Almanac Weekly #38 2019

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

A miscellany of Hudson Valley art, adventure and ideas | Calendar & Classifieds | Issue 38 | Sept. 19 – 26

WILL LYTLE

Taking the long view Catskill Center celebrates a half-century working to ensure a bright future for the environment, economy and culture of the Catskills

thursday See Jeff Bridges’ Flint at Ellenville’s Shadowland Stages

friday Los Wembler’s de Iquitos at BSP; 420 Funk Mob in Woodstock

saturday Chris Thile at Bethel Woods; Art Walk in Kingston; British Car Show

sunday Graham Nash at Bardavon; Beams of light connect Cole House to Olana

monday Celtic Music Night at R & R Taproom in Woodstock

tuesday Head to area libraries for National Voter Registration Day

wednesday Ugandan Afro-pop singer Jackie Akello at the Falcon

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

WOODSTOCK

SIDEWALK

SALE

Sept. 19, 2019

SEPTEMBER 21, 2019 | BSP, KINGSTON | TMIPROJECT.ORG

VOICES IN ACTION BENEFIT AND STORYTELLING SHOWCASE JOIN US AS WE HONOR

PROJECT

Changing the world one story at a time

Chris Wells

Founding Artistic Director, The Secret City

Bike for Cancer Care in Kingston on Sunday The Benedictine Health Foundation and the Rosemary D. Gruner Memorial Cancer Fund present the 16th annual Bike for Cancer Care on Sunday, September 22. Offering 12-, 25and 50-mile rides and a non-competitive 5K run/walk, the day caters to the entire family. The first 300 riders and 5K participants will receive a free tee-

SHOP 'TIL YOU DROP! Sept. 21-22 Pegasus • Lily’s • Changes Woodstock Design Woodstock Trading Post Sparkle • Birchtree Candlestock • Walkabout SPONSORED BY THE WOODSTOCK CHAMBER

GARLIC FARMERS GARLIC FOOD GALORE CHEF DEMOS MUSIC & ENTERTAINMENT CRAFT STREET CHILDREN'S ACTIVITIES FARMER LECTURES

HVGF.ORG


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CHECK IT OUT

100s of things to do every week

Leaving the house can be a wild ride...

“smartass points,” which means making the trivia master laugh. It is a night of friendly competition and fun in a pre-Revolutionary War building and a hip environment. Trivia Night Thursday, Sept. 26, 7 p.m. Rough Draft Bar & Books 82 John St., Kingston (845) 802-0027 www.roughdraftny.com

Sign up to vote at local libraries September 24 on National Voter Registration Day

STAGE

Colony presents two nights with Chris Gethard, September 27 & 28

A

zeitgeist comedian, writer, actor and podcaster for the memoir and confessional generation, Chris Gethard returns to Colony in Woodstock for two nights on September 27 and 28. This is no typical two-night comedy stand: On Friday night, Gethard will deliver a traditional standup set, or as close to it as he is likely to get. On Saturday night, he presents a live onstage episode of his popular caller-based Beautiful/Anonymous podcast. Individual tickets cost $18 in advance on the days of the shows. A two-show combined ticket is available at the discounted price of $32. Chris Gethard, Friday/Saturday, Sept. 27/28, 8 p.m., $18/$32, Colony, 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock, www.colonywoodstock.com

shirt. There will be breakfast, a postevent lunch, ice cream and an awards ceremony as well. Bike for Cancer Care Sunday, Sept. 22, 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Dietz Stadium 170 N. Front St., Kingston (845) 481-1457 www.bikeforcancer.org

TSL screens Fleabag live from London on Saturday See the award-winning one-woman show that inspired the BBC’s hit TV series Fleabag, broadcast live from London’s West End to cinemas around the world. Written and performed by Phoebe Waller-Bridge (Fleabag, Killing Eve)

and directed by Vicky Jones, Fleabag is a hilarious look into one woman’s oversexed, emotionally unfiltered and selfobsessed life. Fleabag will be screened live locally at Time & Space Limited in Hudson on Saturday, September 21. Tickets cost $20 general admission, $18 for members, $15 for students. Fleabag live from London Saturday, Sept. 21, 7 p.m., $20/$18/$15 Time & Space Limited, Hudson (518) 822-8100, https://timeandspace.org

Thursdays are generally Trivia Night at Rough Draft in Kingston Uptown Kingston’s stylish combo bookstore and pub Rough Draft hosts a lively Trivia Night most every Thurs-

2 neighbor couples. 1 black + 1 white. 2 years after the plant closed. And 6 weeks before they told us about the water...

SEPTEMBER 13TH - 29TH ONLY

EAST COAST PREMIERE

day, hosted by Rich Morrison. Teams of up to six people can score drinks and prizes for bonus questions, best team name, highest overall score and

Every year millions of Americans find themselves unable to vote because they miss a registration deadline, don’t update their registration or aren’t sure how to register. September 24 is National Voter Registration Day, a day dedicated to ensuring that sure everyone has the opportunity to vote. Volunteers and organizations from all over the country will hit the streets in a single day of coordinated field, technology and media efforts. Numerous local libraries will be hosting National Voter Registration Day events: Ellenville Library at 40 Center Street, 9:30 a.m. until 8 p.m.; Highland Public Library at 14 Elting Place in Highland, 1 p.m. until 6 p.m.; Morton Memorial Library & Community House at 82 Kelly Street in Rhinecliff, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Blodgett Memorial Library at 37 Broad Street in Fishkill, starting at 10:30 a.m.; Pine Plains Free Library at 7775 South Main Street in Pine Plains, starting at noon. For more information, visit https://nationalvoterregistrationday.org.


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MUSIC Los Wembler’s de Iquitos play BSP on Friday

BSP continues its global-minded curation with a performance by Peru’s legendary psychedelic cumbia band Los Wembler’s de Iquitos on Friday, September 20. In 2007, the Brooklyn label Barbès Records released a 17song compilation of a then-ignored genre of psychedelic cumbia from Peru: a blend of psych/rock, surf, Afro-Latin rhythms and indigenous melodies. That album reintroduced the world to chicha music, a sound previously confined to the Amazon and the poorer neighborhoods of Lima. Los Wembler’s, who formed in 1968 in the Amazonian city of Iquitos, were responsible for some of the first hits of the psychedelic cumbia genre and have enjoyed this resurgence in international interest. BSP welcomes them in the middle of their Visión del Ayahuasca Tour. Tickets cost $12 in advance, $15 at the door. Los Wembler’s de Iquitos Friday, Sept. 20, 7:30 p.m. $15/$12 BSP 323 Wall St., Kingston http://bspkingston.com

ALMANAC WEEKLY editor contributors

calendar manager classifieds

AMY GRANTHAM

Graham Nash

STAGE

Graham Nash talks and plays at the Bardavon on Sunday

G

raham Nash seems to be fully enjoying a late career run, making new music, writing and talking freely about the old music and just being the legendarily decent and elegant guy he is reported to be. A founding member of the Hollies and a constant in all the alphabet soup of CSNY, CSN and CN, Nash lived the ’60s and the classic rock era in a way to which few others can claim, coming up on the same scene as the Beatles and continuing into the present as one of the godfathers of folk/rock. He has written more hits than you probably realize. And he knows everyone. That is why it is hard to say which is the more alluring part of this date: the songs or the stories. Luckily, we don’t have to decide. The Bardavon presents an Intimate Evening of Songs & Stories with Graham Nash & Trio at its namesake Poughkeepsie theater on Sunday, September 22. Ticket prices range from $50 to $75, with a $5 discount for members. – John Burdick Graham Nash, Sunday, Sept. 22, 7 p.m., $50-$75, Bardavon, 35 Market St., Poughkeepsie, (845) 473-2072, www.bardavon.org

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

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

420 Funk Mob plays Colony on Friday Michael Clip Payne’s riotous 420 Funk Mob works in the tradition of the large Dionysian groove collective, a lineage most powerfully associated with Parliament/Funkadelic, with whom Payne and several other members of the Mob have played. A popular Woodstock attraction for years and a world-class ensemble of groove sur-

realists, the 420 Funk Mob returns to Colony in Woodstock on Friday, September 20. Tickets cost $20 in advance, $25 at the door. 420 Funk Mob Friday, Sept. 20, 8 p.m. $25/$20 Colony 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock www.colonywoodstock.com

Fine Arts at Old Dutch Fall - 2019

Snug’s presents Red Crosses, Moonunit on Friday It’s next-gen indie-rock all night at Snug Harbor in New Paltz on Saturday, September 21. Westchester’s Red Crosses deliver sing-songy teenpop cheekiness with an arty and smart post-rock angularity reminiscent of Speedy Ortiz. New Paltz’s own Moonunit, perhaps unwittingly absorbing some of the ancient hippie residue of the village, plays a lush, Strokes-y

UPTOWN FINE ARTS MUSIC SERIES • THURSDAYS, 12:15 - 12:45 P.M

September 19 September 26 October 3 October 10 October 17 October 24 October 31 November 7 November 14

Alison McConekey & Andrea Shaut: Soprano & Piano Andrea Shaut & Robert Shaut: Piano & Saxophone Andrea Shaut & Students Pauline Mancuso, Flute; Peter Mancuso, Piano Adelaide Roberts & Students Jay Shulman, Cello; Lorraine Nelson Wolf, Piano Russel Oliver, Organ Kingston Community Singers, Lonnie Kulick, Director Jenny Bates, Piano

Almanac Weekend The best weekend events delivered to your inbox.

A mid-day break of musical performances featuring area artists in a variety of musical programs. Old Dutch Church is located on Main Street, between Fair and Wall Streets, in Uptown Kingston. All programs are free. Church is handicap accessible.

www.olddutchchurch.org • (845) 338-6759 • info@olddutchchurch.org

SUBSCRIBE AT HUDSONVALLEYONE.COM


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Cohen� at Colony in Woodstock on Saturday, September 21. On what would have been Leonard Cohen’s 85 th birthday, Warren plucks gems from Cohen’s long and varied career, from ’60s classics like “Bird on a Wire� and “Suzanne� to latter-day epics like “Everybody Knows,� “Hallelujah� and “First We Take Manhattan.� The ensemble assembled for this show includes vocalist/harpist/keyboardist Elizabeth Clark (Mamalama), drummer Peter Newell (the Trapps), bassist Chuck Cornelis (the Sometime Sinners) and guitarist Peter Dougan (Gene Ween, Carl Mateo). Special guest vocalists include Mark Lerner, Nancy Howell, Luis Mojica, Rachel Loshak, Kyle Esposito and Colony proprietor Neil Howard. The 2018 iteration of this tribute was standing-room-only. Tickets cost $18 in advance, $20 on the day of the show.

MUSIC

Chris Thile plays Bethel Woods

T

he mandolinist, songwriter, MacArthur Fellow and radio host Chris Thile moves in the same circuit of genrebending shredders and composers that includes bassist/composer Edgar Meyer, violinist Stuart Duncan, Yo-Yo Ma and more of America’s most accomplished and least categorizable musicians. If anything, Thile’s achievement is the most staggeringly diverse of them all. The virtuoso mandolinist came to fame young, as part of the massively popular newgrass trio Nickel Creek. But he was never meant for a single commercial niche, and the millions of fans Nickel Creek amassed must have found Thile’s subsequent project, the Punch Brothers, a head-scratcher, to put it politely. In the Punch Brothers, Thile aligned himself with the artier fringe of indie-rock, arranging his challenging, modernist art songs in a traditional bluegrass ensemble format. Since then, he has released collections of Bach Partitas for Solo Mandolin, a stunning and weird duet album with the jazz pianist Brad Mehldau, more records with the Punch Brothers and (to the surprise of many) a Nickel Creek reunion in 2014. Thile shreds not only the mandolin, but also whatever is left of the perceived walls dividing folk, rock, jazz and modern classical. The Bethel Woods Center for the Arts presents a solo concert by Chris Thile in the intimate Event Gallery on Saturday, September 21 as part of the Vibrations series. Ticket prices begin at $59. – John Burdick Chris Thile, Saturday, Sept. 21, 8 p.m., $59+, Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd., Bethel, www.bethelwoodscenter.org

I’m Your Man: A Birthday Tribute to Leonard Cohen Saturday, Sept. 21, 8 p.m. $20/$18 Colony 22 Rock City Rd., Woodstock www.colonywoodstock.com

Jane Lee Hooker plays Falcon on Saturday The all-female, five-piece gritty blues band Jane Lee Hooker has become a favorite at the Falcon in Marlboro, where their dual-lead guitar attack and soul-scouring vocals play right into one of several house styles. Accompanied by opener Fred Zeppelin – the ukulele-fronted bizarre classic rock cover band – Jane Lee Hooker returns to the main stage at the Falcon

Live Music at The Falcon Presenting the ďŹ nest in Live Music from around the world and Great Food & Drink Check out our line-up: www.liveatthefalcon.com

brand of guitar pop unafraid of a little groove, soul and noodle – without ever violating the general codes and precepts of indie guitar-pop. Based on the evidence offered at Bandcamp, both bands sound young, fresh and talented. Covers at Snug’s usually hover around $5 and, this being New Paltz, the start time is late.

Colony hosts I’m Your Man: A Birthday Tribute to Leonard Cohen on Saturday

end tribute concerts with “I’m Your Man: A Birthday Tribute to Leonard

1348 Route 9W, Marlboro, NY 12542

(845) 236-7970

UNISON ARTS LIVE!

Robert Burke Warren & Friends continue their popular series of high-

Red Crosses & Moonunit Saturday, Sept. 21 Snug Harbor 38 Main St., New Paltz

~The Setting~

3rd FRI. SWING DANCE | SEPT 20 Lessons: 6:30 PM | Dance: 8 PM Music by The Fabulous Versatones

Beautiful, Streamside, Uniquely Woodstock

UNIS N

~The Food~ Fine Asian Cuisine Specializing in Fresh Seafood & Vegetarian with a Flair!

~The Experience~ ✴ UNFORGETTABLE ✴

%XWWHUÂżHOG Oktoberfest September 28th, from 2-6pm Rain or Shine event under our bluestone patio tent. A selection of beer from Hofbrau will be on tap! 2 beers, a Hofbrau glass stein and all-you-can-eat German fare from %XWWHUÂżHOGÂśV %XWFKHU %DU

$55

Additional drinks can be purchased separately.

Open 7 days from noon. 845.679.8899 Located on The Bearsville Theater Complex, two miles west of Woodstock Village Green.

PLUS! Sing, stomp and polka along with *HUPDQ -RH WKH %ODFN )RUHVW %OXHV

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For tickets & more info: www.unisonarts.org (845) 255-1559

adaleto’s Seafood kids under 12 eat free Wednesdays after 4 pm IUHVK ÂżVK PDUNHW UHVWDXUDQW Ä ZZZ JDGDOHWRV FRP PDLQ VWUHHW QHZ SDOW]


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on Saturday, September 21. As usual, there is no cover at the Falcon, but generous direct-to-artist donation is the great club’s oft-repeated mantra.

Free The Beverly Lounge 224 Foxhall Ave., Kingston (845) 514-2570 http://thebeverlylounge.com

Jane Lee Hooker Saturday, Sept. 21, 8 p.m. Donation The Falcon 1348 Rt. 9W, Marlboro (845) 236-7970 www.liveatthefalcon.com

Jackie Akello plays Falcon on Wednesday

Holy Hive & the Shacks play the Beverly in Kingston on Saturday

The Beverly Lounge presents an ultra-hip evening of music featuring Holy Hive and the Shacks, along with deejay El Michels, on Saturday, September 21. Holy Hive (above) play a swanky, lightly retro cheeky pop with some hints of garage. The Shacks

Jessica Rice

Beautiful Images Hair Salon 123 Boices Lane, Kingston, NY 12401 Makeup: 845-309-6860 www.jessicamitzi.com

Hair: 845-383-1852 www.beautifulimageshairsalon.com

Ugandan Afro-pop singer/songwriter Jackie Akello performs at the Falcon in Marlboro on Wednesday, September 25. An Acholi woman from northern Uganda, Akello’s warthemed songs often address the suffering of the Acholi people, during and after the Lord’s Resistance Army War. She sings in six languages and has scored hits with the love ballad “Amari” and the gospel-styled “Samanya.” Per usual, there is no cover charge at the Falcon, but donation is strongly encouraged.

Chief Hendrick Aupaumut

HISTORY

“BROTHERHOOD & BELONGING” ON HUGUENOT STREET THIS SATURDAY

H

istoric Huguenot Street (HHS) hosts a program on the history and culture of the Munsee and Mohican people on Saturday, September 21. HHS’ largest event on indigenous history and culture to date, the program highlights the efforts and accomplishments of Chief Hendrick Aupaumut in particular. Aupaumut was born at Stockbridge in a shared Mohican/English community. He served with the Colonial forces in the American Revolution, was a traditional leader and instrumental to the community’s reconstruction in the wake of war and displacement. The evening will include an exhibit of Munsee artifacts and a recently acquired letter written by Aupaumut, an opportunity to explore HHS’ replica wigwam, complimentary sample tastings of culturally appropriate dishes made with indigenous ingredients, a reading of Aupaumut’s letter by a member of the Stockbridge/Munsee Community, an educational lecture presented by Indigenous Studies scholar Dr. Lisa Brooks and participatory breakout sessions where attendees will be able to discuss specific topics with cultural representatives, researchers and scholars. Register at the website below. “Brotherhood & Belonging,” Saturday, Sept. 21, 4-6:30 p.m., Historic Huguenot Street, New Paltz, www.huguenotstreet.org/brotherhood-belonging

Mirabai of Woodstock Gif ts, Book s and Work shops for Serenit y, W isdom and Transformat ion. E xper t Tarot , I C hing and Psychic Readings Ever yday

Upcoming Events Autumn Equinox: Individual Oneness Blessing w/ Kathy Saulino Mon. Sept 23 12-6PM Free (Call for appt.) Rune Play: A Tool for Transformation w/ Susan Epstein Sun. Sept 29 2-4PM $20/$25* Becoming: Channeled Information For Evolution w/ Patricia Laufer Thurs. Oct 3 6-8PM $20/$25*

proffer a similarly-stylish-but-quieter psychedelic pop product with whisper vocals and ’60s-inspired production values. This show is free, courtesy of the union of Eric and Sarah, who have curated a celebration in honor of their wedding day. I don’t know Eric and

Sarah (at least I don’t think I do), but I’d like to thank and congratulate them. – John Burdick Holy Hive & the Shacks Saturday, Sept. 21, 8 p.m.

Jewish Renewal High Holy Days Musical, meditative, and meaningful. Embodied, egalitarian, and ecological. Initiate a new year in our warm and welcoming community.

Rosh Hashanah

Yom Kippur

Sunday, 9/29, 6:30pm Erev Rosh Hashanah Evening Services

Tuesday, 10/8, 6-9pm Kol Nidre

Monday, 9/30, 9:30am – 12:30pm Music, Meditation, Torah & (re)Turning Vegetarian potluck to follow.

Wednesday, 10/9 Song & Torah 9:30 am Yizkor 1:00 pm Neilah 5:30 pm Vegetarian break-fast potluck to follow.

Tuesday, 10/1, 10am – 3pm Contemplative Hike, Shofar & Tashlich For ages 13+. Sorry, no dogs allowed. All events require registration. Rosh Hashanah & Yom Kippur are in Stone Ridge, NY.

Sukkot Decorate & Celebrate Shabbat Potluck

10/13 10/18

* 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

kolhai.org 845-477-5457

hello@kolhai.org

Jackie Akello Wednesday, Sept. 25, 8 p.m. Donation The Falcon 1348 Rt. 9W, Marlboro (845) 236-7970 www.liveatthefalcon.com

NRBQ plays Falcon September 27

Considered by many to be the greatest bar band of all time and a polygenre, uniquely American treasure, NRBQ has strong ties to the Hudson Valley and the Woodstock area. While the band’s reputation for wit, range and plain old weird has never waned among the cognoscenti, their profile received a late-career boost when they became the official “house band” for The Simpsons in the late ’90s. Sporting a lineup featuring original pianist and songwriter Terry Adams, NRBQ


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Ulster Performing Arts Center 601 Broadway, Kingston (845) 339-6088 www.bardavon.org

Lydia’s Café hosts Benji & Rita September 27

DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

EVENT

British Car Show at Woodstock Playhouse on Sunday

T

he 11th annual Woodstock British Car Show takes over the Woodstock Playhouse on Sunday, September 22. More than 100 British-car-owners will display their classic and quirky British classics. Cars will enter the field starting at 8:30 a.m., and the spectacle goes on all day. The awards ceremony – including prizes for People’s Choice and Longest Distance Traveled – begins at approximately 2 p.m. Preregistration of cars costs $15; registration at the show costs $20. Spectators are welcome, and parking is free. All proceeds benefit the Woodstock Playhouse. The rain date is Sunday, September 29. British Car Show, Sunday, Sept. 22, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Woodstock Playhouse, 103 Mill Hill Rd., Woodstock, https://woodstockbritishcarshow.com

plays the main stage at the Falcon on Friday, September 27. As usual, there is no cover at the Falcon, but generous, direct-to-artist donation is how it works at this jewel of the Hudson Valley.

powerhouse vocalist and her biggest influences, such as Aretha Franklin, Etta James, Odetta, Nina Simone and Bessie Smith. Joplin’s tragically short career yielded a strikingly large num-

NRBQ Friday, Sept. 27, 8 p.m. Donation The Falcon 1348 Rt. 9W, Marlboro (845) 236-7970 www.liveatthefalcon.com

UPAC presents A Night with Janis Joplin on Saturday in Kingston The Tony Award-nominated Broadway musical A Night with Janis Joplin celebrates the legendary ’60s

September 21. This full Broadway touring production has a cast of 14 including the onstage band, and features Mary Bridget Davies in the role of Janis Joplin, for which she received a Tony nomination. Ticket prices begin at $45. A Night with Janis Joplin Saturday, Sept. 21, 8 p.m., $45+

ber of classic songs and unforgettable performances, captured in this awardwinning show. A Night with Janis Joplin comes to the Ulster Performing Arts Center in Kingston on Saturday,

Benji & Rita’s 2018 self-titled debut is a stunning work of Brazilian chamber jazz, heir to the rhythmic subtlety of bossa nova and samba and the advanced harmonic playbook of 20 th-century serious music. Benji and Rita sing with eccentric character and animation, like a considerably more tripped-out Ellis and Tom, mining some of the same terrain. The arrangements for small chamber orchestra dart in and out of comic dissonance, jazzy elegance, skittish polyrhythm and moments of unabashed ardor. Seriously, this stuff is wild and heavy. How did I not know? Benji & Rita, in duo mode, perform at the hotbed of live jazz that is Lydia’s Café in Stone Ridge on Friday, September 27. – John Burdick Benji & Rita Friday, Sept. 27, 7 p.m. Lydia’s Café 7 Old Rt. 209, Stone Ridge www.benjiandrita.com


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MOVIE

Jillian Bell and Micah Stock in Brittany Runs a Marathon

ANNA KOORIS | AMAZON STUDIOS

Pulling her weight Jillian Bell is a winner in Brittany Runs a Marathon

E

verybody loves an underdog who prevails through persistence, right? And a protagonist with low self-esteem who pulls herself up by her bootstraps and builds up her own confidence? Yeah, but we’ve seen such plucky characters onscreen so many times that any new product taking that tack needs to add some sort of twist in order not to seem predictable. One way to make such a heroine feel fresh is to write her as considerably less than saintly. That’s the approach that novice director Paul Downs

ORPHEUM

198 Main St. Saugerties, NY • 845-246-6561 All Shows: Fri thru Tues. & Thurs. at 7:30

,7

: Chapter Two

(R)

BRITTANY RUNS A MARATHON

(R)

SUNDANCE AWARD WINNER JENNIFER LOPEZ

HUSTLERS

(R)

Mon. & Thurs.: All Seats $6 • Closed Wednesday ,

Colaizzo – heretofore known mainly as a playwright – has taken in his freshman effort, Brittany Runs a Marathon. The title character first wins our affection with her breezy, self-deprecating wit and zany, improvisatory sense of humor, but then delves deeply into her darker side en route to her semi-happy ending. It means more, somehow, to root for someone when you already know that they’re not always a nice person, but are motivated to do the work necessary to transcend those tendencies. Colaizzo was inspired to write this screenplay by a real-life friend and housemate, really named Brittany, who turned her messed-up life around by deciding to train for the New York Marathon despite not being naturally athletically inclined. But one might be forgiven for presuming that the script was designed to showcase the talents of comic actress Jillian Bell. Not being much of a TV-watcher, I wasn’t previously familiar with Bell’s career, which includes being a regular on Workaholics and Eastbound & Down. In the last couple of years, she has been getting quite a lot of voice work for animated series. But it’s pretty safe to say that Brittany is going to be her breakout role. Bell has a gift for conveying the

combination of anxious vulnerability and emotional obtuseness, disguised under a veneer of reflexive humor, that makes this protagonist both easy to love and consistently exasperating. Brittany’s arc is a classic comingof-age journey reshaped to fit the modern communications-technologydriven zeitgeist, incidentally tossing off zingers of topical commentary in the process, mainly about the financial plight of Millennials trying to make a life and a living in New York City. (The lengths to which they must go to secure housing come in for particular scrutiny, as two hired dogwalkers become de facto squatters when their wealthy employers leave town for an extended period.) These are hard times for the young – a message that will resonate with many. But the Big Apple still comes off as an enticing place to live. We get it why Brittany doesn’t want to admit defeat and toddle home to her native Philly with her tail between her legs.

