Almanacweekly 32 2014 e sub

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

BASILICA HUD SON RISING A miscellany of Hudson Valley art, entertainment and adventure | Calendar Ca l e n da r & Classifieds | Issue 32 | Aug. 7 – 14

Melissa Auf der Maur & Tony Stone revivify old Hudson factory into thriving community/arts center (p.8) also Bard Music Festival examines Schubert’s legacy . . . Don’t miss the MegaMoon . . . Saugerties Artists’ Studio Tour . . . Secrets in the soil Brad Mehldau at Falcon . . . West Side Story in Woodstock . . . Masterpieces of Polish cinema at Upstate Films . . . Free Family Day in Poughkeepsie


2 High Peaks Festival kicks off on Sunday in Hunter & Tannersville Greene County’s mountaintop High Peaks Festival, which starts its

ALMANAC WEEKLY fifth season this Sunday and runs throughout the ensuing ten days in Hunter and Tannersville, has been attracting the highest-level artists and young musicians from Asia, Europe, Latin America and throughout the US for its ten-day gathering of “com-

August 7, 2014 Hunter and in Tannersville, plus assorted talks on Verdi, Beethoven and the “dawn of Romanticism,” great instrumentmaking and other subjects. Consider it a return to the Grand Tour of the 18th and 19th centuries, all brought home to us right here. – Paul Smart

plete immersion in chamber music,” said founder Yehuda Hanani. “As of this summer, the festival has been taken over by Close Encounters with Music, our chamber music presenting organization that has been in the forefront of thematic programming in the Berkshires and elsewhere (the Frick Collection in New York City, the Clark Museum in Williamstown, Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts et cetera.),” added Hanani’s wife Hannah, also an accomplished player. “‘The Grand Italian Tour’ is the theme of the combination of concerts, lectures, film and master classes, open to the public and featuring distinguished faculty artists and outstanding young musicians from around the world taking place at the newly restored Orpheum Theater in Tannersville and the Doctorow Center for the Arts in Hunter, as well as additional locations in the Hudson Valley and Berkshires.” “We are committed to bringing the very best artists and leading pedagogues to continue this new musical tradition, here in the breathtaking environment that inspired the Hudson River School painters and generations of artists since,” noted the world-acclaimed cellist, noting such guest performers as Elmar Oliveira, Gold Medal-winner of Moscow’s prestigious Tchaikovsky International Competition (the only American violinist ever to capture the award) and Axel Strauss, Enescu and Naumburg prizewinner and guest concertmaster of the Berlin Philharmonic. The centerpieces of the festival will be two concerts devoted to Italy as the motherlode of musical culture: “Years of Pilgrimage,” at 2 p.m. on Sunday, August 10 at the Doctorow Center for the Arts, will feature selections from Scarlatti, Boccherini, Rossini, Paganini and Verdi with Yehuda Hanani on cello, Michael Chertock on piano and Metropolitan Opera mezzo-soprano Lucille Beer. “Souvenir de Florence,” at 2 p.m. the following Sunday, August 17 at the Orpheum Performing Arts Center, will feature Italy-inspired works by Tchaikovsky, Stravinsky and Valentini with Oliveira and Strauss, violist Amadi Azikiwe, cellists Hanani and Thomas Landschoot; Chertock and the High Peaks Festival Chamber Orchestra. In between there will be an August 18 cello chorus concert with 18 of the instruments and an orchestra at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, a “Stars of Tomorrow” performance at the historic Olana Estate in Hudson on Friday, August 15 at 6 p.m., a series of free “Moonlight Sonatas” performances featuring top-tier young artists at the Doctorow Center in

High Peaks Music Festival, August 1020, free-$30, Hunter/Tannersville/Hudson/Berkshires; (518) 392-6677, www. catskillhighpeaksmusic.org.

Byrdcliffe Theater hosts Choreography on the Edge Choreography on the Edge will perform at the historic Byrdcliffe Theater in Woodstock on Friday and Saturday, August 8 and 9 at 8 p.m. and Sunday, August 10 at 3 p.m. The innovative program has given professional choreographers and dancers a chance to experiment and push their boundaries since 1987. It features choreographers and dancers spanning a wide range of styles and techniques; primarily modern dance, contemporary ballet and cultural motifs expressed through Irish step dancing choreographed by Joel Hanna from the original cast of Riverdance. A number of choreographers will perform their work as solos, and others will work as duets and trios, including Laura Ward with the Octavia Cup Dance Theatre, Claire Jacob-Zysman with dancers from the Ellen Sinopoli Dance Theater, Leighann Kowalsky, Jennifer Yackel, Sharon Penz, Angela Maffia, Laura Teeter, Laura Seaman, Diane McCarthy, Rowan Willigan and Alex Bloomstein. Returning this year after a hiatus is Sara Miot, one of the choreographers who began the “Choreographers’ Concert” that was later renamed Choreography on the Edge. She will present a piece performed by members of the Ulster Ballet. To maintain this focus on fresh, innovative work and a high standard of professionalism, choreographers are asked to dig deep, incorporating elements that they haven’t used before. The pieces are not auditioned and most of them will be premiering. The Byrdcliffe Theater is located at 3 Upper Byrdcliffe Way in Woodstock. Tickets cost $12, available at the door or reserved by calling Zack Jacobs at (845) 453-8673 or e-mailing choreographyontheedge@gmail.com. For more information, visit www. woodstockguild.org.

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

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The Upper Landing Park Community Celebration on Saturday, August 9 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Poughkeepsie will include music, food and family-friendly entertainment and activities. The free public event is being offered to thank the Poughkeepsie community for its support in the development of the new riverside park.

transit options. Limited free parking will be available at the Metro North parking lot. For more information, visit www. upperlanding.org.

Bollywood screenings, Indian dance & dinner in Rosendale Join the Vanaver Caravan for a day of Indian film, dance, music and food on Sunday, August 10 from 2 to 6 p.m. in Rosendale. Part of the Vanaver’s

Leaving the house can be a wild ride...

of things to do every week

Poughkeepsie’s Upper Landing Park hosts celebration on Saturday

The Upper Landing Park Community Celebration on Saturday, August 9 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. will include a rich array of family-friendly entertainment and activities. Music will be provided by the Spirit of Unity Band, POOK (Percussion Orchestra of Kingston) and Soñando’s ten-piece salsa band, Mariachi Flor de Toloache. Children’s activities include performances by the Bindlestiff Family Circus, a hula-hoop show, stiltwalkers, a hip-hop juggler and unicyclists. There will be facepainting, an Imagination Playground, demonstrations and plenty of food. The free public event is being offered to thank the Poughkeepsie community for its support in the development of the new riverside park. After several months of construction, Upper Landing Park opened to the public last November. In addition to serving as a free public park located along Water Street to the north of the Mid-Hudson Children’s Museum, Upper Landing Park will eventually provide access to Walkway over the Hudson State Historic Park’s new waterfront elevator. Upper Landing Park is located at 83 North Water Street in Poughkeepsie. Because there is limited parking along Water Street in the City of Poughkeepsie and no dedicated parking at the Upper Landing Park, those wishing to attend are encouraged to walk to the event from nearby neighborhoods or use public

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Shakti Caravan project, this is the first event in the US since the Vanaver Caravan’s partnership began with nongovernmental organization Udaipur Shakti Works in Rajasthan, India in 2012. Their combined efforts have produced the Shakti Caravan: a traveling dance exchange program. Two back-to-back events will take place on Main Street to welcome Bharat Verma and Kishan Lal Gameti to New York. Both dancers are founding members of the Caravan in India. The Rosendale Theatre will screen

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excerpts from Bollywood dance films as part of its Dance Film Sunday presentations from 2 to 4 p.m. Verma and Gameti will share their perspective on the worldwide fascination with all things Bollywood. Film presentations will be capped off with a performance by the Vanaver Caravan’. Admission costs $10 for adults, $9 for members and $6 for children age 12 and under. For more information, visit www.rosendaletheatre.org. Following the screenings, a light Indian buffet will be served at the nearby Rosendale Café from 4 to 6 p.m., complete with a Rajasthani folkdance lesson, Shakti Caravan info session on travel and volunteer opportunities in Udaipur and dancing to live music. Dinner and dance admission costs $35 for adults, $25 for children. For more information, visit www.rosendalecafe.com. All-inclusive admission for both events (screening, dance performance, dinner, dance lesson and community dance) costs $40 for adults, $20 for children. All proceeds support the continuation of Shakti Caravan and the Vanaver Caravan’s SummerDance scholarship fund. Space is limited. To preregister, call (845) 256-9300 or e-mail vcoffice@vanavercaravan.org.

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MUSIC

ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

JOCIE ADAMS IS A MASTER OF EXECUTION, but she has got the ideas too.

Come into milady’s chamber Arc Iris plays the Falcon in Marlboro on Saturday

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he word “chamber,” used as an adjective to describe music, has flipped, performed a complete 180 in its cluster of meanings. Originally, “chamber music” described a reduced scope and a relaxed formality by comparison to orchestral music. Music for smaller spaces is its root meaning, fewer players a direct consequence of that. It also suggested casualness due to the absence of the autocratic authority of the conductor, leaving the musicians to clock and to lead themselves for a change. Finally, “chamber” meant fineness and delicacy, since bombast and war sims were not an option. I use the word “chamber” all the time in my music writing, for chamber is my thing, and chamber is in – chamber pop, chamber folk and, someday soon I am sure, chamber punk – and I usually mean the exact opposite of its original sense. Chamber now means an expanded sound palette and lineup: folk music with oboes

Arc Iris

and cellos for example, or rock with brass, a Theremin and a small chorus. It means more, not less, arrangement, coordination and compositional ambition than pop forms usually entail. It implies the presence, not the absence, of an auteur: an autocratic authority micromanaging the musical detail, as opposed to the laissez-faire, default- and conventiongoverned negotiation of roles and space that happens in a traditional rock or folk group.

But at least chamber can still mean delicate and fine. In fact, “chamber music” hasn’t really changed its intrinsic sense at all; what has changed is the thing that it is the alternative to: Chamber is a step down the ladder of musical and logistical complexity from symphonic music, a step up from rock and folk. Here steps up Arc Iris, an unabashedly “chamber” and micromanaged polyfolk ensemble featuring the singer/ songwriting and compositional auteurism of Jocie Adams, formerly of the Low Anthem. While many songwriters these days augment their arrangements with a bit of the chamber-fine, freshening their standard folk tunes with splashes of brass quartets, stacked vocals and laptop beats without ever really testing

the limits of pop forms, Adams is the real deal: a shamelessly fussy, precious and through-composing mastermind writing one sui generis art song after another. She does not graft fanciful arrangements onto conventional tunes; these tunes are fancy from go. And it is hard not to be impressed by the exacting level of musical development in effect from the downbeat of Arc Iris’ eponymous debut. A full minute into the opening track, “Money Gnomes,” you’re going to think that you know exactly where you are: Why, you are in the big, fancy barn of Mumfordian nu-folk and newgrass, with a banjo-and-snare-powered train groove and the familiar, clipped and keen, folksy elocution of Adam’s vocal delivery, a viral vocal style that contains echoes of Joanna Newsom, Jolie Holland, Nellie McKay and others. But this train is then abruptly derailed by a swirling, kaleidoscopic waltz, some calliope chromaticism and multiple character voices fleshing out an archaic and allegorical Lewis Carroll-type fantasy of some kind about materialism and corruption. Now you don’t know where you are anymore, and that’s where you will stay for the next ten tracks. That teasing pattern is repeated numerous times. Songs may begin in the lounge (“Canadian Cowboy”), in the barrelhouse (“Singing so Sweetly,” “Powder Train”) or in Nola, or on doowop’s streetcorner; but they all end in the same place: the chamber. Even the most grooving and simple songs on this record, the ones that offer respite from the artiness, seem to arrive at a delicate, extended rubato breakdown at some point in their arc. You can take the girl out of the chamber, but... Chamber pop forces us to differentiate idea from execution in a way that few

ALMANAC WEEKLY editor contributors

calendar manager classifieds

Julie O’Connor Bob Berman, John Burdick, Jennifer Brizzi, Erica Chase-Salerno, Will Dendis, Sharyn Flanagan, Leslie Gerber, Megan Labrise, Dion Ogust, Frances Marion Platt, Sue Pilla, Lee Reich, Paul Smart, Lynn Woods Donna Keefe Tobi Watson, Amy Murphy, Dale Geffner

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


Arc Iris with Jeremy Mage & the Magi, Saturday, August 9, 7 p.m.; no cover/donations encouraged, Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro; www.liveatthefalcon.com.

Caught in my struggle for higher achievement Evening of Joni Mitchell songs at Bearsville on Saturday

The confessional singer/songwriters of the ’70s took their clan name and their rulebook from the confessional poets of the ’50s and ’60s. But, like hipsters and grunge rockers, few confessional poets would ever actually call themselves by that name. It was a critics’ term, first used to describe the radically intimate voice and content of Robert Lowell’s 1959 volume Life Studies and later used to yoke Lowell into a school (for poets move in schools, like crows in murders and owls in parliaments) with such eventual icons as Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton and such disparate poets’ poets as W. D. Snodgrass (Heart’s Needle) and John Berryman (Dream Songs), all of whom shared in the moment’s spirit of self-disclosure and reflection but who otherwise had little in common. The confessional poets were not born free; they broke free in the classic manner of revolutionaries: by turning the skills that they learned in prestigious institutions against the stodgy and repressive codes of the establishment that trained them. Most made their names as tricky academic poets, descendents of Modernists like T. S. Eliot and W. H. Auden. They were insiders, the cream-of-the-crop in the increasingly unpopular, rarefied profession of 20th-century poetry. Even the biggest rock star that confessional poetry produced, Sylvia Plath, was a formal and relatively decorous poet in the only collection that she published in her lifetime: The Co-

lossus and Other Poems. That advanced technical skill is still very much in evidence in Ariel as well. To the ritualized disappointment of generations of undergrads, most landmark confessional poetry is hardly the unadorned, risqué, primal and artless venting that the label would seem to suggest – hardly the antidote to a semester of Milton. It is virtuosic and demanding verse in its own way. Of all the confessional singer/songwriters of the ’70s – the James Taylors and Jackson Brownes, Carly Simons and Carole Kings of the pop landscape – the one who worked most in the tradition of Plath and Lowell was Joni Mitchell, not because she was the most candid and revealing but because she was – by a mile – the most skilled, advanced, complex and difficult. The confessionalists can claim Blue as their own: her most personal, intimate and influential album, and my favorite as well (though when I was young it was all about the West Coast, jazzy sophistication of Court and Spark and The Hissing of Summer Lawns). But the rest of Joni’s dazzlingly diverse and adventurous catalogue really seems to belong to players now. She is the official, preferred singer/ songwriter of players everywhere: a writer of such formidable musical substance that top-tier jazz and fusion cats with solo careers like Jaco Pastorius, Pat Metheny, Larry Carlton, Tom Scott and on and on all but lined up and begged to be her sidemen. It is thus no surprise that when the Bearsville Theater presents “Shadows and Light: An Evening of Joni Mitchell Songs” on Saturday, August 9, there will be a lot of formidable instrumentalists on the tribute’s bill. Singers and songwriters are certainly represented as well, in the persons of Leslie Ritter, Julie Last (who has worked with Mitchell), Amy Fradon, Adrien Reju and others; but on the top line you will also find players’ players like Scott Petito, A-list session and tour musicians like drummer Zachary Alford (David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen, B-52s) and world-class jazz heavies like the master composer, interpreter and reed-player Don Byron. It is not just that players love Joni as they love few others in the pop sphere; it’s that, in some cases, these are the only people who can actually cut this stuff. – John Burdick Shadows and Light: An Evening of Joni Mitchell Songs, Saturday, August 9, 9 p.m., $20 advance/$25 door, Bearsville Theater, 291 Tinker Street, Woodstock; (845) 679-4406, www.bearsvilletheater. com.

John Fogarty plays Bethel Woods on Friday

for reserved tickets and $36 for general admission lawn seating and are available at www.bethelwoodscenter. org, TicketMaster or by phone at (800)

John Fogarty keeps on chooglin’, whatever chooglin’ is. Evidence: The classic American roots-rock originator, gravel-voiced legend and original Woodstock alumnus returns to the scene of the crime with a performance at the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts on Friday, August 8 at 8 p.m. Tickets cost $51, $71.50 and $111.50

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

MAVERICK CONCERTS Friday

Aug. 8 8:30 pm

Saturday

Aug. 9 8 pm

Sunday

Aug. 10 4pm

Steve Gorn & Friends

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other genres do. In some hands, chamber can seem heavy on execution, light on idea: all icing, no cake; all doily, no table. It all depends on the strength of the core melodies. Even a chamber-pop superstar like Sufjan Stevens can sometimes crush his frail little tunes under the weight of his compositional ambition. (But ah, he can be such a very fine songwriter that I forgive him his pretensions. Still, mark it well: Not everyone can or should try to be Randy Newman.) Jocie Adams is a master of execution, but she has got the ideas too. This is why my favorite tracks on Arc Iris are not the folksy, swinging and rocky ones meant to move me, but the pure art songs of the bunch: “Honor of the Rainbows I,” “Honor of the Rainbows II” and the exquisite “Might I Deserve to Have a Dream.” Here, her indebtedness to the fully realized otherworldly musicality of Joanna Newsom is evident, as Adams wishes not only to create her own musical language and world, but to populate it with her own set of symbols, allegories and myths as well. Arc Iris appears at the Falcon in Marlboro on Saturday, August 9, and Tony Falco displays once again what a fine and imaginative matchmaker he can be, pairing the New England chamber folk group with Jeremy Mage and the Magi: a pretty high-end chamber group posing as a world groove ensemble. (See my Almanac Weekly review of Mage’s album here: http://www.hudsonvalleyalmanacweekly. com/2014/07/18/gift-of-the-magi/) – John Burdick

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

A Twilight Concert of Indian Ragas

Perry Beekman & Friends

t Jazz athe

Maverick

The George Gershwin Songbook

Amernet String Quartet Jon Klibonoff, piano ` Mahler t Dvoʼnák t Schoenberg t Korngold

General Admission $25 t Students $5 Book of 10 tickets $200 t Limited reserved seats $40 Tickets at the door, online, or by phone 800-595-4TIX(4849)

120 Maverick Road t Woodstock, New York 845-679-8217 t www.maverickconcerts.org

25 YEARS BARD MUSIC FESTIVAL REDISCOVERIES

SCHUBERT AND HIS WORLD The Bard Music Festival presents two extraordinary weeks of concerts, panels, and other special events that will explore the musical world of Franz Schubert.

weekend one | August 8–10 The Making of a Romantic Legend

weekend two | August 15–17 A New Aesthetics of Music

program one The Legacy of a Life Cut Short Works by Schubert

special events “Path toward a Grand Symphony”: Schubert’s Octet and Schubert’s Kosegarten Liederspiel

program two From “Boy” to Master: The Path to Erlkönig Works by Schubert, Gluck, Rossini, and others

program seven Beethoven’s Successor? Chamber works by Schubert

special event The Song Cycle as Drama: Winterreise

program eight The Music of Friendship Chamber works by Schubert, Schumann, and others

program three Mythic Transformations Works by Schubert and orchestrated song program four Goethe and Music: The German Lied Songs by Schubert, Mendelssohn, and others

845-758-7900 fishercenter.bard.edu Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY Image: Franz Schubert by W.A. Rieder, 1825. ©IMAGNO/Lebrecht

program five Before Unspeakable Illness Chamber works by Schubert program six Schubert and Viennese Theater Operettas by Schubert and Franz von Suppé

program nine Late Ambitions Orchestral and choral works by Schubert and Berio program ten Fellowship of Men: The Male Choral Tradition Choral music by Schubert, Bruckner, and others program eleven The Final Months Chamber works by Schubert program twelve Schubert and Opera Semi-staged performance of Schubert’s Fierrabras


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ALMANAC WEEKLY MUSIC

“Unfinished” business Bard Music Festival reexamines Schubert’s legacy next two weekends

W

hen the Bard Music Festival began 25 years ago, few would have predicted its duration and expansion. But Bard’s president Leon Botstein had big ambitions for his school and its music programs. Today, Bard has a rapidly developing music conservatory. Its orchestra recently did a series of performances in Europe. The former home of the Bard Music Festival’s orchestra performances, a large tent, has been replaced by the Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts: a space designed by Frank Gehry that seats nearly a thousand people. The pickup orchestra that began the Festival has been replaced by the American Symphony Orchestra, of which Botstein has been music director for two decades. The Bard Music Festival, this year devoted to “Schubert and His World,” covers the next two weekends and includes 15 concerts, a film screening and two panel discussions, plus a variety of talks, which precede most concerts. The Bard Music Festival is an effort to explore Franz Schubert (1797–1828) both as he was known in his own time and as he came to be understood by posterity. These are radically different viewpoints, as attendees will discover. During his brief career (he died in 1828 at age 31), Schubert was known in his hometown of Vienna, and around Austria, mostly as a song composer of local interest. He wrote more than 600 songs, transforming the entire field of German art song with his romantic approach to poets’ lyrics: an aspect of his work honored during the Festival. But his instrumental works – some of them written on a very large scale – were hardly known and mostly unperformed during his lifetime. As later composers like Robert Schumann and Johannes Brahms discovered and promoted Schubert’s work, Schubert became known as one of the great masters of the Romantic period. His “Unfinished” Symphony is now one of the most popular works in the symphonic repertoire. (It will be performed in Program Three on Saturday evening, August 9.) But it was unknown until 1865, when a friend who had kept the manuscript gave it to a visiting conductor. The String Quintet in C (Program One), completed two months before the composer’s death, was not heard until 1850. The Bard Music Festival is designed to appeal to classical music fans. But even the most casual concertgoer can find programs to enjoy. The opening concert, “The Legacy of a Life Cut Short,” beginning at 8 p.m. at Sosnoff on Friday, August 8, includes one of Schubert’s great early songs, “Gretchen at the Spinning Wheel”; orchestral performances of an opera overture and the Third Symphony; the masterpiece for piano four hands, Fantasy in F Minor; and the String Quintet in C, from the last year of Schubert’s short life. Typical of the Bard Music Festival, it will be a long program, likely to last three hours with intermission. It will convince even a novice listener of Schubert’s greatness. Since the Bard Music Festival has Botstein and the American Symphony Orchestra at its disposal, orchestral works are a mainstay and usually fill the evening events (all at the Fisher Center’s Sosnoff Theater). Program Six, on Sunday, August 10 at 5:30 p.m., uses members of the orchestra to accompany two short operas. One of them is Schubert’s Die Verschworenen (The Conspirators), a one-act “singspiel” (similar to our musical comedy form); the other is Suppé’s operetta Franz Schubert, based loosely on the composer’s life.

745-3000. The Bethel Woods Center for the Arts is located at 200 Hurd Road in Bethel.

Guilt Mountain plays at BSP in Kingston

New Paltz songwriter, ’zine author and event promoter Kate Larson calls her latest solo (and sometimes duo) musical project Guilt Mountain, giving us some clue into its intentions and psychological utility. Larson was formerly a member of Klessa, a fourpiece parlor art collective whose bass clarinet, accordion and glockenspiel ditties ran a range from naïve folksterism to moments of almost staggering musical originality. Larson then fronted the all-female punk-poppy trio Go Ogres, a funny, playful and even a bit vitriolic rock group that harassed harassers and celebrated Jeremy Lin. Guilt Mountain seems to combine

elements of both. There is a one-of-a-kind handcrafted feel to the song forms, as with Klessa, and the lyrics often approach a meditative minimalism. But as with Go Ogres, expiations and vengeance and emotional resolutions are being directly pursued in these charged and personal songs. On Thursday, August 7, Guilt Mountain teams with Brooklyn’s Early Riser, the duo of cellist Heidi Vanderlee (of Leda) and guitarist Kiri Oliver. Early samples describe a deliriously tuneful, acoustic indie-pop with spot harmonies right out of the pop-punk songbook and articulate, emotionally clustered lyrics not far out of step with Guilt Mountain’s. It will be a duo of duos, as Larson will have her frequent collaborator, the multi-instrumental savant Matt Ross (Subpixel, Los Doggies, 3DCosby, Breakfast in Fur), on board for the date. Guilt Mountain and Early Riser appear as part of BSP’s ongoing Free Thursday series. That means that it’s free. The show starts at 8 p.m. BSP is located at 323 Wall Street in Kingston. For more information, visit www.bspkingston.com. – John Burdick

WDST Reunion Concert on Saturday in Kingston WDST presents the WDST Reunion Concert on Saturday, August 9 at 5 p.m., in Apuzzo Hall at the Hudson

August 7, 2014

The concluding Program 12, on Sunday, August 17 at 4:30 p.m., is a complete performance of Schubert’s opera Fierrabras (the name of a Moorish knight): his attempt at a grand opera, although with spoken dialogue. In a long lifetime of concertgoing I have never encountered a performance of any Schubert opera. Critical opinion states that all of Schubert’s operas are too undramatic to be stageworthy, but here’s a chance to find out for ourselves. Expect supertitles at these performances so you can follow what’s going on. In addition to the “Unfinished” Symphony, Program Three (August 9 at Franz Schubert (Wilhelm August Rieder) 8 p.m.) covers later orchestrations of Schubert works, including the Grand Duo for piano four hands transformed into a symphony by the conductor Felix Weingartner, and songs originally for voice and piano orchestrated by Hector Berlioz, Franz Liszt, Jacques Offenbach, Brahms and Anton Webern, all great admirers of Schubert. Program Nine (Saturday, August 16 at 8 p.m.), titled “Late Ambitions,” presents choral works including the great Mass in E Flat (Schubert’s sixth mass setting). Many Bard Music Festival programs offer unusual combinations of different composers and performers. For example, Program Eight, “The Music of Friendship” (Saturday, August 16 at 1:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the Franklin Olin Humanities Building), begins with piano music and songs by Schubert, then adds music by various Schubert friends and admirers, including his younger brother Ferdinand and his close friend Anselm Hüttenbrenner, the man who preserved the “Unfinished” Symphony. Program Seven, “Beethoven’s Successor?” (Friday, August 15 at 8 p.m.), presents late works of Schubert performed by three singers, pianist Brian Zeger, the Horszowski Trio, members of the Bard Festival Chorale conducted by James Bagwell “and others.” Program Four, “Goethe and Music: The German Lied” (Sunday, August 10 at 10 a.m. in Olin Hall), presents songs of Schubert and at least 11 other composers (“and others”), not all of them as well-known as Beethoven and Schumann. It’s important to realize that this Festival has become a “go-to” event, bringing much of its audience from outside our area. Most of the concerts sell out. If you want to attend any of the BMF events, run, do not walk, to http://fishercenter.bard.edu/ bmf, where you will find complete listings of all the programs, lots of background information and “Buy Tickets.” – Leslie Gerber Bard SummerScape/Bard Music Festival, August 8-10 and 15-17, Bard College, 60 Manor Avenue, Annandale-on-Hudson; (845) 758-7900, http://fishercenter.bard. edu/bmf/.

Valley LGBTQ Community Center in Kingston. The show features emcee and WDST weekend host Ron VanWarmer and special guest Hester Mundis, head comedy writer for Joan Rivers. Musical performers include accomplished musicians and WDST alumni Big Joe Fitz, Brian Hollander and Eric Erikson. Proceeds benefit the Center. Admission costs $15, $10 for Center members and $5 for students/seniors. The Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center is located at 300 Wall Street in Kingston. For more information, call (845) 331-5300 or visit www.lgbtqcenter.org.

It’s Joy of Jazz week in Tannersville The Catskill Jazz Factory’s Joy of Jazz festival hits its high-gear stride this weekend with three big public events and some back-to-basics latenight jam sessions all concentrated in the Greene County mountaintop community of Tannersville, where legendary pianist Marcus Roberts has been pulling in top players of several generations to revive the music from its roots to more adventurous near-past. On Thursday night, August 7, there will be a Ragtime-to-Swing Master Class with the various musicians whom Roberts has assembled for the weekend, open to the public.

On Friday, August 8 there will be a Jazz to the Joy of Three concert at the Orpheum Theater, featuring the Benny Bernack III Quartet and the Charenee Wade/Chris Partishall Quartet. On Saturday night, August 9, the Orpheum presents a major Spirit of St. Louis tribute to Louis Armstrong with Roberts and his band, plus a host of the weekend’s special guests. Both Saturday and Sunday nights will see a jam session at the Last Chance Saloon. – Paul Smart Joy of Jazz Week, Thursday-Saturday, August 7-9, $10/$25/free, Orpheum Theater & Last Chance Tavern, Main Street/ Route 23A, Tannersville; www.catskilljazzfactory.org.

Hudson Jazzworks Workshop Performance on Sunday Concurrent with this week’s Joy of Jazz events in Greene County and three-day, hugely busy Hudson Music Fest, the venerable Hudson Opera House will host its eighth annual Hudson Jazzworks Workshop Performance featuring Armen Donelian, Marc Mommaas and special guest Reggie Workman, the legendary jazz double bassist, on Sunday afternoon, August 10 at 3:30 p.m. The gig’s a highlight of workshops with young players, all of whom will also be fea-


August 7, 2014 tured as part of the always-exciting concert. Best of all, it takes place up at the great old Opera House [see separate piece in this edition of Almanac Weekly] with a free “Meet the Artists” talk before the performance and certain hobnobbing with the various players afterwards. – Paul Smart Hudson Jazzworks Workshop Performance, Sunday, August 10, 3:30 p.m., $10/$8/free, Hudson Opera House, 327 Warren Street, Hudson; (518) 822-1438, www.hudsonoperahouse.org.

Main stage renovations next component of Hudson Opera House renaissance

When the Hudson Opera House (HOH) went up in 1855 – also housing a library, a bank and the city’s post office and police station – the city that it was designed to be the pride of had recently shifted from being an upriver whaling port to a manufacturing center filled with textile mills and brick factories, and the commerce freed by the building of the Erie Canal and state’s first great railways. Hudson River School painters Frederic Church and Sanford Gifford, a hometown hero, showed their paintings in the building’s grand second-floor auditorium. Henry Ward Beecher gave a rousing abolitionist lecture, Ralph Waldo Emerson spoke about philosophy and founding editor George W. Curtis of the then-new Harper’s Magazine came to the building’s inaugura-

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ALMANAC WEEKLY tion (commemorated 150 years later with then-Harper’s editor Lewis Lapham’s repeat of that first event). Later, when a group of Hudson residents came together in the early 1990s to spur on the renovation of the building – deteriorated after the city offices moved across the street 30 years earlier – the resulting drive helped solidify the complete rehaul of Hudson. Suddenly, all the glories of the community’s great collection of 19th-century architectural styles and unique river-city qualities were highlighted. Within a few years, the work of a few pioneering galleries and antiques dealers spread to new eateries and nightspots, and the establishment of Hudson as the region’s center of exurban cool. Since those days, the Hudson Opera House has invested nearly $3 million to stabilize, upgrade and restore the exterior, basement and main floor of the building. The result has allowed the Opera House to start housing art shows, classes and community events, as well as a host of events in the stabilized but as-yetnot-fully-renovated auditorium, which planners hope to see transformed into a 300-seat theater. And according to HOH’s executive director Gary Schiro, more has been done and money is being raised to finalize the renovations up into the main stage

area. “We’ve nearly finished the design phase, and hope to be able to make a definitive announcement regarding our full renovation plans sometime in the autumn,” he added, noting that full images of all that has been in the works for the past dozen years will be available then.

