically speaking, on the fact that this was the only alcoholic beverage available most of the year to European settlers of our valley. But it’s a drink with deep roots in the Old World as well. In the mountainous Asturias region of Spain, where more than 200 varieties of apples are grown, traditional sidra is a staple of Basque culture. Cider bars called chigres are to be found everywhere, and cider-tapping festivals take place at certain times of the year, with drinks poured straight from the barrel. Tart, earthy and dry, sidra is meant to be drunk up quickly, before it settles and loses its sparkle. The “pour” is very important. Patrons at a chigre start out with just a small portion in the bottom of their glasses; waiters roam about refreshing their drinks by “throwing the sidra,” or pouring it from a height of three or more feet to enhance its carbonation. You can try it out yourself – without the cost of transatlantic airfare – on Sunday, August 11 at Twin Star Orchards in New Paltz. The second annual Seafood Boil and Sidra Fest goes on from noon to 5 p.m. For $27 in advance, $32 at the door, visitors can enjoy a platter of fresh shrimp, mussels, calamari, clams, crab, potato and corn. Wash your meal down with Brooklyn Cider House’s signature Raw cider, “thrown” in traditional Basque style. Other natural sidras by Blackduck Cidery and Graft Cider will be available, along with craft beer and wine; beverages are sold separately. Twin Star is a dog-friendly venue, located at 155 North Ohioville Road. To order tickets for the Seafood Boil & Sidra Fest, visit https://bit.ly/31lPMOA. Seafood Boil & Seafood Fest, Sunday, Aug. 11, noon-5 p.m., $32/$27, Twin Star Orchards, 155 N. Ohioville Rd., New Paltz, https://bit.ly/31lPMOA
movie shot in China, in 1986: Peter Wang’s A Great Wall. The humor here is similarly wry and gentle. The subject of how best to cope socially with death and other unpleasant realities in Chinese culture is broached several times in The Farewell’s narrative, obliquely enough that Nai Nai can cheerfully avoid thinking that it applies to her in the foreseeable future. The extended family gathers at the tomb of Billi’s grandfather, covering it with food offerings, burning paper effigies of things he might like in the afterlife and invoking his blessings on the young couple about to be wed. Before leaving the cemetery they cross paths with another clan who have hired professional mourners to weep as loudly as possible, as a way to honor the more recently deceased. And at the wedding reception, which affords any attendee a chance to get up and deliver the equivalent of a best man’s toast at an American wedding, freely flowing alcoholic beverages lubricate outbursts of long-repressed emotion from several characters. It’s all theater of a sort, giving Billi much to think about. A Farewell was mostly shot in Changchun, with a predominantly Chinese cast, and most of the dialogue is in Mandarin. So much of the story is told in facial expressions and body language that you won’t mind, even if you don’t much like reading subtitles. The acting is wonderful across the board, and Awkwafina and Zhao are extraordinary together. You’ll come out wishing you had a sensible, upbeat Chinese grandmother like that. Best of all, this is a story that
seems utterly plausible even if you don’t know the culture intimately. That makes its emotional depth all the more poignant. I feel pretty confident in terming this the not-to-be-missed small-budget indie sleeper film for the summer of 2019. – Frances Marion Platt
Dirty Dancing at Hasbrouck House, Captain Marvel under the Walkway
or shine, the Sunset Flix Film series will present what is billed as an “interactive” screening of Dirty Dancing (1987). That suggests that attendees, who are encouraged to wear circa-1963 themed costumes, will have opportunities to get up and dance themselves on the bluestone patio or the lawn. Food and drink will be served. The event begins at 7 p.m. and the movie at 8. To find out more, visit www.hasbrouckhouseny.com/ eventscalendar/2019/8/10/hh-movenight-dirty-dancing. Also this Saturday, the family-friendly Movies under the Walkway series at Upper Landing Park in Poughkeepsie continues with a free sunset screening of Captain Marvel (2019). Musical guests the B-Boyz begin playing at 7 p.m., and there will be food trucks on hand for your picnicking pleasure. Park at the Mid-Hudson Children’s Museum or the Metro North station, and bring your own chairs and blankets.
Denizen Theatre in New Paltz will present the US premiere of the play Meek, written by British playwright Penelope Skinner (The Village Bike) and directed by Kelly Kitchens. Meek depicts an oppressive alternative society where private lives become political and freedom of expression is not an option. Often compared to The Handmaid’s Tale, Meek was described by The Guardian as “elegantly mysterious.” “I am a director who loves tackling strong female-centered narratives. When I say strong, I mean nuanced, complex, gritty, sometimes unlikable and often sympathetic,” said director Kitchens. Meek runs from August 7 through September 1, with shows Wednesday through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. Pay What You Can Wednesdays are August 7 and 14. Tickets cost $28 general admission, with discounts for seniors, under 30 and students. Meek US premiere Aug. 7-Sept. 1 Denizen Theatre, Water Street Market 10 Main St., New Paltz (845) 303-4136 www.denizentheatre.com
The Blueberry Come to
Festival
Saturday August 10, 2019 Canal St. & Liberty Square Ellenville Street Festival 9-4 Rain or Shine Blueberry Pancake Breakfast 7:30-11:00
Live Music All Day • 175+ Vendors Arts/Crafts/Merchandise/Demos Huge Variety Delicious Foods, including our local eateries! Blueberry Pies • Baked Goods & Treats Children’s Area A&T’s House of Bounce For more information: www.ewcoc.com 845-647-4620 • info@ewcoc.com Proudly Sponsored by:
It’s that brief, glorious time of year for activities under the stars that must be enjoyed indoors at other seasons. Besides outdoor theater, our region also hosts several summer film series to which the general public is invited free of charge, with other attractions such as live music and food vendors typically on hand as well. Two of them are happening this Saturday evening, August 10. Under the big tent at the Hasbrouck House restaurant in Stone Ridge, rain
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Sunday, August 11, 1PM
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and our 2019 Co-Sponsors: Catskill Hudson Bank Dan Couse Agency State Farm Quality Services • Rolling V Bus Corp. Shawangunk Journal Sterling National Bank *Please note: By Village Board Resolution NO DOGS are allowed & NO ANIMALS in the areas of The Blueberry Festival This will be strictly enforced. 6am – 6pm
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
ART
Barbara Bravo’s Brilliant Sunset
Makers’ map this weekend’s Saugerties Artists’ Studio Tour features 37 artists
V
isiting an artist in their studio offers a unique perspective on their work. Unlike the gallery experience, in which one rarely meets the exhibiting artist, an open studio tour is a two-way street, where visitors get to ask questions of the artists and the artists get feedback. Visitors have the opportunity to see works-in-progress as well as completed works, and some of the artists offer a hands-on experience. Tourgoers get a behind-the-scenes peek at where artists work and how they live, and most of the studios will offer works for sale at affordable prices. The 17th annual Saugerties Artists’ Studio Tour will kick off the night before with an opening reception on Friday, August 9 from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Gallery at Opus 40. Each of the tour artists will
have work on display, and most will be in attendance to mingle and talk about their art. Several hundred attendees usually show up at the reception, which is free and open to everyone. Refreshments are offered, and the regular admission fee to Opus 40 that evening is waived. The studio tour experience is offered all weekend on Saturday and Sunday, August 10 and 11 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. There is no fee to pay and the tour is selfguided; one has only to pick up a map from one of many local businesses or print one out online. Chart a course, and then visit as many or as few studios as desired, taking in a range of artist studios or concentrating in depth on just a few. According to tour coordinator Barbara Bravo, this year’s event features 37 artists and makers skilled in at least 14 creative disciplines. There are painters working
in oils and acrylics, digital and collage artists, printmakers, mixed-media artists, photographers and videographers, and sculptors working with materials that range from polished steel to industrial debris. A similar variety in materials can be found with the two furnituremakers on the tour: One works with vintage barn wood and the other with fine hardwoods. The tour features a land artist, two jewelrymakers – one using silver, the other fused glass – and there is a devotee of Old World craftsmanship who makes bows, arrows and quivers using traditional tools and locally harvested materials. And a number of clay and ceramic artists (including Bravo) create work that runs the gamut from figurative to functional to “funky-fun,” as she puts it. The participating artists on this year’s tour are Isaac Abrams, abstract painting; Tara Bach, abstract painting; Kristin Barton, abstract painting; Barbara Bravo,
Justin Love Paintings
Burnett Gallery 845-430-0005 31 Mill Hill Rd., Woodstock Artist Reception Party Fri. & Sat. Aug. 9 & 10 — 5-8pm
painted paper collage and sculptural ceramic tiles; David Brown, steel sculpture; Michael Ciccone, multimedia sculpture from industrial debris; Vince Curry, bowmaker; Susan Dougherty, fused glass jewelry; Ruth Edwy, abstract landscapes; Josepha Gutelius, painting; Mikhail Horowitz, collage; Alex Kveton, stainless steel sculpture; Barbara Tepper Levy, silver jewelry and collage; Yvette Lewis, painting; Ulf Loven, painting; Brian Lynch, painting and printmaking; Iain Machell, drawing and sculpture; Marjorie Magid, painting; Meredith Morabito, figurative clay sculpture; Hugh Morris, painter; Michael Nelson, photographer; Gus Pedersen, furnituremaker; Bill Reinhart, painter; Tad Richards, digital painting; Jacquie Roland, painter; Mandolyn Wilson Rosen, painting; Marsha Kaufman Rubinstein, pottery; David Sarlin, photography; Istar Schwager, painting and collage; Robert Sherman, barn wood furniture; Michael Sullivan Smith, land art; Viorica Stan, painting and mixed media; Cornelia Seckel for Raymond J. Steiner (deceased February 2019), painting; Ben Suga, pottery; Robert Troxell, ceramic artist; Marck Webster, pencil drawings; and Carol Zaloom, linocut prints. The first Saugerties Artists’ Studio Tour, back in 2002, had just 11 artists participating. Bravo, as one of the founding members, saw the need for some organization and marketing if the tour was to be continued. She volunteered to serve as tour coordinator the following
Opening reception, Friday, August 9, 5-7 p.m., free, Gallery at Opus 40, 50 Fite Road, Saugerties; (845) 246-3400, www. opus40.org.
Saugerties hosts Caribbean Carnival on Sunday
Photo of Maxwell KoďŹ Donkor and Juma Sultan at last year’s festivities by Jim Peppler
Last year, Martin and Tamika Dunkley threw a party, expecting a few hundred people to show up and enjoy some good food and music. Thousands arrived. Thus, the annual Caribbean Carnival came to the Village of Saugerties, spreading the soulful vibe of the West Indies into the Hudson Valley. On Sunday, August 11, the Dunkleys invite the greater community to come experience an authentic Caribbean Carnival and get a sense of what island culture is all about. The Cantine Veterans’ Memorial Complex will once again vibrate to the beat of the islands, the flash of raucous colors in clothing and dĂŠcor and – best of all – the aromas and tastes being offered by more than 60 food vendors. Live music, a deejay and dance performances throughout the afternoon guarantee that attendees will feel it in their bodies and souls. With games and festive activities for all ages – arts and craft booths, face-painting, a costume contest with a grand prize of $250 – the whole family is welcomed to “get together and feel all rightâ€? in authentic Caribbean style. And take note: The fun starts with a parade slated to move from the Frank D. Greco Community Center, head through town on Washington Avenue and end up at the Complex. Parade lineup will begin at 10 a.m., with step-off at 11. (Participants
21st Annual Germanfest The Ambassador Unit of Cypress Shrine Robert E. Post Park, Town of Ulster, NY Saturday, August 17, 2019 Entertainment by the Joe Unger Band German bratwurst, hot dogs, and burgers, 1PM, main meal of roast pork and all the trim- mings starting at 4PM. Beer, soda & wine are included r Dooes Priz
Tickets $30 Children under 12 w/adult free
For tickets & more info call Kevin Costello 845-234-0923 or Mike Russell 845-802-0077 Please make checks payable to the Shriners Ambassador Unit Mail to Shriners Ambassador Unit, 305 Hurley Ave. Apt. #19F, Kingston, NY 12401
people to get up and dance and move and participate. Endorphins create more endorphins. I’ve been in health care my entire life. They say the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach; well, when I met Martin, he brought me food! I thought, ‘This is confirmation, this was all I needed.’ I thought, ‘We’re gonna have to figure this business thing out and make it a legitimate, viable situation.’� Martin talks about being the prototypical American who had the ambition and the dream, but didn’t know how to go about it. “Typically that’s where a dream dies: when it sparks, but then you’re trying to figure out how to get it done. We were blessed to have Nigel come along. And, like the Carnival, we want to be a beacon for others also. There are so many others out there like us.� “Obstacles are to be expected, and you have to navigate above those obstacles,� says Tamika, who is the official head of the company. “That’s really what separates out people and their success and their capability of creating for themselves. We just put in for another company to start incubating businesses, to provide guidance for whatever business someone sets their mind to. It will be their work, but we’re gonna help with [issue such as]: ‘You need to fill out this paperwork, this is who you go to, these are good resources in the community.’ We want to really encourage entrepreneurs and try to save them a few hiccups along the way. We’ve been through it.� “That’s where networking comes in,� says Martin. “We started from Ground Zero, and then we met Nigel. By trade, he’s an engineer, not a food person. What I’ve always admired about him is that there was never any blockage to getting started. Basically, the foundation that he gave us carried us through: just understanding that an obstacle is part of the process. What we can provide is our experience and the networking web we’ve created and continue to create. That’s the value you have to offer: just to point someone in a direction. Because [in a startup] if you don’t know somebody like Nigel, that window of opportunity closes or that door’s never opened.� When asked how they measure success and plan for the future of their endeavors, Martin says, “Regarding the Carnival, we haven’t set a metric for measuring success. You can’t really measure it until you’re there. This type of project is so young, there’s not a body of work that you can measure it against. It was mind-blowing that so many people came last year. This year, my measure of success is the energy of the people that are there: the joy on kids’ faces, my daughter running around playing with kids she didn’t know, the kids all dancing. That’s how I measure success:
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the reaction of the community afterwards. Off of one year, already I feel successful, because the community is looking forward to something we’ve created. “In West Indian background, boys are taught by their mothers how to cook and to be domesticated. The mentality is: You ain’t gonna just expect your wife to cook. You’d better know how to cook and clean. The fact that I’m able to honor my mother in that she instilled this in me, and now this [business] is a byproduct of that – our first company honors her in the Mamma Blossom line of recipes. We want to be successful enough in our business to give back. Somebody who’s ambitious, we can help and guide them, and that’s another measure of success.� “We cold-pack in a facility in Naples, New York, in the wine country,� says Tamika. We found a wonderful company, Arbor Hill, and we’ve been growing together, increasing their capacity. They work to scale, so you can come with 50 cases or 500 cases. We try to source ingredients as locally as possible. Obviously, you can’t buy papayas and mangos from New York. But we try to get as much as possible from local farms. “When we developed the company, I was working in the cardiac critical care unit, seeing the same faces back in the hospital fighting for their lives for weeks on end. We have geared our recipes to treat healing from within: the food-ismedicine premise. If you look at the ingredients list, you’ll see that sodium is so minute, but we’ve got so much to create an amazing flavor base. We use agave in our products instead of sugar. We have salt-free seasonings. We’re preservativefree. All the herbs we use have benefits. In all of these layers, we try to make sure that all ingredients in every product we have, it’s healthy.� And so is going out to dance and play with friends and neighbors in the community. For more information about the Carnival, e-mail infor@ seasondelicious.com and check Seasoned Delicious on Facebook. Proceeds from the raffle and all donations will benefit the Center for Creative Education in Kingston. – Ann Hutton Caribbean Carnival, Sunday, August 11, 11 a.m.-6 p.m., free, Cantine Veterans’ Memorial Complex/Kiwanis Ice Arena, 6 Small World Ave., Saugerties; (845) 6161689, www.seasonedelicious.com.
Barbara Masterson, Botti
Saugerties Artists’ Studio Tour, Saturday and Sunday, August 10-11, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., free, Town of Saugerties; www. saugertiesarttour.com.
must register online.) “I am West Indian-American myself, born in the Bronx,� says Martin. He describes how, in the City, you always have such a mix of ethnicities, with whole neighborhoods, entire boroughs celebrating their particular cultures. “I felt like this was an opportunity for our community to enjoy something here. After starting our business, Seasoned Delicious Foods, we’ve always wanted to give back to the very community that supported us. In Jamaica, you had your Sunday dinner with music, and everybody’d come over. We’d gather, decompress and start the week. I’ve learned that the best way to bring people together is with food and music. I thought it was time for us to give back to the community and bring everyone together.� “Last year we were expecting 300 to 400 people,� says Tamika. “Ten times that came! We had only 60 days from the time we got the approval to when we put on the event. It was a wonderful turnout. What was beautiful was the sea of faces – black, brown, white, yellow; it was not one color, and was really an incredible experience.� Seasoned Delicious Foods produces spices and seasonings, hot sauces, relishes, preserves and spreads, oils and vinegars. Two auxiliary lines of products, Afya Power Foods and Above Earth Foods, round out the culinary choices, all of which offer finely tuned flavors for the discerning cook. The Dunkleys consider their unique sauces and preserves “the natural byproduct of a life lived with a Caribbean flair.� Martin has always been in sales, he says. “In the Bronx, my dad had an antique store, and I helped there while I was going to school. I came up here 20 years ago, went into the car business and then managed a store in Albany. When I was working there, I was selling food on my own: peppers, flavored hot sauces. Then we got married, had a baby and bought a house. Tamika was the missing link for me to making it all come together. “We decided to continue with the catering. I met Nigel Redman, who had a mentorship program, which I did for about two years. He said we needed to figure out a way to bottle this stuff and turn it into a business. We did our research and looked into the infrastructure and how to get it all done. In our first line we had almost 25 products. My wife and I hit the road and, within a week’s span, she got us in 12 stores.� Tamika is a nurse who says she doesn’t have one sales bone in her body. “This is a huge learning curve for me. What I bring to the table is the health aspect of things. So our product line is unique, wherein we use Himalayan salt instead of iodized salt, for example, because it has all the minerals. And coconut oils. There’s nothing from a can or a jar. No GMOs. It’s a holistic approach to business and to our products. There’s a health dynamic to our company itself. “That also ties into what we’re doing in the community as well, because we want
EXHIBITIONS AT
year, bringing the skills she had developed over the years in her ceramics business, and has been the organizer since. In 2017, she received an Ulster County Executive’s Arts Award in the category of Volunteer in Support of the Arts from then-executive Mike Hein. Bravo would be too modest to say so to this reporter, but, having previewed this event for a number of years now (although not nearly as many as she’s been doing this), it’s apparent that her efforts in producing this tour every year have been crucial to its success. “Visiting the studios and talking with the artists is only part of the experience,� she says. “I’ve been asking myself lately, ‘What is the importance of art? How does it impact our lives?’ And I found a humble answer in a quote from Pablo Picasso. He said, ‘Art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.’� – Sharyn Flanagan
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
AUGUST 10 - SEPTEMBER 1 RECEPTION: Sat. AUG 17, 4-6 PM The first vinyl color coolor and alternativee to traditional arts materials. By its ts unique properties ties mes the color becomes ltiform. absolute & multiform.
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An Artistic Legacy: 1+1+1 FOCUS: Illumination Philip Guston: The Essential Line Think Like an Archivist continues through Aug 11 The Woodstock Art Conferences Opens Aug 17 SAT. AUG 10, 1-5 PM, PERFORMANCE
MORTON FELDMAN’S FOR PHILIP GUSTON FEATURING BENT DUO WITH KELLI KATHMAN FREE
woodstockart.org
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
MUSIC
JD URBAN
From left to right: Kyle Poole, Dominick Farinacci, Piers Playfair, Shenel Johns and Patrick Bartley, Jr. on stage in Hudson last June. These artists will return to Hudson Hall on Saturday, August 24 at 7 p.m. and perform with Russell Hall, Michela Marino Lerman, Mathis Picard, Christian Tamburr, Orlando Watson and Keyon Harrold in a program titled The Spirit of Harlem, part of a residency and tour that began in Tannersville and will conclude with a world-premiere performance in Florence, Italy.
The pastoral work of making sustainable jazz Tannersville’s Catskill Jazz Factory provides support for both sides of jazz’s legacy: the traditional and the revolutionary
J
azz is a music of paradoxes: composition tested to its limits by improvisation; high European classical harmony and ancient church modes radicalized, buoyed
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
on rhythms of African, Caribbean and Latin descent. Jazz is a wild, inherently transgressive and liberated music that has been a disciplined, codified and academy-minted art as well for over half a century. It was mainstream pop during the swing era (and briefly again during the fusion ’70s) and is just as often regarded as the ultimate hipster cognoscenti hoax, bebop and beyond: something that you need a pedantic boyfriend to mansplain to you in stale beatnik tropes. Like this one. So why not one more paradox for good measure in the form of the Catskill Jazz Factory (CJF)? While New Orleans may be the Delta of jazz, and Chicago, Kansas City and Los Angeles home to significant scenes and subgenres, and while Paris and Tokyo still can’t get enough of the stuff, modern jazz is at its heart a New York thing. Most of it, in fact, can be traced to a single stoop in Harlem. What an ironic gas, then, that one of the most active, connected and conceptually ambitious jazz promotion/advocacy/development organizations this side of Lincoln Center is a New York thing in fact: located in the heart of the thinly populated rural Catskills, alongside the biker gangs and ski bums on Route 23. Catskill Jazz Factory, as you will learn
below, can be accurately described as an organization with global ambition. But the grassroots, pastoral work of manufacturing jazz talent and an audience for it (for it is a “factory”) takes place at venues of all kinds right here in the Catskills and mid-Hudson: a sustainable jazz pilot study in an unlikely location. From our high theaters, colleges and clubs to any old ad hoc nook that will have it, there is nary a community center, library or church that they haven’t pressed into service as a temporary Blue Note at one time or another. Us i n g f r e e market logic, one might ask why a music form, any music form, requires advocacy and the intercession of agencies and leagues. If you are wondering that, I invite you to leave this essay at once and go live in a future adorned only by music that the
market supports naturally. Except at its highest “national treasure” curatorial levels, jazz has always been consigned to, erm, “intimate” venues. The most startling thing about jazz’s greatest live recordings – like, say, Bill Evans’ Sunday at the Village Vanguard – is the parts where the music stops and no more than 18 or 20 hands get to clapping, as silverware and glasses chink and rattle. John Cage might even have called it part of the tune. As America’s f o r e m o s t contribution to 20 th -century intellectual life, jazz has long depended on the efforts of dedicated support organizations, from radical collectives like our own Creative Music Studio in Woodstock and Chicago’s hugely influential Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians to
“I got to talking with my old neighbor from the City, the jazz historian and critic Stanley Crouch, who put me in touch with Aaron Diehl, an incredible young pianist who knew who the up-and-coming next generation of players were.”
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Providing artist residencies and project support to a variety of young, top-quality jazz artists to incubate world-premiere programs. Introducing artists into villages, educational institutions and a host of venues to promote community-building through jazz. Serving as a launch point for our artists to develop brand-new, innovative projects to then present to larger and diverse audiences outside of the Hudson Valley/ New York City area. Administrator/production director Chandra Knotts, who steered me through my CJF learning process with extreme clarity, hastened to add that CJF also presents a year-round educational outreach program that extends across the
Mirabai of Woodstock
Hudson Valley, with annual in-classroom work at the Hunter/Tannersville and Millbrook School Districts, to name a few. These visits give students the invaluable opportunity to have face time and performance opportunities with young professional musicians. It’s a lot to take in. I jumped at the chance to interview Catskill Jazz Factory founder and artistic director Piers Playfair, who runs the daily operation along with his wife Lucy Playfair and Knotts. How do you stay so on top of the feeders of talent in jazz? What’s your secret? What’s your connection? And what kind of “value proposition” do you think Catskill Jazz Factory offers the artists? Back in 2012, I got to talking with my old neighbor from the City, the jazz historian and critic Stanley Crouch, who put me in touch with Aaron Diehl, an incredible young pianist who knew who the up-and-coming next generation of players were. Together with my wife Lucy Playfair, we created a small team initially to support a lot of the performing arts initiatives that were happening in Tannersville, mainly through the auspices of the Catskill Mountain Foundation. Since then, we’ve taken this incredible journey from presenting in Mountain Top coffee shops, churches, libraries to sold-out series at the Fisher Center and other venues in the Hudson Valley, then
E xper t Tarot , I C hing and Psychic Readings Ever yday
You’ve worked a lot with a personal favorite of mine, the pianist Dan Tepfer: a guy known for bridging whatever gap still
exists between jazz and so-called “serious” music. With the Goldberg Variations Variations, he beat Brad Mehldau to the idea of an improvisational dialogue with Bach by a few solid years. I have contended many times in print that jazz is now “serious music” – in the sense of not having the popular audience it once enjoyed, in the sense of having advanced to such a state of sophistication that many feel it has evolved itself clean out of a broad appeal and in the sense that it is fostered and kept alive in academic and grantdriven settings more than ever. Over the years you have programmed plenty of demanding, experimental music as well as more accessible, user-friendly jazz where “the tune” still rules. How aware are you of honoring both parts of jazz’s legacy: the traditional and the revolutionary? Ultimately, we want to support great artists and their projects. We take a very broad view of what jazz is because, increasingly, we – like many of the musicians we work with – do not like being defined by a single genre. We aim to incorporate new music and experimentation in our program and, just in the past year or so, we’ve done a great deal of work on projects ranging from Keyon Harrold [NAS, Common]’s Jazz & the Birth of Hip Hop, Life & Loves with Dominick Farinacci and Etienne Charles’ Vibes of Venezuela. These three projects alone cross Venezuelan folk music, the
BETHEL WOODS CENTER FOR THE ARTS
A Season of Song & Celebration. Celebrate the 50th Anniversary where it happened, where it’s happening still. August 8 Alice Cooper & Halestorm Motionless in White August 9 Nelly, TLC, & Flo Rida August 15 (SOLD OUT) Film on the Field with Arlo Guthrie August 16 Ringo Starr & His All Starr Band Edgar Winter Band & Blood, Sweat & Tears August 17 (SOLD OUT)
Gif ts, Book s and Work shops for Serenit y, W isdom and Transformat ion.
to premieres with the New York Botanical Gardens and Kings Theatre in New York City, and now more recently bringing these events to major festivals in Europe. As far as our “secret,” it is not so secret. We are very fortunate as curators that so many of the world’s greatest players are right there, performing very regularly in New York City. On any given night you can catch fantastic talent, and it is not difficult to identify the truly great artists. Our principal vision as a non-profit is to support these young artists and to help them survive in this difficult environment. This generation is facing the unique challenge of how the Internet is impacting our access and consumption of music, so it is a time when our type of support is particularly needed. With this in mind, we try to back brilliant musicians with a unique artistic vision, or work in partnership with them to develop special projects. We take the time to individually meet and rap with each artist that we collaborate with – to understand their goals, their visions, their unique voice – and then find a mutual path forward. The “value” has come from this practice. Our artists know that when they work with CJF, they have the opportunity for complete musical and artistic freedom, and to develop something special.