Metaphorically as well as literally, her journey is a marathon, not a sprint.

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On the surface, the premise of Brittany Runs a Marathon appears to be “fat girl gets makeover.� Certainly the setup for her decision to take up running is a straightforward diagnosis from her doctor – whom she has approached in hopes of obtaining an Adderall prescription to get high – that her fatty liver and high BMI index are endangering her life. (It has to be running, because her job at a theater ticket counter won’t support the extravagance of joining a gym.) But by the time another character tells her pointblank that her transformation wasn’t ever truly about being obese, that lesson has already been hammered home. Brittany’s excess poundage is her physical armor; her emotional armor is much more difficult to peel off. Learning to like and trust herself is inextricably wound up with learning to let other people in who genuinely want to help. It’s in letting go of needing approval from her vain, toxic roommate Gretchen (Alice Lee), instead cultivating relationships with her running buddies Catherine and Seth (Michaela Watkins and Micah Stock, both first-rate) and her sweet loose cannon of a fellow housesitter, Jern (Utkarsh Ambudkar), to the point where she understands that their baggage is as heavy as her own, that Brittany makes her most meaningful progress. Metaphorically as well as literally, her journey is a marathon, not a sprint. When an injury derails her training with her goal nearly in sight, all of Brittany’s worst fears resurface, along with her tendency to project her contempt for herself onto others. That’s where this character’s dark night of the soul comes in. And it’s also where she learns how to discern who one’s true allies are, and why they’re important. Lil Rel Howery, who made such a strong impression as the hero’s best buddy and rescuer in Jordan Peele’s Get Out, shines once again in the role of Demetrius, the brother-in-law who helped raise Brittany and still serves as her wisest mentor. This movie’s theme is perhaps best captured in a recurring sequence of her running for a subway car as the doors are closing. The first time, having overslept, she’s yelling for someone to hold the door, but it slams in her face and she’s late to work for the umpteenth time. The second time, having just taken up running, she’s a teeny bit faster and barely makes it. The next time, a kind stranger does hold the door for her. And finally, it’s Brittany who’s holding the door for someone else. Brittany starts out as a hot mess and ends up somewhat less so, with the bonus of coming to appreciate that everyone’s life is messy – even the folks who look like they have it made because they’re rich or pretty or popular or successful. That’s enough of a deviation from the standard Ugly Duckling tale to make Brittany Runs a Marathon worth a peek. You may even need to wipe away

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

NIGHT SKY

Are you in control?

W

e are a society based on personal responsibility. Everyone believes they have the power to control their own lives. Indeed, a modern catchword is “empowerment.” But, surprisingly perhaps, this may be an illusion. For example, when someone asks you what restaurant you’d like to patronize tonight, and you say “Indian food,” it might initially seem that you made the call and exercised your free will. Yet if someone then asked you why you chose Indian, and you reflected deeply, you’d have to admit that the idea just popped into your mind. So, is this true? Does your brain work automatically, just as your liver and kidneys do? This idea explains why the 19th-century philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer, whom Einstein frequently quoted, liked to say that, “A man can do as he wills, but he cannot will as he wills!” To settle this once and for all, a medical researcher named Benjamin Libet set out to find whether the brain’s autonomous electrical circuitry runs our lives “on its own” while meanwhile informing us of its decisions – which we usually then feel to have been made by ourselves, our egosense – or, instead, whether the “I”-sense truly steers our ship, as most of us always assume. Libet knew his results could be profound and might even settle ancient debates over whether everything in the universe is autonomously determined by its energies and forces, as Einstein and many others believed, or whether there’s room for individual free will. Benjamin Libet’s first 1983 experiment consisted of three key components: a choice that was to be made, a measure of brain activity during that decision process and a clock. The choice, subjects were told, was to move either one’s left or right arm, either by flicking one’s wrist or raising one’s left or right finger. Subjects were instructed to “let the urge [to move] appear on its own at any time without any pre-planning or concentration on when to act. The precise time at which you move is recorded from the muscles of your arm.” The other component, the measure of brain activity, was simultaneously obtained via electrodes on the scalp. The difference between detecting an urge and the actual motion on the right or left was, fortunately, well within the experimenter’s abilities, because when electrodes are placed over the motor cortex along the middle of the head, a different electrical signal appears between right and left as one plans and executes a movement on either side of the body. The clock was specially designed to let participants discern subsecond events, and subjects were told to use the clock to report exactly when they made the decision to

The experiments seemed to show that decisions are already made in the brain’s neurocircuitry before we’re even conscious of it – thus, no free will.

a tear at a certain point near the end. – Frances Marion Platt

DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

move, while the experimenters followed it all carefully. Physiologists had known for decades that a fraction of a second before you actually move, there is a change in the brain’s electrical signals. So, in Libet’s experiment, in an interval that was a fraction of a second before participants moved, a reliable change was recorded using the electrodes. The explosive result arrived when the researchers learned when participants reported the decision to move, and discovered that it always happened in the interval between the electric change in the brain (technically termed the readiness potential) and the actual movement. They found that the feeling of deciding couldn’t be a timely report of whatever was causing the motion decision, for the electrode recording showed that the brain signals were changing even before the subjective awareness of making a decision occurred – typically up to three-tenths of second earlier. And the electrode signals were indeed accurate, since experimenters studying them always could predict which arm, wrist, or hand would eventually be raised, before the subjects themselves knew! The experiments seemed to show that decisions are already made in the brain’s neurocircuitry before we’re even conscious of it – thus, no free will. In short, the brain decides something, and soon afterward you become aware of a decision, which you then mistakenly attribute to your own free will. This and later supporting experiments caused a big stir and provoked three front-page articles in The New York Times over the ensuing years, which brought the whole issue to a wide general audience. The Times pieces ended up concluding that there probably is no free will, although society must pretend that there is if we are to hold criminals responsible for their actions and so on. But if you don’t believe this and want to insist that you do indeed control your dayto-day life, that’s okay. You can’t help but think that way. – Bob Berman Want to know more? To read Bob’s previous columns, visit our Almanac Weekly website at HudsonValleyOne.com.

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

NATURE

Sept. 19, 2019

“RESIDENTS SHOULD BE INFORMED in order to make responsible decisions instead of allowing a “precious possession” that could mean so much to so many people for future years be eroded away through unawareness or neglect.” — SHERRET S. CHASE, President Emeritus of Catskill Center

Climate Solutions Summit at SUNYNew Paltz on Saturday

SUNY-New Paltz hosts the third annual Climate Solutions Summit on Saturday, September 21. Titled “How to Accomplish New York’s Clean Energy and Climate Goals,” the summit’s opening panel features state senator Jen Metzger (shown above), executive director of the Alliance for Clean Energy New York (ACE NY) Anne Reynolds and other local and state advocates. The day will include case studies and workshops on topics including renewable energy storage, ground source (geothermal) and air source heat pumps, clean transportation, regenerative agriculture, climate solutions careers, Climate Smart Communities, student organizing, movement-building and environmental justice. The Summit will include a green vendor fair, waste-free vegan breakfast and lunch and the second annual Zero Emissions Parade at 4 p.m. Registration costs $30. $5 suggested for students. Climate Solutions Summit Saturday, Sept. 21, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. SUNY-New Paltz 1 Hawk Dr., New Paltz http://climatesolutionssummit.org

Illustration above and on cover from Will Lytle’s new children’s book, Little One and the Water, a child’s-eye tour of the Little Beaver Kill Creek

NATURE

Catskill Center turns 50

Rock the Block & the Trail Party in Kingston on Saturday Celebrate the opening of the Kingston Point Rail Trail at the Rock the Block and the Trail Party on Saturday, September 21. The walk proceeds from the Rondout Savings Bank Broadway parking lot to the Jansen/ East Chester Avenue trailhead parking lot. There will be activity tents, food trucks, a deejay, a Kids’ Walk and I Spy adventure, a guided walk to the Rondout Gardens and Trailblazer Awards presented by Kingston mayor Steve Noble at 6:30 p.m. From approximately 7:30 to 10 p.m. there will be an afterparty at Kingston Standard at 22 Jansen Avenue. Rock the Block and the Trail Party Saturday, Sept. 21, 4-7 p.m. Free

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Fall Gala, fireworks, fly-fishing demo and unveiling of Will Lytle’s children’s book this weekend

T

his weekend, the Catskill Center celebrates its 50th anniversary. There will be a big Fall Gala on Saturday, September 21 from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Union Grove Distillery at 43311 Route 28 in Arkville, featuring a “Supper Club from the Golden Age of the Catskills” atmosphere supplied by Kimberly Hawkey and her seven-piece Elvanelle Orchestra. Basil Seggos, Commissioner of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, will receive the Center’s Alf Evers Award for his “dedication and effective leadership of the Catskill Park and region.” The evening will end with a grand fireworks display at 8:30, visible throughout Arkville. Additional activities will be held throughout the day to celebrate the occasion, including an opening reception from 3 to 6 p.m. at the Erpf Gallery for the art exhibit “Natural Resources: 50 Stewards of the Catskills,” featuring photographs from a newly unveiled Catskill Center publication. The Fall Gala will also include a special ride on the Delaware & Ulster Railroad Silver Sleigh Flyer, with a 3:45 p.m. pickup and 5:30 p.m. dropoff at the Union Grove Distillery. Ate-O-Ate Catering will provide a “roaming supper.” And there’s other cool stuff happening throughout the weekend. What has the Catskill Center been up to for the past half-century? The organization’s aim “to ensure a bright future for the environment, economy and culture of the Catskills” covers a lot of ground. Environmental stewardship of public and private lands threatened by unplanned development, with a particular eye toward protecting the watershed of the region’s immense drinking-water reservoir system, is the Center’s raison d’etre. Beyond negotiating conservation easements, that translates into such campaigns as fighting the hemlock wooly adelgid via the Catskill Regional Invasive Species Partnership, stabilizing streambeds to prevent erosion via the Streamside Acquisition Program and nurturing young citizen scientists via the Streamwatch environmental education program for local fourth-graders. The Center also hosts public programs promoting preservation of the history and culture of the Catskills, from Washington Irving’s stories to the birth of fly-fishing to the Hudson River School painters to the heyday of the Borscht Belt. Most of these take place at the organization’s Maurice D. Hinchey Catskills Interpretive Center at 5096 Route 28 in Mt. Tremper. Artists can display their work at the Erpf Gallery in Arkville or retreat for a week to create new work in solitude at the organization’s cabin in Platte Clove. Tickets to the Gala cost $95 and can be ordered at http://catskillcenter.org/fallgala. It’s a cause worthy of such support, but if your budget can’t accommodate it, there are still some other activities (in addition to the art opening) that you can investigate this weekend. From 10 a.m. to noon on Friday, September 20, to celebrate Ashokan Watershed Month, the visitors’ center presents an Esopus Creek Fish and Fly-Fishing Demonstration, featuring talks by Scott George of the USGS and Mark Loete of Trout Unlimited and winding up with a little hands-on casting practice on the lawn. And Will Lytle, author and illustrator of the magical Thorneater Comics, will on hand from 4 to 6 p.m. on Sunday, September 22 to launch his new children’s book, Little One and the Water. While there, you can also peruse “Portraits and Stories,” Jenny Lee Fowler’s series of paper silhouette profiles of watershed residents, accompanied by audio recordings of the sitters’ stories. For more information about the Fall Gala and other Catskill Center programs, call (845) 586-2611, e-mail cccd@catskillcenter. org or visit www.catskillcenter.org. – Frances Marion Platt Catskill Center Fall Gala, Saturday, Sept. 21, (845) 586-2611, www.catskillcenter.org


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

EVENT

CAULIFLOWER FESTIVAL HELD IN MARGARETVILLE ON SATURDAY

M

argaretville’s 16th annual Cauliflower Festival takes place on Saturday, September 21 at the Village of Margaretville Pavilion. Beginning in the 1890s, Margaretville was the center of the nation’s cauliflower industry. The village’s farmers supplied New York City gourmets for 50 years, before California farms took over. Cauliflower remained a vital component of the Catskills economy for decades. The festival includes music, kids’ activities, Pure Catskills producers, an art/craft tent, history exhibits, a quilt tent, vintage cars, vendors, demos, a tractor parade and more. Cauliflower Festival, Saturday, Sept. 21, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Free, Village of Margaretville Pavilion, Bridge St., Margaretville, https://margaretvillecauliflowerfestival.org

Rondout Savings Bank 300 Broadway, Kingston

SUNY-Ulster hosts Master Gardener Plant Sale on Saturday The Cornell Cooperative Extension of Ulster County (CCEUC) presents its annual Master Gardener Plant Sale on Saturday, September 21 at the Xeriscape Garden at SUNY-Ulster in Stone Ridge. The sale will offer an array of plants from the Xeriscape Garden itself, plus perennials, shrubs, trees and houseplants grown by the master gardeners. Proceeds benefit the Master Gardener program. Cash, checks or credit cards will be accepted at the sale, which will be held rain or shine. Master Gardener Plant Sale Saturday, Sept. 21, 10 a.m.-noon Xeriscape Garden, SUNY-Ulster 491 Cottekill Rd., Stone Ridge (845) 340-3990, ext. 335 http://ulster.cce.cornell.edu

Marist’s FM/AM fashion magazine wins third CSPA Gold Medal Marist College’s annual fashion magazine, FM/AM, has again won a Gold Medal from the prestigious Columbia Scholastic Press Association of Columbia University, an international student press organization. This marks the third consecutive year that FM/AM has received this award.

A panel of judges views all entrants, whether they are newspapers, magazines, yearbooks or online media, and assigns a point total out of 1,000. This year, FM/AM earned 984 points, earning All-Columbian Honors. FM/AM is a fully student-produced publication. Professional lecturer of Fashion, Merchandising and Sustainability Melissa Halvorson serves as instructor and editor. FM/AM is built into the academic structure of the Fashion Program; Halvorson teaches the courses “Writing for Fashion” every fall and “Magazine Production” in the spring. The magazine’s mission is to present fashion thoughtfully. “This magazine provides an opportunity for students to explore what fashion is about – namely change, tension and innovation,” said Halvorson. “This year, the magazine explored the relationship between preservation and progress.” All written and graphic content is student-created, including illustrations, infographics and feature photography. Editorial photo shoots are conceived, art-directed and produced by students and utilize the thesis collections of the Fashion Program’s senior designers, but are shot by professional photographers. “This is an important opportunity for our students to work directly with industry professionals as peers, giving and getting direction, compromising, communicating the magazine’s mission and learning how to manage a photo shoot of 20 to 30 people,” said Halvorson. Twenty-five hundred copies of FM/ AM are produced, with 1,500 distributed internationally by Pineapple Media. It is sold in France, the UK, Spain, Portugal, Italy, New Zealand, Canada, Hong Kong, Japan and throughout the US in major cities.

Talk by Sunshine Flint on Woodstock’s English connection Editor and journalist Sunshine Flint, who grew up in Woodstock, will examine Woodstock’s English connection, from Ralph Whitehead to Oxfordshire, at a Woodstock Library Forum. She will discuss the philosophy and aesthetics of Victorian England

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

Works by Dumb Won! (a.k.a. Paul S. Heath) are on view at the Kingston Pop Museum at 672 Broadway

ART

Art Walk Kingston returns this weekend

T

he fourth annual Art Walk Kingston open studio weekend returns on Saturday and Sunday, September 21 and 22 from noon until 5 p.m. each day. Anticipating more than 100 participating artists, Art Walk Kingston opens with a preview at ARTBAR on Friday, September 20 from 6 to 9 p.m. Free and open to the public, the reception provides guests a chance to inspect the variety of artists participating in this year’s event. “Art Walk Kingston is an invaluable asset and contributes to the thriving artistic community in Kingston,” said City of Kingston mayor Steve Noble. The tour, with its special offerings, moves through Kingston studios and galleries in the Rondout, Midtown and Uptown neighborhoods. Free bus service is available to move people to and from each area; see https://ulstercountyny. gov/ucat/bus-schedules. Art Walk Kingston, Sept. 21, 22, noon-5 p.m., Free, Various venues, Kingston, (845) 454-3222, https://artsmidhudson.org/artwalkkingston

that brought Englishman Whitehead and his American wife, Jane Byrd McCall, to Woodstock in 1902, leading to the founding of the Byrdcliffe Arts Colony. Other English connections include the little mystery of the Woodstock Library cornerstone, first sent to Woodstock, New York, by the town of Woodstock, England

in 1937. The presentation will include the history of the cornerstone, information on Woodstock’s 150 th anniversary celebration and subsequent new facts that have been uncovered, including the last time Woodstock, England, reached out to Woodstock, New York. Flint is a travel, food, lifestyle and culture writer/editor and a digital editor and video producer based in New York City. The executive editor of Garage, HP’s digital magazine, she has been a contributing editor to BBC Travel and the editor-at-large for the Luxury Channel, and has contributed to The New York Times, Condé Nast Traveller, The Independent, The Guardian, Elite Traveller, AFAR, Tatler and other publications and websites in the US and the UK. Flint attended Woodstock Elementary School, and is a longtime user and supporter of the Woodstock Library. She currently lives in Brooklyn with her family, but visits frequently. The forum takes place on Saturday, September 28 from 5 to 6 p.m. at the Woodstock Library’s Reading Room. The public is invited and refreshments are served.

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Shi Guorui in his studio (photo by Felix Chan)

ART

SKY PROJECTION PERFORMANCE BY SHI GUORUI HIGHLIGHTS SKYWALK ARTS FESTIVAL ON SUNDAY

O

ur modern word “camera” comes from camera obscura, literally meaning a darkened chamber (sometimes the size of an actual room), which was the invention’s low-tech precursor. As far back as the writings of the fourth-century BCE Chinese philosopher Mozi, we have evidence of curious people experimenting with projecting upsidedown, left/right-reversed images by shining a light through a pinhole. There’s even a hypothesis that Neolithic cave paintings were inspired by images cast on rock walls through tiny holes in animal-hide windbreaks. The first true pinhole camera is attributed to the early-11th-century Arab physicist Ibn al-Haytham, as described in his Book of Optics. In modern times, some artists still enjoy working with the simple tool of the camera obscura, which allows for considerable experimentation with scale. Among those is the Chinese-born photographer Shi Guorui, now based in Catskill. A new exhibition of Shi’s work, “Ab/Sense-Pre/Sense,” curated by Kate Menconeri and featuring landscape photographs up to 15 feet in width, opens on Sunday, September 22 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Thomas Cole National Historic Site. The show is the latest in the Cole Site’s annual series “Open House: Contemporary Art in Conversation with Cole.” Admission to the site will be free of charge during this special event. The opening reception is presented in conjunction with the Hudson River Skywalk Arts Festival – the third annual such festival, despite the fact that the Hudson River Skywalk, the new scenic walkway connecting the homes and studios of Hudson River School artists Thomas Cole and Frederic Church over the Hudson River via the Rip van Winkle Bridge, is still in its “inaugural year.” Prior to the art show opening, at 1 p.m., Shi Guorui will present a performance of light titled 1.7 Mile Lights to connect Church’s Olana with the Cole Site. He will reflect beams of light across the sky above the Hudson River to illuminate the bonds connecting the two 19th-century artists, their homes and our contemporary moment. The light performance will be visible from Olana’s Ridge Road, the Rip Van Winkle Bridge walkway and the Skywalk path from the Thomas Cole Site to the Bridge. Other Skywalk Arts Festival activities are planned for Sunday, including an outdoor yoga class, walking tours and talks at Olana and live music and an art sale in the park next to the Rip van Winkle Bridge toll plaza in Catskill. To enter the Bridge Authority Parking Lot, motorists must travel on Route 23 east and pass through Toll Lane 1 (the full-service lane). To learn more about the artist and the new exhibition, visit http://thomascole.org/ absensepresense. To preregister for a walking tour at Olana, visit www.olana.org. – Frances Marion Platt 1.7 Mile Lights, Sunday, Sept. 22, 1 p.m., Free, Rip van Winkle Bridge Skywalk / “Shi Guorui: Ab/Sense-Pre/Sense” opening, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2-4 p.m., Free, Thomas Cole National Historic Site, 218 Spring St., Catskill, (518) 943-7465, http://thomascole.org


The Woodstock Library Forum is sponsored by the Friends of the Woodstock Library. For more information, call (845) 679-2113.