“We’re progressing, even though there’s still a few moving parts to get in line.” Funds for the Hudson Opera House renovation have come from a host of sources to date, including New York’s Empire State Development and Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

Photo on cover of Basilica Hudson’s creative director Melissa Auf der Maur by George Fok; exterior and interior photos of Basilica Hudson by Matt Charland

Basilica Hudson rising Melissa Auf der Maur & Tony Stone revivify old Hudson factory into thriving community/arts center

B SHOW

BRAD MEHLDAU RETURNS TO THE FALCON ON FRIDAY

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living jazz legend, pianist Brad Mehldau’s appearances at the Falcon are becoming a regular thing. Because he is one of the greatest and least-predictable solo improvisers that the form has ever known, as well as a serious music critic and theorist in his own right, you can’t take a show off. There’s no telling what you would miss: what covers he will do and where he will take them, whether he will be in a mood Bach or a mood Berg. Sit close and listen hard. Jazz does not get fresher and more original than this. Brad Mehldau performs solo at the Falcon on Friday, August 8 at 7 p.m. The Falcon is located at 1348 Route 9W in Marlboro; for more information, visit www.liveatthefalcon.com. – John Burdick

offices and the state Council on the Arts, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development and various local, regional, state and national foundations and private grants. For more on all things HOH, visit the

Hudson Opera House for its exhibits and events at 327 Warren Street in Hudson, call (518) 822-1438 or visit www. hudsonoperahouse.org. – Paul Smart

asilica Hudson, a 19th-century rail foundry and later glue factory near the City of Hudson’s bay, sat vacant and cluttered for many years before artist Patrick Doyle acquired it in 2000 and gutted it. With the hall emptied, his friend noted, the inside looked like a church. When musician Melissa Auf der Maur and her partner Tony Stone moved to the upstate city in 2008, they could see the industrial space from their house; and when Doyle moved away in 2010, they decided to buy the building. Auf d e r Ma u r spent nearly two decades performing with the b a n d s Ho l e a n d Smashing Pumpkins, and she and Tony “were not in the City of Hudson looking to start a community center,” she said. “It fell into our laps, based on the fact that we really responded to the building’s raw shape, and it kind of showed us.” During Doyle’s ownership the space was used for a few art shows and band practices, and Patti Smith played a benefit there in 2003 for the Friends of Hudson. Though the building was in good shape, structurally speaking, when Auf der Maur and Stone took it over, they made significant renovations. Stone, whom Auf der Maur described as “the man who has taken over the building,” researched the ancient nuts and bolts of the structure, from plumbing to “window hardware,” which transformed the space into “a more functioning place.” This allowed Auf der Maur to offer a varied slate of programming. During the summer, Basilica Hudson hosts weekly outdoor film screenings, art exhibitions and concerts. It will also host the annual Basilica Soundscape, a curated music festival on September 12-14. It’s tempting to categorize Basilica Hudson as simply an arts space, but the venue also recently hosted a talk organized by Scenic Hudson and Riverkeeper on plans to ship crude oil on the Hudson River. The building can be rented for weddings, and fundraisers for Habitat for Humanity and the Hudson Opera House, among others, have been held there. This November, Basilica Hudson will host its second annual Farm + Flea

market, and last year saw the Columbia and Greene County Buy Local Business Expo. The Kite’s Nest, a supplementary homeschooling program based in Basilica Hudson, hosts workshops, a community kitchen and a summer camp. For Auf der Maur, “The theme is being a one-stop shop for anything that can enhance the community’s life or can make a beautiful destination for anyone to come for a day for one of our events, or for a weekend.”

Though expanding, Basilica Hudson has a small staff running on, in Auf der Maur’s words, a “shoestring budget.” In order to pull off some of its bigger events, Basilica Hudson teams up with partners. Basilica Soundscape is presented with help from online music magazine Pitchfork, whose Brandon Stosuy programs one night of the festival [see sidebar in this edition of Almanac Weekly]. Last year’s Farm and Flea was presented with help from Bust Magazine and sponsored by Modern Farmer magazine. In a sense, this is by design. “We certainly could be a mainstream wedding venue and make a living doing that; we could be a mainstream rock venue or beer garden if we wanted to,” Auf der Maur said, “but that’s not our priority. Our priority is community.” She described the programming as “cutting-edge, avant-garde, experimental, independent, adventurous, courageous, pioneering and designed to make people think.” Though this mission may seem esoteric, Basilica Hudson is already making an impact. The NADA [New Art Dealers Alliance] Art Fair, held in 2011 and 2012, was well-attended. Three thousand people came to Hudson via Amtrak to attend in 2012: a record number that prompted calls from the New York State Tourism Board. “Every single restaurant,” Auf der Maur remembered, “was out of money, beer and food.” But with the Kite’s Nest and other community programs, Auf der Maur’s goal


August 7, 2014 is to be of interest to more than visitors from New York City. “We want many walks of life to come through the doors: all ages, people from far away and people from right around the corner.” – Rob Rubsam

Basilica Soundscape festival on the horizon The Basilica Soundscape festival, to be staged September 12-14, is becoming an increasingly popular alternative event – almost, in co-organizer Brandon Stosuy’s words, an “anti-festival.” For the third year in a row, Basilica Hudson’s Melissa Auf der Maur and Tony Stone are working in collaboration with Pitchfork senior editor/director of events Brandon Stosuy and Brian De Ran of Leg Up management to program the weekend. In contrast to other large-scale festivals like Coachella and Lollapalooza, Basilica Soundscape is curated with the ethos that “Each band makes sense and bleeds together in some way, and there’s a very definite reason why they were selected.” Where once Basilica Soundscape was pulled together from close friends and contacts, this year it has expanded, with industrial titans Swans and Richard Reed Parry of Arcade Fire topping a bill that also includes Deafheaven, Tim Hecker and White Lung. Here’s the roster so far: On Friday, September 12, Leg Up will present Michael Chapman, the New York psych band Endless Boogie, a performance from Gamelan Dharma Swara orchestra, Tim Hecker, Tom Hawk, Julia Holter and a set from Richard Reed Parry of Arcade Fire, who will perform material from his upcoming solo album, Music for Heart and Breath. Saturday’s show will feature a lineup of Swans and Deafheaven and will be rounded out by Vancouver-based punk group White Lung (as well as a reading by White Lung frontwoman Mish Way), readings by Perfect Pussy frontwoman Meredith Graves and Mira Gonzalez, a set by Guardian Alien with additional solo sets by their drummer Greg Fox (of Liturgy,

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ALMANAC WEEKLY Ben Frost, Dan Deacon and Zs) and a set by nomadic dream-pop artist Emily Reo. Visual artist Sterling Ruby will create large-scale quiltlike flags as backdrops for the main stage. In between acts will be readings, art exhibits, performance art and food provided by a variety of local farm-to-table vendors. Tickets cost $35 per night, $60 for the weekend and can be obtained at http://bss14.bpt.me. This year’s Basilica Soundscape will take place the same weekend as Groundswell, an afternoon exhibition event at the Olana State Historic Site, located just five minutes from Basilica Hudson. Produced by Wave Farm’s WGXC and the Olana Partnership, Groundswell (Saturday, September 13 from 2 to 6 p.m.) features site-specific performances and works by Kenseth Armstead, William Basinski, Steve Bull, Jane Carver, Ellen Driscoll, Michael Garofalo, Mckendree Key, Hélène Lesterlin, Jack Magai, Man Forever, Laura Ortman, Mau Schoettle and Bryan Zimmerman, set amidst one of the Hudson Valley’s most breathtaking viewsheds. Meanwhile, expect metal and avantgarde music at the Basilica Soundscape festival, and a closer sense of connection to both the performers and other audience members. “It will be more like the Maand-Pa version of a festival,” Stosuy said. “It just feels smaller and less WalMartesque.” – Rob Rubsam Basilica Soundscape festival, Friday/ Saturday, September 12-14, $35/night, $60/weekend, Basilica Hudson, 110 South Front Street, Hudson; (518) 8221050, http://Basilicahudson.com, http:// bss14.bpt.me.

Rock and Roll Circus with author talk on Friday; BCB Art hosts related exhibition Basilica Hudson at 110 South Front Street in Hudson will host an evening with film and television director, artist and author Michael Lindsay-Hogg on Friday, August 8 from 8 to 11 p.m.

A pioneer in music video, LindsayHogg’s extensive professional credits include directing the Beatles’ Let It Be and Brideshead Revisited. His directorial stage credits include Agnes of God on Broadway and the original production of Larry Kramer’s The Normal Heart at Joe Papp’s Public Theatre. Lindsay-Hogg will do a reading from his memoir, Luck and Circumstance, followed by a screening of the Rolling Stones’ Rock and Roll Circus, created by Mick Jagger and Michael Lindsay-Hogg and starring Jethro Tull, Taj Mahal, Marianne Faithful, the Who, Eric Clapton, John Lennon assisted by Yoko Ono and the Rolling Stones. It was shot over two days in December 1968. It was not seen by any audience anywhere for 28 years until it was screened at the New York Film Festival in 1996, after it had been rescued by Allen Klein. Admission to the screening costs $10 on a sliding scale. Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s father was an English baronet who lived mostly in Ireland and Spain. His mother, Geraldine Fitzgerald, was a Warner Brothers movie star who won acclaim as Bette Davis’ best friend in Dark Victory and performed in William Wyler’s Wuthering Heights. She spent time with Hollywood’s elite: Laurence Olivier, Charles Chaplin and Orson Welles, with whom she worked in New York at the Mercury Theater and in other productions. Lindsay-Hogg writes of how he wended his way into this exotic, mysterious and seductive world, encountering as a small

boy the likes of Marion Davies and William Randolph Hearst, playing hide-and-seek with Olivia de Havilland, serving drinks to Humphrey Bogart and discussing life with Henry Miller. At the book’s center, an offhand comment made to the author about his mother’s relationship with Orson Welles leads Lindsay-Hogg to question his father’s identity in this moving, deft and illuminating memoir. For more information, visit www. basilicahudson.com. BCB Art at 116 Warren Street in Hudson will host an opening reception for an exhibit of paintings and drawings by Michael Lindsay-Hogg on Saturday, August 9 from 6 to 8 p.m. The exhibit will remain on view through September 7. “You Game? I’m Game” will feature unique works on canvas, board and paper, deftly rendered in paint and colored pencil. They evoke the feeling of “one-frame movies” full of character, intrigue and innuendo. For more information, visit www.basilicahudson.com.

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STAGE

ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

THE WEST SIDE STORY CAST definitely delivers, and the result is an evening of theater that is moving in every sense of the word.

A time and place for us West Side Story at Woodstock Playhouse

W

hen did Broadway musicals take their turn toward the dark side, away from the uncontroversial, feel-good shows of Rodgers & Hammerstein and their contemporaries? Some say that A Chorus Line was the milestone, when it became okay to sing about topics like coming out and being an incest survivor. Others would date it a little earlier, to the kinkiness of Cabaret. But it was West Side Story that paved the way

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for hard-hitting contemporary musicals, rearranging the bones of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet into an edgy modern classic set amidst the gang wars of Manhattan in the mid-1950s. Incorporating three onstage killings and a rape, plus jokes about racism, psychoanalysis and juvenile delinquency, it changed the way that the Broadway game is played, permanently. Bringing together four top-tier artists as formidable in their egos as their talents – playwright Arthur Laurents, composer Leonard Bernstein, lyricist Stephen Sondheim and choreographer Jerome Robbins – the creation of West Side Story was a project that got shelved and nearly scuttled several times. But it’s precisely that simmering cauldron of stubborn, uncompromising genius that gave us a work whose brilliance never fades over time, even while the oncevicious street slang of its dialogue begins to sound somewhat quaint and dated. The taunts still bite, the songs still swell and thrill, the epic dance passages still excite. And audiences still shed a tear for Tony, the idealistic gang member trying to go straight, and for Maria, the naïve immigrant girl plunged into a harsh urban environment. The production of West Side Story currently running at the Woodstock Playhouse – its final show of the 2014 summer season – mines this motherlode

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Brian Klimowski and Mili Diaz in West Side Story of theatrical gold for all it’s worth, putting a young cast through some demanding paces. But the actors, singers and dancers all manage to impress, despite the fact that for many of them, this is the third or fourth play that they’ve had to master this season as part of the Playhouse’s resident ensemble. In fact, of the three shows that this reviewer has seen at Woodstock Playhouse this summer, I’d say that West Side Story offers the most polished, professional and energetic performances. Outstanding among the cast this time is Brian Klimowski as Tony, whose strong and malleable voice easily handled the demanding tonalities of Bernstein’s swooping music. Though somewhat hampered by direction that kept him physically static in a couple of his big vocal numbers – standing on a ladder during “Something’s Coming,” holding a jacket draped over his arm in the first iteration of “Maria” – his acting skills also came across strongly in the lead role. From the moment that Tony and Maria first made eye contact at the dance in the gymnasium, he genuinely looked like a guy who’d gotten hit by the happy stick. For her part, Mili Diaz looked radiantly beautiful, sang sweetly and danced spiritedly as Maria, and she and Klimowski generated convincing chemistry together as the star-crossed lovers. But in West Side Story the leading lady always runs the risk of being upstaged by her spitfire sisterin-law Anita: the part that made a star of Chita Rivera in the original Broadway version. This production was no exception. While Nina Paganucci’s vocal delivery was somewhat inconsistent in Anita’s more

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low-key numbers, she totally rocked the showstopper “America.” On opening night, a wardrobe malfunction – a torn hem of her lace underskirt slipping down around her ankles – threatened to knock her right off her feet, but utterly failed to hinder the vigorous high kicks that characterize the Latin dance number’s choreography. Other players whose dancing and emoting flowed together seamlessly were Hannah Breed as the tomboy Anybody’s, Christian Philippe Consigny as Bernardo (the Tybalt character) and John Kenton Kramer as Riff (the Benvolio/Mercutio hybrid), who particularly shone as the Jets’ leader tried to calm his restive troops before the big rumble in “Cool.” Even with Robbins’ highly technical balletic steps simplified somewhat by Woodstock Playhouse choreographer Andrew Parker Greenwood – who also directs this production – the unprecedented amount of stage time and spectacle given over to dance numbers in West Side Story requires an ensemble that can move in perfect synchrony, with consistent athleticism, spunk and grace. This cast definitely delivers, and the result is an evening of theater that is moving in every sense of the word. The ending is as tragic as ever, but you’ll still feel uplifted. West Side Story continues at the Woodstock Playhouse this Thursday through Saturday, August 7 to 9 at 8 p.m., with a 2 p.m. matinée on Sunday, August 10. Ticket prices are $32, $36 and $40. To order, call the box office at (845) 6796900 or visit www.woodstockplayhouse. org. – Frances Marion Platt

Road Trip To Jacob’s Pillow

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014 West Side Story, Thursday-Saturday, August 7-9, 8 p.m., Sunday, August 10, 2 p.m., $32-$40, Woodstock Playhouse, Playhouse Lane, 103 Mill Hill Road, Woodstock; (845) 679-6900, www.woodstockplayhouse.org.

Hunter Mountain hosts German Alps Festival this weekend It’s time for beer, pretzels and lederhosen as the German Alps Festival returns to Hunter Mountain on Saturday and Sunday, August 9 and 10. Live music is provided by Jimmy Sturr and His Orchestra, along with performances by DSB Die Schlauberger. Hunter Mountain might not be the Alps in Bavaria, but with bratwurst, schnitzel and spaetzle, it will be easy to feel transported. Saturday night ends with fireworks. Admission costs $12 for adults and is free for those age 12 and under. Hunter Mountain is located off Route 23A in Hunter. The gates open at 11 a.m. Dog-owners should know that pets aren’t allowed at the festival. For more information, visit www.huntermtn.com.

Bethel Woods to screen Woodstock: The Director’s Cut th

This August marks the 45 anniversary of the Woodstock Music and Art Fair that kicked off on August 15, 1969. To celebrate, the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts is inviting guests to come “Back to the Field” on Friday, August 15 for a free screening of Woodstock: The Director’s Cut. It’s an opportunity to watch the film on the actual site where a half-million young people gathered 45 years ago for the

historic festival. The field will open to guests at 7 p.m. and the film will begin at 8:30 p.m. The four-hour director’s cut of the 1970 Oscar-winning documentary features some of the greatest rock ’n’ roll performers of all time. Admission to the event is free, but a $5-per-person donation is encouraged to benefit the preservation of the historic Woodstock festival site. For more information, visit www.bethelwoodscenter.org.

The musical farmers from Whirligig Farm CSA will be back with freshpicked vegetables and singalong tunes in front of H. Houst & Son, open late. Later in the evening, the Colony Café

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Woodstock Nights return on Friday The next Woodstock Nights, featuring nighttime shopping, food, music, art and fun, will return to Mill Hill Road, Tinker Street, Rock City Road and Tannery Brook Road in Woodstock on Friday, August 8 until 9 p.m. Admission to the event is free. The Woodstock Film Festival will unveil this year’s poster artist and teeshirt in its offices on Rock City Road across from the Woodstock Chamber Booth. The Woodstock Byrdcliffe Guild will present a rare ten-hour film by Rikrit Tiravanijia, JG Reads, featuring the New York bohemian John Giorno in his Bowery studio, screened in its entirety from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. at the Kleinert/James Center for the Arts. There is no charge for this event. The Landau Cafe will offer half-price draft beer. The Center for Photography will present a program by artists-inresidence Susan Surface and Jessica Vaughn, who will discuss their ongoing projects and research. Heart of Woodstock will hold a fundraiser for Alex’s Lemonade Stand for Childhood Cancer. Artist and activist Norm Magnusson has organized a disc golf course with sculptural holes created by artists on the lawn of the Woodstock Library.

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will host the Traum Family Band: a rare performance by Happy, Adam and April Traum. For more information, visit www.woodstockchamber.com or www. woodstocknights.com.

THE SELF PROLIFERATING LANDSCAPE Friday, August 8 at 7 p.m. Join the Cary Institute for a special lecture by landscape designer Larry Weaner. Weaner will discuss principles and protocols for creating dynamic, ecologically-rich landscapes where nature does much of the planting. His presentation will demonstrate how to combine ecological restoration and proliferation strategies to create gardens on diverse scales using native plants. The event will be held in the Cary Institute auditorium, located at 2801 Sharon Tpk. (Rte. 44) in Millbrook, NY. Doors open at 6:30 p.m.

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Tickets: 9 for adults; $7 for children in advance or at the door

by Kids on Stage Saturday, August 9 at 11 am Wendy Darling loves to tell stories to her brothers, Michael and John. But when her father announces she must move out of the nursery, Peter Pan comes to visit the children and whisks them away to Never Land. Their adventure introduces them to the Lost Boys, Mermaids, Indians and ever the infamous pirate, Captain Hook! A musical performed by The CENTER’S Kids on Stage Performance ensemble. Directed by Diana di Grandi.

by Kids on Stage Sat., Aug. 16 and Sat., Aug. 23 at 11 am One of Broadway’s most hilarious shows has been described as the perfect musical comedy and introduces us to colorful characters who have become legends in the musical theatre canon: Sarah Brown, the upright but uptight “mission doll,”: Sky Masterson, the slick, high-rolling gambler; Adelaide, a nightclub performer; and Nathan Detroit, her devoted fiancé, desperate to find a spot for his infamous floating dice game. A musical performed by The CENTER’s Kids on Stage Performance ensemble. Directed by Lisa Lynds. The Center is located at 661 Rte. 308, See you 3.5 miles east of the light in the at The Village of Rhinebeck CENTER!


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ART

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August 7, 2014

Thirty-four artists who live and work in Saugerties will open their studios to visitors during the Saugerties Artists’ Studio Tour on Saturday and Sunday, August 9 and 10 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day.

Picturesque peregrinations Saugerties Artists’ Studio Tour kicks off with reception at Opus 40

Carol Zaloom’s “Dragon Dance”

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hirty-four artists who live and work in Saugerties will open their studios to visitors during the 12th annual Saugerties Artists’ Studio Tour on Saturday and Sunday, August 9 and 10 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day. The event is free of charge and it’s self-guided; one has only to pick up a map (or print one out online) and chart a course. But with so many studios available to choose from, how does one make the decision where to start? “It’s such an individual exploration,” says tour coordinator and participating artist Barbara Bravo. One way to plan your visit, she suggests, is to view examples of each artist’s work at www.saugertiesarttour. com. You can also attend the artists’ reception on Friday, August 8 at Opus 40 from 5 to 7 p.m. Each tour artist will have one work on display. The reception is free and open to all, and the regular admission fee to Opus 40 that evening is waived. With food and drink included, “You can’t beat it,” says Bravo. “You’re in this incredible environment, viewing an art show, meeting all these artists, and everybody has a great time.” The annual pre-tour reception at Opus 40 has become more popular with each year, she adds, with some 200 people expected to attend. The exhibit at Opus 40 will remain on view through August. Another opportunity to preview work by

RICHARD EDELMAN

the tour artists can be seen in their group show, “Myth & History,” at the Kiersted House at 119 Main Street in Saugerties through Sunday, August 10. Gallery hours are from 1 to 4 p.m. Admission is free. The show will move to Café Mezzaluna on Route 212 in Saugerties on August 16, where it will remain on view through September 21. The participating artists work in a variety of media and styles. Tourgoers can expect to see examples of printmaking, painting, illustration, digital art, mixed-media works, sculpture, fine furnituremaking, ceramics, metalwork and more. Four of the artists are new to the tour: Kristy Bishop, Tamara DiMattio, Erika deVries and Christopher Nealon. The rest of the roster is made up of Isaac Abrams, Noelle Auriemma, Anita Barbour, Loel Barr, Ana Bergen, Barbara Bravo, Michael Ciccone, Richard Edelman, Ruth Edwy, Steve Frederick and Cherie Jemsek, Robert George, Carol Zaloom and Mikhail Horowitz, Marsha Kaufman-Rubinstein, Polly M. Law, Yvette Lewis, Ulf Loven, Brian Lynch, Hugh Morris, Ze’ev Willy Neumann, Gus Pedersen, Joan Max Reinmuth, Tad Richards, Jeffrey Schiller, Istar Schwager, Prue See, Viorica Stan, Raymond J. Steiner and Fay Wood. The artists really enjoy being a part of the tour, says Bravo. “You never know who’s going to walk through your

Noelle Auriemma’s “Goddess”

door; whom you’ll meet. Sometimes you’ ll get a commission to create something specifically for someone that they haven’t been able to get anywhere else. Or somebody will come in and see finished work and fall in love with it. You never know.” She says that she’s always happy to see the families who come with young kids. “I love that. Because the schools have cut the arts budget so severely, I really feel like we’re doing a service by exposing these kids to art. It’s real, it’s in their neighborhoods and it’s to be taken seriously.” And Bravo has a soft spot for the young aspiring artists who take the tour, too. “They’re wonderful: full of enthusiasm and eagerness. By visiting an artist living the life in their own studio, they see the work: finished work, works in progress... there’s a lot of people that come out of art school, and they know the art, they know the technical, but they don’t know how to sell their work.” She encourages their aspirations, she says, but advises them to be smart about it. “It’s not a bad idea to learn something else along the way that’s marketable... but that’s another conversation.” When asked what kinds of comments people make about what they get out of taking the tour, Bravo says that she’s struck by one comment in particular that someone made a few years back. “They said, ‘I didn’t know how beautiful Saugerties is.’ These were people not familiar with the area, here for the weekend, and by going around to visit artists’ studios, they discovered what a pretty place we live in.” The tour is made possible by the sponsorship of local businesses and organizations like the Saugerties Kiwanis

ALLEN BRYAN

Club, radio station WKZE and several grants, including a New York State Council on the Arts grant “that we’re lucky to get every year,” says Bravo. The Town of Saugerties is also affiliated with the Art along the Hudson organization that promotes the arts in Dutchess, Ulster and Orange Counties. Maps can be printed out at www. saugertiesarttour.com or picked up at a number of local Saugerties businesses, a list of which is online along with some suggestions for where to eat lunch along the way. The Farmers’ Market at 115 Main Street in Saugerties will even have some special lunch options for Saturday tourgoers from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. – Sharyn Flanagan Tour artists’ reception, Friday, August 8, 5-7 p.m., free, Gallery at Opus 40, 50 Fite Road, Saugerties; Saugerties Artists’ Studio Tour, Saturday/Sunday, August 9/10, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., free, Town of Saugerties; www.saugertiesarttour.com.

“Park Peacocks Run Wild” in Kingston to benefit new playground The Junior League of Kingston will unleash “Park Peacocks Run Wild,” a three-month public art exhibition that benefits Kingston Kinderland II, the new playground to be built by volunteers at Forsyth Park next April. The three-foot-tall peacocks made of polystyrene plastic and plywood have been decorated by professional artists, art students, hobbyists and even preschoolers, and are exhibited in front of sponsorship businesses, organizations and schools throughout the Uptown, Midtown and Rondout areas of


Kingston. At the conclusion of the exhibition, the 22 peacocks – a nod to everyone’s favorite wild friends at the Forsyth Nature Center – will be auctioned off on October 26 at the Garden Plaza Hotel. Each artist will receive 25 percent of the auction price of his or her peacock. Otherwise, all profits from the exhibition sponsorships and auction will go toward the new playground. Maps of the peacock trail will be available in tourism offices, sponsorship businesses and art galleries. For more information, visit www. facebook.com/kingstonkinderland.

Outdoor Supermoon Screenings at Storm King Art Center

The Storm King Art Center has always been a great place to stroll the grounds admiring great sculpture, enjoy a fine summer day, let your kids run around and burn off some energy, eat a picnic lunch. But nobody really thinks of it as a place to go to the movies, do they? Well, that has just changed: In celebration of the astronomical wonder due to happen this Sunday [see Bob Berman’s column in this edition of Almanac Weekly for details], dubbed the MegaMoon by the media, Storm King’s programming people have organized a “film ramble” on the New Windsor sculpture park’s grounds, set to take place on Saturday evening, August 9 beginning at 8 p.m. T hese first-e ver “Supermoon Screenings,” co-presented with Rooftop Films, will feature screenings of art films ranging in length from three to 14 minutes throughout the grounds. Filmmakers represented include Allison Schulnik, Gomez Salamanca, Wendy Morris, Rino Stefano Tagliafierro, Donato Sansone and Lois Patino. Guitarist Alexander Turnquist will provide live instrumental music interludes prior to and during the screenings. And yes, you can arrive early and make a picnic of it: The Curbside Cuisine Food Truck will be on hand to supply tacos, and cold Brooklyn Brewery beer will be on tap. Admission to the Supermoon Screenings at Storm King is included in your regular admission, which costs $15 for adults, $12 for seniors and $8 for students and kids aged 5 to 18; kids aged 4 and under and Art Center members get in free. The rain date for the event is Sunday, August 10 at 8 p.m. The Storm King Art Center is located at 1 Museum Road in New Windsor. For more information or to order tickets, call (845) 534-3115 or visit www.stormking. org/rooftop. – Frances Marion Platt

Art Murphy exhibition opens on Saturday at Beacon Artists’ Union The Beacon Artists’ Union (BAU) at 506 Main Street in Beacon will hold an opening reception for photographer Art Murphy’s exhibition “Abstract/Concrete” during Beacon’s Second Saturday festivities on Saturday, August 9 from 6 to 9 p.m. The show will remain on view through September 6. Known for his intriguing images of fossils discovered near his studio in Catskill, Murphy’s inspiration for “Abstract/Concrete” came from something far newer. He gained access to a construction site shortly after a large

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concrete floor had been freshly poured, and as he walked around the empty space, he began to notice evocative abstract imagery emerging out of the mundane topography. Much like his fossil finds that often suggest deep time and the persistence of life, his current work captures markings: ephemeral and accidental traces of human commerce. Complete abstraction is something of a departure for Murphy; years of shooting commercially in New York City led to assignments ranging from The Cosby Show to a contemplative photo essay on the Cloisters for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His fossil photographs demonstrate his ongoing interest in the confluence points between art and science while evoking a sense of time and history. With the new abstract works, interpretation is left to the viewer. Muted tones strike graphic forms in compositional tensions balanced with subtle accidental “drawings.” Rough textures contrast with transparencies and suggestions of great depth. Murphy recently had a solo show at the Museum of Natural History in Florence, Italy, and he was named Photographer of the Year last December at the Woodstock Artists Association and Museum. To view his work, visit www.artandfossils. wordpress.com. BAU is open Fridays from 5 to 9 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays from 12 noon to 6 p.m. For more information, call (917) 459-7849 or visit www.baugallery.com.

Windows on Main Street opens on Saturday in Beacon Beacon, for anyone who has not visited in a few years, is a city transformed. Where once there were galleries and restaurants here and there along the river city’s long Main Street, now the march from river to waterfalls and mountain is filled with destination spots, mostly upscale, as well as a healthy number of surviving Momand-Pop establishments whose history stretches back into the community’s blue-collar roots. Think health food stores, brew pubs, specialty boutiques and galleries along with the venerable Alps Sweet Shop. And starting again this Saturday, August 9, with one of Beacon’s now-renowned streetlong festivals, the tenth annual WoMSX, or Windows on Main Street public art spectacular, takes the whole Beacon phenomenon several steps further with the help of 35 local artists competing for prizes filling storefronts and plenty of upstairs windows with examples of their creativity and wit. Prizes include a $1,000 Grand Prize juried by the show’s founders, a Gallerists’ Pick juried by local gallerists and a People’s Choice Award juried by the public via live online voting. The entire streetlong installation, which many now see as one of the inspirations

and guiding lights for Beacon’s Main Street renaissance (along with the presence of Dia: Beacon down by the river, the creation of artist spaces in the old high school and a general rise in fortunes for communities around the centralizing city), will stay up through September 13, with several interior spaces adding to the fun with Meet the Artist events. “Windows on Main Street began as a way to connect Beacon’s residents, businesses and artists,” according to the event’s organizers. “The original idea was to use art as a catalyst for economic growth and to create an open dialogue between all aspects of the community by asking artists to create a dynamic, sitespecific installation in a commercial window. Each piece is a combination of the artist’s style and the unique qualities of the business.” Sponsoring businesses include bagel shops and banks, beauty parlors and restaurants, law offices and butcher shops, barbershops and art galleries, pretty much the entire local business community, spurred on by Beacon Arts, one of the region’s leading community arts entities. Although the windows art installations will be available 24/7 for the coming month, with maps available online and at many locations up and down Beacon’s Main Street, things open and close with big events that are part-and-parcel with the city’s monthly Second Saturdays cultural bashes. An opening party will be held on Saturday, August 9 from 6 to 8 p.m. at Bank Square Coffeehouse at 129 Main Street, with a closing party and awards ceremony from 6 to 8 p.m. on Saturday, September 13 at Quinn’s at 330 Main Street. Additional art will be on view at Bank Square throughout the month’s run of the entire WOMSX installation. – Paul Smart Windows on Main Street opening reception, Saturday, August 9, 6-8 p.m., Bank Square Coffeehouse, 129 Main Street, Beacon, exhibition along Main Street through September 13; (917) 407-9244, www.beaconwindows.org, www.beaconarts.org.

Artists on the Street this Saturday on Huguenot Street Historic Huguenot Street will host Artists on the Street, an all-day en plein air event showcasing the talents of more than 15 Hudson Valley artists. The event is an opportunity for the public to watch and engage with local artists as they work, creating paintings inspired by the landscape of the National Historic Landmark District.

A number of last year’s artists are returning for the second annual event on Saturday, August 9, including the event’s creator Kevin Cook, Mira Fink and E. S. DeSanna. Maps will be provided designating the location of each artist across the site. After a day of painting in the open air, the artists will bring their finished works to the DuBois Fort at 81 Huguenot Street at 4 p.m. to be displayed during an hourlong catered reception. The event is free and open to the public, rain or shine. Historic Huguenot Street encompasses 30 buildings across ten acres of the original 1678 settlement, including seven stone houses that date to the early 18th century. It was founded in 1894 as the Huguenot Patriotic, Historical and Monumental Society to preserve French and Dutch heritage. For more information, call (845) 255-1660 or e-mail kaitlin@huguenotstreet.org.

Kislin exhibit opens on Saturday at Wired Gallery in High Falls The Wired Gallery at 11 Mohonk Road in High Falls will hold an opening reception on Saturday, August 9 from 5 to 7 p.m. for “Past Things, New Beginnings,” an exhibit of assemblage sculptures by Woodstock artist Lenny Kislin, who creates sculpture from antique rarities and oddities, transforming them into intriguing assemblage pieces. Kislin’s works range from sardonic to irreverent, combining his eye for rarity, sharp wit and sense of humor to create unique pieces. The exhibit remains on view through Sunday, September 28. Gallery hours are Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. or by appointment. For more information, call (682) 564-5613 or visit www.thewiredgallery.com.

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MOVIE

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PHILIP SEYMOUR HOFFMAN WAS UTTERLY FEARLESS before the cameras or in front of an audience, exposing himself to pity or ridicule as he portrayed mainly creeps and losers, bullies and pornographers, criminals and hucksters, people with something to hide, people who struggled and often did not prevail – and made us believe in them.