Santana The Doobie Brothers August 18 John Fogerty Tedeschi Trucks Band & Grace Potter
August 25 Pat Benatar & Neil Giraldo + Melissa Etheridge August 30 Bush & +Live+ Our Lady Peace August 31 Pentatonix Rachel Platten Sundays Sept. 1-29 (Free) Harvest Festival September 12 Luke Bryan Cole Swindell & Jon Langston September 13 Canned Heat Event Gallery September 21 Chris Thile Event Gallery
September 22 Axiom Brass PLAY: The Classics Event Gallery September 29 Jimmie Vaughan Event Gallery October 3 & 4 Gordon Lightfoot Event Gallery October 5 Wine Festival October 6 Borisevich Duo PLAY: The Classics Event Gallery October 12 CRAFT: Beer, Spirits & Food Festival October 13 Josh Ritter Event Gallery
October 15 Graham Nash Event Gallery October 19 John Sebastian Event Gallery November 7 David Sanborn Jazz Quintet Event Gallery November 24 Max Weinberg’s Jukebox Event Gallery December 7 & 8 (Free) Holiday Market April 26, 2020 Young People’s Chorus of NYC PLAY: The Classics Event Gallery ® NYSDED
government grants, Jazz Studies and Commercial Music university programs and the work of Wynton Marsalis (and the hand of his mentor Stanley Crouch) at Lincoln Center, jazz’s semi-official canonical seat. What distinguishes Catskill Jazz Factory from so many likeminded jazz advocates is the sheer brio and commitment of its approach, and its conceptual design. Not only does it book transcendent talent (mostly but not exclusively young), it also builds extended, creative relationships with these performers and composers and abides their careers. It honors both sides of jazz’s legacy: the traditional and the revolutionary, seeing no apparent contradiction, and increasingly dropping the J-word entirely from its discourse. Catskill Jazz Factory partners with powerful institutions and venues like Bard’s Fisher Center, Hudson Hall (the old Hudson Opera House and a current hotbed of experimental art) and the region’s premier jazz night club, the Falcon, among others, while still seeding the community at the level of library and church sanctuary, where an intimate encounter with a young genius of jazz can be a life-changing experience. The Catskill Jazz Factory mission is so 360-degree and coherent, it is almost hard to describe what the organization does. From its website I scraped these three core participial bullet points:
Upcoming Events 2019 Special Exhibit Spirit Connection: Energy Medicine & Messages w/ Adam Bernstein & Jenn Bergeron Sat. Aug. 10 1-5PM $60/$70* Shamanic Drum Circle w/ Rebecca Singer Mon. Aug 12 6:30-7:30pm Crystal Trunk Show w/ Aurora Minerals Sat. Aug 24 noon - 6pm
OPEN THRU December 31 “The Past Can Still Take You Places.”
We Are Golden:
Reflections on the 50th Anniversary of the Woodstock Festival and Aspirations for a Peaceful Future.
$10
Free
* Lower price for early reg./pre-payment made at least 48 hrs. in advance
Open 7 Days • 11 to 7 23 Mill Hill Road • Woodstock, NY (845) 679-2100 • www.mirabai.com
To learn more, purchase tickets , and see a complete list of programs and events visit BethelWoodsCenter.org.
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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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roots of hip hop, Kurt Weill, Richard Strauss and the American Songbook! A lot of our programming is purposefully “cross-genre” in this way, as we are always encouraging our artists to explore their passions and limits, which leads to incorporating elements of everything from gospel and classical music, opera, hip hop, work songs. There is no limit to the creative possibilities when you think this way. We encourage these explorations and are always trying to reach a broader audience for our music. We absolutely consider part of our mission to develop a regional jazz (and musical) audience, because that is just one way to support the artists: to help them find ways of reaching communities outside of the traditional concert halls and clubs et cetera. We are also committed to artists trying to break new boundaries. One of our most important residencies in this respect was Dan Tepfer’s Acoustic Informatics, which we world-premiered at Bard’s Fisher Center back in 2015. On top of being a brilliant pianist, Dan is an astrophysicist, and this project (now called Natural Machines) is an extension of his unique musical and scientific approach, using the Yamaha Disklavier, virtual reality video technology and beyond to bring music and computer-driven algorithms together to create a unique artistic experience. Audiences can see Natural Machines for themselves with CJF this December at Hudson Hall. Your summer programs seem be thematically driven in many ways – this year’s focus on song and the songbook, for example (perfectly situated in Bard’s Spiegeltent). Do you see yourself as a curator of the tradition in any way? Wynton’s work at Lincoln Center has been on-and-off controversial. How do you feel about efforts to define jazz and its canon? Is that at all part of your sense of mission? As a young organization in this industry, we are enormously indebted to Jazz at Lincoln Center. They are an educational institution, a mentoring institution, a showcasing institution and so much more. Jazz at Lincoln Center plays an immeasurably important role in the lives
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
Aug. 8, 2019
PETER AARON | ESTO
Through 12 themed concerts, pre-concert lectures, panel discussions and expert commentary, the 30th Bard Music Festival examines the life and times of Erich Wolfgang Korngold (1897-1957).
MUSIC
Bard Music Festival’s “Korngold and His World” opens this weekend
S
ummer is such a hopping time at Bard that it can be hard to tell which parts, exactly, constitute the Bard Music Festival and which parts are just…you know, summer at Bard, also known as SummerScape. The Bard Music Festival is the condensed payoff of the SummerScape programming: an exhaustive investigation of the work and significance of a single composer. Bard tends to select composers based not only on individual genius, but also on a rich, synergistic context of cultural and historical factors, giving intellectuals across the disciplines a lot to chew on. This year’s subject is the famous film composer Erich Korngold, an Austrian-born groomed to take his place in the great Viennese tradition of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert and Brahms. Several factors – being Jewish at the worst time, for example, and being groomed for a profession that did not really exist anymore – sent Korngold’s destiny skittering on a different path: one that led to Hollywood, where Korngold and his peers are credited with defining the sound of American cinema. And now we are in the thick of it. Through 12 themed concerts, pre-concert lectures, panel discussions and expert commentary, the 30th Bard Music Festival examines the life and times of Erich Wolfgang Korngold (1897-1957). “Korngold and His World” programs take place over the next two weekends. Program One on opening night, August 9, is “Erich Wolfgang Korngold: From Viennese Prodigy to Hollywood Master,” an all-Korngold chamber and orchestral program featuring maestro Leon Botstein, mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe and pianist Piers Lane. There will be two programs each on Saturday and Sunday. Program Two, “Teachers, Admirers and Influences,” pairs Korngold’s early work with chamber and vocal music by prominent composers in the Vienna of his youth. Program Three is titled “The Orchestral Imagination,” presenting four relative rarities including Korngold’s Piano Concerto for the Left Hand, a stirring and melodically inventive tour de force performed by Orion Weiss. Weekend one closes with two Sunday programs: Program Four: “Popular Music from the Cabarets, Taverns and Salons of Korngold’s Vienna,” and Program Five: “Before the Reich: Korngold and Fellow Conservatives,” featuring chamber music written by the composer and some of his less revolutionary contemporaries. That’s just Weekend One. Visit the Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts website for tickets, prices, venues and the full schedule of events. – John Burdick “Korngold and His World,” August 9-18, Fisher Center, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, (845) 758-7900, https://fishercenter.bard.edu
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.
of our artists and in the global jazz scene in general, and without the development of so many of the artists with whom they are closely associated, we could not be who we are. With that said, we tend to see our mission as less jazz-based and more musician-based. We are looking to really back great things, and try not to impose our own tastes on musicians with whom we work. Having said that, art by its very nature is always going to invite controversy because people hold such strong beliefs; but wherever we can, we try to be supportive to other artists and arts organizations. This is a time when there is such a need for collaboration. So, to answer your question, I would not say we are thematically driven as much as driven by the mission of artistic and community support. It infiltrates all of our decisions as producers and presenters. In slight contrast, our hometown program, 23Arts Initiative, is always defined by our Tannersville community.
23Arts provides us with ultimate programming flexibility. This is where we get to test-run new projects, incubate future premieres and work with other non-profits like Mountain Top Arboretum,
Hunter Foundation and Mountain Top Library. This side of our programming allows us to transform the Village of Tannersville into a performance space, regardless of genre and accessible to
Saturday, August 10 8pm STEVE GORN AND FRIENDS Tribute to the Art of Ravi Shankar General Admission $30 Reserved Seating $45 Students $5 Ticket Books Welcome
Sunday, August 11 4 pm FRIENDS OF MAVERICK CONCERT AND RECEPTION HARLEM QUARTET Brahms Haydn Bolcom Dizzy Gillespie Admission is by donation. Donors to Friends of Maverick of $75 since August 24, 2018 receive a ticket for one unreserved seat to the concert & reception. Donors of $150 or more receive two tickets. Regular Maverick tickets are not valid for this concert.
www.maverickconcer ts.org
646.965.2365
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Aug. 8, 2019
MUSIC
Three shows this weekend at Opus 40
Roky Erickson’s death precipitated Huichica’s move from the Dutchess County farm that has been its New York home to the big back room at BSP in Kingston. It also led the organizers to shorten it to a one-day festival, one held in Erickson’s honor and memory.
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BSP HOSTS HUICHICA EAST FESTIVAL ON SATURDAY
W
hen the legendary Texas psychedelic rocker Roky Erickson died on May 31, American music lost one of its great Outsider artists. With the 13th Floor Elevators, Erickson was the unmistakable voice of one the most bracingly savage, musical and weird of all the psychedelic rock groups of the ’60s. He had one more miracle in store, coming back from years of debilitating mental illness to reclaim his mantle and reap some of the adulation that had only grown in his years away. On May 31, the Huichica East festival lost something else: its headliner. Roky Erickson’s death precipitated Huichica’s move from the Dutchess County farm that has been its New York home to the big back room at BSP in Kingston. It also led the organizers to shorten it to a one-day festival, one held in Erickson’s honor and memory. The headliners that remain share certain enigmatic traits with Roky Erickson. David Berman’s career benefited immensely from his association with Pavement’s Stephen Malkmus, who had a hand in Berman’s early output with the Silver Jews. But while Malkmus might have provided some scaffolding, Berman has earned his underground superstar reputation with release after release of brilliant rock poetry. His finest work is all post-Malkmus. Berman’s new project, Purple Mountains, will make its debut at this year’s Huichica East. Speaking of enigmas, Huichica East’s second big-name act is Destroyer, the nom de indie of Dan Bejar, minority writer in the New Pornographers and prolific solo artist under the Destroyer alias. Destroyer’s most recent release, 2017’s Ken, is a lush, densely poetic hybrid electro affair. As usual, his lyrics reward close attention, which is why the fact that his Huichica set is solo is possibly more feature than bug. The rich micro-festival bill is rounded out by Helado Negro, the ambient pop project of Roberto Carlos Lange, the tireless festival regulars Mail the Horse, Kingston’s Shana Falana, Howlin Rain and more. Tickets cost a flat $45 for the people.
I
t will be a busy weekend out on the rocks at Opus 40. The three-show run kicks off with a freebie as Radio Woodstock teams up with Opus 40 for Sunset Sessions, a series of free summer concerts set in the unparalleled beauty of Harvey Fite’s sculpture park in Saugerties. On Friday, August 9, the stylish noir- and jazz-inflected New York City dual-couples band Scruffy Pearls takes to the rocks at 5 p.m. On the following Saturday, the heavyweight duo of Cuban percussionist and composer Roberto Juan Rodríguez and Argentinian clarinetist Iván Barenboim bring their heady mix of Cuban klezmer and jazz. Tickets cost $25 and $30, and the show begins at 6 p.m. Finally, on Sunday, August 11, Opus 40 hosts a benefit for the Saugerties Animal Shelter from 3 to 7 p.m. The event features live music, food trucks, 50/50 drawings and beer. Admission costs $10.
Scruffy Pearls, Friday, Aug. 9, 5 p.m., free Roberto Juan Rodríguez/Iván Barenboim, Saturday, Aug. 10, 6 p.m., $30/$25 Saugerties Animal Shelter benefit, Sunday, Aug. 11, 3-7 p.m., $10 Opus 40 50 Fite Rd., Saugerties www.opus40.org
Italy for the full-blown world premiere, which features a specially commissioned
composition arranged for orchestra by Steve Feifke, an incredible young artist
Huichica East Festival, Saturday, Aug. 10, 1-11:30 p.m., $45, BSP, 323 Wall St., Kingston, https://hudson.huichica.com
everyone. We see our role as facilitators of highly talented people, partners with artists that need support and partners of venues that need differentiated content. We don’t want to impose our artistic vision on artists or venues. In a way, we are similar to how old independent record labels would function: Sometimes a project is all the artist, and sometimes it is more of a partnership with ourselves and a venue. What are you most excited about in this great summer season? What’s a show you
are really looking forward to? Our most exciting project this summer is The Spirit of Harlem, a residency and tour that begins in our hometown of Tannersville and concludes with a worldpremiere performance in Florence, Italy. From August 23 to 25, our local audience can join us for shows at the Mountain Top Library, Hudson Hall, Twilight Park and the Falcon before we head to New York City for a show at the National Jazz Museum of Harlem. From there, the band will head over to Florence,
UNISON ARTS LIVE!
new paltz, ny
THE CANAL STREET STRING BAND SAT, AUG 10 • 8 PM Folk & Blues Roots of The Grateful Dead
UNIS N
RIDGEFEST @ SUNY NEW PALTZ FRI-SUN, SEPT 6-8 Multi-Day Performing Arts Festival LIVE MUSIC • PERFORMANCES FOR KIDS www.ridgefestnp.com
For tickets & more info: www.unisonarts.org (845) 255-1559
“The summer’s most stimulating music festival.” —Los Angeles Times
KORNGOLD AND HIS WORLD BARD MUSIC FESTIVAL
Korngold in America
August 16–18 Tickets start at $25
BARDSUMMERSCAPE 2019 fishercenter.bard.edu Erich Wolfgang Korngold, 1916, akg-images
845-758-7900
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who was actually one of the first to work with Catskill Jazz Factory. The band itself is unmatched as far as young talent goes, featuring established artists like Dominick Farinacci and Christian Tambor alongside some of the most exciting young names on the New York City jazz scene, like Michela Marino Lerman, Russell Hall, Mathis Picard and Shenel Johns, to name a few. On its face, the project might appear as a straight-up jazz gig, but there are much greater artistic and political explorations taking place. The project takes a musical tour through Harlem’s most iconic jazz spots and moments while exploring the African American struggle, civil rights, the history of Harlem and the evolution of jazz as an elevated artform. It is a truly unique American story. You could view The Spirit of Harlem tour as a great example of how CJF works. We take a project from conception to premiere and provide support all along the way, ranging from a small-town Mountain Top residency and rehearsal week to increasingly larger audiences and stages across the region to an official and elaborated world premiere overseas.
MUSIC
Harlem Quartet plays Maverick on Sunday
T
he Maverick season is, among other things, a virtual parade of internationally recognized string quartets, proceeding in groups of four, each with its own specialties, repertoire biases and agendas. In its concert and reception for members on Sunday, August 11, the storied seasonal chamber music series welcomes the Harlem Quartet. The Harlem was formed in 2006 entirely by first-place laureates of the Sphinx Competition for Black and Latino string players. Today, the Harlem comprises first violinist Ilmar GavilĂĄn, second violinist Melissa White, violist Jaime Amador and cellist Felix Umansky. Across more than a decade of existence, the Harlem Quartet has drawn a wide and inclusive circle of repertoire, with a special interest in adaptations of jazz, including works by Chick Corea, Duke Ellington and more of jazz’s great composers. On August 11, the Harlem’s glorious diversity will be in full bloom. Anchoring the program are two staples of the classical repertoire: Op. 33 no. 2, the “Jokeâ€? Quartet by Haydn, inventor of the string quartet form; and Johannes Brahms’ Third Quartet, Op. 67, in which the great Romantic composer elevates the role of the lowly yeoman viola to principal melodic voice: an engagement with the viola that would blossom across the rest of his career. The Harlem’s other two selections challenge the canon a bit. The living American composer William Bolcom began, as a serious composer in the mid-20th century practically had to, as a difficult 12-tone serialist. Gradually he moved back toward an inclusive sense of tonality that bridges pop and serious music. His many rags are among his most accessible work. The Harlem will perform Bolcom’s Three Rags for String Quartet. Finally, the Harlem will perform an adaptation of a jazz standard, Dizzy Gillespie’s “A Night in Tunisia.â€? Admission is by donation. Donors to Friends of Maverick of $75 since August 24, 2018 receive a ticket for one unreserved seat to both the concert and reception. Donors of $150 or more receive two tickets. Regular Maverick tickets are not valid for this concert. – John Burdick
Your association with other regional presenters like Bard, the Woodstock Playhouse, Phoenicia Festival of the Voice and Hudson Hall, to name a few, have been really fruitful for all parties, in my opinion. Can you give me a little background on how that works? What other partnerships are you most excited about these days? Our regional partnerships allow us to
Upcoming Events August 16-18 Rats Nest Run-In, East Durham 17 Eagles Tribute Band Performance, Reidlbauer’s Resort 21-25 Vietnam Traveling Memorial Wall, Historic Catskill Point 24 Tavern Night at the Bronck Museum, Coxsackie
September 7 Nussy’s Oktoberfest, Reidlbauer’s Resort Schlachtfest Celebration at the Mountain Brauhaus, Round Top LET US BE YOUR 11-15 Catskill Mountain Thunder Motorcycle Festival, East Durham
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To experience you Greatest-Of-All-Time event please visit greatcatskillsevents.com escapegoat | 1-800-355-2287 #greatcatskillsevents.com
Aug. 8, 2019
Harlem Quartet, Sunday, Aug. 11, 4 p.m., Maverick Concert Hall, 120 Maverick Rd., Woodstock, (800) 595-4TIX, https://maverickconcerts.org
offer multilevel residency opportunities for our artists. They can come upstate, have a residency in Tannersville, present to our local community in intimate spaces and then we can bring these premiere performances to larger stages across the region and beyond. These partnerships embolden our programming capabilities because, unlike the challenge of a typical performance
Š—‘ŠĴŠ—ȹ’—ȹÂ?‘Žȹ ˜ž—Â?Š’—œ — Faculty Concert —
venue, our content is not dictated by space. We can actually follow an artist’s vision and then place it in the appropriate space or venue. Our variety of partnerships also allow us the capability to explore new content. An important part of our mission is to bring jazz and music to where it has never been before, but we respect that different audiences want different things. Ultimately, we think it is vital for non-
profits to work together. An example of this is our most exciting new collaboration with the New Generation Festival, a really groundbreaking endeavor co-founded by a truly visionary trio of young British producers: Maximilian Fane, Roger Granville and Frankie Parham. The festival is presented each summer at the Palazzo Corsini al Prato in Florence, Italy, but this is just the beginning for what’s to come! Stateside, we are looking forward to a new partnership with Storm King Art Center and have our first event coming up with them this September. New partnerships like this allow us to develop ever more artistically ambitious ideas, like world-premiere orchestral commissions and larger ensembles. We are thrilled to be bringing young American artists to an all-new market for our music. Ultimately, what we love is when our musicians get new venues and our presenters get a new musical experience to share with their audience and community. Everybody wins. This article finds us right in the thick of Catskill Jazz Factory’s summer programming at Bard’s Spiegeltent and in its own 23Arts Summer Music Festival, at venues across the Catskills and beyond. Visit the Catskill Jazz Factory website for detailed information on all upcoming concerts at www. catskilljazzfactory.org. – John Burdick
Bard Spiegeltent hosts Spirit Family Reunion on Friday Brooklyn’s Spirit Family Reunion embody and typify the urban roots/ retro impulse of the Aughts both in their emphasis on organic sound sources and uncorrected, ecstatic performances and in the irony-averse, idealistic earnestness of the writing and the messaging, the micro-collective vibe. Where you fall on it – refreshing antidote to the electro-materialism of pop and the jaded modernism of postPavement indie rock, or calculated poorgeoise scruff – is simply a matter of taste and cultural coordinates. Nick Panken and the gang are very much at it and sticking to their story. Spirit Family Reunion celebrate the release of their new record Ride Free in the enchanted big top of the Bard Spiegeltent on Friday, August 9. Tickets cost $25. – John Burdick Spirit Family Reunion Friday, Aug. 9, 9:30 p.m. $25 Spiegeltent, Fisher Center Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson (845) 758-7900 https://fishercenter.bard.edu
Science for environmental solutions
FREE PUBLIC EVENT
Healing America’s Streams On Friday, August 9 at 7pm join Cary Institute for a special presentation by Dr. Margaret Palmer, professor at University of Maryland.
SATURDAY, August 10, 2019 @ 8:00 PM DOCTOROW CENTER FOR THE ARTS 7971 Main Street, Village of Hunter
Tickets Purchased Ahead: $25; $20 seniors; $7 students At the Door: $30; $25 seniors; $7 students To purchase tickets call 518 263 2063 catskillmtn.org
Palmer seeks to understand how activities like mining and urbanization impact streams and rivers, and how restoration science can guide freshwater management. Discover the social, political, and ecological dynamics underpinning restoration efforts from an expert that has emerged as an advocate for streams and rivers in US courts. The event will be held in the Cary Institute auditorium, located at 2801 Sharon Tpk. (Rte. 44) in Millbrook, NY. Seating is first come, first served. Registration required: www.caryinstitute.org/events.
Visit our website at www.caryinstitute.org or call (845) 677-7600 x 121.
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runs from approximately 5 to 7 p.m. – John Burdick Bad Hat Jazz Saturday, Aug. 10, 5 p.m. Free Thomas Bull Memorial Park 211 Rt. 416, Montgomery (845) 615-3831
Hardeman Orchards host Professor Louie on Friday in Red Hook
CHARLES GATEWOOD
The Fugs circa 1968, top row left to right: Tuli Kupferberg, Scott Petito and Steve Taylor; bottom row, left to right: Ed Sanders and Coby Batty.