“For the Love of Birds” at Cunneen Hackett The Cocoon Theatre Visual Arts Initiative presents “For the Love of Birds,” a solo exhibit of photography by Claudia Gorman with avian wire sculptures by Dick Crenson. “For the Love of Birds” runs from now until October 1. The exhibit is being shown at the Cunneen Hackett Theater Building Galleries, open Monday through Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. Gorman will give a talk at the gallery on Saturday, September 21, at 3 p.m. Gallery talk with Claudia Gorman Saturday, Sept. 21, 3 p.m. Cunneen Hackett Theater Building

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

Galleries, 12 Vassar St., Poughkeepsie www.claudiagorman.com

Artist Edwina Sandys, Churchill’s granddaughter, to discuss her Berlin Wall sculpture at FDR site It was Winston Churchill who, in a 1946 speech at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri, coined the term “Iron Curtain” to characterize the growing divide between the capitalist and communist wings of the World War II Allies. Churchill’s granddaughter, the noted artist Edwina Sandys, MBE, has called the Berlin Wall “the physical embodiment of the Iron Curtain.” After the Wall was dismantled in 1989, the reunited German government gave Sandys her pick of eight

of its concrete panels to use as a medium for her art. The result was a sculpture titled Breakthrough, which retains the Wall’s original graffiti but is penetrated by voids in the form of two human silhouettes, one male and one female. Breakthrough was installed on the Westminster College campus by then-president Ronald Reagan in 1990, and in 1992, Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet leader whose reforms enabled the reunification of Germany, visited the site and became one of many who have embraced the symbolism of walking right through the remains of the once-daunting Wall. But what became of those two cutouts? Sandys preserved them, and in 1994 they were installed as a separate sculpture in an area called the Freedom Court on the grounds of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum in Hyde Park. Now titled BreakFree, the 12-foot-

tall concrete figures emerge from a tangle of oversized barbed wire. In 2007, Sandys also commissioned a bronze head of her grandfather by Oscar Nemon to join the bust of FDR in the Freedom Court. On Saturday, September 21, looking forward to the 30th anniversary this November of the fall of the Berlin Wall, Sandys returns to Hyde Park to give a talk on BreakFree and her historic family legacy. Attendees will gather at 4 p.m. in the lobby of the Henry A. Wallace Visitor Center and walk to the sculpture site. You can visit the FDR Library and Museum from 9 a.m. on, so you can make a day of it, learning about the important working relationship between Roosevelt and Churchill during World War II. Visit www.fdrlibrary.org to reserve your place for the Edwina Sandys lecture. Lecture by artist Edwina Sandys, Saturday, Sept. 21, 4 p.m., Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum, 4079 Albany Post Rd. (Rt. 9), Hyde Park, www.fdrlibrary.org

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

CALENDAR Thursday

9/19

9:30am-10:30am 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. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, 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. For 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. 11am-12pm Woodstock Senior Level One (Moderate) Yoga with Susan Blacker. Centering, warm-ups, posture flow, relaxation and meditation. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recre-

If you or your loved one are looking for help for alcohol and/or drug addiction...

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.

Come visit VILLA VERITAS and experience the LOVE and FAMILY ATMOSPHERE of recovery for healing and hope for yourself or your loved one trapped by addiction.

ation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock.

Call admissions for a tour...lunch included!

12:15pm Fine Arts Recitals. Old Dutch Church,

Daytime Call Admissions

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Evenings and after hours call

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272 Wall Street, Kingston. 12:30pm-6pm I Ching Oracle and Tarot Card Readings with esoteric scholar and author Timothy Liu. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/30 minutes. 1pm-4pm Visit Mount Gulian Historic Site. Tours of the historic home, 18th century Dutch barn, and restored garden will be given every Sunday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday through October 27! Tours start at 1pm and the last tour 4pm. $8/adults; $6/srs, and $4/children (6-18 years of age). Info: 845-831-8172; info@ mountgulian.org; mountgulian.org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon. 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

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019 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. 2:30pm-4pm Creative Writing with Maureen McNeil. This class will focus on discovering the power of the inner self through the practice of daily writing. Free. Weekly on Thursdays from 9/19 until 10/10. Info: 518-828-1792; programs@ hudsonarealibrary.org. Hudson Area Library, 51 North 5th Street, Hudson. hudsonarealibrary.org. 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 Radical Resistance, Radical Joy: A Reflection on the Legacy of Black Life at Vassar. The yearlong celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Africana Studies Program will begin with a keynote address. Class of 1951 Reading Room, Thompson Library, Vassar College, 124 Raymond Ave, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-437-5370. 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 Safe Harbors Annual Gala. Safe Harbors Green, Between Broadway and Liberty St, Newburgh. safe-harbors.org. 6pm-8pm English as a Second Language (ESL) Classes. The Sacred Heart Center for New Americans is offering free courses in English as a Second Language (ESL). Mondays and Thursdays. Info and to register: 646-342-4177 or 973-6980205. St. Cabrini Home, 2085 Rt. 9W, West Park.

THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30

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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.

15 min; 2019. Morton Memorial Library, 82 Kelly St, Rhinecliff. mortonrhinecliff.org. 6:30pm-8:30pm Citizenship Classes. There will be free U.S. citizenship classes offered every Thursday through November 21. For more information and to register please call 646-342-4177 or 973-698-0205 (se habla espanol). St. Joseph’s Church, 34 South Chestnut St., New Paltz.

6:30pm-8pm How to Recycle Better & Contribute to a Zero Waste Future. UCRRA and UCEMC representatives discuss our local waste system and best practices for buying, using and disposing of every day things. Rochester Town Hall, 50 Scenic Road, Accord. bit.ly/ECC-recyclingseries.

6:30pm Sisterhood Annual Membership Dinner. Must RSVP. Sponsored by the Jewish Federation. Info: 845-562-5516. Costogliola’s Restaurtant, 290 North St, Newburgh. tbjnewburgh.org. $25.

6:30pm Morton Movie Night: Booksmart. Jason Sudeikis, Lisa Kudrow, Kaitlyn Dever, Beanie Feldstein, Jessica R. Williams, Will Forte. 20th Century Fox; Director Olivia Wilde. R; 102

6:30pm-8pm Free Steps of Meditation. Weekly classes. Learn the fundamentals for an effective meditation experience. Info: 518-589-5000 or peacevillage@bkwsu.org. Peace Village Retreat


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

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premier listings

(open 11am-6pm Wednesdays Sunday). Info: nplittlelightcandle. com; 845-800-1819. Village Candle, 8 South Chestnut St, New Paltz.

Contact Donna at Donna.ulsterpublishing@gmail.com to be included

Sip & Dip Candle Making (9/21 4-6pm). Learn all about Candlemaking; hand pour 16ox scented soy jar; hand dip 8” pair of tapers. BYOB. Limited seating. All equipment, aprons, small bits, ice tea and wind glasses provided. Village Candle, 8 South Chestnut St, New Paltz. Info: nplittlelightcandle.com; 845-8001819.

Butterfield Oktoberfest (9/28-19m 2-6pm). Rain or shine event under the bluestone patio tent. Selections of beer from Hofbrau will be on tap. 2 Beers, a Hofbrau glass stein and all-you-can-eat German fare from Butterfield’s Butcher & Bar. Polka music with German Joe & the Black Forest Blues! Advance tix at butterfieldstoneridge.com. Butterfield, 3805 Main St, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-0887.

be viewed online at carlsengallery.com .Absentee & Phone Bidding available (17% Buyer’s Premium) ~ Internet Bidding available in association with Liveauctioneers.com (22% Buyer’s Premium) Info: 518 634-2466; info@ carlsengallery.com. Previews: Thurs., Sept. 19, Fri., Sept. 20 & Sat., Sept. 21: 12–5pm; and Sunday 8am til sale or by appointment. Carlen Gallery 9931 Rt 32. Freehold.

Jewish Renewal High Holy Days. Info: kolhai.org; 845-477-5457; hello@ kolhai.org.

Sign-up Now! Saratoga Casino Trip (9/19). Leave from three different locations - Phoenicia, Boiceville & Kingston. To reserve a seat, call Leatrice at 845-688-2250 or Janet at 845-3821789. Fee $27/pp.

Getting Our House in Order Auction of Hudson Valley Experiences and Fine Wines ( 9/27, 5-7pm). Free, includes refreshments & wine tasting at 4:30pm. $10/donation appreciated. Info: canalmuseum.org/ sept-27-event; info@canalmuseum. org; 845-687-2000. D & H Canal Museum, High Falls. Anniversary Auction (9/22, 10:30am ). Something for everyone’s taste! Featured are items from two New York City apartments, a life long collection of fine art and sculpture from a Cooperstown, NY collector, a Loudonville, NY mansion, an Albany NY attorney’s home and others. This auction will include, Period Furniture, Fine Art, Sculpture, Silver, Oriental Carpets, Quality Vintage Jewelry, An Info: A fully illustrated catalogue may

A Kind Shot (9/21, 8-9:45pm). Terri tells her story of playing pro ball, modeling, stripping, designing Michael Jordan’s head board & taking lots of shots at life! The Doctorow Center for the Arts, 7971 Main St, Hunter. $15 Online Advance Tickets on line at: akindshot.com or $20 cash at door night of the show. Info: 845-901-6265; terrimateer@gmail.com. Climate Actions Around the Globe - Climate Solutions Summit (9/21, 9am-4:30pm). The 3rd Annual Climate Summit Will Focus on Reaching New York’s Groundbreaking Climate Goals and Features Solutions Experts in the State. The summit’s opening panel, entitled, “How to

Center, 54 O’Hara Rd, Haines Falls. bkwsu.org. 7pm-8pm Josh Lane Presents Conscious Nature: The Art and Neuroscience of Meditating in Nature. Lane provides entertaining stories and over 36 engaging practices to exploring your own relationship with Nature for greater well-being. Info: 845-255-8300. Inquiring Minds New Paltz Bookstore, 6 Church St, New Paltz. Info: 845-255-8300, inquiringmindsevents@ gmail.com. 7pm-8pm The Dr. Donald C. Katt Institute for Constitutional Studies Annual Lecture. This talk will discuss the current position and climate of the constitution in our country. Lecture by Albert M. Rosenblatt. SUNY Ulster, 491 Cottekill road, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-5262, dziombas@sunyulster.edu, http://bit.ly/Const_Threat. This event is free and open to the public. 7pm-9pm 2nd Quadriannual Ulster County Grown-Up Spelling Bee. Rough Draft Bar & Books presents The 2nd Quadriannual Ulster County Grownup Spelling Bee! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail.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. 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 Live @ The Falcon: Colonel & The Mermaids. San Francisco-based Psychedelic Rock Band. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Telepathic Moon Dance. Instrumental funk-jazz-world-housesoul. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm-10pm Shadowland Stages presents Flint. A story of two couples, neighbors who’s lives crumble 2 1/2 years after losing their jobs. It comes to a head one Friday evening in 2014. Shadowland Stages, 157 Canal Street, Ellenville. Info: 845-647-5511, info@shadowlandstages. org, https://shadowlandstages.org/. Student Discounts available.

Friday

17

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

9/20

Northeast Blacksmiths Fall “Hammer-In”. Blacksmithing Weekend - 40th year of demonstrations, hands-on teaching program, tool flea market. Event is held every spring and fall. Admission fee, please pre-register. Info: 845-6877130. Ashokan Center, 477 Beaverkill Rd, Olivebridge. ashokancenter.org. 8am-5pm Industrial Spirits - Fundraiser to help Support the Wogan Family. Artist, Robert Wogan presents Industrial Spirits, A Photographic Retrospective of Things Forgotten. The show is a 20-year photographic chronicle of Wogan’s light installations, which have illuminated aban-

Accomplish New York’s Clean Energy and Climate Goals,” will feature State Senator Jen Metzger, Executive Director of Alliance for Clean Energy New York (ACE NY), Anne Reynolds as well as other local and state advocates to be announced. There will be workshops and panels on renewable energy, energy efficiency, clean transportation, climate justice and organizing in our communities for climate solutions. The summit will include a green vendor fair, a waste-free and vegan breakfast and lunch, and the second annual Zero Emissions Parade at 4pm. 1 Hawk Drive, SUNY New Paltz, New Paltz, NY 12561 Register at: https://www.eventbrite.com. Registration is $30, student registration is $5 suggested fee or “pay what you can” and scholarships tickets are available to anyone who needs it, free of cost. Jewish Renewal High Holy Days. Musical, meditative, and meaningful. Embodied, egalitarian, and ecological. Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and Sukkot Services and celebration. Info: kolhai.org; 845-477-5457; hello@ kolhai.org. Free Estate & Medicaid Planning Seminar (9/26 2pm). Held at Holiday Inn Express, 1835 Ulster Ave, Lake Katrine. To register call 845-338-6405 or log onto setue@herzoglaw.com. Little Light of Mine @ Village Candle

doned industrial structures and discarded modes of transportation in Europe, Asia and across the United States. Wogan’s installations shed light on the precariousness of the environment that surrounds us everyday and question how something of such purpose could be left for entropic demise. Industrial Spirits will range in scale from 6 to 8 foot photographs to smaller print replications. Exhibited in Hurley Motor Sports 2779 Route 209, through September, Tuesdays through Saturdays from 8am to 5pm. The show is free and open to the public. Help is needed at this time for the Wogan family - as they navigate Robert (the dad and the artist’s) bout with stage 4 cancer. 8am-4:30pm Emergency Responder Leadership Academy. An educational forum for leaders in for-profit and non-profit EMS agencies to discuss critical agency systems and personnel issues. Columbia-Greene Community College. www.chahec.org. https://erla2019.eventbrite. com. 9am-1pm Free Tech Help. Bring your devices and your questions! Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 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. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 10am-7pm Opening Reception: Mysteries of the Tanakh Art Exhibit. 77 monotypes interpreting the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament). Show displays through 10/18. Free. Info: 845-454-4525; jim@riverflow.com. Art Centro, 485 Main St, Poughkeepsie. bennecelli.com. 10am-5pm Goshen Farmers’ Market. Info: 845-294-5557; goshennychamber.com. Goshen’s Village Green, Goshen. 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: 845-339-2071; oncology.support@hahv.org; hahv.org/service/cancersupport-program. Herbert H. and Sofia P. Reuner Cancer Support House, 80 Mary’s Ave, Kingston. 11:30am-12:30pm Free Chair Yoga. An hour of chair yoga and Sound Bath meditation! This activity is made possible with a grant from the Catskill Fortnightly Club. Info: mountaintoplibrary.org. Mountain Top Library, 6093 Main St, Tannersville. Free. 12pm-5pm Exhibitions at WAAM. 1 + 1 + 1 Exhibit displays through 12/29. Radius 50, Young People’s R50 & Archivist’s Choices. Exhibit displays through 9/29. Hrs: Wed, Thu & Sun, 12-5PM, Fri & Sat 12-6PM. Woodstock Artists Association & Museum, 28 Tinker ST, Woodstock. Info: info@ woodstockart.org, http://www.woodstockart.org. 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. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd,

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. Community Playback Theatre at Boughton Place (10/4, 3pm). Audience stories brought to life onstage. Boughton Place, 150 Kisor Road, Highland. $10/suggested donation. Info: 845-883-0392. Upcoming performances: Fridays, 8pm: 10/4, 11/1, 12/6; & Sunday, 3pm on 1/5/2020. 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. Volunteer Drivers Needed To Transport Cancer Patients to Treatment. The American Cancer Society needs individuals who can volunteer one hour at least once a month to drive a cancer patient to a local cancer center

Woodstock. 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. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 12:30pm-6pm Expert Tarot Readings and Chakra Attunements with Mary. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. $50 for Chakra Attunement with Crystal Prescription. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/30 minutes. 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. 3:30pm-5pm The Importance of Watershed Wetlands. Get an early look at the Ashokan Rail Trail with Ulster County staff to learn about the importance of wetlands for clean water. Learn from DEP wetlands scientist Laurie Machung and Frank Parisio how DEP is protecting wetlands near the Ashokan Reservoir. We’ll access the rail trail to see several types of wetlands and Butternut Creek. Meet at the AWSMP Office then move to rail trail. Please visit reg.cce.cornell.edu/wetlands_251 to register. Cost: Free. AWSMP Office, 3130 Route 28, Shokan. 3:30pm-5pm Tea, Talks, & Workshops: Understanding Alzheimer’s & Dementia. Joan Carl, of Alzheimer’s Association HV chapter, offers 2 presentations on the latest research on treating & preventing memory loss. Sarah Hull Hallock Free Library, 56-58 Main St, Milton. http:// miltonlib.org/.

in Westchester, Rockland, Putnam, Dutchess, Ulster, Sullivan and Orange County. Locally, the greatest need is for drivers who can pick up patients at their home and take them to treatment -- even one time once a month would be tremendously helpful, according to Patrice Lestrange Mack, Communications Director for the American Cancer Society. All drivers must have: A current, valid driver’s license, A good driving record, Access to a safe and reliable vehicle, Regular desktop, laptop, or tablet computer access, & Proof of car insurance. To learn more about volunteering for the Road To Recovery program, visit cancer.org/ road. 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.

ture 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. For more information, call 845-255-2145 or log onto newpaltzacu.com. 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. Halftime complementary refreshments. Shawangunk Senior Center, 70 Main St, Napanoch. 7:30pm-10pm Outdoor Film Screening: <i>Taking Woodstock </i>. Fisher Center at Montgomery Place Presents <i>Taking Woodstock</i>, presented in partnership with Upstate Films. Free. Montgomery Place, 26 Gardener Way, Annandale-on-Hudson. Info: 845-758-7900, fishercenter@bard.edu, https://bit.ly/2k7QKxR. 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 Boiler Room Girls. Musical! Book by Kevin Archambault and music by Cheryl B. Englehardt. Info: 845-876-3080; centerforperformingarts. org. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck.

4pm-7pm Book Sale. Preview night $10. preview night.

8pm Richard’s Rhinecliff Acoustic Show. Featuring: Paul Maloney, Maureen & Don Black, Blair Shepard, Sugar Moon, George Beckwith. Donations to benefit Morton are suggested. Refreshments provided by The Rhinecliff. Morton Memorial Library, 82 Kelly St, Rhinecliff. mortonrhinecliff.org.

6pm-9pm Sixth Annual Weekend of Wallkill. Movie on the library lawn at dusk., “Mamma Mia.” Info: 845-692-7800. Wallkill Public Library, 7 Bona Ventura Ave, Wallkill.

8pm Live @ The Falcon: Vito Petroccitto & Little Rock. Rootsy, bluesy, swampy Americana. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com.

6pm-9pm Art Walk Kingston Preview Exhibit. Featuring artists from the tour. Artbar Gallery, 674 Broadway, Kingston.

8pm Live @ The Falcon: Robbie Dupree & Friends. Exquisite pop rock with a legendary pro. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro.

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 Saugerties Film Society Picks. SFS screening of Billy Wilder’s acclaimed WW II drama, Stalag 17 starring William Holden, 1953, 120 mins. Saugerties Public Library, 91 Washington Ave, Saugerties. Info: 845-246-4317. free. 7pm-11pm Cajun Dance with The Empty Bottle Ramblers. The Empty Bottle Ramblers are a Cajun band from the Boston area. They play the old-style dance music of southwest Louisiana. White Eagle Hall, 487 Delaware Ave, Kingston, NY. Info: 845-454-2571, hudsonvalleycommunitydances@gmail.com, http://www.hudsonvalleydance.org. $20. 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 acupunc-

8pm-10pm Shadowland Stages presents Flint. A story of two couples, neighbors who’s lives crumble 2 1/2 years after losing their jobs. It comes to a head one Friday evening in 2014. Shadowland Stages, 157 Canal Street, Ellenville. Info: 845-647-5511, info@shadowlandstages. org, https://shadowlandstages.org/. Student Discounts available.

Saturday

9/21

Northeast Blacksmiths Fall “Hammer-In”. Blacksmithing Weekend - 40th year of demonstrations, hands-on teaching program, tool flea market. Event is held every spring and fall. Admission fee, please pre-register. Info: 845-6877130. Ashokan Center, 477 Beaverkill Rd, Olivebridge. ashokancenter.org. 1:30am-3pm Poetry Reading. The Hudson Highlands Poetry Series presents three distinguished Hudson Valley poets: Mary Newell,


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Sept. 19, 2019 through December. Located in basement of church. Take steps to the left of white church doors. Info: comfortercobblestonethrift26@ gmail.com. Comforter Cobblestone Thrift Store. 9am-1pm Free Handgun Safety Course. Course held in two different locations: Kingston & Phoenicia. Info & signup: gosafetycourse.cf; pfgsafetycourse.cf. Gander Outdoors, 705 Frank Sottile Boulevard, Kingston. Info: 845-605-2767, president.pfg@gmail.com, 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: 347-721-7386; kingstonfarmersmarket.org. Wall Street between John St and Main St, Kingston. 9am-1pm Free Tech Help. Teen tech expert Samantha will help solve your computer quandries. Info: 845-266-5530. Drop-ins welcome. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 9:30am-3pm Bagel Brunch with Kingston Bread Lab. Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 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 Museum Storytelling: Family Tours. Lee uses art, objects, history, and interactivity to help young people (and grown-ups!) fall in love with the Church’s adventures. Olana State Historic Site, 5720 St Rt 9G, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1872, education@olana.org, olana.org/ programs-events. $10 Adult | $5 Child/Member.

DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY

Chris Wells (front right), founding artistic director of the Obie Award-winning organization The Secret City, will be honored with the 2019 Voices in Action Award for his groundbreaking work in connecting community through the arts.