Through a glass, smudgily A Most Wanted Man is a worthy capstone to Philip Seymour Hoffman’s brilliant acting career

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he worlds of cinema and the stage lost one of their hardestworking, most talented and accomplished character actors this past winter when Philip Seymour Hoffman succumbed to a drug overdose. Hoffman wasn’t blessed with matinée-idol good looks, but he counted his frumpy, dumpy appearance as an asset when it came to being able to undertake a broad range of interesting roles. He was utterly fearless before the cameras or in front of an audience, exposing himself to pity or ridicule as he portrayed mainly creeps and losers, bullies and pornographers, criminals and hucksters, people with something to hide, people who struggled and often did not prevail – and made us believe in them. Thus, it seems fitting that the great thespian’s last starring role was in a movie whose visual aesthetic keeps returning to the idea of transparency or the lack thereof: Anton Corbijn’s interpretation of the John le Carré espionage novel A Most Wanted Man. Before he became known as a maker of stylish music videos, the Dutch director cut his teeth doing still photography, and that DNA leaves its marks all over this tense, thoughtful, unglamorous spy thriller. As the characters dance their high-stakes pavanne through the glum, seedy streets of the German city of Hamburg, any window, mirror or shiny surface becomes an excuse to have an image blur or dissolve into glare. Two people meeting secretly in an apartment

in WOODSTOCK

A Most Wanted Man with Willem Dafoe and Philip Seymour Hoffman

undergoing renovation struggle to connect through translucent hanging plastic tarps; a character is held prisoner in a room built from glass blocks. It all feels at times like one of those dreams where you’re trying your hardest to move forward, but it’s like walking underwater. That’s probably what Günther Bachmann’s job is starting to feel like by the time we meet him at the outset of A Most Wanted Man. After a more prestigious gig running a German government intelligence unit in Beirut falls apart and most of his team members are killed due to a CIA flub, the veteran spy portrayed by Hoffman gets demoted to a clandestine squad whose job is to keep a low profile while doing things that aren’t technically legal. They’re assigned to Hamburg because that’s where Mohammed Atta and company organized the 9/11 plot, and the German government is embarrassed that it didn’t catch them. Bachmann and his crew are supposed to make sure, whatever it takes, that terrorists don’t continue to operate in that town, which is a crossroads for all sorts of international schemers because it’s a busy shipping port. Bachmann is under pressure from

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July 21 7:15PM Rosendale Theatre July 23 1:00PM Rosendale Theatre July 24 7:15PM Rosendale Theatre* July 26 2:00PM Upstate Films, Woodstock* *Q&A with director Jim Mickle

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his bosses to find hard evidence that CIA agent Martha Sullivan, with whom Bachmann must play cat-and-mouse to an eminent Muslim philanthropist named Dr. Faisal Abdullah (Homayoun buy himself a little more time. The whole Ershadi) is siphoning off a portion of cast is stellar, even the minor characters, with Nina Hoss completing the triumvirate the donations to his charities to fund weapons for terrorists. It’s a long game of strong, interesting female characters that he’s playing, and a s B a c h m a n n’s Bachmann’s modus chief deputy Erna is to worm his way Frey. Dafoe does This being a le Carré into suspects’ inner a particularly fine circles and gain their turnaround as the story, it’s an espionage trust very gradually. smug, in-control procedural, not a He’s a thinker and bank executive a planner, a man with a dicey past James Bond movie. of nearly infinite who loses his cool patience, not an as he’s blackmailed action hero. So into serving as the when a young half-Russian, half-Chechen espionage team’s stalking horse. drifter with a Muslim prayer rug, a long This being a le Carré story, it’s an incarceration record and no passport espionage procedural, not a James Bond movie. There are lots of eye-opening starts showing up on security cameras lessons in A Most Wanted Man on how around town, the higher-ups lean on Bachmann and his highly skilled and loyal to conduct meticulous research, play good team of young operatives to reel him in cop/bad cop or do a bit of metaphorical before the CIA starts sniffing around. arm-twisting, but no guns a-blazing or car chases (though there are quite a Bachmann has other ideas. He has his team stake out the mysterious stranger, few listening gadgets). Moviegoers who Issa Karpov (Grigoriy Dobrygin), who has need that sort of adrenaline rush in their been trying to make contact with a banker spy flicks would be well-advised to look named Tommy Brue (Willem Dafoe). elsewhere. Those who relish the cerebral They quickly discover that Karpov is the chess game of watching a master operative illegitimate son and sole heir of a recently painstakingly manipulate his quarry into deceased Russian mobster, and that a very a trap will be awed by Hoffman’s low-key large sum of money is awaiting him in delivery of this world-weary character Brue’s vaults. What he intends to do with who has seen it all, is great at what he does but still occasionally doesn’t see the it is anybody’s guess, and the higher-ups forest for the trees in a post-Cold War, want him taken out of circulation before he passes the funds along to some terrorist post-9/11 world where transparency is a cell. But Bachmann sees Karpov as the rare and deceptive commodity. potential bait in his plan to catch the It’s a role worthy to cap a stunning bigger fish, Dr. Abdullah. career. We’ll miss you, Phil. Into this setup walk a couple of – Frances Marion Platt wildcards: Rachel McAdams as Annabel To read Frances Marion Platt’s previRichter, a human rights lawyer who wants ous movie reviews & other film-related to protect Karpov from extradition back to pieces, visit our Almanac Weekly website one of the countries where he has already at HudsonValleyAlmanacWeekly.com undergone torture; and Robin Wright as and click on the “film” tab. 408 Main Street Rosendale 845.658.8989 rosendaletheatre.org Movies $7, Members $5

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SCREEN

Masterpieces of Polish Cinema at Upstate Films

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hough little-known in the US except for the work of expatriates ending up in Hollywood like silent-film siren Pola Negri and directors Roman Polanski and Agnieszka Holland, Polish cinema has a history as long and deep as the art of cinema itself. In fact, possibly the earliestever movie camera, called the Pleograf, was patented in 1894 by a Polish inventor named Kazimierz Prószynski – right around the same time that the more influential Cinématographe was being developed in France by Léon Bouly and the Lumière brothers. The first movie theater in Poland opened in 1899, in Lodz, and by 1902 Prószynski was creating both short narrative films and documentaries; one of the latter, whose title translates as Skating Rink in the Royal Baths, is still in existence. The earliest surviving feature film, Anton for the First Time in Warsaw, was made in 1908 by Antoni Fertner. The first-ever stop-motion animated film, Beautiful Lukanida (1912), was made by a Polish filmmaker, Władysław Starewicz, using insect puppets. The upheavals of the Russian Revolution and two World Wars forced many filmmakers from the area that was sometimes Poland, sometimes Lithuania, sometimes Russia to head west and find more amenable working conditions in other countries. There was a spurt of nationalistic epics made in between the wars, when Poland achieved nationhood; but the industry didn’t really start to regain its early momentum until the postwar period. Under the Soviet regime, filmmaking was nationalized as Film Polski under the Stalinist Aleksander Ford, who later went on to teach at the National Film School in Lodz. But out of Ford’s shop emerged some of the greatest talents in late-20th-century European cinema, including Polanski, Krzysztof Kieslowski and the great Andrzej Wajda. Two of Wajda’s best-known classics, Ashes and Diamonds (1958) and Man of Iron (1981), along with his less-familiar Innocent Sorcerers (1960), are included in a traveling series of “Masterpieces of Polish Cinema” curated by Martin Scorsese, 11 of which will be hosted by Upstate Films beginning this Sunday and running through early October. Set on the last day of World War II and the first day of peace under a new communist regime, Ashes and Diamonds is told from the point of view of a young Polish resistance soldier who has to decide whether or not to lay down his arms. Scorsese has written that the film “affected me so deeply that I paid small homage by giving Charlie a pair of similar sunglasses in Mean Streets.” Ashes and Diamonds will be screened at 1:45 p.m. on Sunday, August 10 at Upstate Films’s flagship cinema in Rhinebeck and again on Sunday, August 17 in its Woodstock location, at a time yet to be announced. Man of Iron, which won the Palme d’Or at Cannes and was nominated for a Best Foreign Language Film Oscar, is a fictionalized version of the rise of the Solidarity movement amongst

Wojciech J. Has’s fantastical/allegorical tale The Saragossa Manuscript (1964) nudged Luís Buñuel toward Surrealism and was reputedly the favorite film ever of Jerry Garcia

Saving the planet, one pixel at a time Dark Optimists convene onscreen at Basilica Hudson The challenges of radically changing times sometimes demand new philosophical constructs. Nothing in the experience of people living today has really prepared us to deal with the ultimate ramifications of earthshaking issues like climate change and peak oil. We can react to these changes in a variety of ways: We can deny that anything different is really happening; we can proclaim the imminence of the End Times; or we can conclude that our planet is going to ecological hell no matter what we try to do about it. But if anyone can save the human race from the lethal consequences of its own consumptive excesses, it will likely be those who embrace the new cultural meme of “Dark Optimism.” The premise of this philosophy, as codified by Transition activist and author Shaun Chamberlin, is that we must accept that things are getting really bad and are going to get much worse, but also that there are still things that people can do to stave off the worst possible outcomes and help humanity adapt to tomorrow’s new reality. Dark Optimism advocates

hardheaded inquiry and citizen activism, with an emphasis on collaborative effort as essential if humanity is to have any chance of saving our own habitat. In this worldview, facing harsh facts need not lead to despair – if we work together. Inspired by this philosophy, a group of artists calling themselves Colony of Light came together in last summer at MoMA PS1 in New York City to create an intentional community – or as they’re calling it, “a provisionally Utopian collective of artists and filmmakers” – with the purpose of making artworks and performances that promote hope and motivation in these darkening times. The collective, which consists of Basma Alsharif, Peter Burr, Bonnie Jones, Ted Kennedy, Jodie Mack, Xander Marro, Aily Nash, Ben Russell, Jonathan Schwartz, Fern Silva and Ruth Somalo, is reconvening this month at Basilica Hudson to collaborate on some new works. And to celebrate, Basilica Hudson is presenting a series of August screenings of films that in some way capture the zeitgeist of the Dark Optimism movement. The series kicks off on Saturday, August 9 with Ben Rivers and Ben Russell’s A Spell to Ward off the Darkness, the film that is credited with initially bringing the Colony of Light artists together in the first place. Starring black metal musician Robert A. A. Lowe as an unnamed character who joins a 15-person collective on a small Estonian island, the movie is described as “a radical proposition for the existence of Utopia in the present” and “an inquiry

Two of Andrzej Wajda’s best-known classics, Ashes and Diamonds (above, 1958) and Man of Iron (1981), along with his less-familiar Innocent Sorcerers (1960), are included in a series of “Masterpieces of Polish Cinema” curated by Martin Scorsese.

the shipyard workers in Gdansk. It will screen in Rhinebeck only on Wednesday, September 10. Innocent Sorcerers, a love story, will show on Wednesday, August 27 in Rhinebeck and on Saturday, August 30 in Woodstock. Another star of the postwar Polish Film School was Jerzy Kawalerowicz, represented by three titles in the “Masterpieces of Polish Cinema” series: Night Train (1959), scheduled for Sunday, August 31 in Rhinebeck; Mother Joan of the Angels (1960), to be shown on Sunday, September 14 in Rhinebeck and again on Saturday, September 27 in Woodstock; and the recently restored costume epic Pharaoh (1965), screening on Sunday, September 21 in Rhinebeck and Saturday, October 4 in Woodstock. Beginning in the 1970s, an aesthetic movement arose in Poland known as the “cinema of moral anxiety,” whose leading light, Krzysztof Kieslowski, later gained international fame through his Dekalog series of ten one-hour TV films based on the Ten Commandments and with his Three Colors trilogy filmed in France. Kieslowski’s highly acclaimed A Short Film about Killing (1988), a psychological and ethical study of murder, will be screened on Sunday, September 7 in Rhinebeck. Another gem by the same director, Blind Chance (1981) – a sort of Rashomon-style tale with three different possible outcomes of a man running for a train and either catching or missing it – will be shown in Woodstock only on Saturday, September 13. Also included in the series are Andrzej Munk’s 1957 romantic/realist masterpiece Eroica, screening on Saturday, August 16 in Rhinebeck and Sunday, August 24 in Woodstock, and Camouflage, Krzysztof Zanussi’s 1976 comedy about conformity in academia, showing on Wednesday, October 1 in Rhinebeck. Wojciech J. Has’s fantastical/allegorical tale The Saragossa Manuscript (1964), which nudged Luís Buñuel toward Surrealism and was reputedly the favorite film ever of Jerry Garcia, wraps up the series in Rhinebeck on October 8. So now’s your chance to educate yourself on the rich legacy of Polish cinema, or rediscover classics that are not often seen on these shores. Tickets to most screenings at either Upstate Films venue typically cost $10 general admission, $6 for members. For more information including start times, call 876-2515 or visit the website at http://upstatefilms.org/film-series/martin-scorsese-presents-masterpieces-of-polishcinema. – Frances Marion Platt Andrzej Wajda’s Ashes and Diamonds, Sunday, August 10, 1:45 p.m., Upstate Films, 6415 Montgomery Street/Route 9, Rhinebeck; (845) 876-2515, http://upstatefilms.org.

into transcendence that sees the cinema as a site for transformation.” The screening begins at 8 p.m., and admission is charged on a sliding scale of $5 to $10. Ben Russell will conduct a question-and-answer session via Skype afterwards. The second weekend in the series, Friday and Saturday, August 15 and 16, Colony of Light members will present two programs of performances and screenings of films and videos that the artists produced collaboratively, either in their 2013 residency or in the one currently in process. Live discussions with the artists will follow these 8 p.m. programs, and the $5 to $10 pricing will also apply. Finally, on Thursday, August 28, Basilica Hudson will screen Colony of

Light member Jodie Mack’s “animated musical documentary” Dusty Stacks of Mom: The Poster Project, along with four of her short films. Again, the program will start at 8 p.m., the filmmaker will conduct a question-and-answer session via Skype, and admission will cost $5 to $10. Can socially and environmentally conscious art change our attitudes enough to save us from ourselves? Check out these thought-provoking evenings at Basilica Hudson and find out. More information is available at www.basilicahudson.com. – Frances Marion Platt A Spell to Ward off the Darkness screening, Saturday, August 9, 8 p.m., $5-$10, Basilica Hudson, 110 South Front Street, Hudson; www.basilicahudson.com.


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

FORMERLY AT WILD HIVE IN CLINTON, Chef Amy Lawton planted a lush garden in back of the restaurant to provide ingredients from curly kale to nasturtiums that are as local as it gets

Murray’s in Tivoli serves brunch all day

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t’s about the community, they say. “We’re not a coffeeshop and we’re not a restaurant,” says Jake Stortini of the place that he co-owns with Jesse Feldmus. But Murray’s, their place in Tivoli, clearly boasts the best of both, serving an enthusiastic clientele. Tivoli is a quirky little hamlet just north of Bard College, with a lively social scene and some good restaurants; but until three years ago, it was lacking this kind of cozy gathering spot. “There was a big need for a coffeeshop in Tivoli,” says Jake, who met partner Jesse their freshman year at Bard. All kinds of people from diverse walks of life keep the “all-day brunch café” crowded every day (except Wednesdays, when it is closed). Jake recounts as an example a story about the 82-year-old local couple sitting at a table near a couple of Bard students. They all struck up a conversation, and the four delightedly ran into each other again there another day. And many of the regulars keep coming in for the imaginative sandwiches, salads, egg dishes and other brunchy dishes cooked by executive chef Amy Lawton, who has been with them since they opened three years ago. Formerly at Wild Hive in Clinton, her roots are in local food, her employers say: “She’s the textbook locavore.” Chef Amy planted a lush garden in back of the restaurant to provide ingredients from curly kale to nasturtiums that are as local as it gets; and as soon as the kitchen closes at 4 p.m., she’s out foraging, currently for mushrooms. Everything else is nearly as local, sourced mostly from local producers – within 40 to 50 miles at most, Jake says – and with sustainable growing practices as well.

Inside and out of Murray’s in Tivoli

Murray’s is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day but Wednesday, with the kitchen closing at 4 p.m. Find it at 76 Broadway on Tivoli’s main drag, at (845) 757 6003 or www.murraystivoli.com. Read more about local cuisine and learn about new restaurants on Ulster Publishing’s www.DineHudsonValley.com or www. HudsonValleyAlmanacWeekly.com. ROY GUMPEL

Each Saturday there’s a new menu, but always an egg sandwich, a breakfast burrito and the popular kale and eggs ($9). On a recent incarnation of the menu, the egg sandwich came with cheddar or chèvre ($3.50), with bacon, sausage or greens available as extras ($1.50) and a melted Camembert and tomato option on the week’s offerings ($10). The burrito was stuffed with black beans, cilantro pesto, sharp cheddar and scrambled eggs, with chipotle sour cream on the side ($9). The Apricot Party (Jesse’s fave, $5) with blackberries, oats and a baked biscuit with whipped cream on top, is morphing as we speak into Peaches & Cream, as fresh local peaches come into season. Another current favorite of Jesse’s is the dandelion greens salad with garlic scapes, tomato and mozzarella in a balsamic vinaigrette

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coffee” is roasted in small batches by the Philadelphia company Atelier La Colombe, which offers organic fair-trade beans, single and blends, in a range to please every taste, from Brazil, El Salvador, Guatemala and Mexico. Bags of La Colombe are also available at Murray’s to take home. Dark wood floors and tables don’t keep Murray’s from feeling airy, bright and homey. A current photography exhibit (the art changes every couple of months) is by Sam Rosenblatt. Three years ago, at age 20, these guys opened the place to fill a local need for a coffeeshop, but Murray’s is ever-evolving. First they supplemented the baked goods that go so well with fine coffee by adding breakfast sandwiches; then that evolved into a full menu of brunch options. They even served dinner for a year, but then opted to stop. “It was great,” says Jesse, “but we would rather stick to what we do best.” Future plans include an open-minded, following-the-seasons approach and seeing where things go. In any case, it seems to be working, and Murray’s is loved by Tivolians and visitors alike. Jesse and Jake are too busy to even spend quality time with their cat, named (of course) Murray. “On weekends you can’t move in here,” says Jake. – Jennifer Brizzi

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topped with brioche croutons ($10). A large variety of creative salads, wraps and soups featuring local, inseason ingredients rounds out the menu. All baked goods are made in-house; at a recent visit there were fresh zucchini bread, hippie cookies and biscuits in both regular and jalapeño. Beverage options range from a seasonal cucumber cooler to evolving flavored fresh-squeezed lemonades. You may have tasted watermelon or Thai basil lemonade, or maybe hibiscus mint, lavender or black raspberry. Watch for a jalapeño version coming up soon. Flavored simple syrups are made in-house to add to coffees, like vanilla, chocolate and cinnamon, and they make a popular spicy vanilla chai from scratch as well. Last but not least – “the coffee is as important as the food,” they say – is an ever-refillable $2 mug, so you can enjoy the free WiFi for a while. This “culinary

Wild Blueberry & Huckleberry Festival in Ellenville The 15th annual Shawangunk Mountain Wild Blueberry & Huckleberry Festival will be held rain or shine in Ellenville at Canal Street and Liberty Square on Saturday, August 9 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The day begins with a fundraising blueberry pancake breakfast from 7:30 to 11 a.m. at Norbury Hall on Center Street, hosted by Pioneer Engine Co. 1. The festival includes a blueberry pie contest and bake sale, homemade blueberry piejudging contest, live music by the Carl Richards Band and Side F/X, a cultural heritage area, children’s activities, an interactive inflatable, a rock wall climb and more than 175 vendors. Signs will point the way to free offstreet parking. The festival is sponsored by the

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Ellenville/Wawarsing Chamber of Commerce. Sorry, no dogs are allowed per Village Board ordinance. Persons not in compliance will be asked to leave the festival. For more information, call (845) 647-4620 or visit www.ewcoc.com.

25th anniversary at Zena Cornfield on Saturday The Woodstock Land Conservancy (WLC) will hold a 25th anniversary event at the Zena Cornfield on August 9 from 1 to 4:30 p.m. (rain date: Sunday, August 10). The family-friendly program and activities will begin with a Native American blessing of the land by interfaith minister Jim Davis, followed by music, en plein air work created throughout the field by eight artists and photographers, a history of the cornfield by town historian Richard Heppner and a geological overview of the valley and Overlook by Dr. Robert Titus. The conservation campaign for the 22-acre Zena Cornfield in 1989 was the event that helped launch the Woodstock Land Conservancy on its mission of saving open lands and habitats in the eastern Catskills. More than 500 concerned and determined citizens, inspired by Gay Leonhardt, the board of the new organization and volunteers reached deep into their pockets in a community effort to raise an astounding $160,000, through a homegrown pledge campaign, to save the cornfield from being developed. It remains one of the few open fields in Woodstock available to the public. Attendees at the celebration are encouraged to bring a picnic lunch to eat at the tables that will be on the field that day. Children will enjoy a nature walk, face-painting, storytelling by Emmy Award-winner Gioia Timpanelli and a treasure hunt. WLC will provide freshly baked cornbread, corn-on-the-cob with seasoned butters and lemonade. The cost is $20 per person or $30 per family. Proceeds benefit the Woodstock Land Conservancy. For more information, visit www.zena25.com.

Indian-themed Mid-Summer Benefit on Saturday at Clermont The Friends of Clermont will hold a Mid-Summer Benefit on Saturday, August 9 from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Clermont State Historic Site. “An Evening in Agra” is inspired by the life and legacy of colonel William Linnaeus Gardner, a grandson of the third lord of Livingston Manor. He sought his for-

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tune in India at the age of 18, founded Gardner’s Horse (a cavalry unit still in existence), married a princess and established the Indian line of Livingston descendants, several of whom are involved with Clermont today. Brightly colored silks and Indian tents set against the white exterior walls of the mansion, bathed in the golden summer sunlight, will celebrate the mingling of the two cultures. The festive cocktail party will include food, drink, music and live and silent auctions. Marianna Morrison, a Hudson-based caterer who has appeared on the Food Network’s Throwdown with Bobby Flay, will provide catering. Many local businesses and individuals have donated goods and services towards the event and auction, including the Barlow Hotel in Hudson, Gary Di Mauro Real Estate, Paddlehead Boards in Athens, Modern Farmer and MFA students from the New York Academy of Art. Tickets cost $100. Sponsor levels begin at $300. For more information or tickets, call (518) 537-6622 or visit www. friendsofclermont.org/an-evening-in-agra.

Wear comfortable shoes for the rough terrain on the walking tour portion of the experience. Strollers cannot be accommodated. There is a 72-step climb from the dock to the start of the tour (there is a rest stop along the way). To make a reservation, call (845) 2564007 or visit www.zerve.com. To rent the island for private events, call Neil Caplan at (845) 831-6346. For more information, visit www.bannermancastle.org.

Ice Cream Social this Sunday at Rosendale’s Century House The Century House Historical Society at 668 Route 213 in Rosendale will host an Ice Cream Social on Sunday, August 10 from 1 to 4 p.m. Proceeds benefit the Century House Historical Society, which presents and preserves information about the cement industry, the related D & H Canal and railroads, local history, business documents, photographs and geological information.

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On Sunday, September 1, the D & H Canal Historical Society will hold its annual fundraiser, “Wine-Tasting on the Five Locks Walk,” sponsored by Stone Ridge Wine & Spirits and Emmanuel’s Marketplace. Meet at the Village Green in front of the Canal House between 1 and 4 p.m. on August 31 (rain date Saturday, September 6 from 1 until 4 p.m.) and purchase tickets for tastings of five wines, one at each of the locks. The $15-per-person donation gets you tastings of five different wines from Stone Ridge Wine & Spirits plus appetizers from Emmanuel’s Marketplace, with a bit of D & H history from Canal Society trustees as well. There will also be a raffle for a case of wine donated by Tim Sweeney and Stone Ridge Wine & Spirits.

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A fundraising Wine and Cheese Cruise and tour of Bannerman Island will be sponsored by the Bannerman Castle Trust on Friday, August 8. The Estuary Steward will depart the Beacon Institute Dock at the Beacon waterfront at 3 p.m. The menu includes wine, cheese, wraps, salads and desserts catered by Loughran’s Irish Pub of Salisbury Mills. Once on the island, take a self-guided tour. Afterwards, board the Steward again and cruise south, enjoying wine and cheese as you pass Breakneck Ridge and Storm King Mountain. The boat will cruise to Cold Spring, then come back to the island for a short rest break before returning to Beacon. The cost is $75. Members receive a $5 discount. Advance booking is required.

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HISTORY

ALMANAC WEEKLY

SECRETS IN THE SOIL

August 7, 2014

WHAT WAS THE AREA LIKE WHEN THE PALEO-INDIANS WERE HERE? It has been likened to a park tundra, which is a tundra environment punctuated by small stands of trees. The Paleo-Indians hunted reindeer and possibly elk, as well as mammoths and maybe giant beaver.

Captions Top left and right: Artifacts from the Abeel Street dig in Kingston by the Armadillo restaurant

Archaeologist Joseph Diamond gives us the latest on the oldest artifacts in Ulster County

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tone houses, 350-year-old documents in old Dutch, even a wampum belt: The Hudson Valley doesn’t lack for history. But it turns out that human presence in the area goes back much, much further: to 10,000 BC, a few thousand years after the last ice sheet retreated. Dr. Joseph Diamond, professor of Archaeology at SUNY-New Paltz, is one of the few people who have provided the evidence, digging up and identifying fragments of stone tools of unimaginable age from sites beneath city streets and under riverbanks. In 1998, Diamond set up a summer field school for his students at Historic Huguenot Street, which has been a rich source of artifacts, and he has worked on digs from New York City to Canada. A native of Ulster County who was been fascinated with archaeology since the sixth grade, Diamond recently spoke at Kingston’s Buried Treasures monthly lecture series and to Almanac Weekly’s Lynn Woods about his latest finds and what they tell us about life in the midHudson Valley thousands of years ago. Last summer Kingston installed new bluestone sidewalks and curbs on Abeel Street, located in the Rondout District along the Rondout Creek. Your field technician Frank Spade was on the site and discovered a trove of artifacts. What are the requirements to have an archaeologist on-site for a project? Whenever an excavation project involves state and/or federal funding, as this one did, you need to have an archaeological survey or monitoring. Either an archaeologist is required to do a survey beforehand, or be at the site while the work is being done, as was the case at Abeel Street.

What did Frank find? He started to find prehistoric tools in some of the fill the workers were moving around when they were putting in new water and gas lines and redoing the road and sidewalks. He came to one location that looked like the original soil and excavated 12 onemeter squares, where he got a nice group of artifacts dating from circa 6,000 BC to circa 800 AD.

Where exactly was this? Across from the Armadillo restaurant, by the site of the former Forst Meatpacking Plant. That site, where he found projectile points, knives and other artifacts, was called Abeel Street Pre-Contact Site #1. A second site, called Abeel Street Pre-Contact Site #2, was on the eastern side of Abeel Street and uphill from Broadway. Describe some of the major finds. A nutting stone, used for cracking nuts, which was big enough to fit in your hand and was pitted on two sides. One hammerstone, which was used for making stone tools. It’s a round stone with battering on one end. Two scrapers. Probably around ten knifelike objects, which were used for cutting or were preforms for another tool such as a projectile point. We found nine projectile points, and point fragments. Also, one little fragment of reddishbrown prehistoric pottery, which was manufactured by the coil method. Downtown Kingston was developed in the 19th century, so it seems amazing there would be undisturbed soil from thousands of years ago. We were lucky to get that one section of soil that hadn’t been disturbed from the 19th century until the early 1900s. During construction episodes on Abeel Street they took off the dark soil on top but didn’t get into the yellow subsoil, where the artifacts were, which was about 20 inches down from the sidewalk. We were surprised to find anything at all stratified and still intact, which means there are probably other places in Kingston with a similar situation. What do the artifacts tell us about the area? We have a very early occupation right in the downtown Rondout area, dating from circa 6,000 BC to c. 800 AD. The climate would have been similar, with species such as chestnut, acorn, butternut, walnut and hickory providing food for people. We have all of those today, with the exception of the chestnut. Native Americans of this time period would have had what we call a restricted or

seasonal pattern of mobility. People were living all around the area, moving from one locale to another seasonally. They would have been moving from the Town of Ulster to Hurley, down to Rosendale, around Port Ewen and the Town of Esopus. They would have been along the Hudson and its tributaries when the shad and herring, striped bass and sturgeon were migrating in the spring and moved to the high locations along the rivers in the fall to harvest nuts. They hunted for turtles, rabbits, squirrels, deer and probably elk, of which there was a decent population then, all year long. Also they would have hunted for bear, beaver and river otter, as well as migratory waterfowl in the spring and fall. They would also have gathered fruits such as berries when they became available in the spring and summer. All in all, they were hunters and gatherers who took advantage of all the food resources that the Hudson Valley had to offer.

What about the artifacts that were dug up at Kingston’s Persen House? They’re owned by Ulster County and [whatever is not displayed at the Persen House, which is owned by the county] are in the county archives on Foxhall Avenue in Kingston.

“There are a lot of sites that people are actively looting in the Hudson Valley. Most of them date from circa 8,000 BC to European Contact, and they’re on state, county and town property... We’re losing portions of the prehistory of the Hudson Valley.”

When did farming start here? By around 800 AD they would have had horticulture or agriculture, combined with hunting and gathering. What were their houses like? Back in 6,000 BC, circular or oblong houses made of saplings covered with elm bark. Later, the houses got larger and became long ovals or long rectangles constructed out of saplings with a covering of elm bark. Where are the artifacts from Abeel Street now? Right now they’re on my back porch, and they’re going to the Planning and Engineering Department of the City of Kingston.

Have you found other prehistoric artifacts in nearby areas? Yes. A couple of years ago I partially excavated a site in Port Ewen for the Mid-Hudson Federal Credit Union building, on Broadway. We found artifacts dating from circa 10,000 BC up to European Contact, including a Paleo-Indian point from that early phase and copper projectile points and a bead from the Contact Period. Other Paleo-Indian points have been found by people who were clay-mining in the late 19 th century near Kingston Point. What was the area like when the PaleoIndians were here? It has been likened to a park tundra, which is a tundra environment punctuated by small stands of trees. The Paleo-Indians hunted reindeer and possibly elk, as well as mammoths and maybe giant beaver. What have you found with your students at the Huguenot Street dig in New Paltz? The occupations on Huguenot Street extend back to circa 7,000 BC. People normally settle near a water source, which in this case is the Wallkill River, which is several hundred feet downhill from where we are excavating. From 2013 to 2014 we’ve excavated about 46 square meters of area on the Reformed Church property on


August 7, 2014 Huguenot Street. Each excavation unit has provided us with information on either the historic Huguenots, historic structures on the site or Native American pit features that have excellent evidence of prehistoric diet. For me, each site that we excavate is like a building block, and collectively they give us a look at what was happening in the Hudson Valley over the last several thousand years.

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ALMANAC WEEKLY Are you concerned about people illegally digging in some of the area’s prehistoric archaeological sites? Yes, I’m always worried about this. There are a lot of sites that people are

actively looting in the Hudson Valley. Most of them date from circa 8,000 BC to European Contact, and they’re on state, county and town property. People have been arrested on state

property, but on county and town property, [the authorities] generally look the other way. We’re losing portions of the prehistory of the Hudson Valley because of this. Most of these

How do you identify a Paleo-Indian projectile point – or any fragmented ancient stone tool, for that matter? The points from circa 10,000 BC are fluted, and they were manufactured differently. I’m being handed “artifacts” all day long by my students that are just pointed rocks. You get accustomed to know what to look for: the material, the shape of the stone and the way it’s worked. When you see it, it jumps out at you. What do you do when you dig up a skeleton? You have to alert the landowner, the police, the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation and perhaps the New York Department of Environmental Conservation [DEC], depending on the situation. If it’s a recent burial, the police alert the coroner’s office. If it’s archaeological, the Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation and/or DEC would contact the Stockbridge Munsee, who live in Wisconsin and are the descendants of the Native people from this area. Describe the prehistoric quarries in the Hudson Valley. They’re outcroppings of chert, which is similar to flint and ideal for making tools. There are locations on both sides of the river, but the only one that is protected is Flint Mine Hill in Greene County, which was bought by the Long Island Chapter of the New York State Archaeological Association specifically to keep it from being looted by artifact collectors.