EVENT
THE FUGS WILL EXORCISE WASHINGTON AGAIN, FROM BYRDCLIFFE, ON AUGUST 17
R
ock music has always prided itself on being rebellious, but throughout its history, there have been varying levels of how conceptually outré, lyrically lewd or politically provocative a group or individual performer was willing to be. In the 1960s, no band defied social taboos with such unrestrained glee as the Fugs. Though intellectually well-grounded in both the Beat movement and the visionary Romantic poetry of William Blake, the Fugs quickly became associated with deliberately scatological songs such as the iconic, tongue-twisting “Boobs a Lot.” They recorded seven albums – the second one the subject of an obscenity investigation by the FBI – but few radio outlets dared play them besides Pacifica stations like WBAI. Considering how many later punk bands cited them as a source of inspiration, one might fairly describe the Fugs as “seminal” in more ways than one. More importantly from a historical perspective, they were unabashedly confrontational with the Powers that Be, famously providing the musical score for the attempt to levitate and exorcise the Pentagon during the October 1967 March on Washington to protest the Vietnam War, as documented in Norman Mailer’s Pulitzer-winning nonfiction novel The Armies of the Night. The chant of “Out, demons, out!” will ring out once again with new DC foes in mind, with audience participation led by founding Fug and longtime Woodstock resident Ed Sanders, in a performance on August 17 at the Byrdcliffe Barn commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Woodstock festival. It’s the same venue that has hosted various Fugs reunions since the band reformed in 1985 with “new” members Steve Taylor, Coby Batty and Scott Petito, all three of whom will be joining Sanders onstage this time around. While Fugs co-founder Tuli Kupferberg died in 2010, attendees are assured that he will be there in spirit. “The audience is sure to leave the Byrdcliffe Barn feeling empowered, educated, rocked and maybe a bit sweaty,” promises the official press release. The Fugs perform at 8 p.m. on Saturday, August 17 at the Byrdcliffe Barn, located at 485 Upper Byrdcliffe Road in Woodstock. Tickets cost $30 general admission, $25 for Byrdcliffe members. To order, call (845) 679-2079 or visit www.woodstockguild.org/fugs.html. – Frances Marion Platt The Fugs in concert, Saturday, Aug. 17, 8 p.m., $30/$25, Byrdcliffe Barn, 485 Upper Byrdcliffe Rd., Woodstock, (845) 6792079, www.woodstockguild.org/fugs.html
Bad Hat Jazz performs on Saturday at Thomas Bull Park If you haven’t been down to Thomas Bull Memorial Park in Montgomery, a stone’s throw from the Orange County Airport and Middletown, it is quite a sweet spot for hiking, playing, seasonal snowtubing and more. It also hosts the jam-packed Orange County Summer Concert Series, a run of live music shows with food and beer vendors fol-
lowed by the screening of free, familyfriendly movies. This agreeable series continues with a performance by Bad Hat Jazz on Saturday, August 10. The Warwick-based ensemble of crack players favors that fusion sweet spot where jazz, groove and jam meet, citing cerebral fusion ace Mike Stern, the greatest of all fusion bands Weather Report and jam-scene favorites Galactic as influences and reference points. The gates open at 3:30 p.m., vendors begin their peddling at 4 and the music
Volunteer Firemen’s Hall & Museum of Kingston, NY
16 Annual Antique Fire Engine Muster th
August 10, 2019 — 10 AM - 4 PM AT THE MUSEUM
265 Fair St., Kingston, NY OPEN HOUSE • DO NOT MISS THIS EVENT Antique, Vintage & New Fire Apparatus & Emergency Vehicles • Free Hot Dogs & Soda Silent Auction
Bucket Brigade Contest at 1 PM %DWWHU\ 3RZHUHG )LUHWUXFN 5D൷H A closing parade will start after the muster For More Info: Call (845) 331-0866 or (845) 443-3905
vfmuseumofkingston@gmail.com ZZZ NLQJVWRQYROXQWHHU¿UHPHQVPXVHXP ZHHEO\ FRP
As the original Falcon in Marlboro once proved beyond argument, barn concerts can be pretty high-end affairs, not just straw-strewn and horsey hootenannies. Hardeman Orchards in Red Hook are themselves old hands at the high-end barn venue game: a point that will be amply proven over the next two weekends. On Friday, August 9, Hardeman welcomes a venerated eminence of the local music scene, Professor Louie & the Crowmatix. Herr Professor’s take on American roots music is inclusive, witty, highly musical and fun. It bears all the marks of Mr. Hurwitz’s long association with the Band, Western music’s foremost example of a high-end chamber ensemble disguised as a barn band. Accompanied by the Woodstock Horns, the Professor leads the band through a repertoire steeped in rock ‘n’ roll, blues, gospel and roots music. Tickets cost $20 in advance and $25 at the doors. Taking a sneak peek a week, on August 18 Hardeman Orchards welcome Todd Shaeffer of the wildly popular acoustic newgrass band Railroad Earth and – for those who will recall – former frontman of New Jersey’s near-miss megastars From Good Homes. – John Burdick Professor Louie & the Crowmatix Friday, Aug. 9, 7 p.m. Hardeman Orchards 193 West Market St., Red Hook (845) 656-8653 www.hardemanorchards.com
John Stavros & Kingston Pop Museum present
Art Exhibit and Performance Series Curated by Laura Sativa & SoulCake
PERFORMERS: FRI 8/9 8PM SoulCake, Colin Dempsey, No Valentine SAT 8/10 8PM Jon Blackstone Steele, SoulCake, Jynx & Dino FRI 8/16 8PM Rococo A Go Go, SoulCake SAT 8/17 8PM SoulCake, Walter Steding, Puma Perl & Friends, Closing Finale
ARTISTS: Antony Zito, Eugene Stetz, Jean-Marie Guyaux, Joff Wilson, Josephine Jansen, Lewy V., Mary Ann Moy, Paul Kostabi, Tony Mann, Walter Steding Opening Reception Friday August 9, 6PM Closing Party Saturday August 17, 7PM Gallery hours: Thurs 5-8pm; Fri 5-10pm; Sat 4-10pm
MORE INFO: WWW.KINGSTONPOPMUSEUM.COM
-+0)5610 212 /75'7/ 672 BROADWAY KINGSTON, NY 12401 • 845.481-5638
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Maverick hosts Indian raga tribute to Ravi Shankar on Saturday
While it was the psychedelic rock era and the agency of the Beatles in particular that brought the music of Ravi Shankar to the attention of the general West, make no mistake about one thing: This is classical music. Under the beguiling drones, the exotic microtonal melodies, the mysterious timbral and conversational qualities of sitars and tablas, this is high Indian classical music in a tradition that is many centuries old. Much of it is lost on most of us, but that is no reason to enjoy it any less. Maverick implicitly recognizes that the music of Ravi Shankar belongs to the classical tradition in “Indian Raga: A Tribute to the Art of Ravi Shankar” on Saturday, August 10. Iklaq Hussain plays the sitar, joined by Shankar’s longtime table player Samir Chatterjee and Woodstock’s own high master Steve Gorn on bansuri flute. Tickets cost $45 and $30, $5 for students. – John Burdick Indian Raga: A Tribute to the Art of Ravi Shankar Saturday, Aug. 10, 8 p.m. $45/$30/$5 Maverick Concert Hall 120 Maverick Rd., Woodstock 800-595-4TIX https://maverickconcerts.org
Hear the music of P. D. Q. Bach in Hunter on Saturday Pop music has plenty of parodists whose wit and musical acumen often rival or outstrip the artists they are toasting and roasting. Flight of the Conchords comes to mind, as does
Bird-On-A-Cliff Theatre Company’s
Woodstock Shakespeare Festival
Pericles,
Prince of Tyre
Ringo Starr
MUSIC
Remember Woodstock's 50th Bethel Woods hosts Alice Cooper, Nelly this weekend, Ringo Starr, Santana/Doobies and John Fogerty next weekend
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e might have to wait for the Fyre-style documentary(ies) to really get the whole story, but at least now the outcome is known: Woodstock 50 is not going to happen this year. From the first fissure of Denstu’s acrimonious withdrawal through the loss of several sites and artists, multiple concurrent legal actions and a variety of optimistic Hail Marys from Michael Lang’s team, Woodstock 50 has been a media circus of a kind that leads one to suspect that maybe the music festival itself is extraneous and the actual capital-generating product is the drama-rich collapse of the plan. In the Fyre age, we frame the present with the future documentary in mind, and total bloody conflagrations are great, sexy stories. I got a chance to interview Lang not so long ago, just before the first troubles were made public, and when the man says that Woodstock is an idea and you can’t kill an idea, I am apt to believe him. He is a fighter and I don’t think we’ve seen the last of him. Still, if you are now wondering what to do in Woodstock season, Bethel Woods has got a few ideas for you. As the very date itself approaches, things get more ceremoniously retro, but the fun starts a week before with Alice Cooper and Halestorm on August 8, followed by the triple header of Nelly, TLC and Flo Rida on August 9. Then we’re into 50 territory, and what better way to kick it off with a performance by Ringo Starr (August 16), who sat out the original festival? The next night, a man who made his name at the original concert, Carlos Santana, teams up not with a fellow Woodstock alum but with a fellow Bay Area classic-rock mainstay in the Doobie Brothers. Finally, in a finale that is either cool or creepy, not sure, Woodstock 50 turncoat John Fogerty performs with two very popular younger classic-rock torchbearers in the Tedeschi Trucks Band and Vermont’s Grace Potter. Meanwhile, keep an eye on Lang. – John Burdick Alice Cooper/Halestorm, Thursday, Aug. 8, 7 p.m.; Nelly/TLC/Flo Rida, Friday, Aug. 9, 7 p.m.; Ringo Starr, Friday, August 16, 7 p.m.; Santana/Doobie Brothers, Saturday, Aug. 17, 7 p.m.; John Fogerty/Tedeschi Trucks/Grace Potter, Sunday, Aug. 18, 6 p.m., Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel, www.bethelwoodscenter.org
Neil Innes of the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band and the Rutles. Classical music has few such parodists, maybe because the bar to entry is so damn high. In some cases, the only ones up to it are the great composers themselves, whose intrascore gamesmanship is the stuff of legend. But there is the strange case of Peter Schickele, also known as P. D. Q. Bach, a legitimate composer and serious musical scholar who, over
years and in multiple media, built his hilarious, historic alter ego and a serious body of musical work. On Saturday, August 10, the Doctorow Center for the Arts in Hunter presents “Laughter in the Mountains” as part of the Manhattan in the Mountains summer lecture and performance series. The program features works by guest composer Peter Schickele, and promises to be an erudite hoot. Tickets cost $25
Director/ Designer
Christopher Martin
August 9th thru Sept 1st Fri, Sat, Sun 5:30PM 45 Comeau Drive Woodstock, NY 12498
“Comic perfection!” – Boston Globe
BLANKETS, CHAIRS, PICNICS WELCOME
For More Info: 845 247 4007 birdonacliff.org Sponsored by
JULY 19 - AUG. 18 Tickets Now On Sale
in advance, $20 for seniors and $7 for students. – John Burdick Laughter in the Mountains Saturday, Aug. 10, 8 p.m. Doctorow Center for the Arts 7971 Main St., Hunter (518) 263 2063 www.catskillmtn.org
Canal Street Band traces the Dead’s inspirations at Unison on Saturday To recontextualize the music of the Grateful Dead as folk and bluegrass is hardly a stretch. That was, after all, where Jerry came from, and he never forsook his banjo and pedal steel chops entirely, even as the Dead did wander off the roots map in the mid-’70s, never to return. The Canal Street Band promises not rootsy reinterpretations of the Grateful Dead, but rather an illumination of the source music that inspired them originally, with fiddle, banjo, Dobro, jaw harp, string bass, mandolin, three voices and more. The Canal Street Band performs at Unison Arts in New Paltz on Saturday, August 10. Tickets cost $25, $22 for seniors, $20 for Unison members and $10 for students. – John Burdick Canal Street Band
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477 Beaverkill Rd., Olivebridge (845) 657-8333 https://ashokancenter.org
Multiinstrumentalist Sam Kogon plays Colony in Woodstock on Sunday
EVENT
Blueberry Festival in Ellenville on Saturday
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long the Shawangunk Ridge, where for many decades people eked out a hardscrabble existence each summer by picking wild blueberries and huckleberries for sale to the New York City market, berry season is now in full swing. That means that it’s time once again for the streets of Ellenville to fill with locals and visitors alike, all in quest of the purple-stained tongue that’s a badge of being a true blueberry-lover. The annual Blueberry Festival gets underway on Saturday, August 10, with a Blueberry Pancake Fundraiser for Pioneer Engine Co. 1 at Norbury Hall on Center Street from 7:30 to 11 a.m. The rest of the festival goes on from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. throughout downtown Ellenville, featuring pie sales, live music from the Carl Richards Band, Hudson Valley Youth Jazz Orchestra and Hudson Valley Bluegrass Band all day in Liberty Square, a Homemade Blueberry Muffin Contest at noon, a bounce house for the kids plus more than 175 exhibitors and vendors. Admission to the Blueberry Festival is free; follow the signs for Festival Parking. Please note that no pets are allowed at this event. To learn more, call (845) 647-4620. Blueberry Festival, Saturday, Aug. 10, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Free, Pancake Breakfast 7:30-11 a.m., Village of Ellenville, (845) 6474620, www.ewcoc.com/blueberry-festival.html
Saturday, Aug. 10, 8 p.m. $25/$22/$20/$10 Unison Arts Center 68 Mountain Rest Rd., New Paltz (845) 255-1559 www.unisonarts.org
Square & Zydeco Dance on Saturday at Ashokan Center
at 9:30 p.m. Dance-only tickets cost $15, $10 for those 19 and under; dinner-and-dance combos cost $30 in advance, $35 on the day of the show, $25/$30 for those 19 and under. Lodging options are available. Square & Zydeco Dance Saturday, Aug. 10, 6 p.m.
~The Setting~ Beautiful, Streamside, Uniquely Woodstock
~The Food~ Fine Asian Cuisine Specializing in Fresh Seafood & Vegetarian with a Flair!
~The Experience~ The Ashokan Center hosts a hybrid Square and Zydeco Dance on Saturday, August 10 with live music from Ashokan Center principals Jay Ungar & Molly Mason and from Jeffery Broussard & the Creole Cowboys. Square dance calling comes courtesy of Phil Jamison. A barbecue dinner with vegan and gluten-free options begins at 6 p.m. The dance schedule moves from waltzes at 7:30 to Southern squares at 8 and Zydeco starting
Live Music at The Falcon Presenting the finest in Live Music from around the world and Great Food & Drink Check out our line-up: www.liveatthefalcon.com
1348 Route 9W, Marlboro, NY 12542
(845) 236-7970
✴ UNFORGETTABLE ✴
Open 7 days from noon. 845.679.8899 Located on The Bearsville Theater Complex, two miles west of Woodstock Village Green.
$10-$35 Ashokan Center
Sam Kogon has always been on the move. He grew up as a snowbird, splitting the year between Florida and Clinton Corners until he was in the sixth grade, when his parents settled in Rhinebeck for good. He was “obsessed with classical music” and asked to learn violin at the age of 5. “It wasn’t one of those scenarios where I was forced to play piano,” he laughs. He practiced so much that he got into a School of the Arts program in Florida – a plan that was disrupted by the final move up to New York. He eventually put the bow down. Which isn’t to say that Kogon stopped playing music. He picked up guitar at age 8, and can now play at least ten instruments. His proclivities were helped along by Sam’s Surplus Store, an Uptown Kingston pawnshop that his family had owned for 99 years before its 2018 closure, resulting in a collection of unexpected instruments like the autoharp and balalaika. After his early classical love, Kogon identifies the Beatles and in particular A Hard Day’s Night as foundational for his musical development. His first songs, written around age 10, were direct Beatles rips, emulating Lennon and McCartney vocally, with chords taken from a Beatles music book. Listening to and repeating their songs – sometimes to the chagrin of his guitar teacher – were how he learned
14 to write music. He would listen to oldies radio with his mom in the car, allowing doo-wop and ’60s influences to form his musical sensibilities. “I was able to digest things and spit them out – even if it wasn’t good,” he laughs. He didn’t keep these instincts to himself. Kogon was in a number of middle and high school bands, playing covers and originals. He self-recorded a song under the name Teaching Purple that got play on WDST, and almost got the band a spot at Mountain Jam. Kogon estimates that he has played in something like seven groups of various sizes over the years, including a band he formed at SUNY-Environmental Science and Forestry, the Vanderbilts, as well as taking over vocal duties for a reunited lineup of the ’60s psychedelic group the Left Banke. After the Vanderbilts broke up, Kogon moved to New York City and took it solo. “I wanted to go under my own name,” he said, “so no one would have control over my passion.” He has recorded two albums of psych-adjacent power pop, including 2016’s frazzled standout Psychic Tears, with a rotating cast of backing musicians, and is currently at work on a third with Kurt Vile and Sonic Youth producer John Agnello. His partnership with Agnello came about in a somewhat roundabout way. He was cast as a featured extra in Martin Scorsese’s upcoming crime epic The Irishman as a backing musician for Jerry Vale, played in the film by Steven van Zandt, and shot for a week in Harlem’s Alhambra Ballroom. It was a strange enough experience in its own right, and Kogon even played Words with Friends with Ray Romano. He hit it off with music supervisor Stewart Lerman and, after sending some demos along, received praise and a recommendation for Agnello. They recorded an EP at Weehawken’s Hobo Sound Studios in the fall, for which Kogon is currently seeking a label, and are currently demoing for an album. On the recommendation of Agnello, he recently tracked in Goethenberg at Svenksa Grammofon, a studio owned by a member of alt/rock big-timers Soundtrack of Our Lives. He describes his new approach as that of an “Upstate country rockabilly crooner,” a sound he had once put off while playing in Brooklyn’s psychedelic scene. “I want to make music that is accessible,” he says. Kogon has always skewed a little older in his sensibilities, from an early affinity for Chopin and the Beatles to the session work he’s done with Al Jardine and the Zombies. He feels a little put out by current trends, and unsettled from any particular scene. This is partially technological – “you can be a huge musician and live in Fargo” – but also personal: “I’m gay, and most of the Brooklyn bands are straight guys,” he says. “I’m trying to find my own circle.” Kogon lived and played in New York
ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
MOOKIE FORCELLA | ALMANAC WEEKLY
HISTORY
HUGUENOT STREET TOURS SPOTLIGHT MUNSEE FOODWAYS, GHOSTS & CIDER ON SATURDAY
T
his Saturday would be a great day to spend in New Paltz, bookended by two special events hosted by Historic Huguenot Street. From 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., ethnoecologist Justin Wexler will be your guide for “Summers of Growth: Fruits, Greens and Sun,” the third in a series of four nature treks collectively titled “Everywhere at Home: How Local Native People Once Lived with the Land.” The Munsee people who were indigenous to the Wallkill Valley led a semi-nomadic existence, tethered in summertime to the fertile floodplains where they raised their staple crops – maize, squash and pole beans, the famous Three Sisters – but ranging far afield when fish spawned in spring, tree nuts were ripe for collecting in autumn or large game became easier to trap and hunt in winter. Wexler’s entertaining and informative walks identify local flora and fauna and explain their material uses in native culture while also explaining the species and the surrounding ecosystems through Munsee language and folklore. The group will check in at the DuBois Fort Visitor Center at 10:50 a.m. on Saturday, August 10, gather at the adjacent wigwam and proceed through the Nyquist-Harcourt Wildlife Sanctuary, whose entrance is also on Huguenot Street. Tickets for “Summers of Growth” cost $20 general admission. Saturday, August 17 is the rain date. A return to the Visitor Center in the evening is warranted by an expanded offering of one of the historic site’s most popular annual activities: Haunted Huguenot Street, which is normally only conducted during the weeks immediately preceding Halloween. But the wild and wooly tales of past residents who lived in the street’s stone houses and experienced terrible tragedies, encountered apparitions and held paranormal investigations are just too much fun not to be told at other times of year. This new event, titled “Cider & Spirits: A Haunted Walking Tour of Historic Huguenot Street,” pairs the ghost stories and unsolved mysteries with a sample of delicious locally made hard cider – the year-round alcoholic beverage of choice for the region’s European settlers – provided by the Kettleborough Cider House in Gardiner. The tour runs from 7:30 to 9 p.m. on Saturday, August 10. Entry, including one glass of cider, costs $15 general admission; additional drinks will be available for purchase at $3 per glass of cider, $1.50 for bottled water. Discounted admission for both tours is available for Historic Huguenot Street members, seniors, students, active military, veterans and children under 13. To reserve your spot for either, call (845) 255-1889 or visit www.huguenotstreet.org/eventsand-exhibitions. – Frances Marion Platt Summers of Growth: 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m., $20; Cider & Spirits: 7:30-9 p.m., $15; Saturday, Aug. 10, Historic Huguenot Street’s DuBois Fort Visitor Center, 81 Huguenot St., New Paltz, (845) 255-1889, www.huguenotstreet.org
for several years, but nowadays lives in Westchester and spends more time in the Hudson Valley. He is working on a studio in Saugerties with his dad. And he’ll return to Colony on Sunday, August 11 at 8 p.m. for a stripped-down set with his friends in the band Potted Plant, with possible collaborations between both groups. Audiences who have caught his ultra-tight live band are likely in for at least a few unexpected moves, including brand-new songs. Leaning into a new sound, recording a new album, finding a new scene: All of these indicate a musician who has yet to slow down. Kogon considers moving to another state, even another part of the country. But he also can’t quite shake the Hudson Valley. “Maybe I’ll be bicoastal,” SUPPORT OUR LOCAL AGRICULTURAL COMMUNITY
SAVE THIS DATE
August 24, 2019 4-H LIVESTOCK SALE 4 E Dutchess County Fairgrounds You’re Invited...Pre-Sale Reception at 2 pm in the Livestock Show Arena Species that sell: Beef, Rabbit, Hog, Goat, Poultry & Lamb For more info, contact Michelle Hicks 845.453.4903
he deadpans. “I’ll be bi.” – Rob Rubsam Sam Kogon and Potted Plant show, Sunday, Aug. 11, 8 p.m., Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock, www.colonywoodstock.com
Free Friday Addiction Recovery Acupuncture Clinics in New Paltz New Paltz Community Acupuncture will be offering a free Addiction Recovery Acupuncture Clinic on Fridays from 7 to 9 p.m. A specific treatment using ear points only will be available free of charge. Acupuncture may help to reduce cravings, assist the detox process and calm the nervous system. It is reported to be helpful for all types of addictions and all stages of recovery. This program accepts walk-ins only on a first-come, first-served basis. Addiction Recovery Acupuncture Clinic Fridays, 7-9 p.m., Free New Paltz Community Acupuncture 21 South Chestnut St., New Paltz (845) 255-2145, www.newpaltzacu.com
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
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HISTORY
ESTHER NISANOVA
Jared Cohen’s interest in unexpected transfers of power began during his childhood when he read the late Staatsburg author/illustrator Alice Provensen’s The Buck Stops Here, a book about US presidents.
Vice squad Morton Library hosts Accidental Presidents book talk with Jigsaw CEO Jared Cohen on Tuesday
J
ared Cohen was still in his early 20s when he was recruited by the US State Department in 2006 to bring new ideas to its Policy Planning Staff. His main claim to fame while serving as an advisor to Condoleezza Rice and Hillary Clinton was shepherding in the use of social media as a tool for diplomacy. After that success he became the chief executive of Google Ideas, retaining that post when that incubator morphed into Jigsaw at Alphabet, Inc. He made Time magazine’s 100 Most Influential People List in 2013 and is still an adjunct fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. Cohen’s also a history nerd, with a special interest in unexpected transfers of power acquired from the late Staatsburg author/illustrator Alice Provensen’s The Buck Stops Here, a book about US presidents that he read as a child. His new book, Accidental Presidents: Eight Men Who Changed America, traces the circumstances that brought John Tyler, Millard Fillmore, Andrew Johnson, Chester Arthur, Theodore Roosevelt, Calvin Coolidge, Harry Truman and Lyndon Johnson to power, and what those abrupt changes meant for American history. The author will be giving a reading and talk based on Accidental Presidents at the Morton Memorial Library on Tuesday, August 13. Of these seismic shifts in presidential power, the one with the most far-reaching effects was Andrew Johnson’s accession following the Lincoln assassination – in particular his reversal of Lincoln’s plans to provide reparations for freed slaves. “The victory in the Civil War gave the country an enormous opportunity that was completely squandered, and we’re still paying a price for it today,” Cohen said in an April Guardian interview. He’s a fan of Teddy Roosevelt, but thinks he was too “irresponsible” to have made a good wartime president. And when pressed on the question of how Mike Pence would fare if Donald Trump should
be impeached, or removed from office due to disability via the 25th Amendment, Cohen compared him to “Silent Cal” Coolidge, who maintained plausible deniability during the scandal-ridden Harding administration by avoiding meetings where he knew potentially dicey topics would be discussed. Intrigued? Learn more on Tuesday evening at the Morton Library, located at 82 Kelly Street in Rhinecliff. The presentation begins at 6:30 p.m. Admission is free. – Frances Marion Platt Accidental Presidents book talk, Tuesday, Aug. 13, 6:30 p.m., Free, Morton Memorial Library, 82 Kelly St., Rhinecliff, (845) 876-2903, http://morton.rhinecliff. lib.ny.us
West Point Academy Band performs free at Vanderbilt Mansion
The West Point Academy Band performs at the Vanderbilt Mansion Historic Site on Wednesday, August 14, with a rain date of August 15. This jam is free, and for the people, who are advised to bring blankets and lawn chairs. – John Burdick West Point Academy Band Wednesday, Aug. 14, 6:30 p.m. Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site 119 Vanderbilt Park Rd., Hyde Park (845) 229-8086 www.hydeparkny.us/176/music-in-theparks
Antique Fire Engine Muster in Kingston
Fire Engine Muster will be happening from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Antique, vintage and new emergency vehicles will be on display, along with “firemanic” artifacts. Family-friendly activities go on all day, including a bucket brigade contest, a raffle for a child’s batterypowered firetruck and a silent auction. Visitors can enjoy hot dogs and soda for free! It all goes down at the Volunteer Firemen’s Hall & Museum, housed in the original 1857 Wiltwyck Fire Station, located at 265 Fair Street. To learn more, call (845) 331-0866. Antique Fire Engine Muster Saturday, Aug. 10, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free, Volunteer Firemen’s Hall & Museum 265 Fair St., Kingston (845) 331-0866
Got a yen for a nostalgic immersion in old-timey summer fun? Come to Uptown Kingston this Saturday, August 10, where the 16 th annual Antique
Enlightened Landscaping
LANDSCAPING When the Town of Hyde Park – the land of the many riverside mansions and estates – hosts a Music in the Parks series, the parks themselves are quite often the star attraction. Nothing wrong with a playground, of course, and a ’50s-nostalgia doo-wop tribute thereupon; but how about the brassy artillery power of the West Point Academy Band rocking your bird tattoos off on the opulent rolling lawns of the Vanderbilt Mansion, where at least one room is literally coated in gold? It reminds you what the boys are fighting for.
Working with nature to create beautiful, sustainable and natural landscapes.
POLLINATOR GARDENS WOODLAND RESTORATION • PERMACULTURE INVASIVE PLANT REMOVAL • NATIVE LANDSCAPING FOREST STEWARDSHIP • TREE CARE
845-687-9528 www.hudsonvalleynative.com
Your Gardens are our Gardens
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
Can the Moon bring rain? With a fat Gibbous Moon ruining this Sunday’s Perseid meteor shower, it’s tempting to make the Moon a scapegoat for other problems as well. It’s not as screwy as it sounds. Folklore has long endowed the Moon with various powers, which, although discredited by the facts, are still widely believed. For example, the Full Moon does not foster mental illness; psychiatric hospital admissions show no rise. No link to crime either, according to a Dade County study. As for the
Aug. 8, 2019
Moon’s influence on menstrual cycles, its 29.5-day sequence of phases does not parallel the average cycle of women. And (although many maternity wing personnel swear otherwise) there are no more births during the Full Moon than any other phase. Now, recent studies let us replace those old myths with new lunar powers. Of course, people have always noticed the Moon’s synchronicity with the five-foot average rise and fall of the oceans at the shoreline. More recent science has credited the Moon with an eight-inch tidally induced deformity in crustal rock – which, by the way, is amazingly small. That the solid mass of our planet warps just 0.23 meter
SAT
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LIVE MUSIC!
in the presence of such a nearby mass as the Moon makes us one of the universe’s structural success stories. But an even-newer (to us) effect is the Moon’s ability to generate an atmospheric tide, a gaseous pulse that creates daily changes in air pressure. It also alters circulation patterns such as the subtropical high-pressure belts. These may help explain amazing-if-subtle links, recognized since the 1960s, between lunar phase and cloudiness, hurricane formation and precipitation. The Moon definitely influences the weather. Twenty years ago, researchers analyzing satellite data announced yet another effect: At the time of Full Moon, the temperature of the lower four miles of atmosphere increases by two hundredths of a degree Fahrenheit. Not enough to allow you to leave your sweater home on moonlit nights, but possibly enough to provide new theories to explain the link between weather and lunar phase. Other investigators think the Moon’s influence involves subtler mechanisms. Some maintain that the statistical increase in thunderstorm activity observed around Full Moon may be caused by our planet’s magnetic tail undergoing Moon-induced distortions. Other theorists suggest that rainfall might increase a few days after Full and New Moon because clouds are “seeded” by the Moon’s modulation of meteor dust. Studies from 2014 and 2016 confirm a one-percent rainfall variation
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019 caused by the Moon, and linked particularly to local weather when the Moon is near the horizon, rising or setting. Back in 1995, University of Arizona investigators suggested a direct mechanism other than lunarinduced air pressure changes, tidal or magnetic effects. They surmised the Moon’s action may be primarily thermal, caused by infrared emission from its hot 230-degree daylight surface, aimed at us like an electric bathroom heater. Since
this energy is 100,000 times less intense than the heat we receive directly from the Sun, it’s probably supplemented by the Full Moon’s simple mirroring of sunlight at the night side of Earth. The mirror effect is slight because the Moon is one of the least shiny objects in the known universe. Its albedo of 10 – which means it reflects just 10 percent of the sunlight that strikes it – matches the reflectivity of asphalt. The Moon’s appearance, then, is no brighter than if
its surface were entirely paved like an enormous mall parking lot. This helps explain why the Full Moon drearily appears 450,000 times less bright than the Sun. It appears white only because of its contrast with the even-darker nighttime sky behind it. So the Moon can’t win this month. If skies
are clear, a nearly Full Moon washes out the summer meteors, one of the year’s best celestial shows. If it’s cloudy, then it’s not meteor showers but rainshowers that we might blame on Earth’s nearest neighbor. Almost enough to make us howl. – Bob Berman
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18
ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
CALENDAR Thursday
8/8
8am-5pm MidHudson Adirondack Mountain Club Outing. Mid-week Paddles. Every 2nd & 4th Thurs. Leader: Glenda Schwarze schwar582@aol.com. Quiet water 2 hour paddles with beach put-ins. Contact the Leader if you are interested in these paddles. midhusonADK.org. 8am-5pm Mid-Hudson Adirondack Mountain Club Outing. Mid-week Hikes. Every Thurs. Hikes of varying difficulty to different areas of the Mid-Hudson Valley. Leaders: Ginny Fauci, gefauci@gmail.com; 845-399-2170 or Lalita Malik, Lalitamalik@aol.com; 845-592-0204. midhusonADK.org. 8:30am-11am Community Bike Ride on Wallkill Valley Rail Trail with Senator Metzger. Followed by a coffee gathering at Commissary. Wallkill Valley Rail Trail, Wallkill. Info: 845-344-3311, metzger@nysenate.gov, https://bit.ly/2GMUm0w. Free. 9am 143rd Schoharie County Sunshine Fair. Info: 518-234-2123 or info@sunshinefair.org. Schoharie County Fairgrounds, Grand St, Cobleskill. sunshinefair.org. 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 Town Hall, Tinker St, Woodstock. 10am-11am Coffee Hour with Senator Metzger. Following a community bike ride, Consituents are invited for a coffee gathering. Lagusta’s Lucious Commissary, 11 Church Street, New Paltz. Info: 845-344-3311, metzger@ nysenate.gov, https://bit.ly/2GMUm0w. Free. 10am-1pm Junior Naturalists at Minnewaska: Nature Book Making Part II. For the second part of this two-part program, we will be taking our completed books and filling them with art and observations. Starting at the Minnewaska
Nature Center, we will be talking about and showing participants some creative options for filling their accordion-style books. We will plan to hike approximately two miles during this program. This program is recommended for six to twelve-year-old children, accompanied by a parent or legal guardian over the age of 18. Well behaved younger siblings are always welcome. Meet at the Minnewaska Nature Center. Preregistration is required by calling: 845-2550752. Minnewaska Preserve, Gardiner. 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, http://www.tivolilibrary.org/. Bring a snack to share. 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. Info: 845-343-1000, info@tara-spayneuter. org, tara-spayneuter.org. Cost varies. 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. John’s Episcopal Church, 207 Albany Ave, Kingston. $12 for one or $22 for two. 10:30am-12pm Stitch & Bitch. Bring your work-in-progress (or get your inspiration here) and knit, crochet, sew or stitch with us. Info: 845-858-4942; kristi@thelightningco.com. The Loft at Foundry42, 42 Front St, Port Jervis. f42home.com. 11am-12pm Woodstock Senior Level One (Moderate) Yoga with Susan Blacker. Centering, warm-ups, posture flow, relaxation and meditation. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville.