STAGE

TMI Project’s Voices in Action benefit held at BSP on Saturday

T

he Hudson Valley storytelling not-for-profit TMI Project presents Voices in Action, an annual benefit and storytelling showcase on Saturday, September 21. The fourth annual fundraiser at BSP in Kingston features local storytellers who have shared and developed stories in recent TMI Project workshops and live performances. Chris Wells, founding artistic director of the Obie Award-winning organization The Secret City, will be honored with the 2019 Voices in Action Award for his groundbreaking work in connecting community through the arts. The TMI Project will also be recognizing three local leaders and activists as TMI Project Agents of Change: Jeff Rindler, executive director of the Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center; artist Ubaka Hill; and RUPCO, the region’s leading provider of and advocate for quality, affordable housing and community development programs. General admission tickets cost $75, $25 for students. Premium tickets, available for $100 ($35 for students), include a preshow reception, food, drink and a meet-and-greet with honorees, storytellers and TMI Project staff. Voices in Action, Saturday, Sept. 21, 8 p.m. (7 p.m. cocktail hour), $25-$100, BSP, 323 Wall St., Kingston, www.tmiproject.org

Margo Taft Stever, Jeffrey Yang. Desmond Fish Public Library, 472 NY-403, Garrison. Info: 9145228017, mnewell4@gmail.com, https:// www.facebook.com/event. free. 8am-1:30pm Annual Tamarack Swamp Ducks Unlimited Shoot. Sporting Clays 9:00am -12:00pm. Price includes Shoot Registration, Continental Breakfast, Ammunition, one golf cart per squad, Ducks Ulimited Membership, prizes and their famous BBQ Lunch! Tamarack Preserve Ltd, 4754 Route 44, Millbrook. ducks.org/newyork/events/59213/tamarack-swamp-shoot. 8am 20th Annual Hudson River Valley Ramble. An annual event series that celebrates the history, culture and natural resources of the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area, as well as the amazing landscape, communities, and trails throughout the region. Every September, ‘Ramblers’ come not only from the Hudson Valley region and New York State, but from other regions of the country as well to discover the riches our Valley has to offer. Events schedule every weekend the entire month of September log onto hudsonrivervalleyramble.com/ramble for details! 8am-5pm Industrial Spirits - Fundraiser to help Support the Wogan Family. Artist, Robert Wogan presents Industrial Spirits, A Photographic Retrospective of Things Forgotten. The show is a 20-year photographic chronicle of Wogan’s light installations, which have illuminated abandoned industrial structures and discarded modes of transportation in Europe, Asia and across the United States. Wogan’s installations shed light on the precariousness of the environment that surrounds us everyday and question how some-

thing of such purpose could be left for entropic demise. Industrial Spirits will range in scale from 6 to 8 foot photographs to smaller print replications. Exhibited in Hurley Motor Sports 2779 Route 209, through September, Tuesdays through Saturdays from 8am to 5pm. The show is free and open to the public. Help is needed at this time for the Wogan family - as they navigate Robert (the dad and the artist’s) bout with stage 4 cancer. 8:30am-12pm Hudson Valley Writing Project Saturday Seminar. THROUGH A WIDER LENS: Seeking New Perspectives. Join HVWP teachers who share literacy teaching strategies that engage students in building more complex understanding and respect for each other, the past, and the world today. SUNY New Paltz Coykendall Science Building, 5 Wawarsing Road, New Paltz. newpaltz.edu/ hvwp. 9am-2pm Yard Sale $5 Bag Sale. Quarryville United Methodist Church holding a yard sale, Most items fill a bag for $5. Info: 845-247-3154; Thewellsacc@gmail.com. Saugerties Elks Lodge, Rt 32N, Saugerties. 9am-4:30pm Climate Actions Around the Globe - Climate Solutions Summit. The 3rd Annual Climate Summit Will Focus on Reaching New York’s Groundbreaking Climate Goals and Features Solutions Experts in the State. The summit’s opening panel, entitled, “How to Accomplish New York’s Clean Energy and Climate Goals,” will feature State Senator Jen Metzger, Executive Director of Alliance for Clean Energy New York (ACE NY), Anne Reynolds as well as other local and state advocates to be announced. There will be workshops and panels on renewable energy, energy efficiency, clean transportation,

climate justice and organizing in our communities for climate solutions. The summit will include a green vendor fair, a waste-free and vegan breakfast and lunch, and the second annual Zero Emissions Parade at 4pm. SUNY New Paltz, 1 Hawk Dr, New Paltz, Reg at eventbrite.com. Registration is $30, student registration is $5 suggested fee or “pay what you can” and scholarships tickets are available to anyone who needs it, free. View program details at: climatesolutionssummit.org/ program/. 9am Catskill Conquest Rally Commemorating the 1903 Automobile Endurance Run. A noncompetitive tour open to all vintages. Travel a 65-mile guided route through several checkpoints along the Catskill Mountains Scenic Byway and beyond. Register online. Maurice D. Hinchey Catskill Interpretive Center, 5096 New York 28, Mount Tremper. catskillinterpretivecenter.org. 9am-3pm Sixth Annual Weekend of Wallkill. Family fun includes Touch A Truck, art contest, historical presentations, Billy Goat Bingo, bouncy house, dog costume content, petting zoo. Events at library park and town hall. Info: 845-6927800. Wallkill Public Library, 7 Bona Ventura Ave, Wallkill. 9am-3pm Book Sale & Tag Sale. Spots are $15 if you bring your own table, and $25 if you need to rent a table for the day. You keep all the profits! Rain or shine! Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. $15 with your own table, $25 rent a table. 9am-12pm Comforter Cobblestone Thrift Store. More space has been added for more items! Store hours: Every Saturday 9-12 April

10am-4pm 21st Annual Hamptonburgh Country Festival. Featuring Live music, Hayrides, Pumpkin Painting, Petting Zoo, Vendors & Food! Organizer is Hamptonburgh Festival Committee, location is 18 Bull Rd Campbell Hall, NY 10916 and contact info is 914-2049819. 10am-4pm Annual Cauliflower Festival. Music, kids activities, Pure Catskills producers, art/craft tent, history exhibits, Quilt Tent (new!), vintage cars, vendors, demos. Tractor Parade at 11:30, Main St. to festival grounds. Sponsored by Central Catskills Chamber of Commerce. Free entry! Village Park Pavilion/Margaretville, Margaretville. 10am Higher Self Healing Meditation: Introduction to a Life in Peace. Cary Bayer, author of Higher Self Meditations, and a former teacher of Transcendental Meditation (TM) and teacher trainer, will present a free talk on Higher Self Healing Meditation (HSHM.) Info: 845-338-2092. Hurley Library, 48 Main St, Hurley. hurleylibrary. org. 10am-10pm Annual Hardscrabble Day. Vendors, live music all day, free events for kids, food, parade! Parade starts at 4:30pm - Lineup begins on Linden Avenue Middle School at 3:30pm. Info: facebook.com/hardscrabblerh/. Village of Red Hook, 7467 South Broadway, Red Hook. hardscrabbleday.wordpress.com. 10am-4pm The Garden Conservancy Dutchess County Open Days. Event times vary please check each location. See website for locations and times. Each private garden is $10 per person and children 12 and under are free. Info: 845-677-7600; opendays@gardenconservancy. org. gardenconservancy.org/open-days. 10am-5pm 50th Annual Gem, Mineral, Fossil, Jewelry Show & Sale. Show Theme: ‘Pyrite, Don’t be Fooled!’ 6 Free Rocks for Kids at “Glitter Mountain.” Scavenger Hunt for Earth Science Students. 28+ Dealers showing, selling and demonstrating all sorts of gems, minerals, fossils, meteorites & jewelry. Did you know some rocks even fluoresce under black light? Lapidaryjewelry making demos. There is a sluice at the show selling both mineral and fossil bags. Gold’s Gym & Family Sports Center, 258 Titusville Rd, Poughkeepsie. mhvgms.org. $5, $4/senior, $2/ students, Free/under12. 10am-4pm Volunteer Firemen’s Museum in Kingston. A “little gem of a museum” housed in the 1857 Wiltwyck Fire House. Display of fire engines and firemanic artifacts. Info: 845-3310866. Volunteer Fireman’s Hall & Museum, 265 Fair St, Kingston. 10am-12pm Windy Ridge Art Show. Support our communities budding artists! The library will exhibit the artwork of students from local preschool Windy Ridge. All are welcome! Phoenicia Library, 48 Main St, Phoenicia. www.phoenicialibrary.org. 10am-12pm Annual Master Gardener Plant Sale. The Plant Sale will offer an array of plants from the Xeriscape Garden itself, plus perennials, shrubs, trees and even houseplants grown by the Master Gardeners! Proceeds benefit the CCEUC Master Gardener program. Held rain or shine. Info: 845-340-3990 ext. 335 or email dm282@ cornell.edu. SUNY Ulster/Xeriscape Garden, Stone


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

barn, and restored garden will be given every Sunday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday through October 27! Tours start at 1pm and the last tour 4pm. $8/adults; $6/srs, and $4/children (6-18 years of age). Info: 845-831-8172; info@ mountgulian.org; mountgulian.org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon. 1:30pm-3:30pm Telling Peace -- Arts and Information Celebration for Kids and Families. Local event with story-telling and participatory theater, a peace song sing-along and related arts and crafts. Kids Celebration of UN International Day of Peace built around the concept of peace and sustainability -- this year’s theme “Climate Action for Peace.” Take away a list of 100 acts of peace kids can do. Ideas for kids, parents, teachers, peace and environmental activists, and everyone! Free. Mountain View Studio, 20 Mountain View Ave, Woodstock. mtnviewstudio.com. 2pm-4pm Opening Reception: Selected Works. Works by regional artist Ron DeNitto. Exhibits through 11/2. Info: 845-657-2482; helpdesk@ olivefreelibrary.org. Olive Free Library, 4033 Rte. 28A, West Shokan. olivefreelibrary.org. 2pm-4pm Watercolor with your Grand Person. All ages welcome. Paint seasonal still lifes, objects, photos and learn basic techniques. Materials provided. Registration required. Hudson Area Library, 51 North 5th Street, Hudson. hudsonarealibrary.org.

Mark Dion, Storm King Environmental Field Station, 2019. Courtesy the artist and Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York/Los Angeles. Photograph by Jeffrey Jenkins.

ART

TOUR “MARK DION: FOLLIES” AT STORM KING WITH THE ARTIST ON SATURDAY

A

rtist Mark Dion leads a conversation and walking tour of selected works in the 2019 special exhibition “Mark Dion: Follies” at the Storm King Art Center on Saturday, September 21. Dion has frequently employed the form of the architectural folly in his ongoing investigation of intersections between culture and nature. Visitors to these compact, decorative structures are invited to peer through windows and doors, and in some instances enter and explore their intricate interiors. Visitors will be able to enter and activate the site-specific Storm King Environmental Field Station (2019). This public program is free with admission to Storm King, but you must reserve a space here: https://bit. ly/2mebp3Y. Walking Tour with Mark Dion, Saturday, Sept. 21, 2 p.m., $18/$15/$8, Storm King Arts Center, 1 Museum Rd., New Windsor, https://stormking.org

Ridge. ulster.cce.cornell.edu.

Cornell St PO, Kingston.

10am Apply Now: Teen Voices Rising. Hudson Valley teens are encouraged to apply to participate in this spoken word event for youth. No prior experience necessary. One EPIC Place, New Paltz. Info: 845-418-5227, info@mayagoldfoundation. org, http://bit.ly/2TcGIc1. Free.

11am-4pm Hudson Valley Parent Magazine – 2019 Kids’ Steam Trail. Take part in an exciting day filled with hands-on learning and get personal experience with local programs in science, technology, engineering, arts, math and sports. Families with school age children are invited to take part in hands-on demonstrations and performances from local STEAM providers, educators and vendors and win raffle prizes too! Various locations throughout the mall. Poughkeepsie Galleria, 2001 South Rd, Poughkeepsie. poughkeepsiegalleriamall.com.

10am-5pm 13th Annual Mid-Hudson Woodworkers Show. displays of woodworking, demonstrations, woodmizer demonstration, gifts for the children, make a pen, raffle, door prizes. Hurley Reformed Church, Main St, Hurley. http://Www.midhudsonwoodworkers.org%20. (children under 12 free). 10am-2pm History of Early Dutch in Kingston Presentation at Persen House. Join Friends of Historic Kingston as they share their vast knowledge of Kingston along with Chando’s historical presentation. Matthewis Persen House, 74 John St, Kingston. https://www.fohk.org/. 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. 10:30am-12pm Little Brays of Sunshine. Meet and greet miniature therapy donkeys - the ambassadors of the non-profit Donkey Park. Sign up by calling 845-795-2200. Sarah Hull Hallock Free Library, 56-58 Main St, Milton. http://miltonlib. org/. 10:30am-12pm PS21’s Final Movement Without Borders of the Season: SoundWalk. The final Movement Without Borders workshop featuring a SoundWalk led by Grace Osborne and Edisa Weeks. PS21: Performance Spaces for the 21st Century, 2980 Rt 66, Chatham. Info: 5183926121, sam.reilly@ps21chatham.org, https://ps21chatham.org/event/. Pay What You Wish. 10:30am-4pm Woodstock Animal Sanctuary Visiting Season. Saturdays and Sundays through October. Weekend Tour Times (hourly, starting at 11am with the last tour at 2pm). Be prepared to move-about in the open air for about a mile and half. Tours run for about 55-60 minutes. Suggested donation: $10/adults, $5/4-12 yrs old, 65 & up & Vets and Active Service; free/ 3 & under. Info: 845-247-5700. Woodstock Animal Sanctuary, 2 Rescue Rd, High Falls. 10:30am-11:30am Silent Vigil for Global Peace & Non-Violence. Sponsored by The Kingston Women in Black. Meet outside Cornell St PO.

11am-5pm Hardscrabble Day on the Elmendorph Green. Bob for apples, enjoy homemade apple pie a la mode, fresh cider and more at Historic Red Hook’s ever-popular Hardscrabble Day event. This year, bigger and better than ever with farm animals, antique cider making and “apple yoga” sessions on the new Elmendorph Green. Plus a chance to see the newest exhibit in the StoryStudio, How About Them Apples! with stories, images and artifacts from Red Hook’s rich apple growing heritage. Info: info@historicredhook.org, 845-758-1920. Elmendorph Green, Red Hook. historicredhook.org. 11am-6pm Little Light of Mine @ Village Candle. Hours: Wed - Sun, 11am - 6pm. Village Candle, 8 South Chestnut St, New Paltz. Info: nplittlelightcandle.com; 845-800-1819. 11am Catskill Animal Sanctuary Tour. Meet rescued animals and hear their stories. Understand what caring for these amazing animals has taught us. Learn about the plight of farmed animals and how you can help. Seasonal Weekend Tours offered on Saturday and Sunday through November. Tour Times: 11am, 12pm, 1pm, 2pm, 3pm (each tour is approximately 90 minutes). Family-Focused Tour is once a day at 11am (this tour is 60 minutes). You can purchase tickets in the Welcome Hut. Tix: $12/adults, $8/age 12 & under & srs, & free/ 2 & under. Info: 845-3368447. Catskill Animal Sanctuary, 316 Old Stage Rd, Saugerties. 11am-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-6pm 20th Annual Arlington Street Fair. Over 130 vendors selling food, jewelry, art and novelties. Many local nonprofits will be on hand to give out information on services they provide to the local community. There will be two stages of free entertainment. For the young there will be a youth area on the Arthur May Elementary School Lawn. The fair reaches from the corner of Fulton and Collegeview Avenues to the East-

bound Arterial (Route 44/55). Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie. arlingtonhasit.org. 12pm Decentralization Grant Information Session. Anyone interested in applying for a DEC Grant to support projects and programs that will take place in 2020 must attend an information session. All DEC Grant Information Sessions are free and open to the public. Info: 607-8295055. Bright Hill Literary Center, 94 Church St, Treadwell. roxburyartsgroup.org. 12pm-2pm We The People March/Kingston Unity Rally. This event is a solidarity rally with the national We The People March being held throughout this nation on September 21st. Academy Green Park, 2 Albany Ave. free. 12pm-5pm 4th Annual Art Walk Kingston. A weekend of open studios and arts events. The tour meanders through the City of Kingston including studios and art galleries on the Rondout, midtown, and uptown. Printed maps will be available in Kingston the week prior to the event at Rough Draft, ARTBAR, Village Coffee & Goods and Kingston Wine Co. Visit the online map anytime through Art Walk weekend at: map.artwalkkingston.com. Local bus route: ulstercountyny.gov/ ucat/bus-schedules. 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-5pm Woodstock Collects: Heritage Through Art. An exhibit of artwork from the homes of HSW board members. Each work displayed is accompanied by photographs and a few written paragraphs explaining the story behind it. While the value of the artwork may be more sentimental than monetary, the worth of the exhibit lies in the rich dimension it adds to our understanding of Woodstock’s history. Exhibits through October 27 on Saturdays and Sundays, 1-5 pm. Eames House / Historical Society of Woodstock, 20 Comeau Drive, Woodstock, NY. historicalsocietyofwoodstock.org. 1pm-6pm New Hackensack Fire Company’s Food Truck & Craft Fair Event. Food, activities and music. New Hackensack Fire Company, 217 Myers Corners Road, Wappinger Falls. Info: 845 297-3897, nkfdfoodtruckfest@gmail.com, www. nkfd.org/content/events. Under 12 free. 1pm-4pm Visit Mount Gulian Historic Site. Tours of the historic home, 18th century Dutch

2pm-3:30pm Introduction to Meditation and Tibetan Buddhism. Taught by KTD’s lamas , this class offers brief, basic meditation instruction combined with a presentation setting meditation in the wider context of the practices and principles of the Karma Kagyu lineage of Tibetan Buddhism. Time will be set aside for questions from the participants. The class is free of charge, and preregistration is not required. Info: managingdirector@kagyu.org or 845-679-1091. Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, 335 Meads Mountain Rd, Woodstock. 3pm-5pm Art Opening. Longyear Gallery invites you to concurrent solo exhibitions of work by Neil Driscoll and Gary Mayer, along with a new group exhibition. Located in the historic Commons Building, Main St., Margaretville, NY. Show runs through Sept. 30. See website for gallery days, hours and info. 845-586-3270 Longyeargallery. org. 3pm-4pm For the Love of Birds Art Talk. Every picture has a story to tell. Cunneen Hackett Theater Building Galleries, 12 Vassar Street, Poughkeepsie. Info: 914-475-0450, claudia@ claudiagorman, www.claudiagorman.com. 3pm-4pm Artists on Olana: Bob Lukomski. Audible Topography: Olana as Music. Composer Bob Lukomski explores the sounds of Olana and its surrounding environment using technology. 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. 4pm-7pm Hispanic Heritage Month Celebration. Join us for this celebration of Hispanic Heritage and the Latino influence on Hip Hop and Urban music with DJ Tony Touch. Safe Harbors Green, Between Broadway and Liberty St, Newburgh. 4pm-6:30pm Brotherhood and Belonging at Historic Huguenot Street. Program focused on the history and culture of the Munsee and Mohican people. Featuring artifact exhibit viewing, replica wigwam exploration, complimentary sample tasting of culturally appropriate dishes made with indigenous ingredients and more. Info: 845-255-1660. Historic Huguenot Street, Huguenot St., New Paltz. 4pm-6pm Sip & Dip Candle Making. Learn all about Candlemaking; hand pour 16ox scented soy jar; hand dip 8” pair of tapers. BYOB. Limited seating. All equipment, aprons, small bits, ice tea and wind glasses provided. Village Candle, 8 South Chestnut St, New Paltz. Info: nplittlelightcandle.com; 845-800-1819. 4pm-6pm Celebrity Activism: From Paul Robeson to Colin Kaepernick Part 3. Individuals leverage their celebrity to achieve social

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20 equality & racial justice. Part 3 – Paul Robeson: The Stage and Screen Actor. A.J. Williams-Myers African Roots Library, 43 Gill St, Kingston. Info: 845 802-0035, africanrootslibrary@outlook.com, http://bit.ly/2KzYvpy. 5pm-8pm Rhinebeck’s ArtWalk. Ongoing, every third Saturday of each month, 5-8pm. Village of Rhinebeck, Rhinebeck. 5:30pm-8:30pm Catskill Center’s 50th Anniversary Fall Gala. Take a ride on the Delaware & Ulster Railroad beforehand, then join the festivities at Union Grove Distillery where a roaming supper prepared by ate.o.ate catering/Rich Ellsworth will be served. There will be music from Elvanelle Music. NYS Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner Basil Seggos will be honored with the Alf Evers Award for his support of the Catskill Park and region. The evening ends with a fireworks display celebrating 50 years of work to protect and preserve the Catskills! Train picks up at 3:45pm and drops off at 5:30 pm. Info: 845-586-2611; cccd@catskillcenter.org. Union Grove Distillery, 43311 State Hwy 28, Arkville. catskillcenter.org/fallgala. 6pm-9pm Annual Sauerbraten Dinner. With all the trimmings. Reserve by 9/13, call: 845-4526050, email Office@firstlutheran.org. First Evangelical Lutheran Church, 325 Mill St., Poughkeepsie, NY. Info: 845-452-6050. $15 for ALL adults, $8 for children 6-12 years, and children under 6 served free. 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 Zelda’s Happening at Art Walk Kingston Benefit Citizen Action! NY. Blacklight body-painting percussive dance party! A multi-sensory event in a magical, glowing, environment created with up-cycled materials. This event is 21+ only. Potluck. No dogs allowed. Donations benefit Citizen Action! Info: 850-583-4224; ZeldaArtsManagement@gmail.com. Lace Mill, 165 Cornell St, Kingston. Info: ZeldasHappenings@gmail.com, https://tinyurl.com/y2vvhf23. Cash Requested Donation at the Door. 7pm-10pm TMI Project: Voices in Action. TMI Project’s anticipated annual benefit and storytelling showcase, will have Kingston abuzz this year with true confessions from local storytellers who’ve bravely and candidly shared their stories in recent TMI Project workshops and live performances. All proceeds will be used to support TMI Project programming in 2019 and 2020 and will help bring our transformative storytelling workshops, live performances and digital campaigns to more people in our community and beyond. Cocktail hour: 7-8 p.m. Show: 8 p.m. Tickets: Premium $100. Includes: pre-show reception, food, drink, meet and greet with honorees, storytellers and TMI Project staff, main event. Student price (with valid ID): $35. General admission $75. Includes access to main event. Student price (with ID): $25. BSP Kingston, 323 Wall Street, Kingston. Info: info@tmiproject.org, http://bit.do/voicesinaction. 25-100. 7pm-9pm Erev Selichot. Preparing for the “Sacred Work” of the season with a guided study of passage of Talmud on forgiveness, a short story of forgiveness and a po. Congregation Emanuel of the Hudson Valley, 243 Albany Ave, Kingston. Info: 845-338-4271, chevoffice2@gmail.com, https://www.cehv.org/. 7pm-10pm Screening: Adaption. Nicolas Cage is celebrated screenwriter Charlie Kaufman in this comedy drama based on real strife Kaufman faced in adapting a book to film. St. John’s Episcopal Church/Kingston, 207 Albany Ave., Kingston. Info: 845-389-9201, gerryharrington@mindspring.com, https://bit.ly/2NMH7Bc. donation. 7pm Live @ The Falcon: Jane Lee Hooker Band. 5 NYC women infuse grit and attitude into the blues. Opener: Fred Zepplin. Info: 845-2367970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7pm-10:30pm Roland Vasquez Sextet. Drummer/Composer Roland Vasquez’s brilliant career spans 30 years and features a long list of accolades, awards, grants and performances. Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-6373, mark@lydiasdeli.com, www. lydias-cafe.com. Donations. 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 Heather Aubrey Lloyd with Rob Hinkal in Concert. Info: 845-688-4692. United Methodist Church Phoenicia, 25 Church Street, Phoenicia. flyingcatmusic.org. $18 (cash only) door. 7:30pm-9pm Equinox Water Blessing and Traditional Indigenous Sounds Ceremony. Join us for an evening of traditional sounds as we bless the waters of our planet and our bodies. With Francois and Kelly Demange. Sage Academy of Sound Energy, 6 Deming Street, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-5650, sagehealingcenter@gmail. com, sageacademyofsoundenergy.com. $20. 7:30pm-9:30pm TheaterSounds: The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged). A hilarious frolic through all 37 of Shakespeare’s dramatic works, performed by only 3 actors. The Sanctuary at UUCC, 320 Sawkill Road, Kingston, 320 Sawkill Road, Kingston. Info: 845-657-6303, producer@theatersounds.

ALMANAC WEEKLY com, http://www.theatersounds.com. by donation. 8pm-9:30pm Gus Mancini’s Sonic Soul Band In Concert. This is an amazing totally unique band mixing ancient African rhythms along side, Jazz, Funk, Blues, Ethereal, Free Improvisations. Info: manugo90@aol.com. Boughton Place, 150 Kisor Rd, Highland. Info: 845- 691-7578, boughtonplace@gmail.com, http://www.boughtonplace. org. $10. 8pm-9:45pm A Kind Shot. Terri tells her story of playing pro ball, modeling, stripping, designing Michael Jordan’s head board & taking lots of shots at life! The Doctorow Center for the Arts, 7971 Main St, Hunter. $15 Online Advance Tickets on line at: akindshot.com or $20 cash at door night of the show. Info: 845-901-6265; terrimateer@ gmail.com. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Arlen Roth Solo. “Master of the Telecaster,” NY Blues Hall of Fame inductee. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@ thefalcon.com. 8pm-10pm Shadowland Stages presents Flint. A story of two couples, neighbors who’s lives crumble 2 1/2 years after losing their jobs. It comes to a head one Friday evening in 2014. Shadowland Stages, 157 Canal Street, Ellenville. Info: 845-647-5511, info@shadowlandstages. org, https://shadowlandstages.org/. Student Discounts available. 8pm-10pm Trivia Night At Chic’s Restaurant and Bar. Chic’s Restaurant and Bar, 226 Kingston Plaza, Kingston.