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August 7, 2014 sites are recurring camp locations, where people have lived on the same site on and off for about 8,000 years and made the site part of their seasonal rounds. Are the Abeel Street sites at risk? No. I don’t think there’s a hell of a lot more under Abeel Street.

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For more information about Joe Diamond and his work, contact the SUNYNew Paltz Archeological Field School at (845) 257-2990. Kingston’s Buried Treasures lecture series takes place on the third Friday of each month, unless otherwise noted, at the Vanderlyn Gallery of the Senate House Museum located at 296 Fair Street in Kingston. For more information on Kingston’s Buried Treasures, call (845) 340-3050 or e-mail poneill@ courts.state.ny.us.

Poughkeepsie hosts Lake Champlain schooner on Tuesday

W W W . R U G E S S U B A R U . C O M

Gazebos

What else did you dig up on Abeel Street? White kaolin smoking pipes, bottle fragments, historic ceramics, toys and toothbrushes from the 19th century. Also marbles, relatively modern coins, bottlecaps and some liquor bottle fragments from the 1950s and 1960s. These were from Night Train and other cheap booze bottles. We catalogued these and then threw them out. I doubt very much if the folks in Planning and Engineering at City Hall would have wanted to store them.

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The Lake Champlain Maritime Museum (LCMM)’s schooner Lois McClure will be in port at Waryas Park in Poughkeepsie on Tuesday, August 12 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The visit commemorates the War of 1812 Bicentennial. This year’s thematic and interpretive message is “1814: From War to Peace.” “The shipbuilding races and naval battles of 1814 helped to determine the outcome of the War of 1812 and left a legacy of shipwrecks beneath the waters of the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence River and Lake Champlain,” explains project director Art Cohn. “Our outreach program explores history where it happened, on the anniversary of the cross-border war that ushered in 200 years of peace. We’ll be sharing new information about the crucial role of the New York City shipwrights who came to Lake Champlain to build the fleet that Commodore Macdonough took into battle.” Visitors can board the schooner free of charge to explore the 88-foot-long boat “from stem to stern.” In recent years, a tangible legacy of shipwrecks from the War of 1812 has been discovered at the bottom of the lakes and waterways where naval history was made. These shipwrecks and related sites on land form a powerful connection to the little-known war, which closed the final chapter in North American boundary disputes and ushered in two centuries of peaceful alliance between the US, Britain and Canada. The schooner will carry copies of a newly released book, Coffins of the Brave: Lake Shipwrecks from the War of 1812, which presents more than a dozen underwater studies of 1812 warships.

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D & H Canal Museum in High Falls hosts bel canto concert The D & H Historical Society and Jane Klaviter, artistic director of the Bel Canto Institute in New York City, will bring an evening of bel canto singing to the newly air-conditioned chapel at the D & H Canal Museum on Mohonk Road in High Falls on Saturday, August 9 at 5 p.m. The concert will feature several award-winning performers, including Alice Girle, Kira Neary and Nicolas Randrianarvelo. They


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August 7, 2014 will sing in the unique bel canto style of 19th- and 20th-century Italian opera arias. Included in the repertoire for the evening will be selections from the works of Bellini, Rossini, Donizetti and Verdi. General admission costs $10, or $5 for D & H Historical Society members. Complimentary refreshments will be served at intermission.

Madeleine Albright brooch collection at FDR Library In 1997, Madeleine Albright was named the first female secretary of State and became, at that time, the highest-ranking woman in the history

of the US government. While serving under president Bill Clinton, first as US ambassador to the United Nations and then as secretary of State, Albright became known for wearing brooches that purposefully conveyed her views about the situation at hand. “While president George H. W. Bush had been known for saying, ‘Read my lips,’” she has been quoted as saying, “I began urging colleagues and reporters to ‘Read my pins.’” Those brooches are now part of a traveling exhibition making a stop at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum in Hyde Park from Saturday, August 9 through Sunday, November 2. “Read My Pins: The Madeleine Albright Collection” features more than 200 symbolic and historically significant pins

and explores how Albright used jewelry as a diplomatic, political and social tool. A highlight of the exhibition will be the brooch that began Albright’s unusual use of pins as a tool in her diplomatic arsenal. After Saddam Hussein’s governmentcontrolled press referred to her as a “serpent” in 1994, then-US ambassador to the United Nations Albright wore a golden snake brooch pinned to her suit for her next meeting on Iraq. The exhibit features the famous snake brooch among many other pins with similar stories – some associated with important world events,

others gifts from international leaders or valued friends. One of her most original pieces is a pin made specifically for her. The silver brooch shows the head of Lady Liberty with two watch faces for eyes, one of which is upside down – allowing both her and her visitor to see when it is time for an appointment to end. Sponsored by the library’s nonprofit partner, the Roosevelt Institute, and organized by the Museum of Arts and Design in New York, the exhibition will be on display in the William J. vanden

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August 7, 2014 Heuvel Gallery at the FDR Library. Regular hours and admission apply. The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum is located at 4079 Albany Post Road in Hyde Park. For more information, call (845) 486-7745 or visit www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu.

Since

1978

Piecemakers of Cairo Quilt Show on Saturday

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The Cairo Public Library at 15 Railroad Avenue in Cairo will host the annual Piecemakers of Cairo Quilt Show on Saturday, August 9 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring quilts and other items made by guild members. There will be demonstrations, raffles, vendors and door prizes. Choose the winner of the Viewers’ Choice award, Viewers’ Choice wall-hanging and the member block challenge. The theme for this year’s block challenge is “Movies.” Proceeds support the guild’s charity projects and member education. The admission cost is $2. For more information, call (518) 622-2270.

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August 7, 2014

Parent-approved

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ALMANAC WEEKLY

KIDS’ ALMANAC

Aug. 7-14 FRIDAY, AUGUST 8

“LIVE IN THE SUNSHINE, swim the sea, drink the wild air’s salubrity.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

the Amernet String Quartet play the iconic sounds of the little boy Peter, his cat, his duck, a bird, some hunters, his grandfather and of course the wolf, with narration by Maverick’s music director, Alexander Platt. The Maverick is located at 120 Maverick Road in Woodstock. For more information, call (845) 679-8217 or visit http://maverickconcerts.org.

ZOOM FLUME

Family rocket launch at Pleasant Valley Free Library

WATERY WONDERLANDS: ZOOM FLUME AND SPLASHDOWN BEACH

Don’t let summer end without a rocket launch! Register your family for the Pleasant Valley Free Library’s family rocket launch on Friday, August 8 at 1:30 p.m. This program is for ages 7 and up. The Pleasant Valley Free Library is located at 1584 Main Street in Pleasant Valley. For more information or to register, call (845) 635-8460 or visit http://pleasantvalleylibrary.org. SATURDAY, AUGUST 9

The weather’s always sunny inside when Dog on Fleas plays a concert at the Rosendale Theatre. Book your tickets now for a total family win, especially if you have company visiting from out of town, because you’ll all have a great time. On Saturday, August 9 at 11 a.m., you and your crew can see a live performance of Dog on Fleas. And not only is there active audience participation, but each family will also receive one free CD of the band’s latest release, Buy One Get One Flea! Tickets cost $10 for children age 12 and under, everybody else gets in for $12. For tickets, visit http://summerfun. brownpapertickets.com or call (800) 838-3006 and press “1” to speak to a representative. Also, tickets can be purchased at the Rosendale Theatre on the day of the show: The box office opens at 10 a.m. The Rosendale Theatre is located at 408 Main Street in Rosendale. For more information about the summer family series, call (845) 658-8989 or visit www. rosendaletheatre.org/summer-fun.

To hear a live musical performance of Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf is to create a lifelong memory of this classic story. Give your family the gift of

Calling all youth interested in fun and informal music-making this summer: The Bard Preparatory Division String Ensemble invites students ages 8 to 14 with at least two years of private instruction on an orchestral string instrument (violin, viola, cello, double bass) to participate in free, open rehearsals from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. on the following four Saturdays: August 9, 16, 23 and 30. Rehearsals take place at the Bard College Conservatory of Music’s László Z. Bitó ’60 Conservatory Building at Bard College, located on Campus Road in Annandaleon-Hudson. If you would like your child to join in for one or all of the dates, register with the Preparatory Division director, Ryan Kamm, at bardprep@bard.edu or

We’re lucky to have two dedicated water parks in our area, Zoom Flume and SplashDown Beach, and our family enjoys both of them. Both parks hold appeal for all ages with their variety of slides, wave pools and eateries. Zoom Flume also has some wonderful established foliage, so you can relax in naturally shady spots when you want a break from the sun. And did you know that outside food is allowed at Zoom Flume? SplashDown Beach is accessible and easy to get to, since it’s right off Route 9 and close to all of the main roads. And if you’re wishing that SPLASHDOWN BEACH you could feel the sand between your toes without driving another hour, you’re in luck: Splashdown has two lounge chair areas, complete with sand. I was pleasantly surprised by some of the park updates this year. If you’ve been curious to try ziplining before committing to an afternoon or a day of it, Zoom Flume now offers the Gravity Gorge zipline for ages 7 and up. One ride costs $8, or you can take two rides for $12. I noticed Splashdown’s new Safari Outpost attraction while in line for the Cowabunga slides. I looked around and thought to myself, “Ha, that’s funny – that looks like a tiger resting in a pen down there. Wait, what? That’s a tiger down there!” Safari Outpost does daily animal shows except on Mondays, included with park admission. Day rates at Zoom Flume are $27.99 per person, $20.99 for children age 7 and under. Children ages 2 and under get in free. Zoom Flume also offers a spectator pass for $20.99 for anyone interested in just sunning and picnicking. SplashDown’s rates are $28, and they offer military discounts and half-day pricing as well as cabana rentals. Both parks offer online ticketing, group rates and locker rentals. Get there soon: Both parks’ last day of the season is September 1. Zoom Flume Water Park is located at 20 Shady Glen Road in East Durham. For more information, call (800) 888-3586 or visit www.zoomflume.com. Splashdown Beach is located at 16 Old Route 9 in West Fishkill. For more information, call (845) 897-9600 or visit www.splashdownbeach.com.

Dog on Fleas at Rosendale Theatre

Amernet String Quartet plays Peter and the Wolf at the Maverick

Bard Preparatory Division String Ensemble offers open rehearsals

NATURE

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live music in the historic, rustic hall at Maverick Concerts at a show created just for them. And did I mention that children get in free? Adults pay $5, and you can even use the coupon on the program to take $5 off any regular Maverick concert this season.

MAVERICK CONCERTS

Free Young People’s Concert Saturday, Aug. 9, 11am

Peter and the Wolf Amernet String Quartet Alexander Platt, narrator Designed for enjoyment by school-age children, who are admitted free. Adults $5.

120 Maverick Road t Woodstock, New York 845-679-8217 t www.maverickconcerts.org

On Saturday, August 9 at 11 a.m., hear

smoore@nextstepcollegecounseling.com www.nextstepcollegecounseling.com

HIGH MEADOW SCHOOL FALL 2014 3643 MAIN ST, STONE RIDGE, NY

FREE STORY TIME FOR AGES 4 AND UNDER EVERY THURSDAY 9:15-10:15am STARTS THURSDAY, SEPT 11, 2014 DROP-INS WELCOME

MUSIC & ME

FOR AGES 3 AND UNDER TUESDAYS 9:15-10:30am FIRST 2 CLASSES ARE FREE! CLASS STARTS TUESDAY, SEPT 9, 2014 REGISTRATION IS RECOMMENDED

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE VISIT

WWW.HIGHMEADOWSCHOOL.ORG


24 (615) 498-4996.

Family Day at Byrdcliffe features Bari Koral, Paul Green Rock Academy To help round out your musical day, check out Byrdcliffe’s Family Day with a performance by Bari Koral at 4:30 p.m. and by the Paul Green Rock Academy at 7:30 p.m. Koral’s concert takes place on the lawn of White Pines, located at 454 Upper Byrdcliffe Road in Woodstock. The Paul Green Rock Academy’s Battle of the Bands takes place in the Byrdcliffe Barn, located at 485 Upper Byrdcliffe Road in Woodstock. Band contestants are ages 8 to 18 performing original material. The day includes a free sandwich buffet between Koral’s and the Academy’s performances, as well as an Aikido demonstration. Tickets cost $12 for Bari Koral, $18 for the Paul Green Rock Academy and $25 for both. Kids under 12 get in free. For tickets or more information, visit www.woodstockguild. org.

Tales of the Rainbow Forest reading at Olana For an hour of sweet story and song for children ages 4 to 8 years, come to Olana on Saturday, August 9 at 10 a.m. McKenzie Willis will read Tales of the Rainbow Forest. Admission to this event is free, but vehicles pay an $8 parking fee or use a current Empire Passport. Olana is located at 5720 State Highway 9G in Hudson. For more information or to complete the required registration, call (518) 828-1872, extension 109, or e-mail shasbrook@olana.org.

Madeleine Albright’s “Read My Pins!” at FDR Library For all of you British royals fans who followed Duchess Catherine’s daily fashion choices during her recent tour abroad, you know the history and symbolism behind each thoughtfully chosen accessory. But did you know that our country’s own former secretary of state, Madeleine Albright, did that for years with her own jewelry? Learn more about the messages or moods conveyed by pieces such as the serpent pin worn in a meeting with Iraqi officials after being called “an unparalleled serpent” by Saddam Hussein’s poet-in-residence, or her favorite heart pin made by her then-5year-old daughter. This “Read My Pins!” traveling exhibition is on display in the William J. vanden Heuvel Special Exhibits Gallery at the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum from August 9 to November 2. The FDR site is located at 4097 Albany Post Road in Hyde Park. For more information, call (845) 486-7770 or visit www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu.

Corn festivals in Zena and Beacon It’s corn season here in the Hudson Valley, and that means that it’s time for corn celebrations! The Blessing of the Land at the Zena Cornfield takes place on Saturday, August 9 from 1 to 4:30 p.m., beginning with a Native American blessing. Corn with seasoned butters will be provided, and attendees are encouraged to bring a picnic lunch. Children’s activities include a nature walk, face-painting, storytelling by Gioia Timpanelli and a treasure hunt. Tickets cost $20 per person, $30 per family. The Zena Cornfield is located along Zena Road in Woodstock. For more information, visit http://zena25.com.

ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

The Beacon Sloop Club Corn Festival takes place on Sunday, August 10 from 12 noon to 5 p.m. at the Beacon Riverfront Park. In addition to the excellent corn-on-the-cob, the children’s stage will be going all day with performances by Jonathan Kruk, Hudson River Lore, Lydia Adams Davis and more. Riverfront Park is located at 1 Flynn Drive in Beacon. For more information, call (845) 527-8671 or visit www.beaconsloopclub.org.

Hudson Valley first aid products ’Tis the season for all things outdoors, which means that you may need to upgrade your first-aid arsenal. Here are three local products to help you and your family heal all kinds of hurts this summer and all year ’round. Or give them as gifts and impress anyone in the world with your savvy locally sourced selections. Topricin: I am so fascinated by this product and its origins that I’m going to tell you more about it in a future Kids’ Almanac column. My friends swear by this homeopathic pain relief cream for muscle soreness. You want this in your medicine cabinet at home, as well as in your car for muscle support after laps at the Ulster County Pool or hiking Bonticou Crag in New Paltz. The company is based in Rhinebeck. (800) 959-1007, www. topricin.com. Holistic First Aid Kits: You’d prefer natural alternatives for treating the mishaps that come up during s’moresmaking over a campfire, or scrapes and bruises from flashlight-tag-turnedwrestling with the cousins, but you don’t have the time or energy to set something up. That’s where Dragonfly Holistic First Aid Kits and Travel Holistic First Aid Kits come in, including homeopathic remedies and locally made Three Sisters Herbals products. Dragonfly Holistic is based in Poughkeepsie and Rhinebeck. dragonflyholisticllc@gmail.com, www. dragonflyholistic.com. Insect Sting Ointment: Regular readers already know how I feel about Wright Naturals Bug Stuff Herbal Insect Repellent, which works on me like an off-switch for mosquitos. But how about an off-switch for pain or itching for the bugs that do get you? Or poison ivy? Or splinters? Just keep a jar of Insect Sting Ointment in your backpack, and you’ll always be prepared, especially if your crew refuses to wear shoes all summer. Wright Naturals is located in Tillson. www.wrightnaturals.com.

Summer reading for NYC expats Here’s a great summer read for you: Goodbye to All That: Writers on Loving and Leaving New York, edited by Kingston’s Sari Botton. It’s a terrific book for any time of year, but I think that its 28-essay format, rather than one continuous story, each inspired by Joan Didion’s famous essay of the same title, especially lends itself to summertime, where you might find yourself interrupted at unpredictable intervals between sandcastle-building and ice cream-licking and mini-golfing. If you are a New Yorker who moved upstate to the Hudson Valley, you’re in good company: There are a lot of you here, especially after having kids, and this book will connect with some of that experience. But what about the rest of us – those of us who never lived in New York City, who don’t have any particular allegiance to a specific café or even a neighborhood? I am telling you, this is an anthology for all of us. I loved it because while the themes are centered around New York, it’s more than that: It’s about that time in our lives when we were establishing who we were, when anything felt possible and a significant

EVENT

Down by the Riverside

I

enjoy park festivals, and when it’s a park festival along the Hudson River, I say, “Two thumbs up!” I just love every time that the community reclaims its riverfront! On Saturday, August 9 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., head over to Upper Landing Park in Poughkeepsie for a day of free entertainment, including performances by Soñando the salsa band, the Spirit of Unity Band, POOK (Percussion Orchestra of Kingston), Bindlestiff Family Circus (pictured above) and Story Laurie, as well as children’s activities. Nearby parking is limited, so consider walking down or taking public transportation. Upper Landing Park is located at 83 North Water Street in Poughkeepsie. For more information, visit http://upperlanding.org.

amount of discomfort could be tolerated to achieve that vision. And we live that way for a while. And then what? “It all changes – even institutions, even concrete towers, even, or perhaps most of all, our very selves,” notes Dani Shapiro in her raw piece about betrayal of her younger self, “My City.” Sure, the references in Goodbye are all about Gotham, but Meghan Daum’s contribution, “My Misspent Youth,” also feels like financial therapy (is that a thing?). Kids’ Almanac readers will connect with plenty of Botton’s Goodbye: as grownups making different choices from their youth, valuing new priorities; as parents with kids of their own; and as individuals whose lives headed in a different direction from what was planned, or sometimes even desired. I left Goodbye to All That wanting a sequel, and good news! Botton’s next book, Never Can Say Goodbye: Writers on Their Unshakable Love for New York, comes out in October. I recommend Goodbye to All That for anyone living anywhere, but it feels extra-special to read it when you live right here. For more information, visit http://goodbyetonycbook.com. To learn more about the editor, who runs the Anvil Gallery in Uptown Kingston with her husband Brian Macaluso, visit http:// saribotton.com.

Kids’ Almanac Writes Kids’ Almanac thanks Jennifer Castle for supplying writing prompts during the month of August. Jennifer Castle is the author of the young adult novels The Beginning of After and You Look Different in Real Life, both from HarperCollins. She lives in New Paltz with her husband, two daughters, two cats and about 20 notebook volumes

of the ongoing journal that she has kept since 1985. Here is her journal prompt for the week. Remember to post your piece on the Almanac Weekly Facebook page: www.facebook.com/pages/almanacweekly/287633831270607. Prompt: Journaling is where we really figure out the stories inside and around us, and where we are all writers, for ourselves. I believe everyone can and should do it! These prompts are designed to help you start, get back into or freshen up a habit of regular journaling. But first, some tips: Rather than using a fancy blank journal – way too much pressure for the words to be fancy, too – buy a cheap marbled composition or spiral notebook and make it your own with stickers, collage or drawings on the cover. Set rules for yourself, like you will write for ten minutes straight or fill up an entire page, or write on Tuesdays. Keep the pen moving. Resist the urge to cross out. And always: the less you think, the better. Now: Sit down before bedtime and write your day backwards. What did you do just before you picked up the pen? And then before that, and before that? We usually recount our days chronologically, from morning to night, but going from night to morning might help you see or express something that you didn’t expect. – Erica Chase-Salerno Erica Chase-Salerno drinks the wild air in New Paltz with her husband Mike and their two children: the inspirations behind hudsonvalleyparents.com. She can be reached at kidsalmanac@ulsterpublishing.com.


August 7, 2014

Thursday

CALENDAR 8/7

8:30AM-9:30AM Free Daily Silent Sitting Meditation. On-going every Morning, seven days a week, 8:30-9:30am in the Amitabha Shrine Room. For info contact Jan Tarlin, 679-5906 x 1012. Karma Triyiana Dharmachakra, 335 Meads Mountain Rd, Woodstock. 9AM-11:15AM New Paltz Playspace. NPZ Town Rec Center, off of Rt 32, New Paltz. 9:30AM-10:30AM Senior Fit After 50 with Diane Collelo. Three-part class offering movement for balance and breath, weight-training for bone health, and mat work for flexibility and core. Open to Woodstock residents 55 and older, $1 donation requested. Mountainview Studio, Woodstock. 10AM UCI Windham World Cup Windham Mountain, 19 Resort Dr, Windham. 10AM-11:45AM Register Now! Sprouts! A Summer Arts Program. (8/11-8/15) Free for children ages 3 to 7. Reg. reqr’d. Info: 518-943-3400. Catskill Community Center, 344 Main St, Catskill. 11AM-5PM Exhibit: Still Life with Sculpture. Group show. Gallery hours: Thursday - Monday, 11am - 5pm, open late on Fridays till 7pm. Info: www.thompsongirouxgallery.com or 518-392-3336. Thompson Giroux Gallery, 57 Main St, Chatham. 11:30AM-1PM “Third Thursday Luncheonâ€? As part of Messiah’s Outreach Programs, each luncheon benefits a local organization to support its ongoing programs. $6/ donation requested. For takeout orders with a $7/ donation. Info: 876-3533. The Church of the Messiah, 6436 Montgomery St, Rhinebeck. 12:30PM-2:30PM Calling all Minecrafters Ages 10 to 14: come build structures, explode hissing creepers, and connect with fellow players. Info: 845-452-1974 or www.laglib.org. LaGrange Library, 488 Freedom Plains Rd, Poughkeepsie. 1PM-7PM Blood Drive at the Marlboro Library. The New York Blood Center will be holding a blood drive at the Library. Reg reqr’d. Info: 845-245-1722. Marlboro Library, 1251 Rte 9W, Marlboro. 1 PM-4 PM Senior Duplicate Bridge with John Stokes. Woodstock Bridge Club offers a short lesson and a game of Duplicate Bridge. Most players are elementary and intermediate players. Open to Woodstock residents 55 and older, $1 donation requested. Rescue Squad Bldg, Rt 212, Woodstock. 1:30PM Thursday Matinee Series: Funny Girl (1968). Barbara Streisand is comedienne Fanny Brice. Info: www.poklib.org or 845-485-3445 X 3702. Adriance Memorial Library, Charwat Room, Poughkeepsie. 2PM-4PM Summer Spanish At The Woodstock Library (8/6-8/8). Led by KarÂĄn Flores Reininger for Ages 5+. A fun and educational three day intensive Spanish language adventure. Everyone is welcome! Woodstock Library, 5 Library Ln, Woodstock. 2PM-8PM Blood Drive. Info: 845-379-8175. Reservoir United Methodist Church, 3056 State Route 28, Shokan. 3:30PM-4:30PM Kingston Library Teen Summer Reading: Battle of the Books . Info: 845-331-0507. Kingston Library, 55 Franklin St, Kingston, free. 4PM-7PM Kingston YMCA Farm Stand. This project brings youth from the YMCA outside to a new urban farm in Midtown, where they learn about growing and eating healthy food. Open every Thurs. Info: 332-2927. YMCA, 507 Broadway, Kingston. 5:30PM-6:30PM Tai Chi with Martha Cheo. Beginners: Please note: no new beginners until 9/4. Info: mcheo@hvc.rr.com.. Unison Arts Center, 68 Mt. Rest Rd, New Paltz, $12, $130 /14 week session. 6PM Joy of Jazz Week: Ragtime to Jazz Master Class. Catskill Jazz Factory 2014 artist-in-residence Marcus Roberts will lead this lecture and discussion

WWW.N

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on the roots and evolution of jazz. Info: www.catskilljazzfactory.org or 518-628-4424. Orpheum Film &Performing Arts Center, 6050 Main St, Tannersville. 6PM Spring Valley Puppet Theatre presents “The Three Wishes and The Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing.â€? For ages 5 and up. Info: 845-679-2213 or www.woodstock. org. Woodstock Library, 5 Library Ln, Woodstock. 6PM-7PM Free Meditation Practice at Sky Lake Shambhala Retreat Center. Meets every Thursday, 6-7pm. Free and open to the public. Contact info: 658-8556 or www.skylake.shambhala.org. Sky Lake, 22 Hillcrest Ln, Rosendale. 6PM Ragtime to Swing Masterclass. Info: 518-2632000. Doctorow Center for the Arts, 7970 Main St, Hunter, $10. 6PM-8PM Rhythm on the Riverfront Concert Series. Info: 845-473-4440 x273, or www.scenichudson.org. Foundry Dock Park, Cold Spring, free. 6:30PM Astronomy Nights. The free program begins with an indoor planetarium show. After the show, Smolen Observatory will be open for telescope viewing if the sky is clear. Info: www.newpaltz.edu/ planetarium/shows.html. Online res reqr’d. SUNY New Paltz, Coykendall ScienceBuilding, John R. Kirk Planetarium, New Paltz, free. 6:30 PM -8:30 PM Hudson Valley Playwrights Workshop. Open to newcomers and experienced playwrights. Meets on Thursdays. Info: hudsonvalleyplaywrights@gmail.com, or 845-217-0734. Morton Memorial Library, 82 Kelly St, Rhinecliff. 6:30 PM -7:15 PM Tai Chi with Martha Cheo. Advanced. Info: mcheo@hvc.rr.com.. Unison Arts Center, 68 Mt. Rest Rd, New Paltz, $12, $130 /14 week session. 6:30PM-8PM Family Fun Workshops: Week IV: Soda Pop Soda Shoppe. Discover what puts the pop into “popâ€?!Make your own delicious drink and learn how soda water became today’s tasty treat. Reg reqr’d. Info: 845-795-2200. Sarah Hull Hallock Free Library, Milton, free. 7PM Cairo Fish & Game Club. Acra Community Center, Acra. 7PM Live @ The Falcon: Scarecrow! Blues/Hip Hop phenomenon from France! Info: 236-7970 or www.liveatthefalcon.com. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7PM-9PM Spiritual Explorations with Merlin and the Angelic Realm. Group channeling with Margaret Doner. This is a group journey into inner wisdom. Margaret will channel Merlin as well as members of the angelic realm. Bring your questions. Info: 845-6792100.Mirabai Books, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock, $20. 7PM Cafe Singer Showcase with Barbara Dempsey and Dewitt Nelson featuring Mike Herz, Genna and Jesse, and John Hughes. Info: 845-687-2699 or highfallscafe@earthlink.net. High Falls CafĂŠ, Stone Dock Golf Club, 12 Stone Dock Rd, High Falls. 7PM Summer Shortcuts. A festival of original tenminute plays by Catskill Mountain residents as well as playwrights from all over the country. Info: 845-586-1660 or www.theopeneyetheater.org. Open Eye Theatre, 960 Main St, Margaretville, $18, $15 / senior, $10 /25 & under. 7PM Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival: Othello. Info: 265-9575 or www.hvshakespeare.org. Boscobel, Route 9D, Garrison, $47, $32. 7PM Evening Salon: “Angeloch Under Glass.â€? Paula Nelson and John Kleinhans, curators of the exhibit will be joined by Staats Fasoldt, Kate McGloughlin and perhaps another guest, as they reminisce about the school’s founder, instructor and their friend Bob Angeloch. Info:845-679-2388. Woodstock School of Art, 2470 Rte. 212, Woodstock. 7PM Swingin Newburgh at the Newburgh Brewing Company! While having a beer, wine or soda and get a dance lesson and live music. Beginner swing dance lesson provided by Linda & Chester Freeman of Got2Lindy Dance Studios 7-7:30. Swing Shift

Orchestra plays 7:30-9pm. Swingin’ Newburgh will take place on the 1st Thursday of every month. Visit www.got2lindy.com for details. Newburgh Brewing Company, 88 So Colden St, Newburgh. 7PM-9PM Free Film Night: “Louise Hay, You can Heal Your Life�. Info: www.rvhhc.org. Marbletown Community Center, 3564 Main St, Stone Ridge. 8PM The Hudson Valley Programmers Group Summer Series: Twist. Directed byRon Mann. Combining rare and often hilarious archival footage with interviews, Twist chronicles the evolution of rock and roll dance. Info: www.hvpg.org. Mountain View Studio, 20 Mountain View Ln, Woodstock. 8PM “West Side Story.� Info: 845-679-6900 or www. woodstockplayhouse.org. Woodstock Playhouse, 103 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock, $40, $36, $32. 8PM Belleayre Music Festival 2014: Hot Latin Nights 1 - Alberto Solis and Gil Gutierrez - Belleayre Jazz Club. Info: 800-942-6904 x1344 or www. belleayremusic.org. Belleayre Mountain, Lodge, Route 28, Highmount, $26 /table seat. 8:30PM Astronomy Night. Begins with an indoor planetarium show. After the show, Smolen Observatory will be open for telescope viewing if the sky is clear. Info: www.newpaltz.edu/planetarium/shows. html. SUNY New Paltz, John R. Kirk Planetarium, Coykendall Science Building, New Paltz. 9PM Outdoor Big Screen Movie Series: ‘To Kill A Mockingbird.’ Rain Location for all films is the Roxbury Arts Center, 5025 Vega Mountain Road, Roxbury. Info: 607-326-7908 and mcullen@roxburyartsgroup.org. Kirkside Park, Roxbury. 9PM Free Thursdays @ BSP. Leda (Brooklyn) Guilt Mountain (New Paltz). All shows 18+. Info: www. bspkingston.com or 845-481-5158. BSP, 323 Wall St, Kingston, free. 9PM Extreme Thursdays @ Quinn’s. Damian Catera: Pioneering computer-interactive noise guitarist Catera (Con Demek, Lee Ranaldo, KK Null, &c, &c.) de-composes in real time for this rare HV appearance. Info: 845-202-7447. Quinn’s, 330 Main St, Beacon. 10PM Harlem on the Mountaintop Experience. Info: 518-589-6424. Last Chance Tavern, 6009 Main St, Tannersville, free.

