Almanac Weekly #51 2019

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

A miscellany of Hudson Valley art, adventure and ideas | Calendar & Classifieds | Issue 51 | Dec. 19 – 26

Happy Holidays DION OGUST | ALMANAC WEEKLY


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

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MOVIE

NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL

They’re back again, most of them: those fascinating English kids ďŹ rst introduced to us in the 1964 Granada Television documentary 7 Up and brought back to our attention at sevenyear intervals ever since, in what is probably the best-known, most inuential longitudinal study of human sociology ever captured onscreen.

End of story? Perhaps for the last time, 63 Up revisits 14 famous ordinary British schoolchildren

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hey’re back again, most of them: those fascinating English kids first introduced to us in the 1964 Granada Television documentary 7 Up and brought back to our attention at seven-year intervals ever since, in what is probably the best-known, most influential longitudinal study of human sociology ever captured onscreen. Currently playing at Upstate Films, 63 Up finds Michael Apted – director of the series since its second installment, 7 Plus Seven (1970) – checking back in with all of the original 14 subjects who still want to be involved with the project. There are a few surprises, but for the most part, these are the same no-longer-young Britons we’ve come to know and love over the decades. Conceived by a Canadian director named Paul Almond, with Apted at first an assistant who screened 7-yearolds to participate, 7 Up and its sequels were originally intended to demonstrate how the rigid British caste system

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predetermines the life paths and future successes of children from differing socioeconomic backgrounds. The Jesuit proverb, “Give me a child until he is 7 and I will show you the man,� was the precept invoked at the start. And in the cases of the four kids from more affluent families, being tracked to attend prestigious institutions of secondary education

certainly took them far on the road to good jobs (mostly in law) and material success. But even the most annoyingly privileged of the 7-year-olds, John, turns out to have a more convoluted and challenging life story than we would have expected – and of the adult participants asked for their opinion of Brexit in 63 Up, he’s the one who condemns it most sharply.

408 Main Street, Rosendale • rosendaletheatre.org

HARRIET, THURSDAY 12/19, 1pm + 7:15pm JOJO RABBIT, FRIDAY 12/20 - MONDAY

12/23, & THURSDAY 12/26, 7:15pm. THUR, 1pm 42ND STREET: THE MUSICAL, SUNDAY 12/22, 2pm, $12/$10

A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD, FRIDAY 12/27 - MONDAY 12/30 & THUR 1/02, 7:15pm. THUR, 1pm GREAT ART ON SCREEN: TINTORETTO: A REBEL IN VENICE, SUN 12/29, 2pm, $12/15 FANTASTIC FUNGI (Happy New Year!), TUESDAY 12/31, 7:15pm. $12/$10 DANCE FILM SUNDAY: MARTHA GRAHAM: DANCE ON FILM, SUN 1/12, 7:15pm, $12/15 845.658.8989 MOVIES $8 MEMBERS $6

What the Up series has unfolded, decade after decade, is a montage of lives in which individual choices, variables of health and dumb luck, as much as inherited wealth, have shaped their outcomes in meaningful ways. The kids who seemed at first most doomed to end up in prison (Tony) or on the dole forever (Paul and Symon) turned out reasonably well, with steady work and supportive families. Two who got off to bright starts were sidelined by disabilities: Jackie by rheumatoid arthritis and Neil by clinical depression – although the latter is no longer the homeless man he was in his 20s, but a sometime elected district councillor and current church elder. One of our erstwhile children now faces throat cancer; another has died since 56 Up. I’ll let you find out which on your own. One interesting factor that has become clearer over time is that sex, as much as social class if not more, has played a major role in determining the life arcs of these people. To a man, the boys who succeeded against the odds credit their (often second) wives for keeping them focused, confident and on an even keel. The women were more likely to marry too young, have those marriages fail and then soldier on as single mothers. Apted

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Fri & Sat at 7:10 & 9:35 (3D), Sat & Sun Mat at 2:00, Sun, Mon, Wed, Thurs at 7:30

StarWars: The Rise of Skywalker Starts Wed, 12/25 - Little Women (PG) Closed Tuesday 12/24

(PG-13)


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

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plans. Feisty Jackie in particular continues to hold the director accountable for his past patronizing tone toward the women. Looking ahead toward the future and the fortunes of their own children, the study subjects frequently note that the British system, while more tolerant of diversity, has become tougher in recent decades, particularly with regard to government-funded social support systems such as the National Health Service and council housing being cut back or eliminated altogether. One predicts that the generation of kids being raised today will be the first in a century or more to have a worse standard of living than their parents. He’s hardly the first to make this observation, but as part of a long-running group sociology experiment, his words bear considerable weight. Will there be a 70 Up? And if so, how many of these adorable/infuriating former kids will be still around, still lucid, still articulate? Apted himself is now 78. So, 63 Up may well turn out to be the final installment in this groundbreaking documentary series. Even if you’re new to it, it’s well-worth an investment of two-and-a-half hours of your time to experience these bittersweet glimpses into 14 ordinary, transcendent human lives. – Frances Marion Platt

SHOP

LOCAL

&

WIN!!!

WIN a $50 Gift Certificate to: FRANCESCO MASTALIA

Uncle Skallywag is the latest collection of poems by Shivastan’s proprietor, tantric Buddhist/Hindu yogi, anthropologist, archivist, artist, photographer, publisher and poet Shiv Mirabito

BOOK

SHIVASTAN PRESS HOSTS SOLSTICE BOOK-RELEASE PARTY IN WOODSTOCK

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Mirabai of Woodstock

he Woodstock Shivastan Bookshop and Art Gallery is hosting a Winter Solstice Gathering and book-release party this Saturday evening, touting two new limited-edition Shivastan Press titles – both with handcrafted covers and printed on handmade lokta paper in Kathmandu. One is the second edition of Breathe by the Los Angeles-based poet India Radfar, originally published in 2004. “Written after my son was born and two years after my father died, this book is based on a dream I had in which my father told me to ‘cherish breath,’” says the author. “It is a one-sided conversation with my father about what it means to be alive and what it means to be gone from this world.” The other new release, titled Uncle Skallywag, is the latest collection of poems by Shivastan’s proprietor, tantric Buddhist/Hindu yogi, anthropologist, archivist, artist, photographer, publisher and poet Shiv Mirabito. Based in Woodstock most of the year, Mirabito takes off each winter to spend four months in India and Nepal, so this event is also a sort of going-away party. Hot tea and snacks will be on offer, along with some unusual gift-shopping opportunities at Shiv’s Pop-Up Shop: thousands of new, used and rare books, art, antiques and crafts, including jewelry that Mirabito designs. After the Solstice, the shop will be packed up until the spring. The Winter Solstice Gathering & Shiv’s Going Away Book-Release Party runs from 4 to 8 p.m. this Saturday, December 21. The bookshop is the bright orange cabin in back of the driveway at 6 Hillcrest Avenue in Woodstock.

Spirit World Guidance for New Year w/psychic medium Adam Bernstein Wed. Jan 1 2-4PM $20/$25*

Winter Solstice Gathering & Shiv’s Going Away Book-Release Party, Saturday, Dec. 21, 4-8 p.m., Shivastan Bookshop & Art Gallery, 6 Hillcrest Ave., Woodstock, http://www.shivastan.com/

*Lower price for early reg./pre-payment made at least 48 hrs. in advance

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

Reiki Healing Sessions w/Reiki master Maureen Brennan-Mercier Tues. Jan 7 12-5PM

$75

(Call for appt.)

Karmic Clearing & Shamanic Reiki Healing Sessions w/Jenn Bergeron Wed. Jan 8 12-6PM $75 (Call for appt.)

Open 7 Days • 11 to 7 himself has expressed regret that he didn’t include more than four girls in the original sample. And by young womanhood,

those girls were pushing back against his tendency to ask them questions about their boyfriends instead of their career

23 Mill Hill Road • Woodstock, NY (845) 679-2100 • www.mirabai.com

Bare Furniture Catskill Rose Center for Therapeutic Massage Chops Crafts People Crystal Connections Early Terrible Emerson Gilded Carriage Glo Spa Handmade Health & Nutrition Center Historic Red Hook Diner Isabella’s Movita Dance Mudd Club The Nest Egg October Country Oriole 9 Paradise Emporium Pilates of New Paltz PopCulture Collectibles Postmark Books The Pub Rosendale WaxWorks Candles & Soaps Scarborough Fare Story’s Nursery Town & Country Liquors Wallkill View Farm The Wine Hutch Woodstock Art Exchange Woodstock Golf Club Woodstock Healing Arts

And many more still joining the Shop Local Extravaganza!!!!! Send us a picture of you shopping local or a copy of your receipt.

Many winners each week between now and the end of the year.

You can enter each week!!! Email: info@ulsterpublishing.com Mail: PO Box 3329, Kingston, NY 12402 Text: 845-332-0175 Include name and contact information!

Thank you for shopping local!


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MUSIC Hamilton’s Lexi Lawson plays the Falcon in Marlboro on Monday Musical theater star and Newburgh native Lexi Lawson presents a selection of Christmas classics at the Falcon on Monday, December 23. The Newburgh Free Academy graduate is best-known for performing in the role of Eliza in the generational box-office smash Hamilton. She has also appeared on Broadway in Rent and In the Heights and is currently featured in the Lifetime Movie Original Always and Forever Christmas. A portion of the night’s proceeds will go to the Ryan McElroy Children’s Cancer Foundation. Per usual at the Falcon, there is no cover charge, but generous donation commensurate with this level of programing is strongly encouraged. Lexi Lawson Monday, Dec. 23, 7 p.m. By donation The Falcon 1348 Rt. 9W, Marlboro www.liveatthefalcon.com

Tom Pacheco performs Peace Concert in Rosendale on Saturday About this time each year, singer/ songwriter Tom Pacheco designates a local appearance as a “Peace Concert.” Not that he’s unconcerned with it in all the rest of his shows, but it has something

ALMANAC WEEKLY editor contributors

calendar manager classifieds

MUSIC

Sing along with Handel’s Messiah on Saturday at the Bardavon

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n the region’s many stages, it’s the time of year for performances of The Nutcracker, A Christmas Carol, TubaChristmas…and yes, Georg Frideric Handel’s spectacular oratorio, the Messiah (HWV 56). On Saturday afternoon, December 21, the Bardavon 1869 Opera House will be hosting the Hudson Valley Philharmonic (now celebrating its 60th anniversary season) and guest vocalists from Cappella Festiva, whose artistic director Christine Howlett will serve as guest conductor. There will be a total of 140 instrumentalists and singers on the Bardavon stage, and in the time-honored Messiah tradition, audience members will be invited to sing along – especially when they get to the famous “Hallelujah Chorus.” The featured soloists for this Messiah performance are soprano Katherine Whyte, tenor Dann Coakwell, baritone Tyler Duncan and mezzo-soprano Christina English. Maestro Howlett and members of the orchestra will be on hand one hour before the 2 p.m. concert to give a pre-concert talk for all ticketholders. Howlett is the director of Choral Activities at Vassar College, where she conducts the Vassar College Women’s Chorus and Vassar College Choir, and also co-founded the Summer Choral Festival at Vassar College and the Cappella Festiva Treble Choir. Ticket prices for Handel’s Messiah start at $26. They can be purchased at the Bardavon box office at 35 Market Street in Poughkeepsie, (845) 473-2072; the Ulster Performing Arts Center box office at 601 Broadway in Kingston, (845) 339-6088; or via Ticketmaster at (800) 745-3000 or www1.ticketmaster.com/event/00005693AAE659B2. Handel’s Messiah, Saturday, Dec. 21, 2 p.m., $26+, Bardavon 1869 Opera House, 35 Market St., Poughkeepsie, (845) 4732072, www.ticketmaster.com

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.

to do with the holiday time of year, when the yearning for understanding in the

world comes to the fore, and perhaps for a moment, all seems possible. It is then that Pacheco seeks to grab a tangible moment and promote this most elusive concept by applying song as balm for the soul. As has been tradition in recent years, the show will be at the venerable Rosendale

CUBAN ART AT

ULSTER SAVINGS BANK IN PHOENICIA www.art-from-cuba.com

Cafe (434 Main Street) at 8 p.m. Saturday, December 21. Pacheco will look back on his 27 albums of original material, and through his two foot high, thousand page stack of notebooks for songs he has forgotten or misplaced; for gems that are undiscovered; for favorites of his followers, like the one about hijacker D.B. Cooper or the busboy who handed his Rosary beads to the fallen RFK; for songs about the hungry, outlaws, the gentle and ferocious; songs about the land and sea, about time and its toll. He’ll be accompanied by Brian Hollander on guitar and Dobro.


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MUSIC

ALEXA TARANTINO HEADLINES SEASONAL BIRD TRIBUTE IN WOODSTOCK ON SATURDAY

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ext year brings with it Charlie “Yardbird” Parker’s 100th birthday. Kicking off the commemoration celebrations a little early – this Saturday, in fact – is award-winning, vibrant young jazz saxophonist Alexa Tarantino. She’s gathering a quintet of today’s top women in jazz to perform a program titled Seasonal Bird, highlighting the iconic bebop recordings and repertoire of the holiday season. Other greats of the genre, such as Ella Fitzgerald, Dexter Gordon and Dizzy Gillespie, will also get a Santahatted nod. Sponsored by the Catskill Jazz Factory and hosted by the Woodstock Playhouse at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, December 21, Seasonal Bird: A Very Charlie Parker Holiday will feature Alita Moses on vocals, Nadje Noordhuis on trumpet, Liya Grigoryan on piano, Noriko Ueda on bass and Allison Miller on drums, fronted by Alexa Tarantino on sax and woodwinds. Founder of Massachusetts’ Rockport Jazz Workshop and currently on the faculty for Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Youth Programs, Tarantino has worked with Wynton Marsalis & the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, Darcy James Argue’s Photo of Alexa Tarantino by Tory Williams Secret Society, Cécile McLorin Salvant’s Ogresse, Arturo O’Farrill & the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra, Sherrie Maricle & the Diva Jazz Orchestra, LSAT and the Alexa Tarantino Quartet. Her debut quartet record on the Posi-Tone Records label, Winds of Change, came out in May of this year. Ticket prices for Season Bird range from $40 to $55 for adults, $15 for children plus handling fee. To purchase, call (845) 679-6900 or visit www.woodstockplayhouse.org/seasonalbird. To learn more about Alexa Tarantino’s oeuvre, visit www. alexatarantino.com. Seasonal Bird, Saturday, Dec. 21, 7:30 p.m., $55/$45/$40/$15+, Woodstock Playhouse, 103 Mill Hill Rd., Woodstock, (845) 679-6900, www.woodstockplayhouse.org/seasonalbird

Admission is $15. The Rosendale Cafe doesn’t take reservations, so plan on an early entry. For more information, see rosendalecafe.com or call (845) 658-9048.