Sunday

9/22

Northeast Blacksmiths Fall “Hammer-In”. Blacksmithing Weekend - 40th year of demonstrations, hands-on teaching program, tool flea market. Event is held every spring and fall. Admission fee, please pre-register. Info: 845-6877130. Ashokan Center, 477 Beaverkill Rd, Olivebridge. ashokancenter.org. Oncology Support Programs of Health Alliance Hospital. WMC Health offers emotional support, wellness, integrative and healing arts programs for people affected by cancer including cancer support groups for women of all ages, young women, men, caregivers, women with ovarian cancer, & people living with metastatic. Info, times and dates: 845-339-2071; oncology. support@hahv.org; hahv.org/service/cancersupport-program. Herbert H. and Sofia P. Reuner Cancer Support House, 80 Mary’s Ave, Kingston. 8am 20th Annual Hudson River Valley Ramble. An annual event series that celebrates the history, culture and natural resources of the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area, as well as the amazing landscape, communities, and trails throughout the region. Every September, ‘Ramblers’ come not only from the Hudson Valley region and New York State, but from other regions of the country as well to discover the riches our Valley has to offer. Events schedule every weekend the entire month of September log onto hudsonrivervalleyramble.com/ramble for details! 8am-1pm Bike For Cancer Care - Dietz Stadium. 5K Run/Walk, 12,25,50 Mile Bike Rides T-Shirt to first 300, food, awards, live entertainment great family day. Info: bikeforcancer. org. Dietz Stadium, Kingston. Info: 8454811457, jrompella@bhfoundation.org. Registration fees see website. 9am-10am Yoga of the Earth. Led by Stephanie Fischer. A monthly gentle morning yoga practice, imaged in the beauty of Frederic Church’s expansive Hudson River views. Olana State Historic Site, 5720 St Rt 9G, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1872, education@olana.org, http://bit.ly/yogaatolana. Donation Based.

collector, a Loudonville, NY mansion, an Albany NY attorney’s home and others. This auction will include, Period Furniture, Fine Art, Sculpture, Silver, Oriental Carpets, Quality Vintage Jewelry, An Info: A fully illustrated catalogue may be viewed online at carlsengallery.com .Absentee & Phone Bidding available (17% Buyer’s Premium) ~ Internet Bidding available in association with Liveauctioneers.com (22% Buyer’s Premium) Info: 518 634-2466; info@carlsengallery.com. Previews: Thurs., Sept. 19, Fri., Sept. 20 & Sat., Sept. 21: 12–5pm; and Sunday 8am til sale or by appointment. Carlsen Gallery, 9931 Rt 32, Freehold. 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: 845-247-5700. Woodstock Animal Sanctuary, 2 Rescue Rd, High Falls. 11am-12pm Spots of Time: Writing & Thinking Walk. This tour, led by poet Celia Bland and art historian Susan Merriam, will put the gorgeous panoramas in dialogue with Romantic poetry. Olana State Historic Site, 5720 St Rt 9G, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1872, education@olana.org, olana. org/programs-events. $15 Adult | $10 Members. 11am-2pm Wild Food Walk with Mallory O’Donnell. Traverse the trailed forests of Opus 40, foraging for wild edibles, guided by wild food gatherer, grower and cook Mallory O’Donnell. Opus 40, 50 Fite Road, Saugerties. Info: 8456819352, caroline@opus40.org, http://bit. ly/wildedibleswalk. $15. 11am-2pm Sunday Brunch @ the Falcon: Vito Petroccitto & Little Rock Brunch. Rootsy, bluesy, swampy Americana! Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 11am-4pm PuppyUp! Dog Walk 2019. 2-mile walk to promote awareness of canine cancer and raise funds for cancer research to benefit both pets and people. Vendors selling both canine and human products, demonstrations to include agility, retrievers and a great K-9 demonstration by the NYS Troopers K-9 teams, raffles, entertainment. The Hudson Valley Ghostbusters will be there. Pet adoption opportunity, featuring Pets Alive, where you can go home with your new best friend. This a fundraiser for PuppyUp! Foundation. Info: 845-389-1699. Saint Huberts Lodge & CLub, 626 Lattintown Road, Marlboro. Info: 845-691-9584, lori_s@puppyup.org, puppyupwalk.org/newpaltz. $20 in advance, $25 at door. 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: 845-3368447. 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.

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.

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.

10am-11am Kids’ Story & Craft Hour With Christine. Join us for Sunday morning story hour with Christine! This month’s theme is FALL! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@ gmail.com.

11:30am-2:30pm Walk for Recovery. Fundraiser to benefit ongoing efforts of Villa Veritas Foundation to help the chemically addicted and their families. 845-626-3555. Walkway Over the Hudson/Highland, 87 Haviland Rd, Highland. https://villaveritas.org/. Donations of $25 or more receive a free t-shirt and bracelet.

10am-4pm 50th Annual Gem, Mineral, Fossil, Jewelry Show & Sale. Show Theme: ‘Pyrite, Don’t be Fooled!’ 6 Free Rocks for Kids at “Glitter Mountain.” Scavenger Hunt for Earth Science Students. 28+ Dealers showing, selling and demonstrating all sorts of gems, minerals, fossils, meteorites & jewelry. Did you know some rocks even fluoresce under black light? Lapidaryjewelry making demos. There is a sluice at the show selling both mineral and fossil bags. Gold’s Gym & Family Sports Center, 258 Titusville Rd, Poughkeepsie. mhvgms.org. $5, $4/senior, $2/ students, Free/under12. 10am Apply Now: Teen Voices Rising. Hudson Valley teens are encouraged to apply to participate in this spoken word event for youth. No prior experience necessary. One EPIC Place, New Paltz. Info: 845-418-5227, info@mayagoldfoundation. org, http://bit.ly/2TcGIc1. Free. 10:30am Anniversary Auction. Something for everyone’s taste! Featured are items from two New York City apartments, a life long collection of fine art and sculpture from a Cooperstown, NY

12pm-3pm Electric Car Show. Come see every Electric Car on the market today, and meet local owners (no dealers) who can give you unbiased advice. Free. Info: 845-380-8365; hudsonvalleyev@gmail.com. Locust Grove Estate, 2683 South Road (Route 9), Poughkeepsie. 12pm-5pm 4th Annual Art Walk Kingston. A weekend of open studios and arts events. The tour meanders through the City of Kingston including studios and art galleries on the Rondout, midtown, and uptown. Printed maps will be available in Kingston the week prior to the event at Rough Draft, ARTBAR, Village Coffee & Goods and Kingston Wine Co. Visit the online map anytime through Art Walk weekend at: map.artwalkkingston.com. Local bus route: ulstercountyny.gov/ ucat/bus-schedules. 12:30pm-6:30pm Astro-Tarot Readings with angelic conduit, tarot reader and astrologer Diane Bergmanson. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead to reserve an appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill

Sept. 19, 2019 Rd, Woodstock. $50/1 hour, $30/30 minutes. 1pm-2:30pm Marianne Osiel. A passionate songwriter and a diversely talented musician (oboe, flute, piano, voice, and strings). Rail Trail Cafe, 310 River Road Ext., New Paltz. Info: 845-399-5450, http://railtrailcaferosendale.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: 845-831-8172; 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-4pm Documentary Film Screening and Meet the Hurley Democratic Candidates. A screening of The Organizer will be presented by the Hurley Democratic Committee. The committee is holding a fundraiser featuring the documentary film about Wade Rathke, the founder of ACORN, once the largest community organization in America. Democratic candidates for Hurley town offices will be on hand to listen to concerns and answer questions. $10 Suggested donation. Info: hurleydemsny@gmail.com; 845-657-2914. West Hurley Firehouse, 24 Wall St, West Hurley. hurleydems.com. 2pm-4pm Talk by Dr. Ward Stone. Dedicated to saving millions of people and wildlife from industrial pollution and environmental harm. Climate change in the Catskills and correlating environmental impacts on the forest will be discussed. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 2pm-5pm Family Constellation to Cosmic Consciousness. In this workshop, we’ll be looking at your ancestral line to see where repetitive patterns have been passed from one generation to another. Sage Academy of Sound Energy, 6 Deming Street, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-5650, sagehealingcenter@gmail.com, sageacademyofsoundenergy.com. $75. 2pm-6pm 20th Anniversary of Peace Village Retreat Center. An International Day of Peace event. Info: 518-589-5000. Peace Village Retreat Center, 54 O’Hara Rd, Haines Falls. 2pm Nearby Covered Bridges in Ulster County. Daniel Snavely will give a presentation on his research on the seven covered bridges that are located within the lower Catskill Mountains. Free and all are welcome. Info: egstewart@aol.com. Milton Train Station, End of Dock Road, Milton. historicmarlborough.org. 2pm-5:30pm National Theatre presents The Lehman Trilogy. Critically acclaimed, 5-time Olivier Award nominated play about the family that started Lehman Brothers, a company that changed the world. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St, Rosendale. Info: 845-658-8989, info@rosendaletheatre.org, rosendaletheatre.org. $12. 2pm-4pm Opening Reception: SHI GUORUI Ab/Sense-Pre/Sense. New series of landscape photographs up to 15-feet wide by the contemporary artist Shi Guorui. Thomas Cole National Historic Site, 218 Spring St, Catskill. Info: 518-943-7465, MMccool@thomascole.org, https://thomascole.org/events/. FREE! 2pm-4pm Shadowland Stages presents Flint. A story of two couples, neighbors who’s lives crumble 2 1/2 years after losing their jobs. It comes to a head one Friday evening in 2014. Shadowland Stages, 157 Canal Street, Ellenville. Info: 845-647-5511, info@shadowlandstages. org, https://shadowlandstages.org/. Student Discounts available. 2pm-4pm Walking with the Water. A short history of local rivers and their lasting impacts and a review of how we harness the value of our creeks and streams today. Time and the Valley Museum, St. Rt. 55, Grahamsville. https://bit. ly/2XZLhs4. Members: FREE, non-members: $5. 3pm Mid-Hudson Classical Guitar Society: The Italians. Society members will perform an all Italian program including works by Paganini, Guilliani, Castlenuovo-Tedesco, Ennio Morricone. Info: midhudsoncgs@gmail.com. Morton Memorial Library, 82 Kelly St, Rhinecliff. mhcgs. blogspot.com. $10. 3pm Grand Montgomery Chamber Music Series: Enchantments for a Sunday Afternoon. Free. Info: montgomerychambermusic@ gmail.com. Montgomery Senior Center, 36 Bridge St, Montgomery. montgomerychambermusic. com. 3pm P.L.A.Y. the Classics. Collaboration between Shandelee Music Festival (SMF) and Bethel Woods Center for the Arts continues with a multimedia concert by Axiom Brass. An out-of-this-world concert featuring Axiom Brass. The concert will be followed by a specialty dessert reception. Info: 845-439-3277. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Hurd Rd, Bethel. shandelee.org. $35, $10/17 & under. 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/.


3:30pm Mezzo-soprano Kelly Guerra and pianist Michael Skelly. Free-will offering. (suggested donation $15). Info: 845-452-8110; towermusicseriesemail@gmail.com. Reformed Church of Poughkeepsie, 70 Hooker Ave, Poughkeepsie. churches.rca.org/poughkeepsierc/towerseries. 4pm-6pm Little Beaver Kill Book Signing and Video Release. Catskill Waters presents Little One and the Water, a children’s illustrated book, along with author Will Lytle (Thorneater Comics) and an accompanying video on Little Beaver Kill —the subject of the book. Thorneater Comics is known for his poignant black and white drawing style in a wide array of formats from comic strips in the Woodstock Times to murals in Kingston. A documentary of the Little Beaver Kill stream assessment will be screened, followed by Q&A. A limited copies of the book will be given away for free. No registration required. Cost: Free. Catskill Visitor Center, 5096 Route 28, Mount Tremper. 4pm-8pm Sunday Supper. Remember the good old days when the family gathered around the table every Sunday for dinner? Carry on the tradition with Sunday Supper at Woodnotes Grille. Enjoy house made selections ranging from Prime Rib dinner, seasonal roasts, or chicken and dumplings for $21 per person! Call 845-688-2828 for reservations. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper. 4pm-6pm Woodstock Community Drum Circle. Sponsored by Birds of a Feather and Timekeeper Drums. Broadcast - Woodstock 104 at 8pm. All drummers, dancers are welcome. Meets every Sunday, 4-6pm. Admission is free, donations appreciated. At the community center when raining or cold, on the green when warm. Village Green/Woodstock, Woodstock. 6pm-8pm HV Queer Bookclub with the LGBTQ Center. Come one, come all! It’s finally happening, the HV LGBTQ Center is bringing a queer adult book club to the Hudson Valley! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 6pm-7pm Meditation Session. Meets every Sunday at 6pm. Free and open to the public. Info: skylake.shambhala.org. Sky Lake Shambhala Meditation & Retreat Center, 22 Hillcrest Ln, Rosendale. 7pm Storytelling with Janet Carter. Info: 845-246-5775. Free admission. Inquiring Minds Saugerties Bookstore, 65 Partition Street, Saugerties. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Jason “Malletman” Taylor. Vibraphone Grammy Nominee’s “Vibrafunk”. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro.

Monday

21

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

9/23

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. Mescal Hornbeck 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. Mescal Hornbeck 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-12pm Chair Yoga. Gentle yoga stretches utilizing chairs as props. This will occur every Monday until 10/21. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@gmail.com, https://bit.ly/2PbgIiH.

to the illusion of separation which is the root cause of suffering. The Blessing takes only a few minutes and Kathy will address any questions regarding the finer points of living in Oneness. Schedule is limited, so please register early to reserve a time slot. Free. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/30 minutes. 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. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 12:30pm-6pm Crystal Attunements and Tarot Card Readings 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. $30/30 minutes. 1pm Chair Yoga. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 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-4pm Woodstock Senior Painting with Jennifer Wulfe Schimmrich. In addition to painting supplies and instruction participants will take part of periodic exhibitions, friendships and camaraderie! Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 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 Tai Chi. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 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.

tion 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. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 9:30am-8pm National Voter Registration Day 2019. Americans coast-to-coast will celebrate National Voter Registration Day with a massive 50-state effort to register voters before Election Day this November. With local elections happening in a few weeks, every eligible American voter should exercise his or her right to be heard at the ballot box this year and for years to come. For more information concerning National Voter Registration Day in Ellenville, call 845-647-5530. Ellenville Public Library & Museum, 40 Center St, Ellenville. 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: 845-7504402, newbabynewpaltz@yahoo.com, https:// newbabynewpaltz.com. $5. 10am-12pm UCTC Technical Committee. All meetings are typically held on the 4th Tuesday of each month in Room M-15 unless otherwise noted. Agenda packets are made available 10 days prior to the day of the meeting at https://ulstercountyny.gov/transportation-council. Rosendale/ Marbletown Joint Town Hall, Cottekill. 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. 10:45am-12pm Qi-Arts with Celeste Graves. New class offering Shibashi & 24 forms Yang style Tai-chi. Adults all ages. Registration required. Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. www.tivolilibrary.org. Free.

6pm-8pm English as a Second Language (ESL) Classes. The Sacred Heart Center for New Americans is offering free courses in English as a Second Language (ESL). Mondays and Thursdays. Info and to register: 646-342-4177 or 973-6980205. St. Cabrini Home, 2085 Rt. 9W, West Park.

11am-7pm National Voter Registration Day. Voter registration is a crucial aspect of a healthy democracy. Join a nationwide effort to register more folks to vote. This is completely non-partisan and also allows you to vote when library issues are on the ballot. Stop in, have a cider doughnut, register to vote, and visit the library - a fun way to make your voice heard! Morton Memorial Library, 82 Kelly St, Rhinecliff.

6:30pm Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) of Dutchess County: Active Shooter and Stop the Bleed Preparedness Training. Hands-on training is offered on techniques like tourniquets, wound packing and direct pressure. The trainings are free and open to the public. Make reservations as soon as possible, as seating is limited. Reservations: jryan@dutchessny.gov. Stanford Fire House, 6098 State Route 82, Standfordville.

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. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock.

6:30pm Music - Mendelssohn Club Meeting. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston.

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.

7pm-8:30pm A Public Forum on The New York Health Act. Info: 845-324-0741. High Woods Reformed Church 1290 Church Road, Saugerties, 1290 Church Road, Saugerties. 7:15pm Mid-Hudson Women’s Chorus Free Open Rehearsal. No auditions required. For more information about rehearsals and membership visit midhudsonwomenschorus.org or call 914-388-4630. St. James United Methodist Church, 35 Pearl St (corner of Fair & Pearl sts), Kingston. 7:30pm Ralph T. Waterman Bird Club Meeting. The talk will be by bird photographer Marie Reid: Capturing the Spirit of Birds. Freedom Plains Church Fellowship Hall, 1168 Route 55, LaGrangeville. watermanbirdclub.org.

Tuesday

9/24

12pm Steven Caras: A Dancer Captures Dance. An exhibition of photographs by acclaimed dancer and photographer, Steven Caras. Showing Sep 23–Oct 18. Vassar College Palmer Gallery, 124 Raymond Ave, Poughkeepsie, NY. Info: 845-4375370.

8:30am-9:30am Hanna Somatic Education Series. Begins today! This eight-session series is cumulative, working with the somatic center first and progressively to the rest of the body. The Living Seed Yoga & Holistic Health Center, 521 Main St (Rt 299), New Paltz. Info: 845-255-8212, contact@thelivingseed.com, www.thelivingseed. com. see website for details.

12pm-6pm Individual Oneness Blessings with Kathy Saulino. The Oneness Blessing, also known as “Deeksha” is a direct transfer of divine intelligent energy from a certified Oneness practitioner that results in a neurological shift in the brain, balancing the body’s natural healing centers and attunes the brain with the fields of unity. All with the purpose of bringing an end

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 Educa-

1pm-3:30pm Esopus Artist Group. Ongoing session of art making. Bring your own supplies. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. Info: 845-338-5580, organizedmode@gmail. com, esopuslibrary.org. 1:30pm-4:30pm Play Bridge. New Paltz Community Center, 3 Veterans Dr /32 North, New Paltz. Free. 2pm-3pm Building Your Family Tree. With Moe Lemire. Learn the tips and tools available to research and build your family tree. Bring a laptop computer if you own one. Free. Info: 845-2545469. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. free. 2:30pm-4:30pm Film Screening: Suicide - The Ripple Effect. The powerful story of suicide survivor Kevin Hines. Special Q & A session following the film. Event features info tables and local resources. Free. SUNY Ulster, Quimby Theater, 491 Cottekill road, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-6875262, dziombas@sunyulster.edu, http://bit.ly/ Film_HOPE. No Charge, Free Admission, Open to the Public. 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 The Forever Soldiers: Americans at War in Afghanistan and Iraq. Kyle Longley’s presentation will focus on those who fought in Afghanistan and Iraq and those who continue to do so. Vassar College, Taylor Hall, Rm 203, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-4375370. 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 Town of Rochester Town Board Special Meeting. The meeting is proposed to be conducted in executive session for the purpose of hearing and discussion of matters leading to the employment, demotion, discipline, suspension, dismissal or removal of a particular employee. You may view the latest post at townofrochester. ny.gov/2019/09/12/legal-notice-town-boardspecial-meeting-9-24-2019-6pm/. Rochester Town Hall, 50 Scenic Rd, Accord. 6pm-7:30pm September Policy and Politics Bookclub. New members always welcome! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail. com. 6pm Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) of Dutchess County: Active Shooter and Stop the Bleed Preparedness Training. Hands-on training is offered on techniques like tourniquets, wound packing and direct pressure. The trainings are free and open to the public. Make reservations as soon as possible, as seating is limited. Reservations: jryan@dutchessny.gov. Department of Emergency Response, 392 Creek Rd, Poughkeepsie. 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-9pm Saugerties Democratic Committee Meeting. Regular monthly meeting. We meet the fourth Tuesday of every month with the exception of December. Social at 6:30pm; meeting at 7pm. Saugerties Senior Center, 207 Market St, Saugerties. Info: 845-246-1545. 7pm Fiber Arts. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 7pm-9pm Writer’s Group. Six-month workshopping program for active writers of prose. Sign-up 845-338-5580. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. https://www.esopuslibrary.org. 7pm-10pm Open Mic Night. Join host Ben Rounds and take your shot at becoming the next Catskills Singing Sensation! Woodnotes Grille No Cover. Info: 845-688-2828. Woodnotes Grill - Emerson Resort, Rt 28, Mt. Pleasant. emersonresort.com. 7pm-8pm Scrabble Night. Every Tuesday! Bring snacks to share starts 7pm. All welcome. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. free. 7:15pm-9pm Music Fan Film Series presents Punk the Capital: Building a Sound Movement. Music documentary about the punk music scene (1976-1983) in Washington, DC. Stars icons of the era. Q&A with filmmakers. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St, Rosendale. Info: 845-658-8989, info@rosendaletheatre.org, rosendaletheatre. org. $8. 7:30pm-9:30pm Evergreen Chorus. Women meet every Tuesday to sing 4-part Harmony at Crown Heights Clubhouse 34 Nassau Road, Poughkeepsie. Info: evergreenchorus.org. http:// www.evergreenchorus.org.