Friday

8/8

A triple event featuring cross country, downhill and four cross World Cup mountain biking. Info: www.racewindham. com or 518-943-3223. Windham Mountain, Clarence D. Lane Rd, Windham. 8AM Golf BeneďŹ ts SPCA in Highland: Putt Fore Paws. Benefit for Ulster County SPCA. 9am Shotgun Start. Captain & crew format. Continental breakfast, lunch and awards with an auction following tournament. Info: 255-1399, or danmalski444@gmail.com, or www.ucspca.org.Apple Greens Golf Course, 161 South St, Highland, $125. 9 AM -12 PM Workshop: Bindlestiff Family Cirkus(8/4-8/8). Info: 518-828 - 0017. Hudson Youth Center, 18 S 3rd St, Hudson. 9AM-10PM Bluegrass In Greenville (8/8-8/10). 3-day outdoor music festival with performances by bands from up and down the east coast. On-site camping, food, vendors, and hot showers. Hours: 9am-10pm, Sunday til 2pm. Admission: Varies, $48/person/ weekend. Rt 81, Greenville. 9:45AM-10:45AM Senior Chi Kung with Corinne Mol. Meditative, healing exercise consisting of 13 movements. Open to Woodstock residents 55 and older for a $1 donation. Town Hall, Main Room, Woodstock. 10AM-4PM C o m m u n i ty A p p re c i a t i o n Day!Community Appreciation Day Celebration! Free activities and refreshments for the whole family. Info: customerservice@ulstersavings.com 866-4400391 or 845-255+5470. 180 Schwenk DrUlster Savings Bank, New Paltz. 11AM-9PM Screening: Film by Rikrit Tiravanijia, JG Reads, featuring the famous New York bohemian John Giorno in his Bowery studio. Rare/10 hr film. Part of Woodstock Nights Event. Free. Kleinert/James Center for the Arts, Tinker St, Woodstock. 11:30AM-4:30PM Private Sessions: Past Life Regression and Private Angelic Channeling with Margaret Doner. Call Mirabai to reserve appointment. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Books, 23 Mill Hill Rd, WoodUCI MTB World Cup Bike Race. (8/6-8/10)

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premier listings Contact Donna at calendar@ulsterpublishing.com to be included Sign Up Now! First Wawaka Lake 5K Walk/Run (8/9, 10am)! All proceeds from this race go to the Catskill Mountain Girls in the Avon Walk for Breast Cancer in NYC~ Free T-shirt to the first 75 to enter. Registration Fee is$25/adults, $15/12 & under. Sign-in 8:30-9:30am, event kicks off at 10am. Info: www.wawakalake5k. yolasite.com. Meet at 1 Bragg Hollow R, Halcottsville. WDST Reunion Concert (8/9, 5pm) Featuring Big Joe Fitz, Brian Hollander, and Eric Erickson will perform soulful blend of rhythm and blues. Benefits the Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center. Ron VanWarmer will emcee, introducing special guest, Hester Mundis, who will open theshow. Info: 845-331-5300. Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center, 300 Wall St, Kingston, $15, $5 /senior/ student. Day of Healing with One Light Healing Touch (8/10, 10am-5pm). International Energy Healing & Mystery School A Day of Healing with One Light Healing Touch. $150 (with lunch), $25 off with registration 2 weeks prior, repeater $65 Call Nancy @ 845-687-2252 for information and registration. Learn Aura Scanning, Radiant and Distance Healing and experience a powerful one-day training of One Light Healing Touch. Learn how to access, strengthen and apply the healing energies that are available to you. Call for a brochure. Call for Information, Registration and Private sessions: Nancy Plumer: 845-687-2252nplumer@hvi.net Stone Ridge, NY www. womenwithwisdom.com. An Introduction (8/16, starting at 10am) background and demonstration; The Rites (the complete exercise practice)Yoga and the Five Tibetan Rites with Robin Tosky at 2 - 3:30 pm. The Five Tibetan Rites is believed to be a traditional practice for Tibetan monks. Slow deliberate breathing is coordinated with movement, stimulating the energy centers and the entire endocrine system. Robin Tosky, a certified Karuna Reiki Master Teacher, realized her Reiki work with the Universal Energy Field, the chakra system, and the Five Tibetan Rites were entwined. She developed what she learned from the ancient exercises into a spiritual practice that moves biodynamic energy up and down the chakras, and grounds, opens and connects to higher forces. Morning or afternoon session: $25, morning plus afternoon session: $40. Please call 845-383-1774 or email info@ tibetancenter.org to register. The Tibetan Center, 875 Rt 28, Kingston. Register Now! Introduction to Buddhism. A Weekend Teaching 8/8-8/10 at Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, 335 Meads Mt. Rd, Woodstock. 8/8, 7-8:30 pm, 8/9, 10:30 am-12 p.m. & 3:30-5 pm and Sun, 8/10, 10:30 am-12 pm & 2:30-4 pm. Teacher: Lama Losang (David Bole). Are

you interested in knowing more about the Buddha, what he taught and its relevance to our modern world? Lama Losang present the basics of Tibetan Buddhism in down-to-earth language with warmth, humor, and clarity. He covers a wide range of topics, answers questions, and leads sessions of sitting and walking meditation.$120/$96 (KTD members) for the whole weekend. $30/$25 (KTD members) per individual session. Meals and overnight accommodations available at additional cost. Please call 845-679-5906 x3 for registration or more information. IIntegrating Mindfulness and Compassion into your Communication …with Yourself and Others (8/9, 3-5:30pm). Can you envision relationships and a world where everyone’s needs (yours and the other person’s) are valued and can be met? Afternoon class of learning and practicing Mindful and Nonviolent Communication (NVC) , with NVC trainer, mediator and coach, Roberta Wall. Roberta gives workshops around the world, including recently in Israel , Palestine and Plum Village, France , inspired by the teachings of Thich Nhat Hanh and Dr. Marshall Rosenberg and Nonviolent Communication. Reformed Church members/$15, public/ $20, couples/ $35. To register: and with questions about facility: 914-5849593 or info@steps2peace.com or www. steps2peace.com.Flatbush Reformed Church, 1844 Rt 32, Saugerties. Kingston Film Festival 2014 (8/148/17). Presenting a wide spectrum of filmmaking - feature films, documentaries, animation, short films, experimental, big budget, micro-budget, trailers. For details and info: www.kingstonfilmfestival.org or 914-417-9114. BSP, 323 Wall St, Kingston. Audition Notice: It’s A Wonderful Life. Dates: Sat, 9/6 at 1pm; Sun, 9/7 at 7pm. Readings will be from the script. Multiple roles for men, women, and children ages 7-70. No appointment necessary. Info: upinoneprod@aol.com. The Center for Performing Arts, Rt 308, Rhinebeck. Bakers Wanted! Register Now! For the Special Holiday Edition of Safe Harbors of the Hudson Cupcake-a-Palooza. The event will be held Sat, 10/25, 12pm - 4pm. There is a nominal $10 charge for bakers. Info: 845-784-1110 or jhenley@safe-harbors. org. Lobby at the Ritz Theater, Newburgh. Ashokan Music and Dance Camps (8/178/31). Family Camp. Music, Dancing, Crafts, Puppetry, Nature Walks. Info: www.ashokan.org. Ashokan Center, 477 Beaverkill Rd, Olivebridge. UCI MTB World Cup Bike Race (8/6-8/10). A triple event featuring cross country, downhill and four cross World Cup mountain biking. Info: www.racewindham.com or 518-943-3223. Windham Mountain, Clarence D. Lane Rd, Windham.

stock. 12PM Cruise-In 2014 All vehicles and spectators welcome! Food plus music by DJ .For details, call 518-943-1564. Great Northern Catskills, 15 Maple Ave, Catskill. 12PM Noon Lecture Series: “Kingston IBM Conversations.” Family Experiences. Talk by Bob Winrow. Info: www.fohk.org. Friends of Historic Kingston Gallery, corner of Wall & Main Sts, Kingston. 12PM-7PM Summer Swim at Williams Lake. Public swimming, picnicking and sunbathing through 9/1 on Fri, Sat & Sun (plus Labor Day) from 12 Noon to 7pm. $5 sunset rate after 5pm. Cash Only at the door. All profits donated to the Rosendale Pool Project. Info: www.williamslakeproject.com/summer-swim. Williams Lake Beach, Rosendale, $10, $8 /senior, $6 /12 & under. 12:05PM-1:15PM Senior Basic Pilates with Christine Anderson. A floor work course promoting improvement of balance, coordination, focus, awareness breathing, strength and flexibility. Open to Woodstock residents 55 and older, $1 donation requested. Fire Co #1, Rt 212, Woodstock. 1PM-3PM Save Energy, Save Dollars Workshop. Learn about reducing your energy bills and receive free energy efficient light bulbs at the end of the workshop. Info: ctm78@cornell.edu or 845-677-8223 x138. Catholic Charities, 280 Broadway, Newburgh, free. 2PM-4PM Summer Spanish At The Woodstock Library (8/6-8/8). Led by Kar¡n Flores Reininger for Ages 5+. A fun and educational three day intensive Spanish language adventure. Everyone is welcome! Woodstock Library, 5 Library Ln, Woodstock. 2PM-8PM Flower Show: “Glory of the Garden.” Presented by the Shawangunk Garden Club. Info: 845-647-6080. St. Mary’s & St Andrew’s Catholic Church, Parish Hall, 137 S. Main St, Ellenville. 3:30PM-4:30PM Kingston Library Teen Summer Reading: Teen Game Time. Info: 845-331-0507. Kingston Library, 55 Franklin St, Kingston, free. 4PM Knitting Club “Knit Wits.” Saugerties Public library, Washington Avenue, Saugerties, 246-4317, x 3. 5PM-8PM Artists in Residence Susan Surface & Jessica Vaughn, will their ongoing projects and research. Part of Woodstock Nights Event. The Center for Photography, Tinker St, Woodstock. 5PM-9PM Woodstock Nights. Open until 9pm. Night time shopping, food, music & art. Info: www.woodstockchamber.com. Village of Woodstock, Woodstock. 5PM-9PM Woodstock Film Festival. A special unveiling its official 15th Anniversary poster. Info: 845-6794265 or www.woodstockfilmfestival.com. Woodstock Film Festival, 13 Rock City Rd, Woodstock, free. 5PM-7PM Saugerties Artist Studio Tour (8/88/9-8/10). Thirty-four artists, working in a variety of media and styles, will open their doors for this

Call for Actors: Voices From The Fringe. Rehearsals will take place on 8/16 and 8/23. The staged readings will be performed book-in-hand. Please send pictures and resumes to woodstockfringe@ gmail.com. STS Playhouse, Phoenicia. Day Trip: Noguchi Sculpture Museum, Long Island City, . Trip is 9/4. 8:30am. Registration deadline is 8/21. Mount Saint Mary College, Desmond Campus for Adult Enrichment, Newburgh, $70. Day Trip: Lunch at the Culinary Institute’s Caterina de’Medici Restaurant/ Tour. Trip is 8/12. 11:15am-3pm. No transportation provided. Registration deadline is 8/12. Mount Saint Mary College, Desmond Campus for Adult Enrichment, Newburgh, $45. Register Now! Buddhism and Addiction Recovery. A Weekend Teaching 8/1-8/3 at Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, 335 Meads Mt. Rd, Woodstock. 8/1, 7-8:30 pm, 8/2, 10:30 am-12 pm & 3:30-5 pm and 8/3, 10:30 am-12 pm & 2:30-4 pm. Teachers: Lama Losang (David Bole) and Bill Alexander. Addictions are not the result of our suffering. Addictions are the suffering itself. Buddha said that his teachings had just one taste: the taste of freedom from suffering and attachment. This program is designed for people who want to combine a Buddhist approach to life with the power of the twelve steps.$120/$96 (KTD members) for the whole weekend. $30/$25 (KTD members) per individual session. Meals and overnight accommodations available at additional cost. Please call 845-679-5906 x3 for registration or more information. Low-Cost Spay/Neuter Clinics for Cats & Dogs – For details call 845-754-7100. tara-spayneuter.org. Free Chakra Meditation will be held twice a month on the Tuesday nights closest to the Full and New Moons. For the summer, those dates will be: 8/12 & 8/26, 9/9 & 9/23. Please check back for fall dates. Donations welcome. Namaste Sacred Healing Center, 427 Ohayo Mountain Rd, Woodstock. Info: 679-6107 or NamasteSacred@gmail.com or www. namastesacredhealing.com. Summer Reading Contest. Kids, Adults, Families. Kids Prize: $100 gift certificate to bookstore. Adult Prize: $100 gift certificate to bookstore. Family Prize: Family that reads the most gets a special prize. Deadline 8/23. Info: www.phoenicialibrary. org or 688-7811. Phoenicia Library, 9 Ava Maria Ave, Phoenicia. Register Now! Children’s Open Studio Classes: Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays, 4-6pm & Saturday mornings 10am-noon: Children’s Cartoon Drawing Classes: Saturdays, 1-2pm; Adult Open Studio Classes: Monday evenings, 6-9pm & midday Thursdays, 10am-1pm: & Private

free tour.. You can see examples of their work and maps at www.saugertiesarttour.com Map & info: or event@saugertiesarttour.com. Opus 40, 50 Fite Rd, Saugerties. 5 PM Woodstock Shakespeare Festival’s 19th Summer Season: Twelfth Night. Performed by Bird-On-A-Cliff Theatre Company. Folding chairs or blankets are suggested. Admission free, $5 donation suggested.Info: 845-247-4007 or birdonacliff.org. Woodstock’s Outdoor Elizabethan stage, 45 Comeau Dr, Woodstock. 5PM-7PM Zombie Apocalypse Party. For ages 10 and up. Games: like zombie tag, and pack your survival kit game. Expect food fit for a zombie like brains and “finger” food. As well as activities like make a zombie Barbie, and learn to apply zombie make-up. Zombieattire is encouraged. Info: 845-687-8726. Stone Ridge Library, Stone Ridge. 6PM-6:30PM Free Open Meditation. Meets Mon-Fri, 6-6:30pm. No particular tradition or practice. Not a ‘class’. All are welcome. Just a time to join with others to meditate together. Interfaith Awakening (the little yellow house), 9 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 6PM-8PM Opening Reception: Plum In The Icebox. Featuring works by Theresa Drapkin. Complimentary refreshments. Info: www.cornellstreetstudios.com. Cornell Street Studios, 168 Cornell St, Kingston. 6:30PM-9:30PM Rock Night in the Park. Steve Bello Band and Three For All. Presented by Meet Me in Marlborough. Info: www.meetmeinmarlborough.com/ festivals.html. Cluett-Shantz Memorial Park, Milton. 7PM Live at Kindred Spirits: Acoustic Jazz featuring Frank Luther on bass, John Esposito on piano, Mike DeMicco on guitar, NYC saxophonist Al Guart and local guest artists. No cover or minimum! Kindred Spirits, 334 Rte 32A, Palenville, 518-678-3101. 7PM Live @ The Falcon: Brad Mehldau, Solo Piano, Jazz. Info: 845-236-7970 or www.liveatthefalcon.com. The Falcon, 1348 Rte 9w, Marlboro. 7PM-8:30PM Introduction to Buddhism. A Weekend Teaching. August 8-10. Lama Losang present the basics of Tibetan Buddhism in down-to-earth language with warmth, humor, and clarity. 845-679-5906 x3 for registration or more information. Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, 335 Meads Mt. Rd, Woodstock, $120 /whole weekend, $30 /per session. 7PM Summer Shortcuts. A festival of original tenminute plays by Catskill Mountain residents as well as playwrights from all over the country. Info: 845-586-1660 or www.theopeneyetheater.org. Open Eye Theatre, 960 Main St, Margaretville, $18, $15 / senior, $10 /25 & under. 7PM Landscaping lecture in Millbrook. noted landscape architect Larry Weaner will discuss how to create and manage ecologically-rich landscapes where nature does much of the planting. Call: Barbara @ 297-6701. Info: www.watermanbirdclub.org. Cary Institute of

August 7, 2014

Sessions scheduled individually. To register & details: 845- 679-9541 or Kathy@ schoolforyoungartists.org or www.kathyandersonschoolforyoungartists.org. Putt For Paws (8/8, 8am). Benefit for Ulster County SPCA. 9am Shotgun Start. Captain & crew format. Continental breakfast, lunch and awards with an auction following tournament. Info: 255-1399, or danmalski444@gmail.com, or www. ucspca.org. Apple Greens Golf Course, 161 South St, Highland, $125. Register Now. Mohonk Garden Tour & Breakfast.”Art in the Garden” (8/14). A two-hour guided walking tour of Mohonk’s formal flower gardens, annual and perennial beds, and magnificent greenhouse. Reg reqr’d by 8/5. Info: www.cceulster. org. Mohonk Mountain House, New Paltz. Day Trip: Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ ( 8/15). 8 am-5:30 pm. Registration deadline is Fri, Aug. 1. Mount Saint Mary College, Desmond Campus for Adult Enrichment, Newburgh, $75. Call For Entries: PHOTOgraphy 2014. Deadline for submission 8/24. Any work created from an original photographic based process is welcome. Info: www. rhcan.com or rhcanphoto@gmail.com. Red Hook CAN / Artist’s Collective, 7516 N. Broadway, Red Hook. Audition Notice: Cappella Festiva is holding auditions for both the Treble Choir (ages 10 years old - 17 years old) and for the Chamber Choir (adults) 8/27-8/29. Call for appointment 845-853-7765 or email info@cappellafestiva.org. Vassar College Chapel, Poughkeepsie. Register Now! Children’s Open Studio Classes: Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays, 4-6pm & Saturday mornings 10am-noon: Children’s Cartoon Drawing Classes: Saturdays, 1-2pm; Adult Open Studio Classes: Monday evenings, 6-9pm & midday Thursdays, 10am-1pm: & Private Sessions scheduled individually. To register & details: 845- 679-9541 or Kathy@ schoolforyoungartists.org or www.kathyandersonschoolforyoungartists.org. Summer Spanish At The Woodstock Library (8/6-8/8). Led by Karin Flores Reininger for Ages 5+. A fun and educational three day intensive Spanish language adventure. Everyone is welcome! Woodstock Library, 5 Library Ln, Woodstock. Hudson Valley RibFest (8/15-8/17). Three events in one - a food festival, a music festival, and a sanctioned Barbeque Contest. Hosted by the Highland Rotary Club. Featuring Jessica Lynn followed by Stephen Alexander Band. Info: www. hudsonvalleyribfest.org. Ulster County Fairgrounds, 249 Libertyville Rd, New Paltz, $5, free /12 & under. Saugerties Artist Studio Tour (8/88/9-8/10). Thirty-four artists, working in a variety of media and styles, will open their doors for this free tour.. You can see examples of their work and maps at www.saugertiesarttour.com Map & info: or event@saugertiesarttour.com. Opus 40, 50 Fite Rd, Saugerties. Gun Safety Course (7/22-8/9). Carry

EcosystemStudies, Gifford House, 65 Sharon Turnpike, Millbrook. 7PM Old Love. Presented by the Taconic Stage Co. Written by Canadian Norm Foster. Tickets for all shows are $20 (senior citizens and students pay what you can), Info: www.taconicstage.com or 518-325-1234 St. John in the Wilderness Church, Copake Falls. 7:30PM Joy of Jazz Week: Jazz To The Joy Of Three. Featuring performances by Walking Distance, the Benny Benack III Quartet and the Charenee Wade Quartet with Chris Pattishall. Info: www.catskilljazzfactory.org or 518-628-4424. Orpheum Film & Performing Arts Center, 6050 Main St, Tannersville, $25. 7:30PM John Fogerty Concert commemorates 45th anniversary of Woodstock.John Fogerty. Info: www. bethelwoodscenter.org or 866-781-2922. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, 200 Hurd Rd, Bethel. 8PM Belleayre Music Festival 2014: Hot Latin Nights 2 - Pedrito - Belleayre Jazz Club. Info: 800-942-6904, ext. 1344 or www.belleayremusic.org. Belleayre Mountain, Lodge, Route 28, Highmount, $26 /table seat. 8PM Dutchess County Singles Dance.There will be a wide range of music by DJ Johnny Angel and a light dinner buffet with desert and coffee. Admission is $20. There will be door prizes and 50/50 raffle. Meets every 2nd Friday at 8pm. Info: www.meetup.com/DutchessCounty-Singles or www.dutchesscountysingles.org or dcsingles28@yahoo.com. Elks Lodge #275, 29 Overocker Rd, Poughkeepsie. 8PM Movie Nights at Sugar Loaf PAC. Despicable Me 2. Please bring your own chairs and blankets. Info: 845-214-1400 or www.sugarloafpac.org Sugar Loaf Performing Arts Center, 1351 Kings Highway, Sugar Loaf, free. 8PM Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival: The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Friday Night Tasting. Info: 265-9575 or www.hvshakespeare.org. Boscobel, Route 9D, Garrison, $68, $38. 8PM Choreography on the Edge. Featuring choreographers and dancers spanning a wide range of styles and techniques; primarily modern dance, contemporary ballet and cultural motifs expressed through Irish step dancing choreographed by Joel Hanna from the original cast of Riverdance. Info: 845-453-8673 or choreographyontheedge@gma or www.woodstockguild.org. $12.TheByrdcliffe Theater, 3 Upper Byrdcliffe Way, Woodstock. 8PM “West Side Story.” Info: 845-679-6900 or www. woodstockplayhouse.org. Woodstock Playhouse, 103 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock, $40, $36, $32. 8PM-11PM Film Screening & Author/Filmmaker Talk with film and television director, artist, and author Michael Lindsay-Hogg. $10 on a sliding scale. Info: www.basilicahudson.com. Basilica Hudson, 110 South Front St, Hudson.

Concealed in 35 States. NY - UT - NH Handgun Safety Course. 4 hour class. No Live Fire required. Learn Multi-State Laws and Federal Firearms Transportation rules. Local Instructors. Info: www.InterstateCCW.com or 845-478-6604. Summer Spanish At The Woodstock Library (8/6-8/8). Led by Karin Flores Reininger for Ages 5+. A fun and educational three day intensive Spanish language adventure. Everyone is welcome! Woodstock Library, 5 Library Ln, Woodstock. 5th Annual Hudson Valley Jazz Festival (8/14-17). See individual calendar listings. Info: 845-986-7436 or www.hudsonvalleyjazzfest.org. Warwick. Gun Safety Course(7/22-8/9). Carry Concealed in 35 States. NY - UT - NH Handgun Safety Course. 4 hour class. No Live Fire required. Learn Multi-State Laws and Federal Firearms Transportation rules. Local Instructors. Info: www.InterstateCCW.com or 845-478-6604. Register Now!! Zumba for Tweens and Teens. For ages 10 to 14. Will be held on Wednesdays August 6, 13, 20, and 27 from 4:30 to 5:30PM. Pre-registration by July 30 is required. Info: 845-255-1255. The Gardiner Library, 133 Farmer’s Turnpike, Gardiner, free. Register Now! Emotional Recovery from Trauma. A Weekend Teaching 8/158/17 at Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, 335 Meads Mt. Rd, Woodstock. 8/15, 7-8:30 pm, 8/1616, 9-10:15 am.; 10:30 am-12 pm; 2:30-4 pm; 4:15-5:45 pm& 7:00-8:30 pm and 8/18, 9-10:15 am.; 10:30 am-12 pm.& 2:30-4 pm.Teachers: Lama Tsultrim Yeshe (John Samuelson), James L. Knoll IV, M.D., Trish Malone and Kell Julliard. Buddhism has a lot to say about suffering — its source, its cause and how it can be relieved. This retreat, which combines knowledge gained from Western psychological science and Buddhist teachings, is designed to help people of all denominations recover from traumatic experiences and loss. We also tap into creativity to explore healing through the arts. Although registration for individual sessions is available, participants are strongly encouraged to register for the whole weekend.$120/$96 (KTD members) for the whole weekend. $30/$25 (KTD members) per individual session. Meals and overnight accommodations available at additional cost. Please call 845-679-5906 x3 for registration or more information. Notice: Creative Seed Support Group for Songwriters, Playwrights & Actors. Meets Wednesday nights, 6-7:30pm. Info: Patricebluemaltas@gmail.com or www. bluehealing.co. A place for artist to voice there work inprogress in a supportive environment of other artist. Held by Patrice Blue Maltas, Actress, Playwright, Musician and founder of Blue Healing Arts Center . Blue Healing Art Center, 107 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. Notice: Woodstock Ultimate Frisbee Pickup Game. Sundays 3pm, Tuesdays & Thursdays 5:30pm through Oct 30th. For all genders and skill levels, ages 10 and up.Free. Town Athletic Fields, 98 Comeau Dr, Woodstock. Info: WoodstockUltimate. org or 914-458-2215.

8PM Les Miserables. Info: 876-3080 or www.centerforperformingarts.org. The Center for Performing Arts, Route 308, Rhinebeck, $27, $25 /senior, $25 /child under 12. 8PM The Heart of Yoga and Sacred Chant with Stephen Phillips, Phd. Call 845-679-5358 for reservations and directions. Mount Tremper, $10 /suggested donation. 8PM Second Friday Jam with Jeff Entin & Bob Blum. Info: 845-687-2699 or highfallscafe@earthlink.net. High Falls Café, Stone Dock Golf Club, 12 Stone Dock Rd, High Falls. 8PM Honky-Tonk Highway. Book by Richard Berg. Music, Lyrics and Additional dialogue by Robert Lindsey Nassif. Directed by Michael LaFleur. Info: 845-647-5511. Shadowland Theatre, 157 Canal St, Ellenville, $39. 8PM-11PM 2nd Friday Swing Salon. Info: www. got2lindy.com or call 845-236-3939. Meets the 2nd Friday of every month. The evening will feature a dance lesson from 8-8:30pm by professional swing dance instructors, Linda and Chester Freeman of Got2Lindy DanceStudios followed by an evening of dancing to classic and contemporary swing music. The Uptown Gallery, 296 Wall St, Kingston, $12. 8PM Seventh Annual Mount Tremper Arts Summer Festival: World Premiere. Black Lakes by Katie Workum. Info: 845-688-9893 or mounttremperarts. org Mount Tremper Arts, 647 South Plank Rd, Mount Tremper, $20. 8PM Happy Traum Family Band - a very rare performance by Happy, Adam and April Traum. Part of Woodstock Nights Event. Info: 679-5342. The Colony Café, 22 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 8:30PM Maverick Hall Concert:Steve Gorn & Friends. A Twilight Concert of Indian RagasWith Samarth Nagarkar, vocalist, and Samir Chatterjee, tabla. $40 or $50 (depending on the event). $200/ book of 10 tickets, “Pay-what-you-can” seating. Bring your own chair or blanket. Info: 679-8217. Catering, wine, and beer from Yum Yum at this concert. Maverick Concerts, 120Maverick Rd, Woodstock, $25 /gen adm, $5 /students, free /12 & under. 8:30 PM Bard SummerScape 2014: The Hot Sardines. Info: www.fishercenter.bard.edu or 758-7900. Bard College, Fisher Center, Spiegeltent, Annandale-on-Hudson, $25. 9 PM Lick The Toad. Info: 229-8277 or www. hydeparkbrewing.com. Hyde Park Brewing Company, 4076 Albany Post Rd, Hyde Park. 9PM ULTRAM, Peter Aaron/Brian Chase Duo, Also, Clockwork Mercury. All shows 18+. Info: www.bspkingston.com or 845-481-5158. BSP, 323 Wall St, Kingston, $7. 10PM Bard SummerScape 2014: Heather Christian & the Arbornauts. Info: www.fishercenter.bard.edu or 758-7900. Bard College, Fisher Center, Spiegeltent,


Annandale-on-Hudson, $12. 10PM Harlem on the Mountaintop Experience. Info: 518-589-6424. Last Chance Tavern, 6009 Main St, Tannersville, free.

Saturday

8/9

Handgun Safety Course (thru 8/9). Carry Concealed in 35 States. NY -UT-NH Handgun Safety Course. 4 hour class. No live fire required. Learn Multi-State Laws and Federal Firearms Transportation rules. Local Instructors. Info: www.InterstateCCW.com or 845-478-6604. Mohonk Preserve Singles and Sociables Outing - Kaaterskill High Peak. Aged 18 and above. No reservations required. A strenuous, 8-mile hike led by Dale Hughes (845-679-1196). Call the hike leader for meeting time, location, and fee by 8/7. Info: 845-255-0919. UCI MTB World Cup Bike Race (8/6-8/10). A triple event featuring cross country, downhill and four cross World Cup mountain biking. Info: www.racewindham. com or 518-943-3223. Windham Mountain, Clarence D. Lane Rd, Windham. Read My Pins: The Madeleine Albright Collection. The traveling exhibition will be on display through 11/2. Regular hours and admission apply. Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, William J. vanden Heuvel Gallery, Hyde Park. 8AM-2PM 12 Annual Car Show. Entertainment by “Route 66 Band”. Art and craft vendors. Food concessions will be on site. Info: 518-281-1046. Fundraiser. Whittier Rehabilitation & Skilled Nursing Center, 1 Whittier Way, Ghent, free. 9AM Breakfast & A Movie. Followed by Summer Reading Closing Celebration and raffle baskets drawing Info: 845-657-2482 or outreach@olivefreelibrary.org. Olive Free Library, 4033 Rt 28A, West Shokan. 9AM-4PM “Artists on the Street.” An all-day plein air event showcasing the talents of over 15 Hudson Valley artists. Maps will be provided designating the location of each artist across the site. Info: 845-255-1660 or kaitlin@huguenotstreet.org. Historic Huguenot Street, New Paltz. 9AM-10:30AM Woodstock: Christian Centering Prayer and Meditation. On-going, every Saturday, 9-10:30am. Everyone welcome. Info: 679-8800. St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church (the A-Frame), 2578 Rte 212, Woodstock. 9AM-10PM Bluegrass In Greenville (8/8-8/10). 3 day outdoor music festival with performances by bands from up and down the east coast. On-site camping,

food, vendors, and hot showers. Hours: 9am-10pm, Sunday til 2pm. Admission: Varies, $48/person/ weekend. Rt 81, Greenville. 5PM Bel Canto Concert. The concert will feature several award-winning performers, including Alice Girle from Europe, Kira Neary from New York City and Nicolas Randrianarvelo from Baltimore.Refreshments will be served. Info: 687-9311 or www.canalmuseum.org. D&H Canal Museum, 23 Mohonk Rd, High Falls, $10. 9AM-2PM Kingston Farmers’ Market . Celebrating National Farmers’ Market Day. Info: www.kingstonfarmersmarket.org. Wall Street, between Main & John Sts, Kingston. 9AM Object de Junque. . Vintage items, jewelry, clothing, organic veggies. Something for everyone! 679-6744. Woodstock Flea Market, Maple Ln, Woodstock. 9AM Saugerties’ Christian Meditation. Meets every Saturday, 9-10:30am. All welcome. No charge. 246-3285. Trinity Episcopal Church, Rte 9W, Saugerties. 9AM-2PM Heart of the Hudson Valley Farmers’ Market. Offering local produce, fruit, specialty/farm items - wine, honey, pickles, condiments, hot sauce, homemade pasta & sauce, jams & jellies, cheese, cured meats, eggs, baked goods, woven baskets & kitchenitems, vendors - crafts, unique & specialty items. Info: www.hhvfm@verizon.net or 616-7824 Cluett Schantz Park, 1801-1805 Rt. 9W, Milton. 9:30AM-12:30PM Minnewaska Preserve: Hike in the Peter’s Kill Area. Approx two mile loop hike. Hike includes some moderate to challenging hills and rocky, uneven footing. Pre-registration is required. Info: 845-255-0752. Minnewaska State Park Preserve, Peter’s Kill, New Paltz. 10AM-4PM 15th Annual Shawangunk Mountain

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eckankar-ny.org or 800-630-3546

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Mirabai of Woodstock Books • Music • Gifts Upcoming Events Group Channeling w/ Margaret Doner: Merlin & The Angels Thursday August 7 7-9pm $15/$20* Past Life Regression Private Sessions w/ Margaret Doner Friday August 8 11:30-4pm Call for appt. Introduction to ThetaHealing® w/ Kathy Saulino Tuesday August 12 7-9pm $15/$20* * Lower price for early reg./pre-payment made at least 48 hrs. in advance

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meats and eggs, baked goods, cheeses, pickles, wine, flowers, honey, jams, soap and other great local products.On-going Saturdays 10am-2pm thru October. Info:www.redhookvillagefarmersmarket.com. Across from the Village Hall, South Broadway at Prince, Red Hook. 10AM-2PM Volunteer Restoration Day. These semimonthly sessions offer a great way to learn about native flora while removing invasive plants that hinder their growth. Info: 845-473-4440 x 273, or www.scenichudson.org. Black Creek Preserve, Esopus.

for adults and children

Dreams—A Source of Truth

WAITING LIST

CALM

Wild Blueberry & Huckleberry Festival. Rain or shine. 175+ vendors, live music all day, blueberry pie judging contest, face painting, interactive inflatables, Climb On Us Rock Wall. Info: 845-647-4620 Canal St. & Liberty Square, Ellenville. 10AM-6PM Saugerties Artist Studio Tour (8/88/9-8/10). Thirty-four artists, working in a variety of media and styles, will open their doors for this free tour.. You can see examples of their work and maps at www.saugertiesarttour.com Map & info: or event@saugertiesarttour.com. Opus 40, 50 Fite Rd, Saugerties. 10AM-3PM Woodstock Library Book Sale. Woodstock Library, 5 Library Ln, Woodstock. 10AM-12PM Knitting Group. Stone Ridge Library, 3700 Main Street, Stone Ridge, 687-7023. 10AM-4PM Cairo Quilt Show. Demonstrations, boutique items for sale made by members, demonstrations, raffles, vendors and door prizes. Info: 518-6222270. Cairo Public Library, 15 Railroad Ave, Cairo, $2. 10AM-2PM Saugerties’ Farmers Market. Offering fruits & vegetables, greens, herbs, asparagus, apples, pastured meats &poultry, eggs, fresh-caught fish, local cheeses, baked goods (bread and pastries, including gluten-free), jams & pickles, & artisanal foods. 115 Main St.Parking Lot - Across from Cahill School, Saugerties. 10AM The Heart of Yoga and Sacred Chant with Stephen Phillips, Phd. Call 845-679-5358 for reservations and directions. Mount Tremper, $10 /suggested donation. 10AM-9PM Candlewax Recycling Drop-off. Open every Saturday, 10am-9pm. Candlewax in any condition to be recycled. Pachamama Store (near food court), Hudson Valley Mall, Kingston. 10AM-2PM Red Hook Village Farmers’ Market. Offering organically grown local produce, pastured