Perrotta/Marotta play BSP on Friday Not only is it a lot of fun to say, but “Perrotta/Marotta” makes an awful lot of sense, too. The Perrotta in question, Sarah, is inarguably one of the very first – at one time perhaps the only—mid-Hudson Valley writing and performing artist to embrace the challenge of song-oriented, modern, progressive, ambient and experimental pop/rock, here in the land of barns and roots. It started long ago with her duo Outloud Dreamer, an arresting fusion of jazziness and luminous art song. She has continued to mine that mode and refine that voice, and frankly, our scene has finally caught up to it. The new material she has previewed at recent shows sounds like her best to date. The Marotta of course is the legendary drummer Jerry, who has played with pretty much everybody, but most pertinent to this discussion is his radical work as the featured percussionist on

the first four Peter Gabriel solo albums – albums that defined a new way of arty ensemble playing (the third record in particular) and that established a musical dialect from which Sarah Perrotta has drawn across her entire career. Their names rhyme. They perform together. They are recording Sarah’s new album together at the storied Dreamland Studio, where Marotta has been presiding for a number of years. Joining them at BSP on Friday, December 20 is the lush indierock band Sveet, a new project formed by members of local favorites the Pleasers and former members of Perrotta’s band. Tickets cost $10 in advance, $12 on the day of the show. – John Burdick Perrotta/Marotta Friday, Dec. 20, 8 p.m., $12/$10

BSP, 323 Wall St., Kingston www.bspkingston.com

New Year’s Camp, Dance & Dinner at Ashokan Center If there were a Best of the Hudson Valley award for Most Amazing Way to Spend New Year’s Eve, surely the Ashokan Center’s annual dance wingding would sit high on the list of candidates. Participants who come for the entire New Year’s Camp “weekend” – this year extending from 3 p.m. on Sunday, December 29 to 1 p.m. on Wednesday, January 1 – get to party as late as they want on the night of the 31st without having to worry about drunk drivers. Bookending that high-octane

New Year’s Eve Dance & Dinner Party are days of music and dance classes, evening dance parties, sing-alongs and jams. The food is healthy and amazing, and if you don’t lose more weight than you gain by stuffing yourself, you’re clearly not jitterbugging enough – and not for lack of opportunity. You can also come for the NYE Dance & Dinner alone, of course. The 6 p.m. fourcourse dinner is followed at 8 p.m. by couple dancing and called dances in two rooms ’til the wee hours, with a midnight countdown and more dancing in the upstairs Zydeco Lounge. Your dance style choices include swing, Cajun, Zydeco, contras, squares, blues and waltzes, with red-hot music to propel you, supplied by Jay Ungar & Molly Mason with Swingology, Christine Balfa & Balfa Toujours, the Russet Trio and Zydegroove. Casey Carr and John Krumm are the callers. Various packages are available to attend all or part of the long weekend’s activities. For schedules and fees and to register, visit https://ashokancenter.org/new-yearscamp-2020. For the NYE Dance & Dinner only ($30 for the dance for adults, $15 for youth aged 5 to 25, $30 extra for dinner), visit www.eventbrite.com/e/new-years-evedinner-dance-2020-tickets-82382234481. – Frances Marion Platt

Rubblebucket to perform in back room at BSP in Kingston The Brooklyn-based art-pop/indierock band Rubblebucket is still riding a wave of critical praise for their 2018 release Sun Machine, described by Paste Magazine as a fun, danceable breakup album. Although Kalmia Traver (lead vocals, tenor/baritone saxophones, flute) and Alex Toth (trumpet, backing vocals, flute, percussion) are no longer a couple, they’re still touring busily together. They’ll be stopping in for a show in the Back Room Theater at BSP on Monday, December 30, with Guerilla Toss opening. The show begins at 8 p.m. and the doors open at 7:30. Tickets cost $20 in advance, $25 at the door. Advance tickets can be ordered online at http://bit.ly/RubblebucketBSP or in person (cash only) at Outdated, Rocket Number Nine, Jack’s Rhythms, Darkside Records and the Woodstock Music Shop. For more info, visit http://bspkingston.com/event/rubblebucket.

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

1348 Route 9W, Marlboro, NY 12542

(845) 236-7970

~The Setting~ Beautiful, Streamside, Uniquely Woodstock

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ADAPTED BY JOE LANDRY

FROM THE SCREENPLAY BY FRANCES GOODRICH, ALBERT HACKETT, FRANK CAPRA & JO SWERLING

DIRECTED BY BRENDAN BURKE PERFORMANCES: FRIDAY AT 7PM, SATURDAY AT 2PM & 7PM, SUNDAY AT 2PM & 7PM

DECEMBER 6 - 22

157 Canal St., Ellenville

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


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Ask a

naturalist

Birds are disappearing at an alarming rate while porcupines and fishers are making a comeback

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n Ask a Naturalist, we direct the attention of our esteemed experts to the local animal environment. Some take on topics of seasonal interest. Others address issues of wildlife population and ecosystem crisis. The goal of these columns is to satisfy and to inspire curiosity, but also to attune the larger community to the uncommonly rich biodiversity for which the midHudson Valley is famous. – John Burdick According to a recent article in the journal Science, if you were alive in the year 1970, more than one in four birds in the US and Canada has disappeared within your lifetime. What’s happening, and which birds are most in danger? The first time I saw a rusty blackbird – a black bird with a rusty mantle and a haunting white eye – my friend Peter said, “Look closely: This is a bird that will be extinct in your lifetime.” I took in my surroundings in the Tivoli Bays – a lush habitat filled with birds – and didn’t want to believe him. The bird and its flock were so full of vibrant life. Yet Peter might be right: The rusty blackbird has seen a decline of 89 percent in the past few decades. The rusty blackbird is not the only bird in decline. A recent article in Science magazine reports that three billion birds have vanished since 1970. And it’s not just the rare birds, but common ones as well, from sparrows and finches to the starling. Another way to think of this is that when I was nine years old, there were 25 percent more birds out there singing and winging about. Often the reasons for a species’ decline is a bit mysterious, but we do know some of the reasons, and top of the list is habitat loss, particularly where birds breed. Those habitats that are hardest hit are grasslands, which hold many of our sparrows as well as birds like the meadowlark, and boreal forests, where many birds, including warblers, breed. Bird species have gone down in all habitats except wetlands (which could be due in part to the interest in duck hunting and the effort as a result to protect these habitats). There are other causes for bird population decline: outdoor cats (which kill between 1.4 and 3.7 billion birds a year), collisions with windows (365 to 988 million a year) and pesticides. It was the pesticide DDT that brought the bald eagle and other raptors to the brink of extinction. Thanks to the research and writings of Rachel Carson, we eliminated DDT from our ecosystem and the eagles are back; the one family of birds that is thriving, according to the study in Science, is our raptors. Other families that are not in decline are vireos, gnatcatchers, ducks and geese and turkey. This shows that if we change our ways – let our grasslands grow and keep our cats indoors – we can turn around these declines. And maybe the rusty blackbird won’t go extinct. – Susan Fox Rogers Board member, John Burroughs

PHOTO OF FISHER AT MOHONK PRESERVE’S COXING KILL BY DAVID JOHNSON

Fishers are missing from most picture books featuring “classic” woodland animals – most likely because they are only recently making a comeback in the lower 48 states after having been overhunted for their pelts. Thanks to many state agencies’ reintroduction programs, they are back and doing very well.

Natural History Society http://jbnhs.org Are porcupines making a comeback here? I have a special fondness for porcupines, and I will forever associate them with the Shawangunk Ridge. When I first moved to this area in October 2015, I was eager to get out into the woods and start learning about the local flora and fauna. On my second day in my new town, I took a walk on Mohonk Preserve’s Overcliff/Undercliff loop. I passed a couple going in the other direction who warned me to be careful, because they had just seen a porcupine up ahead. Delighted, I quietly continued along the carriage road and came to a spot next to a jumble of boulders where a porcupine stood, minding its own business. It didn’t seem at all concerned by my presence, and why should it? Its heavy coating of sharp quills provides a great defense against most predators. I stood and watched the animal for several minutes, enthralled, until it eventually waddled off into the boulder pile. This wasn’t my first porcupine encounter, and it wouldn’t be my last, but it’s one of my favorites. Now whenever I see porcupines it brings back a little bit of the joy from my first days here in the Shawangunks. Since then, I’ve learned that porcupines have made a remarkable comeback in our forests. Today, the Shawangunk Ridge looks very different than it did a century ago. Early European settlers cleared much of the land for farming, eliminating the thick forests that animals like porcupines need for food and shelter. Animals that

JOHN MIZEL

As porcupines maneuver to mate, the male covers the female with his urine. Presumably the pheromones present help boost her fertility and increase the chance of conception.

we now take for granted, like white-tailed deer, were rare or absent altogether. As agriculture on the Ridge subsided, the forests returned, and so did many of the original animal inhabitants. Indeed, one of the most interesting records on file in the Daniel Smiley Research Center’s natural history records database sheds light on this. An observation recorded by Daniel Smiley, Jr. reads: “A. K. Smiley, Jr. saw one on Woodland Drive at Lake Shore Path 9-11-1930 Mohonk Lake, NY… He was not apparently foraging but headed somewhere. He passed within about two feet of [Keith] paying no attention to him. As far as I know this is the first record here.” It isn’t surprising that Keith Smiley’s

encounter with this porcupine happened in autumn, as this is when the normally solitary animals begin to look for mates. Females are only fertile for a very short time – sometimes only a few hours – each year. To improve her chances of finding a mate, she spreads a trail of urine as she wanders widely through her territory. Males are attracted by the pheromones in her urine and use the scent to track her. Porcupines have a complex mating ritual involving noise and teeth clacking, and things get stranger from there – at least by human standards! As the two animals maneuver to mate, the male covers the female with his urine. Presumably the pheromones present help boost her fertility and increase the chance of


Dec. 19, 2019

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

sources they utilize during milder weather are low to the ground, and less available under even a few inches of snow. Nature, however, has endowed these ruminants with a very useful adaptation: In the wintertime, they switch their digestive system, based on leaves and seeds, to twigs and buds, which are above instead of below the snow. Deep snow, while difficult to navigate, can also offer them protection from wind and cold, especially when they yard up, packing down the snow and hunkering together. Deer, however, can experience starvation if the snow gets too deep or develops an icy crust. Most people don’t appreciate the fact that harsh winters are far more effective in culling the herd than hunting. So instead of grousing about having to shovel all this “white stuff,” let’s think about the amazing adaptations that our animal neighbors must utilize to survive the extreme cold and snow of winter. – Ann Guenther Regular contributor, Bluestone Press Former educator/naturalist, Mohonk Preserve

ANDY REAGO & CHRISSY MCCLARREN

The rusty blackbird has seen a decline of 89 percent in the past few decades. The rusty blackbird is not the only bird in decline. A recent article in Science magazine reports that three billion birds have vanished since 1970.

TUCHODI

Nature has endowed these ruminants with a very useful adaptation: In the wintertime, they switch their digestive system, based on leaves and seeds, to twigs and buds, which are above instead of below the snow.

conception. Porcupines have other unusual traits, including their reddish-orange teeth. Like all rodents, a porcupine’s teeth grow continuously throughout its life and get sharpened and worn down by gnawing on tree bark or even bones. Their teeth have to be very strong to withstand all this gnawing, and that’s where the color comes in. That color is actually iron oxide in the enamel of their teeth, which helps keep them strong. You may be lucky enough to see the handiwork of these orange teeth if you have these animals living near you. Look at tree trunks and branches in wintertime when the leaves are off the trees. Porcupines often strip the bark off trees as they gnaw on wood and eat leaves and stems. – Elizabeth Long Director of Conservation Science Mohonk Preserve www.mohonkpreserve.org Snow: Bane or boon to local wildlife? While conducting an informal survey with neighbors and friends about

the recent heavy snow, I found, not surprisingly, that some hated snow, others loved it and many were mixed. The latter explained that, although they disliked driving and shoveling on snowy days, they felt that snow wasn’t all that bad – and often beautiful. Within the animal world, it’s also a mixed bag. Russian scientist A. N. Formozov actually created three categories of animals’ relationships with snow: those that love snow, those that hate it and those that tolerate it. Some of the snow-haters, mainly birds, have developed the ultimate solution: They leave! They migrate to warmer climes. Lovers of snow, like the lynx and snowshoe hare, hang out to the north of us, where snow is abundant. But let’s consider our local tolerators of snow, and how they adapt. Many of those able to succeed in winter depend on the insulating characteristics of snow. Recently, I went out on a chilly, 25-degree day, put a thermometer under the snow and found that the temperature was in the mid-30s! The ground was not only not frozen, but was actually muddy.

Local excavators inform us that no matter how cold it gets, if there is adequate snow, the ground below rarely freezes. This is also a boon for the small four-leggeds, such as mice, voles and shrews, who can still excavate their tunnels during chilly winters. While digging, they’re also able to munch on seeds, bits of foliage, plus any stray insects. And when the snow melts, we notice their surface tunnels crisscrossing our lawns. Most of this activity transpires while these small mammals are safely hidden from their aerial predators. Certainly, these little ones are much more secure when there is good snow cover for most of the season. Birds of prey, on the other hand, often “dance with starvation” when their food sources are obscured by snow. Despite the mammals’ protection from raptors, snow is no protection from the voracious weasel, who adapts by turning snow-white in the wintertime. But nature cursed it with a black tail tip that can attract its own predators. Our white-tailed deer have a complex relationship with snow. Most of the food

What is a fisher? Should I call it a fisher cat? I was recently in front of a class of first-graders, excited to soon be walking in the forest behind their school. We were running through a list of animals that we might find signs of in the forest. Bear elicited squeals of excitement. Coyote too. When I got to fisher, there were blank stares. I wasn’t surprised. They are missing from most picture books featuring “classic” woodland animals – most likely because they are only recently making a comeback in the lower 48 states after having been overhunted for their pelts. Thanks to many state agencies’ reintroduction programs, they are back and doing very well. They are expert hunters and very adaptable, which is allowing them to carve a niche once again in our ecosystems. In our area – in fact, behind the kids’ school – I have seen evidence that they will actively vie for territory with much larger predators. A coyote marked the middle of a hiking trail with a pile of scat, and a fisher very carefully deposited scat on top, covering it in a circular pattern like a swirl of frosting on a cupcake. “Fisher cat” is what many people call them, but they don’t fish and they’re not cats. They’re in the family Mustelidae (weasels), which includes mink, badgers and otters. I’ve heard some say the cat part came from their catlike screech, which is terrifying. But “cat” comes from early American immigrants noticing their similarity to the European polecat, which also went by “fitch.” So, it’s not wrong to call them fisher cats, just possibly misleading. I prefer to leave the “cat” off. So, what do they look like? They have dark fur, long, sleek bodies and a long tail. Full-grown males can be four feet long, although almost half of this is tail. Females are smaller. They make homes for raising young in trees. Old forests are important to them. In fact, to help fishers out where there aren’t many old trees with hollow cavities, some biologists are installing fisher boxes. (These do quite well.) To help them descend trees quickly, headfirst, their hind feet swivel 180 degrees. This is handy when attacking a porcupine, which hides its vulnerable head against a tree. The fisher’s swivel feet and sharp claws let it hold onto the trunk while it attacks the head, eventually incapacitating it, flipping it over and fileting it. They have a preference for fresh meat; their scat is very dark from blood and doesn’t tend to have much fur. Besides porcupines, they enjoy rabbits and other small mammals. These ferocious predators will even attack a grey fox that is easily their size. So, keep an eye out for signs of this resourceful, fierce underdog (undercat?). – Julie Seyfert-Lillis Director, Mill Brook Preserve www.millbrookpreserve.org


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

NIGHT SKY

Ring around the Sun The magnificent 22-degree halo

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et’s watch the sky. We will focus on one common and one rare sky phenomenon. The rare one is the stunning CZA, an “upside-down rainbow” whose colors are often astoundingly intense. And even more amazing than its brilliance is its positioning: A CZA can only appear overhead! While actual rainbows are never high up, the CZA is never low down. The preferred time is when the Sun is about 20 degrees high, which nowadays means around 10 a.m. and then again around 2 p.m. But it often materializes a full hour from those times. You’ll always remember the experience if you spy the CZA once. So, whenever the sky is mostly clear, but has thin or barely-there high clouds, look straight up. Then slowly move your eyes downward in the direction of the Sun. Bingo: There are the spectral colors forming a “smile” rather than a rainbow’s “frown.” They’ll always pop out better through sunglasses. The full name is the circumzenithal arc. Around here, it probably appears once a month. But now consider the most common dramatic apparition of the day or night: It’s the 22-degree halo. Seen encircling the Sun or the Moon, a halo is bigger than people remember or expect. In our area, they typically appear at least once a week. What’s that? You haven’t seen one in years? That’s because you don’t look up very often. The optimum time is whenever the sky has delicate high-altitude cirrus clouds, or else thin sheets of high cirrostratus. Both are semi-transparent clouds made of ice crystals rather than water droplets. If you simply look up from time to time, you’ll easily see when the clouds are thin and high. Then look around the Sun. Or Moon. The present cold season offers a profusion of ice-crystal phenomena, but the halo – with red always on the inside of the ring – is commonplace. And the ring is always the same size.