Wednesday

9/25

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. 8am MidHudsonADK: Boulders, crevices, caves, chutes, shafts. And yes, there`s another Lemon Squeeze near New Paltz, NY. Moderate pace for experienced hikers. Difficult scrambles. Events & locations weather dependent but usually in the Gunks. Leader: Marty Carp martymcarp@ gmail.com; 845-214-8520. Please confirm with leader by text, cell, or email. midhusonADK.org. 8am Waterman Bird Club: Montgomery Place. Meet there. Take Rt.9G north of Rhinebeck, turn left on Rt. 199 to Kingston Bridge. Turn right onto River Rd. (Dut. 103) to estate parking lot. Please bring water, sturdy footwear, your lunch, and join us to discuss the birds following our walk. watermanbirdclub.org. 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


22 Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 10am-5pm Art Opening: In Retrospect & Painted Cities. The exhibit features 60 year survey of work by William Clutz and painted cityscapes by seven other gallery artists. Carrie Haddad Gallery, 622 Warren Street, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1915, carriehaddadgallery@gmail. com, https://bit.ly/2L3gdTV. 10am Apply Now: Teen Voices Rising. Hudson Valley teens are encouraged to apply to participate in this spoken word event for youth. No prior experience necessary. One EPIC Place, New Paltz. Info: 845-418-5227, info@mayagoldfoundation. org, http://bit.ly/2TcGIc1. Free. 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 selfexpression 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. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 10:30am-1:30pm Town of Cornwall Farmers’ Market. Shop for fresh, local, healthy and natural goods from a variety of vendors. Meets weekly on Wednesdays. Info: 845-534-2070; marketmanager@cornwallny.gov. Munger Cottage, Cornwall. cornwallny.com. 10:30am-11:30am Woodstock Senior Weights and Bands with Linda Sirkin. Improve muscle tone, protect bones and enhance balance. Fire Co. #1, Route 212. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 11am-6pm Little Light of Mine @ Village Candle. Hours: Wed - Sun, 11am - 6pm. Village Candle, 8 South Chestnut St, New Paltz. Info: nplittlelightcandle.com; 845-800-1819. 11:30am-4pm Expert Tarot Readings and Intuitive Guidance with Malley. Every Wednesday. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $50/1 hour, $30/30 minutes. 1pm-3pm Pinochle. Card Game every Wednesday! Looking for a 4th player. Anyone interested - email info@pinehillcommunitycenter.org. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. FREE. 1pm-3pm Social Circle. Good conversation! Every Wednesday. Everyone welcome. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. 1pm Kingston Community Singers Meetup New Members Welcome. Open to all men and women. No auditions necessary. Info: 856-3051546. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. 1:30pm Weekly Senior Citizen’s Bingo.

legal notices LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO BIDDERS: Sealed bids will be received, publicly opened and read at the Ulster County Purchasing Department, 244 Fair Street, 3rd Floor, Kingston, NY 12401 on Thursday, September 26, 2019 at 3:00 PM for Transportation of Preschool Children Delaware County, BID #RFB-UC19-059. Specifications and conditions may be obtained at the above address or on our website at www. co.ulster.ny.us/purchasing. Ed Jordan, Ulster County Director of Purchasing LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO BIDDERS: Sealed bids will be received, publicly opened and read at the Ulster County Purchasing Department, 244 Fair Street, 3rd Floor, Kingston, NY 12401 on Thursday, October 17, 2019 at 3:00 PM for DeWitt Lake Road Slope Stabilization, #RFB-UC19-149C. Specifications and conditions may be obtained at the above address, at the New York State Contract Reporter, or on our website at www. ulstercountyny.gov/purchasing Edward Jordan, Ulster County Director of Purchasing LEGAL NOTICE Section I Notice to Bidders The Board of Trustees of Ulster County Community College (in accordance with Section 103 of Article 5-A of the General Municipal Law) hereby invites the submission of sealed bids for Charter Bus Service. Bids will be received until 10am on Monday, October 7, 2019 in the Purchasing Dept, Algonquin Building, Room 109, at which time and place all bids will be opened. Specifications and bid form may be obtained from the same office, 845-687-5193 or casciarj@sunyulster.edu. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Any bid submitted will be binding for 30 days subsequent to the date of bid opening. Dated: September 13, 2019

ALMANAC WEEKLY Ongoing every Wednesday at 1:30pm & Friday at 7pm. 50/50 tickets available at 3 tickets/$2. Halftime complementary refreshments. Shawangunk Senior Center, 70 Main St, Napanoch. 2pm-4pm Minecraft Club. Kids and teens get to play and fight together on our special servers led by Tech Services and Reference Librarian, Paul Costa. Hudson Area Library, 51 North 5th Street, Hudson. Info: 518-828-1792, brenda.shufelt@ hudsonarealibrary.org, hudsonarealibrary.org. 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 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-6pm General Reading Book Group. The General Reading Book Group meets monthly on Wednesdays and is reading Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens. Free. Info: 518-828-1792; programs@hudsonarealibrary.org. Hudson Area Library, 51 North 5th Street, Hudson. hudsonarealibrary.org. 5pm-6:30pm Educators’ Night in Rhinebeck! Oblong’s Suzanna Hermans will share her recommendations on new and notable books arriving this Fall for every grade level. Oblong Books & Music Rhinebeck, 6422 Montgomery Street, Rhinebeck. Info: 845-876-0500, events@oblongbooks, http://bit.ly/2zhPPPu. 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 www.LGBTQacupuncture. $5 suggested donation, no one turned away for lack of funds. Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center, 300 Wall St, Kingston. 5:30pm-7pm Breast Cancer Options-Young Survivor Support Group. Features speakers and topics. For information or to register: 845-339HOPE or email hope@breastcanceroptions.org. Vassar Brothers Hospital: Conference room C, 45 Rheade Pl, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-339-4673, hopenemiroff@yahoo.com. 5:30pm-6:30pm Barrett Roundtable: The Artist’s Statement. Join co-hosts Carolyn Edlund and Karl Schmitz for a discussion of

AA/EOE LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED PROJECT AND FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE RELATING THERETO Notice is hereby given that a public hearing pursuant to Section 859-a(2) of the General Municipal Law of the State of New York (the “Act”) will be held by the Ulster County Industrial Development Agency (the “Agency”) on the 30th day of September, 2019 at 7:00 o’clock p.m., local time, at the Town of Marlborough Town Hall located at 21 Milton Turnpike in the Town of Marlborough, Ulster County, New York in connection with the following matters: Brooklyn Bottling of Milton, New York, Inc., a New York State business corporation (“Brooklyn Bottling”) and Ham III Realty, LLC, a New York State limited liability company (“Ham” and collectively with Brooklyn Bottling referred to as the “Company”) have presented an application (the “Application”) to the Agency, a copy of which Application is on file at the office of the Agency, requesting that the Agency consider undertaking a project (the “Project”) for the benefit of the Company, said Project consisting of the following: (A) (1) the acquisition of an interest in (a) a portion of an approximately 21.20 acre parcel of land located at 9 Riverview Drive in the Town of Marlborough, Ulster County, New York (tax map number 109.1-2-5.111) (the “Riverview Drive Land”), together with an approximately 118,000 square foot building located thereon (the “Riverview Drive Existing Facility”) and (b) a portion of two parcels of land containing in the aggregate approximately 15.3 acres located at 643 South Road (tax map number 103.1-3-52) and 34 Dock Road (tax map number 103.1-329) in the Town of Marlborough, Ulster County, New York (collectively, the “South Road Land,” and, collectively with the Riverview Drive Land, the “Land”), together with an approximately 100,000 square foot building located thereon (the “South Road Facility”) (2) the construction to the Riverview Drive Existing Facility of an approximately 52,716 square foot addition (the “Addition”) (the Addition and the Riverview

approaches to creating a statement that does justice to you and your work Free. Info: 845-4712550; info@barrettartcenter.org. Barrett Art Center, 55 Noxon St, Poughkeepsie. barrettartcenter.org. 5:30pm-6:30pm Woodstock Informal Service. Followed by reflections and spiritual discussions. Everyone welcome. 845-679-9534. First Church of Christ, 85 Tinker St, Woodstock. 5:30pm-7:30pm Prenatal Class. Ongoing on Wednesdays. 845-563-8043 for more info. Mackintosh Community Room, 147 Lake St, Newburgh. 6pm-7:30pm The White Hart Speaker Series: Dr. Matt McCarthy. New York Times bestselling author Dr. Matt McCarthy will share the story of cutting-edge science and the race against SUPERBUGS. The White Hart Inn, 15 Undermountain Rd, Salisbury, CT. Info: 845-876-0500, events@ oblongbooks, http://bit.ly/2NqUcA8. 6pm Tai Chi. Clinton Community Library, 1215 Centre Rd, Rhinebeck. 6:15pm-7:45pm In Cold Blood - True Crime, An American Genre. A reading and discussion group. This six-session series is facilitated by Woodstock author Sheila Isenberg and sponsored by Humanities New York and the Woodstock Public Library District. Registration is required. Books for the course are free and supplied by the library. Held in the Woodstock Library Reading Room. For information, contact the library at 845-679-2113 or check at the front desk, Woodstock Library , Library Lane, Woodstock. 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. 6:30pm-7:30pm New Baby Workshop. A complimentary workshop led by Donna Bruschi, IBCLC and Dr. David Lester. Lester Chiropractic, 3 Paradies Ln, New Paltz. Info: 845-255-3300, Lester.chiropractic@gmail.com.

Sept. 19, 2019 7pm-8:30pm Rock Your Socks Off: Two Billion Years of New York State Earth History. An exciting hands-on demonstration, display and brief slide show about geological and fossil history. Identify your rock or fossil, too! Rosendale Public Library, 264 Main ST, Rosendale. Info: 845-658-9013, rosendalelibrary@hvi.net, rosendalelibrary.org. 7pm-8:30pm Rhinebeck Choral Club Open Rehearsals. Open to residents ages 14+ of all areas of the Hudson Valley region. Concert dates this season are 12/14 & 12/15. Ferncliff Nursing Home, 21 Ferncliff Dr, Rhinebeck. Info: 518-537-2884, taylor.susan33@gmail.com, www. rhinebeckchoralclub.0rg. Membership Fee. 7pm-10:30pm Heartbeat Music Hall of Grahamsville Open Mic. Every Wed. Down home hospitality. No charge, donations welcome. Info: 845-985-2731; davidtrestyn@yahoo.com. Heartbeat Music Hall of Grahamsville, 304 Main St, Grahamsville. 7pm-10pm Trivia Night. Calling all trivia nerds ~ flex your mental muscles and compete for prizes. Play solo or as part of a team. Info: 845-688-2828; emersonresort.com. Woodnotes Grill - Emerson Resort, Rt 28, Mt. Pleasant. emersonresort.com. 7pm-8:30pm Actors & Musician Creative Seed Support Group. Come share your work in progress! Weds nights 7 - 8:30pm. Admission by donation. Info: reikyogachant.com; 203-2465711. Reiki Yoga Chant Healing Arts Center, Stone Ridge. 7pm Ashokan-Pepacton Watershed Chapter of Trout Unlimited, #559 Meeting. General membership meeting. Info: 845-657-8500. Boiceville Inn, Rt 28, Boiceville. 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-9pm Climate Week: The Human Element Screening & Panel. The film follows James Balog on his quest to highlight Americans on the front lines of climate change. Panel discussion follows. The Old VFW Hall/Cold Spring, Cold Spring. Info: ccl.shoe@dfgh.net, https://tinyurl.com/ y3kna6qy.

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.

7pm Survival Instinct: A Dancer’s Story of Self-Reinvention. Steven Caras, an acclaimed dancer and photographer, will give a lecture, “Survival Instinct: A Dancer’s Story of Self-Reinvention.” Frances Daly Fergusson Dance Theater, Kenyon Hall, Vassar College, 124 Raymond Ave, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-437-5370.

7:30pm Resnick Series: The Politics of Jewish Vulnerability in 1930s Poland. Kenneth Moss is the third speaker in the Resnick Series on “Jewish Communities and the Uneasy Future.” SUNY New Paltz/Lecture Center 104, New Paltz. newpaltz. edu/resnickinstitute/.

7pm-8:30pm September Omnibus Book Club Meeting. Come join the Omnibus Book club for their September meeting, reading “Ask the Dust”. New members welcome! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-8020027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 7pm Live @ The Falcon: Poet Gold’s POELODIES. Fresh line-up of brilliant spoken word & musical artists. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@ thefalcon.com.

Drive Existing Facility hereinafter collectively referred to as the “Riverview Drive Facility”), (3) the renovation and upgrade of the South Road Facility (the “Riverview Drive Facility and the South Road Facility being collectively referred to as the “Facility”) and (4) the acquisition and installation at (a) the Riverview Drive Facility of certain machinery, equipment and other personal property (collectively, the “Riverview Drive Equipment”) and (b) the South Road Facility of certain machinery, equipment and other personal property (collectively, the “South Road Equipment” and collectively with the Riverview Drive Equipment, the “Equipment”), (the Land, the Facility and the Equipment being collectively referred to as the “Project Facility”), all of the foregoing to be owned and operated by the Company as a contract manufacturing beverage and food operation, and any other directly and indirectly related activities; (B) the granting of certain “financial assistance” (within the meaning of Section 854(14) of the Act) with respect to the foregoing, including potential exemptions from certain sales and use taxes, real property taxes, real estate transfer taxes and mortgage recording taxes (collectively, the “Financial Assistance”); and (C) the lease (with an obligation to purchase) or sale of the Project Facility to the Company or such other person as may be designated by the Company and agreed upon by the Agency. The Agency is considering whether (A) to undertake the Project, and (B) to provide certain exemptions from taxation with respect to the Project, including (1) exemption from mortgage recording taxes with respect to any documents, if any, recorded by the Agency with respect to the Project in the office of the County Clerk of Ulster County, New York or elsewhere, (2) exemption from deed transfer taxes on any real estate transfers, if any, with respect to the Project, (3) exemption from sales taxes relating to the acquisition, construction, renovation and installation of the Project Facility, and (4) in the event that the Project Facility would be subject to real property taxation if owned by the Company but shall be deemed exempt from real property taxation due to the involvement of the Agency therewith, exemption from real property

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: Jackie Akello. Ugandan Afro Pop singer/songwriter. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro.

taxes (but not including special assessments and special ad valorem levies), if any, with respect to the Project Facility, subject to the obligation of the Company to make payments in lieu of taxes with respect to the Project Facility. If any portion of the Financial Assistance to be granted by the Agency with respect to the Project is not consistent with the Agency’s uniform tax exemption policy, the Agency will follow the procedures for deviation from such policy set forth in Section 874(4) of the Act prior to granting such portion of the Financial Assistance. If the Agency determines to proceed with the Project, the Project Facility will be acquired, constructed, reconstructed and installed by the Agency and will be leased (with an obligation to purchase) or sold by the Agency to the Company or its designee pursuant to a project agreement (the “Agreement”) requiring that the Company or its designee make certain payments to the Agency. The Agency has not yet made a determination pursuant to Article 8 of the Environmental Conservation Law (the “SEQR Act”) regarding the potential environmental impact of the Project. The Agency will at said time and place hear all persons with views on either the location and nature of the proposed Project, or the Financial Assistance being contemplated by the Agency in connection with the proposed Project. A copy of the Application filed by the Company with the Agency with respect to the Project, including an analysis of the costs and benefits of the Project, is available for public inspection during business hours at the offices of the Agency. A transcript or summary report of the hearing will be made available to the members of the Agency. Additional information can be obtained from, and written comments may be addressed to: Rose Woodworth, Chief Executive Officer, Ulster County Industrial Development Agency, PO Box 4265, Kingston, New York 12402; Telephone: (845) 943-4600. Dated: September 17, 2019. ULSTER COUNTY INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AGENCY BY: Randall Leverette Chair


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The Lace Mill | 165 Cornell St East Gallery Ferrovia Studios | 17 Railroad Ave Gallery Fifty5 | 55 Greenkill Ave Local Artisan Bakery | 448 Broadway the idea garden | 346 Broadway Reher Center | 99–101 Broadway Saturday only Art Society of Kingston | 97 Broadway The D.R.A.W. | 63 Broadway Brush & Reed | 39 Broadway | 2nd Floor Facets of Earth | 22 Broadway One Mile Gallery | 475 Abeel St

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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

27 Johnny Poux 28 Rosalie Frankel 29 Murphy Munday 30 Mary Vandezande 31 Sue Burlew 33 Elaine Toland 34 Leslie Bender 35 Mercedes Cecilia 36 Charlotte Tusch 37 Zelda 38 (aka Judith Z. Miller) 39 24 Andrew Kaminski 40 25 Sativa Haskell 26 Tom DeLooza Photography 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23

Eighth Belle inarticulate incorporated Kat Howard Angela Rose Voulgarelis Rebecca Hellard Matthew Pleva mural Deborah Mills Thackrey Margrit Wenzel Harris Diamant Neville Bean Tyler Borchert Kate Patterson-Ueda Kosuke Ueda

See page 2 for detailed artist listings, including mediums and addresses.

Jeffrey Milstein Art by Gunner Matthew Pleva Studio Cassandra Quackenbush Patti Gibbons Lindsey Wolkowicz Redsharkboy Dennis Connors Hans van Meeuwen Ian von Miller Chris Andersen Jack Decker Chris Gonyea

O PARTICIPATING ARTISTS

Along with open studios, visitors can see art exhibits at 22 galleries, some open for this one weekend only, such as the pop-up sculpture show at the head of the Rail Trail. Art Walk Kingston also has special performances and events during both days including live music performances, mural tours, walking tours and a sneak peek of the second annual Kingston Design Showhouse.

EXPLORE KINGSTON on this self-guided tour featuring over 140 artists showing work. With 40 open studios, you can meet the artists who make the artwork – from ceramics and jewelry, to paintings and performance, there is something for all art lovers.


19, 2019 2 | Sept. Art Walk Kingston PARTICIPATING ARTISTS

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Artist number corresponds with location on the map. JEFFREY MILSTEIN Photography 331 Wall St | Open Saturday only jeffreymilstein.com

ROSALIE FRANKEL Mixed-Medium 77 Cornell St | Studio 202 rosaliefrankel.com

ART BY GUNNER Mixed-Medium, Painting, Photography, Encaustic 233 Wall St ygunner.com

MURPHY MUNDAY Mixed-Medium, Sculpture 77 Cornell St | Studio 205 murphymonday.com

MATTHEW PLEVA STUDIO Drawing/Illustration, Mixed-Medium 33-1/2 John St instagram.com/matthewpleva

MARY VANDEZANDE Painting, Sculpture 77 Cornell St | Studio 301 mary-vandezande.squarespace.com

CASSANDRA QUACKENBUSH Drawing/Illustration, Painting 44 Main St

SUE BURLEW Ceramics 77 Cornell St | Studio 309

PATTI GIBBONS Drawing/Illustration, Mixed-Medium, Painting, Photography 17 Mountainview Ave pattigibbonsart.bigcartel.com

ELAINE TOLAND Painting, Art Goodies 77 Cornell St Studio 317

LINDSEY WOLKOWICZ Drawing/Illustration, Painting 30 Johnston Ave lindseyawolkowicz.com

LESLIE BENDER Drawing/Illustration, Painting 77 Cornell St | Studio 416 lesliebender.com

REDSHARKBOY Drawing/Illustration 152 Washington Ave redsharkboy.com

MERCEDES CECILIA Painting 165 Cornell St mercedescecilia.com

DENNIS CONNORS Drawing/Illustration, Painting, Sculpture 80 Marius St dennyconnors.com

CHARLOTTE TUSCH Mixed-Medium, Painting, Photography 165 Cornell St | Studio 117 charlottetusch.com

HANS VAN MEEUWEN Drawing/Illustration, Mixed-Medium, Sculpture 635 Broadway | Rear Entrance hansvanmeeuwen.com

ZELDA (aka Judith Z. Miller) Painting, Photography 165 Cornell St | East Gallery facebook.com/ArtistSoulSpeaks/

IAN VON MILLER Furniture 37 O’Neill St vonmillerworkshop.com

ANDREW KAMINSKI Drawing/Illustration, Painting, Performance 165 Cornell St | Workroom Only showing during the Zelda’s Happening event andrewkaminskiart.com

CHRIS ANDERSEN Musical Instruments 59 O’Neil St balisteelpan.com JACK DECKER Furniture 59 O’Neil St | Studio 1-A vernaculardesignco.com CHRIS GONYEA Drawing/Illustration, Mixed-Medium, Painting 59 O’Neil St | Studio 1-E JOHNNY POUX Sculpture, Furniture 59 O’Neil St | Studio 1-D johnnypouxdesign.com

SATIVA HASKELL Up cycling art, henna & body painting 165 Cornell St | Workroom Only showing during the Zelda’s Happening event facebook.com/sativashenna/ TOM DELOOZA PHOTOGRAPHY Photography 110 S. Manor Ave tomdelooza.com EIGHTH BELLE Textile 17 Railroad Ave | Studio 207 Eighthbelle.com

INARTICULATE INCORPORATED Installation 17 Railroad Ave | Studio 208 KAT HOWARD Textile 17 Railroad Ave | Studio 214 kat-howard.com ANGELA ROSE VOULGARELIS Drawing/Illustration, Painting 17 Railroad Ave | Suite 201 angelavolgarelis.com REBECCA HELLARD Drawing/Illustration, Painting 85 Grand St | 2nd Flr | #L8 rebecca-hellard.com MATTHEW PLEVA MURAL Presented by Revolution Bicycle Drawing/Illustration, Painting 388 Hasbrouck Ave Mural stop only DEBORAH MILLS THACKREY Textile 50 Spring St art-for-living.com MARGRIT WENZEL Photography 90 Spring St margritwenzel.com HARRIS DIAMANT Drawing/Illustration, Mixed-Medium, Sculpture 50 Abeel St | Rear entrance | Studio 6 harrisdiamant.com NEVILLE BEAN Ceramics, Mixed-Medium, Painting 50 Abeel St | Rear entrance | Studio 6 nevillebeandesign.com TYLER BORCHERT Mixed-Medium, Photography, Sculpture 440 Abeel St | Open Sunday only stonestyling.art KATE PATTERSON-UEDA Bookbinding 231 Gallis Hill Rd littlemountainbooks.com KOSUKE UEDA Textile 231 Gallis Hill Rd indikoindiko.com

ArtWalkKingston.com X SPECIAL PERFORMANCES & EVENTS 1 Kingston Design Connection | 302 Clinton Ave | A Sneak Peek at the second annual Kingston Design Showhouse that brings together 16 design professionals to design spaces in an 1800s house in Kingston. 2 O+ Mural Tour | 20 St James Street | Keegan Ales | Free one-hour guided walking tour of murals in Midtown | Assemble Saturday at 5pm 3 Art Walk Pop-up Sculpture Park | 26 Downs St | Sculptures Dennis Connors, Hans van Meeuwen, Johnny Poux, Michael Lalicki, Sean Calyer and Tyler Borchert. 4 AWK Producers Show | 17 Railroad Ave | Village Coffee and Goods | Original work from the organizers of Art Walk Kingston: Joe Gonzalez, Linda Marston-Reid, Scott Marston-Reid, Barbara Scott and Rick Whelan. 5 Zelda’s Happening | 165 Cornell Street | Black-light body-painting percussive dance party | $10-$25 suggested donation | Ages 21+ | Saturday 7–10pm 6 Slow Made Market | Lis | 240 Foxhall Ave | Pop-up of locally made artisan goods | Sunday 12–5pm. 7 Wine Tasting | Kingston Wine Co. | 65 Broadway | Saturday 1–3pm 8 Spaghetti Eastern Music | Kingston Artist Collective + Café | 63 Broadway | After-party entertainment by Saugerties-based guitarist, keyboardist and singer Sal Cataldi Saturday 5–7pm 9 Mindful Rondout Walking Tour | Assemble at 20 Broadway | Saturday 1–3pm | $12 | Book at eventbrite.com 10 Mindful Midtown Walking Tour |Assemble at Broadway & Staples St | Sunday 1–3pm | $12 | Book at eventbrite.com


Sept. 19, 2019 Art Walk Kingston

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Kingston’s Art Walk

K By Lynn Woods

ingston’s fourth annual Art Walk will take place this Saturday and Sunday, September 21 and 22, from noon to 5 p.m. More than 140 artists will participate, with work displayed in more than 40 studios and 20-plus galleries. Last year the event attracted 500 to 1000 visitors, according to the organizers’ estimates, showcasing the variety of artists, artisans, and display venues throughout the city’s three districts. The Art Walk puts Kingston on the map as an arts destination, helps fill its lodgings and restaurants, and brings customers to its specialty retail shops. “I love the supportive artistic community here in Kingston, and I’m so happy to be part of this,” said Marker Snyder, one of the participating artists. “It’s a powerful thing for all of the artists to be sharing in this. Art Walk encourages a lot of people to come out and look at work in progress.” Snyder’s artistic nom de plume is RedSharkBoy. He will be showing his imaginative pen-and-ink illustrations and drawings, digital paintings and mixedmedia pieces incorporating photography and drawing at his home-based studio on Washington Avenue. Co-organizer Linda Marston-Reid, also executive director of Arts MidHudson, said the opportunity to interact with artists was a big draw. “People can strike up a conversation with artists,” she said. “They fall in love with the story of making art and having that personal connection.” For their part, the artists make “connections that are valuable in promoting and furthering their careers,” she said. Joe Gonzalez, a project manager who moved up to Kingston in 2015, is founder of a nonprofit that funds infrastructure projects around the world. He and Marston-Reid first floated the idea over a glass of wine. Art Walk turned out to be an event waiting to happen. The two got back an overwhelming response to a survey gauging the support among local artists for a studio tour. Some artists reported that they had gotten discouraged when an annual house tour was discontinued years ago, according to Marston-Reid. The first year, in 2016, more than 50 artists signed up. “We were pretty nervous,” she said. “On social media people say they’re interested, but then ten people show up.” Volunteers stepped up to

Community • Arts • Engagement madkingston.org

Sidewalk chalk art during Art Walk Kingston.

help with selling ads for the booklet and map and putting out signs. The turnout was promising. The event has grown dramatically since, According to Gonzalez, Kingston’s is the largest artists’ studio tour in the

Hudson Valley. This year’s roster of participants include not only visual artists — painters, sculptors, and mixed-media practitioners working in a variety of styles — but also three furniture makers, a fiber artist,

two clothing and textile designers, a bookbinder, at least four photographers, a musical instrument maker, several ceramicists and jewelry makers, and an artisan who makes bags out of recycled sailcloth, along with cotton and leather.