Back to School
Art Music Writing After-school & Saturdays, workshops, and daytime home-school classes 1343 Route 44, Pleasant Valley, NY 12569 www.renkids.org | (845) 452-4225
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.
12:15pm Fine Arts Recitals. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 12:30pm-5pm Expert Tarot Readings with Malley. 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. 12:30pm-3:30pm Free Kids Summer Art Class- Adventure Awaits. A Summer of Art Adventures classes July-August. 12:30-3:30pm on Tuesdays & Thursdays. Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens. Info: 518-9452136, info@athensculturalcenter.org, www. athensculturalcenter.org. free. 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: 845-8318172; info@mountgulian.org; mountgulian. org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon. 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. 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-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. www.MathTutoringwithMisha.com. Free. 4pm-10pm Alice Cooper & Halestorm with special guests Motionless in White. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter. org. General Lawn. 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. 4pm-7pm Free Holistic Healthcare Clinic. Many holistic Practitioners will be volunteering their time monthly to provide services, including: massage, chiropractic, reiki, other energy and body work, acupuncture, craniosacral massage, deep tissue body work and hypnosis. There’s also a prenatal and lactation specialist offering a breastfeeding cafe. Lace Mill, 165 Cornell St, Kingston. healthcareisahumanright. com. 4:30pm-10pm Otisville Country Fair. Craft vendor’s marketplace, big antique machinery display, animals, youth cattle show, great food, a car show on Saturday, rides, shows and entertainment! Info: 845-386-1315. Otisville Country Fair, 340 Finchville Turnpike, Otisville. otisvillecountryfair.org/index.html. 5pm-6:30pm New Paltz Climate Action Coalition Meeting. Meets every Thursday. New Paltz Village Hall, Plattekill Ave, New Paltz. www. newpaltzclimateaction.org. 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. http://woodstockultimate.org/. 6pm-8:30pm The Incredible Race VBS. Kids ages 3 to 12, join us for The Incredibe Race! One Family, One Race, One Savior! Free to attend! Register at LCFmilton@gmail.com. Lattingtown Christian Fellowship, 426 Old Indian Rd, Milton. https://bit.ly/2LLln8u. 6pm-7pm Monthly Book Club. This month Killers of the Flower Moon by David Grann. Info: phoenicialibrary.org. Phoenicia Library, 48 Main St, Phoenicia. www.phoenicialibrary.org. 6pm-11:30pm The Hudson Valley Jazz Festival. 10th season of 4 day jazz festival. Shows are held in various locations. Info: hudsonvalleyjazzfest.org. Info: 917-903-4380, hudsonvalleyjazzfest@gmail.com, www.hudsonvalleyjazzfest.org. 6pm-9pm Basilica Back Gallery Artist-inResidence Series: SJLA 2019. Returning for their second year the Social Justice Leadership Academy. Basilica Hudson, 110 South Front Street, Hudson NY 12534, new york. Info: 518-822-1050, info@basilicahudson.org, https://basilicahudson.org/. 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,
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19
ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
more information contact Lynn Gore at 845-687-9210 or lynngore54@gmail. com.
premier listings Contact Donna at Donna.ulsterpublishing@gmail.com to be included Beacon’s Sloop Corn Festival & a Public Sail aboard the Hudson River Sloop Clearwater (8/11, 3-5pm). Climb aboard the sloop for a public sail! This trip gives you the opportunity to join in raising the sails, listen to music, learn about the river and the things that live here, explore this historic vessel, and relax in a unique environment. Membership gets you discounted tickets and other perks! Info: 845-265-8080. Located at Red Flynn Dr in Beacon. AUNTS Camp3 (8/10, 8-10pm). A dance event which brings together 10 choreographers from the Hudson Valley and NYC for an immersive performance/party throughout the Mount Tremper Arts grounds located at 647 S. Plank Road, Mt. Tremper. Info: 845-688-9893, info@mttremperarts.org, MountTremperArts.org. Tickets $15.
Miracles Book Signing (8/10, 3pm).
Join Thurman Greco at Mower’s Saturday Flea Market, Woodstock. “Miracles, Volume 1 of the Unworthy Hungry Series” is Greco’s second book about miracles and hunger. Info:845399-3967. Rock n’ Roll Walking Tours of Woodstock. 2 hour tour plus limited edition poster. Saturday tours 4pm, Sunday tours 1pm. Meet at Rock Junket at 54 Tinker St in Woodstock. Book online at rockjunket.com. In It’s 30th Season! Bard Sumerscape Festival. The 16th annual Bard SummerScape festival features seven weeks of world-class opera, theater, dance, cabaret, film, and music, including the 30th annual Bard Music Festival, Korngold and His World. Bard Music Festival weekends include orchestral concerts, chamber and choral music performances, panel discussions, special events, and opera in concert through 8/18. See website
Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. Info: 845-757-3771, tivoliprograms@gmail.com, http://www.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-8:30pm Road Trip~2019 Summer Evening Art Program. Classes are held through July-August to students and other members of our community. Tuesdays & Thursdays. Students & srs are free. Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens. Info: 518-945-2136, info@ athensculturalcenter.org, www.athensculturalcenter.org. Free. 6:30pm-8pm Free Steps of Meditation. Weekly classes. Learn the fundamentals for an effective meditation experience. Info: 518-5895000 or peacevillage@bkwsu.org. Peace Village Retreat Center, 54 O’Hara Rd, Haines Falls. bkwsu.org. 7pm Word oF Mouth Poetry Series. Mike Jurkovic, Teresa Costa + open reading w/ 5 minute limit. Info: 845-331-6713. Artbar Gallery, 674 Broadway, Kingston. $3. 7pm Treasure of the Sierra Madre. One of the all-time great stories of greed and punishment, John Huston’s adaptation of the B. Traven novel stars Humphrey Bogart in a career-best performance as a prospector whose search for a serious payday threatens to destroy his entire world. Info: 845-758-7900. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson. fishercenter.bard.edu. $10. 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 Stamford Concerts in the Park Series: Cimarrón. The Roxbury Arts Group welcomes Cimarrón and their new wave of Colombian Joropo music. Bring your lawn chairs or blankets, picnic baskets and get ready for a night of music that is sure to get you out of your seat and moving! The Concerts in the Park series is always free! Info: 607-326-7908. Veterans Memorial Park/ Stamford, Main St & Railroad Ave, Stamford. roxburyartsgroup.org. 7pm-9pm Citizen’s Climate Lobby Monthly Meeting. CCL empowers everyday people to work together on climate change solutions. We’re building support in Congress for a national bipartisan bill. Beahive, 291 Main St, Beacon. Info: ccl.shoe@dfgh.net, http://citizensclimatelobby.org. Free. 7pm-8pm Gardiner Library Knitting Group. Sit and knit. Gardiner Library, 133 Farmer’s Turnpike, Gardiner. Info: 845-255-1255, nlane@
Jessica Rice
Beautiful Images Hair Salon 123 Boices Lane, Kingston, NY 12401 Makeup: 845-309-6860 www.jessicamitzi.com
for complete schedule at fishercenter. bard.edu. or call 845-758-7900. Bard College, The Richard B. Fisher Center, 60 Manor Ave, Annandale-on-Hudson. 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! Bus Trip to Cooperstown (8/20). The American Association of University Women (AAUW) is planning a trip from Kingston to Cooperstown. The first stop will be the Fenimore Museum to view two special exhibits. In the afternoon attend a performance of Show Boat at the Glimmerglass Opera House. This chartered bus trip is open to everyone, tix $150. For AAUW
rcls.org, gardinerlibrary.org. 7pm Old Dutch Choir. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 7pm Bingo! Meet the 2nd & 4th Thursdays,7pm. Doors open at 6pm. Prizes & food. Sponsored by the Beekman Fire Company Auxiliarly Inc. Beekman Fire House, 316 Beekman- Poughquag Rd, Poughquag. 7:30pm New Group Meeting Notice: Men’s Support Group. Meets on the second and fourth Thursday of each month in the Woodstock Library at 7:30 pm. The Male Room is a safe environment where men gather to discuss issues of importance in their lives. If interested, please contact Gary at 908-754-1101, or scribeny@aol. com. 7:30pm-9pm Painting Peace: Art in the Time of Global Crisis by Kazuaki Tanahashi. Live reading w/ Q&A. Traces Tanahashi’s legendary career as a creative peace activist and leading translator of Zen Master Dogen. Zen Mountain Monastery, 871 Plank Rd, Mount Tremper. Info: 8456882228, mro@mro.org, http://www.zmm. org. Free. 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 Live @ The Falcon: The Brad Cole Electric Show. Hi-Tilt blend of soul, samba and rock! Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm Singers & Songbooks: Joni Mitchell and Friends Led by Sam Reider and the Human Hands with Kéren Tayár. Jazz-pianist-turnedroots-musician Sam Reider teams up with modern-day chanteuse Kéren Tayár for a youthful twist on Joni Mitchell. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@bard.edu, http:// bit.ly/2Xu3uNJ. Tickets start at $25.
Friday
8/9
8:30am-9:30am Aquoga Aquatic Yoga & Cardio Class. Arrive 10 mins early to regis-
Save the Date: 12th Annual Art Studio Views (8/31-9/1, 11am-5pm). Celebrating community artists with 33 Open Studio Tours! A Free, SelfGuided Tour in Northern Dutchess & Southern Columbia counties. Travel at your own pace through the countryside and discover the talent hidden in the region. Look for the bright, yellow signs which will guide you to each studio. 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. Call for Entries - Fall for Art Artist. The Jewish Federation of Ulster County’s Fall for Art Committee is pleased to announce the Call for Entries for their 23rd annual fundraising juried art show, sale and cocktail reception, which is scheduled for Thursday, 11/7, 5-8pm at The Chateau, 240 Boulevard, Route 32, in Kingston. Applications and guidelines for Hudson Valley based
ter. Monday & Friday mornings through 8/9. Moriello Pool, 40 Mulberry St, New Paltz. www. facebook.com/aquoga. or buy 10 class card for 10% off. 9am-4pm Thomas The Tank™: The Steam Team Tour 2019. Children can spend a day with their friend Thomas when the #1 Engine pulls into Arkville. Food vendors available on site. The activities on site at Day Out With Thomas™ are to enjoy for the duration of the event. For more information and directions, contact 845-586– 3877; 845-586-2929 or durr.org. Delaware & Ulster Railroad, 43510 NYS Route 28, Arkville. dayoutwiththomas.com. $20. 9am 143rd Schoharie County Sunshine Fair. Info: 518-234-2123 or info@sunshinefair.org. Schoharie County Fairgrounds, Grand St, Cobleskill. sunshinefair.org. 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 North Voyage Adventure. An epic puzzle adventure for your team of 1 - 4 people. Explore Hudson, NY and surrounding areas using a book and a smartphone app. Events through 8/31. Log onto cruxclubhq.com/nor for details. Hudson, NY. Info: temple@cruxclubhq.com. Price for entire team of 1-4 people. 10am-5pm Goshen Farmers’ Market. Info: 845-294-5557; goshennychamber.com. Goshen’s Village Green, Goshen. 10:30am-5pm Hike to the Shingle Gully Ice Caves. Explore the Shingle Gully Ice Caves where ice persists into summer in deep crevice caves. These caves are in a backcountry area in Minnewaska State Park Preserve. This rugged, protected landscape is accessible only on guided tours led by park staff and volunteer docents. This all-day, strenuous adventure ascends and descends 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
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Oncology Support Programs offered at HealthAlliance Hospital. WMC Health offers emotional support, wellness and healing arts programs for people affected by cancer. Info: 845-339-2071; oncology.support@ hahv.org; hahv.org/service/cancersupport-program. 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.
at 845-647-7989. Pre-registration deadline: August 4th. Sam’s Point Preserve, 400 Sam’s Point Road, Cragsmoor. $10.00. 11am-1pm Mah-jongg. Learn and play this game of skill and strategy each Friday morning. Beginners and more experienced players welcome. Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. www.tivolilibrary.org. Free. 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 Read-
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ings 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. Meets every Friday. Games include scrabble, Monopoly, Jenga & Bridge. Info: 845-679-8537. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 2:30pm-4:30pm Climbing Wall in the Park! Climb the portable climbing rock wall from Climb Time. Wear comfortable clothing and footwear. All ages. Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. www.tivolilibrary.org. Free. 4pm-10pm Nelly, TLC & Flo Rida. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter.org. General Lawn. 4:30pm-10pm Otisville Country Fair. Craft vendor’s marketplace, big antique machinery display, animals, youth cattle show, great food, a car show on Saturday, rides, shows and entertainment! Info: 845-386-1315. Otisville Country Fair, 340 Finchville Turnpike, Otisville. otisvillecountryfair.org/index.html. 5:30pm-7:30pm Pericles, Prince of Tyre . The Woodstock Shakespeare Festival this summer presents the Bard’s romantic odyssey with an Evil Queen, Pirates and Goddesses. Outdoor Elizabethan Stage, 45 Comeau Drive, Woodstock. birdonacliff.org. Admission free, donations appreciated. 6pm-8:30pm The Incredible Race VBS. Kids ages 3 to 12, join us for The Incredibe Race! One Family, One Race, One Savior! Free to attend! Register at LCFmilton@gmail.com. Lattingtown Christian Fellowship, 426 Old Indian Rd, Milton. https://bit.ly/2LLln8u. 6pm-11:30pm The Hudson Valley Jazz Festival. 10th season of 4 day jazz festival. Shows are held in various locations. Info: hudsonvalleyjazzfest.org. Info: 917-903-4380, hudsonvalleyjazzfest@gmail.com, www.hudsonvalleyjazzfest.org. 6pm Newburgh: Swing Dance Classes. Fourweek Beginner Swing classes held on Friday nights at 6-7pm, no experience or partner needed; & Intermediate Level classes at 7-8pm with Linda and Chester Freeman, Got2Lindy Dance Studios. Advanced levels also available. $85 per person per four-week series. Private lessons in swing and ballroom and for wedding couples also available by appointment. For more info and to register visit got2lindy.com or call 845-236-3939. Maximum Fitness, 59 North Plank Rd, Newburgh. 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-9pm Free Addiction Recovery Acupuncture Clinic. New Paltz Community Acupuncture will be offering a Free Addiction Recovery Acupuncture Clinic on Fridays from 7-9pm. A specific treatment using ear points only will be available free of charge. Come by and let acupuncture help to reduce cravings, assist the detox process, calm your nervous system, and support recovery. It is helpful for all types of addictions and all stages of recovery. Walk-ins only - first come, first served. 21 South Chestnut Street, New Paltz. Walk-ins only - first come, first served. 21 South Chestnut Street, New Paltz.
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For more information, call 845-255-2145 or log onto newpaltzacu.com. 7pm Live @ The Falcon: Rob Stoner. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7pm-9pm Return to Woodstock. In anticipation of the 50th anniversary of the first Woodstock concert, we are celebrating the event with an evening of memories and music. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@gmail.com, https://www.esopuslibrary.org/. 7pm-9pm Film: The ISIS Trial. Plus special guest, filmmaker Ellie Bernstein. This documentary takes a look at why young men with no criminal background would be attracted to join a terrorist organization. Was it because the FBI planned and bankrolled the operation? Cosponsored by: Middle East Crisis Response mideastcrisis.org, Hudson Valley BDS hudsonvalleybds.org, Jewish Voice for Peace- HV hudsonvalley@JVP.org, Veterans For PeaceCatskill Mountains, and Women in Black-New Paltz. Contact: mecr@mideastcrisis.org or 845 876-7906. Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Catskills, 320 Sawkill Rd, Kingston. 7pm-10:30pm Alexander Brott, Rob Scheps, Lew Scott, Jimmy Madison. Powerhouse Modern Jazz group! Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-6373, mark@ lydiasdeli.com, http://www.lydias-cafe.com. Donation. 7pm-10pm Professor Louie and the Crowmatix with the Woodstock Horns. Doors open at 6 pm. $10 admission ticket if purchased in advance. Info: 845-656-8653. Hardeman Orchards Event Barn, 52 Orchard Alley, Red Hook. hardemanorchards.com. $12/at the door. 7pm Weekly Senior Citizen’s Bingo. Ongoing every Wednesday at 1:30pm & Friday at 7pm. 50/50 tickets available at 3 tickets/$2. Half-time complementary refreshments. Shawangunk Senior Center, 70 Main St, Napanoch. 7:30pm-9pm Kabbalat Shabbat Services. Friday evening services. Woodstock Jewish Congregation, 1682 Glasco Turnpike, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-2218, info@wjcshul.org, http://www.wjcshul.org. 8pm Erich Wolfgang Korngold: from Viennese Prodigy to Hollywood Master. Anchored by The Orchestra Now, this opening concert offers a broad overview of the composer’s multi-faceted career. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@bard.edu. Tickets start at $25. 8pm Mamma Mia. With music and lyrics by Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Anderson and book by Catherine Johnson, ABBA’s hits tell the hilarious story of a young woman’s search for her birth father. The show features such hit songs as “Take A Chance on Me”, “Honey, Honey”, “I Have A Dream”, and the title song. Info: 845-876-3080. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. centerforperformingarts.org. $27. 8:30pm Spirit Family Reunion & Ride Free Record Release Show. Record Release Show. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@bard.edu, https://bit.ly/2EfXalp. $25. 9pm Wappingers Falls: The Hudson Valley Renegades Post Game Fireworks. Event held at 500 New York 9D, Wappingers Falls.
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9am-4pm Thomas The Tank™: The Steam Team Tour 2019. Children can spend a day with their friend Thomas when the #1 Engine pulls into Arkville. Food vendors available on site. The activities on site at Day Out With Thomas™ are to enjoy for the duration of the event. For more information and directions, contact 845-586– 3877; 845-586-2929 or durr.org. Delaware & Ulster Railroad, 43510 NYS Route 28, Arkville. dayoutwiththomas.com. $20. 9am-4pm The Blueberry Festival. Free Admission & Parking (Follow “Festival Parking” signs) Blueberry Pancake Breakfast - 7:30 am - 11 am. Fundraiser Hosted by Pioneer Engine Co. 1, at Norbury Hall, Center St. Live Music All Day in Liberty Square • Over 175 Exhibitors & Vendors • Local Businesses & Organizations, Arts, Crafts, Merchandise, a Great Variety of Delicious Foods - “It’s not just blueberries” Homemade Blueberry Muffin Contest - Submit your entry by 11:30 am Children’s Area - A & T’s House of Bounce & more! - Please Note - NO ANIMALS/ PETS ARE ALLOWED. Info: 845-647-4620. Village of Ellenville, Canal St & Liberty Square, Ellenville. ewcoc.com. 9am 143rd Schoharie County Sunshine Fair. Info: 518-234-2123 or info@sunshinefair.org. Schoharie County Fairgrounds, Grand St, Cobleskill. sunshinefair.org. 9am-3pm Group Exhibition: The House. Curated by Jessica Gaddis. Step into a unique world where art meets history. Pieces will be displayed throughout the house. Gallery hours:
Saturday, 9am-3pm, Tuesday - Friday, 9am 4:30pm through 8/16. Matthewis Persen House, 74 John St, Kingston. http://bit.ly/persenhouse. 9am-11am Damsels and Dragons. The sixth in a series of outings the Burroughs Sanctuary. After time spent searching for odonates around the sanctuary pond, participants can explore Slabsides and learn more about the interesting and influential life of our famous namesake. Contact trip leader Larry Federman (birderlarry@verizon.net) with questions. Meet Larry at Pond House. Follow the “Path through History” signs at the intersection of Floyd Ackert Road and Rt. 9W in West Park and turn west onto Floyd Ackert Road (at Global Palate restaurant) and continue for about a mile, past Burroughs Drive continue a short distance and make a left at the next sanctuary entrance with the new sign marked with Black Creek Trail and Pond Entrance enter and follow Pond Lane to Pond House. John Burroughs Nature Sanctuary, 261 Floyd Ackert Rd (Burroughs Rd), West Park. jbnhs.org. 9am-1pm Free Tech Help. Bring your devices or your questions with Samantha. 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: 845-6052767, president.pfg@gmail.com, www.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: 347-7217386; 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-11am Eid al Adha Henna Day. Celebrate Eid with a South Asian tradition, HENNA! Learn about Eid al Adha, the cultural significance of henna, and how to apply it. Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. Info: 845-757-3771, tivoliprograms@gmail.com. For ages 5+. Caregivers MUST accompany their child if they are younger than 9 years of age. Happens in the East Room. 10am-12:30pm Citizen Science Plant Hike at Sam’s Point. In this program, you will learn all about phenology, the study of how plants and animals change throughout the seasons, while working as a citizen scientist to collect information about the plants in our park. We will be offering this hike once a month at Sam’s Point to monitor seasonal changes in plants along the Loop Road. Along this carriage road, you will encounter a variety of flowers, ferns, shrubs, and trees which change as you move up in elevation. This program is recommended for children eight years old and above, but everyone is welcome to join us. Children must be accompanied by a parent or guardian over the age of 18. Meet at the Sam’s Point Visitor Center. Pre-registration is required by calling Sam’s Point at 845-6477989. Sam’s Point Preserve, 400 Sam’s Point Road, Cragsmoor. $10.00. 10am-12pm Citizen Science Hike on Beacon Hill at Minnewaska. Become a citizen scientist and learn all about phenology, the study of how plants and animals change throughout the seasons. This approximately two-mile loop hike offers beautiful views of the Rondout and Wallkill Valleys as well as the Catskill Mountains. Includes some hills and tricky footing. This program is recommended for children over the age of eight, but everyone who can hike the distance is welcome to join us. Children must be accompanied by a parent or guardian over the age of 18. Meet at the Minnewaska Nature Center. Pre-registration is required by calling Minnewaska at 845-255-0752. Minnewaska Preserve, Gardiner. 10am-6pm Sunflower Festival at Barton Orchards. Great local music, craft vendors,
Aug. 8, 2019 and wine and beer surrounding the five acre sunflower field that has about 100k sunflowers! A perfect spot for photo ops! The Fun Park, Tap Room, Farm Market, Dog Park and Petting Zoo will also be open! The farm will be open for picking, and parking is free! Barton Orchards, 63 Apple Tree Ln, Poughquag. bartonorchards. com. 10am-4pm 16th Annual Antique Fire Engine Muster. Come see antique, vintage and new emergency vehicles. There will also be family friendly activities during the day like a bucket brigade contest, child’s battery powered firetruck raffle, silent auction and free hot dogs and soda. Info: 845-331-0866. Volunteer Fireman’s Hall & Museum, 265 Fair St, Kingston. kingstonvolunteerfiremensmuseum.weebly.com. 10am-1pm Costumed Figure Drawing at the Persen House. Join the Woodstock School of Art for a costumed figure drawing demonstration with instructor Les Castellanos. Matthewis Persen House, 74 John St, Kingston. http://bit. ly/persenhouse. 10am-11am Museum Storytelling: Family Tours at Olana. Master storyteller Tom Lee uses art, objects, history & folktales to help kids (and grown-ups!) fall in love with Church’s adventures. Olana State Historic Site, 5720 St Rt 9G, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1872, education@olana. org, olana.org/programs-events. $5 for Members of The Olana Partnership. 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 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. 10:15am-11:15am Children’s Story Time & Craft. Story, Music, Craft and of course Fun! Free and no reservation needed. Info: 845-8584942; kristi@thelightningco.com. The Loft at Foundry42, 42 Front St, Port Jervis. f42home. com. 10:30am-12pm Saturday Studio. Led by practicing artists and designed for all ages, Dia:Beacon’s Saturday Studio is a free workshop of art making and play. Dia:Beacon, 3 Beekman Street, Beacon. Info: 845-440-0100, beaconprogram@diaart.org, www.diaart.org. Free for participating families. 10:30am-1:30pm Book Making Workshop. Learn to create and bind your own small book. No experience necessary. All supplies provided. Register at 845-688-7811. Phoenicia Library, 48 Main St, Phoenicia. www.phoenicialibrary.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: 845-2475700. Woodstock Animal Sanctuary, 2 Rescue Rd, High Falls. 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 Peace Mass. Please join the Pax Christi community at St. Joseph’s in New Paltz for a special Peace Mass. It will be followed by a light reception at 12:00 P.M. downstairs in the church hall. This Mass is held in observance of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 and Nagasaki on August 9, 1945, and what better way to pray for the peace that is so much needed among nations, in our societies, in our neighborhoods and homes, and in our hearts. Info: 845-255-5635, ext. 114. St. Joseph’s Church, 34 South Chestnut St., New Paltz. 11am-6pm Sam Gilliam. Dia Art Foundation presents an ongoing exhibition of Sam Gilliam’s early work from the 1960s and 1970s at Dia:Beacon. Dia:Beacon, 3 Beekman Street, Beacon. Info: 845-440-0100, beaconprogram@ diaart.org, www.diaart.org/gilliam. Free with museum admission. 11am-2pm Annual Community Paint-In event. This is a hands-on, collaborative, community art event open to all ages. Donations appreciated. Supplies Provided. Food and refreshments available for purchase. Free “Pick a Pass” to local fun children’s attractions. Info: 845-784-1199. Ann Street Gallery, 104 Ann St, Newburgh. safe-harbors.org. 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. 845-516-4435; betsyjacarusoartist.com. Free admission. 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: 845-336-8447. Catskill Animal Sanctuary, 316 Old Stage Rd, Saugerties. 11am-12:30pm Summers of Growth: Fruits, Greens, and Sun. The third in a series of four seasonal nature walks being led by Justin Wexler through the Nyquist-Harcourt Wildlife Sanctuary titled, Everywhere at Home: How Local Native People Once Lived With The Land. Learn all about how local native people lived off the land. These walks identify local flora and fauna and explain their material uses in native culture while also explaining the species and the surrounding ecosystems through Munsee language and folklore. DuBois Fort Visitor Center, 81 Huguenot St, New Paltz. huguenotstreet.org/calendar-of-events/. $20. 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. 11:30am-12:30pm Animal Embassy: Over the Mood Animal Adventure. Join Animal Embassy on this nocturnal journey through the fascinating night life of the animal kingdom! Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 12pm-5pm Yuliya Lanina: Artist Residency Open House & Reception. Multimedia artist Yuliya Lanina completes a 2 week residency at NY Studio Gallery in New Paltz. Open to the public. NY Studio Gallery, 214 N. Ohioville Rd., New Paltz. http://www.nystudiogallery.com. Free. 12pm-4pm Traditional Hand-Tool Woodworking. Demonstration with Peter Forward. Walk-ins welcome at any point during the demonstration. Free to attend. Shaker Museum | Mount Lebanon, 202 Shaker Road, New Lebanon. Info: 518-794-9100, programs@shakerml.org, https://shakerml.org/calendar/. free. 12pm-3pm Weekend Sampling. Join us at the Emerson Country Stores for a sampling of Terrapin Ridge – Blueberry Bourbon Pecan Jam. Terrapin Ridge blends intense flavors, varied textures, and spicy/sweet combinations to create unexpected flavors. Info: 845-688-2828. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper. emersonresort.com. 12pm Waterman Bird Club: Clinton Vineyards. Bring water, sturdy footwear, your lunch, and discuss the birds following the walk. Leader: Barbara Butler. Call 914-474-5981 for time and meeting place. watermanbirdclub.org. 12pm-5pm Kaatskill Wine Summit. Wild Arc Farm and Emerson Resort & Spa are bringing together some of the most exciting wine producers from across New York State for a tasting to provide a deeper understanding of New York Wine. Producers will be on hand to pour and answer questions. Ticket price of $40 per person includes a commemorative glass and food in addition to the tasting. Info: 845-688-2828; emersonresort.com. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper. 12pm-11pm Otisville Country Fair. Craft vendor’s marketplace, big antique machinery display, animals, youth cattle show, great food, a car show on Saturday, rides, shows and entertainment! Info: 845-386-1315. Otisville Country Fair, 340 Finchville Turnpike, Otisville. otisvillecountryfair.org/index.html. 12pm-1:30pm Breast Cancer Options Metastatic Peer-Led Support Group. Features speakers & topics. For information or to register: 845-339-HOPE or email hope@breastcanceroptions.org. Christ the King Church, 2 Eugene L Brown Dr, New Paltz. Info: 845-3394673, hopenemiroff@yahoo.com, http://bit. ly/1USVReh. 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 Free Family Saturday Program: Dave Ruch. Along with the buzz of sawmill blade, Hanford Mills Museum will be filled with the sounds of a banjo, jaw harp, guitar, spoons, and more as Dave Ruch performs in a special Family Concert. The concert is part of a Free Family Saturday program, Music in the Mill, which runs from 10 am to 4 pm. Mill tours will highlight the sounds and rhythms you can hear in the Mill, including the waterwheel, belts and pulleys, and water-powered machines. Kids can make music with instruments like egg shakers, wood blocks, and tambourines. A selection of traditional games will be available to play. On August 10, up to two adults get in free when accompanied by a child under 18. Info: 607-278-5744. . Hanford Mills Museum, 51 County Highway 12,
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Aug. 8, 2019 East Meredith. hanfordmills.org.