Written in stone The surprising career of Pine Hill’s scientist/philanthropist Henry Morton

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magine it’s 1856. You’re a very bright and promising 20-year-old man from a family of comfortable means who is attending a prestigious university where your father happens to be a trustee. What do you choose to do with your leisure time? Join a fraternity where pledges have to go through a hazing process that involves pain and humiliation? Not Henry Morton. He did something remarkably ambitious and outside-the-box with his talents and the privileges that came his way. It seems that the University of Pennsylvania had recently been gifted a plaster cast of the Rosetta Stone, which at that point had not been fully translated into English. Some of the Egyptian characters had not been defined, even by experts in that field. So young Morton – whose academic gifts were primarily in art and the sciences, not languages – and two of his college buddies from a student organization called the Philomathean Society, Charles R. Hale and S. Huntington Jones, took it upon themselves to finish the job. It took them two years, but they did it – for fun, or for

the intellectual challenge. In 1858, as recent graduates, they published their findings in a gorgeous book, which Morton illustrated by drawing directly on stone: Report of the Committee Appointed by the Philomathean Society of the University of Pennsylvania to Translate the Inscription on the Rosetta Stone, the first complete and direct translation of the Greek, demotic and hieroglyphic inscriptions into English – and also the first American book to be printed entirely by lithography. They printed 400 copies, some of which survive (you can view a digitized copy here: https://bit. ly/2Pup3wb). Not bad for a senior project!

Dec. 19, 2019

Maximally spread open your hand and hold it out at arm’s length, and close one eye. If you place your thumb at the Sun, your pinky-tip will mark the position of the halo: Count on it. Folklore says that such a ring around the Sun or Moon portends the arrival of a storm within 24 hours. There’s truth to that. A frontal system that may bring rain or BOB BERMAN snow typically starts by The 22-degree halo over Phoenicia earlier this month. Note the shoving high-altitude parhelia, or sun dogs. clouds over us: the cold ice-crystal clouds. Although it may be a glancing blow with no rain, these cirrus clouds usually give way to lower-altitude clouds, and then even lower and thicker ones that actually deliver the precipitation. The timeframe is indeed 24 hours or less. Next time you see a halo, look at the right and leftmost edges, at the 3 and 9 o’clock positions, and look for a bright spot at either place. Yes, that’s a sundog, or parhelion. The two require the plural: parhelia. Next, look at the top of the halo and see if there’s a sort of bowl-shaped phenomenon balancing there. If so, you’ve now observed the upper tangent arc. It’s unique in that it changes its appearance depending on how high up the Sun is. This can begin the habit of routinely watching the sky, which ultimately will uncover a universe of colorful phenomena. Some are very rare; I’ve only seen the parhelic circle twice in my life, and only once saw a vivid moonbow: a rainbow created by moonlight. The CZA is rare enough to be truly exciting, too. But it all usually starts with the most common of them all: the 22-degree halo. – Bob Berman Want to know more? To read Bob’s previous columns, visit our Almanac Weekly website at HudsonValleyOne.com.

his life, once settled in at Stevens, he spent his summers in the Catskills, purchasing a grand “cottage” on Birch Creek Road in Pine Hill. His philanthropy extended to his new community: Morton endowed a number of small local projects, primarily roads and stonearched bridges. And In 1870 Henry Morton (left) became the first president of the in 1897 he established newly founded Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, New the community ’s Jersey . In 1897, he established Pine Hill’s first library. first library; when it Henry Morton was valedictorian of outgrew its original building, he made plans to build a fine new one on the west side of his class, wrote original poetry for his graduation speech, went on to study law Elm Street, just south of Route 28. but quickly switched to a career in physics Henry Morton died in 1902, the year before it was finished, but the library named and chemistry, with a particular interest in for him still stands. Built in the Georgian the properties of fluorescence. In the early days of photography, he followed solar Revival style, the one-and-a-half-story eclipses across the map to capture them rectangular limestone structure features on plates. He served on the US Lighthouse a red slate roof wrapped in a broad frieze Board, conducting investigations on fog and denticulated cornice supported by Ionic signals, electric lighting, fire extinguishers columns, with a brick chimney, two gabled and illuminating buoys. He taught at the dormer windows and a semicircular wing Episcopal Academy of Philadelphia and with a conical roof on its eastern side. Stacks and circulation desk occupy the main block the Franklin Institute, co-founded the Philadelphia Dental College in 1863 and and a reading room the east wing, with a by 1869 had taken over the chemistry fireplace in between and an iron spiral staircase leading to the attic. professorship at his alma mater. He experimented and published widely, and The Morton Memorial Library in Pine in 1874 was elected to membership in the Hill (not to be confused with the library National Academy of Sciences. of the same name in Rhinecliff, which is In 1870 Morton became the first president named after a different Morton) is open of the newly founded Stevens Institute of to the public Tuesday through Saturday. Technology in Hoboken, New Jersey and Hours vary from day to day; visit http:// used his own personal wealth to equip its pinehilllibrary.org for details to plan labs with steam engines, tools and electrical your visit. equipment. During the latter decades of – Frances Marion Platt

Church services

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Dec. 19, 2019

CALENDAR Plan your weekend: Each issue of Almanac Weekly is packed with local activities. It’s the best guide to Hudson Valley art, entertainment & adventure. We’ve printed this weekend’s events here, but if you'd like to read what’s happening during the workweek, visit our website at https://calendar. hudsonvalleyone.com/events.

Thursday

12/19

The Polar Express Train Ride. Take a magical trip to the North Pole while reading along with the classic children’s book. Santa and his Elves board the train add to the memories made on this unforgettable adventure. Call for ride times and availability. Runs Nov. 16-Dec. 28. Tickets & Info: 845-332-4854; catskillmountainrailroad. com/event/the-polar-express. Catskill Mountain Railroad (CMRR), Westbrook Lane Station, 55 Plaza Rd, Kingston. 9am-10am Woodstock Senior Senior Feel Good Fitness with Diane Collelo. All aspects of fitness: flexibility, balance, strength and aerobic capacity done to music from many decades that makes us feel like dancing. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 9:30am FDR Christmas Tours. See the FDR estate decorated for the holiday season. Open daily for tours at 9:30am, 11am, 1pm and 3pm. Info: 845-229-5320; nps.gov/hofr/index.htm. Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site, 4097 Albany Post Rd, Hyde Park. 10am-4pm Boscobel Holiday Tours. The mansion will be decorated for 19th-century holidays. Guides share stories of Yuletide traditions past. Boscobel House and Gardens, 1601 Route 9D, Garrison. boscobel.org/events/guided-housetours. 10am Vanderbilt Mansion Christmas Tours. See the Vanderbilt home decorated for the holiday season. Open daily for tours at 10:00, 12:00, 2:00, and 3:00. Info: 845-229-7770; nps.gov/vama/ index.htm. Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic

Site, Hyde Park. 10am-2pm Hooks & Needles, Yarns & Threads. Informal weekly social gathering for rug hookers, knitters, crocheters, and all other yarn crafters. Drop-in. Tivoli Free Library, Watts dePeyster Hall, 86 Broadway, Tivoli. Info: 845-757-3771, tivoliprograms@gmail.com, tivolilibrary.org/. Bring a snack to share. 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-3pm A Gilded Age Christmas. Enjoy lavish turn-of-the-century style holiday decorations while touring the mansion. Tickets: $8, $6/seniors & students, children 12 & under are free. Info: 845-889-8851; parks.ny.gov/historicsites/25/details.aspx. Staatsburg State Historic Site, 75 Mills Mansion Drive Rd 1, Staatsburg. 11am-1pm Holiday Open House at the Mesier Homestead. See the decorated downstairs rooms, full of candlelight & greenery. Self-guided tour. Docent available. Mesier Homestead, 2 Spring Street, Wappingers Falls. Info: 845-632-1281, christinaungar@wappingershistorical.org. Free. 11am-12pm Woodstock Senior Level One (Moderate) Yoga with Susan Blacker. Centering, warm-ups, posture flow, relaxation and meditation. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Mescal Hornbeck Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 12:15pm Fine Arts Recitals. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston.

1pm Val-Kill Christmas Tours. Come see the Val-Kill decorated for the holiday season. Open Thursday through Monday for tours at 1:00 and 3:00. Info: 845-229-9422; nps.gov/elro/index. htm. Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site, 54 Valkill Park Road, Hyde Park. 1pm-5pm Mount Gulian Historic Site Festive Holiday Tours. Unwind during the busy holiday season by joining us for a close-to-home, relaxing time of good cheer, good food and good company. The homestead’s rooms will be beautifully decorated in different holiday fashions. Tours leave on the hour between 1:00 & 4:00. Tickets: $8/ adult, $6/senior, $4/child. Info: 845-831-8172; mountgulian.org. Mount Gulian Historic Site, 145 Sterling Street, Beacon. 1pm-3pm Game and Card Day. Board games, Mah-jong and cards are available, or bring your own. Bring a friend or come and meet people. $1 donation suggested to cover cost of refreshments. Ongoing every Thursday. Red Hook Community Center, 59 Fisk St, Red Hook. 1pm-4pm Woodstock Senior Duplicate Bridge with John Stokes. The Woodstock Bridge Club offers a short lesson and a game of Duplicate Bridge. Sponsored by Woodstock Senior Recreation and open to Woodstock residents 55 and older. $1 donation. Woodstock Rescue Squad, 222 Tinker St, Woodstock. 1:30pm-3pm “Thursdays” Community Voice Ensemble with Debbie Lan. THURSDAYS, new weekly community voice ensemble directed by Debbie Lan. All genders welcome. No experience necessary. Unison Arts Center, 68 Mountain Rest Rd, New Paltz. Info: debbiemaxine@gmail.com, facebook.com/Thursday%20Voice. sliding scale available. 3pm-6pm Farm Hub Winter Market in Kingston. The Farm Hub is once again partnering with the Kingston YMCA Farm Project on the weekly winter market to make fresh produce available to Kingston and surrounding communities through the coldest months. Runs every Thursday. YMCA lobby, 507 Broadway, Kingston. hvfarmhub.org/ winter-production-ramps.

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3:30pm-6:30pm Free Math Tutoring. Algebra, Geometry, Precalculus, Trigonometry, and SAT/ ACT Prep. Call to sign up 845-255-1255. Meets every Thursday at 3:30pm. Gardiner Library, 133 Farmer’s Turnpike, Gardiner. MathTutoringwithMisha.com. Free.

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12:30pm-6pm I Ching Oracle and Tarot Readings with Timothy Liu. Every Thursday. Walkins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/30 minutes,.

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

4pm-5pm Merry-Go-Read. Geared toward ages 3-5 (siblings welcome)! Just as a carousel goes ‘round, pre-schoolers will take turns travelling from station to station. Clinton Community Library.

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 certi-

Have a Safe and Happy Holiday Season!

Dec. 19, 2019

fied 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. newpaltzclimateaction.org. 5:15pm Junior Rangers Girls Hockey League at

McCann Ice Arena. Junior Rangers Girls Hockey League at McCann Ice Arena @ the Mid-Hudson Civic Center. Majed J. Nesheiwat Convention Center, 14 Civic Center Plaza, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-454-5800, chance@icetimesports.org, midhudsonciviccenter.org. $395. 6pm Tech Time. Call the Library at 845-3387881 if you would like to reserve a spot or drop in for a fifteen-minute one-to-one session with a

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

Dec. 19, 2019 library staff member who will answer your general tech questions. Town of Ulster Public Library, 860 Ulster Ave., Kingston.

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11 6pm Wine Night - Thirsty Thursday. Celebrate every Thursday at Woodnotes Grille with the Wine Club! Enjoy 25% off all bottles of wine


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

and special selections from the cellar by the glass. Info: 845-688-2828; emersonresort.com. The Emerson Resort and Spa, 5340 Rt 28, Mt. Tremper. 6:30pm ECC- 3rd Thursday Nature Series. The Town of Rochester Environmental Conservation Commission presents a monthly series of speakers relating to nature, our local environment, recreation, agriculture, and beyond. The series will highlight the diverse ecosystems, communities, and ways people support and improve our beautiful valley. You may view the latest post at townofrochester.ny.gov/2019/11/18/ecc-3rd-thursdaynature-series-630pm/. Town of Rochester Town Hall, 50 Scenic Rd, Accord. 6:30pm-8pm Free Steps of Meditation. Weekly classes. Learn the fundamentals for an effective meditation experience. Info: 518-589-5000 or peacevillage@bkwsu.org. Peace Village Retreat Center, 54 O’Hara Rd, Haines Falls. bkwsu.org. 7pm-9pm Ulster County Civil War Round Table December Meeting. Ron Gabriele presents a program titled “The Second Battle Gettysburg – 1913” which tells the story of the 50th Anniversary Commemoration. In the Legislative Chambers. Free. Info: 518-821-6548; jcraig@gtel. net. Ulster County Office Building, 244 Fair St, Kingston. 7pm Harriet. The extraordinary tale of Harriet Tubman’s escape from slavery and transformation into one of America’s greatest heroes, whose courage, ingenuity, and tenacity freed hundreds of slaves and changed the course of history. PG-13. Info: 845-658-8989. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St, Rosendale. 7pm Seasonal Theme Night—Christmas, Hannukah, Solstice, Yule, Winter. Please come and share your favorite original or traditional Holiday-themed poem or spoken word piece. Seasonal refreshments will be provided. Free coffee served. Performers are limited to 8 minutes. Guest Host Tom Romeo. Green Kill, 229 Greenkill Avenue, Kingston. greenkill.org. 7pm-9pm 3rd Quadriannual Ulster County Grown-Up Spelling Bee. Rough Draft Bar & Books presents The 3rd Quadriannual Ulster County Grownup Spelling Bee! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-802-0027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 7pm-8pm Advent Bible Study. Incarnation. Emmanuel. God With Us. What does that even mean & how does it matter to us?”. Reformed Church of Saugerties, 173 Main St, Saugerties. Info: 845-246-2867, refsaug@yahoo.com, saugertiesreformed.org. 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 Christmastown: A Holiday Noir. A witty comedy follows a hard-boiled private eye, Nick Holiday, as he searches for the truth about Santa Claus. With some steamy leads from a vixen of an elf, Nick hilariously navigates the underbelly of Christmastown to help solve his case; but not before a cast of characters including a shady used Christmas tree salesman, Santa imposters, and a couple of bumbling elf henchman try to foil his leads. For all ages. Tickets: ci.ovationtix.com/35097/production/1018729. DENIZEN Theatre, 10 Main St, New Paltz. denizentheatre.com. 7:30pm-9pm Weekly Thursday Nite EFT Healing Circle & Recovery Workshop. Bring your physical, emotional, & spiritual challenges and issues, and have them quickly, effectively resolved and healed in a safe supportive environment. Ongoing. 845-706-2183. Family of Woodstock/Kingston, 39 John St, Kingston. Free, $5 donation welcome. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: The Last Minute Soulmates. Original storytelling, guitar-driven music, and a wide selection of covers from iconic artists with an improvisational approach to live shows are the keys to their unique sound. Info: 845-2367970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com.