19, 2019 4 | Sept. Art Walk Kingston

Various clusters of artists and galleries around the city will enable visitors to explore multiple sites on foot. In Midtown, there will be group shows at the Lace Mill, the Idea Gallery, Artbar, the Cornell Creative Arts Center, and a 7500-square-foot space on the ground floor of Ferrovia Studios at 17 Railroad Avenue. There, a

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curated show will feature several accomplished artists, including Susan Spencer Crowe, Andrew Lyght, and Valerie Piraino. There’ll also be an installation by an artists’ collective themed around a department store. Upstairs, many of the 14 studios will be open, including that of building owner Angela Rose Voulgarelis. Village Coffee and Goods, also located

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in the building, will be showing the artwork of Art Walk organizers MarstonReid and Gonzalez, along with volunteers Barbara Scott, Scott Marston-Reid and Rick Whelan — a reminder that the event itself sprung from the ideas and efforts of artists. More studios are located in the Shirt Factory, including Hudson Valley Silverworks, which will be showing the

work of numerous jewelers, and the Kingston Ceramics Studio, which will display pottery by eight artists -- some instructors, some members and some studio assistants (people will also be working on and off at the eight wheels in the studio, so visitors might see a pot in the making). The new Artisan Bakery and Kingston Pop Museum, both on Broadway, will also

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Sept. 19, 2019 Art Walk Kingston

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| 5

FACTORY & WORKSHOPS

Encaustic & Pigment Sticks Experience the fantastical world of Redsharkboy’s live-work studio.

be showing art. A new attraction this year will be an outdoor sculpture garden at the base of the new Midtown linear rail-trail at Downs Street, which will display the work of six artists, including Dennis Connors, Tyler Borchert and Hans van Meeuwen. Van Meeuwen, the recipient of two prestigious grants, will be showing an undersized doghouse crafted out of wood with an oversized extended canine paw. More of his absurdist sculptures, which play with scale and context, can be seen in his Midtown studio, located in the former Bank of America building. Uptown, two new galleries will be open. Uncanny will feature a group show of dolls and figurative sculpture. Pinkwater on North Front Street will exhibit the abstract work of Anne Sanger. Exit 19, the gift, furniture and housewares store on Wall Street, will show the work of Scott Michael Ackerman, while Carla Rozman, who designed the Art Walk logo, will show her stuff at the Design Connection. The stunning new North Front Street Gallery exhibits vintage furniture. Downtown, in Rondout, the Arts Society of Kingston, calligraphic studio Brush & Reed, jewelry studio Facets of Earth, the gallery at the Reher Center of Immigrant Culture and History, and the Kingston Artists Collective and Café all feature group shows. The Reher, participating in Art Walk for the first time, will show artwork by undocumented youth. The Kingston Artists Collective will exhibit pieces by the instructors at D.R.A.W., a community youth visual arts program, including Judith Hoyt, Carol Struve, Wayne Montecalvo and D.R.A.W. founder Lara Giordano. Around the corner on West Strand and up Company Path are the husbandand-wife studios of Harris Diamont, who will be showing his series of stylized selfportraits in paint and gold leaf, and of Neville Bean, who will be displaying her miniature ceramic, fabric and painted designs. The drive a couple of miles down Abeel Street is well worth the effort to check out the creekside studio of Borchert

and the group show at One Mile Gallery, organized in conjunction with Shrine

rfpaints.com | 845-331-3112

BETHEL WOODS CENTER FOR THE ARTS

A Season of Song & Celebration. Celebrate the 50th Anniversary where it happened, where it’s happening still.

CREATIVE PROGRAMS Wednesdays, Sept 11-Oct 30 Arts in Healing, Creative Therapy Support Group Saturdays, Sept 21-Nov 23 Museum Drop-In Art Making October 2 Youth Leadership Day Oct 26-Nov 23 Art, Music & Woodstock for Kids Oct 27 (Free) Halloween at the Woods Nov 1 A Night at The Museum Sleepover Nov 2 (Free) Story Pirates Performance Nov 8 (Free) Soul Inscribed Community Performance

MUSICAL PERFORMANCES

September 21 Chris Thile September 22 Axiom Brass PLAY: The Classics September 29 Jimmie Vaughan Slam Allen October 6 Borisevich Duo PLAY: The Classics October 13 Josh Ritter Carsie Blanton October 15 Graham Nash October 19 John Sebastian November 7 David Sanborn Jazz Quintet November 24 Max Weinberg’s Jukebox December 22 Kung Fu April 26, 2020 Young People’s Chorus of NYC PLAY: The Classics

EXHIBITS & INSTALLATIONS Now Open The Bindy Bazaar Trails ft. Embracing Bindy: Crocheted Connections Through Dec. 31: We Are Golden We Are Stardust Elliott Landy Outdoor Art Display PANELS & FILMS September 28 Framing History October 19 Sixties @ 50: “A Woodstock Retrospective”

331 Wall St. Kingston Saturday Sept. 21 10am - 6pm

time well spent FESTIVAL SEASON Sundays (FREE) September 1-29 Harvest Festival 9/22: Wellness with Sullivan 180 Live music by AJ Sanders & Frankie Justin 9/29: Pop-Up Vintage Market Live music by Delaware Valley Raptors & The Bergkamp Brothers October 5: Wine Festival Live music by Kat Wright & The Big Takeover October 12: Craft: Beer, Spirits & Food Festival Live Music by Andy Frasco and The U.N. & Big Something December 7-8 10th Annual Holiday Market (Free)

ARTWALK STUDIO SALE Jeffrey Milstein photography

Time spent together is

To learn more, purchase tickets , and see a complete list of programs and events visit BethelWoodsCenter.org.

Follow Us

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


19, 2019 6 | Sept. Art Walk Kingston

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Photographer Jeffrey Milstein opens his studio for a rare peek during Art Walk Kingston (studio open Saturday only, September 21).

Gallery in New York City. Besides being able to mix gallery and studio-hopping with stops at the multitude of cafes and restaurants that have popped up all over the city, visitors can participate in several events. There’s a free wine-tasting on Saturday afternoon at Kingston Wine Company, a free walking tour of Mid-

Deborah Mills Thackrey opens her studio in the Rondout area.

town murals on Saturday at 5 p.m. (be sure to check out the new one by Matt Pleva, adjacent to Revolution Bikes on Hasbrouck Avenue), a “Slowmade Market” of artisan goods, craft beer and other brews served around the wood fire at the outdoor courtyard at Lis Bar, and a preview of the specially designed interior at 302 Clinton Avenue by Design Connection, which of-

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Fall in the Valley

A local perspective

The Hudson Valley is a beautiful place, never more so than in autumn. Each year, tens of thousands of residents spend their weekends enjoying the natural beauty that surrounds us, and tens of thousands more "leaf-peepers" plan their vacations around it. Explore Hudson 6ALLEY ű&ALLűINűTHEű6ALLEYűISűTHEűREGION SűDEůNITIVEűGUIDEűTOű-ID (UDSONű6ALLEYűAUTUMNALűACTIVIties. It's a guided tour of all the big community events and annual activities in the area. Fall in the Valley is one of our most popular sections because it's so useful for both residents and tourists of all kinds. Everyone reads Fall in the Valley: it really has everything.

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Catskill Tannersville

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said, are markers for bicyclists on the digital map. Solicitations from local businesses pay for the map, which is the main expense; major sponsors include R&F Handmade Paints, Bailey Pottery, Cornell Creative Arts, and the Midtown Arts District (which is sponsoring the group show at the Lace Mill). Gonzalez and Marston-Reid donate their time to organize the event, supplemented by the help of volunteers Barbara Scott, Scott Marston-Reid, Nancy Tierney and Rick Whelan. The main driver for him and MarstonReid is “the satisfaction of preserving the arts community,” Gonzalez said. A key component is the support to artists. Last year one artist was offered a gallery show in Manhattan thanks to a Sal Cataldi performs as Spaghetti Eastern during the visit by a curator to her after-party on Saturday, September 21 5-7:00 p.m. at studio, while another one Kingston Artist Collective, 63 Broadway. — van Meeuwen — was offered participation in an outdoor ficially will open on October 11. Two performances are scheduled for sculpture show at Wildenstein. Saturday night: the beguiling Spaghetti Yet another artist was visited by the Eastern music of Sal Cataldi at the owner of Wired Gallery, in High Falls, Kingston Artists Collective and Café and where she showed and sold work. an Interactive Art Happening by resident “You just don’t know who’s walking artist Zelda at the Lace Mill. the door,” said Gonzalez. “I’ve run into Check out www.artwalkingston.com people who were scouts for galleries and for information. There is an accompanying individual investors and collectors who are image for each artist, which helps people going to studios very quietly to network. pre-select their visits in advance. The Plus, more than half of the artists [last website also includes a map, which shows year] sold work.” parking areas (annoyingly, the parking will Added Marston-Reid: “One artist told be metered on Saturday). The organizers me last year that she sold enough of her will also be printing out 1500 maps, which work during Art Walk to pay her studio will be distributed at the Kingston Wine rent for the whole year. Several other Company, Rough Draft, Village Coffee and artists have mentioned curators walking Goods, and Artbar. around.” A new feature this year, Gonzalez Voulgarelis, owner of Ferrovia Studios,

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Sept. 19, 2019 Art Walk Kingston

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Tyler Borchert explains the process of his artmaking during Art Walk Kingston.

said that last year’s Art Walk helped her get tenants for her 14 studio spaces. “We had a very good turnout. and I filled the

studios after Art Walk with the help of Instagram,” she said. This year “there are a lot of different

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he latest Onteora District 2011-2012 Central School does not include budget proposal massive layoffs as might be seen in other does feature districts, but the positions and elimination of six teacher another five, reductions to part-time of sectors. The among job cuts in many cuts are seen declining enrollment, as a reaction to but also contribute to a total plan that only 0.87 percent, increases spending by based on revenue that would translate, figures, to a levy increase. 3.9 percent At the Tuesday, March 22 of education board meeting at ementary, school Woodstock ElRobert Angeloch Superintendent’s officials presented The drawing in Recommended to trustees Monhegan, Budget that includes in this John by Kate McGloughlin spending to an increase Kleinhans a in photo. board adopts total of $50,477,497. If art gallery the and art school, session, voters the budget at its April n Friday, March fervent admiration 5 and the will be asked 18, 2011, on the budget studied to be the morning to vote on of generations devoted on May 17. an engineer of of up in If voters reject the budget and ended Moon, legendarythe full Super credit, art students. To his personal medical proposal, a he leaves a artist and cofounder of contingency austerity) budget The Art Studentsschool. He studied at lasting The art, beauty (or could be put Art Robert H. Woodstock School of and a sustaining legacy of from 1946-1951, League of New York that would in place Angeloch, died having led eliminate $121,785 example, at home. To a equipment budget painting with where he first began from his professional quietly unwavering life of purpose with line, as mandated the over 75 one printmaking Yasuo Kuniyoshi and credit, complishment.determination man by the with and acbooks, notable shows, 25 illustrated spent the summer Martin Lewis. He Continued awards from Born on April on Page 9 of The Pollack-Krasner the likes craft of making of 1947 learning the Hill, New York, 8, 1922 in Richmond woodcuts with Foundation, founding of Boyd and it Angeloch served the the US Fiske an esteemed was that summer Air Corps and in geloch Woodstock that first studied Army during World War nature working AnII where he of doors. For out was a pilot, this reason he recently Continued on Page 13

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types of things for people to discover,” concluded Marston-Reid. After viewing the “amazing sculpture” at the outdoor

Library after

the fire.

$20 for 6 months

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23

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

CLASSIFIEDS 100

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* Effectively diagnose and repair/replace malfunctioning A/C systems, gas and oil furnaces, gas and oil boilers, zone systems, as well as other HVAC equipment. * Must be able to complete annual maintenance of heating and A/C systems.

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

* The ability to solder and braze pipe. * You must have the ability to install and fabricate duct work, refrigerant piping, condensate lines, thermostats and control wiring experience. * 2-5 years experience preferred. Requirements: * EPA Universal certification is a plus * Valid driver’s license * Drug Free * Valid cell phone * Neat and clean appearance

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299

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TOWN OF SAUGERTIES

Part-Time opening in the Parks & Buildings Department Custodial type work with flexible work schedule. Must be able to work nights and weekends. Ideal for semi-retired or one looking to supplement income. Applications are available from the Town Clerk’s Office, 4 High Street, during regular business hours.

T.O.S. is an equal opportunity employer M/F Woodstock Laundry Attendant Needed Saturday-Wednesday, 2-10 p.m. (40 hrs./ week). Run the Wash & Fold business while keeping the Laundromat clean. Must have reliable transportation. We could split the shifts between 2 people. Stop by the Laundromat for an Application or e-mail WoodstockLaundry@aol.com with your qualifications. MANAGER NEEDED; Aid Tibet Thrift Store. F/T, start immediately. Retail experience preferred. Contact Steve at 845-3831774.

220

Instruction

French Tutoring in New Paltz area. Native French speaker, educated in French and American Universities, experienced teacher MS and US. Will tutor students and adults. Resume upon request. Call 845-633-8596 and leave a message for Nicole

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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

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300

Real Estate

For Sale By Owner, 3-Bedroom House, Accord. Patio with above ground pool. New kitchen, finished family room with bath. $250,000. 845-253-0396 For Sale By Owner in Woodstock. Location, opportunity, location. 2 adjacent multibedroom move-in condition homes w/accessory apartments, heated garage, off-street parking w/attached store front office on half acre in the center of town on desirable Neher Street. For appointment 845-399-4420.

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FOR SALE: RANCH, Route 28A, West Shokan. Large Eat-in Kitchen, 3-Bedrooms, Living room, Bathroom, Main floor 1040 sq.ft., Basement; 1040 sq.ft. 8ft. high ceiling. 1 Acre. $229,900. Call 845-629-7136, Details See (www.catskillhudsonvalley.com)

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24

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 2019

300

Real Estate

, NEW RENT WOODSTOCK, NEW YORK AL! This 2 bed, 1.5 bath home has an incredible peaceful vibe, near Upper Byrd Cliff where artists have worked and lived for decades. The healing waters of the natural springs that feed the pond are loved by all that have stayed and visited. This home is a short walk to the village center, shopping, public transport, and parks as well as great places to eat, enjoy music and people watch. Listen to the birds in the morning and the peepers and frogs in the evening while sitting on the screened in porch. This is a 5-month rental (Dec 1stApril 30th) Pets are allowed but no cats due to allergies. Renter pays electric, snow removal, cleaning of home 1x per month $75.00. Owner pays existing cable and internet, pest control, garbage pickup. This listing brought to you by Charlotte Scherer .................. $2,000 month

W NE TAL! N E R

SAMSONVILLE, NEW YORK A must see!!! Totally renovated, freshly painted 2-bedroom, 1 bath home, or commercial space including a nice size den or office. Spacious kitchen with all new stainless-steel appliances and a blue slate floor. Living room and bedrooms also have newly refinished hardwood floors with nice size closets. The apartment is located above Tetta’s Market in the lovely country hamlet of Samsonville, in the Town of Olive. Apt has a separate entrance and stairwell. No smoking and no pets. 2 Parking spots also included. $1,600 month, plus security. This listing brought to you by Siobhan Scanlan ...... $1,600 month plus security

NEW!

KINGSTON, NEW YORK Lovingly maintained 2,900 sq. ft gem in the prestigious Hillside Acres neighborhood. Home features 5 bedrooms, 2½ baths on a well landscaped lot. Home is updated with sparkling hardwood floors throughout. Sliders off the back lead to the level back yard and patio area with 3-season back porch. The entire first floor is open featuring the kitchen, living room, dining room, family room with a wood fireplace and a playroom that could also be used as a workout room. Master suite with a bathroom and 4 other bedrooms are on the second floor with a Jacuzzi bath and tons a storage space throughout! Just minutes away from Uptown Kingston hot spot restaurants, shopping and more! This listing brought to you by Megan Rios ........... $329,900

KINGSTON, NEW YORK Great income property in prime Uptown Kingston! Apartments are three bedrooms featuring sunroom/porch in each apartment. Home is presently rented. Good size back yard with garage that can be converted to work studio. Extra-long private drive. Can be ideal professional or income property. Home does need upgrades, however, is fully functioning. Steps to all! This listing brought to you by Jeanne Rakowski............ $179,000

HUNTER, NEW YORK Two totally renovated one family houses. Two houses for one small price. Live in one house and rent the other. The main house has 3 or 4BR and 2 fully renovated bathrooms. The second house has 2BR, a full bath on 1.5 acres. With solar panels the electric bill for both houses are about $60 a month. Both units have been totally reconstructed in past months and are turnkey ready to go. Newly vinyl sided, hardwood floors, and newer roofs. These beautifully done houses are fully renovated with two new kitchens and three beautiful tiled bathrooms. The back house has a large attic and a large finished basement. There is also a circular driveway and a nice size shed. This listing brought to you by Karen Stanbrook .............. $259,000

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

350

Commercial Listings for Sale

Profitable Main Street Business; asking $165,000; $125,000 down & $40,000 seller note, owner cash flow $82,517. Easy to manage and has beer & wine license. 845594-5523 scurcio@tworld.com

ULSTER - Mobile Park $500,000 NEWBURGH - 17+Acres, town water/sewer, zoned 1-2 family, affordable housing, nursing hms. US9 Hudson 4.8 acres $250,000 Realty600 (845) 229-1618

360

Office Space/ Commercial Rentals

NEW PALTZ: OFFICE/PROFESSIONAL SPACE. Large, Beautiful Soho loft-like space w/brick walls, new floors & new large windows. 71 Main Street, best downtown location. Great light. $895/month. Call Owner 917-838-3124, e-mail: steven@epicsecurity.com

380

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430

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. 5-BEDROOM APARTMENT. Large balcony, large kitchen, living room. Also, ROOM for rent. Can be used as residential or an

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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 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.

435

Rosendale/ Tillson/High Falls/Stone

ROSENDALE RENTAL: Studio Apartment in private home, Binnewater Road. $795/month includes utilities. Security required. 845-331-1728

450

Saugerties Rentals

Near Saugerties: 2-Bedroom fully renovated farmhouse on 32 acres. Hook-ups for washer & dryer, hot water heating system, new kitchen, bathroom with bathtub/ shower, beautiful wooden plank floors- fully polished & finished. Plenty of parking. 2 porches. $1450/month plus utilities. Call owner: 718-755-4947.

470

Woodstock/West Hurley Rentals

$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 845-4175282. 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. WOODSTOCK; 1-BEDROOM 800 sq.ft. space. Short-term; 3-6 month rental; November-April. $1560/month utilities included. References. No pets. Call between 9 a.m-9 p.m. 845-679-2713. WOODSTOCK/LAKE HILL: Comfortable, furnished private room in restored historic inn available Oct 1st. Fully equipped kitchen, living room with piano, friendly working cats, gardens. $600/ month includes utilities. Partial work exchange considered. Security, refs, car needed. 845-679-2564; waydhomestays@msn. com

Rosendale Apartment for rent in 2-family house. Open floor plan downstairs, kitchen, dining, living. 2 rooms upstairs, 1000 sq.ft. Porches front and back, garden area, fresh paint. Country setting. No dogs. $925/ month plus utilities. Leave number or text: 845-532-4160.

LOVELY ATTACHED WOODSTOCK FARMHOUSE: beautiful 16 acres w/ breathtaking mountain views, pastures, orchard, ponds, streams, waterfalls. Across from Wilson State Park. Huge farm kitchen, wood-stove, 2-bedrooms, south facing sleeping porch, hardwood floors, terrace, full bath, W/D. Available 9/1. No smoking, no dogs. $1650/month plus utilities, security and references. 845-706-4439 cell or 845-679-4439, hera@netstep.net

Near Rosendale ; Efficiency Apartment, suitable for 1 person. Quiet park-like setting with pond, on beautiful Shawangunk Ridge, with hiking trails at your door. $750/month with utilities. First, last and security. Non-smoker. No pets. 845-658-9332.

VILLAGE OF WOODSTOCK; 3-BEDROOMS. All new appliances, renovated kitchen & bathroom, washer/dryer, dishwasher, wooden floors throughout, fireplace, oil heat, screened-in porch, 2 Blue-stone slate patios w/Pergola, large fenced-in yard, custom-made shed & fire-

Ridge Rentals

wood shed, plowing & garbage disposal. On a private road & has driveway, plenty of parking. Onteora school district. Call owner: 718-755-4947. House Share in West Saugerties: 10 minutes to Woodstock by car. Lovely details, private estate, gardens, fruit trees, Olympic size non-toxic pool, walking distance to In The Sticks Restaruant. Private room with view. All utilities paid. WIFI. Long-term $525/month. Available 10/1. 845-246-9995. 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. $650/month. Utilities not included. 845-679-6590. 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.

480

West of Woodstock Rentals

GORGEOUS COTTAGE on 150 ACRE ESTATE. 3-Bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace. Hiking, cross country trails throughout. Borders on 700 acres of state land. 13 miles to Woodstock, 17 to Hunter. Renowned trout stream runs through property. Reasonable. Photos available. 845-688-5062.