1pm-4pm Drip Paintings inspired by Jackson Pollock. Free event for ages 12–16. Instructor, Melanie Delgado. Woodstock Library, 5 Library Lane, Woodstock. woodstock.org. 1pm-2pm Joakim Lartey and Chris Lane. An interdependent improvisational duo that is passionate about cross-cultural musical expression. Rail Trail Cafe, 310 River Road Ext., New Paltz. Info: 845-399-5450, railtrailcaferosendale.com.
Dream”, and the title song. Info: 845-8763080. Sat 3pm (only 8/3 & 8/10). The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. centerforperformingarts.org. $27. 3pm-4pm Artists on Olana: Dr. Christopher Brellochs. Frederic Church & Music of the Gilded Age Brellochs will perform live music and tell stories of Church’s friendship with leading composers. 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.
1pm-5pm For Philip Guston. For Philip Guston was composed in 1984 by Morton Feldman (1926-1987). Performed by New York’s Bent Duo & Kelli Kathman. The exhibition of Guston’s drawings will be installed in a gallery adjacent to the performance area allowing audience members to take in both art and music throughout the performance. Info: info@woodstockart. org. Woodstock Artists Association & Museum, 28 Tinker ST, Woodstock. woodstockart.org.
4pm-6pm Opening Reception: “ More Perfect Union”. Exhibit features new works by street artist Scout. Scout creates graphic mixed-media pieces influenced by graffiti and street-art that juxtapose colorful paint, vintage clip art and found images to create vital works of protest. Exhibits through 9/22. Thompson Giroux Gallery, 57 Main St, Chatham. thompsongirouxgallery.com.
1pm-3pm Second Saturday Walk – Kingston’s Rondout. Explore architectural gems; stories of immigrants and ethnic groups; art and culture; and the neighborhood’s rise, decline, and rebirth. Heritage Area Visitors Center, 20 Broadway, Kingston. Info: 347-628-2457, mindful@mindfulwalker.com, https://bit.ly/2K3G50i. $10 per person.
4pm-6pm Opening Reception: Human Variations. A new summer exhibit celebrating humanity through a portraiture. Curated from an open call, works included in this exhibit range from traditional paintings to works that engage technology. Exhibits through 9/14. Info: 607-326-7908. Walt Meade Gallery of the Roxbury Arts Center, 5025 Vega Mountain Rd, Roxbury. roxburyartsgroup.org.
1pm-5pm The Spirit Connection: Energy Medicine and Messages. An experiential workshop with psychic medium Adam Bernstein and shamanic energy healer Jenn Bergeron. In this workshop we will tap into the unlimited power of spiritual connection to open the door to the wonderful world of healing energy and connecting to the other side. Each participant will experience an individual clearing and energy treatment. Open to all levels and come prepared to open to greater energy, greater potential on your spiritual endeavors and deepen your connection to spirit. Info: 845-679-2100. $60 if registered by August 8; $70 after. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. 1pm-5pm Art Exhibit: Woodstock Music: In Tune with the Times, 1600-Present. 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. Gallery open Saturdays and Sundays from 1-5 pm. Info: historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org. Eames House / Historical Society of Woodstock, 20 Comeau Drive, Woodstock, NY. 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: 845-8318172; info@mountgulian.org; mountgulian. org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon. 1pm-3pm Cooking with the Catskill Animal Sanctuary. Vegan Dumplings and Dim Sum by Catskill Animal Sanctuary. Chinese dumplings and dim sum are edible art, showcasing a variety of shapes, flavors, and textures in bitesize packages. In this brand-new class, Chef Sara will show you to make four traditional dim sum dishes - with a vegan twist! Following a full meal Sara will share her passion for Chinese tea by presenting a traditional gong fu tea ceremony, featuring one of her very favorite teas from a small tea garden in the Wuyi Mountains. $70. Info: 845-336-8447. Catskill Animal Sanctuary, 316 Old Stage Rd, Saugerties. 2pm Special Celebration of the Woodstock 50th Anniversary. Departing 2 & 4pm. $16-$18. Info: 845-332-4854; catskillmountainrailroad.com. Catskill Mountain Railroad (CMRR), Westbrook Lane Station, 55 Plaza Rd, Kingston. 2pm-8pm Survey Dover Plains. A pop-up exhibition showcasing 17 artists working across painting, sculpture, installation, performance, and film. Meet at 5 Harts Rd, Dover Plains. Info: 786-344-9901, info@surveysurvey.art, http:// surveysurvey.art/. Open to the Public. 2pm Woodstock Poetry Society and Festival. A Woodstock Second Saturday event featuring guest poets. For info contact Phillip Levine at 845-246-8565 or pprod@mindspring.com. The Golden Notebook, 29 Tinker St, Woodstock. woodstockpoetry.com. 3pm-6pm Brunel Park Outdoor Celebration. Starting with a sculpture and garden tour - view the totum poles, followed by a poetry reading by Sparrow and music by The Spirit of Thunderheart! Free admission, donations appreciated. Parking on old Rt 28 next to the Boiceville Inn and Bread Alone. 3pm “Miracles” Book Signing. Join Thurman Greco at Mower’s Saturday Flea Market, Woodstock. “Miracles, Volume 1 of the Unworthy Hungry Series” is Greco’s second book about miracles and hunger. Info:845-399-3967. 3pm Mamma Mia. With music and lyrics by Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Anderson and book by Catherine Johnson, ABBA’s hits tell the hilarious story of a young woman’s search for her birth father. The show features such hit songs as “Take A Chance on Me”, “Honey, Honey”, “I Have A
4pm Rock n’ Roll Walking Tours of Woodstock. 2 hour tour plus limited edition poster. Saturday tours 4pm, Sunday tours 1pm. Meet at Rock Junket at 54 Tinker St in Woodstock. Book online at rockjunket.com. 4pm-6pm Joy Road Book Launch: Benefit for Family of Woodstock Addiction Hotline. Join author Julie Evans, and Michael Berg, Executive Director, Family of Woodstock. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, Rock City Road, Woodstock. https://bit.ly/2LO9Oww. FREE. 4pm-8pm Catskill Second Saturdays. Welcome receptions, gallery openings & musical performances along Main Street & Bridge Street in the Village of Catskill. Info: welcometocatskill. com; 518-943-0380. 5pm-8pm Artist’s Reception: In Praise of Shadows. Heather Hutchison presents her most recent paintings in a solo show. On view through September 2, 2019. Info: 845-399-9751. Jane Street Art Center, 11 Jane St, Saugerties. 5pm-8pm Opening Reception - Summer Flowers. Art by local artist Slink G. Moss. Runs thru end of Sept. Gallery at 46 Green Street, 46 Green St, Hudson. Info: 518-303-6446, gallery@46greenstreetstudios.com, http://bit. ly/gallery46. 5pm-6pm Julia Haines on Harp: Spirit Sounds. Classical, traditional, improvisation and contemporary influences to create a radiant music. Rail Trail Cafe, 310 River Road Ext., New Paltz. Info: 845-399-5450, railtrailcaferosendale.com. 5pm-9pm Beacon Second Saturday. A citywide celebration of the arts held on the second Saturday of every month where galleries and shops stay open until 9pm, most of which are right along Main Street. In addition to displaying art from around the globe, the event often includes free gallery talks, live music, and wine tasting. Beaconarts.org. Downtown Beacon, Main Street, Beacon. 5:30pm-7:30pm Pericles, Prince of Tyre . The Woodstock Shakespeare Festival this summer presents the Bard’s romantic odyssey with an Evil Queen, Pirates and Goddesses. Outdoor Elizabethan Stage, 45 Comeau Drive, Woodstock. birdonacliff.org. Admission free, donations appreciated. 6pm-11:30pm The Hudson Valley Jazz Festival. 10th season of 4 day jazz festival. Shows are held in various locations. Info: hudsonvalleyjazzfest.org. Info: 917-903-4380, hudsonvalleyjazzfest@gmail.com, www.hudsonvalleyjazzfest.org. 7pm-9pm Saturday Night Live Music with Levanta. Levanta means “lift” in Portuguese and Spanish, and this unique quartet brings a collective intention to do just that: lift the music! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 7pm-8:30pm Crystal Sound Healing with Pyramids and Singing Bowls. Crystal vibrations reduce stress and help restore balance, and align our mind-heart-cosmic connection. With Lea Garnier and Scott Williams. Sage Academy of Sound Energy, 6 Deming Street, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-5650, sagehealingcenter@gmail. com, sageacademyofsoundenergy.com. $20. 7pm Live @ The Falcon: The Funk Junkies. Thirteen piece Funk Orchestra! Opener: Craig Greenberg. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7pm-10:30pm Elks Lounge Dance Night. A vibrant mix of R&B, Latin, Funk, Disco, Rock & much more. Requests welcome. Delicious complimentary snacks; full cash bar. Beacon Elks Lodge, 900 Wolcott Avenue, Beacon. Info: 845-765-0667, rhodaja@optonline.net, https:// bit.ly/2GtZt5l. $10.00. 7pm-10:30pm Finck, Tomlinson, Horton,
Garrity & Usvolk. Part of the Hudson Valley Jazz Festival: Matt Finck, Peter Tomlinson, Ron Horton, Matt Garrity and Mark Usvolk. Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-6876373, mark@lydiasdeli.com, http://lydias-cafe. com. Donation. 7pm-10pm Movies Under the Walkway Captain Marvel. Pre-show: B-Boyz. 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. Info: mhrfoundation@aol.com. 7pm-11pm Hasbrouck House Sunset Flix Film Series: Dirty Dancing. Hasbrouck House presents Sunset Flix Film Series! Surprises. Rain or shine event. Film: 8pm. Free admission. Hasbrouck House, 3805 Main St, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-0736, hello@hasbrouckhouseny.com, bit.ly2HeqlAy. 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. 7:30pm-8:30pm Jewish Congregations Gather on Behalf of Immigrants. On Tisha B’Av, the saddest day of the Jewish calendar, Jews mourn the destruction of the first and second temples and consider the fate of refugees in the wake of those catastrophic events. This year members of four local Jewish communities will come together with members of area churches and other faith groups to commemorate the plight of our immigrant neighbors and friends. The event is co-sponsored by the Ulster Immigrant Defense Network and T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights. Everyone is welcome. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 8pm-10pm AUNTS Camp3. A dance event which brings together 10 choreographers from the Hudson Valley and NYC for an immersive performance/party throughout the Mount Tremper Arts grounds located at 647 S. Plank Road, Mt. Tremper. Info: 845-688-9893, info@mttremperarts.org, MountTremperArts.org. Tickets $15. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: The Greyhounds. Sounds of the 50’s through early 60’s. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm-10pm The Canal Street Band: Folk and Blues Roots of the Grateful Dead. Fiddle, banjo, dobro, jaw harp, string bass, mandolin, three voices, & more explores American music that influenced the Grateful Dead. Unison Arts Center, 68 Mountain Rest Rd, New Paltz. Info: 845-255-1559, info@unisonarts.org, http://bit. ly/2Su4KyG. $25, $22 Seniors, $20 Members, $10 Students. 8pm-9:30pm Aunts Dance Performance at Mount Tremper Arts. Dance artists takeover the grounds with an experimental performance! Mount Tremper Arts, 647 South Plank Rd, Mount Tremper. Info: info@mttremperarts. org, https://bit.ly/2SsDQqV. General Admission. 8pm Program Three: The Orchestral Imagination. 7 pm Preconcert talk, 8 pm Performance. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@bard.edu, https://bit.ly/32BFISP. Tickets start at $25. 8pm-10pm Laughter in the Mountains, Featuring Works by Peter Schickele. Manhattan in the Mountains Faculty Concert features a collection of lighter chamber and solo works, some of which are intended to be comical. The concert will feature works by Peter Schickele, an internationally renowned composer of many humorous works under the pseudonym P.D.Q. Bach. Doctorow Center for the Arts, 7979 Main Street. Info: 518-263-2000, cmf@catskillmtn. org, https://www.catskillmtn.org/events/ performances/2019-08-10-manhattan-in-themountains-faculty-concert-1008.html. $25. 8pm-10pm Trivia Night At Chic’s Restaurant and Bar. Chic’s Restaurant and Bar, 226 Kings-
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
ton Plaza, Kingston. 8pm-10pm Maverick Concert: Indian Ragas - A Tribute to the Art of Ravi Shankar. With Barun Kumar Pal, Samir Chatterjee, and Steve Gorn. Maverick Concert Hall, 120 Maverick Rd, Woodstock. www.maverickconcerts.org. $5/$30/$45. 8:30pm Erin Markey: Wet Food and Peter Smith: Alone at Last. A double bill evening. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@bard.edu, https://bit.ly/2Z3o3kQ. $35.
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8/11
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-4pm Thomas The Tank™: The Steam Team Tour 2019. Children can spend a day with their friend Thomas when the #1 Engine pulls into Arkville. Food vendors available on site. The activities on site at Day Out With Thomas™ are to enjoy for the duration of the event. For more information and directions, contact 845-586– 3877; 845-586-2929 or durr.org. Delaware & Ulster Railroad, 43510 NYS Route 28, Arkville. dayoutwiththomas.com. $20. 9am 143rd Schoharie County Sunshine Fair. Info: 518-234-2123 or info@sunshinefair.org. Schoharie County Fairgrounds, Grand St, Cobleskill. sunshinefair.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. http://www. canalmuseum.org/. to the public. 10am-6pm Sunflower Festival at Barton Orchards. Great local music, craft vendors, and wine and beer surrounding the five acre sunflower field that has about 100k sunflowers! A perfect spot for photo ops! The Fun Park, Tap Room, Farm Market, Dog Park and Petting Zoo will also be open! The farm will be open for picking, and parking is free! Barton Orchards, 63 Apple Tree Ln, Poughquag. bartonorchards. com. 10:30am-12:30pm Open Meditation. Shambhala Meditation is based on the premise that the natural state of the mind is calm and clear. It’s a practice that anyone can do. Free/donations appreciated. Sky Lake Lodge, 22 Hillcrest Ln, Rosendale. 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: 845-2475700. Woodstock Animal Sanctuary, 2 Rescue Rd, High Falls. 11am-6pm 2nd Annual Saugerties Caribbean Carnival. Revel in in the festive fun and culture
and learn about these beautiful islands. Bring the whole family. Many live music and dance performances; a DJ; over 60 vendors; games and family fun activities for all ages; arts and craft booths; face painting; and a costume contest. Parade starts at 11am. The winner of the Best Carnival Costume Contest to receive a grand prize of $250. Event to benefit: Center 4 Creative Education in Kingston. Info: 845-616-1689; info@seasondelicious.com. Cantine Memorial Field, Saugerties. seasonedelicious.com. 11am-2pm Sunday Brunch @ the Falcon: Times Square. Classic A Cappella Doo Wop. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 11am Project: Identity Photography II. Threeday intensive photography workshop focused on photo editing. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@ bethelwoodscenter.org. 11am-3pm Beer Geek Sundays @ the Anchor. Meets every Sunday, 11-3pm. The Anchor, 744 Broadway, Kingston. 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: 845-336-8447. Catskill Animal Sanctuary, 316 Old Stage Rd, Saugerties. 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 Weekend Sampling. Join us at the Emerson Country Stores for a sampling of Terrapin Ridge – Apple Horseradish Jam. Terrapin Ridge blends intense flavors, varied textures, and spicy/sweet combinations to create unexpected flavors. Info: 845-688-2828. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper. emersonresort.com. 12pm-9pm Otisville Country Fair. Craft vendor’s marketplace, big antique machinery display, animals, youth cattle show, great food, a car show on Saturday, rides, shows and entertainment! Info: 845-386-1315. Otisville Country Fair, 340 Finchville Turnpike, Otisville. otisvillecountryfair.org/index.html. 12pm-5pm Beacon Sloop Club’s Annual Corn Festival. Fresh picked, ready to eat local grown sweet corn on the cob, and other treats. Free Tumble Bus for kids 18 months to 9 years. Pete & Toshi Seeger Riverfront ParK, 1 Flynn Drive, Beacon. www.beaconsloopclub.org. Free. 12pm-3pm Fiber Arts Second Sundays. This group is for all stages of knitters, crocheters, spinners or sewers! Bring your own needles, yarn and project. Share and socialize. Gardiner Library, 133 Farmer’s Turnpike, Gardiner. Info: 845-255-1255, nlane@rcls.org, https:// bit.ly/2MSs7iN. 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: 845-6792100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $60/1 hour, $30/30 minutes. 1pm-3pm Andy Shapiro. Singer-songwriter Andy Shapiro loves rock and roll and released his first CD “Find My Way Home” in May 2018. Rail Trail Cafe, 310 River Road Ext., New Paltz. Info: 845-399-5450, railtrailcaferosendale.com. 1pm Rock n’ Roll Walking Tours of Woodstock. 2 hour tour plus limited edition poster. Saturday tours 4pm, Sunday tours 1pm. Meet at Rock Junket at 54 Tinker St in Woodstock. Book online at rockjunket.com. 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: 845-8318172; info@mountgulian.org; mountgulian. org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon. 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. 2pm Michael Lang, “Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace and Music”. Michael will be signing copies of his new book, “Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace and Music”. The official 50th-anniversary book on the festival that epitomizes the ‘60s. Info: 845-679-8000. The Golden Notebook, 29 Tinker St, Woodstock. goldennotebook.indielite. org. 2pm-3pm Meditation, Intention and the Zero Point Field. Learn how to drop down and tune in, helping you focus your unique frequencies and increasing your potential to create positive change. Sage Academy of Sound Energy, 6 Deming Street, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-5650, sagehealingcenter@gmail.com, sageacademyofsoundenergy.com. $20. 2pm Special Celebration of the Woodstock 50th Anniversary. Departing 2 & 4pm. $16-$18. Info: 845-332-4854; catskillmountainrailroad.com. Catskill Mountain Railroad (CMRR), Westbrook Lane Station, 55 Plaza Rd, Kingston. 2pm Hair . The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical. Book and Lyrics by Gerome Ragni and James Rado. Music by Galt MacDermot Produced for the Broadway Stage by Michael Butler Originally Produced by the New York Shakespeare Festival Theatre $40-$32. Info: woodstockplayhouse.org; 845-679-6900. Woodstock Playhouse, 103 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. 2pm-4pm ‘Pete & Toshi Get a Camera’ and The Vanaver SummerDance on Tour. A rare screening of Pete & Toshi’s musical adventure film plus, a live performance of the Vanaver Caravan SummerDance on Tour. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St, Rosendale. Info: 845-6588989, info@rosendaletheatre.org, www.rosendaletheatre.org. $12 General Admission/$6 Students. 2pm-4pm The Spanish American War. Join Charles Breiner of Claryville to learn about the role of Theodore Roosevelt before and during the war and Battleship USS Oregon. Time and the Valley Museum, St. Rt. 55, Grahamsville. https://bit.ly/2Fiu6JZ. Members: FREE, nonmembers: $5.
Each issue of Almanac Weekly has hundreds of local activities It's the best guide to Hudson Valley art, entertainment & adventure
Aug. 8, 2019 2:30pm-5pm Last Year in Samsonville. Concert reading of NEW OPERA by Victor Caruso (Music) and Paul Cooper (Libretto). Arts Society of Kingston, 97 Broadway, Kingston. Info: 845-338-0333, ask@askforarts.org. $20. 3pm Flying Cat Music Presents Martha Scanlan with Jon Neufeld. Featuring her distinctive soprano and cinematic lyrics, singersongwriter Martha Scanlan, accompanied by virtuosic guitarist Jon Neufeld, will perform at a special matinee. You can find out more about Martha Scanlan at: marthascanlan.com/. United Methodist Church Phoenicia, 25 Church Street, Phoenicia. $18 (cash only) door. 3pm-5pm Omi Improvisers Orchestra. A unique opportunity to experience the diverse backgrounds of the summer 2019 musician fellows early in their residency. Basilica Hudson, 110 South Front St, Hudson. Info: 531-392-8031, cmassa@artomi.org, https://bit.ly/2y5k6R6. 3pm-5pm Beacon’s Sloop Corn Festival & a Public Sail aboard the Hudson River Sloop Clearwater. Climb aboard the sloop for a public sail! This trip gives you the opportunity to join in raising the sails, listen to music, learn about the river and the things that live here, explore this historic vessel, and relax in a unique environment. Membership gets you discounted tickets and other perks! Info: 845-265-8080. Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, Red Flynn Dr, Beacon. clearwater.org. 3pm-5pm Catskill Mountain Gamelan in the Widow Jane Mine. The Kingston-based Indonesian Ensemble will play bell and gong-like instruments, with singing, flute in the Widow Jane Mine. A magical experience in a magical setting! Bring a folding chair for each audience member! Yoga mats or camping mattresses might also do if you don’t mind them getting wet and muddy. Dress for cool, damp, drippy weather. $20/presale available through PayPal. Free/children 12 & under. Cash and checks preferred at the event. Snyder Estate, 668 Route 213, Rosendale. Info: 845-658-9900, info@ centuryhouse.org, https://bit.ly/2JzrJFF. $20. 3pm Mamma Mia. With music and lyrics by Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Anderson and book by Catherine Johnson, ABBA’s hits tell the hilarious story of a young woman’s search for her birth father. The show features such hit songs as “Take A Chance on Me”, “Honey, Honey”, “I Have A Dream”, and the title song. Info: 845-876-3080. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. centerforperformingarts.org. $27. 3pm-6pm Terrain & Table: Golden Anniversary Dinner. The Farmhouse Project and Bethel Woods Center for the Arts will be paying homage to the legendary music festival. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter. org. ticket. 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. http:// woodstockultimate.org/. 4pm-6pm Maraleen Manos-Jones’ (last) Butterfly/Pollinator Garden Tour. In Shokan. You’ll stroll, smell, and taste your way through lush gardens, walk a labyrinth, listen to an inspiring, informative illustrated lecture, sip iced garden tea & nibble butterfly cookies. Suggested donation $10. Reservations please. 845-6578073, mmjbutterfly@hvc.rr.com; spiritofbutterflies.com. 4pm-6pm Local Author Showcase: Woodstock Edition. An afternoon celebrating local authors and their recently published books all about Woodstock -- the famous 1969 music festival. Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@ gmail.com. 4pm-5pm Grian MacGregor and the Ivy Vine Players. Puppets for kids of all ages! Rail Trail Cafe, 310 River Road Ext., New Paltz. Info: 845-399-5450, railtrailcaferosendale.com. 4pm-6pm Concert for the Friends of Maverick. Harlem Quartet. Maverick Concert Hall, 120 Maverick Rd, Woodstock. www.maverickconcerts.org. $5/$30. 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.
adventure
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 Program Six: “Operetta’s America”. 4:30pm Preconcert Talk, 5pm Performance. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson. Info: 845-758-7900,
fishercenter@bard.edu, https://bit.ly/2XY3s07. Tickets start at $25. 5:30pm-7:30pm Pericles, Prince of Tyre . The Woodstock Shakespeare Festival this summer presents the Bard’s romantic odyssey with an Evil Queen, Pirates and Goddesses. Outdoor Elizabethan Stage, 45 Comeau Drive, Woodstock. birdonacliff.org. Admission free, donations appreciated. 6pm-10pm Don’t Forget About It Swing Dance. Includes a beginner’s swing dance lesson, multiple dance performances and music by the Swing Shift Orchestra, an 18-piece big band. There will also be a 50/50 raffle and a silent auction. Proceeds will go to the Alzheimer’s Association Hudson Valley Chapter. Visit got2lindy.com for more information. Locust Grove Estate, 2683 South Road (Route 9), Poughkeepsie. $20/suggested donation. 6pm-11:30pm The Hudson Valley Jazz Festival. 10th season of 4 day jazz festival. Shows are held in various locations. Info: hudsonvalleyjazzfest.org. Info: 917-903-4380, hudsonvalleyjazzfest@gmail.com, www.hudsonvalleyjazzfest.org. 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. 7pm Storytelling with Janet Carter. Info: 845-246-5775. Free admission. Inquiring Minds Saugerties Bookstore, 65 Partition Street, Saugerties. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Rock Academy. Student Showcase. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro.