Friday

12/20

Polar Express Train Ride. Take a magical trip to the North Pole while reading along with the classic children’s book. Santa and his Elves board the train add to the memories made on this unforgettable adventure. Call for ride times and availability. Runs Nov. 16-Dec. 28. Tickets & Info: 845-332-4854; catskillmountainrailroad. com/event/the-polar-express. Catskill Mountain Railroad (CMRR), Westbrook Lane Station, 55 Plaza Rd, Kingston. 9:30am FDR Christmas Tours. See the FDR estate decorated for the holiday season. Open daily for tours at 9:30am, 11am, 1pm and 3pm. Info: 845-229-5320; nps.gov/hofr/index.htm. Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site, 4097 Albany Post Rd, Hyde Park. 9:30am MidHudsonADK: Ski with Marty Carp. Every Mon & Fri until March 31. 3-5 hours, depending on conditions. No snow, they will do a moderate hike 6-9 miles. Questions welcomed. Info: 845-214-8520 or martymcarp@gmail.com. Meet @ the Mohonk Visitor Center for drive/ shuttle to trailhead. Mohonk Preserve, 3197 Route 44/55, Gardiner. midhudsonadk.org/ outings-events-list.

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-4pm Boscobel Holiday Tours. The mansion will be decorated for 19th-century holidays. Guides share stories of Yuletide traditions past. Boscobel House and Gardens, 1601 Route 9D, Garrison. boscobel.org/events/guided-housetours. 10am Vanderbilt Mansion Christmas Tours. See the Vanderbilt home decorated for the holiday season. Open daily for tours at 10:00, 12:00, 2:00, and 3:00. Info: 845-229-7770; nps.gov/vama/ index.htm. Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site, Hyde Park. 11am-3pm A Gilded Age Christmas. Enjoy lavish turn-of-the-century style holiday decorations while touring the mansion. Tickets: $8, $6/seniors & students, children 12 & under are free. Info: 845-889-8851; parks.ny.gov/historicsites/25/details.aspx. Staatsburg State Historic Site, 75 Mills Mansion Drive Rd 1, Staatsburg. 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. 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. 11am-6pm Woodstock Art Exchange - Unique one-of-a-kind Gifts. Unique one-of-a-kind art, glass and gifts and a special exhibit by worldrenowned artist Ruby Silvious. Gallery and gift shop open Friday through Sunday 11am–6pm; & Mondays 10am–4pm. Info: 914-806-3573. Woodstock Art Exchange, 1396 Rt 28, West Hurley. Woodstock Art Exchange, 1396 Rte 28, West Hurley. 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 Crystal Attunements and Tarot Card Readings with owl medicine woman Mary Vukovic. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call ahead for appointment. $50 for 45 minute reading and chakra attunement. Info: 845-6792100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/30 minutes,. 1pm Val-Kill Christmas Tours. Come see the Val-Kill decorated for the holiday season. Open Thursday through Monday for tours at 1:00 and 3:00. Info: 845-229-9422; nps.gov/elro/index. htm. Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site, 54 Valkill Park Road, Hyde Park. 1pm-2pm Chair Yoga. Practiced sitting on a chair or standing using a chair for support. Clinton Community Library. 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. 3pm-9pm U.C. SPCA Fill the Van & Holiday Wrapping. Barnes & Noble/ Kingston, 1177 Ulster Ave, Kingston. 5pm-7pm Sips and Sweets (and Shopping). Join us for a little fun with your holiday shopping. We’ll have a special baked treat from Colleen McMurray and some sips for you to enjoy - mulled wine, prosecco, or beer for the guys. Info: 845-5864177; hgom.net. Home Goods of Margaretville, 784 Main St, Margaretville. 6pm-9pm Holiday Movie Night with Kingston Midtown Rising. Enjoy a wonderful holiday movie with us as a loving community. Please bring your children and any one wanting to spend a few hours in a peaceful environment with great positive energy. Hosted by Kingston Midtown Rising in Association with The Clinton Avenue Church, Samadhi and MyKingstonKids. Light refreshments will be served. Clinton Avenue Methodist Church. Free. 6pm-8pm Youth Open Mic Night at the African Roots Center. Youth-focused, youth-led Open Mic Nights featuring middle and high school student poets, singers, musicians and actors from the area. A.J. Williams-Myers African Roots Library, 43 Gill St, Kingston. Info: 845 802-0035, africanrootslibrary@outlook.com, bit.ly/2KzYvpy. 6pm-7:30pm Kabbalat Shabbat Services. Friday evening services. Woodstock Jewish Congregation, 1682 Glasco Turnpike, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-2218, info@wjcshul.org, wjcshul.org. 6:20pm-8:30pm Special Screening: Bombshell. Followed by a Q&A with the film’s screenwriter, Charles Randolph (Academy Award winner for The Big Short). The Moviehouse, 48 Main Street, Millerton. Info: 518-789-0022, events@themoviehouse.net, themoviehouse.net. $14. 6:45pm-8:30pm Children & Teen Ministries. Meets Fridays: 6:45-8:30pm. Class for adults

Dec. 19, 2019

submission policy contact

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

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

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

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

also offered. Info: 845-876-6923 or cdfcirone@ aol.com. Grace Bible Fellowship Church, Rt9 & Rt9G, Rhinebeck. 7pm Perrotta & Marotta. Bassist Jackie Zeeman will Join Sarah and Jerry to debut songs from Perrotta & Marotta’s upcoming album set to drop in 2020. Tickets: $10 advance, $12 at the door. Info: sarahperrottamusic.com. BSP Kingston, 323 Wall Street, Kingston. 7pm-9pm Friday Ugly Sweater Skate Party. All ages are welcome to come skate, dance, win prizes and have some fun! Different themed nights each week with music and giveaways. $5 off admission with sweater. $15 regular admission, $5 rentals. Info: MidHudsonCivicCenter. org. Ice Time Sports Complex, 21 Lakeside Rd, Newburgh. 7pm-9pm Dzieci Theatre’s “Fools Mass”. Bursting with outrageous comic buffoonery alongside exquisite choral singing, Fools Mass captures the heart of the holidays. Boughton Place, 150 Kisor Rd, Highland. Info: 845- 691-7578, boughtonplace@gmail.com, ipsite.org/11xuk. $20. 7pm-2am Winter Reggae Solstice Party. Music by DJ Shaman Vybez featuring live reggae performances by Kurtiouss FullyAktive, Moody British Soulomusic and more. Homeade Carribean food. Station Bar and Curio, 101 Tinker St., Woodstock. Info: 240 727 0548, JahLoveEntertainment@ gmail.com, bit.ly/35NPKkM. No Cover. 7pm-9pm It’s A Wonderful Life. The beloved American holiday classic comes to captivating life as a live 1940s radio broadcast. Shadowland Stages, 157 Canal Street, Ellenville. Info: 845-6475511, info@shadowlandstages.org, shadowlandstages.org/2. 31-39. 7pm-9pm Free Addiction Recovery Acupuncture Clinic. New Paltz Community Acupuncture will be offering a Free Addiction Recovery Acupuncture Clinic on Fridays from 7-9pm. A specific treatment using ear points only will be available free of charge. Come by and let acupuncture help to reduce cravings, assist the detox process, calm your nervous system, and support recovery. It is helpful for all types of addictions and all stages of recovery. Walk-ins only - first come, first served. 21 South Chestnut Street, New Paltz. 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 Christmastown: A Holiday Noir. A witty comedy follows a hard-boiled private eye, Nick Holiday, as he searches for the truth about Santa Claus. With some steamy leads from a vixen of an elf, Nick hilariously navigates the underbelly of Christmastown to help solve his case; but not before a cast of characters including a shady used Christmas tree salesman, Santa imposters, and a couple of bumbling elf henchman try to foil his leads. For all ages. Tickets: ci.ovationtix.com/35097/production/1018729. DENIZEN Theatre, 10 Main St, New Paltz. denizentheatre.com. 7:30pm Pre-Hanukkah Songfest - A Sing Along with Rabbi Lerner. Celebrate the Festival of Lights with us. Sing along with Rabbi Lerner and the congregation of Monroe Temple. Children welcome. Song sheets provided. Free event. Monroe Temple of Liberal Judaism, 314 North Main St, Monroe. 7:30pm-8:30pm Sad Season Blue Christmas Service. A different type of worship service, for those who struggle during the holidays (because of loss, financial difficulties or any reason). Reformed Church of Saugerties, 173 Main St, Saugerties. Info: 845-246-2867, refsaug@yahoo. com, saugertiesreformed.org. 8pm-10:30pm Sugar Moon. Shannon Malone with Ethan Campbell. Russell Austin. Tim Kapeluck and perhaps The Harmony Grits. Donations.

Info: 845-876-7007. mortonrhinecliff.org. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Hurley Mountain Highway. Popular four piece pop/rock band, covers the 60s, 70s, and beyond. Info: 845-2367970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm Seventh Annual Christmas@The Falcon Benefit. A Falcon tradition, Brian Collazo (BSKi, Live Society) hosts. Co-produced by Tony Falco and Hallie Seltzer (Fizz Management). Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 8pm Davestocking Dance Party with DJ Dave Leonard and Friends. Light show, audio and visual extravaganza. Soul, Motown, rock, hip hop, alternative, 80s, 90s, and underground house. Tickets: $12-$15 at eventbrite.com. The Colony, 22 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 8pm A Christmas Carol. Directed by Diana di Grandi, adapted by Lou Trapani with musical direction by Paul & JoAnne Schubert. Info & tickets: centerforperformingarts.org. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. $27.

Saturday

12/21

Polar Express Train Ride. Take a magical trip to the North Pole while reading along with the classic children’s book. Santa and his Elves board the train add to the memories made on this unforgettable adventure. Call for ride times and availability. Runs Nov. 16-Dec. 28. Tickets & Info: 845-332-4854; catskillmountainrailroad. com/event/the-polar-express. Catskill Mountain Railroad (CMRR), Westbrook Lane Station, 55 Plaza Rd, Kingston. 8am-12pm Breakfast with Santa. Enjoy a breakfast buffet with Santa at Woodnotes Grille. Story time & Pictures with Santa at the Emerson North Pole. Cost: $22.50/adults, $10/kids 5-12, $5/kids 1-4. Call 845-688-2828 for information and reservations. Woodnotes Grill - Emerson Resort, Rt 28, Mt. Pleasant. 9am-1pm Winter Solstice Hike to Kempton Ledge at Minnewaska. A walk to Kempton Ledge. Pre-registration is required by calling 845-255-0752. Minnewaska Preserve, Gardiner. parks.ny.gov/parks/127. 9am-3pm Annual Procrastinator’s Cookie Sale. Don’t have time to bake? Need gifts for your holiday parties? We have a fantastic selection of cookies and more, Including various gluten free items. We bake, you choose, we wrap, you enjoy. Price: $8 per pound, $5 1/2 pound. Olivebridge United Methodist Church, 5179 State Route 213, Olivebridge. 9am-12pm Comforter Cobblestone Thrift Store. More space has been added for more items! Store hours: Every Saturday 9-12 April through December. Located in basement of church. Take steps to the left of white church doors. Info: comfortercobblestonethrift26@ gmail.com. Comforter Cobblestone Thrift Store, 26 Wynkoop Pl, Kingston. 9:30am FDR Christmas Tours. See the FDR estate decorated for the holiday season. Open daily for tours at 9:30am, 11am, 1pm and 3pm. Info: 845-229-5320; nps.gov/hofr/index.htm. Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site, 4097 Albany Post Rd, Hyde Park. 9:30am-11:30am Free Ukulele Program. Intergenerational ukulele program for ages 10 and up. This is a group that shares learning with each other. We usually do some folk music, popular music and anything else anyone might want to play. Remember beginners are welcome and encouraged! Direct your questions to Uke Coordinator Lynda at tofu.uke.group@gmail.com. Info: 845-338-7881. Town of Ulster Public Library, 860 Ulster Ave., Kingston. 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.


13

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Dec. 19, 2019

premier listings Contact Donna at Donna.ulsterpublishing@gmail.com to be included Overeaters Anonymous Meeting. Meets on Wednesdays, 10-11am at Woodstock Reformed Church on the Village Green. For more info go to midhudsonoa.org. Enter door in back by parking lot. Annual Peace Concert with Tom Pacheco & Brian Hollander (12/21, 8pm). Admission is $15 at the door. No reservations are taken at the Rosendale, but vegetarian food is on the menu. For more information, see rosendalecafe.com or call 945-6589048. He’ll bring those songs to the stage of the legendary Rosendale Cafe, 434 Main Street, Rosendale. 40th Anniversary Holiday Party (12/28, 2pm). Sal’s Place, 99 Vineyard Ave, Highland. Info: salscatering.com; 845-691-2811. Upcoming Events at Mirabai! Thursday, December 19 12:30 – 6:00 p.m. I Ching Oracle and Tarot Card Readings with Timothy Liu. Every Thursday at Mirabai. Walk-ins welcome or call for appointment. $30 for half hour reading; Friday, December 20 12:30 – 6:00 p.m. Crystal Readings and Chakra Attunements with owl medicine woman Mary Vukovic. Every Friday at Mirabai. Walk-ins welcome or call for appointment. $30 for half

hour Crystal Reading; $50 for 45 minute Crystal Reading and Chakra Attunement; Saturday, December 21 12:30 – 6:30 p.m. Tarot Readings with Stephanie every Saturday at Mirabai. Walk-ins welcome or call ahead for appointment. $30 for half hour reading; & Sunday, December 22 12:30 – 6:00 p.m. Voyager Tarot Readings with Sarvananda every Sunday at Mirabai. Walk-ins welcome or call ahead for appt. $30 for half hour; $50 for one hour reading. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Road, Woodstock. 845-679-2100. Billy’n The Bad Boys (12/21, 4-7pm). Featuring Billy Stephen, guitar/vocals, Larry Packer, fiddle & Kyle Esposito, guitar. Billy has shared the stage with Pete Seeger and rocked out with John Lee Hooker. Backed by Larry Packer (The Last Waltz, Levon Helm Band) on fiddle & Kyle Esposito (A- List session here) on guitar, together they take Billy’s songs and Americana tunes for A ride in the country with the top down. Held over for the 14th week at Station Bar & Curio, 101 Tinker St, Woodstock. No cover. <strong>Club Mahjong. Whether your new to the game, or a seasoned player, there’s a seat at the table for

you! Every Monday, 1-4pm at the Woodstock Jewish Congregation. For more information contact Heather at MJCRobinson1010@gmail.com; or text 914-388-3577. City of Kingston Arts Commission Accepting Nominations for Distinguished Artist Award. Nominees must be Kingston residents for at least two years. Artists in any discipline may be nominated: music, theatre, dance, literary, visual, or media arts. A small stipend will be provided to the awardee and additional funding may be available for a programming budget. Submission forms can be found at kingston-ny.gov/ArtsCommission and must include a one-page narrative that highlights the nominee’s qualifications. Poughkeepsie Galleria Announces ‘12 Days of Giftmas’ Holiday Sweepstakes. Kicking off the gift-giving season, for the second year in a row, Poughkeepsie Galleria has launched their ’12 Days of Giftmas’ Holiday Sweepstakes where lucky shoppers will be chosen throughout the month of December to win over $500 worth of prizes. Customers can enter to win twelve days of gifts donated by Poughkeepsie Galleria merchants including Auntie Anne’s, Hallmark, JCPenney,

10am-11am Project FeederWatch Drop-In Program at Sam’s Point. Become a Citizen Scientist and help us learn more about the beautiful birds that visit the feeders at the Sam’s Point Visitor Center. Make pinecone/peanut butter bird feeders for you to take home so you can continue your observations in your own yard. This program is recommended for beginner and experienced bird watchers of all ages. Children must be accompanied by a parent or guardian over the age of 18. Meet at the Sam’s Point Visitor Center. Preregistration is not required. Sam’s Point Preserve, 400 Sam’s Point Road, Cragsmoor.

lavish turn-of-the-century style holiday decorations while touring the mansion. Tickets: $8, $6/seniors & students, children 12 & under are free. Info: 845-889-8851; parks.ny.gov/historicsites/25/details.aspx. Staatsburg State Historic Site, 75 Mills Mansion Drive Rd 1, Staatsburg.