500

Seasonal Rentals

$1600; Beautiful Woodstock 3-BR House w/sauna. November 1, 2019 - April 1, 2020. Five minutes to center of town. $1600/month includes utilities. Furnished. Free cable, internet, heat. All new appliances in kitchen. ͵Ǧ ϐ Ǥ Large living/ dining areas and kitchen. Sauna and movie screening room. Large screened- in porch and 2-car garage. 561-843-7643 ; Text or call or e-mail: Cslewispublicity@gmail.com

520

Rentals Wanted

Retired Grandma, who wants to visit her Grandson in the Woodstock area, is looking to Rent a Room w/private bath for 3-5 nights a month. Please call or text 917-9749876


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

25

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 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

ŨĹœ:

LOCAL EXPERTS

VILLAGE GREEN REALTY

#

1 in Homes Sold 2011-2018 * - 6 9 4 , 9 3@

OPEN HOUSE

EASY LIVING CONDO

This wonderful 2BD end unit awaits your r;uvom-Ń´ |o†1_;vÄş )oo7ĹŠ0†umbm] Cu;rŃ´-1; bm Ń´bˆbm] uoolġ m;†|u-Ń´ 1-ur;াm] Ĺ&#x; 1u;-l‹ ‰-Ń´Ń´v allow a blank canvas for your furniture. Move ub]_| bmġ b|Ä˝v bm ]u;-| 1om7bাomÄ´ "-†];uা;v $139,000

WE REPRESENT YOU!

SUNDAY SEPT 22nd, 12-3 PM

Whether buying or selling, your Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Hudson Valley Properties agent is committed to seeing you get the best value based on up-to-theminute market trends and conditions. With decades of recognized Real Estate success and a tradition of service and integrity, we are uniquely qualiďŹ ed to help you realize your real estate goals. Trust your success to ours. It works!

"|u;-lvb7; b7ĹŠ ;m|†u‹ĺ +o†ĽѴѴ vlbŃ´; Ĺ&#x; 0u;-|_; 7;;r ;ˆ;u‹ াl; ‹o† 1uovv |_; rubˆ-|; 0ub7]; |o |_bv bmˆbাm] _ol;Äş @ |_; 0;-|;m path, yet close to the hip hamlet of Phoenicia, )oo7v|o1hġ Ĺ&#x; vhbbm]Äş $287,000 448 Broadstreet Hollow, Shandaken

NEW PRICE

NEW PRICE

OPEN HOUSE

WOODLAND HIDEAWAY $_bv u†vা1 1-0bm ‰-v om1; - vblrŃ´; v†lmer refuge. The current owner has enjoyed |u-mv=oulbm] b| |o b|v 1†uu;m| bm1-um-াom -v a year-round hideaway. Hand-hewn beams, a wood-burning stove, a stone’s throw from Cooper Lake. Woodstock $295,000

SUNDAY SEPT 22nd 2-4PM

Contemporary colonial with 4BD/3.5BA at the end of a cul-de-sac on 4.70 acres. Living room boasts a 2-story vaulted ceiling nearly Ć?Ńś =;;| _b]_Äş l-ÂŒbm] Ń´o1-াom ‰ņ;-v‹ -11;vv |o v_orvġ 1ollÂ†ŕŚžm] Ĺ&#x; ;ˆ;m b1; 1u;-l -| _;uu‹ $orÄ´ $420,000 | 6 Pella Court, Wallkill

“ASHOKA FARMâ€? – Extraordinary architect renovated 1850 farmhouse commands 68 tranquil acres of meadows and forest. The impeccable design offers a seamless 3100+ SF oor plan featuring 3 ďŹ replaces, wide board & HW oors, 30’ vaulted Great room, top-quality gourmet kitchen equipment, 5 BRs incl. main level ensuite MBR, 3.5 baths, 24’ family/media room, French doors to inviting patio PLUS studio in original stone ice house. FABULOUS! ............................... $1,180,000

WOODSTOCK ENCHANTMENT – First offering in decades! Storybook style STONE c. 1918 on 42 acres with creek front & views just minutes to town center. Abundant original charm & detail over 2000 SF – beamed ceilings, wood floors, fireplaces, French doors, stone patios, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths PLUS sep. artist’s cottage w/ north light window, painter’s cottage w/ stone fireplace and detached garage, too! VERY RARE FIND! ................................................. $750,000

JUST LISTED

FAR ABOVE THE FRAY

Views galore from this super secluded log chalet set on 6 acres in Lexington. Follow the private drive to your piece of paradise where |_; v†m Ĺ&#x; ˆb;‰v v|u;-l bm |_uo†]_ Ń´-u]; ]Ń´-vv ‰bm7o‰v Ĺ&#x; 7oouvÄş mfo‹ |_; _†]; 7;1hġ ou vb| Ĺ&#x; u;-7 bm |_; 1oŒ‹ Ń´o[Äş ;Šbm]|om $358,000

villagegreenrealty.com

BRAT LE

28

G IN

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

CE

BUY IT AND THEY WILL COME

This resort-style luxury compound will have your friends begging for an invite. Features 2 -‚-1_;7 u;vb7;m1;vġ - _;-|;7 bm7oou rooŃ´ ‰ņ 0-uġ Ń´o†m];ņ]‹lġ |;mmbv 1o†u|ġ _o| |†0ġ Ĺ&#x; -m outdoor kitchen. Less than 5 mins to Hunter Mt. Hunter $1,699,000

JUST LISTED

YEARS

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

BROOKSIDE RETREAT – Well sited on 8 country acres with babbling brook at property’s edge, discover this appealing Catskill style rustic contemporary hideaway. The airy, open oor plan offers fantastic cathedral beamed skylit Great Room with handsome stone ďŹ replace & wall of windows, country kitchen, 3 bedrooms incl. ensuite master w/ private balcony, 2 full baths, huge breezy “live-inâ€? screened porch and stone patio. .................................................... $550,000

HEART OF THE CATSKILLS – Absolutely breathtaking multi-peak mountain views grace the private 2.4 acre site of this expanded vintage LOG home c. 1957 w/ abundant original charm and detail. Features include vaulted LR w/ hand built river stone ďŹ replace, vaulted EI kitchen w/ cozy woodburner, 4+ BRs w/ ensuite MBR, 3 full baths, family/media room with another stone ďŹ replace, wideboard oors and expansive decking. THE REAL DEAL! .................... $475,000

BHHSHUDSONVALLEY.COM KINGSTON 340•1920

NEW PALTZ 255•9400

STONE RIDGE 687•0232

WOODSTOCK 679•0006


26

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 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 MAGNIFICENT ASHOKAN RESERVOIR VIEWS!!

OVER 6 ACRES WATERFRONT PROPERTY

JUST LISTED

JUST LISTED

Beautiful waterfront property to build your dream home or use it for recreational activities! If you have spent time Downtown Kingston, you have seen this amazing parcel across from the West Strand. Relax in the gazebo in front of the Rumford Fireplace and watch the busy water front! This property is private with deep water access, dock with water hookup, and electric. Equipped with 50 AMP RV hookup and 50 AMP boat hookup. Owner financing is available, call for more details or to schedule a private viewing!

For more info and pictures, Text: M618327

$1,400,000

To: 85377

For more info and pictures, Text: M153568

CREEKSIDE “FRENCH COUNTRY� FARMHOUSE

PRICE REDUCED

For more info and pictures, Text: M616913

To: 85377

This home is sited on the Hellbrook portion of Black Creek in Esopus, surrounded by perennials, flowering trees and stone walls. French doors welcome you into the formal Living Room with gleaming wood floors and some beamed ceilings; Formal Dining Room with wall of windows provides a great creek view, while the wood burning stove keeps all guests warm and cozy while entertaining. The kitchen is light and bright with a large picture window, center island and french doors leading to the flagstone deck & creek side terrace. The gracious Family Room has a wood burning brick fireplace. An ample full bath with inviting claw foot tub, complete this stunning main floor design. Upstairs there’s 2 sunny BRs and the Master Suite. Spacious skylit Master Bath consists of open European style stone/brick shower and bidet. The romantic Master BR features a wood burning fireplace with french doors [from a railway station], leading to an additional deck with creek and property views. $475,000

To: 85377

RESTORED 1900’S HURLEY CAPE

JUST LISTED

For more info and pictures, Text: M152369

W Walls of glass encompass Ashokan reservoir and accompanying mt. views. This eastern vista will lure you a tto a tranquil state of mind as you watch the seasons cchange. 27.5 acres with a healthy mix of pine and hardwoods. Hundreds of NYC protected acres nearby. h Classic mid-century modern gem. Open floor plan with C ccathedral ceilings and beams. Hardwood floors and 2 stone fireplaces. Electric operated window shades. Superb to entertain. Large master-suite with newly renovated bathroom. Second and third bedrooms aside full baths. Modern cheery kitchen with center island & euro-style cabinetry. Lower level is on-grade and still commands the view. Included is a second summer kitchen. This area can function well as an office, for company or your teenagers. Extensive decking in the rear enables you to take in the everchanging panorama. 2 car attached garage. $875,000

To: 85377

T charming Hurley home is situated on nearly an acre This with a private backyard, a large organic vegetable garden, w established grapevines, and perennial gardens! Offering e original wood trim, glass doorknobs, and hardwood floors o throughout. The open kitchen & dining area feature new th ccustom hardwood cabinets, a farmhouse sink, and a live-edge wood island/bar top. An antique wood stove is the centerpiece of the living room which easily heats the entire home. The 1st floor master suite is bright, airy and tranquil featuring skylights, ship lap ceiling, cedar-lined closet and a custom river rock shower. Sliding glass doors provide direct access to the rear deck. Upstairs you will find two generously-sized BRs with wainscot walls and a bathroom with jacuzzi tub. Way too much to list, this is a must see, call for more details today! $299,900

Restored 1920’s Farmhouse Immaculately restored 2 family, 1920’s farmhouse in town, professionally designed for upscale rental income, live/work or family compound. No detail left untouched! Two units with wonderful reclaimed pine oors, whitewashed beams, two new fully equipped kitchens, air conditioning in every room, two private landscaped, fenced-in backyards and off street parking. Downstairs: Three bedrooms, 2 full baths and an ofďŹ ce. Upstairs is a two bedroom, 2 baths, light ďŹ lled apt. with private balcony and backyard. A quiet neighborhood yet steps to the center of Woodstock and all the music, arts and culinary treats and culture it has to offer............... $639,000

A Fabulous Mid-Century Home

Ă? 3257 Route 212 Woodstock, NY 12409 845 679-2010

Just moments from the center of Woodstock, yet perfectly private. The driveway opens up to a stylish stone and wood home overlooking gardens and an inground heated pool. The modern design and spacious layout encourages a relaxed lifestyle. A few stairs lead to the main living area with stone ďŹ replace, hardwood oors, custom kitchen with stainless appliances and solid surface counters. A large dining area with skylights is adjacent to the kitchen, and doors lead out to the stone patio and fenced, inground pool area. Upstairs are three spacious bedrooms, two of which have their own ensuite baths including a Jacuzzi tub. This elegant retreat is well maintained and move-in ready, close to all that Woodstock and the Catskills have to offer ..... $682,000

Ă? 89 North Front Street Kingston, NY 12401 845 331-3110

com

HUDSON VIEW - Seasonally expanding Hudson River view graces the low trafďŹ c site of this vintage tri-level that’s been well maintained and updated. Features include a smartly renovated eat-in kitchen w/ gas cook top, 4 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, mini split air conditioners on each level for warm weather comfort, LR opens to covered veranda with river view PLUS sunny rear deck and AG pool for summer fun! .......................... $248,900 Barbara A. Ellman, RE Salesperson m 845.399.1570 24 Mill Hill Road, Woodstock, NY 12498

Kingston 845.338.5832 Woodstock 845.684.0304 www.lawrenceotoolerealty.com Rondout Multi-Family

Rondout Mid-Century Modern

Solid Brick 3-Family with updated kitchens, baths and many other improvements. Two loft-like apartments and one ground oor apartment with potential for 3 bedrooms. Filled with character and charm, all have wide board oors and carpet in bedrooms. Amenities include on-site laundry, offstreet parking, a/c, patios, decks and convenient to Uptown Kingston and the Rondout area, make this a solid investment opportunity ....... $360,000

Mid-Century brick on the estuary. A strange and dynamic setting, steeped with nautical history. Located in the heart of this visually eccentric waterfront enclave, this high visible intersection is a well traveled back road. This expansive brick house is the perfect place for the work-at-home professional with a air for the unconventional ......$365,000

STATELY TREES OFFER COMPLETE PRIVACY, COOL FUN & NATURAL SHELTER FOR YOUR PATIO!! This gracious Colonial has been lovingly tended and maintained. Relax on the wrap-around front porch or in the shady slate patio garden in the fenced backyard. Spread out and enjoy the roominess and comfort of this 4 bedroom, 2 1/2 bath beauty!  Offered at $417,000

COLUCCI SHAND REALTY, INC 255-3455

Gardiner Gables 2356 Rte. 44-55 Gardiner, NY 12525

www.coluccishandrealty.com

** Become a Fan of Colucci Shand Realty on Facebook **

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580Â

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).

600Â

For Sale

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 Whirlpool Electric Dryer. Excellent condition. Had very little usage. 23 1/2� wid eStackable. $175 or best offer. 845-339-2726

CREATE AN ESTATE - Amazing opportunity here! Utmost seclusion and privacy can be yours on this 106+ ACRE estate parcel. Various terrain features meadows, woods, old roads, mountain VIEWS and a creek running through it. Use existing well maintained 3 BR, 1.5 bath high ranch set back off 1000’ driveway with EI kitchen, full basement, 2 decks and stone patio while you create your dream home. RARE FIND! Call for details. $415,000 Jeoffrey D.Devor, Associate Real Estate Broker m 845.389.0688 3027 Main St., Stone Ridge, NY 12484

NEW 18x36 POOL COVER for sale. Good quality, never used. $600. Text or call: 650279-9177.

601Â

Portable Toilet Rentals

TLK

LLC

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

TLKportables@gmail.com tlkportables.com We e ke n ds • We e kl y • M o n th l y

603Â

Tree Services

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


FULLY INSURED

27

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Sept. 19, 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

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.

650

Antiques & Collectibles

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: Saturday, 9/21, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Three bedroom sets; 1 queen teak w/ dresser, 1 full cherry sleigh w/2 dressers, 1 queen modern 2-tone w/dresser, large oval oak dining room table & chairs, 2 couches; 1 fabric w/matching recliner, 1 black leather, much more. 595 N. Elting Corners Road, Highland.

670

Yard & Garage Sales

WOODSTOCK ESTATE SALE. Selling household contents of long-time resident, including vintage furniture, books, lamps, two sewing machines, stamp collection, records, complete kitchen, book cases, linens, craft supplies, seasonal and holiday decorations, kitchen set, hutch, bedroom set, glass and china, clothing, desks, televisions, quantities of bric-a-brac, room full of new stuffed toy animals with original tags, afghan and quilt, tools, garage items, and more. Saturday, September 21st and Sunday, September 22nd, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Rain or shine. Follow signs from junction of Zena Road and Van Dale Road to VandeBogart Road.

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

CLEAN UPS, CLEAN OUTS. Indoor/ Outdoor. Junk & debris removal. Estates prepared for Moving and Sale. (845)6882253.

717

Caretaking/Home Management

LET ME HELP YOU ORGANIZE YOUR LIFE. PERSONAL ASSISTANT, 20 years experience. Office Administration, Home Organization, Errands, Shopping, Cooking, Driving. Karen Sawdey 845-443-6296. Full or half days available. References Available.

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

Reliable, Dependable & Insured Call for an estimate

845-591-8812

www.tedsinteriors.com

Personal & Health Services

720

Painting/Odd Jobs

SPORT OF IRON FITNESS- A Culture of Strength. NOW OFFERING $35/MONTH OPEN GYM. *State of the Art Strength Training Equipment* *Powerlifting, Strongman, Olympic Lifting Equipped* *9000 sq.ft. facility including 1400 sq.ft. of turf. Group Training Sessions - Registered Dietician - Youth Programs - Personal Training. 120 State Route 28, Kingston. Call Today 845-853-8189. Marta’s Fitness Coaching offers gentle, effective training in my Stone Ridge area home-gym. As an older adult, I help people gain strength, flexibility, balance to resist falling, problems such as diabetes, osteoarthritis & injury recovery. First session: FREE. Call Marta, W.I.T.S. personal trainer, 561-543-3792.

702

Art Services

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

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

feliciacasey@gmail.com 845.691.7853

Swan Hollow Doll Repair

Highland, NY 12528

710

Organizing/ Decorating/ Refinishing

PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZER/HOUSEKEEPER. Help w/everyday problems, special projects; clutter, paperwork, moving, gardening & personal assistant. Affordable. Fully Insured, Confidentiality Assured. MargotMolnar.com; Masters Psychology, former CEO, Certified Hospice Volunteer. margotmolnar1@gmail.com (845)6796242.

715

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

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

FREE ESTIMATES, FULLY INSURED Accepting All Major Credit Cards

QUALITY • VALUE • RELIABILITY • SINCE 1980 • Int. & Ext. Painting • Power Washing • Sheetrock & Plaster Repair • Free Estimates Multiple References Available Upon Request Licensed & Insured • ritaccopainting.com

FINE HOUSE PAINTING — 15 Years experience —

COUNTRY CLEANERS

Stone Ridge

• Hardware, Lawn & Houseware Items • Furniture • Clothing • Art

GARAGE/YARD SALE; 3-Families, Saturday, 9/21, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. & Sunday, 9/22, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Lots of stuff: furniture, household, plumbing, kayaks, paddle boat, floats, GMC truck, 24 ft. bow rider boat. We’ve got Something for Everyone! 623 New Paltz Rd., Highland, off Rt. 299 towards New Paltz. MOWER’S SATURDAY/SUNDAY FLEA MARKET; Maple Lane, Woodstock. Through October & Monday, 11/11/2019. Antiques, collectibles, produce & Reusables. 845-679-6744. Join us for our 42nd Year! For brochure: woodstockfleamarket@hvc. rr.com GOOGLE US!

ULSTER WINDOW CLEANING CO. **Estate, **Residential. **Free Estimates, Fully Insured. Call 679-3879 *CONSCIOUS CLEANING, CONSCIOUS ORGANIZING!* ZEN ENERGY w/a DERVISH APPROACH. ATTENTION TO DETAIL. PUNCTUAL. METHODICAL. LET’S SHIFT THE ENERGY & PUT CLARITY & BEAUTY BACK IN YOUR HOME. ALLERGIC TO CATS. ROSENDALE-KINGSTON-SAUGERTIES-WEST HURLEYWOODSTOCK. ROBYN 845-339-9458. Precision Cleaning. Complete line of services with affordable rates. Commercial, residential, clean-outs, rentals, Air B&Bs; hospitality (daily, weekly, housekeeping, linen service, etc.) 30 years experience. Insured. Free estimates. 845-235-6701.

760

Gardening/ Landscaping

Gardening/Animal Care/Housekeeping. Call Sam at (845)943-9796.

Contact Jason Habernig

Homes & Offices • Insured & Bonded

Sat. only, 9/21 • 9am-3pm

845-242-8490

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

Multi-Family Yard Sale

• Antiques • Jewelry (Costume to Chanel) • Items from Japan

Home Repair and Renovation only Hourly Rates Electrical, plumbing, Carpentry, Art Installation

Shandaken, NY 845-688-2253

845-532-6587 • pabloshine@gmail.com

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

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

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

Free estimates • Reasonable rates

705 & 709 Vly Road

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

755

Cleaning Services

Excellent references.

BRIAN’S HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Repair/ Maintenance Services

HOUSE CLEANING for a tidy sum. 845658-2073.

(2 miles fr Ashokan Resv)

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

Interiors & Remodeling Inc s ’ d e T

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

700

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

.

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. 914388-9286

695

Professional Services

PABLO SHINE 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

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

740

Building Services

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/

catskill gardens

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

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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 —


28

ALMANAC WEEKLY

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2019 JEEP CHEROKEE LIMITED 4X4

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$259 A MONTH

V6, LEATHER, HEATED SEATS, R/START, MSRP $35,690, 36 MONTH, 10,000 ANNUAL MILEAGE, $2999 DOWN PLUS TAX, STOCK #CK1225

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2019 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE UPLAND 4X4 LEASE FOR

$28 9 ON

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$289 A MONTHH

$299 A MONTH

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$359 A MONTH

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COLD WEATHER PACKAGE, MSRP $29,035, 35, 5 36 6 MON M MO MONTHS, T 10,000 ANNUAL MILES, $2995 DOWN PLUS TA TAX STK NO CP1111

DUAL DVD’S, LEATHER, HEATED SEATS, MSRP $40,790, $4 4 36 MONTHS, 10,000 ANNUAL MILEAGE, $3499 DOWN PLUS TAX, STOCK #PA5985

MSRP $39,635, 36 MONTH, 10,000 ANNUAL MILEAGE, $3,250 DOWN PLUS TAX, STOCK #GCH1207

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COLD WEATHER GROUP, 3.6L V6, MSRP $46,405, 48 MONTHS, 10,000 ANNUAL MILEAGE, $3250 DOWN PLUS TAX, STOCK #GL6003

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LEVEL 1 EQUIPMENT GROUP, 5.7L V-6 HEMI, MSRP $47,570, 36 MONTH, 10,000 ANNUAL MILEAGE, $2999 DOWN PLUS TAX, STOCK #RP2223

2019 CHRYSLER PACIFICA TOURING L PLUS

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Sept. 19, 2019

*To qualified buyers through preferred lender. Tax and tags additional unless noted. Stock photos. Not responsible for typographical errors. All offers expire 9/30/19.

ULSTER AVENUE, SAUGERTIES 845-246-4560 WWW.SAWYERMOTORCARS.COM

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Saugerties, NY 12477 (behind the Saugerties Transfer Station). Open TuesdaySaturday, 9 am-3 pm. (Closed Sunday and Monday); 845-679-0339.

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 347-258-2725.

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Professional pet care visits for cats, dogs, birds, and other exotic species.

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

Lunch CONTINUE

Safe & Saf Secure Sec

Learn More at RondoutBank RondoutBank.com

Check us out on Facebook!

999

Vehicles Wanted

Kingston • West Hurley • Hyde Park

(845) 331-0073 • www.RondoutBank.com

950

Animals

Look who’s at Saugerties Animal Shelter! We have such loving adult cats just waiting to become part of your family. TIGER; medium hair tiger cat boy, is very sweet & would be happiest in a home without dogs. GRACE & GABE are siblings. They’re gray & white short-hair kitties.

You must have a checking or savings account with Rondout Savings Bank to use SPIN. Transfers of funds can only be sent to accounts opened and located in the US. International transfers of funds cannot be conducted through SPIN.

GISELLE, also gray & white, is Grace’s & Gabe’s mother. How lovely would it be to adopt the whole family! MISHU; orange medium hair kitty. Mishu needs to be the only pet. That means Mishu would love only you! SAVANNAH; loving medium hair tiger girl who could bring so much joy to your home. If you’re interested in adopting a kitten or two, this is a perfect time to meet the adorable & lively kittens at Saugerties Animal Shelter. DOGS who are at Saugerties

Animal Shelter. Please come meet them and see who could be your new love. CHARLOTTE; Brindle Pittie mix girl who loves people. Children will enjoy growing up with Charlotte. Charlotte needs to be your only pet. LACY; tan Pittie mix girl who loves people & prefers to be the only pet. ROCKY; Sheltie/Border Collie mix boy, is very sweet, good with dogs, loves peoples & loves to herd cats. He is part Border Collie!! Saugerties Animal Shelter, 1765 Route 212

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

Help keep local journalism strong The business of media is changing, but local, on-the-ground, fact-checked journalism is needed now more than ever. hudsonvalleyone.com/support

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