Monday
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
8/12
9am-4pm Light on the Esopus Creek Plein Air Oil Painting. 3-Day Workshop with Jen Dragon.Working outdoors on site, the Light on the Esopus Creek workshop focuses on scale, editing, and blocking form to record the luminous and changing light of the Catskills. Workshops are available to non-overnight guests at the rate of $350 per person. Call 845-6882828 to register. For more information visit https://emersonresort.com/art-and-culture/. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper. 9am-11am NED Corps Community Action. By appointment. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 9am-4pm Learn to Sail. Young people, ages nine to eighteen, learn to sail with US SailingCertified Instructors at the Sailing Program of the Hudson River Maritime Museum. One week programs. Info: 845-338-0071. Run on dates 7/15, 7/22, 7/29, 8/5, 8/12. Hudson River Maritime Museum, 50 Rondout Landing, Kingston. hrmm.org/youth-sailing-program.html. $20 & up. 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-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-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 Project: Identity Photography II. Threeday intensive photography workshop focused on photo editing. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@ bethelwoodscenter.org. 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 appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/25 minutes. 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, http://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 Tai Chi. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 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. MidHudson Children’s Museum, 75 North Water St, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-471-0589, lproscia@ mhcm.org, https://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. 5pm-7pm Dinner and Slide Night. Join us Monday night for dinner and Slide Night! Enjoy a meal, and see presentations from this week’s instructors. Women’s Studio Workshop, 722 Binnewater Lane, Kingston. Info: 845-6589133, info@wsworkshop.org, http://bit.ly/ WSWFBEvents. Free for students of Summer Art Institute that week. 5:30pm-8:30pm Creation Care for Congregations. Whether you’re new to the idea of creation care advocacy or have been a champion for many years, please join Reformed Church of America ministry leaders for an evening of ideasharing and information gathering. Our goal is to generate congregational and local excitement around this important work of caring for God’s creation. We’ll discuss some challenges as well as practical next steps for living a “creation-aware lifestyle” personally, locally, and globally. Dinner is provided. This event is free to all participants. Please RSVP to Earl James at creationcare@rca. org. Reformed Church of New Paltz, 92 Huguenot St, New Paltz. reformedchurchofnewpaltz. org. 6pm-7pm Kingston: Swing Dance Classes. Four-week (skips Labor Day) Beginner Swing classes held on Monday nights at 6-7pm, with Linda and Chester Freeman, Got2Lindy Dance Studios. No partner or experience necessary. Intermediate and advanced also available. $85 per person per four-week series. Private lessons in swing and ballroom and for wedding couples also available by appointment. For more info and to register visit got2lindy.com or call 845-2363939. Arts Society of Kingston, 97 Broadway, Kingston. 6:30pm-7:30pm Monthly Drumming Circle with shamanic sound healer Rebecca Singer. Second Monday of every month. Please bring a drum and arrive early enough to be seated in circle by 6:30. Please call ahead to ensure a seat in the circle. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $10. 6:30pm-8:30pm Monday Night Movie: Shazam. Sarah Hull Hallock Free Library, 56-58 Main St, Milton. http://miltonlib.org/. 6:30pm-7:30pm Flow & Restore Yoga. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 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: 845-5687540, Chirp@roostcoop.org, www.roostcoop. org. 6:30pm Music - Mendelssohn Club Meeting. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 7pm Planning Board of the Town of Rochester Public Hearing. , will hold a public hearing at its meeting on the following matters: PB 2019-08 SPA Amend Existing Approval (PB 2016-01)/Public Hearing Let Lee c/o Blake Arrowood/Arrowood Farms Amend Existing Site Plan Approval. Rochester Town Hall, 50 Scenic Rd, Accord.
Tuesday
8/13
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 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 New Mother’s Social Circle. If you and your baby are ready to make some friends and receive reassurance that everything is normal, this is the place for you. New Baby New Paltz, 10 Old Tschirky Rd, New Paltz. Info: 845-750-4402, newbabynewpaltz@yahoo.com, https://newbabynewpaltz.com. $5. 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 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 Project: Identity Photography II. Threeday intensive photography workshop focused on photo editing. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@ bethelwoodscenter.org. 12pm Altamont Fair. Rides, live music, entertainment, a circus, demo derby, monster trucks, livestock events, exhibits, farmers market & fair food. Altamont Fairgrounds, 129 Grand Street, Altamont. Info: 518-861-6671, http://altamontfair.com. Pay-one-price admission: $17 Aug. 13-14, $19 Aug. 15-18; $15 online pre-sale. 12pm-6pm Private Spirit Guide Readings with psychic medium Adam Bernstein. A practitioner of Evidential-Style Mediumship, Adam is able to connect with the spirit world and bring through factual information and messages from those on the other side. He works through a vibration of positivity and love to ensure safety and uplifting experiences. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $50/1 hour, $40/30minutes. 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. 12:30pm-3:30pm Free Kids Summer Art Class- Adventure Awaits. A Summer of Art Adventures classes July-August. 12:30-3:30pm on Tuesdays & Thursdays. Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens. Info: 518-9452136, info@athensculturalcenter.org, www. athensculturalcenter.org. free. 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-4pm YA Theatre Workshop: Create Your Own Sci-Fi Play. Based on Shakespeare’s “The Tempest,” teens will have the opportunity to create an imaginary universe. For ages 12-17. Call to register. Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. http://www.tivolilibrary.org. 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: 845-254-5469. 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-6:30pm Cat Yoga @ DCSPCA. Yoga with adoptable cats! Bring yourself and a yoga mat. Advanced registration required. Dutchess County SPCA, 636 Violet Avenue, Hyde Park. https://dcspca.org/cat-yoga-dcspca/. $20.00. 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. http://woodstockultimate.org/. 6pm-8pm Sip & Write Night with Kingston Writers’ Studio. Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 6:30pm-8:30pm Road Trip~2019 Summer Evening Art Program. Classes are held through July-August to students and other members of our community. Tuesdays & Thursdays. Students & srs are free. Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens. Info: 518-945-2136, info@ athensculturalcenter.org, www.athensculturalcenter.org. Free. 6:30pm-7:30pm WSW Slide Night. Meets every second Tuesday of the month at 6:30pm. Hear from current artists-in-residence about their work. Free admission. Women’s Studio Workshop, 722 Binnewater Lane, Kingston. Info: 845-658-9133, info@wsworkshop.org, http:// bit.ly/2HLZ9Sj. 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-8:30pm Adult Coloring & Treats. A variety of coloring books to choose from, coloring pencils and yummy treats to eat! Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@gmail.com, https://www.esopuslibrary.org. 7pm-9pm Woodstock: The Whole Story, An Intertwinement of Arts & Culture. Thru short films & photographs, filmmaker/historian Stephen Blauweiss presents how the Woodstock of today came to be; 6:30pm music from ‘69. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St, Rosendale. Info: 845-658-8989, info@rosendaletheatre. org, www.rosendaletheatre.org. $15. 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-10pm Open Jazz Jam. Hosted by The Poughkeepsie Jazz Project. Info: 845-452-3232. Free,everyone welcome! PA, drums and keyboard provided. The Derby, 96 Main St, Poughkeepsie. 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.
Wednesday
8/14
Altamont Fair. Rides, live music, entertainment, a circus, demo derby, monster trucks,
24 livestock events, exhibits, farmers market & fair food. Altamont Fairgrounds, 129 Grand Street, Altamont. Info: 518-861-6671, http:// altamontfair.com. Pay-one-price admission: $17 Aug. 13-14, $19 Aug. 15-18; $15 online pre-sale. 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. 7:30am Waterman Bird Club: Tamarack Preserve/Turkey Hollow. Please bring water, sturdy footwear, your lunch, and join us to discuss the birds following our walk. Meet at club house parking lot on Turkey Hollow Rd. (turn off Rt. 44) - #4754 Rt.44, Millbrook. Plan to carry lunch. Questions on field trips: Adrienne Popko @ 845-264-2015 or Barbara Michelin @ 845-242-2301. watermanbirdclub.org. 8am-5pm Tai Chi Chuan. Improve your balance, immunity, flexibility, focus, and overall well-being. Instructor Martha Cheo teaches a traditional form passed down through generations of tai chi masters. Nurture your body, mind and spirit with flowing energy to feel healthy, calm and confident. Meets on Wednesdays 10-11:30am. $15 per class. Contact Martha for details: marthascheo@gmail.com or 845-2569316. Mountain View Studio, 20 Mountain View Ave, Woodstock. 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. 10:15am-11:15am Children’s Story Time & Craft. Story, Music, Craft and of course Fun! Free and no reservation needed. Info: 845-8584942; kristi@thelightningco.com. The Loft at Foundry42, 42 Front St, Port Jervis. f42home. com. 10:30am-12:30pm Senior Writing Workshop in Woodstock Welcomes New Members. Writers at all levels of experience, beginner to expert, are invited to join the Writers Workshop of the Woodstock Senior Recreation Program. Whether interested in non-fiction, short stories, plays, memoir, or poetry, writers age 55 and above may join the group. Rock City Writers provides new and experieinced writers a venue for self-expression and sharing. No fee is required. The workshop is led by experienced writer, editor, and instructor Lew Gardner. For further information: woodstockny.org/content/ Parks/View/3. Woodstock Town Hall, Tinker St, 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. 11:30am-4:40pm Expert Tarot Readings with Silvia Forni from Florence, Italy 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. 12pm-3pm Butterfly Day on Bannerman Island. Enjoy a tour of Bannerman Island, historical icon of the Hudson Valley, a presentation on monarchs and butterflies and see the garden views. Info: 845-203-1316, thecopperfrog22@gmail.com. Beacon Dock, Beacon. bannermancastle.org. $40. 1pm Sawkill Seniors Meeting. Monthly meetings are held on the second Wednesday of the month at 1pm. Meetings begin with a guest speaker and formal format, followed by a raffle, socializing and refreshments. There is also a card game or bingo for those who wish to participate. New members are welcome. Info: 845-546-0159. Diamond Mills, 25 S Partition St, Saugerties. 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:
ALMANAC WEEKLY 856-305-1546. 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. Half-time complementary refreshments. Shawangunk Senior Center, 70 Main St, Napanoch. 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 Family Lego. Info: 845-876-4030. Starr Library, 68 West Market St, Rhinebeck. starrlibrary.org. 4:30pm-5:30pm Art Hour: Slime Making. Join Francesca for this special Art Hour where she will be making slime with ordinary household items! A fun and messy project for all ages. Phoenicia Library, 48 Main St, Phoenicia. www. phoenicialibrary.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. http://www.phoenicialibrary.org. FREE. 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. 5pm-6pm Youth Scrabble Club. For grades 3-8 .Learn about Scrabble, compete in Scrabble or just play for fun. Meets the 2nd and 4th Wednesday every month. Gardiner Library, 133 Farmer’s Turnpike, Gardiner. Info: 845-255-1255, nlane@ rcls.org, http://bit.ly/2GuwmxE. 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 Saugerties Writers Club. Do you like to write? Club meets on the 2nd & 4th Wednesday at 6pm. Info: 845-246-4317. Saugerties Public Library, 91 Washington Ave, Saugerties. 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 “It Happened in Middletown”. Melodrama brings campy fun to Historical Society. The Historical Society of the Town of Middletown will play host to some mid-summer silliness performed by a troupe of local thespians directed by Marge Miller. Admission is by donation. Historical Society of Middletown Hall, 778 Cemetery Rd, Margaretvlle. mtownhistory.org. 7pm-9pm Headcase: LGBTQ Mental Health Talk with Stephanie Schroeder. Stephanie will read from the anthology she co-edited, Headcase: LGBTQ Writers & Artists on Mental Health and Wellness. Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 7pm Live @ The Falcon: Jazz Sessions at The Falcon Underground. Sign up and sit in with veteran jazz cats. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 7pm-9pm The Ukuleleans- Gardiner Library Ukulele Club. All ages welcome, from beginner to experienced. Encourage one another along as we have fun with this uniquely upbeat instrument. Gardiner Library, Gardiner. Info: 845-255-1255, nlane@rcls.org, http://bit. ly/2VdADw2. 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.
Aug. 8, 2019
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; 203-246-5711. 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: Latin Jazz Express “The Music of the Masters”. Devoted to the works of Tito Puente & Eddie Palmieri. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro.
Thursday
8/15
Altamont Fair. Rides, live music, entertainment, a circus, demo derby, monster trucks, livestock events, exhibits, farmers market & fair food. Altamont Fairgrounds, 129 Grand Street, Altamont. Info: 518-861-6671, http:// altamontfair.com. Pay-one-price admission: $17 Aug. 13-14, $19 Aug. 15-18; $15 online pre-sale. 8am-5pm Mid-Hudson Adirondack Mountain Club Outing. Mid-week Hikes. Every Thurs. Hikes of varying difficulty to different areas of the Mid-Hudson Valley. Leaders: Ginny Fauci, gefauci@gmail.com; 845-399-2170 or Lalita Malik, Lalitamalik@aol.com; 845-592-0204. midhusonADK.org. 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 Town Hall, Tinker St, Woodstock. 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, http://www.tivolilibrary.org/. Bring a snack to share. 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. Info: 845-343-1000, info@tara-spayneuter. org, tara-spayneuter.org. Cost varies. 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. John’s Episcopal Church, 207 Albany Ave, Kingston. $12 for one or $22 for two.
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. 12:30pm-3:30pm Free Kids Summer Art Class- Adventure Awaits. A Summer of Art Adventures classes July-August. 12:30-3:30pm on Tuesdays & Thursdays. Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens. Info: 518-9452136, info@athensculturalcenter.org, www. athensculturalcenter.org. free. 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: 845-8318172; info@mountgulian.org; mountgulian. org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon. 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. 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-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. www.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-6:30pm New Paltz Climate Action Coalition Meeting. Meets every Thursday. New Paltz Village Hall, Plattekill Ave, New Paltz. www. newpaltzclimateaction.org. 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. http://woodstockultimate.org/. 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 Road Trip~2019 Summer Evening Art Program. Classes are held through July-August to students and other members of our community. Tuesdays & Thursdays. Students & srs are free. Athens Cultural Center, 24 Second Street, Athens. Info: 518-945-2136, info@ athensculturalcenter.org, www.athensculturalcenter.org. Free. 6:30pm-8pm Free Steps of Meditation. Weekly classes. Learn the fundamentals for an effective meditation experience. Info: 518-5895000 or peacevillage@bkwsu.org. Peace Village Retreat Center, 54 O’Hara Rd, Haines Falls. bkwsu.org.
10:30am-12pm Stitch & Bitch. Bring your work-in-progress (or get your inspiration here) and knit, crochet, sew or stitch with us. Info: 845-858-4942; kristi@thelightningco.com. The Loft at Foundry42, 42 Front St, Port Jervis. f42home.com.
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.
11am-12pm Woodstock Senior Level One (Moderate) Yoga with Susan Blacker. Centering, warm-ups, posture flow, relaxation and meditation. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Fire Co. #1, Rt 212, Bearsville.
7:30pm Essential Thursdays: Strings by Way of Juilliard. The Roxbury Arts Group’s 40th Anniversary ‘Season of Free’ continues when a trio of Juilliard students Noah Koh, Rae Gallimore & Byungchan Lee share their talents in an evening of classical viola, violin and cello. Free. Info: 607-326-7608. Old School Baptist Church, Intersection of Route 36 and Cartwright Road, Denver. roxburyartsgroup.org.
11:30am-12:30pm Super Special Storytime: Beautiful Birds. Featuring special guest Laura Conner, Environmental Educator at Minnewaska, and Librarian Amy Laber, presenting story time that’s for the birds. Gardiner Library, 133 Farmer’s Turnpike, Gardiner. Info: 845-2551255, nlane@rcls.org, https://bit.ly/2YnrbMn. 12:15pm Fine Arts Recitals. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 12:30pm-6pm I Ching Oracle and Tarot Card Readings with esoteric scholar and author
7pm Old Dutch Choir. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston.
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 Singers & Songbooks: Horace Silver Led
by Camille Thurman and the Darrell Green Trio. Camille Thurman honors the legacy of exalted pianist Horace Silver by exploring his soulful 70s jazz-funk through exciting new arrangements. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@bard.edu, http:// bit.ly/31cMTAl. Tickets start at $25.
Friday
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Aug. 8, 2019
8/16
Altamont Fair. Rides, live music, entertainment, a circus, demo derby, monster trucks, livestock events, exhibits, farmers market & fair food. Altamont Fairgrounds, 129 Grand Street, Altamont. Info: 518-861-6671, http:// altamontfair.com. Pay-one-price admission: $17 Aug. 13-14, $19 Aug. 15-18; $15 online pre-sale. 9am-4pm Thomas The Tank™: The Steam Team Tour 2019. Children can spend a day with their friend Thomas when the #1 Engine pulls into Arkville. Food vendors available on site. The activities on site at Day Out With Thomas™ are to enjoy for the duration of the event. For more information and directions, contact 845-586– 3877; 845-586-2929 or durr.org. Delaware & Ulster Railroad, 43510 NYS Route 28, Arkville. dayoutwiththomas.com. $20. 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-4pm Fresh Water Snorkeling and Stream Study for Families. Learn about the underwater ecology of the Esopus in this complimentary class! To register with the Ashokan Watershed Stream Management Program visit http://ashokanstreams.org. Reservations must be received by August 10th. The Ashokan Watershed Stream Management Program is a collaborative effort of New York City Department of Environmental Protection, Cornell Cooperative Extension of Ulster County and Ulster County Soil and Water Conservation District. Info: 845-688-2828; emersonresort. com. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper.
Blood, Sweat &Tears. Pre-show festivities will consist of live music, food trucks, craft vendors, adult-art making, games, and variety of food and beverages. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@ bethelwoodscenter.org. General Lawn. 5:30pm-7:30pm Pericles, Prince of Tyre . The Woodstock Shakespeare Festival this summer presents the Bard’s romantic odyssey with an Evil Queen, Pirates and Goddesses. Outdoor Elizabethan Stage, 45 Comeau Drive, Woodstock. birdonacliff.org. Admission free, donations appreciated. 5:30pm-7pm NERF Wars Grades 5-8. Join us for a NERF battle and PIZZA, after hours at the library. Perfect for grades 5-8, registration is a must. Call 845-657-2482. Olive Free Library, 4033 Rte. 28A, West Shokan. Info: 845-6572482, programs@olivefreelibrary.org. FREE. 6:30pm-8:30pm Jewish Renewal Shabbat 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. Woodland Pond, Woodland Pond Circle, New Paltz. Info: 845-477-5457, hello@kolhai.org, www.kolhai. org. 6:30pm-8:30pm Newburgh Jazz Series 2019. Empire Blue Cross-and Blue Shield sponsors a free Concert in a variety of jazz styles and live shows. Newburgh’s Waterfront Unico Park, Front St & 4th St, Newburgh. Info: 225-3662442, FerryGodmother@msn.com, www.ferrygodmother.com. 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-9pm Free Addiction Recovery Acupunc-
ture Clinic. New Paltz Community Acupuncture will be offering a Free Addiction Recovery Acupuncture Clinic on Fridays from 7-9pm. A specific treatment using ear points only will be available free of charge. Come by and let acupuncture help to reduce cravings, assist the detox process, calm your nervous system, and support recovery. It is helpful for all types of addictions and all stages of recovery. Walk-ins only - first come, first served. 21 South Chestnut Street, New Paltz. Walk-ins only - first come, first served. 21 South Chestnut Street, New Paltz. For more information, call 845-255-2145 or log onto newpaltzacu.com. 7pm-10pm Tom DePetris Quartet. Guitarist Tom DePetris will be joined by Charles Frommer sax, Lou Pappas bass, Matt Garrity drums and special guest vocalist Shannon Early. Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-6876373, mark@lydiasdeli.com, http://www.lydiascafe.com. Donation. 7pm-10pm Hudson Valley Queer Youth Project presents Teen Night. Meets on the 3rd Friday of each month from 7-10pm. Info: 845-331-5300; LGBTQCenter.org. Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center, 300 Wall St, Kingston. lgbtqcenter.org. 7pm Weekly Senior Citizen’s Bingo. Ongoing every Wednesday at 1:30pm & Friday at 7pm. 50/50 tickets available at 3 tickets/$2. Half-time complementary refreshments. Shawangunk Senior Center, 70 Main St, Napanoch. 7:30pm-9:30pm The Film El Ramo by Flatsitter. “El Ramo” from artist Flatsitter is an intense, visceral short film paired with virtual reality and was produced entirely in Oaxaca, México. Rail Trail Cafe, 310 River Road Ext., New Paltz. Info: 845-399-5450. 7:30pm-9pm Kabbalat Shabbat Services. Friday evening services. Woodstock Jewish Congregation, 1682 Glasco Turnpike, Wood-
stock. Info: 845-679-2218, info@wjcshul.org, http://www.wjcshul.org. 8pm-11pm Swing Dance w/ One Straw Revolution. Doors open at 7:30pm, Lesson with Jason Fenton at 8pm, Live music at 9pm. Sliding fee scale $20-$10. No partner necessary, beginners welcome. Dewey Hall, 91 Main Street, Sheffield. Info: 413-429-1176, beth@oldtonemusicfestival.com, https://bit.ly/33caYs4. $20-$10 w/ sliding fee scale. 8pm-9:30pm ASK presents the Hudson Valley Performing Arts Lab’s Medea. The Hudson Valley Performing Arts Laboratory brings you Euripides’ famous tragedy, reimagined through the eyes of Medea. Arts Society of Kingston, 97 Broadway, Kingston. Info: 845-338-0333, ask@ askforarts.org, https://bit.ly/2MC59hI. Student and ASK members $15. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: JigJam. An Irish band that’s going to impact the world! Info: 845-2367970. 8. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: The Dark Horses: The Woodstock Concert. Celebrating the Festival of ’69-a powerhouse line-up of nine musicians. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 8pm Mamma Mia. With music and lyrics by Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Anderson and book by Catherine Johnson, ABBA’s hits tell the hilarious story of a young woman’s search for her birth father. The show features such hit songs as “Take A Chance on Me”, “Honey, Honey”, “I Have A Dream”, and the title song. Info: 845-876-3080. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. centerforperformingarts.org. $27. 8:30pm A Night of Song. Ryan Landry, Provincetown’s infamous icon of revelry, holds court for the final weekend of Spiegeltent. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-
Ulster Publishing Special Section
Fall Home Improvement
10am-5pm Goshen Farmers’ Market. Info: 845-294-5557; goshennychamber.com. Goshen’s Village Green, Goshen. 11am-4pm Annual Community Appreciation Day. Enjoy free hot dogs and hamburgers along with arts and crafts for kids, games, prizes, and a chance to win a $25 gift card. Ulster Savings Bank/Phoencia, 58 Main St, Phoenicia. 11am-1pm Mah-jongg. Learn and play this game of skill and strategy each Friday morning. Beginners and more experienced players welcome. Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. www.tivolilibrary.org. Free. 11am-12:30pm Women’s Cancer Support Group for Women. Share common concerns and learn about living with cancer during and after treatment. Meets on the 3rd Fridays through 5/17, 11am-12:30pm. Info: 845-3392071; oncology.support@hahv.org; hahv.org/ service/cancer-support-program. Herbert H. and Sofia P. Reuner Cancer Support House, 80 Mary’s Ave, Kingston. 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 Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@gmail.com, esopuslibrary.org.
A local perspective
As summer turns to fall, the Hudson Valley homeowner's mind turns to thoughts of home improvement. Our Fall Home Improvement issue is packed with 100-percent local articles and photos on a huge variety of topics. Every page of Home Hudson Valley features the kind of local home inspirations your customers are interested in. If you can only advertise in one home-related publication this fall, make it this one.
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2EACHű OVERű ű PRINTű READERSű INű ůVEű COUNTIESű WITHINű trusted community weekly newspapers, including thousands of subscribers. A digital version of the section will also appear on hudsonvalleyone.com, which receives 200,000+ monthly visitors, many from New York City. All sorts of people read Ulster Publishing papers, but we're especially popular among upper-income readers who value community and buying locally. As the largest independent local media company dedicated to local news, we attract just the type of reader most likely to make a special point of patronizing local businesses.
1:30pm-3:30pm Woodstock Senior Citizens Club Game Day. Meets every Friday. Games include scrabble, Monopoly, Jenga & Bridge. Info: 845-679-8537. Woodstock Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 3pm Special Showing: The Constant Nymph. Directed by Edmund Goulding. With Charles Boyer, Joan Fontaine, Alexis Smith, and others. Score by Erich Wolfgang Korngold (1897–1957). Free and open to the public. Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson. https://bit.ly/2Z0cxGY. 3pm-10pm Ringo Starr and His All Starr Band with special guests The Edgar Winter Band &
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
Hudson. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@ bard.edu, https://bit.ly/2xV16Ez. Tickets start at $25.
Saturday
8/17
9am-4pm Thomas The Tank™: The Steam Team Tour 2019. Children can spend a day with their friend Thomas when the #1 Engine pulls into Arkville. Food vendors available on site. The activities on site at Day Out With Thomas™ are to enjoy for the duration of the event. For more information and directions, contact 845-586– 3877; 845-586-2929 or durr.org. Delaware & Ulster Railroad, 43510 NYS Route 28, Arkville. dayoutwiththomas.com. $20. 9am-3pm Group Exhibition: The House. Curated by Jessica Gaddis. Step into a unique world where art meets history. Pieces will be displayed throughout the house. Gallery hours: Saturday, 9am-3pm, Tuesday - Friday, 9am 4:30pm through 8/16. Matthewis Persen House, 74 John St, Kingston. http://bit.ly/persenhouse. 9am-1pm Free Tech Help. Bring your devices or your questions with Samantha. 9am-4pm Community Traders’ Market. Local artists, vendors, and community members buy and sell new and used items. Info: 845-5762493. Holy Cross Greek Orthodox Church, 2250 Goshen tpke, Middletown. Free. 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: 845-6052767, president.pfg@gmail.com, www.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: 347-7217386; 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-10:30am Take a Tour Through the Master Gardeners’ Low-Maintenance Xeriscape Garden. Xeriscaping is a form of gardening which reduces the need for supplemental watering. Started in Denver, during a period of severe water shortage, it utilizes seven principles which are appropriate for any type of garden. The Xeriscape Garden started with plantings of more than 55 drought tolerant, disease resistant, low maintenance plants in 9 beds. An additional 3 beds were later added in addition to an information kiosk/pergola (one for composting demonstrations; another as a nursery area to hold plants for our annual plant sale or demonstration classes; and a third as an alpine garden). Info: 845-340-3990 ext. 335; dm282@cornell.edu. SUNY Ulster, Stone Ridge. tinyurl.com/2019LIG. 10am-3pm Photography Workshop with China Jorrin. Bring your iPhone and, if you want, a fancy camera. We will be talking about
legal notices LEGAL NOTICE ROAD CLOSING ULSTER COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS County Road #14, Tongore Road in the Town of Marbletown, approximately 0.3 miles north of the intersection with Hurley Mountain Road, will be closed to all thru traffic effective Thursday, August 15th to facilitate embankment repair. Traffic may use Tongore Road south for 1.5 miles to U.S. Route 209 southwest for 1.4 miles to NY Route 213 northeast for 3.0 miles to Tongore Road. By Order of Thomas Jackson, Commissioner of Public Works
the virtues of the quick/unfiltered take. Free. Info: 845-681-9352. Opus 40, 50 Fite Rd, Saugerties. 10am-6pm Sunflower Festival at Barton Orchards. Great local music, craft vendors, and wine and beer surrounding the five acre sunflower field that has about 100k sunflowers! A perfect spot for photo ops! The Fun Park, Tap Room, Farm Market, Dog Park and Petting Zoo will also be open! The farm will be open for picking, and parking is free! Barton Orchards, 63 Apple Tree Ln, Poughquag. bartonorchards. com. 10am-2pm Revolutionary War Medical Re-enactor at Persen House. Professor Emeritus of Biology, Don Terpening presents various medicines, implements, and techniques used by physicians during the Rev. War. Matthewis Persen House, 74 John St, Kingston. http://bit. ly/persenhouse. 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 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. 10am-11:30am Generations Shabbat Morning Service. Family-friendly, multi-generational, musical service with singing, sharing, and teaching from the Torah. Kol Hai Hudson Valley Jewish Renewal. All ages and faiths welcome. Every first and third Saturday of the month in the Great Room at the Woodland Pond Health Center. Info: 845-477-5457, hello@kolhai.org. Woodland Pond, Woodland Pond Circle, New Paltz. kolhai.org. 10:15am-11:15am Children’s Story Time & Craft. Story, Music, Craft and of course Fun! Free and no reservation needed. Info: 845-8584942; kristi@thelightningco.com. The Loft at Foundry42, 42 Front St, Port Jervis. f42home. com. 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: 845-2475700. Woodstock Animal Sanctuary, 2 Rescue Rd, High Falls.