10am-11am All-Level Yoga. Wear comfortable clothes. Clinton Community Library.

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.

10am-2pm Kingston Winter Farmers Market. The Winter Market runs every other Saturday through April 25. Old Dutch Church, 272 Wall Street, Kingston. kingstonfarmersmarket.org. 10am-4pm Boscobel Holiday Tours. The mansion will be decorated for 19th-century holidays. Guides share stories of Yuletide traditions past. Boscobel House and Gardens, 1601 Route 9D, Garrison. boscobel.org/events/guided-housetours. 10am Vanderbilt Mansion Christmas Tours. See the Vanderbilt home decorated for the holiday season. Open daily for tours at 10:00, 12:00, 2:00, and 3:00. Info: 845-229-7770; nps.gov/vama/ index.htm. Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site, Hyde Park. 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-11:30am Silent Vigil for Global Peace & Non-Violence. Sponsored by The Kingston Women in Black. Meet outside Cornell St PO. Cornell St PO, Kingston. 11am-2pm Beer & Bagel Brunch with West Kill Brewing and Kingston Bread Lab. Beer! Bagels! Brunch! Join us Saturday, December 21 as we ring in Winter with some fantastic dark and warming beers from West Kill Brewing! Rough Draft Bar & Books, 82 John Street, Kingston. Info: 845-8020027, roughdraftbar@gmail.com. 11am-4pm Christmas at Clermont Open House. Explore the mansion at your leisure enjoying the holiday decorations with docents available to answer questions in each room. Cider and cookies will be available in the visitor’s center. Free admission. Info: 518-537-4240. Clermont State Historical Site, Germantown. 11am-3pm A Gilded Age Christmas. Enjoy

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

11am-5pm Holiday Shopping Extravaganza. There will be 50+vendors with different vendors from all over the Hudson Valley each day. Bring the kids to see Santa Claus, take free pictures with him between 1-4pm on both days - 12/21 & 12/22. Homewood Suites by Hilton, Newburgh-Stewart Airport, New Windsor.

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-5pm Snowflake Waltz Exhibition. A holiday exhibition celebrating the traditions of the winter season. Curator Laurie De Chiara, has invited artists and makers to share their creations for this festive exhibition of sculptural installations, objects, painting and ornamentation and to transform the upper deck of the Cornell building into a magical space. Cornell Steamboat Building, 110 East Strand, Kingston. 12pm-5pm 3rd Annual Lace Mill Holiday Art Show. Over a hundred works of art from some of our most prominent local artists are on view at the Lace Mill’s Main and West Galleries. Open weekends 12-5pm through December 29th. Lace Mill, 165 Cornell St, Kingston. 12pm 2nd Saugerties Holiday Artisan Market. Local artisans, wine tasting, jewelry, art, hand crafted pet products, and much more! The first one was such a success we decided to do it again with a new variety of vendors and returning ones as well. JJ Newberry Building, 236 Main St., Saugerties.

Kirwan’s Game Store, Macy’s, Trollbeads, Ruby Tuesday and more by visiting Poughkeepsie Galleria’s website. December 5 through December 20, excluding weekends, one winner will be selected at random to claim their gift from the store of the day. Info: PoughkeepsieGalleria.com. Mexican Mondays (5-9pm). Mexican Cuisine offered: $5 Tacos $6 Margaritas Authentic. Info: 845-679-5763; oriole9.com. Oriole 9, 17 Tinker St, Woodstock. Sign-up Now! Archery, Karate, Yoga, Dance, Sewing, Chess & Ceramics. Register online 845-246-3744, ext 156. Woodstock Day School, 1430 Glasco Tpke, Saugerties. Woodstock Art Exchange Unique one-of-a-kind Gifts (Friday - Sunday, 11am - 6pm & Monday 10am-4pm). Unique one-of-a-kind art, glass and gifts and a special exhibit by worldrenowned artist Ruby Silvious. Gallery and gift shop open Friday through Sunday 11am–6pm; & Mondays 10am–4pm. Info: 914-806-3573. Woodstock Art Exchange, 1396 Rt 28, West Hurley. 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 in Westchester, Rockland, Putnam, Dutchess, Ulster, Sullivan and Orange County. Locally, the greatest need is

Val-Kill decorated for the holiday season. Open Thursday through Monday for tours at 1:00 and 3:00. Info: 845-229-9422; nps.gov/elro/index. htm. Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site, 54 Valkill Park Road, Hyde Park. 1pm-2pm 8th Annual Hudson Valley Saxophone Orchestra Christmas Concert. Tickets are not necessary, but here is a $5 donation at the door. Snow date is the next day. Revel 32°, 32 Cannon St, Poughkeepsie. revel32.com. 1pm-4pm Wilderstein Holiday House Tours. Wilderstein will be decorated for the holiday season. Tour at your own pace, with a guide in each room to share information. Tours run every Saturday and Sunday through 12/29. Tickets: $11/ adults, $10/students and seniors. Info: 845-8764818; wilderstein.org. Wilderstein Historic Site, 330 Morton Rd, Rhinebeck. 2pm-4:30pm 7th Annual Solstice Celebration & Potluck Dinner with Neetopk Keetopk. A mix of fun and heartfelt activities to celebrate the returning light, the renewal and bounty of our land, hope for a stable climate, all beings of the earth, especially each other. RSVP appreciated. Info: 845-383-1528; info@SeedSongFarm. org. Seed Song Farm, 158 Esopus Ave, Kingston. seedsongfarm.org/events.html. 2pm Edie’s Fairytale Theatre Presents Party at the North Pole. Join us for one of our 45 minute interactive musicals, plus treats & Santa. Tickets: $10 at EFTnorthpole.bpt.me. Info: 314-797-9242; ediesfairytaletheatre.com. Mountain View Studio, 20 Mountain View Ave, Woodstock. 2pm-4:30pm Wondrous Winter: Poetry, Prose and Images to Warm the Soul. An afternoon of readings to honor and celebrate the wonders of winter. Spector, Makofske and Nixon are well established writers and poets. Amity Gallery, 110 Newport Bridge Road, WARWICK. amitygallery. org. 2pm-4pm Watercolor with Your Grand Person. Artists of all ages, come paint seasonal watercol-

1pm-3pm Animals for Adoption’s Holiday Open House. Bring your dog! Games, photo booth, refreshments. Also, please bring a toy for a shelter dog. Animals for Adoption Community Center, 4628 Route 209, Accord. 1pm Val-Kill Christmas Tours. Come see the

SAUGERTIES SENIOR HOUSING Subsidized Housing for Low Income Senior Citizens

SECURE LIVING

WAITING LIST

Call or write for an application at the information below 155 MAIN STREET • SAUGERTIES, NY 12477

— 845-247-0612 —

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.

ors with instruction by Gretchen Kelly. Free - all materials provided. Beginners welcome. Hudson Area Library, 51 North 5th Street, Hudson. hudsonarealibrary.org. 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. 2:30pm-5pm An Italian Holiday. Join baritone Kerry Henderson and friends for an enchanting afternoon of Italian opera, highlights from Broadway and gems from the world of song at our beautiful new gallery and music space in the heart of Uptown Kingston. Tickets: $45, Italian appetizers and sweets included. Info: 917-6976916. Fair John ArtSpace and Music Salon, 288 Fair Street, Kingston. italianholiday.bpt.me. 3pm A Christmas Carol. Sensory friendly performance for those with sensitivities to light and

HOLIDAY

EARLY

DEADLINES Christmas

Almanac, classifieds and New Paltz Times ad deadline is

December 20th

12:30pm-6:45pm Tarot Readings and Intuitive Guidance every Saturday with Stephanie. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call for appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $30/30minutes. 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.

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.

Kingston, Saugerties, Woodstock ad deadline is

December 23rd

New Year’s Almanac, classifieds and New Paltz Times ad deadline is

December 27th Kingston, Saugerties, Woodstock ad deadline is

December 30th Please call

845.334.8200

for more info or to place your ad.

Thank you and

Happy Holidays!


14 sound. Directed by Diana di Grandi, adapted by Lou Trapani with musical direction by Paul & JoAnne Schubert and starring your CENTER favorites. Info & tickets: centerforperformingarts. org. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. $27. 3:30pm Kwanzaa - Umoja Community Celebration. Presented in partnership with Operation Unite NY, come celebrate African-American culture and unity with friends and family. Join us for an afternoon of arts and crafts for children, dancing, drumming, a candle-lighting ceremony, and the sharing of Nguzo Saba, the seven principles of Kwanzaa. Free and open to the public. Hudson Hall, 327 Warren St, Hudson. hudsonhall.org/kwanzaa. 4pm-6pm Ugly Sweater Skate 2019. Celebrate the reopening of the rink and the holiday season with us! Christmas craft making, a bake sale with hot chocolate, an ugly sweater contest and Santa’s workshop with a gift sale. Kiwanis Ice Arena, 6 Small World Ave, Saugerties. Info: scofsaug@ gmail.com, tiny.cc/71umhz. include skate rentals! 4pm-7pm Billy’n The Bad Boys. Featuring Billy Stephen, guitar/vocals, Larry Packer, fiddle & Kyle Esposito, guitar. Billy has shared the stage with Pete Seeger and rocked out with John Lee Hooker. Backed by Larry Packer (The Last Waltz, Levon Helm Band) on fiddle & Kyle Esposito (AList session here) on guitar, together they take Billy’s songs and Americana tunes for A ride in the country with the top down. Held over for the 14th week at Station Bar & Curio, 101 Tinker St, Woodstock. No cover. 5pm-8pm <strong>Christmas at the Edmonstons: A Colonial Christmas. See one of New Windsor’s oldest existing homes, and headquarters to General Gates and General St. Clare, decorated as it would have been during the final years of the Revolutionary War. Each evening there will be candlelight tours of the house and grounds and light refreshments by the fire. Free, but donations are greatly appreciated. Info: 845-926-6290; ntha1783@gmail.com. Edmonston House, 1042 Route 94, New Windsor. 5pm-8pm Wassail, Wassail All Over the Town at Knox’s Headquarters. By candlelight, watch the Ellison family, Continental Army soldiers and officers celebrate a rowdy Christmas Eve in 1780. Knox’s Headquarters State Historic Site, 289 Forge Hill Road, Vails Gate. Info: 845-5611765, chad.johnson@parks.ny.gov, nysparks.com. 5pm-8pm Rhinebeck’s ArtWalk. Ongoing, every third Saturday of each month, 5-8pm. Village of Rhinebeck, Rhinebeck. 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, facebook.com/event. 7pm-8:30pm Key of Q Presents: Out in the Snow! The LGBTQ+ & Allied A Cappella Chorus of the HV for a night of songs, snacks, & wintery fun. Arts Society of Kingston, 97 Broadway, Kingston. Info: keyofq@gmail.com, keyofq.org. Suggested donation. 7pm-10pm 20 Feet From Stardom. Millions know their voices, but no one knows their names. This film spotlights the singers backing up some of rock music’s greatest stars. New Progressive Baptist Church, 8 Hone St, Kingston. Info: 845-389-9201, gerryharrington@mindspring. com, bit.ly/2PbNdLC. donation. 7pm-9pm Ritz Bitz. One weekend, two performances! Don’t miss your chance to see this variety show with acrobatics, balancing, juggling, comedy, dance and more. Safe Harbors Lobby at the Ritz, 107 Broadway, Newburgh, NY 12550, Newburgh. safe-harbors.org. $5. 7pm Live @ The Falcon: Ed Palermo Big Band: A Very Proggy Christmas. The world’s zaniest big band performs Eddy’s Prog-Rock Holiday Show! Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7pm-10pm Marc Black Band Christmas Party. Dancing, good food and general merriment. Dinner reservations recommended. Lydia’s Cafe, 7 Old US 209, Stone Ridge. Info: 845-687-6373, mark@lydiasdeli.com, lydias-cafe.com. Donation Requested. 7pm-9pm It’s A Wonderful Life. The beloved American holiday classic comes to captivating life as a live 1940s radio broadcast. Shadowland Stages, 157 Canal Street, Ellenville. Info: 845-6475511, info@shadowlandstages.org, shadowlandstages.org/2. 31-39. 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 Christmastown: A Holiday Noir. A witty comedy follows a hard-boiled private eye, Nick Holiday, as he searches for the truth about Santa Claus. With some steamy leads from a vixen of an elf, Nick hilariously navigates the underbelly of Christmastown to help solve his case; but not before a cast of characters including a shady used Christmas tree salesman, Santa imposters, and a couple of bumbling elf henchman try to foil his leads. For all ages. Tickets: ci.ovationtix.com/35097/production/1018729. DENIZEN Theatre, 10 Main St, New Paltz. denizentheatre.com. 7:30pm-9pm Becoming Human: Songs of Observation, Realization and Transformation. Jim Kunkel on classical, electric, and

ALMANAC WEEKLY 12-string guitars; Marji Zintz on voice, guitar, and percussion; Mickey Kopchak on Bass and Ron Wilson. Amity Gallery, 110 Newport Bridge Road, WARWICK. amitygallery.org. Donation. 7:30pm Seasonal Bird; A Very Charlie Parker Holiday. Award-winning and vibrant young jazz saxophonist Alexa Tarantino gathers a quintet of today’s top women in jazz bring you Seasonal Bird. This premiere night of music highlights the iconic bebop recordings and repertoire of the holiday season in anticipation of Charlie ‘Yardbird’ Parker’s 100th anniversary in the upcoming new year. The Catskill Jazz Factory and Woodstock Playhouse celebrate the season with this holiday-infused ode to the masters of bebop. For tickets, call 845-679-6900. Woodstock Playhouse, 103 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. woodstockplayhouse.org. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Matt Finck’s “Fat Mink”. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 8pm-9:30pm Annual Solstice Sound Bath Concert. Join us for an evening of sound featuring Peter Blum, Naaz Hosseini, Evry Mann, Steve Gorn, and Thomas Workman. Sage Academy of Sound Energy, 6 Deming Street, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-5650, sagehealingcenter@gmail. com, sageacademyofsoundenergy.com. $25 preregistration, $30 at the door. 8pm A Christmas Carol. Directed by Diana di Grandi, adapted by Lou Trapani with musical direction by Paul & JoAnne Schubert. Info & tickets: centerforperformingarts.org. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. $27. 8pm Annual Peace Concert with Tom Pacheco & Brian Hollander. Tom Pacheco is the genuine article, one of the last of the true troubadours who comes to a stage armed only with a guitar and a thousand songs. The grit on Pacheco’s guitar and in his hands is often offset by what can then turn to a light, sweet touch as he sings about a broken piano found lying in the desert, or about Juan Romero, the busboy who gave Robert Kennedy Rosary beads as Kennedy lay dying on the hotel floor in 1968. He’ll regale you with tall tales of D.B. Cooper and Grahame Livingston, the guy, Tom claims, who killed Jack the Ripper. Accompanied by guitar/dobro player Brian Hollander. Admission is $15 at the door. No reservations are taken at the Rosendale, but vegetarian food is on the menu. Info: rosendalecafe.com; 945-6589048; tompacheco.com. Rosendale Cafe, 434 Main St, Rosendale. Rosendale Cafe, Main St, Rosendale. 8pm-10pm Trivia Night At Chic’s Restaurant and Bar. Chic’s Restaurant and Bar, 226 Kingston Plaza, Kingston.