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27

ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

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Comics Toys and dolls Watches and clocks Musical Instruments Scientific Instruments Books; 1st ed., signed, etc. Sporting goods

o o o o o o o

Fishing items: fishing lures, reels, etc. Hunting items: firearms, duck decoys, etc. Military, Guns & Weapons, Uniforms, etc. Clothing, Accessories and Costume Jewelry Textiles: tapestries, quilts, linen, lace, etc. Country items: weather vanes, crock pots, etc. Chinese and Japanese Antiques

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28

ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

NIGHT SKY

Don’t miss the MegaMoon It’s the biggest Moon in three years

I

t’s coming up Sunday night: the closest and largest Moon of 2014. What’s cool is that the Moon reaches an extreme perigee the very same hour in which it is full. As a result, Sunday’s Full Moon will be about as large as possible. Now, the actual size-boost is about six percent above an average Full Moon, and 11 percent over a small one, like this past January’s Full Moon. Even 11 percent is not at all dramatic, visually. The human eye can barely see the difference. The size enhancement is dwarfed by a separate factor: the Moon illusion. When you see any Moon rising, it looks enormous. So between 8 and 8:30 p.m. Sunday evening, you will see a gigantic-looking Full Moon low in the east. But this is mostly a psycho-optical effect imposed on all celestial objects near the skyline. Even the Big Dipper looks supersized when it’s low, as you can see these nights at around midnight when it scrapes the northern horizon. The science behind all this may actually be cooler than the visual observation. You see, the Moon’s orbit changes shape. Sometimes it’s rounder; at other times it’s more squashed and oval. Well, it so happens the Moon’s orbit will reach its most stretched-out elliptical shape this weekend. The result will be a Moon that is able to approach our planet more closely than at any other time this year. That it happens the very same hour in which it is full is no coincidence: The configuration is what helps stretch out the Moon’s orbit in the first place. Bottom line: Saturday night and again Sunday night, find a place with an unobstructed eastern horizon. Right around sunset, watch the Moon rise. It will look huge. The media, fed by sources that include our community observatory SLOOH, is calling this the MegaMoon. As usual, there are caveats: On the one hand, yes, this is the year’s largest Full Moon. Indeed, the Moon hasn’t come this close to us since March 2011. And yes, it will indeed look huge on Saturday night from 7:10 to 7:40 p.m., and this Sunday evening about an hour later. It’s worth a look. But remember, the big size is mostly due to the Moon

Between 8 and 8:30 p.m. Sunday evening, you will see a giganticlooking Full Moon low in the east

10AM-12PM Orange County Land Trust Hike: EcoExploration for Kids. This family-friendly nature walk will include a walk along The Tadpole Trail, Orange County Land Trust’s educational nature trail for children. Reg reqr’d. Info: LPSprograms@oclt.org or call845-469-0951, ext 12. Hunter Farm Preserve, 65 Jared Court, Slate Hill. 10AM Walk & Talk Series Forest Walk Part Two - Ethan Pierce. Join Ethan Pierce as her surveys the woods to uncover their history, understand their composition, and asses their future viability. Preregister at www.bire.org/events. CEIE at Denning’s Point, 199 Denning’s Ave, Beacon. 10AM-4PM Upper Landing Park Community Celebration. Family-friendly entertainment and activities including Sonando’s 10 piece salsa band, Mariachi Flor de Toloache, children’s activities, demonstrations, affordable food . Info: www.upperlanding.org. Upper Landing Park, 83 North Water St, Poughkeepsie, free. 10AM-3PM Flower Show: “Glory of the Garden.” Presented by the Shawangunk Garden Club. Info: 845-647-6080. St. Mary’s & St Andrew’s Catholic Church, Parish Hall, 137 S. Main St, Ellenville. 10AM-11AM Story Hour with Author McKenzie Willis. Target age 4-8 years old. Please register for this event to 518-828-1872 x 109 or shasbrook@olana. org. Olana, Wagon House Education Center, Hudson. 10AM Walk Woodstock with The Experts! Historical Walking Tour with Janine Mower, author of “Woodstock.” $10 per person or free with purchase of local history book. Info: 845-679-8000 or www. goldennotebook.com. Meet at The Golden Notebook, 29 Tinker St, Woodstock. 10AM First Wawaka Lake 5K Walk/Run! ~All proceeds from this race go to the Catskill Mountain Girls in the Avon Walk for Breast Cancer in NYC~ Free T-shirt to the first 75 to enter. Registration Fee is $25/ adults, $15/12 &under. Sign-in 8:30-9:30am, event kicks off at 10am. Info: www.wawakalake5k.yolasite. com. Meet at 1 Bragg Hollow R, Halcottsville. 10AM-12PM Bard SummerScape 2014: Panel One: Invention and Reinvention: Who was Schubert? Open to the public. Info: www.fishercenter.bard.edu or 758-7900. Bard College, Olin Hall, Annandale-onHudson, free. 10:30AM-11:30AM Silent Vigil for Global Peace & Non-Violence. Sponsored by The Kingston Women in Black. Meet outside Cornell St PO, Kingston, 339-0637. 10:30 AM-12 PM Introduction to Buddhism. A Weekend Teaching. August 8-10. Lama Losang present the basics of Tibetan Buddhism in downto-earth language with warmth, humor, and clarity. 845-679-5906 x3 for registration or more information. Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, 335Meads Mt. Rd, Woodstock, $120 /whole weekend, $30 /per session. 10:30AM Saturday Story Program with Story Laurie. Info: 679-2213 or www.woodstock.org . The Woodstock Library, 5 Library Ln, Woodstock. 11AM Summer Family Series: Dog On Fleas. Info: www.rosendaletheatre.org or 658-8989. Rosendale Theatre, Main St, Rosendale, $12, $10 /12 & under. 11AM-6PM Vincent Serbin Open Studio willpresent his photographic artworks and latest series of abstract paintings. All artworks will be for sale and exhibited in a gallery setting. 845-336-4165, 845-430-3041(cell) mindvincent@yahoo.com. Vincent Serbin Studio, 260 Sawmill Rd, Lake Katrine. 11AM Delaware & Ulster Railroad Train Rides. Twohour round trip excursion. Every Saturday and Sunday,

through the end of October. 11am & 2pm from Arkville to Roxbury. Info: 586-DURR. Rt 28, Arkville. 11AM Young People’s Concert: Peter and the Wolf with the Amernet String Quartet. Info: 679-8217. Maverick Concerts, 120 Maverick Rd, Woodstock, $5 /adults, free /students f/t. 11AM-4PM Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary. A shelter for over 300 pigs, goats, sheep, cows, chickens and more. Meet the animals, hear their heartwarming stories and walk away with a deeper understanding of who they are. Tours every Sat & Sun - 11:30am, 1:15pm, 3pm. $10 /adults, $5/ kids 12 & under. Info: www. WoodstockSanctuary.org or 679-5955. Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary, 35 Van Wagner Rd, Willow. 11AM-2PM Red Cross Shelter Fundamentals Training. A 3 hour course is designed to give participants an overview of the American Red Cross policies and procedures for opening, setting up, running & closing a Red Cross shelter during a disaster. Reg reqr’d. Info:845-691-2275. Highland Library, 30 Church St, Highland. 11AM-5PM 2nd Annual Artists On The Street - A Plein Air Event. Showcasing the talents of over 15 Hudson Valley artists. At 4pm, artists will bring their work to the DuBois Fort (81 Huguenot Street) to be displayed during an hour-long reception. Info: 845-255-1660 orwww.huguenotstreet.org. Huguenot St, New Paltz. 11AM-6PM Vincent Serbin Open Studio. Info: 845-336-4165, 845-430-3041(cell), mindvincent@ yahoo.com. 260 Sawmill Rd, Lake Katrine. 11AM-2:30PM Catskill Animal Sanctuary Weekend Tours. Meet 300+ rescued farm animals on this beautiful 110-acre haven. , Saturdays and Sundays, April through October. Info: 336-8447 or www.casanctuary.org. Catskill Animal Sanctuary, 316 Old Stage Rd, Saugerties. 11AM-6PM 7th Annual Sangria Festival. It will showcase 5 different fresh-made sangrias, live flamenco guitar music, other musical acts, tarot card readings, henna tattoos, and great food! Admission is free. Sangria tasting is $5.Info: www.hudsonchathamwinery.com or518- 392-9463. Hudson-Chatham Winery, 1900 New York 66, Ghent. 11AM Tour the Hudson-Athens Lighthouse. Tours depart from Hudson Riverfront at 11 am, 12, 1 & 2 pm and Athens Village River Front Park at 11:30 am, 12:30, 1:30 & 2:30 pm. Reservations by calling Hudson Cruises at 518-822-1014. Info: www.hudsonathenslighthouse.org. Hudson, $25 /adults, $10 12yrs & under. 12PM-1PM Free, Foot Stompin’, Spirited & Open to All! Featuring Enrico Scull and “Gary & The Roving Cowboys.” Info: 518-299-3258. Zadock Pratt Museum, 3540 Main St, Prattsville, free. 12 PM-4 PM Building Clinton: the Carpenter’s Toolbox of Sherman Hoyt. New Exhibition at the Clinton Historical Society. Creek Meeting House, 2433 Salt Point Turnpike, Clinton Corners, free. 12PM-5PM Saturday Stroll & Wine Tasting Festival. Main Street, Catskill. 12PM-7PM Summer Swim at Williams Lake. Public swimming, picnicking and sunbathing through 9/1 on Fri, Sat & Sun (plus Labor Day) from 12 Noon to 7pm. $5 sunset rate after 5pm. Cash Only at the door. All profits donated to the Rosendale Pool Project. Info: www.williamslakeproject.com/summer-swim. Williams Lake Beach, Rosendale, $10, $8 /senior, $6 /12 & under.

illusion. This weekend’s Full Moons will look less imposing in the middle of the night, when they’re high up. A more dramatic consequence involves tides. The Moon’s tidal effect varies with the cube of its distance. This lunar close approach will thus significantly raise the tides everywhere. In addition to the fact that it coincides with the Full Moon, the syzygy or lineup of the Earth, Moon and Sun creates its own especially high spring tides. The combo of spring tides (meaning that it’s the New or Full Moon) plus this close perigee produces what are sometimes called proxigean tides. These are maximal tides. Now, all we’d need along the coast are onshore winds, as in a storm, and there’d be major coastal flooding. A storm would add further, since a one-inch drop in air pressure raises the seas one foot. The exact moment of Full Moon is 2:09 p.m. Sunday afternoon. So the Moon will look almost equally full late Saturday night and early Sunday night. But tides usually max out one day after the peak lunar influence. The seas need a little time to catch up to what’s happening. So expect the highest tides on Monday. If you’re at the beach, the highs will reach almost to the boardwalk in some places, while the lows will go way out and make clamdiggers very happy. In our region, at places like the Saugerties Lighthouse, the Hudson River tides will be dramatic. The path to the lighthouse will be underwater. It’s a dramatic connection between Earth and the heavens. For all these reasons, we shouldn’t miss this weekend’s MegaMoon. – Bob Berman This week’s column was adapted from Bob Berman’s newest book, Zoom. Want to know more? To read Bob’s previous “Night Sky” columns, visit our Almanac Weekly website at HudsonValleyAlmanacWeekly.com.

12PM Mid Hudson ADK Outing: Hudson River Paddle. Leader: Russ Faller 845-297-5126 (before 9:30PM) or russoutdoors@yahoo.com. Bring food, water & paddling gear. PFDs & spray skirts required. Joint withAMC-NY/NJ. Info: www.midhudsonadk.org. Norrie Point Marina, Staatsburgh. 1PM Mohonk Preserve - How Did the Rope Get Up There? History and Practice of Gunks Rock Climbing. No reservations required. Info: 845-255-0919. Mohonk Preserve, Trapps Bridge, New Paltz, $12. 1PM-4:30PM Zena Cornfest: 25 - A Community Celebration. A summer day picnic and a day of nature, art, history and community. Help protect the cornfield and other meadows and mountains for 25 more years. Info: www.zena25.com. Zena Cornfield, Zena Rd, Woodstock, $20 1PM-4PM Buggin’ Out! A family Insect Festival. Put your bug eyes on this! A family-friendly event focusing on the fascinating world of insects. Make a beeline to us.Free. Info:518-622-9820. Agroforestry Resource Center, 6055 Route 23, Acra. 1:30PM Bard SummerScape 2014: Program Two: From “Boy” to Master: The Path to Erlk”nig. 1 pm Preconcert Talk. Info: www.fishercenter.bard.edu or 758-7900. Bard College, Olin Hall, Annandale-onHudson, $35. 1:30PM-3:30PM The Woodstock Poetry Society Meeting. Featured poets and open mic to follow. Free admission. Meets 2nd Saturday of every month at 2pm. Info: 679-8000 or nan.goldennotebook@gmail.com. The Golden Notebook, 29 Tinker St, Woodstock. 1:30PM-4PM Super Saturdays. The Center is open for recreation for all ages. Info: 254-5469 or info@ pinehillcommunitycenter.org. Pine Hill Community Center -, 287 Main St, Pine Hill, free. 2 PM Gardiner Library Music Lover’s Group Meeting. The group meets the second and fourth Saturdays of each month at 2pm. Gardiner, free, 255-1255. 2PM The Heart of Yoga and Sacred Chant with Stephen Phillips, Phd. Call 845-679-5358 for reservations and directions. Mount Tremper, $10 /suggested donation. 2 PM Free Meditation Instruction. On-going every Saturday, 2pm in the Amitabha Shrine Room. 60-minute class requires no previous meditation experience. For info contact Jan Tarlin, 679-5906 Ext. 1012 Karma Triyiana Dharmachakra, 335 Meads Mountain Rd, Woodstock. 3PM-5PM Tag! The Play of Visual and Written Art John Nieman - an introductory presentation about his art, his writing, and the interplay between the two. Info: www.poklib.org or 845-485-3445 x 3702. Adriance Memorial Library, 93 Market St, Poughkeepsie. 3PM Book Reading with Jesse A. Saperstein, author & advocate of “getting A Life with Asperger’s.” Info: 518-789-3797. Northeast Millerton Library Annex, 28 Century Blvd, Millerton. 3PM -5:30PM Integrating Mindfulness and Compassion into your Communication …with Yourself and Others.Afternoon class of learning and practicing Mindful and Nonviolent Communication (NVC) , with NVC trainer, mediator and coach, Roberta Wall. Roberta gives workshops around the world, including recently in Israel , Palestine and Plum Village, France , inspired by the teachings of Thich Nhat Hanh and Dr. Marshall Rosenberg and Nonviolent Communication. Registration and Attendance open to everyone! Public $20,Couples $35. To register: and with

questions about facility: 914-584-9593. Info: info@ steps2peace.com or www.steps2peace.com. Flatbush Reformed Church,1844 Rt 32, Saugerties, (near 9w). 3PM-6PM Fundraising Dinner at The United Methodist Church of Shady . Pulled Pork & Peach Shortcake. Take-out Dinner. Inside seating available. Menu: Pulled Pork w/Bun, Baked Beans, Macaroni Salad, Cole Slaw, & Peach Shortcake. Info: 845- 679-2982. The United Methodist Church of Shady, Church Rd, Shady, $12, $6 /child. 3PM Mid Hudson ADK Outing: Madam Brett Park Walk. Leader: Sue Mackson suemackson@gmail. com, 845-471-9892. Heavy rain cancels. Meet at the entrance to the property. Info: www.midhudsonadk. org. Madam Brett Park, Beacon. 3:30PM-5PM Introduction to Buddhism. A Weekend Teaching. August 8-10. Lama Losang present the basics of Tibetan Buddhism in down-to-earth language with warmth, humor, and clarity. 845-679-5906 x3 for registration or more information. Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, 335 MeadsMt. Rd, Woodstock, $120 /whole weekend, $30 /per session. 4PM Art Reception: Artists on the Street. An hourlong catered reception. The event is free and open to the public, rain or shine. Info: 845-255-1660 or kaitlin@huguenotstreet.org. DuBois Fort, 81 Huguenot St, New Paltz. 4PM-8PM Cruise Nite. Free T-shirt to Cruise Entrants, Muffler rap & Hula-hoop contest, DJ, pinstriping by Don Rooney, Shakin’ Loose Band featuring Joe “Elvis” Eigo, Nostalgic awards! Info: 518-622-3430. Angelo Canna Park, Mountain Ave, Cairo, free. 4:30PM Chicken Barbecue. Seatings at 4:30pm, 5:30pm and 6:30pm. Children under 5 free. Info: 845-883-6619. Memorial United Methodist Church, Modena, $15, $13 /senior, $6 /5-10. 4:30PM Family Fun Day. Bari Koral. $12 for Bari Koral (kids under 12 free). $18 for Paul Green Rock Academy at 7:30pm. Free Sandwich Buffet between performances. Info: 845-679-2079. Byrdcliffe Art Colony, Upper Byrdcliffe Rd, Woodstock, $25 /both shows, free /under 12. 4:30 PM Music for Kids (and their Grown-Ups). 2nd performance at 7:30pm . Free Sandwich Buffet between performances. Cost: $12 for Bari Koral (kids under 12 free); $18 for Paul Green Rock Academy/ $25 for both. Info: 845-679-2079. . Byrdcliffe Art Colony, Upper Byrdcliffe Rd, Woodstock. 5PM Bel Canto Concert. The concert will feature several award-winning performers, including Alice Girle from Europe, Kira Neary from New York City and Nicolas Randrianarvelo from Baltimore.Refreshments will be served. Info: 687-9311 or www.canalmuseum.org. D&H Canal Museum, 23 Mohonk Rd, High Falls, $10. 5PM-9PM Great Woodstock Mash. Guitar Mash musical director Mark Stewart (musical director + guitarist for Paul Simon)will join with Larry Campbell (Levon Helm Band, Bob Dylan) to lead 100 guitarists + music lovers in a massive six-string symphony benefittinglocal music in education programs, a collaboration with the local Levon Helm Studio. For tix, directions www.greatwoodstockmash.eventbrite.com. Glenford. 5PM-8PM Closing Party and Artist Talk: 13 Ways of Looking at a Blackbird: A theory of painting. Info: www.starhousegallery.com. Star House Gallery & Studio, The Shirt Factory, 77 Cornell St, Kingston. 5PM-7PM Opening Reception: “Water Show” Photographs by Joan Barker. Info: www.thewiredgallery.


com. Coldwell Banker Village Green Realty, Stone Ridge. 5 PM Woodstock Shakespeare Festival’s 19th Summer Season: Twelfth Night. Performed by Bird-On-A-Cliff Theatre Company. Folding chairs or blankets are suggested. Admission free, $5 donation suggested.Info: 845-247-4007 or birdonacliff.org. Woodstock’s Outdoor Elizabethan stage, 45 Comeau Dr, Woodstock. 5PM Reading and Book Signing with Carey Harrison, author of “Who Was That Lady?” The Golden Notebook, Upstairs, 29 Tinker St, Woodstock. 5PM-7PM Solo Show of the Antiques Assemblage Sculptures of Lenny Kislin (44-year resident of Woodstock and area curator and past chairman of the Woodstock Artists Association Board of Directors (1996-2002). Info: 682-564-5613. The WiredGallery, 11 Mohonk Rd, High Falls. 5PM-9PM The Great Woodstock Mash. Guitar Mash musical director Mark Stewart will join with Larry Campbell to lead 100 guitarists + music lovers in a massive six-string symphony benefitting local music in education programs. Info & tickets: www.guitarmash.org/events. 5PM-7PM Opening Reception: Past Things, New Beginnings. Past and new antique assemblage sculptures by Lenny Kislin. Info: www.thewiredgallery.com. Wired Gallery, 11 Mohonk Rd, High Falls. 5PM Bard SummerScape 2014: Special Event. The Song Cycle as Drama: Winterreise. Info: www.fishercenter.bard.edu or 758-7900. Bard College, Olin Hall, Annandale-on-Hudson, $35. 5PM WDST Reunion Concert’ featuring Big Joe Fitz, Brian Hollander, and Eric Erickson will perform soulful blend of rhythm and blues. Benefits the Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center. Ron VanWarmer will emcee, introducing special guest, Hester Mundis, who will open theshow. Info: 845-3315300. Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center, 300 Wall St, Kingston, $15, $5 /senior/student. 5PM-8PM Closing Party and Artist Talk: Parallel Places. Works by Owen Harvey and Michael Hunt. Exhibits through 8/9. Info: www.starhousegallery. com or 814-777-6990. Star House Gallery & Studio, The Shirt Factory, 77 Cornell St, Kingston. 5PM Commemoration of the U.S. Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima. A presentation and discussion of the continued development of nuclear weapons by the U.S. and four other nuclear weapon states, and materials distributed by Elizabeth Shafer, J.D, vice-president of the Lawyers’Committee on Nuclear Policy. Trinity Church Parish House, 32 Church St, Saugerties. 6PM Ashokan Music and Dance - Southern Dance Party. 6pm BBQ ($15 adv/$20 at event). 7:30pm Free beginner dance workshop. 8pm Squares w. Kristin Andreassen with Jay & Molly’s Family Band. 9:30pm Cajun & Zydeco with The Revelers. Info: info@ashokancenter.org or 657-8333. The Ashokan Center, 477 Beaverkill Rd, Olivebridge. 6PM-8PM Annual Benefit Dinner for the Friends of Clermont & Agra Mid-Summer Gala. The cocktail party will include food, drink, music, and live and silent auctions. RSVP. Info: 518-537-6622 or www. friendsofclermont.org Clermont State Historic Site, 87 Clermont Ave, Germantown. 6PM-8PM Opening Party: 10th Summer of Windows on Main Street. Beacon’s annual public art exhibition. Thirty-five local artists have been challenged to create a unique piece of art inspired by and installed in a business storefront. Info: www.beaconwindows. org. Bank Square,Main St, Beacon. 6PM-8PM Opening Reception: Booksmart. A group exhibition featuring work by Theresa Gooby, Brece Honeycutt, Bj”rn Meyer-Ebrecht, and August Ventimiglia. Exhibits through 8/31. Info: 845-440-7901. Matteawan Gallery, 464 Main St, Beacon. 6PM-9PM Opening Reception: Abstract/Concrete. Featuring works by Art Murphy. Show will exhibit thorugh 9/6. Info: 917-459-7849. Gallery hours: Saturdays and Sundays 12-6pm. BAU, 506 Main St, Beacon. 6:30 PM -8:30 PM Hudson Highlands Nature Museum: Evening Full Moon Hike. Bring a flashlight and dress for evening. For adults with or without children and children ages 5 and up. Info: www.hhnaturemuseum.org or 845-534-5506, x 204. Hudson Highlands Nature Museum, Muser Dr, Cornwall. 7PM Live @ The Falcon: Arc Iris. Opener: Jeremy Mage & The Magi. Info: 845-236-7970 or www.liveatthefalcon.com. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7PM Battle of the Bands. Paul Green Rock Academy. With Special Guest: The Five Points Band. Info: 845-679-2079. Byrdcliffe Art Colony, Upper Byrdcliffe Rd, Woodstock, $18, free /under 12. 7PM Summer Shortcuts. A festival of original tenminute plays by Catskill Mountain residents as well as playwrights from all over the country. Info: 845-586-1660 or www.theopeneyetheater.org. Open Eye Theatre, 960 Main St, Margaretville, $18, $15 / senior, $10 /25 & under. 7PM Talk & Book Signing: Roots of the 1969 Woodstock Festival: The Backstory to “Woodstock” with Weston Blelock. Featuring music by Fish Castle. Info: 845-246-5775. Inquiring Minds Bookstore, 65 Partition St, Saugerties, free. 7PM Old Love. Presented by the Taconic Stage Co. Written by Canadian Norm Foster. Tickets for all shows are $20 (senior citizens and students pay what you can), Info: www.taconicstage.com or 518-325-1234 St. John in the Wilderness Church, Copake Falls. 7PM Live at Kindred Spirits: Acoustic Jazz featuring Grammy winner Malcolm Cecil on bass, guitarist Steve Raleigh, pianist Peter Tomlinson, NYC saxophonist Al Guart and local guest artists. No cover or minimum! Kindred Spirits, 334 Rte 32A, Palenville, 518-678-3101. 7PM-11:30PM The Gallery/Open Mic/Open Stage Jam. Music, fine art, and meet new friends! Every 2nd Sat. Feel free to bring a plate and or beverage to share responsibly. Info: 607-652-4030 or www.touhey.com. The Gallery, 128 Main St, Stamford, $5. 7PM Live @ The Falcon: Robert Glasper Trio. Info: 236-7970 or www.liveatthefalcon.com. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7PM Children’s Recital. Performance by pupils of the two week Ukrainian folk singing course for children, ages 4-10. Info: www.GrazhdaMusicandArt.org or 518-943-3400. Music and Art Center of Greene County, Rt. 23A, Jewett, $5. 7:30PM Joy of Jazz Week: The Spirit Of Louis. A tribute to Louis Armstrong. Jazz master Marcus Roberts and the Modern Jazz Generation will explore and pay tribute to the musical influences and legacy of the late jazz great Louis Armstrong. Info:www.catskilljazzfactory.org or 518-628-4424. Orpheum Film & Performing Arts Center, 6050 Main St, Tannersville, $25. 8PM Choreography on the Edge. Featuring choreog-

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raphers and dancers spanning a wide range of styles and techniques; primarily modern dance, contemporary ballet and cultural motifs expressed through Irish step dancing choreographed by Joel Hanna from the original cast of Riverdance.$12. Info: 845-453-8673 or choreographyontheedge@gma orwww.woodstockguild.org. TheByrdcliffe Theater, 3 Upper Byrdcliffe Way, Woodstock. 8PM Nelson Patton. An experimental duo of looped trombone and drums/Moog bass pedals, to perform. Info: 518-671-6006 or www.thespottydog.com. The Spotty Dog Books & Ale, 440 Warren St, Hudson, $5. 8PM “West Side Story.” Info: 845-679-6900 or www. woodstockplayhouse.org. Woodstock Playhouse, 103 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock, $40, $36, $32. 8PM Seventh Annual Mount Tremper Arts Summer Festival: World Premiere. Black Lakes by Katie Workum. Info: 845-688-9893 or mounttremperarts. org Mount Tremper Arts, 647 South Plank Rd, Mount Tremper, $20. 8PM Supermoon Screenings: Rooftop Films. Experience an evening exploration of short films sited among the sculptures and rolling fields. Also features live music performances prior to and during screenings. Info: 845-534-3115. Storm King, Old Pleasant Hill Rd, Mountainville. 8PM Maverick Hall Concert: Jazz at Maverick Perry Beekman & Friends. American Landscapes VII: The George Gershwin Songbook. $40 or $50 (depending on the event). $200/book of 10 tickets, “Pay-what-you-can” seating. Bring your own chair or blanket. Info:679-8217. Catering, wine, and beer from Yum Yum at this concert. Maverick Concerts, 120 Maverick Rd, Woodstock, $25 /gen adm, $5 /students, free /12 & under. 8PM Dickey Betts & Great Southern. Intimate Indoor Summer Performance. Info: www.BethelWoodsCenter. org. Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, Event Gallery, 200 Hurd Rd, Bethel, $81.50, $71.50. 8PM Honky-Tonk Highway. Book by Richard Berg. Music, Lyrics and Additional dialogue by Robert Lindsey Nassif. Directed by Michael LaFleur. Info: 845-647-5511. Shadowland Theatre, 157 Canal St, Ellenville, $39. 8PM Sidewalk Party @ the Open Studio. Celebration of Dina’s ceramic murals newly installed on our building facade, plus other new works. In conjuction with the Second Saturday Stroll & Wine Tasting Festival. Info: 518-943-0180. Open Studio, 402 Main St, Catskill. 8PM Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival: The Liar. Info: 265-9575 or www.hvshakespeare.org. Boscobel, Route 9D, Garrison, $79, $44. 8PM Bard SummerScape 2014: Program Three: Mythic Transformations. 7:30 pm Preconcert Talk. Info: www.fishercenter.bard.edu or 758-7900. Bard College, Fisher Center, Sosnoff Theater, Annandaleon-Hudson, $25. 8PM A Spell to Ward Off the Darkness. Ben Rivers and Ben Russell, Estonia/France, 2013, 98 min. Ben Russell in person for Q&A. Info: 518-822-1050 or www.basilicahudson.com. Basilica Hudson, 110 South Front St, Hudson. 8PM Belleayre Music Festival: Romero Lubambo’s Quintet. Music of Brazil & Argentina. Featuring Anat CohenPablo Aslan’s Tango Orchestra & Dancers. Lawn: $26. Info: 845-254-5600 x 1344 or www.belleayremusic.org. Belleayre Mountain, 181 Galli Curci Rd, Highmount, $66, $56, $36. 8PM Les Miserables. Info: 876-3080 or www.centerforperformingarts.org. The Center for Performing Arts, Route 308, Rhinebeck, $27, $25 /senior, $25 /child under 12. 8PM Joey Eppard & Friends. Billie Rogan opening. Info: 679-3484. Harmony Café @ Wok ‘n Roll, 50 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock, 679-3484. 8:30PM The Legendary Sunburst Brothers! “Rhythm & Western!” “Hillbilly Brit-Pop!” “Roots`n’Roll?” Info: 679-7969. Catskill Mountain Pizza, 51 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. 8:30PM Pianist/Vocalist Marcia Ball. Info: 845-8551300 or www.townecrier.com. Towne Crier Café, 379 Main St, Beacon, $50. 9PM Just Two: Michael Torsone & Robbie Germano. Info: 229-8277 or www.hydeparkbrewing.com. Hyde Park Brewing Company, 4076 Albany Post Rd, Hyde Park. 9PM Chris Cernak Band. Info: 845-687-2699 or highfallscafe@earthlink.net. High Falls Café, Stone Dock Golf Club, 12 Stone Dock Rd, High Falls. 9PM Mambo Night. Featuring the original DJ of Mambo Night Party Master, Perry GIPS. Live dirty dancing, comedian, Reverend Rob Levy. Drink specials. 21 & over. The Sullivan, 283 Rock Hill Dr, Rock Hill, $10. 9PM Shadows and Light: An Evening of Joni Mitchell Songs. Info: 845-679-4406. Bearsville Theatre, 291 Tinker St, Woodstock, $25. 9PM Book Reading: Carey Harrison, author of “Who Was That Lady?” Info: 845-679-8000. The Golden Notebook, Upstairs, 29 Tinker St, Woodstock.