Sessions Concert. New York School of Music’s Student Concert. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 12pm-3pm Weekend Sampling. Join us at the Emerson Country Stores for a sampling of Terrapin Ridge – Asiago and Cheese Spinach Dip. Terrapin Ridge blends intense flavors, varied textures, and spicy/sweet combinations to create unexpected flavors. Info: 845-688-2828. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper. emersonresort.com. 12pm Artist Reception for Lois Dickson, Rocks and Caves. Group exhibit by by Ben Butler, Isidro Blasco, Thaddeus Radell, Mark Saltz, & Eric Bank. Gallery hours: 11am-5pm Thursday - Monday! John Davis Gallery, 124 Warren Street, Hudson. www.johndavisgallery. com. free. 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-4pm Volunteer Day. (cancelled if there is thunder or pouring rain – a light drizzle is acceptable) Please check our website for more details. Phillies Bridge Farm Project, 45 Phillies Bridge Road, New Paltz. https://tinyurl.com/ y48f3jx8. 1pm-5pm German Festival. German Bratwurst, Hot Dogs, Burgers will begin at 1pm with the main meal of Roast Pork and all the trimmings starting at 4pm. Tickets are $30 and Children under 12 accompanied by an adult are Free. Beer, Soda and Wine are included. There will be drawings for great door prizes throughout the the Fest. A family day of fun, relaxation, German food, music, and dancing along the banks of the Hudson River at the Town of Ulster Park - Robert Post Memorial Park, 570 Park Rd, Kingston. 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: 845-8318172; info@mountgulian.org; mountgulian. org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon.
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.
1:30pm-3:30pm Ann Belmont. Brazilian Beauties! Rail Trail Cafe, 310 River Road Ext., New Paltz. Info: 845-399-5450, railtrailcaferosendale.com.
11am-3pm Hudson Highland Nature Museum: Butterfly Weekend. Flutter in to Hudson Highlands Nature Museum afternoon for its much anticipated Butterfly Weekend. Discover the beauty and unique qualities of butterflies, moths and caterpillars. Children and adults alike will get a thrill getting “up close and personal” with butterflies in the Butterfly Tent (one ticket is included with each paid admission). At11:30am & 1:30pm, join Environmental Educators for a presentation all about Monarch Butterflies followed by tagging and releasing Monarchs as part of the Citizen Science project from “Monarch Watch. Info: 845-534-5506. Hudson Highlands Nature Museum/Outdoor Discovery Center, Cornwall. hhnm.org. $10; $7/child.
2pm Special Celebration of the Woodstock 50th Anniversary. Departing 2 & 4pm. $16-$18. Info: 845-332-4854; catskillmountainrailroad.com. Catskill Mountain Railroad (CMRR), Westbrook Lane Station, 55 Plaza Rd, Kingston.
11am-1pm Drop In Legal Clinic. Volunteer, David Balinksy, a retired lawyer, is available to talk with you to help answer any legal questions you may have. Phoenicia Library, 48 Main St, Phoenicia. www.phoenicialibrary.org. 11am-3pm Seventh Annual Fair Street Reformed Church Classic Car Show. Rain date 8/24. Fair Street Reformed Church, 209 Fair Street, Kingston. Info: 845-338-7722, fschurch1@gmail.com. Free. 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. 845-516-4435; betsyjacarusoartist.com. Free admission. 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: 845-336-8447. Catskill Animal Sanctuary, 316 Old Stage Rd, Saugerties. 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. 12pm-8pm Live @ The Falcon: NYSM: Summer
2pm 15th Annual Woodstock Volunteer’s Day of Gratitude. 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! Andy Lee Field, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 4pm Rock n’ Roll Walking Tours of Woodstock. 2 hour tour plus limited edition poster. Saturday tours 4pm, Sunday tours 1pm. Meet at Rock Junket at 54 Tinker St in Woodstock. Book online at rockjunket.com. 4pm-6pm Opening Reception: 1 + 1 + 1. FOCUS: Illumination, Philip Guston Line Drawings, Small Works, The Woodstock Art Conf. Exhibit will display through 12/29. Woodstock Artists Association & Museum, 28 Tinker ST, Woodstock. Info: info@woodstockart.org, http:// www.woodstockart.org. Free. 4pm-6pm The Essential Line and Performance of Morton Feldman. This line features Philip Guston’s “pure drawings” and in conjunction with the exhibition a performance. Woodstock Artists Association & Museum, 28 Tinker ST, Woodstock. Info: info@woodstockart.org, http://www.woodstockart.org. Free. 4pm-10pm Santana with The Doobie Brothers. Pre-show festivities will consist of live music, food trucks, craft vendors, adult-art making, games, and variety of food and beverages. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. Info: 866-781-2922, info@bethelwoodscenter.org. General Lawn. 5pm-8pm Orange County Summer Concert Series - Shelton Taylor. 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, Powder Mill Rd, Newburgh. 5pm-8pm Rhinebeck’s ArtWalk. Ongoing, every third Saturday of each month, 5-8pm. Village of Rhinebeck, Rhinebeck. 5:30pm “Ghosts on the Land: How Hardscrabble Farmers Changed History”. A two-
Aug. 8, 2019 part program by writer/researcher Jennifer Kabat. Explore remnants of an early homestead (meet at 5:30 p.m. at 1314 Bull Run Road, Margaretville; jenkabat@gmail.com). Followed at 7 p.m. by illustrated talk at Historical Society of Middletown, 778 Cemetery Rd., Margaretville, on the Anti-Rent War and connections to 19th-century social upheaval worldwide. Admission by donation. mtownhistory.org. 5:30pm-6:30pm Joakim Lartey and Chris Lane. An interdependent improvisational duo that is passionate about cross-cultural musical expression. Rail Trail Cafe, 310 River Road Ext., New Paltz. Info: 845-399-5450, railtrailcaferosendale.com. 5:30pm-7:30pm Pericles, Prince of Tyre . The Woodstock Shakespeare Festival this summer presents the Bard’s romantic odyssey with an Evil Queen, Pirates and Goddesses. Outdoor Elizabethan Stage, 45 Comeau Drive, Woodstock. birdonacliff.org. Admission free, donations appreciated. 5:30pm-6:30pm Architects On Olana. Experience Olana through the eyes of an architect. Susan Wides, Director & Curator of Steven Holl’s ‘T’ Space has curated the series. Olana State Historic Site, 5720 St Rt 9G, Hudson. olana.org/architectsonolana. $20. 6pm Movies on the Beach: Free Willie. Grab a blanket, chairs and some snacks and get together with family and friends. Come early for the party - stay and watch the movie. Under the Sea Party. Movie at 8:00pm. Freedom Park Bandshell, Skidmore Rd, LaGrange. 6:30pm-8:30pm Orange County Pop, Rock & Doowop Series 2019. Empire Blue Cross-and Blue Shield sponsor a free Pop, Rock, Doowop music from the 50s and 60s. Info:FerryGodmother.com. Newburgh’s Waterfront Unico Park, Front St & 4th St, Newburgh. Info: 225-366-2442, FerryGodmother@msn. com, http://www.ferrygodmother.com. 6:30pm-9:30pm Open Mic at Kingston Artist Collective! Every 3rd Saturday of the month we host our beloved Open Mic Night! Everyone welcome! 6:30pm Sign Up 7pm start. The Kingston Artist Collective & Cafe, 63 Broadway, Kingston. Info: 845-399-2491, kidbusy@gmail. com, https://www.facebook.com/event. 7pm-10pm Dance Party with Soul City. Presenting some of the most powerful decades in music history. Popping out hit after hit of the best of Motown/Stax and Soul classic. Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-6876373, mark@lydiasdeli.com, http://www.lydiascafe.com. Donation. 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. 8pm-9:30pm ASK presents the Hudson Valley Performing Arts Lab’s Medea. The Hudson Valley Performing Arts Laboratory brings you Euripides’ famous tragedy, reimagined through the eyes of Medea. Arts Society of Kingston, 97 Broadway, Kingston. Info: 845-338-0333, ask@ askforarts.org, https://bit.ly/2MC59hI. Student and ASK members $15. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Gent Treadly. Bluesyimprov-roots-rock ensemble. Info: 845-2367970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm Program Nine: Sustaining the Beautiful. 7 pm Preconcert Talk & 8 pm Orchestral Performance. Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson. Info: 845-7587900, fishercenter@bard.edu, https://bit. ly/2XUMPHp. Tickets start at $25. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Ed Palermo Big Band “Summer of Love”. The world’s zaniest band performs Zappa’s HOT RATS. Info: 845-2367970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 8pm Mamma Mia. With music and lyrics by Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Anderson and book by Catherine Johnson, ABBA’s hits tell the hilarious story of a young woman’s search for her birth father. The show features such hit songs as “Take A Chance on Me”, “Honey, Honey”, “I Have A Dream”, and the title song. Info: 845-876-3080. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. centerforperformingarts.org. $27. 8pm-10pm Trivia Night At Chic’s Restaurant and Bar. Chic’s Restaurant and Bar, 226 Kingston Plaza, Kingston. 8pm-10pm The Fugs at the Byrdcliffe Barn. To celebrate the anniversary of the Woodstock music festival, the legendary rock/proto-punk band The Fugs perform their farewell concert. The Byrdcliffe Barn, 485 Upper Byrdcliffe Rd., Woodstock. Info: 845-679-2079, derin@woodstockguild.org, http://www.woodstockguild. org/. $30 general admission or $25 for Byrdcliffe members. 8:30pm A Night of Song. Find out why the Boston Globe classes Ryan Landry as an “impresario of comic mayhem.” Fisher Center at Bard, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@bard.edu, https:// bit.ly/2JRglEh. Tickets start at $25.
27
ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
CLASSIFIEDS 100Â
Help Wanted
to place an ad: contact
Call 334-8200. For regular line ads, ask for Tobi or Amy; real estate display ads or help wanted display, Genia; automobile display, Ralph. Hours: MWThF 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday: 9-11 a.m. classifieds@ulsterpublishing.com
website
Classified line ads can be placed at www.ulsterpublishing.com
fax
Our fax-machine number is 845-334-8809 (include credit card #)
drop-off
Sunflower Health Food store, Bradley Meadows, Woodstock; 29 South Chestnut Street, New Paltz, NY; 322 Wall St., Kingston.
telephone
Vacancy Announcement Program Associate, Indigenous Communities Initiative
deadlines
About NoVo Foundation
phone, mail
NoVo Foundation acts from the original meaning of philanthropy: the love of humanity. The Foundation is dedicated to catalyzing a global social transformation away from current cultures of domination and their reliance on hierarchy, violence, and the subordination of girls and women. NoVo believes a new code of behavior is possible, where we are all linked and not ranked. We envision a balanced world that’s governed by principles of mutual respect, collaboration, and civic participation, and that our contribution is to help create the conditions for that new code to arise and inspire others to join them.
drop-off
For further details about the mission and vision of the NoVo Foundation, please visit www.novofoundation.org.
rates weekly
$20 for 30 words; 20 cents for each additional word.
special deals
$72 for four weeks (30 words); $225 for 13 weeks; $425 for 26 weeks; 800 for a year; each additional word after 30 is 20 cents per word per week. Future credit given for cancellations, no refunds.
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Almanac’s classified ads also appear on ulsterpublishing.com, part of our network of sites with more than 60,000 unique visitors.
Position Overview NoVo Foundation is hiring a Program Associate to join the Indigenous Communities Initiative.
The absolute final deadline is Tuesday at 11 a.m. Monday at 11 a.m. in Woodstock and New Paltz; Tuesday in Kingston.
The Program Associate reports to the Foundation’s Senior Director and ™‘”Â?• …Ž‘•‡Ž› ™‹–Š –™‘ ”‘‰”ƒÂ? ˆĎ?‹…‡”• „ƒ•‡† ”‡Â?‘–‡Ž›ǥ ‹Â? ™‡•–‡”Â? Montana and Reno, NV. The PA provides administrative support to both ”‘‰”ƒÂ? ˆĎ?‹…‡”•ǥ ƒ••‹•–• ™‹–Š –Š‡ Â?Â‹Â–Â‹ÂƒÂ–Â‹Â˜Â‡ÇŻÂ• ‰”ƒÂ?–Â?ƒÂ?‹Â?‰ǥ ƒÂ?† Â?ƒÂ?ƒ‰‡• strategic projects. This role requires experience working in Indigenous communities, as well as passion for NoVo Foundation’s mission to foster a transformation from a world of domination and exploitation to one of …‘ŽŽƒ„‘”ƒ–‹‘Â? ƒÂ?† ’ƒ”–Â?‡”•Š‹’Ǥ Š‡ ’‘•‹–‹‘Â? †‡Â?ƒÂ?†• –Š‡ Ď?Ž‡š‹„‹Ž‹–› ƒÂ?† precision needed to support a fully remote team across multiple time zones. Š‡ ’‘•‹–‹‘Â? ™‹ŽŽ „‡ „ƒ•‡† ‹Â? ‘Â?‡ ‘ˆ ‘ ‘ǯ• ‘ˆĎ?‹…‡•ǥ ‡‹–Š‡” ‹Â?‰•–‘Â?ÇĄ Č‹Â’Â”Â‡ÂˆÂ‡Â”ÂƒÂ„ÂŽÂ›ČŒ ‘” ”‘‘Â?Ž›Â?ÇĄ Ǥ ‡‰—Žƒ” –”ƒ˜‡Ž –‘ ‘ ‘ǯ• ‘ˆĎ?‹…‡• ˆ‘” Â?‡‡–‹Â?‰• and other Foundation activities is expected. ‘ ‘ ‘ˆˆ‡”• …‘Â?’‡–‹–‹˜‡ Â•ÂƒÂŽÂƒÂ”Â‹Â‡Â•ÇĄ ‡š…‡ŽŽ‡Â?– „‡Â?‡Ď?‹–•ǥ ‰‡Â?‡”‘—• ˜ƒ…ƒ–‹‘Â?ÇĄ ƒÂ?† a pleasant working environment. The Foundation employs a small staff and is dedicated to promoting an environment of collaboration and workplace Ď?Ž‡š‹„‹Ž‹–›Ǥ NoVo deeply values diversity and is committed to the recruitment and retention of individuals of underrepresented backgrounds, including gender, race, religion, and sexual orientation.
Application Process • Please review the full vacancy announcement at https://novofoundation.org/updatesfromnovo/novo-is-hiring-programassociate-indigenous-communities-initiative/ • All applications should be submitted via email. E-mail applications to jobs@novofoundation.org with subject line: Indigenous Communities PA/YOUR NAME. • Applications must include a resume and thoughtful cover letter. Applications received without a cover letter will not be considered. • Application Deadline: August 30, 2019.
Join the Mohonk team! We have Jobs at Mohonk Mountain House, both Seasonal and Year Round Please look on-line and apply at MOHONKJOBS.com
Full-time Maintenance Worker needed for apartment complex in Kingston. Apartment maintenance, service calls, spackling, painting, preparing apartments for occupancy. Snow plowing and shoveling, outdoor work when needed. Must have good people skills. Prior maintenance work ex-
perience needed. Paid time-off. Respond to sherry@mgt26.com EXPERIENCED DRAFT PERSON NEEDED on freelance basis for West Hurley architectural firm. Immediate opening. $30/hr. Call 845-679-0890.
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.
28
ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
300Â
Real Estate
Specializing In Real Estate Throughout Ulster County & The Catskills www.MurphyRealtyGrp.com Speak With An Agent today, Call: (845) 338-5252 PRIVATE HOME ON 4+ ACRES
WEST HURLEY COLONIAL
A perfect country home or full time residence. Entering onto the property you have a circular drive with plenty of parking and an attached 2-car garage. There is a nice sized kitchen with a gas range, breakfast bar, recessed lighting and stainless appliances along with a wall of built in storage. Off of the kitchen is your washer/ dryer and a half bath. A comfortable family room with a stone fireplace is a cozy place to hang out and opens up into a large heated glassed room overlooking the private yard. A real bonus is a first floor guest room/ den and a full bath perfect for guests. Upstairs are 3 BRs including a master bedroom suite. A large walkin attic space is on the 2nd floor offers all the storage you need. There is an additional 2.7 acre building lot on a separate deed adjacent to this property available for purchase as well. $389,000
S Spacious 5 BR 2.5 bath Colonial in Onteora School District on 1 acre located on a cul de sac with town D of Hurley taxes. This home offers 2 fireplaces, 2 o car garage, hardwood floors throughout, large eat c in kitchen with French doors leading to a 3 season screened in porch allowing the enjoyment of the s natural surroundings, a family room with separate n front entrance with a fireplace and sliding glass doors to deck. The living room has hardwood floors and brick fireplace and the dining room has hardwood floors and wainscoted walls. The main level also has a room off the foyer area with hardwood floors currently being used as an office and half bath off the foyer area as well. Upstairs, is the master suite and 4 good sized BRs with another full bathroom on 2’ level and hardwood floors throughout. Open front porch with ceiling fan, shed, full basement and a new roof with warranty. $427,900
BETWEEN SAUGERTIES & WOODSTOCK JUST LISTED
For more info and pictures, Text: M161799
To: 85377
JUST LISTED
For more info and pictures, Text: M616349
To: 85377
PICTURE PERFECT
SAUGERTIES VILLAGE CAPE
JUST LISTED
For more info and pictures, Text: M140719
To: 85377
:LWKLQ ZDONLQJ GLVWDQFH WR DOO WKH DPHQLWLHV WKH 9LOODJH KDV WR RIIHU WKLV EU EDWK FDSH ZLOO QRW GLVDSSRLQW 2IIHULQJ D VW IORRU %5 IXOO EDWK DQG NLWFKHQ RSHQ WR WKH IRUPDO GLQLQJ URRP ZLWK KDUGZRRG IORRUV 6N\OLJKWV EULJKWHQ WKH VHFRQG OHYHO ZKHUH \RXÂśOO ILQG %5V D ODUJH ZDON LQ FHGDU FORVHW KDOI EDWK DQG DQ DUHD LGHDO DV D UHDGLQJ QRRN GHQ RU VWXG\ DUHD 'RQÂśW VWRS KHUH \RXÂśOO ILQG D ODUJH UHDU \DUG JDUGHQV DQG D IDEXORXV LQJURXQG KHDWHG VDOLQH SRRO ZLWK SDWLR VXUURXQG WR HQMR\ IURP VSULQJ WR IDOO 7KH VLGH \DUG JLYHV \RX VSDFH IRU SOD\ RU HYHQ D JRRG YROOH\ EDOO JDPH 7KH WZR FDU JDUDJH SURYLGHV ERWK SDUNLQJ VWRUDJH DQG PRUH $259,000
TRANQUIL & DESIRABLE GARDINER SETTING Charming Country Gardiner Cape with first floor bedroom is part of a mini estate with in ground pool, pool house and two story 20 by 30 garage with first floor workshop. Offering 3 Bedrooms and 2 baths and numerous updates, this lovingly maintained home is just down the road from the rail trail, perfect for hiking and biking. An opportunity not to be missed! Offered at $349,500
For more info and pictures, Text: M140747
300Â
Real Estate
For Sale By Owner, 3-Bedroom House, Accord. Patio with above ground pool. New kitchen, finished family room with bath. $270,000. 845-253-0396
REALTY600
255-3455
www.coluccishandrealty.com
(845) 229-1618
Gardiner Gables 2356 Rte. 44-55 Gardiner, NY 12525
** Become a Fan of Colucci Shand Realty on Facebook ** The Woodstock Artists Association & Museum (WAAM) seeks an enthusiastic and personable Administrative Assistant to join our staff. The candidate will serve as the front desk receptionist during open hours and answer phones, greet visitors, respond to public and member inquiries, manage art and museum shop sales and provide administrative support to the staff. Please submit a resume and three references to: janice@ woodstockart.org (subject line: Administrative Assistant Position). Application deadline: August 18, 2019
VETERINARY RECEPTIONIST Part-time receptionist needed. Answer phones, schedule appts., provide general administrative and clerical support. Computer skills required. Drop off resume:
resume or work history to: simplyreadyflowers@gmail.com
225Â
Party Planning/ Catering
POTTIE FOR YOUR PARTY! HAVING A PARTY? TLK LLC. PORTABLE TOILET RENTALS. Weekend, Weekly, Monthly Rentals. We have Gray, White, Blue, Tan, Green (pine-scented), Pink (rose-scented), 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
240Â
Events
On August 11th, 4-6 pm., come to Maraleen Manos-Jones’
204 Plutarch Road Highland, NY 12528 or email npcompassionvet@aol.com No phone calls please.
BOOKKEEPER
Small Veterinary office looking for a part time bookkeeper. Payroll, A/P, A/R. Knowledge of Intuit Quick Books helpful. 10-12 hours per week. Drop off resume:
(Last) Buttery/Pollinator Garden Tour in Shokan.
You’ll stroll, smell, and taste your way through lush gardens, walk a labyrinth, listen to an inspiring, informative illustrated lecture, sip iced garden tea & nibble buttery cookies. Suggested donation $10. Reservations please. 845-657-8073 • mmjbuttery@hvc.rr.com www.spiritofbutteries.com
250Â
Car Services
STU’S CAR SERVICE 204 Plutarch Road, Highland, NY 12528 or email npcompassionvet@aol.com. No phone calls please.
P/T Floral Merchandiser Needed 4 mornings per week. West Hurley area. Fun, flexible position for a creative person. Send
Your Car or My Car Determines the Fare Airports & Long Distance Trips are our specialties!
Call 845-649-5350 (cell)
IIMMACULATE INCOME PROPERTY ,Q ,QYHVWRUV 7XUQ .H\ 5HQWDO ,PPDFXODWH LQFRPH SURSHUW\ RQ D GHDG HQG VWUHHW ZLWK RII VWUHHW SDUNLQJ SU 7KLV EHGURRP XS DQG EHGURRPÂśV GRZQ LQFRPH 7K SURSHUW\ LV H[DFWO\ ZKDW D WUXH LQYHVWRU LV ORRNLQJ IRU %RWK XQLWV DUH DPSOH VL]HG DQG DUH EULJKW DQG VXQQ\ DQG YHU\ ZHOO FDUHG IRU E\ WKH WHQDQWV $OO XWLOLWLHV DUH VHSDUDWHG RZQHU SD\V WD[HV DQG ZDWHU WHQDQWV SD\ IRU DOO RI WKHLU RZQ XWLOLWLHV &DS UDWH DW DVNLQJ SULFH LV DW &DOO IRU PRUH GHWDLOV RU WR VFKHGXOH D VKRZLQJ WRGD\
+Mobile Park $500,000 +Newburgh 17acs W&S, 1-2 Fam, Multi-Family, Senior Housing, Nursery, Clubs, etc. $550,000 +E. Fishkl 17acs $150k +Tagkanic 36acs $148,800
COLUCCI SHAND REALTY, INC
KINGSTON CITY 2 FAMILY
JUST LISTED
For Sale By Owner in Woodstock. Location, opportunity, location. 2 adjacent multi-bedroom move in condition homes with accessory apartments, heated garage, off-street parking with attached store front office on half acre in the center of town on desirable Neher Street. For appointment 845-399-4420.
320Â
Land for Sale
Margaretville. 4 acres. Beautiful. Location, Location Location. Priced to sell. $62,500 with survey...1/2 mile to town .... pristine. 631-553-9798 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.
360Â
Office Space/ Commercial Rentals
Route 375 Office Space. High visibility, excellent parking, 1,000sf +/-, $1300/month. Lease and security deposit required. Ask for Dorry, 845-679-7607.
Turn Key Loft-Style Office/Studio Efficient Heat & A/C. Big Windows. High Ceilings. LED lights. Concrete Floor. Shared Bathroom. On Site Parking. 1 Overlook Dr. 1 Year Lease. $795 for 500 SF
917-992-6960 NEWLY RENOVATED COMMERCIAL SPACE for rent on Vineyard Avenue in Highland. 600 sq.ft. of beautifully finished commercial space w/half bath. If interested call 845-464-2948 for appointment to see. Commercial Office Space available in the Governor Clinton Building. 825 sq.ft. suite with 3 offices. Call for showing 845-3891813.
subscribe 334-8200 subscribe
$249,900
To: 85377
380Â
Garage/ Workspace/ Storage
ASHOKAN STORE-IT Ask About Our Long Term Storage Discount
5x10 $40 10x15 $90
5x15 $50 10x10 $70 10x20 $110 10x30 $150
845-657-2494 845-389-0504 1 Ridge Rd., Shokan, NY 12481
430Â
New Paltz Rentals
NEW PALTZ VILLAGE: 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT, lovely details, walking distance to Water Street Market, public library, Denizen theater, many diverse restaurants. Sadly, no pets. Heat included in rent of $1300/ month. Available 9/1. Call 914-819-2348.
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 VERY LARGE CARPETED ROOM for rent on small horse farm. For serious student or professional. Your own floor. Furnished or
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
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
Help Wanted Situations Wanted Housesitting Services Opportunities Adult Care Child Care Educational Programs Seasonal Programs Workshops Instruction Catering/ Party Planning Wedding Directory Photography Events Courier & Delivery Car Services Entertainment Editing Publications/Websites Real Estate Open Houses
300 301 320 325 340 350 360 380 390 400 405 410 415 418
Real Estate Affordable Home Land for Sale Mobile Home Park Lot Lease Land & Real Estate Wanted Commercial Listings for Sale Office Space/ Commercial Rentals Garage/Workspace/ Storage Garage/Workspace/ Storage Wanted NYC Rentals & Shares Poughkeepsie/Hyde Park Rentals Gardiner/Modena/ Plattekill Rentals Wallkill Rentals Newburgh Rentals
420 425 430 435
438 440 442 445 450 460 470 480 485
Highland/Clintondale Rentals Milton/Marlboro Rentals New Paltz Rentals Rosendale/Tillson/ High Falls/ Stone Ridge Rentals South of Stone Ridge Rentals Kingston/Hurley/Port Ewen Rentals Esopus/Ulster Park Rentals Krumville/Olivebridge/ Shokan Rentals Saugerties Rentals Rhinebeck/Red Hook Rentals Woodstock/West Hurley Rentals West of Woodstock Rentals Green County Rentals
520 540 545 550 | 560 565 575 580 600 601 602 603 605 607 610 615 620 630 640
Delaware County Rentals Vacation Rentals Seasonal Rentals Seasonal Rentals Wanted Rentals Wanted Rentals to Share Senior Housing Housing Exchange / SWAP Lodgings/Bed and Breakfast Travel Free Stuff New & Used Books For Sale Septic Services Snow Plowing Tree Services Firewood for Sale Property Maintenance Studio Sales Hunting/Fishing Sporting Goods Buy & Swap Musician Connections Musical Instruction &Instruments
645 648 650 655 660 665 670 680 690 695 698 700 702 703
705 708 710 715 717 720
Recording Studios Auctions Antiques & Collectibles Vendors Needed Estate/Moving Sale Flea Market Yard & Garage Sales Counseling Services Legal Services Professional Services Paving & Seal Coating Personal & Health Services Art Services Tax Preparation/ Accounting/ Bookkeeping Services Office & Computer Service Custom Work & Specialty Repairs Organizing/ Decorating/Refinishing Cleaning Services Caretaking/Home Management Painting/Odd Jobs
725
Plumbing, Heating, AC & Electric 730 Alternative Energy Services 738 Locksmithing 740 Building Services 745 Demolition 748 Telecommunications 750 Eclectic Services 755 Repair/Maintenance Services 760 Gardening/ Landscaping 765 Home Security Services 770 Excavating Services 810 Lost & Found 890 Spirituality 900 Personals 920 Adoptions 950 Animals 960 Pet Care 970 Horse Care 980 Auto Services 990 Boats/Recreational Vehicles 995 Motorcycles 999 Vehicles Wanted 1000 Vehicles
300Â
Real Estate
the
LOCAL EXPERTS
VILLAGE GREEN REALTY
#
1 in Homes Sold 2011-2018 * - 6 9 4 , 9 3@
OPEN HOUSE
SIMPLE LAKE LIVING
Enjoy birds chirping & stars shining at this spacious single level living home. The walk out #!9'1'2; -9 $<88'2;£@ <2)2-9,'&U ! 6'8('$; $!2=!9 (38 @3<8 -1!+-2!ধ32W 2 9<-;' #'&room has separate entrance to deck. Located -2 ! £!0' (832; $311<2-;@W ;,'29 $274,900
SAT., AUG 10TH | 1PM-3PM
INTEREST RATES FALL AGAIN! Mortgage interest rates have fallen again. Fixed rate residential loans are now under 4%! Coupled with moderating prices, these lower rates mean increased BUYING POWER. Trust our 30+ yearsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; experience as a residential sales leader to give you the sound, time-honored advice you need now to find the home of your dreams. Call a Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Hudson Valley Properties agent today!