Sunday

12/22

Hanukkah. Jewish Festival of Lights begins at sundown on December 22 goes through nightfall of December 30. First candle is lit December 22 and the last on December 29. Ramapo Catskill Library, 619 Route 17M, Middletown. Polar Express Train Ride. Take a magical trip to the North Pole while reading along with the classic children’s book. Santa and his Elves board the train add to the memories made on this unforgettable adventure. Call for ride times and availability. Runs Nov. 16-Dec. 28. Tickets & Info: 845-332-4854; catskillmountainrailroad. com/event/the-polar-express. Catskill Mountain Railroad (CMRR), Westbrook Lane Station, 55 Plaza Rd, Kingston. 9:30am FDR Christmas Tours. See the FDR estate decorated for the holiday season. Open daily for tours at 9:30am, 11am, 1pm and 3pm. Info: 845-229-5320; nps.gov/hofr/index.htm. Franklin D. Roosevelt National Historic Site, 4097 Albany Post Rd, Hyde Park. 10am-12:30pm Loop around the Lake for Families at Sam’s Point. Three-mile hike to view Lake Maratanza. Children must be accompanied by a parent or guardian over the age of 18. Meet at the Sam’s Point Visitor Center. Pre-registration is required by calling Sam’s Point at 845-6477989. Sam’s Point Preserve, 400 Sam’s Point Road, Cragsmoor. 10am-4pm Boscobel Holiday Tours. The mansion will be decorated for 19th-century holidays. Guides share stories of Yuletide traditions past. Boscobel House and Gardens, 1601 Route 9D, Garrison. boscobel.org/events/guided-housetours. 10am Vanderbilt Mansion Christmas Tours. See the Vanderbilt home decorated for the holiday season. Open daily for tours at 10:00, 12:00, 2:00, and 3:00. Info: 845-229-7770; nps.gov/vama/ index.htm. Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site, Hyde Park. 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. 11am-2pm Sunday Brunch @ the Falcon: Annie & the Hedonists. Western swing, bluesy country, rootsy Americana, and interpret the songs of the great female artists of the ‘20s, 30s & 40s.. Info: 845-236-7970. The Falcon Main Stage, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. live@thefalcon.com. 11am-3pm A Gilded Age Christmas. Enjoy

lavish turn-of-the-century style holiday decorations while touring the mansion. Tickets: $8, $6/seniors & students, children 12 & under are free. Info: 845-889-8851; parks.ny.gov/historicsites/25/details.aspx. Staatsburg State Historic Site, 75 Mills Mansion Drive Rd 1, Staatsburg. 11am-5pm Holiday Shopping Extravaganza. There will be 50+vendors with different vendors from all over the Hudson Valley each day. Bring the kids to see Santa Claus, take free pictures with him between 1-4pm on both days - 12/21 & 12/22. Homewood Suites by Hilton, Newburgh-Stewart Airport, New Windsor. 11am-3pm Sunday Funday. Open recreation! Pool table, Foosball and ping pong. Meets every Sunday. Pine Hill Community Center, 287 Main St, Pine Hill. pinehillcommunitycenter.org. FREE. 11am-12pm Conversations Over Coffee. An open forum for discussions and opinions of topics relevant to the world around us. The Crafted Kup, 44 Raymond Ave, Poughkeepsie. Info: 845-242-6546, cocpoughkeepsie@gmail. com, bit.ly/2xYW0bq. 12pm-5pm 3rd Annual Lace Mill Holiday Art Show. Over a hundred works of art from some of our most prominent local artists are on view at the Lace Mill’s Main and West Galleries. Open weekends 12-5pm through December 29th. Lace Mill, 165 Cornell St, Kingston. 12pm 2nd Saugerties Holiday Artisan Market. Local artisans, wine tasting, jewelry, art, hand crafted pet products, and much more! The first one was such a success we decided to do it again with a new variety of vendors and returning ones as well. JJ Newberry Building, 236 Main St., Saugerties. 12pm 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. 12:30pm-6pm Voyager Tarot and Psychic Readings with Sarvananda. Walk-ins warmly welcome or call for appointment. Info: 845-6792100. Mirabai Bookstore, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. $50/ one hour, $30/30minutes. 1pm-2pm Holiday Tunes with Roger & Lenny. They will be singing an hour’s worth of holiday pop songs. Rhinebeck Farmers Market, 61 E. Market Street, Rhinebeck. rhinebeckfarmersmarket.com. Free. 1pm Val-Kill Christmas Tours. Come see the Val-Kill decorated for the holiday season. Open Thursday through Monday for tours at 1:00 and 3:00. Info: 845-229-9422; nps.gov/elro/index. htm. Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site, 54 Valkill Park Road, Hyde Park. 1pm A Christmas Carol by Theatre on the Road. Victorian carolers, three course dinner, cash bar and the show. Tickets: $75/person including tax & gratuity. Info: 845-475-7973; theatreontheroad. com. Beekman Arms, 6387 Mill St, Rhinebeck. 1pm-4pm Wilderstein Holiday House Tours. Wilderstein will be decorated for the holiday season. Tour at your own pace, with a guide in each room to share information. Tours run every Saturday and Sunday through 12/29. Tickets: $11/ adults, $10/students and seniors. Info: 845-8764818; wilderstein.org. Wilderstein Historic Site, 330 Morton Rd, Rhinebeck. 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 Christmastown: A Holiday Noir. A witty comedy follows a hard-boiled private eye, Nick Holiday, as he searches for the truth about Santa Claus. With some steamy leads from a vixen of an elf, Nick hilariously navigates the underbelly of Christmastown to help solve his case; but not before a cast of characters including a shady used Christmas tree salesman, Santa imposters, and a couple of bumbling elf henchman try to foil his leads. For all ages. Tickets: ci.ovationtix. com/35097/production/1018729. DENIZEN Theatre, 10 Main St, New Paltz. denizentheatre. com. 2pm-4:45pm 42nd Street: The Musical. One of Broadway’s most beloved tales, comes to U.S. cinema screens in the largest-ever production of the breathtaking musical. Rosendale Theatre, 408 Main St, Rosendale. Info: 845-658-8989, info@ rosendaletheatre.org, rosendaletheatre.org. $12. 2pm-4pm Handgun, Rifle and Shotgun Live Fire Refresher. Get Tickets. Must have attended our Live Fire Shooting Course Handgun Rifle Shotgun ARMSTA Training reserves the right to reschedule a course date, course dates can change. Free. Info: training@armsta.com. Phoenicia Fish and Game Association, 5419 State Route 28, Mount Tremper. 2pm-5pm Kingston’s Holiday Penny Social. We will have an awesome selection of prizes from some of your favorite local businesses including gift certificates, clothes, show tickets, toys, gift baskets and so much more. Kitchen will be open

Dec. 19, 2019 for lunch and snacks. Proceeds go to support continued programming and events for MyKingstonKids. VFW Post 1386 Men’s Auxiliary, 708 East Chester St, Kingston. 2pm-3:30pm Meditation, Intention and the Zero Point Field. Ricarda O’Conner takes you on a lively exploration of consciousness and intention. Sage Academy of Sound Energy, 6 Deming Street, Woodstock. Info: 845-679-5650, sagehealingcenter@gmail.com, sageacademyofsoundenergy.com. $20. 3pm A Christmas Carol. Directed by Diana di Grandi, adapted by Lou Trapani with musical direction by Paul & JoAnne Schubert. Info & tickets: centerforperformingarts.org. The Center for Performing Arts at Rhinebeck, 661 Rt 308, Rhinebeck. $27. 3pm-9pm U.C. SPCA Fill the Van & Holiday Wrapping. Barnes & Noble/ Kingston, 1177 Ulster Ave, Kingston. 3pm Woodstock Ultimate Disc. A free, casual, co-ed pickup game. Ongoing games - Tuesday, Thursday & Sundays at 3pm. See WoodstockUltimate.org for details. Athletic Fields, 98 Comeau Drive, Woodstock. woodstockultimate.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-4:30pm Woodstock Public Menorah Lighting & Grand Gelt Drop. Lighting of the Menorah, Grand Hannukah chocolate coin drop by the Woodstock Fire Department, singing holiday songs, apple cider, latkes, music, and gifts for every child. Come meet the new directors of Chabad of Woodstock Rabbi Mendy and Shaindy Karczag. Info: 845-331-1176; ChabadUlsterCounty.org. Woodstock Village Green, Woodstock. Info: 845-684-0418, chabadulster@gmail. com, bit.ly/34XELFs. 4pm Annual Hanukkah Celebration. Held at the Jewish Congregation of New Paltz Community Center at 30 North Chestnut St in New Paltz. All are welcome! This celebration will have something for everyone: group sing-a-long led by our illustrious choir the Chai Notes, games (including dreidle), crafts, and plenty of delicious latkes! If you have, please bring your menorah and candles and we will all symbolically light our menorahs together! Please bring a vegetarian dish to share. Our Judaica shop will also be open during the party. Please call 845-255-9817 with any questions. 4pm-5:30pm Tenth Annual Celebration - Life Lessons and Carols. Kinderhook Reformed Church, 21 Broad Street (US Route 9), Kinderhook. KinderhookRevormedChurch.com. Freewill offering. 4pm-6pm Concerts at Christmastime. Classic Choral Singers with Janiece J. Kohler, Conductor. This year’s program is a joyous and inspiring collection of Christmas music. Blooming Grove United Church of Christ, Blooming Grove. classicchoralsociety.org. free/goodwill donation. 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. 4:30pm-7:30pm First Night of Hannukah Festival. Activities will begin outdoors with the lighting of the Hanukkiah, followed by an indoors, family carnival including latkes and deep-fried soufganiyot, crafts and games for children, and story-telling by Rabbi Yael Romer. Free. Congregation Emanuel of the Hudson Valley, 243 Albany Ave, Kingston. 5pm A Christmas Carol by Theatre on the Road. Victorian carolers, three course dinner, cash bar and the show. Tickets: $75/person including tax & gratuity. Info: 845-475-7973; theatreontheroad.com. Beekman Arms, 6387 Mill St, Rhinebeck. 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-9pm It’s A Wonderful Life. The beloved American holiday classic comes to captivating life as a live 1940s radio broadcast. Shadowland Stages, 157 Canal Street, Ellenville. Info: 845-6475511, info@shadowlandstages.org, shadowlandstages.org/2. 31-39. 7pm Storytelling with Janet Carter. Info: 845-246-5775. Free admission. Inquiring Minds Saugerties Bookstore, 65 Partition Street, Saugerties. 8pm Live @ The Falcon: Jeremy Baum Trio: Charlie “Baum” Christmas. Annual tribute to Vince Guaraldi’s 1965 studio album, “A Charlie Brown Christmas” - considered one of the most beloved holiday albums recorded. Info: 845-2367970. The Falcon Underground, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro.


15

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Dec. 19, 2019

CLASSIFIEDS 100

Help Wanted

to place an ad: contact

e-mail

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

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

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

fax

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

drop-off

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

Please look on-line and apply at MOHONKJOBS.com

deadlines

telephone

Join the Mohonk team!

phone, mail drop-off

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

rates

POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT BUDDHIST MONASTERY: KITCHEN: Assist Kitchen Manager with food preparation for up to 75 people. Maintain clean & organized cooking & storage areas. All meals are vegetarian. HOUSEKEEPER: Clean and prepare guest rooms and common areas. Some laundry. Must have ability to lift up to 30 lbs. Visit www.kagyu.org or email: ktdapps@kagyu. org (Please include contact info.) Court Clerk Position: Seeking a motivated and reliable individual that is able to multitask in a fast-paced environment. Must have computer knowledge and customer service skills. Knowledge of Microsoft Office and Outlook a plus. This is a 40 hour a week position, must be available to work Tuesday and Wednesday evenings as needed. Starting pay is $15/hour plus benefits. Please send a resume to: New Paltz Justice Court, Attn: Resume, 23 Plattekill Avenue, New Paltz, NY 12561. ARE YOU A THERAPIST WISHING TO GROW AND GIVE BACK? A Home Within (formerly the Children’s Psychotherapy Project) is a radical nation-wide program serving the foster care community. Our motto is “One child- One therapist- for as long as it takes”. We are looking for therapists willing to provide pro bono therapy in return for free small group consultation/supervision. You provide the space and time, we provide the referrals through Ulster County Foster Care Unit with whom we have a long-standing positive relationship. This is a rare opportunity to provide long-term Psychotherapy to a population in need of secure attachment experiences. Please contact Jenny Bates, LCSW, Clinical Director, Mid-Hudson Valley chapter, at Jennybates1459@gmail.com or call 845-383-1844 for more information. HOME ATTENDANT NEEDED PT. Weekdays. $11.80/hour. Disabled 55-yr. old female looking for female home attendant to help w/ basic needs. Reliable, caring + live within 30 minutes of Woodstock. Must have car. 845684-5314. No calls before 9 a.m. or after 8 p.m.

140

Opportunities

PEACE, LOVE AND WINE, LIQUOR STORE IN VILLAGE CENTER, WOODSTOCK, NY; SUCCESSFUL 17 YEARS.. OWNER RETIRING. RSCHWARTZCPA@ AOL.COM, 914-466-4646.

145

Adult Care

Helping Hand Care Giving Service. Shopping, Meal preparation, Light house keeping, Errands, Beauty needs, companionship. Much more. New Paltz and surrounding areas. Elaine Parisi. 914-388-3008

225

Party Planning/ Catering

POTTIE FOR YOUR PARTY! HAVING A PARTY? TLK LLC. PORTABLE TOILET RENTALS. Weekend, Weekly, Monthly Rentals. We have Gray, White, Blue, Tan,

Green (pine-scented), Pink (rose-scented), Red & Blue Handicap Accessible. (We also have a few w/sinks). Great for Construction/ Building Sites, Sporting Events, Concerts, Street Festivals, Parks, Outdoor Weddings, Campsites, Flea Markets, Party Events, etc. Call 845-658-8766, 845-417-6461 or 845706-7197. e-mail: TLKportables@gmail. com

weekly

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

special deals

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

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380

Garage/ Workspace/ Storage

ASHOKAN STORE-IT Ask About Our Long Term Storage Discount

5x10 $40 10x15 $90

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

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

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

420

Highland/ Clintondale Rentals

HIGHLAND: LARGE 1-BEDROOM END UNIT. $1025/month heat & hot water included. Private, quiet neighborhood. Private parking. Next to Highland Town Hall/Court on Church Street, near Rt. 9W. Minutes to SUNY New Paltz, Poughkeepsie Bridge, Metro North, Rt. 9 & hospitals. 1 month security. No smoking. No pets. 845-453-0047. HIGHLAND: 2-BEDROOM second floor end unit. Separate entrance. $1225/month. Heat & hot water included. Carpeted. Private, quiet neighborhood. On-site parking. Next to Lloyd Town Hall, near Rt. 9W. Minutes to Poughkeepsie Bridge, Metro North, Rt. 9 & hospitals. 1 month security. No smoking. 845-453-0047.

430

New Paltz Rentals

SOUTHSIDE TERRACE APARTMENTS offers semester leases for SPRING 2020 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.

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web

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

New Paltz: Southside Terrace Apartments Year round and other lease terms to suit your needs available!