Sunday

8/10

A triple event featuring cross country, downhill and four cross World Cup mountain biking. Info: www.racewindham. com or 518-943-3223. Windham Mountain, Clarence D. Lane Rd, Windham. Mohonk Preserve Singles and Sociables Outing Balsam Mountain. Aged 18 and above. No reservations required. A strenuous, 8-mile hike led by Jill Abrahamsen (845-389-7756). Call the hike leader for meeting time, location, and fee by 8/7. Info: 845-255-0919. Ashokan Music & Dance Camps (8/10-8/16). Southern Week. Appalachian, Old-time, Cajun and Zydeco. Info: www.ashokan.org. Ashokan Center, 477 Beaverkill Rd, Olivebridge. Mid Hudson ADK Outing: Fishkill Creek Clean-out & Paddle. Leader: Russ Faller 845-297-5126 (before 9:30PM) or russoutdoors@yahoo.com. Contact leader for meeting place/time. Bring lunch, water & work gloves. PFDs required. Info: www.midhudsonadk.org. 8AM-3PM Beacon Flea Market. More than 50 regular and one-time vendors sell a variety of items. Info: www.beaconflea.blogspot.com or 202-0094. Henry St parking lot, Beacon. 9AM-2PM Rosendale Summer Farmers’ Market. Live acoustic music and children’s activities at every Market! Rain or shine. Info: 658-8348; binnewaterbilly@gmail.com or 658-3805. 408 Main St (Rt213), Rosendale. 9AM-2PM Bluegrass In Greenville (8/8-8/10). 3 day outdoor music festival with performances by bands UCI MTB World Cup Bike Race. (8/6-8/10)

from up and down the east coast. On-site camping, food, vendors, and hot showers. Hours: 9am-10pm, Sunday til 2pm. Admission: Varies, $48/person/ weekend. Rt 81, Greenville. 9AM Object de Junque. . Vintage items, jewelry, clothing, organic veggies. Something for everyone! 679-6744. Woodstock Flea Market, Maple Ln, Woodstock. 9:30AM-12:30PM Minnewaska Preserve: Mossy Glen Meander. Three-mile hike. This trail does include some tricky footing, including potentially slippery rocks and exposed tree roots. Pre-registration is required. Info: 845-255-0752. Minnewaska State Park Preserve, Nature Center, Gardiner. $8/car. 10AM-2PM Sunday Brunch @ The Falcon: Saints of Swing with RenŠ Bailey. Info: 845-236-7970 or www.liveatthefalcon.com. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 10AM-6PM Saugerties Artist Studio Tour (8/88/9-8/10). Thirty-four artists, working in a variety of media and styles, will open their doors for this free tour.. You can see examples of their work and maps at www.saugertiesarttour.com Map & info: or event@saugertiesarttour.com. Opus 40, 50 Fite Rd, Saugerties. 10AM The Heart of Yoga and Sacred Chant with Stephen Phillips, Phd. Call 845-679-5358 for reservations and directions. Mount Tremper, $10 /suggested donation. 10AM Bard SummerScape 2014: Program Four: Goethe and Music: The German Lied. Performance with Commentary by Susan Youens. Info: www.fishercenter.bard.edu or 758-7900. Bard College, Olin Hall, Annandale-on-Hudson, $25. 10AM-5PM A Day of Healing with One Light Healing Touch. Learn Aura Scanning, Radiant and Distance Healing and experience a powerful one-day training. Reg rqr’d. Info: 845 687-2252. Stone Ridge, $150. 10:30 AM-12 PM Introduction to Buddhism. A Weekend Teaching. August 8-10. Lama Losang present the basics of Tibetan Buddhism in downto-earth language with warmth, humor, and clarity. 845-679-5906 x3 for registration or more information. Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, 335Meads Mt. Rd, Woodstock, $120 /whole weekend, $30 /per session. 10:30AM-12:30PM Free Meditation Practice at Sky Lake Shambhala Retreat Center. Meets every Sunday. Sitting and walking meditation with short teaching and discussion from Pema Chodron books or video. Free and open to the public. Contact info: 658-8556 orwww.skylake.shambhala.org. Sky Lake, 22 Hillcrest Ln, Rosendale. 10:30AM-12PM Sunday Mornings in Service of Sacred Unity. (every 2nd and 4th Sunday) Guided by Amy McTear, Joseph Jastrab, Dahila Bartz Cabe & other musical guests. Info: www.unisonarts.org or 255-1559. Unison Arts Center, 68 Mt. Rest Rd, New Paltz, $10. 11AM-2:30PM Catskill Animal Sanctuary Weekend Tours. Meet 300+ rescued farm animals on this beautiful 110-acre haven. , Saturdays and Sundays, April through October. Info: 336-8447 or www.casanctuary.org. Catskill Animal Sanctuary, 316 Old Stage Rd, Saugerties. 11AM-12PM Dreams - A Source of Truth - ECK Worship Service. ECKANKAR - Religion of theLight and Sound of Godeckankar-ny.org or 800-630-3546 6 Broadhead Ave, New Paltz. 11AM-6PM Vincent Serbin Open Studio. Info: 845-336-4165, 845-430-3041(cell), mindvincent@ yahoo.com. 260 Sawmill Rd, Lake Katrine. 11AM-4PM Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary. A shelter for over 300 pigs, goats, sheep, cows, chickens and more. Meet the animals, hear their heartwarming stories and walk away with a deeper understanding of who they are. Tours every Sat & Sun - 11:30am, 1:15pm, 3pm. $10 /adults, $5/ kids 12 & under. Info: www. WoodstockSanctuary.org or 679-5955. Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary, 35 Van Wagner Rd, Willow. 11AM Delaware & Ulster Railroad Train Rides. Twohour round trip excursion. Every Saturday and Sunday, through the end of October. 11am & 2pm from Arkville to Roxbury. Info: 586-DURR. Rt 28, Arkville. 12PM-7PM Summer Swim at Williams Lake. Public swimming, picnicking and sunbathing through 9/1on Fri, Sat & Sun (plus Labor Day) from 12 Noon to 7pm. $5 sunset rate after 5pm. Cash Only at the door. All profits donated to the Rosendale Pool Project. Info: www.williamslakeproject.com/summer-swim. Williams Lake Beach, Rosendale, $10, $8 /senior, $6 /12 & under. 12PM-5PM Beacon Sloop Club Annual Corn Festival. Hot fresh sweet corn, stone soup, fresh made chili. Music. Children’s area, environmental displays, food & craft vendors. Info: www.beaconsloopclub.org, or 845-463-4660. Riverfront Park, 1 Flynn Dr, Beacon. 12PM The Heart of Yoga and Sacred Chant with Stephen Phillips, Phd. Bring your lunch. Q & A. Call 845-679-5358 for reservations and directions. Mount Tremper, free. 12 PM-4 PM Building Clinton: the Carpenter’s Toolbox of Sherman Hoyt. New Exhibition at the Clinton Historical Society. Creek Meeting House, 2433 Salt Point Turnpike, Clinton Corners, free. 1PM-4PM “Tobey Pomerantz Memorial All-YouCan-Eat Chicken BBQ” Reduced prices for Seniors and children. Info: gapref@yahoo.com or 845-6262264. Kerhonkson Synagogue, Jewish Center, 24 Minnewaska Trail, Kerhonkson, $15. 1PM-2PM Silent Peace Vigil by Woodstock Women in Black. Village Green, Tinker St, Woodstock, 679-7148 or rizka@hvc.rr.com. 1PM-4PM Ice Cream Social - Fundraiser. Proceeds benefit The Century House Historical Society. 845-658-9900 or visit www.centuryhouse.org. Proceeds benefit the Century House Historical Society. 845- 658-9900 or visit www.centuryhouse.org. The Century House Historical Society, Rt 213, Rosendale. 1PM Mohonk Preserve - How Did the Rope Get Up There? History and Practice of Gunks Rock Climbing. No reservations required. Info: 845-255-0919. Mohonk Preserve, Trapps Bridge, New Paltz, $12. 1PM-3PM Pallet Puppet Theatre offers Spanish Puppet Lesson. Ongoing on Sundays, 1-3pm. Materials for kids provided. The Green Palette, 215 Main Street inside of the Medusa Antique Center Building, New Paltz. 1:30PM Bard SummerScape 2014: Program Five: Before Unspeakable Illness. 1 pm Preconcert Talk. Info: www.fishercenter.bard.edu or 758-7900. Bard College, Olin Hall, Annandale-on-Hudson, $35. 2PM Third Annual Newburgh Croquet Tournament. Participants of all ages are welcome. Hosted by Historical Society of Newburgh Bay and the Highlands and the Newburgh Preservation Association. Info: 845-561-2585. Downing Park, Newburgh. 2PM Bollywood & Indian Folk Dance. Featuring

dance artists Bharat Verma and Kishan Lal Gameti. This “Meet-the-Artist” event will take place as a fundraiser to support TVC’s India Project. Also, a performance by the Vanaver Caravan’s SummerDance on Tour! Info: www.rosendaletheatre.org or 845-6588989. Rosendale Theatre, Main St, Rosendale, $10 / adults, $6 /12 & under. 2PM Catskill High Peaks Festival: Years of Pilgrimage. Featuring Lucille Beer, Michael Chertock, and Yehuda Hanani, traverses two centuries of Italian brilliance and demonstrates how it inspired its famous tourists. Info: 518-263-2063. Doctorow Center for the Arts, PianoPerformance Museum, 7970 Main St, Hunter, $30, $25. 2PM “West Side Story.” Info: 845-679-6900 or www. woodstockplayhouse.org. Woodstock Playhouse, 103 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock, $40, $36, $32. 2PM Honky-Tonk Highway. Book by Richard Berg. Music, Lyrics and Additional dialogue by Robert Lindsey Nassif. Directed by Michael LaFleur. Info: 845-647-5511. Shadowland Theatre, 157 Canal St, Ellenville, $34. 2PM New Paltz Musicales Concert Series. An Afternoon of Opera: The Bel Canto Performance Award Recipient Concert. Info: 845-255-0051 or musicales@redeemernewpaltz.org. Redeemer Evangelical Lutheran Church, 90 Route 32 South, New Paltz, $10 /suggested donation. 2:30PM-4PM Introduction to Buddhism. A Weekend Teaching. August 8-10. Lama Losang present the basics of Tibetan Buddhism in down-to-earth language with warmth, humor, and clarity. 845-679-5906 x3 for registration or more information. Karma Triyana Dharmachakra, 335 MeadsMt. Rd, Woodstock, $120 /whole weekend, $30 /per session. 3PM Old Love. Presented by the Taconic Stage Co. Written by Canadian Norm Foster. Tickets for all shows are $20 (senior citizens and students pay what you can), Info: www.taconicstage.com or 518-325-1234 St. John in the Wilderness Church, Copake Falls. 3PM Summer Shortcuts. A festival of original tenminute plays by Catskill Mountain residents as well as playwrights from all over the country. Info: 845-586-1660 or www.theopeneyetheater.org. Open Eye Theatre, 960 Main St, Margaretville, $18, $15 / senior, $10 /25 & under. 3PM Choreography on the Edge. Featuring choreographers and dancers spanning a wide range of styles and techniques; primarily modern dance, contemporary ballet and cultural motifs expressed through Irish step dancing choreographed by Joel Hanna from the original cast of Riverdance. $12.Info: 845-453-8673 or choreographyontheedge@gma orwww.woodstockguild.org. TheByrdcliffe Theater, 3 Upper Byrdcliffe Way, Woodstock. 3PM Les Miserables. Info: 876-3080 or www.centerforperformingarts.org. The Center for Performing Arts, Route 308, Rhinebeck, $27, $25 /senior, $25 /child under 12. 3:30PM 8th Annual Hudson Jazz Workshop Performance. Featuring Armen Donelian, Marc Mommaas, with special guest Reggie Workman. A free pre-concert talk at 3pm. Info: 518-822-1438 or www.hudsonoperahouse.org. Hudson Opera House, 327 Warren St, Hudson, $10, free /child. 4PM Maverick Hall Concert: Amernet String Quartet. Jon Klibonoff, piano. American Landscapes VIII The World of Richard Strauss. $40 or $50 (depending on the event). $200/book of 10 tickets, “Pay-what-you-can” seating. Bring your own chair orblanket. Info: 679-8217. Maverick Concerts, 120 Maverick Rd, Woodstock, $25 /gen adm, $5 /students, free /12 & under. 4PM-6PM Woodstock Community Drum Circle. Drummers on The Green are hosted by Birds of a Feather. Singers & dancers are all welcome. Bring your drums and percussion instruments. On-going on Sundays, 4-6pm. Community Center, 56 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 4PM Book Reading and Signing: Richard O’Connor, PhD. The author of “Rewire.” A road map to overcoming whatever self-destructive habits are plaguing you, with exercises throughout the book. Info: 845-8760500. Oblong Books & Music, 6422 Montgomery St, Rhinebeck, free. 4PM-6PM Last Butterfly & Pollinator Garden Tour of Season. Stroll with Maraleen Manos-Jones, Butterfly Woman, in her ever-changing gardens. learn how you can help protect all pollinators, who are in peril. Reservations and directions: 845-657-8073 or email mmjbutterfly@gmail.com. 5 PM Woodstock Shakespeare Festival’s 19th Summer Season: Twelfth Night. Performed by Bird-On-A-Cliff Theatre Company. Folding chairs or blankets are suggested. Admission free, $5 donation suggested.Info: 845-247-4007 or birdonacliff.org. Woodstock’s Outdoor Elizabethan stage, 45 Comeau Dr, Woodstock. 5:30PM Bard SummerScape 2014: Program Six: Schubert and Viennese Theater. 5 pm Preconcert Talk. Info: www.fishercenter.bard.edu or 758-7900. Bard College, Fisher Center, Sosnoff Theater, Annandale-on-Hudson, $25. 6PM 3 by Steve: The Zig-Zag Woman - Patter for the Floating Lady. Wasp by Steve Martin withBrett Owen, Audrey Rapoport, Michael Rhodes, Amie Tedesco and Steven Young. Free. Menu available. Come early for best seats. Traghaven Whiskey Pub, 66 Broadway, Tivoli. 6PM-8PM Mid-Hudson Rainbow Chorus Rehearsal. This four-part chorus of LGBTQ and LGBTQ-friendly singers always welcomes new members. Sopranos, altos, tenors, and basses-all voice parts needed. Ability to read music not required but helpful. Rehearsals everySunday, 6-8 pm. Info: rainbowchorus1@gmail. com or 845-353-8348. LGBTQ, 300 Wall St, Kingston. 7PM Live @ The Falcon: Jeffery Broussard & The Creole Cowboys. Info: 845-236-7970 or www.liveatthefalcon.com. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 8PM Doug Marcus. Info: 679-3484. Harmony Café @ Wok ‘n Roll, 50 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. 8PM JD McPherson. Info: info@helsinkihudson.com or www.helsinkihudson.com or 518-828-4800. Club Helsinki Hudson, 405 Columbia St, Hudson. 8PM Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival: The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Caught in the Act Night. Info: 265-9575 or www.hvshakespeare.org. Boscobel, Route 9D, Garrison, $68, $38. 10PM Harlem on the Mountaintop Experience. Info: 518-589-6424. Last Chance Tavern, 6009 Main St, Tannersville, free.

Monday

8/11

8:30AM-9:30AM Free Daily Silent Sitting Medita-


30 tion. On-going every Morning, seven days a week, 8:30-9:30am in the Amitabha Shrine Room. For info contact Jan Tarlin, 679-5906 x 1012. Karma Triyiana Dharmachakra, 335 Meads Mountain Rd, Woodstock. 9AM-4PM Workshop: Contemporary American Impression in Pastel, Robert Carsten. (8/11-8/14) Reg reqr’d. Info: 845-679-2388. Woodstock School of Art, 2470 Rte. 212, Woodstock, $370. 9AM-9:50AM Senior Fit Dance for Seniors with Adah Frank. Dance and movement for strength and flexibility. Open to Woodstock residents 55 and older, $1 donation requested. Bring a mat. Town Hall, Main Room, Woodstock. 10AM-12PM Senior Drama with Edith LeFever. Comets of Woodstock focuses on improvisation, acting exercises, monologues & scenes. Interested seniors are welcome to sit in. Open to Woodstock residents 55 and older, $1 donation requested. Fire Co #1 Rt 212, Woodstock. 12PM-1PM Kingston Library Teen Summer Reading: Book Club Lunch. Info: 845-331-0507. Kingston Library, 55 Franklin St, Kingston, free. 12:15PM Rhinebeck Rotary Club Meeting. Beekman Arms, Rhinebeck, 914-244-0333. 1PM Needlework Group. On-going every Monday, 1pm. Info: 338-5580 x1005. Town of Esopus Library, 128 Canal St, Port Ewen. 4:15PM-5:30PM Healthy Back Class w/ Anne Olin. Build strength and increase flexibility and range of motion with attention to your special needs. Class is on-going and meets on Mondays, 4:15-5:30pm. $12/ class. 28 West Gym, Maverick Rd & Rt 28, Glenford. 5:30PM Phoenicia Community Choir. Prepare choral music for concerts as well as singing with the Phoenicia Festival of the Voice. No auditions, no need to read music. Info: 845-688-5759. Wesleyan Church, Main St, Phoenicia. 6PM-6:30PM Free Open Meditation. Meets Mon-Fri, 6-6:30pm. No particular tradition or practice. Not a ‘class’. All are welcome. Just a time to join with others to meditate together. Interfaith Awakening (the little yellow house), 9 Rock City Rd, Woodstock. 6PM Animal Embassy presents World Wildlife. Kids ages 4 & up are invited to a live interactive animal presentation where they’ll meet a Eurasian Eagle Owl, a Sinaloan Milk Snake, an African Tortoise, a Chinchilla, a Flemish Giant Rabbit. Info: 845-452-3141 or www.laglib.org. LaGrange Library, 488 Freedom Plains Rd, Poughkeepsie. 6:30PM Open Mic Night with Jeff Entin. Info: www. highfallscafe.com or 845-687-2699 or highfallscafe@ earthlink.net. High Falls Café, Stone Dock Golf Club, High Falls. 7PM Harmony Poetry Series. Featured poet: Pamela Twining and Cosmic Legends. Open Mic begins at 8 pm; sign up at 7:30 pm. Hosted by Michael Platsky. Info: 845-679-7760. Wok N Roll Café, Woodstock. 7PM Live @ The Falcon: Dayna Kurtz - Falcon Residency! Info: 845-236-7970 or www.liveatthefalcon. com. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7PM Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival: The Liar. Info: 265-9575 or www.hvshakespeare.org. Boscobel, Route 9D, Garrison, $47, $32. 7PM Live @ The Falcon: Dayna Kurtz - Monday Night Falcon Residency! Info: 236-7970 or www.liveatthefalcon.com. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7:30PM Hudson Valley Railroad Society History Night. Meets the 2nd Monday of each month at 7:30pm. Business meeting at 7:30pm, program at 8pm. Info: www.hydeparkstation.com or 229-2338. Hyde Park Train Station Museum, 38 River Rd, Hyde

ALMANAC WEEKLY Park. 7:30PM Free Meditation - The Path of the Heart Four progressive sessions. Mondays, 7:30pm through August 11. Reservations required. Info: 845-797-1218 or www.srichinmoy.org. Woodstock Reformed Church, 16 Tinker St, Woodstock, free.

Tuesday

8/12

Day Trip: Lunch at the Culinary Institute’s Caterina de’Medici Restaurant/Tour. Trip is 9/2. 11:15am-3pm. No transportation provided. Registration deadline is Tues. Aug. 12. Mount Saint Mary College, Desmond Campus for Adult Enrichment, Newburgh, $45. 7AM Minnewaska State Park Preserve: Early Morning Birders. Designed for birding enthusiasts or those just looking to learn the basics. Pre-registration is required. Info: 255-0752. Minnewaska State Park Preserve, Main Entrance, Gardiner, $8 /per car. 7AM Minnewaska Preserve: Early Morning Birders. For birding enthusiasts or those just looking to learn the basics, this series will offer various outings led by experienced birding volunteers and park naturalists. Info: 845-255-0752. Minnewaska State Park Preserve, Main Entrance, Gardiner, $8/car. 9AM-4PM Workshop: Lithography Workshop, Ron Netsky. (8/12-8/14) Reg reqr’d. Info: 845-679-2388. Woodstock School of Art, 2470 Rte. 212, Woodstock, $290, $15 /lab fee. 9AM-10AM Senior Dance Exercise with Inyo Charbonneau. An emphasis is on fun while benefiting from strengthening and aerobic exercise. Open to Woodstock residents 55 and older, $1 donation requested. Mountainview Studio, Woodstock. 9:30AM Serving and Staying in Place, SSIP/New Paltz. Regular Tuesday social breakfast meeting for seniors who want to remain in their own home and community. Info: 845- 255-5970. Plaza Diner, New Paltz. 10AM Tuesday Morning Movies for the Family: Planes. Rated PG and appropriate for kids of all ages. Info: www.poklib.org or 845-485-3445 x3320. The Auditorium, 105 Market St, Poughkeepsie, free. 10AM-11:30AM Chess Club for Children ( for ages 7 through teens). with Ken Evans and Mitch Dominus. Tuesday & Wednesday mornings through 8/20. Registration is required and is ongoing. Info: 331-0507 x7. Kingston Library, 55 Franklin Str, Kingston, free. 10AM-11:30AM Parkinson’s Dance & Exercise Class. Led by Anne Olin. For people with PD & other neurological disorders. Groups are challenging, creative and fun! Info: 679-6250. $13/oneclass or $20/two classes. St. John’s Episcopal Church, 207 Albany Ave, Kingston. 10AM Tuesday Morning Movies for the Family - All movies are rated PG and appropriate for kids of all ages. The Auditorium, 105 Market St, Poughkeepsie, free. 10AM-5PM Lake Champlain Maritime Museum’s Schooner Lois McClure will be in port. Visitors can board the schooner free of charge to explore the 88-foot-long boat “from stem to stern. Waryas Park, Poughkeepsie. 10AM-11:30AM Chess Club for Children ( for ages 7 through teens) with Ken Evans and Mitch Dominus. Tuesday & Wednesday mornings through 8/20. Registration is required and is ongoing. Info: 331-0507, ext. 7. Kingston Library, 55 Franklin Str, Kingston, free. 1PM-4PM Public Demonstration of Mobile Pelleter.

legals LEGAL NOTICE Section I Notice to Bidders The Board of Trustees of Ulster County Community College (in accordance with Section 103 of Article 5-A of the General Municipal Law) hereby invites the submission of sealed bids for Computing Systems except for notebooks (laptops) and mobile tablets. Bids will be received until 11:00 am the 18th of August, 2014 at the Dean of Administration Office in 212 Clinton Hall, at which time and place all bids will be opened publicly. Specifications and bid form may be obtained from the same office, 845-687-5109 or tagliafn@sunyulster.edu. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Any bid submitted will be binding for 30 days subsequent to the date of bid opening. Dated: August 4, 2014 AA/EOE LEGAL NOTICE Section I Notice to Bidders The Board of Trustees of Ulster County Community College (in accordance with Section 103 of Article 5-A of the General Municipal Law) hereby invites the submission of sealed bids for Construction Materials. Bids will be received until 11:00 am the 18nd of August, 2014 at the Dean of Administration Office in 212 Clinton Hall, at which time and place all bids will be opened publicly. Specifications and bid form may be obtained from the same office, 845-687-5109 or tagliafn@ sunyulster.edu. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Any bid submitted will be binding for 30 days subsequent to the date of bid opening. Dated: August 4, 2014 AA/EOE LEGAL NOTICE Section I Notice to Bidders The Board of Trustees of Ulster County Community College (in accordance with Section 103 of Article 5-A of the General Municipal Law) hereby invites the submission of sealed bids for Electrical Supplies. Bids will be received until 11:00 am the 18th of August, 2014 at the Dean of Administration Office in 212 Clinton Hall, at which time and place all bids will be opened publicly. Specifications and bid form may be obtained from the same office, 845-687-5109 or berendau@sunyulster.edu. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Any bid submitted will be binding for 30 days subsequent to the date of bid opening. Dated: August 4, 2014 AA/EOE

LEGAL NOTICE Section I Notice to Bidders The Board of Trustees of Ulster County Community College (in accordance with Section 103 of Article 5-A of the General Municipal Law) hereby invites the submission of sealed bids for Housekeeping Supplies. Bids will be received until 11:00 am the 18th of August, 2014 at the Dean of Administration Office in 212 Clinton Hall, at which time and place all bids will be opened publicly. Specifications and bid form may be obtained from the same office, 845-687-5109 or tagliafn@ sunyulster.edu. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Any bid submitted will be binding for 30 days subsequent to the date of bid opening. Dated: August 4, 2014 AA/EOE LEGAL NOTICE Section I Notice to Bidders The Board of Trustees of Ulster County Community College (in accordance with Section 103 of Article 5-A of the General Municipal Law) hereby invites the submission of sealed bids for Printer Maintenance Parts & Supplies. Bids will be received until 11:00 am the 18th of August, 2014 at the Dean of Administration Office in 212 Clinton Hall, at which time and place all bids will be opened publicly. Specifications and bid form may be obtained from the same office, 845-687-5109 or tagliafn@sunyulster.edu. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Any bid submitted will be binding for 30 days subsequent to the date of bid opening. Dated: August 4, 2014 AA/EOE LEGAL NOTICE Section I Notice to Bidders The Board of Trustees of Ulster County Community College (in accordance with Section 103 of Article 5-A of the General Municipal Law) hereby invites the submission of sealed bids for Casio Projectors. Bids will be received until 11:00 am the 18th of August, 2014 at the Dean of Administration Office in 212 Clinton Hall, at which time and place all bids will be opened publicly. Specifications and bid form may be obtained from the same office, 845-687-5109 or tagliafn@sunyulster. edu. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Any bid submitted will be binding for 30 days subsequent to the date of bid opening. Dated: August 4, 2014 AA/EOE

August 7, 2014

Learn about the Hudson Valley Grass Energy Project’s Mobile Pelleter and watch it turn Hudson Valley grasses into grass pellets. RSVP. Hudson Valley Farm Hub, 1875 Hurley Mountain Rd, Hurley. 1PM-2PM Kingston Library Teen Summer Reading: Embroidery Ear Buds. Create cool new ear buds with Martha Farrell. Info: 845-331-0507. Kingston Library, 55 Franklin St, Kingston, free. 2PM-4PM Summer Workshops Fashion Week with Pamela Mann (8/12-15). For ages 8-17. Info: www. woodstock.org. Woodstock Library, 5 Library Ln, Woodstock, free. 3PM SUNY Ulster Nursing Information Session. Information on the admissions process, the program curriculum including pre-requisites and co-requisites, as well as new testing requirements. Reg reqr’d. Info: 845-687-5022 or www.sunyulster.edu. SUNY Ulster, Hasbrouck Hall, Stone Ridge. 5:30PM-7PM SUNY Ulster Financial Aid Workshop: Learn to navigate the financial aid application process and complete your Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), with the Director of Financial Aid. Info: 845-687-5096 or financialaid@sunyulster. edu. Business Resource Center, Room 116, Ulster Ave, Kingston. 6PM-7PM Free Meditation Practice at Sky Lake Shambhala Retreat Center. Meets every Thursday, 6-7pm. Free and open to the public. Contact info: 658-8556 or www.skylake.shambhala.org. Sky Lake, 22 Hillcrest Ln, Rosendale. 6PM-7:15PM Mohonk Preserve - Evening Yoga at the Pavilion. Ages 12 and up are welcome. The series will focus on Vinyasa Yoga for beginner and intermediate students. Bring your own mat and water. Rain or Shine. Reservations are required. Info: 255-0919 for reservations and program location. Mohonk Preserve, New Paltz, $12. 6PM Arts Mid-Hudson and La Voz, cultura y noticias hispanas del Valle de Hudson, hosting a special Latino themed mini auction. Benefits La Voz. Info: fiori@ bard.edu. Bard College, Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, Spiegeltent, Annandale-onHudson. 6:30 PM-8:30 PM Orange County Pop, Rock & Doowop Series 2014: The Chain Gang. Info: www. FerryGodmother.com. Thomas Bull Memorial Park, Orange County Arboretum, Montgomery, free. 7 PM Eat Ice Cream & Listen to Music while supporting the Library! Carolyn Mix and Darcy Doniger will be playing Celtic, Contemporary, Folk and Fusion music. A portion of the proceeds of all ice cream sales made between 7pmand 10pm on Tuesdays will be donated to the Campaign for the New Hudson Area Library. Info: www.armory.hudsonarealibrary. org. Lick, Warren St, Hudson. 7PM-9PM Open Mic. On-going, Tuesdays, 7-9pm. Inquiring Minds Bookstore, 200 Main St, Saugerties, 246-5775. 7PM Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival: Othello. Info: 265-9575 or www.hvshakespeare.org. Boscobel, Route 9D, Garrison, $47, $32. 7PM-9PM Introduction to ThetaHealing with Kathy Saulino. In this workshop you will learn to connect with Source energy using Theta brainwave meditation and muscle testing to remove and clear limiting beliefs while repairing and activating your DNA to achieve cellularhealing. Info: 845-679-2100. Mirabai Books, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock, $20. 7PM Live @ The Falcon: Jesse Harris, Grammy winning Singer/Songwriter. Info: 236-7970 or www. liveatthefalcon.com. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7PM Demo Night: Holbein Duo - water soluble oils with Bart LoSchiavo. Courtesy of Catskill Art Supply! Reg reqr’d. Info: www.catskillart.com. Woodstock School of Art, 2470 Rte. 212, Woodstock. 7PM-8PM Alateen Meeting. Alateen is for kids affected by someone else’s drinking. Open to ages 7-19. Info: 845-594-2864 or www.alanon.alateen.org Overlook United Methodist Church, 233 Tinker St, Woodstock. 7PM-8:30PM Weekly Opportunity Workshop . Meets every Tuesday night, 7pm-8:30pm.Free to attend: learn how to help the environment, raise funds for non-profit organizations, and save money over time! Novella’s, 2 Terwilliger Ln (across from Super 8), New Paltz. 7PM Open Mic with Cameron & Ryder. Info: info@ helsinkihudson.com or www.helsinkihudson.com or 518-828-4800. Club Helsinki Hudson, 405 Columbia St, Hudson. 7PM-9PM Introduction to Theta Healing with Kathy Saulino. You will learn to connect with Source energy using Theta brainwave meditation and muscle testing to remove and clear limiting beliefs while repairing and activating your DNA to achieve cellular healing. Info: 679-2100. Mirabai Books, 23 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock, $20. 7 PM-10 PM Jazz Jam. Every Tuesday, 7-10pm. 452-3232. The Derby, 96 Main St, Poughkeepsie. 7PM Live @ The Falcon: Jesse Harris. Info: 845-2367970 or www.liveatthefalcon.com. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 7PM-8:30PM Singing Just for Fun! New Paltz Community Singers. Everyone welcome, everyone gets to choose songs. Going 20+ years. Meets 2nd and 4th Tuesdays. Info: genecotton@gmail.com. Quaker Meeting House, 8 N. Manheim, New Paltz. 7:30PM-9:30PM Life Drawing Sessions at Unison. Info: www.unisonarts.org or 255-1559. Unison Arts Center, 68 Mt. Rest Rd, New Paltz, $13, $48 /4 classes. 8PM Open Mic Nite Join host Ben Rounds and take your shot at becoming the next Catskills Singing Sensation! No cover. Tuesday is also Burger Night at the Cat - only $8. Info: 688-2444 or www.emersonresort.com. Catamount Restaurant, Mt. Pleasant. 8PM Sin City. Info: 679-3484. Harmony Café @ Wok ‘n Roll, 50 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. 8:45PM Karl Allweier’s Open Mic. Sign up at 8:45pm. Every week beer specials, bar snacks and a good time available. Info: 845-876-0590 or www.the rhinecliff. com. The Rhinecliff Restaurant, Rhinecliff. 9PM Free Chakra Meditation. Held twice a month on the Tuesday nights closest to the Full and New Moons. Donations welcome. Info: 679-6107 or NamasteSacred@gmail.com or www.namastesacredhealing.com. Namaste Sacred Healing Center, 427 Ohayo Mountain Rd, Woodstock.