This newly renovated 1903 home has a 13&'82c8';83 0-;$,'2 >c! 9<#>!@ ধ£' #!$0f 96£!9, { @3<8 ='8@ 3>2 68-=!;' #!$0 +!8&'2U ! 7<-'; 3!9-9 8-+,; -2 ;,' $-;@W £39' ;3 T -2+9;32 !81'89 !80';T { 1<$, 138'R 15 Clinton Ave., Kingston, NY | $145,000
JUST LISTED
JUST LISTED
PRICE REDUCED
STATELY
CLEAN, CRISP, & NEW
,-9 'ÂŁ'+!2; Â&#x160; cÂ&#x160;WÂ&#x152; '38+-!2 3ÂŁ32-!ÂŁ -9 68-=!;'ÂŁ@ 9'; 32 Â&#x2030;Â? 9'8'2' !$8'9W +38+'3<9 master en-suite w/a walk-in closet & a pri=!;' &'$0 3='8ÂŁ3309 ;,' #'!<ধ(<ÂŁ !$8'!+'W 3$!ধ32S <9; Â&#x2C6;Â&#x2021; 1-2<;'9 ;3 ;,' -&f <&932 8-&+'T !2& 3<;' Â&#x17D; W -+,ÂŁ!2& $345,000
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LUXURY LOG - Amazing 37-acre estate parcel with multi-peak mountain views, streams & spring-fed swim POND w/ beach. The â&#x20AC;&#x153;lodge chicâ&#x20AC;? residence features soaring beamed ceilings, massive stone fireplace, main level ensuite MBR + 4 BRs, 3 full & 2 half baths, gorgeous hardwood floors, 2 large lofts, 26â&#x20AC;&#x2122; family/media room, breezy screened porch, bluestone patio, central AC & pristine landscape. .................................... $1,275,000
PRIME WOODSTOCK - 8 magical acres in a prime near town location. Formerly known as â&#x20AC;&#x153;Camp Camelotâ&#x20AC;?, it is truly one-of-kind and first time on market in decades. The 3 BR, 2 bath home offers abundant old-world charm - stone interior walls, beamed ceiling, stone fireplace & more. A workshop, 2 stone silo ruins, old stable out past the meadow and bridge over the seasonal stream add irreplaceable charm. ...................... $699,000
JUST LISTED
SWEET STARTER HOME
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DAIRY FARM DREAMING
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*According to Hudson Valley Catskill Region MLS. Š2016 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC fully 9<6638;9 ;,' 68-2$-6ÂŁ'9 3( ;,' !-8 3<9-2+ $;W !$, Ä&#x192;$' 9 2&'6'2&'2;ÂŁ@ >2'& 2& 6'8!;'&W 3ÂŁ&>'ÂŁÂŁ !20'8 !2& ;,' 3ÂŁ&>'ÂŁÂŁ !20'8 3+3 are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.
unfurnished. 2 miles from S.U.N.Y. & Thruway. Non-smoker. $700/month. 845-9013124. SOUTHSIDE TERRACE APARTMENTS offers semester leases for FALL 2019 and Short-Term for the Summer! Furnished
studios, one & two bedrooms, includes heat & hot water. Recreation facilities. Walking distance to campus and town. 845-2557205. NICE UNFURNISHED ROOMS; Starting at $485/month. Excellent location. Close
THINK NEW! - Bring your own personal taste and style to this BRAND-NEW Alta Log home nestled on 4.7 â&#x20AC;&#x153;Heart of the Catskillsâ&#x20AC;? acres adjacent to â&#x20AC;&#x153;Forever Wildâ&#x20AC;? preserve. Quiet cul-de-sac insures tranquility. The lofty open ďŹ&#x201A;oor plan features cathedral beamed ceilings, French doors, cherry wood ďŹ&#x201A;oors, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, full walkout basement for expansion, vast deck and covered porch + VIEWS,too! ................ $449,000
JUST LISTED
TWO COTTAGES - High Falls enchantment. Two storybook style cottages perched along a lock of the historic D&H Canal. Walk to town! â&#x20AC;&#x153;Lower Houseâ&#x20AC;? is charming craftsman style with 2 BRs, 2 full baths, HW ďŹ&#x201A;oors, beamed Cathedral ceilings, 5 skylights, country kitchen & sleep loft. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Upper Houseâ&#x20AC;? offers 3 BRs, 2 full baths, barn board wainscoting, country kitchen and fresh paint all in a Mid-Century ambiance. SO CHARMING! .......................$475,000
BHHSHUDSONVALLEY.COM KINGSTON 340â&#x20AC;˘1920
NEW PALTZ 255â&#x20AC;˘9400
STONE RIDGE 687â&#x20AC;˘0232
WOODSTOCK 679â&#x20AC;˘0006
30
ALMANAC WEEKLY
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300Â
Real Estate
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74-76 SMIGEL LANE RENSSELEARVILLE, NEW YORK EN 1 TOTAL SECLUSION! Take the drive up to RensseOP /11/19 8 learville and arrive to this picturesque family retreat. This property sits along the pristine Triangle lake with 400 feet of water frontage. The Log Cabin Style buildings are adorned with chimes and ďŹ&#x201A;owers â&#x20AC;&#x201D; all have views of the lake. Enter into each cabin and be in awe with the vaulted ceilings and open concept. Two of the cabins are divided into four apartments each having wood stoves that helps keep the heating bills low. Directions: Exit 21 off thruway, east to 9W North, West on 81 to County Rd. 358, to County Rd 353 to Litner to Smigel Ln. This listing brought to you by Kathy Shumway................................................$879,000 3 2-
SAUGERTIES, NEW YORK Want a move in ready Ranch home with Mountain views on over 1 acre of land with a creek running through the backyard? If so, this is the house for you. There is potential to add a third bedroom by moving the laundry back to the basement. The home had an addition added on and has the potential to make an apartment or a home ofďŹ ce with a separate entrance off the basement. Garage is heated and has a separate man-door with a backup generator hookup. Very easy to add a third bedroom without structural alterations. Right now, being used as a closet and a laundry room. This listing brought to you by Michael Barros and Alan Kessler.................. $264,000
130 ESOPUS CREEK ROAD SAUGERTIES, NEW YORK H Quaint, rustic one-bedroom N 9 12pm E OP 8/11/1 cottage with deeded access n Su rights to the Esopus Creek. Enjoy swimming, boating and ďŹ shing on this quiet, dead end country road. Hardwood ďŹ&#x201A;oors throughout, new toilet and bathroom ďŹ&#x201A;ooring. Separate studio (11.5 x 19) awaits your ďŹ nishing touches. The detached one car garage also adds to the value of this charming property. Airbnb potential. Photos of creek are taken from deeded right of way across street from property. Conveniently located only one mile to the village. Directions: Route 9W North to Saugerties, Left on Main Street, straight to center lane at 3 way split onto Esopus Creek Rd, house on right. This listing brought to you by Nadina Truini. .......................... $179,000
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WOODSTOCK, NEW YORK If itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s charm, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re looking for in a Woodstock home, look no further. Downstairs has a country kitchen with a Dutch door, dining area which opens to a lovely living room with a wood burning ďŹ replace. The downstairs bedroom has a beamed cathedral ceiling, large Andersen windows and French doors leading to the outside. A perfect spot for a cozy hot tub. The upstairs has a full-size loft bedroom with closet, which looks over the living room. Can easily be enclosed for more privacy if needed. The entire home has beautiful Southern pine ďŹ&#x201A;ooring. The outside features a stone patio, a fern garden, and stone walls. The pretty property on both sides of the road has great mountain views and a short stroll to the Sawkill Creek. This listing brought to you by Richard Miller..... $349,000 ROSENDALE, NEW YORK Commercial building located in Tillson just off the Village of Rosendale. The building offers about 3,700 sq. ft of space on the ďŹ rst ďŹ&#x201A;oor with a covered deck for outside dining. There is a large second ďŹ&#x201A;oor apartment, 3 bedrooms and one bath. Restaurant and bar are in full operation but can easily be converted to many other commercial uses. The cozy bar with cocktail lounge has a well-equipped kitchen could be rented separately if desired. Established in 1988 chef/owner has offered premier dining experience for every occasion including off site catering. The bar has 13 stools with a total occupancy in the lounge for 45 people. The massive 37X44 main dining room has occupancy for 165 people. This listing brought to you by Greg Berardi and Kathy Shumway. .................................................... $695,000
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
Stunning Woodstock Farm House on 6 Acres Stunning Cooper Lake Road home on 6.1 manicured acres with beautifully landscaped gardens. Take a dip in the heated saline pool or relax on the wrap-around deck. This beautifully maintained and upgraded four-bedroom, three bath home also borders DEC forever wild land. This lovely farm house is off of a bucolic country road several steps from scenic Cooper Lake boasting many updated features like the chefâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s kitchen with stainless steel appliances, wood ďŹ&#x201A;ooring and beamed ceilings. French doors open to the outdoor dining area on the wraparound deck overlooking the pool. The master bedroom is an oasis within the home complete with a deep soaking tub, wall to wall windows overlooking the grounds and mountain view. Owners have taken meticulous care of the house and it shows in the extensive improvements and renovations inside and out including the kitchen, bathrooms, mudroom, a new roof, all new windows and French doors, new siding and decks. Lovely ďŹ&#x201A;owering trees grace the grounds. This location is enhanced by the majestic reservoir with stunning panoramic views. Situated just minutes from the center of Woodstock village, yet completely private ............................................................................. $1,300,000
Ă? 3257 Route 212 Woodstock, NY 12409 845 679-2010 Ă? 89 North Front Street Kingston, NY 12401 845 331-3110
com
845-338-5832
Kingston & Woodstock www.lawrenceotoolerealty.com
Hudson River Views
Great for Gatherings
4 bedroom, 3 bath early historic colonial stunningly sited. Generous, high-ceiling rooms feature moldings, wide board ďŹ&#x201A;ooring, built-ins, woodwork and hardware that have remained the same for a century and a half. A 35-foot cookâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s kitchen addition, with dining additional to the formal dining room, that leads to a splendid patio overlooking the Hudson River and a gently sloping hillock with a gazebo for further up-river views. In addition to a formal living room there is a den and a library with a ďŹ replace. You wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t ďŹ nd anything more original and pristine than this. ...................... $895,000
Unique two story home with a mansard roof has an open ďŹ&#x201A;oor plan allowing for family and friends to mix and mingle and hang in the kitchen while also inviting you to step outside onto the expansive rear deck or enjoy the 3 season porch or cozy living room with stone ďŹ replace. Oversized garage for all the toys! Under 2 hours from the GWB and close to all skiing, hiking, biking, shopping and more. .................................................................. $349,000
to SUNY college. All utilities included. Call 845-255-6029 or 914-474-5176, leave message.
435Â
Rosendale/ Tillson/High Falls/Stone
Ridge Rentals
Rosendale apt for rent in 2-family house. Open floor plan downstairs, kitchen, dining, living. 2 rooms upstairs, 1,000 sf. Porches front and back, garden area, fresh paint. Country setting. No dogs. $925/month plus utilities. Leave number or text: 845-5324160.
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450Â
Saugerties Rentals
Saugerties: 2-Bedroom Apartment, second floor. Very quiet building. Full bath. Off-street parking. Deck off master bedroom. Coin laundry on premise. Garbage removal and plowing included. No pets, no smoking. $950/month plus deposit & utilities. 845-246-3320.
470Â
Woodstock/West Hurley Rentals
Woodstock; Large two-level Family House . One mile from town. Four Bedrooms, three Baths. Two working fireplaces. Bright, clean and quiet. Private back deck. Beautiful property. Two-car
garage. Just renovated. Wonderful neighborhood. $2600/month. 845-4304730. $875/month; Newly renovated GUEST COTTAGE in BEARSVILLE. Large windows, brand new bathroom, kitchen. Wonderful grounds. On a private lane. Walking distance to Cub Market. Call 845-417-5282. Available September; 3-BEDROOMS, 1.5 baths, LR, DR, kitchen, deck, glass study room, washer/dryer. On 2 acres. Center of Woodstock. $1650/month. Call 845-4175282. 1-BEDROOM CHARMING, COZY APARTMENT. Wide-plank floors. Full bath. 2 acres. Deck. Borders stream. Garden. $900/month. No pets. References. 845-679-2300, 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Available September 1. Beautiful Furnished 4-Bedroom House, 2 miles from Woodstock. Great in-ground
pool, fenced yard, huge kitchen, breakfast bar, LR, DR, 2.5 baths, den, fireplace $2100/ month. Call 347-622-0224; 347-622-0206. LOVELY ATTACHED WOODSTOCK FARMHOUSE. Breathtaking mountain views, pastures, orchard, ponds, streams, waterfalls. Across from Wilson State Park. Huge farm kitchen, woodstove, 2-bedrooms, south facing sleeping porch, hardwood floors, terrace, full bath, W/D. Available September 1st. No smoking, no dogs. $1650/month plus utilities, security and references. 845-706-4439 cell or 845-6794439, hera@netstep.net Cottage, 2-Bedroom plus Loft. Woodburning stove. On horse farm. By stream. Willow, 15 minutes from Woodstock. $650/ month plus 2 hours a day farm work. 845679-6590. STUDIO APARTMENT in Carriage House on horse farm in Willow, 15 minutes from Woodstock. By stream. Wood burning stove. (With electric back-up heat). Scenic area. Garage space included for storage or workshop. $650/month. Utilities not included. 845-679-6590. Village House, 2BR, 1.5B, Screened Porch, Large EIK, WBFpl, 5 min walk to Village Green/NYC Bus, Dead End Street, Sunny Private large yard, Includes separate studio bldg. $1900/month, plus oil & electric. No Brokers, Avail 9.1.19, Annual Lease, Owner Mary J, 646.413.9895 Beautiful 1-Bedroom Apartment in the heart of Woodstock right off the Village Green and walking distance to everything. Everything has just been redone brand new from floor to ceiling. Heat and hot water included. Ref. and Sec. required. $795/month. (845)217-7207. CHARMING 1-BEDROOM HOUSE on Mink Hollow Road within walking distance to Cooper Lake, 4 miles to center of Woodstock. On 1 acre. Wood floors, newly renovated bathroom. $1050/month. 845417-5282.
480Â
West of Woodstock Rentals
Modern 1-Bedroom, living room, kitchen and bath. Very private in country setting w/ mountain view. 10 minutes from Woodstock. Walking distance to Onteora schools and stores. $850/month, tenant pays electric. 845-366-0751. 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 Woodstock, 17 to Hunter. Renowned trout stream runs through property. Reasonable. Photos available. 845-688-5062.
580
New & Used Books
BOOKS WANTED: Actively buying used, rare and collectible books, maps, posters and typewriters! Seeking quality books from a single title to a full collection. Bring them to the shop or call for an in-home visit (845-255-2635). Barner Books; 3 Church St. New Paltz (barnerbooks@gmail.com).
600
For Sale
Woodworking Equipment For Sale and more to come. Dave Heinlein 845-3323568. Clearing out extra and unused equipment from my shop. Most prices are firm, based on current auction sales, but some are negotiable. *Delta/Rockwell 8” tilt-table saw; 1940s-50s; resto project, needs cleaning; Stand and motor inc.- Firm; $50. *Grizzly 10” 3hp right tilt cabinet saw; 1023S; Price firm; $700. *Delta 10” drill press, bench model; runs, cracked casting, but usable; Neg.; $40. *Delta/Rockwell floor model drill press; 1957, runs good; Neg.; $350. *Delta 10” RA saw, runs good, 70s model, on cabinet stand; Neg.; $300. *Shaper- 1966 Delta 2hp cabinet model; $600. *Shaper- Grizzly 3hp w/ass. bits; $900. *Power feeder 1hp Grizzly 3 wheel w/ stand; $700. *Drawer Boxes- maple, dovetailed, finished ass. sizes; $20.ea. *Cabinet hdw- misc. hinges, knobs, etc. Make offer. FOR SALE: GENERATOR, GENERAC 5500; 5500 Running Watts/6875 Starting Watts Gasoline-Powered Portable Generator. Hardly used: 21 hours. Perfect for camping, power tool use and emergency backup power. Hour Meter / Low-oil level shutdown / Covered, circuit breaker outlets for added protection / 7 gallons fuel tank / Heavy duty wheels and fold-down, locking handle. $315. 845-616-0710
603
Tree Services
round, table saw w/router table & accessories, mountain bike (kids or short adult), backpacks, cabinet hardware/accessories, glides hinges drawer boxes, household items, framed pictures/prints, storm/ screen door. 10 Pine Terrace, Highland, Saturday, 8/10, Sunday, 8/11, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
FABULOUS MOVING SALE BY OWNER 45 years of collecting Wonderful Things at Wonderful Prices! Short list: Brass bed w/drawers underneath for storage, night tables, outdoor iron garden stuff, planters, stone benches & tables, tools, workbench, paintings, etchings, designer clothes, great books, old records, oak table w/leaves, lamps, bedding, vintage furniture, Mission grandfather clock, antique swan chairs, office equipment, painted screen, leather & metal dining room chairs, jewelry, antique dressing table, mirrors, kitchen stuff, old toys, flat-screen TVs, stereo & turntable,
Plus Much More!
Friday, 8/9 & Saturday, 8/10, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sunday, 8/11, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 262 Grog Kill Road, Willow Questions - 688-7819
670
Yard & Garage Sales
Rosendale, 18 Cottekill Rd. Saturday, 8/10 and Sunday, 8/11, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Furniture, jewelry, books, linens, planters, household items, fabrics, & more.... No early birds! MOWER’S SATURDAY/SUNDAY FLEA MARKET; Maple Lane, Woodstock. Antiques, collectibles, produce & Reusables. 845-679-6744. Join us for our 42nd Year! For brochure: woodstockfleamarket@ hvc.rr.com GOOGLE US!
695
Professional 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
31
ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
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... HIGHEST PRICES PAID For old furniture through the 1960s & ANTIQUES of every description: Paintings, Lamps, Silver, Rugs, Pottery, China, Asian items, etc. One item-Entire Estates. Housecalls. Free appraisals. Richard Miller Antiques. 35+ years in business. Call/text 845389-7286.
*Jessica Rice*; Beautiful Images Hair Salon, 123 Boices Lane, Kingston. Hair845-383-1852; www.beautifulimageshairsalon.com Makeup- 845-309-6860; www. jessicamitzi.com
715
Cleaning Services
• Int. & Ext. Painting • Power Washing
HOUSE CLEANING for a tidy sum. 845658-2073.
• Sheetrock & Plaster Repair
Precision Cleaning. Complete line of services with affordable rates. Commercial, clean-outs, rentals, Air B&Bs; hospitality (daily, weekly, housekeeping, linen service, etc.) 30 years experience. Insured. Free estimates. 845-235-6701.
• Free Estimates
ULSTER WINDOW CLEANING CO. **Estate, **Residential. **Free Estimates, Fully Insured. Call 679-3879
BLAIR COLLECTIBLES is your Trusted Local BUYER of: Old COINS, Currency, Gold & Silver items, Old Marbles, Toys, Small antiques (pocket watches, military medals, costume jewelry, etc). OVER 50 YEARS of satisfied clients! Call 845-2544717 or email blaircol4@aol.com
660
Estate/Moving Sale
MOVING SALE: chairs, stools, dining table & cabinet, media hutch, fireplace sur-
Contact Jason Habernig
845-331-4966, 845-249-8668 Visit my website: Haberwash.com
— 15 Years experience —
Fully Insured • Free Estimates 30+ Years Exp. • (914) 262-2474
COUNTRY CLEANERS Homes & Offices • Insured & Bonded
Excellent references.
Call (845)706-1713 or (845) 679-8932 CLEAN UPS, CLEAN OUTS. Indoor/Outdoor. Junk & debris removal. Estates prepared for Moving and Sale. (845)688-2253.
717
Caretaking/Home Management
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. 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; 845-202-0606
PABLO SHINE 845-532-6587 • pabloshine@gmail.com HANDYALL SERVICES: *Carpentry, *Plumbing, *Electrical, *Painting, *Excavating & Grading. 5 ton dump trailer. Trees cut. Call Dave 845-514-6503- mobile. House & Estate Cleanouts, Junk Removal, Dump Runs. Helping homeowners, realtors and property managers for 20 years. One call, it’s gone! Senior & disabled discounts. 845-247-7365. GarysHauling.com
725
Plumbing, Heating, AC & Electric
Stoneridge Electrical Service, Inc. www.stoneridgeelectric.com
• LED Lighting
• Standby Generators
• 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
720
Painting/Odd Jobs
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. NYS DOT T-12467
Incorporated 1985
TLK LLC. PORTABLE TOILET RENTALS. Weekend, Weekly, Monthly rentals. We have Gray, white, blue, tan, green (pinescented), pink (rose-scented), red & blue handicap accessible. (We also have a few w/ sinks). Great for Construction/Building Sites, Sporting Events, Concerts, Street Festivals, Parks, Outdoor Weddings, Campsites, Flea Markets, Party Events, etc. Call 845-658-8766, 845-417-6461 or 845-7067197. e-mail: TLKportables@gmail.com
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
Structural and Cosmetic Repair Reclaim an Old Treasured Doll or Stuffed Animal feliciacasey@gmail.com 845.691.7853
Swan Hollow Doll Repair
Highland, NY 12528
710
Organizing/ Decorating/ Refinishing
PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZER/ HOUSEKEEPER. Help w/everyday problems, special projects; clutter, paperwork, moving, gardening & personal assistant. Affordable. Fully Insured, Confidentiality Assured. MargotMolnar.com; Masters Psychology, former CEO, Certified Hospice Volunteer. margotmolnar1@gmail. com (845)679-6242.
• Residential / Commercial • Moving • Delivery • Trucking • Local & NYC Metro Areas
Shandaken, NY 845-688-2253
Interiors & Remodeling Inc s ’ d e T
.
650
FREE ESTIMATES, FULLY INSURED Accepting All Major Credit Cards
Free estimates • Reasonable rates
I Re-string Re-inforce Re-attach Re-stuff Restore
Antiques & Collectibles
Residential and Commercial Residentia Specializing in decks, fences, roofs, driveways, patios.
Power Washing
700
702
HABE HABERWASH PRESSURE WASHING PRE & EXTERIOR PAINTING & STAINING.
FINE HOUSE PAINTING
Window Cleaning
Personal & Health Services
Art Services
Multiple References Available Upon Request Licensed & Insured • ritaccopainting.com
CLEAR VIEW
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.
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 845-8538189.
QUALITY • VALUE • RELIABILITY • SINCE 1980
From Walls to Floors, Ceilings to Doors, Decks, Siding & More.
Reliable, Dependable & Insured Call for an estimate
845-591-8812
www.tedsinteriors.com Gary Buckendorf Painting: Interior - Exterior Plastering, Taping, Structolite Wall coverings, Color Matching Many references in Catskill area and Manhattan garybuckendorf@gmail.com
917-593-5069
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
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ALMANAC WEEKLY
Aug. 8, 2019
AUTOMATIC STANDBY GENERATORS • • • • • •
Never Be Without Power Again Totally Automatic Safe & Reliable Built to Last More Power & More Confidence Financing Available
1-800-542-5552 MainCareEnergy.com Trusted Since 1930
100% Employee-Owned & Locally Operated 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. 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
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
Excavation Site work 'UDLQ ¿HOGV /DQG FOHDULQJ 6HSWLF V\VWHPV 'HPROLWLRQ 'ULYHZD\V
Landscaping /DZQ LQVWDOODWLRQ 3RQGV &OHDQ XSV /DZQ FDUH ...and much more
Paramount Contracting & Development Corp.
William Watson • Residential / Commercial
SNOW PLOWING & SANDING Call William, for your free estimate (845) 401-6637
DRIVEWAY STONE Screened Topsoil - Walk & Wall Stone Shale - Mulch - Fill - Compost 845-505-3890 — RBE Materials —
890
Spirituality
PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN. (Never known to fail.) Oh, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God. Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh, Star of the Sea, help me and show me herein you are my mother. Oh, Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth! I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in this necessity. There are none that can withstand your power. Oh, show me herein you are my mother. Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (3x). Holy Mother, I place this cause in your hands (3x). Holy Spirit, you who solve all problems, light all roads so that I can attain my goal. You who gave me the divine gift to forgive and forget all evil against me and that in all instances in my life you are with me, I want in this short prayer to thank-you for all things as you confirm once again that I never want to be separated from you in eternal glory. Thank-you for your mercy towards me and mine. The person must say this prayer 3 consecutive days, the request will be granted. This prayer must be published after the favor is granted.
950
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. Savanna; petite, medium hair tiger & raised 2 litters of kittens. Now it’s this very sweet & cuddly cat girl’s time to be loved w/the kindness she gave her kittens. Tamari; 8-yr. old buff cat girl who is sweet and gentle. Mishu; opinionated 10year old orange medium hair cat boy. He needs to be your only pet. QUEENIE; 8-yr. old tiger cat girl (who looks like an Abyssinian) & is very sweet. She wants you all to herself so no other pets, please. BABY; 4-year old tiger striped cat boy. 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. 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?) 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 & be loved. In return, they’ll give you a lifetime of unconditional LOVE. Max & Chase; 6-year old Golden Retriever brothers. These super sweet boys are bonded & must be adopted together. Just think- Twice the love! ROCKY; Border Collie/Sheltie mix. He is such a sweet dog! Lacey; 7-year old sweet girl looking for a laid-back home where she’ll be the only
pet. Charlotte; 7-year old female who needs a quiet, loving home & needs to be the only pet. Could she be your new family member? PENELOPE; sweet 8-month old Terrier mix. She weighs 15 pounds. 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 845-679-0339 to answer any questions you may have. Adopt an Animal. They will thank you every day.
960
Pet Care
WOULD YOU LIKE AN OUTDOOR CAT? Do you have a barn, garage, shed or outbuilding? Would you like to consider having feral cats? You can help cats in need who will help keep your barn, etc. free of rodents. The cats will be neutered/spayed and up to date w/shots. Please call the Woodstock Feral Cat Project at 347-2582725.
L&M Pet Sitting Professional pet care visits for cats, dogs, birds, and other exotic species.
Lauren Storm & Michael Steeley (607) 431-3392 LnMpetsitting@gmail.com
Check us out on Facebook!
999
Vehicles Wanted
CASH PAID FOR USED cars & trucks regardless of condition. Junk cars removed. Call 246-0214. DMV 7107350.