HOLIDAY

EARLY

DEADLINES Christmas

Almanac, classifieds and New Paltz Times ad deadline is

Free use of the: Recreation Room, Pool, New Fitness Center & much more!

December 20th

“Now accepting credit cards! Move in & pay your security and deposit with your credit or debit card with no additional fees!”

December 23rd

Call 845-255-7205 for more information

Kingston, Saugerties, Woodstock ad deadline is

New Year’s Almanac, classifieds and New Paltz Times ad deadline is

NEW PALTZ GARDENS APARTMENTS

December 27th

845-255-6171

December 30th

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

Kingston, Saugerties, Woodstock ad deadline is

Please call

435

Rosendale/ Tillson/High Falls/Stone

845.334.8200

for more info or to place your ad.

Ridge Rentals

Stone Ridge, 2-Bedroom with parking. $1000/month. Tenant pays utilities. No smoking, no pets. References, credit check required. First, last and security. Call 845657-8248. House to sublet - January 15th - May 15th in the hamlet of High Falls - the river flowing behind. Two bedrooms and studio space. Simple and elegant furnishings. $1500/ month plus utilities negotiable. For inquiries text 845-943-0206

Thank you and

Happy Holidays! 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. Nonsmoker. No pets. 845-658-9332.

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


16

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Dec. 19, 2019

300

Real Estate

,

NEW!

EN W!

WOODSTOCK, NEW YORK Perfect home for a weekend retreat or a full time resident. This cedar sided 2-bedroom, 1 bath midcentury ranch, on a pretty 1/2-acre parcel has what you want. Privacy, views, convenient location to both the Woodstock Village and historic Kingston. Some of the great features include: Beautiful wide board oak and cherry flooring, a large Living room with a brick fireplace and a high efficiency Jotyl stove insert, cathedral ceilings and a spacious screened in porch with Trex flooring. Another important amenity is a whole house generator that goes with the sale. This listing brought to you by Richard Miller......................... $295,000

KINGSTON, NEW YORK Building totally renovated. Commercial space, street level, 2 bathrooms, excellent location Midtown Kingston, Lighting, Entrance, Center door entrance. Historic brick building. Private parking spaces in rear of building. Metered street parking. Currently used for an exhibition and performance space. approx. 2,000 sq. ft. Space available December 2019. This listing brought to you by Charlotte Scherer. $3,000 month

WEST SHOKAN, NEW YORK West Shokan- one of the charming sought after hamlets in the beautiful Town of Olive. This is a great starter/retirement home. It is a ranch style mobile home. Master bedroom has a master bath with a double sink and a walk-in closet. There is a large deck on the front of the house. The same owners have owned this parcel for the past 50 years. They put this mobile home on in 1997. Close to the Olive Library and the local Town of Olive pool at Davis Park. The school, supermarket and pharmacy are only 5 miles away. This listing brought to you by Siobhan Scanlan. ............ $159,000

ICE ! PR CTION U D RE

SAUGERTIES, NEW YORK WATERFRONT Dock and access to the Hudson River from your home. Fifty feet of waterfront on the lower Esopus Creek. Enjoy the sight and sounds of the Diamond Mill waterfall from multilevel decks. Three bedrooms, one and a half baths, eat in kitchen, dining room/wood stove, living room and observatory, Family room includes wet bar and spiral staircase to lower level. Master Bedroom suite on main floor with deck to water views. Convenient walk to local shops and restaurants and “beach”. This waterfront property is for sale in the Village of Saugerties. Steps to waterfront need to be replaced or create a ramp. Price reflects needed upgrading. Access to water is from Lynch’s Marina with a tie-up at property. This listing brought to you by Blanca Aponte............................................. $235,000

REN

TAL

WINDHAM, NEW YORK AM UST This quiet two-bedroom duplex SEE ! sits back off the main road in a beautiful peaceful setting only minutes away from the hustle and bustle of Windham and Hunter Mountains. Enjoy local Skiing, Golfing, Hiking, Zip lining, Biking, Fishing and Dining. Sliding glass doors off the living room lead you onto a large deck to relax on after all those fun activities. Fabulous mountain views in the winter and spectacular colorful foliage in the Autumn. 4 seasons of views from your living room and deck. This listing brought to you by Karen Stanbrook..........................$148,000

Kingston 845.339.1144 / Woodstock 845.679.2929 & 845.679.9444 / Saugerties 845.246.3300 / Phoenicia 845.688.2929 / Catskill 518.800.9999 / Commercial 845.339.9999

Man With A Van # 255-6347 DOT 32476

20' Moving Trucks

Moving & Delivery Service Reasonable Rates • Free Estimates 8 Enterprise Rd., New Paltz, NY

440

Kingston/ Hurley/Port Ewen Rentals

Charming 3-Bedroom Cape-Cod style House in Hurley. 1170 sq.ft. Kitchen, DR, LR, den, bathroom, washer/dryer in basement. Minutes to uptown Kingston & Thruway. Non-smoking. No pets. $1800/month plus utilities. 1 month security deposit. Available 1/1/20. 845-750-2986.

450

Saugerties Rentals

Saugerties: 2-Bedroom, first floor, full bath. Quiet location, good neighborhood, off-street parking, coin laundry, garbage pick-up, water, sewer included. Locked mailboxes. Absolutely NO pets, no smoking. $1000/month plus utilities. 845-246-3320

470

Woodstock/West Hurley Rentals

NEWLY RENOVATED 700 sq.ft. LARGE STUDIO. New appliances, high ceilings, large windows, separate kitchen, bathroom. Beautiful property, private compound. 2.5 miles to center of Woodstock. $1050/month plus utilities. Call 845-417-5282. CHARMING COTTAGE. Walk to Woodstock Village. Loft/balcony plus bedroom, deck, quiet & private. $950/month includes lawn care, snow plow, trash pickup. Security, references. 845-679-6816. LOVELY ATTACHED WOODSTOCK FARMHOUSE: beautiful 16 acres w/breathtaking mountain views. Across from Wilson State Park. Huge farm kitchen, wood-stove, 2-bedrooms, south facing sleeping porch, hardwood floors, terrace, full bath, W/D. $1350/month. Security, references. 845-7064439 cell or 845-679-4439, hera@netstep. net WOODSTOCK STUDIO APARTMENT; 5 min walk to town, restaurants, shops. Newly renovated. $650/month; plus utilities. 718864-9312

WOODSTOCK/LAKE HILL: Welcome to our restored rural historic inn on NYC busline! 2 furnished rooms available January 2020. Fully equipped kitchen, living room with piano, friendly working cats, gardens. $575 or $700/month includes utilities & internet. Security, refs, car essential. 845-6792564; waydhomestays@msn.com

sleepless nights, I can take care of everything. Over 25 years’ experience. Call Adam (JOYOUS KITCHEN, CROSROADS FOOD & DRINK, JOYOUS CAFÉ AND CATERING) 914-4662008. Reliable, honest, excellent references.

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. $1000/month. 845-417-5282.

615

600

For Sale

YAMAHA 3000 WATT INVERTER GENERATOR WITH 3500 WATT SURGE POTENTAL, ELECTRIC STARTER, THROTTLE UP OR DOWN DEPENDING ON LOAD, USED FOR 1 MONTH THAN PURCHASED A BIGGER UNIT. $1000.00. 845988-8576; frankwc100@gmail.com.

601

Portable Toilet Rentals

TLK

LLC

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

TLKportables@gmail.com tlkportables.com

Wee k e n d s • We e k l y • M o n t h l y

603

Tree Services

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

FULLY INSURED

LAWLESS TREE SERVICE

CERTIFIED ARBORIST • CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES

STUMP GRINDING

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

607

Property Maintenance

YOUR GUY FRIDAY - Personal Chef, Property Manager, Houseman, Weekend Home Shopping & Set Up. No more

Hunting/Fishing Sporting Goods

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

620

700

Personal & Health Services

SPORT OF IRON FITNESS- A Culture of Strength. NOW OFFERING $35/MONTH OPEN GYM. *State of the Art Strength Training Equipment* *Powerlifting, Strongman, Olympic Lifting Equipped* *9000 sq. ft. facility including 1400 sq.ft. of turf. Group Training Sessions - Registered Dietician Youth Programs - Personal Training. 120 State Route 28, Kingston. Call Today 845853-8189.

702

Art Services

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. House-calls. Free appraisals. Richard Miller Antiques. 35+ years in business. Call/text 845-3897286 .

650

Antiques & Collectibles

BLAIR COLLECTIBLES is your trusted local BUYER of old COINS, Paper Money, Jewelry (and other Gold & Silver items), Marbles & Toys, Pocket Watches, etc.. most small size collectibles.50+ YEARS EXPERIENCE serving satisfied clients! 845-254-4717 /blaircol4@aol. com PHOENICIA ARTS & ANTIQUES , 41 Main St.,Phoenicia, 845-688-0021. Friday-Monday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Jewelry, art gallery, clothing, blown glass, honey, mid-century and antiques.

695

Professional Services

*Jessica Rice*; Beautiful Images Hair Salon, 123 Boices Lane, Kingston. Hair845-383-1852; www.beautifulimageshairsalon.com Makeup- 845-309-6860; www.jessicamitzi.com 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 .

710

Organizing/ Decorating/ Refinishing

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

715

Cleaning Services

HOUSE CLEANING for a tidy sum. 845658-2073.

Brook Does Cleaning Residential, Commercial & Airbnb Cleaning by a reliable human. Tel: (845)206-9126 Facebook.com/brookdoescleaning

COUNTRY CLEANERS Homes & Offices • Insured & Bonded

Excellent references.

Call (845)706-1713 or (845) 679-8932 Think Holiday Cleaning! Residential, Commercial, Rentals Cleaning. SPECIAL FOR SENIORS: basic clean 2-bedroom/1


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

17

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Dec. 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

300

Real Estate

Happy Holidays!

- 6 9 4 , 9 3@

Best wishes for the holiday season and the happiest of New Years to the friends we’ve made throughout the year, and to those we look forward to serving in the future!

COLUCCI SHAND REALTY, INC Gardiner Gables

255-3455

‘TIS THE SEASON…. It’s time to start planning your New Year’s Real Estate strategy! Be prepared for 2020 by seriously considering your buying & selling options NOW. With over 40 years of recognized success in the Mid-Hudson Valley, we know this market. You can TRUST our seasoned advice and cutting-edge technology to get you to your Real Estate goal. Let us exceed your expectations!

2356 Rte. 44-55 Gardiner, NY 12525

www.coluccishandrealty.com

** Become a Fan of Colucci Shand Realty on Facebook ** bath- $60. All services offered. Green/all natural supplies. Flexible schedule. 7 day service. Insured. Free estimates. 845-235-6701. CLEAN UPS, CLEAN OUTS. Indoor/Outdoor. Junk & debris removal. Estates prepared for Moving and Sale. (845)688-2253.

717

HANDYALL SERVICES: *Carpentry, *Plumbing, *Electrical, *Painting, *Excavating & Grading. 5 ton dump trailer. Trees cut. Call Dave 845-514-6503- mobile. NYS DOT T-12467

Incorporated 1985

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

Shandaken, NY 845-688-2253

HURLEY CAPE - Gracious, spacious and just minutes to Uptown Kingston’s vibrant Stockade District. Seamless floor plan flows from LR w/ cozy brick fireplace to sunny eat-in kitchen and onto inviting dining room. Convenient main level bedroom & full bath + en suite MBR w/walk-in closet and add’l BR and full bath upstairs. Freshly painted lower level family/media room and workshop. Fully fenced rear yard w/deck & fire pit. ........... $335,000

RONDOUT GEM - Original detail, loads of character and just a one block walk to the vibrant Kingston waterfront! Stately Victorian era beauty with wide wrap around veranda welcomes you into a grand foyer with original woodwork & stained glass. Main level features 10’ ceilings, grand DR, two staircases, pocket doors, 2 fireplaces and oversized EI kitchen. There are 5 BRs upstairs. Deck o’looks leafy backyard. MUST SEE! ..........$419,000

Interior Painting & Staining, Sheet Rocking, All Stages of Remodeling

NEW PRICE

Residential & Commercial • Free estimates, fully insured Accepting all major credit cards.

Contact Jason Habernig

720

Painting/Odd Jobs

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

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

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

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

FINE HOUSE PAINTING — 15 Years experience —

• Power Washing

Free estimates • Reasonable rates

• Sheetrock & Plaster Repair

845-532-6587 • pabloshine@gmail.com

PABLO SHINE

PEACE & QUIET!! - Completely PRIVATE and tranquil 28 acres enclose this sprawling 3000+ SF modern rustic home flooded with natural light from walls of windows. The bi-level design features a crisp Scandinavian aesthetic and offers open concept living spaces for easy entertaining, den with cozy wood burner, HW & slate flooring, 3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, home office PLUS, decks & stone patios for al fresco relaxation. SO NICE! ..................................................................$625,000

BHHSHUDSONVALLEY.COM

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

House & Estate Cleanouts, Junk Removal, Dump Runs. Helping homeowners, realtors and property managers for 20 years. One

PURE COUNTRY - Quintessential country home nestled on 15+ prime acres with springfed pond and IG pool. Casual elegance abounds throughout the gracious interior featuring gourmet kitchen, family room with cozy fireplace, en suite MBR with lavish marble bath & fireplace + 3 BRs, 4.5 baths, hardwood floors, gourmet kitchen, all in a lush landscape with stone patio, fire pit & arched walkway to sparkling pool. ..................................................................$999,000

KINGSTON 340•1920

NEW PALTZ 255•9400

STONE RIDGE 687•0232

WOODSTOCK 679•0006


18

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Dec. 19, 2019

300

Real Estate

Specializing In Real Estate Throughout Ulster County & The Catskills www.MurphyRealtyGrp.com

Speak With An Agent today, Call: (845) 338-5252 UPTOWN KINGSTON

NEW PALTZ LOG HOME W/ SPECTACULAR VIEWS!!

GORGEOUS 1920’S COLONIAL

Amazing setting with breathtaking and sweeping mountain and meadow views of the Shawngunk Ridge and Mohonk yet only minutes to the Village of New Paltz with entertainment, eateries, shops and all that the Mohonk Mountain House has to offer. This 3 BR, 2 bath Cape style log home offers an open kitchen with dining area with plenty of space for entertaining. Large living room with wood stove for those cold winter nights. Lower level has family/rec room with wood stove, lots of additional storage and oversized three car garage with breezeway that connects to the lower level. Expansive deck for picnics and family get togethers or just enjoying outdoor living at its’ best! This country home is surrounded by split rail fencing, stone walkway and gardens to enhance the exterior beauty. One of a kind distinctive offering!! $499,900

This home consists of 3 BRs & 2 1/2 baths. Enter this charming foyer to see hardwood floors throughout. Convenient Office/mud room. Wood-burning fireplace, plantation shutters and built-ins add charm to this homes LR. French doors open to a bright and cozy Florida room with newer windows. Elegant, formal dining room connects to the kitchen boasting a farmhouse sink, double oven, stainless steel appliances, walk-in pantry and cozy dining booth for those memorable family meals. Exit the kitchen and enjoy your screened in porch for those buggy nights & Trex deck for many beautiful days. The Master suite contains bath with laundry, built-in bureau and plenty of closet space. Central air keeps the 2nd floor cool on those hot summer days. 5yr roof! 2yr hot water on demand! Updated electric! $450,000

MINUTES TO UPTOWN KINGSTON!

PICTURESQUE LOG HOME ON 2.9 ACRES

12 Year Young Colonial. Very conveniently located on the Loughran Court Cul-de-sac! Minutes to Uptown for a nice dinner and shopping! Grand entry foyer, hardwood flooring, gracious rooms, family room with fireplace, huge eat-in kitchen with granite counter tops and stainless steel appliances, recessed lighting, 1st floor bedroom offers flexibility in family living! Upstairs 4 generous bedroom and 2 full baths, laundry room, walkup attic for storage. Basement offers 9 ft ceilings, sliding glass doors to back yard - Plenty of room for the entire family! Bonus room over the 2 car garage for studio yoga space, in home office or both!

Come to the country and enjoy this beautiful Log Home. Situated on 2.9 acres on a quiet country road in Hurley, yet convenient to surrounding Stone Ridge, High Falls, and Kingston and easy access to commuter routes 209 and the Thruway! Relax on the cozy front porch, or sit on the back porch and enjoy nature! There’s an above-ground pool, plus an out door shower and hot tub that can’t be missed! Beamed ceilings grace this open area into the dining area and kitchen along with the den above. First floor bedroom is a bonus as well. Automatic on generator for those winter storms. Amazing wood stove will keep you cozy on these chilly nights. Plus a spacious 2 car garage for all the boys toys!

$439,000

$499,000

call, it’s gone! Senior & disabled discounts. 845-247-7365. GarysHauling.com

Stoneridge Electrical Service, Inc. www.stoneridgeelectric.com

• LED Lighting

• Standby Generators

• Heated Bathroom Floor Tiles

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

• Roof Deicing Cables

• Service Upgrades

Authorized Dealer & Installer Low-Rate Financing Available

H Z Emergency Generators U \ LICENSED 331-4227 INSURED

740

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

ly insured. www.dandsimprovements.com (845)339-3017

.

725

Plumbing, Heating, AC & Electric

Interiors & Remodeling Inc s ’ d e T Reliable, dependable & insured

845-591-8812 tedsinteriors@gmail.com HANDYMAN, HOME REPAIR, Carpentry, Remodels, Installations, Roofing, Painting, Mechanical repairs, etc. Large and small jobs. Reasonable rates. Free estimates. References available. (845)616-7470. D AND S IMPROVEMENTS: Home improvement, repair and maintenance, from the smallest repairs to large renovations. Over 50 years of combined experience. Ful-

760

Gardening/ Landscaping

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

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

Paramount Contracting & Development Corp.

William Watson • Residential / Commercial

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

Building Services

TLK LLC. PORTABLE TOILET RENTALS. Weekend, Weekly, Monthly rentals. We have Gray, white, blue, tan, green (pinescented), pink (rose-scented), red & blue handicap accessible. (We also have a few w/ sinks). Great for Construction/Building Sites, Sporting Events, Concerts, Street Festivals, Parks, Outdoor Weddings, Campsites, Flea Markets, Party Events, etc. Call 845658-8766, 845-417-6461 or 845-706-7197. e-mail: TLKportables@gmail.com

legal notices LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF LOCAL LAW SUBJECT TO PERMISSIVE REFERENDUM NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that at a regular meeting held on the 19th day of November, 2019, the Ulster County Legislature adopted a resolution adopting a local law, which was deemed duly adopted by the County Executive on the 12th day of December, 2019. Said local law, published herewith, is subject to a permissive referendum pursuant to Section 24 of the Municipal Home Rule Law and Section 101 of NY County Law. Annual salary so identified shall become effective unless by no later than January 27, 2020 a petition signed by the required number of qualified electors of the County of Ulster is received in the Office of the Clerk of the Legislature, 244 Fair Street, Kingston, NY 12402, protesting such local law and requesting a referendum thereupon. DATED:December 19, 2019 Kingston, New York Victoria A. Fabella, Clerk Ulster County Legislature Resolution No. 445 November 19, 2019 Adopting Proposed Local Law No. 6 Of 2019, A Local Law Increasing The Salary And Hours Of The Commissioner Of Social Services Referred to: The Public Health and Social Services Committee (Chairman Lopez and Legislators Collins, Nolan, Petit, and Wawro), The Ways and Means Committee (Chairwoman Archer and Legislators Donaldson, Gerentine, Maio, Joseph Maloney, Petit, and Ronk), and The

Everything Ulster Publishing now in one place. hudsonvalleyone.com Laws and Rules, Governmental Services Committee (Chairman Donaldson and Legislators Archer, Heppner, Roberts, and Ronk) Chairman of the Public Health and Social Services Committee, Craig V. Lopez, and Deputy Chair Kathy Nolan offer the following: WHEREAS, Resolution No. 355 dated August 20, 2019, set the date for the Public Hearing on Proposed Local Law No. 6 of 2019 (A Local Law Increasing The Salary And Hours Of The Commissioner Of Social Services), to be held on Tuesday, September 10, 2019 at 6:10 PM in the Legislative Chambers, Ulster County Office Building, 244 Fair Street, Kingston, New York; and WHEREAS, said Public Hearing was held on Tuesday, September 10, 2019 at 6:10 PM in the Legislative Chambers, Ulster County Office Building, 244 Fair Street, Kingston, New York; and WHEREAS, said Public Hearing was advertised in the official newspapers of the County of Ulster, and posted on the signboard maintained by the Clerk of the Legislature situated in the Ulster County Office Building; and WHEREAS, all parties in attendance were permitted an opportunity to speak on behalf of or in opposition to the Proposed Local Law; now, therefore, be it RESOLVED, that herein, Proposed Local Law No. 6 of 2019 is hereby adopted by the Ulster County Legislature, and, pending the approval of the County Executive, will be assigned a local law number consecutive to the last local law adopted and approved in 2019; Proposed Local Law Number 6 Of 2019 County Of Ulster A Local Law Increasing The Salary And Hours Of The Commissioner Of Social Services

BE IT ENACTED, by the County Legislature of the County of Ulster as follows: SECTION 1. LEGISLATIVE INTENT AND FINDINGS. The Ulster County Legislature finds and determines that the Commissioner of Social Services is responsible for overseeing the Department of Social Services and ensuring that the Department adequately and efficiently assesses, plans for, and provides appropriate services to families and individuals in need. The Ulster County Legislature further finds and determines that the Commissioner of Social Services is responsible for overseeing all units of the Department of Social Services including, but not limited to, Anti-Fraud Waste and Abuse, Child Support Enforcement, Children and Family Services, Coordinates Children’s Services, Early Intervention and Preschool Special Education Programs, Food Stamps Programs, Safe Harbour Program, Temporary Assistance, and the Inter-Agency Council on Domestic Violence. The Ulster County Legislature further finds that while performing his duties and responsibilities as the Commissioner of Social Services, the Commissioner dedicates more time than the standard thirty-five hour work week, and as such it is necessary and appropriate to increase the amount of hours worked per week from thirtyfive (35) to forty (40). The Ulster County Legislature further finds that an increase in the amount of hours worked per week results in a necessary increase in salary. The Ulster County Legislature further finds and determines that pursuant to N.Y. County Law §201 the salaries of County Officers serving for a fixed term of office may be changed and adjusted only by local law. Pursuant to New York Social Services Law

950

Animals

Look who’s being cared for at Saugerties Animal Shelter!We have such loving adult cats & kittens just waiting to become part of your family. DUKE & HECTOR; 4-month old kitten boys. They’re shy, sweet, all blackso as cute as they are now, they’ll become elegant cat boys. SARAH; sweet 2-year old tiger girl. Sarah was a mom to her own litter- When another orphaned litter needed a mom, Sarah nursed those kittens. Isn’t it her time to be loved? MISHU; 10-year old orange medium hair kitty. He’s been at the shelter the longest of all the animals. Mishu needs to be the only pet- That means Mishu would love only you! ZINNEA (kitten girl) & THEODORABLE (kitten boy); 5-month old tiger & white kittens. SPHINX (kitten girl) & JINX (kitten boy); 6-month old gray & white kittens. 2 Feral Cats are looking for work in a barn or factory. They’re older & experienced mousers. Remember: 2 kittens aren’t twice as much fun as 1 kitten; they’re 10 times the fun! Also- They’ll always have each other as company. And- You’ll receive twice the love! If you’re interested in adopting a kitten, this is a perfect time to meet the Adorable & Lively kittens at Saugerties Animal Shelter. Kitten season is almost all year long!! We have lots of young & teenage kittens. Teenage kittens are between 10-14 months old. That time-frame can vary as each kitten is an individual. These are the DOGS at Saugerties Animal Shelter. Please come meet them &

Section 116 the Commissioner of Social Services of a County serves for a fixed term. Therefore, the purpose of this local law is to increase the amount of hours worked per week and salary of the Commissioner of Social Services for Ulster County. SECTION 2. The annual salary of such County Officer serving for a fixed term of office shall be adjusted and changed in accordance with provisions of Resolution No. 445 of 2019. On and after the effective date of this Local Law, the foregoing officer shall be paid at such a rate which, will equal the annual salary fixed for such office for the year 2020 as set forth. SECTION 3. EFFECTIVE DATE. This Local Law shall take effect January 1, 2020 subject to compliance with all applicable provisions of the Municipal Home Rule Law of the State of New York. This Local Law is subject to a permissive referendum, and will be submitted to a vote of the qualified electors of the County of Ulster if within 45 days after the date on which it was so adopted, there is filed with the Clerk of the Ulster County Legislature a petition protesting against this Local Law, signed and authenticated as required by Section 24 of the Municipal Home Rule Law, by qualified electors of the County of Ulster registered to vote therein at the last preceding general election, in number equal to at least ten percentum of the total number of votes cast for Governor at the last gubernatorial election held in said County. Addendum Title: Commissioner of Social Services 2019 Salary: $112,306.00 2020 Salary: $128,349.00


19

ALMANAC WEEKLY

Dec. 19, 2019

MATT

RICH

TEAMS Week of Dec. 22

Begnal Motors

Healey Hyundai

Sawyer Motors

HOUSTON AT TAMPA BAY

TAM

TAM

HOU

TAM

TAM

HOU

BUFFALO AT NEW ENGLAND

BUF

NE

NE

NE

NE

BUF

RAMS AT SAN FRANCISCO

SF

SF

SF

SF

SF

SF SF

PITTSBURGH AT NY JETS

PIT

PIT

NYJ

PIT

PIT

PIT

Route 52 Beacon, NY

CINCINNATI AT MIAMI

MIA

MIA

CIN

MIA

MIA

MIA

OPEN: MON-THURS 9AM-8PM, FRI 9AM-6PM, SAT 9AM-5PM, SUN 11AM-4PM

BALTIMORE AT CLEVELAND

BAL

BAL

BAL

BAL

BAL

BAL

NY GIANTS AT WASHINGTON

WAS

NYG

NYG

WAS

NYG

NYG

JACKSONVILLE AT ATLANTA

ATL

ATL

ATL

ATL

ATL

ATL

CAROLINA AT INDIANAPOLIS

CARO

INDY

CARO

INDY

INDY

CARO

NEW ORLEANS AT TENNESSEE

NO

TEN

NO

NO

NO

TEN

OAKLAND AT CHARGERS

OAK

CHG

CHG

CHG

CHG

OAK

DETROIT AT DENVER

DEN

DEN

DET

DEN

DEN

DEN

ARIZONA AT SEATTLE

SEA

SEA

SEA

SEA

SEA

SEA

DALLAS AT PHILADELPHIA

DAL

DAL

DAL

DAL

DAL

PHI

LAST WEEK’S TOTALS

10 5 121 86 KC

13 2 126 81 KC

11 4 125 82 KC

11 4 127 80 KC

13 2 123 84 KC

7 8 120 87 KC

45

62

48

42

56

47

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

HEALEY HYUNDAI

845-831-2222 •845-831-1990 visit us online: HealeyBrothersHyundai.com

Over 600 vehicles in stock! TIE BREAKER KANSAS CITY AT CHICAGO

RAY

FRAN

Lia Honda Poughkeepsie Thorpe’s GMC of Kingston Nissan

CONGRATULATIONS LIFETIME WARRANTIES ON OUR NEW AND USED CARS! ONLY AT

POUGHKEEPSIE NISSAN ROUTE 9 WAPPINGE RS FA LLS

845-297-4314

GREGORY

KEVIN

www.poughkeepsienissan.com

OPEN 7 DAYS

Since 1930

THIS WEEK’S WINNER

THORPE’S

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

RICH KNUDSEN HEALEY HYUNDAI


20

ALMANAC WEEKLY

$2 A M 79 ON

2020 JEEP CHEROKEE LIMITED 4X4 LEASE FOR

$279 A MONTH

V6, LEATHER, HEATED SEATS, R/START, MSRP $35,690, 39 MONTH, 10,000 ANNUAL MILEAGE, $2999 DOWN PLUS TAX, STOCK #CK1225

$33 9 ON

AM

2020 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE UPLAND 4X4 LEASE FOR

$28 9 ON

AM

2019 RAM 1500 BIG HORN QUAD CAB

TH

LEASE FOR

TH

$289 A MONTHH

5.7L V-6 HEMI, MSRP $42,975, 39 MONTH, 10,000 ANNUAL MILEAGE, $2999 DOWN PLUS TAX, STOCK #RP2330D

$34 9 ON

AM

2020 CHRYSLER PACIFICA TOURING L

TH

Dec. 19, 2019

$339 A MONTH

LEASE E FOR

TH

$349 $ 349 A MONT MONTH M ONT ON

LEATHER, HEATED SEATS, MSRP $38,240 0, 36 MONTHS, 10,000 ANNUAL MILEAGE, $3000 DOWN PLUS TAX, STOCK #PA7041D

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$36 9 ON

AM

2020 JEEP GLADIATOR SPORT 4X4

LEASE FOR

TH

$369 A MONTH

COLD WEATHER GROUP, 3.6L V6, MSRP $44,830, 42 MONTHS, 10,000 ANNUAL MILEAGE, $3000 DOWN PLUS TAX, STOCK #GL6065

$24 9 ON

AM

2020 JEEP COMPASS LATITUDE 4X4 LEASE FOR

TH

$249 A MONTH

COLD WEATHER PACKAGE, MSRP $30,580 80, 422 MON M MONTHS, O 10,000 ANNUAL MILES, $2995 DOWN PLUS TA TAX STK #CP6174D

*To qualified buyers through preferred lender. Tax and tags additional unless noted. Stock photos. Not responsible for typographical errors. All offers expire 12/31/19.

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

see who could be your new love. LILY; sweet, shy Pittie mix girl, 4-years old & needs a quiet home. CHARLOTTE; Brindle Pittie mix girl who loves people. Children will enjoy growing up w/Charlotte. Charlotte needs to be your only pet. ROCKY; Sheltie/Border Collie mix boy, very sweet, good w/dogs, loves peoples and loves to herd cats. He IS part Border Collie!! Rocky can be found at Ulster County Canines where he’s available for adoption. Saugerties Animal Shelter; located at 1765 Route 212 Saugerties, NY 12477 (behind the Saugerties Transfer Station). (Closed Sunday & 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.

L&M Pet Sitting

PSYCHOTHERAPY

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

MINDFULNESS

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

CLASSES WWW.WELLNESSEMBODIEDCENTER.COM 845-532-6064 126 Main Street, New Paltz 12561

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999

Vehicles Wanted

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

The business of media is changing, but local, on-the-ground, fact-checked journalism is needed now more than ever. We believe it’s important for the entire community, regardless of economic position, to have access to the local news that impacts their lives most. That’s why we don’t place our online content behind a paywall. But good, local journalism costs money to produce. That’s where you come in. We’re asking our online readers: If you value what we do, please consider making a contribution at hudsonvalleyone.com/support. Your help will ensure independent, locally owned journalism will continue to thrive in your community.

UP Ulster Publish ublish ish sh hing

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