Wednesday

8/13

7:30AM Waterman Bird Club Field Trip: Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies. Call: Adrienne @ 845-2642015. Info: www.watermanbirdclub.org. Cary Institute

of Ecosystem Studies, Gifford House, 65 Sharon Turnpike, Millbrook. 8AM-8PM The Artists of Excellence Exhibits A display of works by artist Fay Wood of Saugerties. Exhibits through 10/27. Info: cultural@sunyorange. edu or www.sunyorange.edu/culturalaffairs. SUNY Orange, Kaplan Hall, Mindy Ross Gallery, Newburgh. 8:30AM Open Mic Blues Jam hosted by Petey Hop. Info: www.hydeparkbrewing.com or 229-8277. Hyde Park Brewing Company, 4076 Albany Post Rd, Hyde Park. 9:15AM-10:15AM Senior Kripalu Yoga with Susan Blacker. Gentle yoga class with each student encouraged to move and stretch at his or her own pace. Includes warmups, poses for strength and balance and breath work for relaxation. Open to Woodstock residents 55 and older, $1donation requested. Mountainview Studio, Woodstock. 9:30AM-1PM Mohonk Preserve Bob Babb Wednesday Walk: Rainbow Falls. Aged 18 and above. No reservations required. A strenuous, 6+ mile hike. Info: 845-255-0919. Minnewaska State Park Preserve, Awosting (lower) Lot, Gardiner, $8 /car. 10AM-11:30AM Chess Club for Children ( for ages 7 through teens). with Ken Evans and Mitch Dominus. Tuesday & Wednesday mornings through 8/20. Registration is required and is ongoing. Info: 331-0507 x7. Kingston Library, 55 Franklin Str, Kingston, free. 10AM-11AM Song & Motion with Abby. Ages 8 and up. Info: 518-822-1438 or www.hudsonoperahouse. org. Hudson Opera House, 327 Warren St, Hudson. 10AM-11:30AM Chess Club for Children ( for ages 7 through teens) with Ken Evans and Mitch Dominus. Tuesday & Wednesday mornings through 8/20. Registration is required and is ongoing. Info: 331-0507 x7. Kingston Library, 55 Franklin Str, Kingston, free. 12PM Rotary Club of Kingston Meeting. Fellowship, lunch, and an informative and interesting presentation from a guest speaker. Meets every Wed at 12noon. Web: www.kingstonnyrotary.org. Christina’s Restaurant, 812 Ulster Ave, Kingston. 1PM-2PM Kingston Library Teen Summer Reading: Guerilla Gardening. Learn how to make seed bombs with Matthew Cassidy. Info: 845-331-0507. Kingston Library, 55 Franklin St, Kingston, free. 1PM Exploring Your Family Ancestry. An Introduction to Ancestry.com workshop. Info: www.pokblib.org or 845-485-3445 X 3381. Adriance Memorial Library, 93 Market St, Poughkeepsie. 1PM The Sawkill Seniors Meeting. Gathering begins with a formal meeting format, followed by a raffle, socializing and refreshments. Then for those who wish to join in, there is a card game. All seniors are welcome. Town Hall, 905 Sawkill Rd, Kingston. 2PM-4PM Summer Workshops. Fashion Week with Pamela Mann. (8/12-15) Ages 8-17. Info: www.woodstock.org. Woodstock Library, 5 Library Ln, Woodstock, free. 3PM-4PM Spark A Reaction! Teens! 2014. End of the Summer Pizza Party. Age: 13 or 7th grade and up. Info: 845-246-4317 or www.saugertiespubliclibrary.org. Saugerties Public Library, Washington Ave, Saugerties. 3:30PM Math Regents Prep. Every Wed. @ 3:30pm Certified Math Teacher - Don’t fail Algebra, Geometry, and Trig. Empowering Ellenville, 159 Canal St, Ellenville, 877-576-9931. 5:15PM-6:15PM Hip Hop Dance. Info: 518-822-1438 or www.hudsonoperahouse.org. Hudson Opera House, 327 Warren St, Hudson. 5:15PM-6:15PM Hip Hop Dance. Info: 518-822-1438 or www.hudsonoperahouse.org. Hudson Opera House, 327 Warren St, Hudson. 6PM Woodstock Community Chorale Prepare choral music for concerts as well as singing with the Phoenicia Festival of the Voice. No auditions, no need to read music. Info: 845-688-5759. Kleinert/James Center for the Arts, Tinker St, Woodstock. 6PM-8PM Ukulele Circle. On-going every Wed, 6-8pm. Info: 845-657-2482 or outreach@olivefreelibrary.org. Olive Free Library, 4033 Rt 28A, West Shokan. 6PM-8PM Meeting of End the New Jim Crow Action Committee. A Hudson Valley network dedicated to fighting racist policies of racial profiling, police brutality, and mass incarceration (the “new Jim Crow”). Info: 845-475-8781 or www.enjan.org. Sadie Peterson DelaneyAfrican Roots Library, Family Partnership Center, 29 N Hamilton St, Poughkeepsie. 6PM-7:30PM Creative Seed Support Group For artists to voice their works inprogress in a supportive environment. For Songwriters, Playwrights & Actors. Held by Patrice Blue Maltas, Actress, Playwright, Musician and founder of Blue Healing Arts Center. MeetsWednesday nights, 6-7:30pm. Info: Patricebluemaltas@gmail.com or www.bluehealing.co. Blue Healing Art Center, 107 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. 6:30 PM-8:30 PM Newburgh Jazz Series 2014: Jeremy Baum Band. Info: www.FerryGodmother. com. Thomas Bull Memorial Park, Orange County Arboretum, Montgomery, free. 7PM Hudson Valley Shakespeare Festival: The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Info: 265-9575 or www. hvshakespeare.org. Boscobel, Route 9D, Garrison, $68, $38. 7PM-11PM Rosendale Chess Club. Free admission-no dues. On-going every Wed, 7-11pm. Rosendale Café, Rosendale. 7PM USMA Concert Band. Show tunes and popular music. Info: 845-229-8086 or www.nps.gov/vama/ planyourvisit/events.htm. Vanderbilt Mansion Historic Site, Hyde Park. 7:30PM World Premiere Revival. Tomorrow In The Battle. Preview. Play by Kieron Barry. Directed by Laura Margolis. Info: 518-822-9667 or www. stageworkshudson.org. Stageworks’ Max and Lillian Katzman Theater, 41 Cross St, Hudson, $18. 7:30PM The Poughkeepsie Newyorkers Barbershop Chorus. Meets every Wednesday night, 7:30pm. An evening of singing, fun & fellowship.A male a cappella group that sings in the American “Barbershop Style”of close four-part harmony. Guests are always welcome. Sight reading not required. Info: wwwnewyorkerschorus.org. St. Andrews Church, 110 Overlook St, Poughkeepsie. 8PM Live @ The Falcon: Kevin Hays New Day Trio. Info: 845-236-7970 or www.liveatthefalcon.com. The Falcon, 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro. 8PM JV Squad. Info: 679-3484. Harmony Café @ Wok ‘n Roll, 50 Mill Hill Rd, Woodstock. 8:30PM-11PM Live at Catskill Mountain Pizza Company: Acoustic Jazz Trio with Syracuse/Siegel Duo + Special Featured Guest. Featuring Bassist Rich Syracuse and drummer Jeff “Siege” Siegel. No cover or minimum! Info: 679-7969. Catskill Mountain Pizza Company, 51 Mill Hill


August 7, 2014

“Happy hunting!�

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CLASSIFIEDS ALMANAC WEEKLY

help wanted

to place an ad: contact

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,QWHUYLHZV ZLOO EH KHOG LQ RXU +XPDQ 5HVRXUFHV 'HSDUWPHQW ORFDWHG DW $OEDQ\ $YH LQ .LQJVWRQ DP WR 1RRQ DQG SP WR SP ,QWHUYLHZV DUH E\ DSSRLQWPHQW RQO\ &DOO IRU \RXU DSSRLQWPHQW DW H[W RU WAITERS/WAITRESSES. Part-time, full-time. Apply in person: College Diner, 500 Main St., New Paltz. BUSY HAIR SALON established in 1990 in Woodstock, NY is looking for a STYLIST with following. 845-706-1888. CAFÉ ASSISTANT: Sunflower Natural Foods is hiring people who love making and serving delicious organic food for our new cafÊ in Rhinebeck. Ideal candidates provide high level customer service, have great communication skills and a positive attitude. Available some weekend days/weekdays. Full-time and part-time. Send resume and let us know why you would be great for this position. We look forward to hearing from you! sunflowercaferbk@gmail.com

WANTED

A local person for p/t position Kennel Tech / Veterinary Assistant Apply to: Compassion Veterinary Center 204 Plutarch Rd. Highland, NY 12528 E-mail: npcompassionvet@aol.com (845) 255-5920

HELP WANTED Full Time position for ground personnel with a tree service.

Chainsaw operator/experience required.

657-7125

CARETAKER SOUGHT! For seasonal community. Experience with plumbing or general carpentry a plus. Salary commensurate with ability. Please email Chris at caretakersought@gmail.com with resume or for more information. CROSSING GUARD- New Paltz Middle School. Hours: 7:15-8:15 a.m. (or 7-8 a.m.) and 2:30-3:30 p.m. Please be advised a background check and brief training session by New Paltz Police Department is required. Salary will be $12 per hour. Please send a letter of interest to Chief Joseph Snyder, New Paltz Police Department, 83 Suite 1 South Putt Corners Road, New Paltz, NY 12561. DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT: Fundraiser and manager w/minimum 5 years’ experience to oversee successful Development program. Responsible for major gift solicitation; donor cultivation/ recognition; fundraising strategies; supervising membership, volunteer programs, special events, planned giving. Supervisory &

advanced computer skills required. Raiser’s Edge experience preferred. Competitive salary & benefits. Position open until filled. Cover letter & resume to Executive Projects Manager, Mohonk Preserve, P.O. Box 715, New Paltz, NY 12561. For details http:// www.mohonkpreserve.org/jobs-fellowships-and-internships DRIVERS, CDL-A: LOCAL $1500.00. Sign-On Bonus! Dedicated Fleet! New Well Maintained Equipment! Referral Program! Great Weekly Pay! 2yrs CDL-A Experience. Call Penske Logistics: 1-855-971-9852 EXPANDING HOUSE CLEANING COMPANY seeks conscientious, reliable, hardworking, fun individuals. Serious inquiries only. Please call 845-853-4477. Send resume to info@welcomehomecleaners.com Infant/Toddler Teacher Hillside Nursery, a small group family daycare in Kingston, is LOOKING TO HIRE AN ASSISTANT full or part-time. Please see www.hillsidenursery.net or call (845)331-0303 for more information. PEGASUS FOOTWEAR in Woodstock seeks an energetic, friendly person - fulltime or part-time. Weekends a must. Email Bob@PegasusShoes.com , or stop in. SEEKING COLLEGE STUDENT in Woodstock, Maverick Rd area, to help senior with shopping, errands, etc. 212-877-2892

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situations wanted

DIANA’S FANCY FLEA MARKET: Nice Items Needed For Next Sale! Call Diana 626-0221. To Benefit Diana’s CAT Shelter in Accord. HORSE BOARDING: Looking for a single horse to board w/my 26-yr. old mare. Mildmannered gelding ideal. Retired horse lifestyle on 8 acres of pasture, run-in barn, Stone Ridge area. $300/month includes hay, fly care, holding for farrier, and blanketing on extra cold days. Grain, farrier and vet expenses not included. Call Shannah 845-797-1393. NEEDED: Foster Homes for Kittens. If you have the time (little is needed) and space to foster kittens, our organization will provide kitten food and if necessary, medical attention for these wonderful beings. Please call (917)282-2018 if you are interested in this rewarding endeavor.

e-mail

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

website

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

fax

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

drop-off

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

telephone

deadlines phone, mail drop-off

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

rates weekly

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

special deals

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

policy errors payment

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

reach print

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

web

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

140

opportunities

DEAR BUSINESSMAN/WOMAN- We at Hardscrabble Flea Market & Swap Meet would like to congratulate you on being picked from over 100 businesses in your field. We believe we can help each other- We have a swap meet every Sunday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. at Holy Cow Shopping Center, in addition to a flea market/garage sale. We find that when business people set up a table w/business cards & flyers or “show how to do� projects it will definitely increase your business (and mine). It’s a great way to introduce your business to new/old customers. And, if you have leftover merchandise you’d like to sell- this would be a perfect way to unload it. Please give John a call for more details- (845)7581170. Spots are $12-$35. New Paltz Community-- this App’s for You! Hugies & Hipsters * Pub Owners & Pub Crawlers * Dentists & Patients * Shoppers & Shops * Chefs & Diners * Baristas & Coffee Lovers... Get Connected! Find us at: https:// newpaltz.mycityapp.mobile Local businesses– contact us for our annual ad rates- 845527-4100.

145

adult care

BEST RATES SENIOR CARE companion services. ALL SERVICES AVAILABLE including medication reminders. Available 24-7. 2 hour minimum visit. Great hourly & shift rates available. References. 20 years experience. 845-235-6701

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

(845)901-8513 CAREGIVER/COMPANION for seniors and people diagnosed w/mental illness. I can help you w/shopping, cooking, laundry,

errands, transportation, de-cluttering, recreation and loneliness. I am patient, compassionate, trustworthy and funny. Experienced. References. 845-339-5496. Gentle Care, Assistance with compassion in time of need, for those who would benefit from care at home. Experienced. Please call for more information (845)657-7010.

200

educational programs

SCHOOL OF THE NEW MOON — Since 1972 — Pre-K thru Early Elementary Christine Oliveira - Director 679-7112 www.schoolofthenewmoon.com

240

events

WHAT COULD BE BETTER? Saving money & helping shelter animals at the same time! SHOP FOR A CAUSE- SATURDAY, AUGUST 23 - MACY*S.... Buy a 25% Off (10% in some departments & other exclusions apply) Savings Pass for $5. $5 from the Savings Pass goes directly to the Ulster County SPCA! Then shop, shop & shop some more! Back to school, early holiday gifts, something special or just because! And save on almost everything in the store!! When you buy the $5 Saving Pass, you also get a chance to win a $500 Macy*s Gift Card! We plan to have some of our wonderful shelter dogs to greet you!!

250

car services

AND HAVE IT YOUR WAY. Who’s car determines the pay. Always ready to get you there. Doesn’t matter when or where. I drive the miles your way with smiles. Airport transportation starting at $50. 845-6495350; stu@hvc.rr.com

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.


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ALMANAC WEEKLY

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August 7, 2014

real estate

Browse ALL Available Residential • Multi-Family • Land • Commercial • Multi-Use • Rental Properties

(845) 338-5252 JUST LISTED

Text: M140640

To: 85377

www.MurphyRealtyGrp.com

DESIRABLE NEW PALTZ BRICK RANCH G Great location & an affordable price for this ssolidly built ranch, nicely sited on .52 +/acre. Enjoy sweet views, abundant wildlife a and a minute from the village of New Paltz. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 car garage and full finished walk out basement. Wood burning brick fireplace in living room and lower level family room. Nice & bright, move in ready, bring your imagination and make this bargain a real gem! Easy to show call today! $219,900

CHARMING ROSENDALE CAPE

JUST LISTED

Text: M141444

To: 85377

WOODSTOCK HOME ON 18+ ACRES WITH QUARRY AND GORGEOUS VIEWS

PRICE

REDUCED

Text: M140660

To: 85377

Relax on the spacious deck, enjoy the amazing mountain views or dip into the Quarry to cool off. Easy living in this fairly new construction perched up on the hill w/ two studio’s for guests. Vaulted living room with fabulous stone fireplace & a fabulous gourmet kitchen w/breakfast bar. Finished lower level with BR & kitchen for in law suite. All this on over 18 acres in Bearsville! $585,000

FUN... ROMANTIC... ECLECTIC... VIEWS!!!! Watch the seasons change and the beautiful sunrises & sunsets on the Bonticou Crag while relaxing on the expansive deck or romantic living room. A short walk to the Wallkill Valley Rail Trail where you can enjoy an evening bike ride, run or winter sport when going to New Paltz or Rosendale. A lot of character and charm is expressed in the 1930’s home including a separate bunk house with heat, electric & compost toilet. Not often does a home and property come available like this one. ................... $298,500

COLUCCI SHAND REALTY, INC 255-3455

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

www.coluccishandrealty.com

299

Check out our OPEN HOUSE on SUNDAY FROM 12 TO 3PM 7 DOWNER LANE WOODSTOCK

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, 8/10, 1-5 pm. Raised Ranch on .28 acres. 3-bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms, updated Kitchen with granite counter tops and island. Lower level could be M/D with stove top, sink, refrigerator, new Bathroom and shower. Asking $239,000. Dir. 9W(Highland) to Chapel Hill to end. Make right on Vineyard to #222 Vineyard. Hosted by Francesca Campbell, Real Estate Salesperson, Weichert Realtors, Main St., Fishkill, NY. 845-896-7042 office and 845541-4770 cell.

300

real estate

FOR SALE BY OWNER. Perfect weekender with best location in Woodstock. 2 brick fireplaces, private and secluded. $235,000. 845417-6558. Further description, pictures and address at www.forsalebyowner.com Listing #21058879 MOBILE HOME FOR SALE. 3-bedroom, 1 bath, plus shed in quiet Kingston park. $22,500. Call: 845-514-8825.

An artist’s delight! You will love this unique 2 bedroom artist’s home, walking distance to town, on a hidden 2 acres with picturesque views of Overlook Mountain. Wide board floors, open floor plan, huge vaulted ceiling studio / great room, the perfect escape. Call Mary Ellen VanWagenen for directions and information 845-901-3135. .....$399,000 Kingston 845.339.1144

Saugerties 845.246.3300

Woodstock 845.679.9444

Boiceville 845.657.4240

Woodstock 845.679.2929

Phoenicia 845.688.2929

NOLA GUTMANN REALTY. GERMANTOWN; LOVELY 2-STORY COLONIAL ON 12+ ACRES. 4-Bdrm, 2.5 Bath, Conveniently located- approximately 20 minutes from both the Kingston/ Rhinebeck and Rip VanWinkle Bridges. Full walk-out basement with lg work area and large indoor/outdoor dog kennel. Borders acres of Forever Wild lands. Asking $318,000. (mls #20140035). ESOPUS; New Salem Road; Lovely old 1925 fixer-upper needs to be brought back to its original beauty. Brimming w/character, large retro kitchen, original woodwork, formal dining room, nice living room and family room (parlor). 3+bedrooms, 1.5 baths. New garage door, new well pump, furnace is 8-years old, 100 amp service installed in 2004. Asking $75,000. (mls #20142100). KERHONKSON/SAMSONVILLE area; Over 10 lovely, mostly wooded acres located on a private country road. Approximately 2 miles from ACRES of state land including the Vernooy Falls Trail Head. Great spot for dream home or that weekend get-a-away! Some mostly seasonal mountain views. There

OLIVEBRIDGE LOG HOME ON 3+ ACRES

PRICE

REDUCED

Text: M149071

To: 85377

is a drilled well, septic and electric (conditions unknown) as well as rough driveway on the property. Asking $75,000. (mls #20142169). KERHONKSON/SAMSONVILLE; Immaculately maintained 3-bdrm, 3 bath manufactured home on over 4 lovely acres on a private country road w/seasonal mountain views framed by woods and near LOADS of state land, including Vernooy Kill Trail Head. Eat-in kitchen w/slider leading out to lovely large deck. Full finished basement has huge family room w/free standing woodstove, two smaller rooms and full bath. Perfect fulltime or weekender home! Asking $145,000. (mls #20121686). Call NOLA GUTMANN REALTY, 845-688-2409, 845-688-2409.

HILLTOP REALTY RANCH HOMES

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real estate open houses

A lovely blend of old and new. Originally built in the 1920’s, an addition enlarged the kitchen & added a new living room, creating an open & comfortable floor plan for today’s lifestyles. The kitchen, which opens to the dining room, features a large center island with built-in Jennaire range, plenty of cabinets & pantry. Both the kitchen & DR flow nicely into the LR w/ propane gas fireplace & French door opening to the back deck & above-ground pool. Bonus, master BR on the 1st floor with adjoining $269,500 m master bath.

E Enjoy the peace & serenity the Catskill M Mountains offer in this privately sited 4 BR 2 bath log home in the Town of Olive. New addition built in the late 1990’s adding a large master BR suite with cathedral ceilings, another small BR & a large sunlit studio space upstairs to use as you see fit. Priced to sell. Call for an appointment today!

REAL ESTATE AUCTION Lake Home. Nominal Opening Bid: $10,000. Woodstock, NY. 225 Morey Hill Road. 2BR, 1BA, 849+/sf. New roof, HVCA and paint. Located minutes from Onteora Lake and Bluestone Wild Forest. Open: 1-4 p.m., Aug 17. Auctions: 12:30 p.m., Fri., Aug 29th. Bid live from anywhere at auctionnetwork.com 800.982.0425. williamsauction.com. Dean C. Williams Re Lic 32WI0834875. 5% Buyer’s Premium. WEST SAUGERTIES: A very private 2-BEDROOM HOUSE on 2.8 acres. EIK, living room w/woodburning stove, full bath, screened-in porch. House is vinyl-sided, heavily insulated and virtually mouse proof. Property is mostly fields, bordered by woods and a mountain stream on 2 sides. Also, garden/storage shed. Impeccable move-in condition. Call 908-369-1802. $179,500.

320 Spacious ranch home offers two enclosed porches (one heated), large living room with vaulted ceilings has brick natural gas fireplace, kitchen with laundry area, lots of cabinets, dining opens to heated porch, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, full basement, central AC, attached oversized garage, circular paved driveway. Immaculate. ....................................................... $179,900 Economical ranch offers 3 bedrooms, remodeled tiled bath, kitchen with pantry, separate dining room, newer windows, exterior doors, siding, and fenced yard, large paved driveway. ................ $109,000 HILLTOP REALTY Francine Heinlein Licensed Real Estate Broker / ABR 157 Hilltop Rd., Saugerties, NY 12477 845-246-3776 phone & fax fheinlein@hvc.rr.com - www.hilltoprealty.biz

WE BUY HOUSES! CASH PAID, QUICK CLOSINGS! Will look at any condition properties. We are the largest private buyer of homes in Ulster County and can provide references. Please call Dan @ Winn Realty Associates, LLC, 845/514-2500 or email dan@winn-realty.com.

On Rte 212, in Saugerties; Great deal for cash buyer! RECENTLY UPDATED HOUSE. Commercial/residential. Can be used as both. Close to an acre. Could be circular drive or ideal for commercial use. $90,000- open to offers. 561-542-0954. PRICE REDUCED to $174,500 on this SWEET 3-BEDROOM, immaculate home located in a quiet neighborhood on Fox Hollow Rd. in Shandaken (MLS# 20133869). If you haven’t seen this gem, updated and in move-in condition, set on 1/4 acre w/beautifully landscaped grounds, then please put it on your preview list. The owner is ready to move out West and will consider all reasonable offers. For more information or to preview, call: Nola Gutmann Realty, 845-688-2409. RAISED RANCH: 4-bedrooms, 3 baths, 2 kitchens, 1-bedroom apartment. Must see to appreciate!! $299,999. FMI Call Sam, Century-21 Venables 845-656-6088.

$259,000

land for sale

MARLBORO: 3 APPROVED SCENIC RESIDENTIAL BUILDING LOTS available in the lovely hills of Marlboro. This small subdivision has 3 completed homes, underground utilities and paved roads. 5.7 acres, 2.6 acres and 2.2 acres. Asking $125,000 for each lot. Minutes to 9W Marlboro. Call FRANCESCA CAMPBELL, 845-541-4770 cell. Licensed Real Estate Salesperson, Weichert Realtors, Main St., Fishkill, NY. New Paltz Town: GORGEOUS! 3.4 ACRES. Approved residential building lot. Frontage on Rt. 32 North & Mountain View Place. Shawangunk views. Walk this parcel! $118,900. Call Sam, Century-21 Venables 845-656-6088. What a LOCATION! Half-way between Woodstock and Saugerties! 2.20 ACRES! PHILLIPPS ROAD, SAUGERTIES, NY! It’s time to build your dream home on this land that’s been surveyed, well is installed, engineered for septic system, approved by the U.C. Board of Health, 50 ft. driveway is in and electric pole has been installed for property! Beautiful, peaceful, undisturbed setting on quiet country road away from hustle and bustle of city life! Has open sunny meadow for large garden and lightly wooded area that’s perfect for your private home! Minutes to NYS Thruway, horseback riding, close to ski slopes and close-by creeks for fishing. $80,000. (845)679-9072, Richard.

340

land and real estate wanted

PRIVATE BUYER (non-realtor) SEEKING PROPERTY to purchase, MUST HAVE NATURAL WATERFALL. 2-10 acres needed. Maybe subdivide? Can be either a vacant, SECLUDED parcel of land, OR property w/a house with a natural, private waterfall (w/ year-round views, NOT just seasonal). Must be secluded (absolutely no homes in view), AND MUST BE WITHIN 10 MINUTES DRIVE TO WOODSTOCK. CASH OFFERED, CAN CLOSE IMMEDIATELY! Contact: sabe1970@yahoo.com.au w/photos/info. or call (518)965-7223.


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Help Wanted

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Situations Wanted

200 210 215 220 225 230 235 240 245 250 260 280 299

Opportunities Adult Care

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Child Care Educational Programs Seasonal Programs Workshops Instruction Catering/ Party Planning Wedding Directory Photography Events Courier & Delivery Car Services Entertainment Publications/Websites Real Estate Open Houses

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Real Estate Land for Sale 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 Highland/Clintondale Rentals

425 430 435

438 440 442 445 450 460 470 480 485

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

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

655 665 660 670 680 690 695 698 700 702 703

705 708 710 715 717 720 725

Vendors Needed Flea Market Estate/Moving Sale Yard & Garage Sales Counseling Services Legal Services Paving & Seal Coating Medical Equipment Personal & Health Services Art Services Tax Preparation/ Accounting/ Bookkeeping Services Office & Computer Service Furniture Restoration & Repairs Organizing/ Decorating/Refinishing Cleaning Services Caretaking/Home Management Painting/Odd Jobs 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

real estate

We Are... Locally Grown, Nationally Known, Globally Connected We Are... Making a Difference

Call “Schultzie” for a schowing! Nina Schultz Terner Associate RE Broker (845) 901-3684 mobile

We Are... #1 in Sales in Ulster County*

(845) 679-0006 x 122 nina@westwoodrealty.com

TEXT M330239 to 85377 Gorgeous Saugerties Farmhouse on pristine 16 acres with very own crystal clear POND! Wonderfully updated and maintained country home with modern feel and great open floor plan offering wood floors & beamed ceilings, cozy woodstove, 3 beds & 2 full baths, 2 screened porches and large antique barn ................................................$575,000 Take a Virtual Tour: www.realestateshows.com/710157

Spacious 3 bedroom home in a well-established neighborhood on Angel Road close to the Village of New Paltz. Eat-in kitchen & dining/living room are on the upper level; lower level features a bedroom, full bath, & family room with wood-stove. The greenhouse helps provide solar heat for house! This convenient location is about 5 mins SUNY New Paltz, and NYS Thruway. $239,900

Welcoming, cute and charming home on a quiet dead end city street. Close to everything busy Uptown Kingston has to offer. Close to city life, but feels like a quiet retreat from it all. The windows throughout the house offer warm natural lighting. Enjoy morning coffee while birdwatching on the screened in back deck, surrounded by your perennial gardens. $129,900

Great horse farm only minutes to the NYS Thruway & conveniently located to HITS. 6-12x14 stalls, tack room, wash area and a studio apartment. Land is level, perfect for horses with 5 paddocks with 4-board fencing to accommodate Stallions. Circular driveway makes it easy for trailers of any size. Plenty of room if you want to construct a single family residence. $249,000

Have you been looking for a stream side home nestled into the Village of Woodstock? Here’s one with a fireplace,open & nicely updated, great for entertaining w/ lovely outdoor patios to enjoy your own piece of Woodstock’s historic Tannery Brook. Walk to galleries, restaurants, the theater & shopping with little need for a car with NYC & local bus route nearby. $249,000

Look no further for that perfect home. Immaculate inside & out with wood floors & a cozy wood-burning fireplace in the living room. Dreamy modern layout with an open den adjacent to the breakfast bar for guest & family, plus a gorgeous dining room off the kitchen. Spacious deck for sun & grilling. Roomy main bedroom with a fantastic ensuite bathroom & walk-in closet. $270,000

Pristine one level 3 bedroom 2 full bath home on 2.5 private landscaped acres in desirable Glacier Park. Excellent condition house with mix of open level land surrounded by trees plus mountain views, make this house perfect for weekender or full timers. Plenty of room to entertain, for kids to play or to install an in-ground pool. Short drive to Woodstock & Saugerties. $349,000

TEXT M2689179 to 85377 Perfect Woodstock Dream Gorgeous Farmhouse renovation with period details intact. Newly painted and landscaped on 5 acres with meadow & mountain VIEWS. 3 Bedrooms & 3 full luxury baths with main floor master bedroom suite. Former Maple Syrup Farm! ..........$459,000 Take a Virtual Tour: www.realestateshows.com/696106

24 MILL HILL ROAD, WOODSTOCK, NY 12498

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office space commercial rentals

NEW PALTZ: OFFICE/PROFESSIONAL SPACE(S) for rent. Large, beautiful Soho loft-like space(s) w/brick walls & new large windows. Faces the Gunks w/great views. 71 Main Street. Best downtown location. Former architect office(s). Will divide. Call owner (917)838-3124. steven@epicsecurity.com WOODSTOCK; STORE on Tinker Street, next to Woodstock Wine Store. Heart of town. Great visibility. Large picture window. C/O for food. (845)417-5282, Owner/Realtor.

380

garage/ workspace/ storage

FOR RENT; LARGE 2-BAY GARAGE in Highland area. (845)223-9614.

Made you look. Ulster Publishing newspapers and websites reach over 50,000 readers a week. Go to www.ulsterpublishing.com/ advertise or 845-334-8200 to advertise.

9LOODJH*UHHQ5HDOW\ FRP Kingston 845-331-5357 New Paltz 845-255-0615 Stone Ridge 845-687-4355 Windham 518-734-4200 Woodstock 845-679-2255 *Ulster MLS Statistics 2013

410

gardiner/ modena/ plattekill rentals

1-BEDROOM APARTMENT, MODENA: near Junction 32 & 44/55. 650 sq.ft. on second floor of converted 19th Century barn. Parking. Snow-plowed. Trash, recycle weekly. 1-year lease, 1 month security. No smokers, no dogs, References. $695/month excluding utilities. 845-883-0857. STONE & WOOD HOME on 30 gorgeous acres in Gardiner. 3-bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, impeccable woodwork/LR, fam-

ily room with floor to ceiling windows, stone patio. Privacy, walking trail. $2400/MONTH. Laura Rose Real Estate, 845-255-9009; www.lauraroserealestate.info

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highland/ clintondale rentals

HIGHLAND: APARTMENT #3; BEAUTIFUL 1-BEDROOM, airy spacious apartment. Skylight in LR, balcony off LR, large kitchen, many closets, serene surroundings. $850/month. Call Michael (570)296-6185.

1-BEDROOM GARDEN APARTMENT. No smokers/drugs/pets. Small dog negotiable. 3 miles to Thruway & Bridge, 5 minute walk to Rail Trail. $800/month includes heat, hot water & off-street parking. First, last, 1 month security, references. (845)6912021. 3-BEDROOM APARTMENT FOR RENT. In country setting. 15 minutes from MidHudson and Newburgh bridges. $1800/ month including utilities. Security and references. 845-223-9614. HIGHLAND: 1-BEDROOM w/a full attic for storage. Second floor of a 2-family home. Off-street parking. Close to Poughkeepsie


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Our Manager, whom almost everyone calls “Uncle” Mitch (because he is contacted so often for advice), wrote a very funny list of “agentspeak” that jokes about the silly descriptions in real estate ads. We try not to do that in our ads. We try to be frank without embellishment or embroidery (although we do have fun with them), so the next time you’re talking to a Realtor and hear, “Yes, normally a clothesline in the backyard would severely impact the appearance and price of a home, but don’t worry, I’m calling it a solar powered wardrobe spa…” It won’t be from our agents, I promise! This only hurts everyone in the long run.

YOUR COMPETITIVE EDGE!

With a Westwood Realtor on your team, you’ll have a distinct competitive edge in reaching your Real Estate goals. Our strategies, developed over 35 years, have made us a consistent industry leader in residential Real Estate. Savvy buyers and sellers look to Westwood as their expert source in a complex marketplace. With an unparalleled commitment to service and integrity, you can trust your success to ours. IT WORKS!

DOREEN’S ENCHANTED PINNACLE

NEW

TEXT M384153 to 85377

TEXT M310388 to 85377

WOODSTOCK HIDEAWAY - You can walk to town from this one-level cedar contemporary nestled on a quiet dead-end lane and refresh in the IG pool when you get back! Features include 21’ main BR, 2 add’l BRs, 2 full baths, 30’ LR with a cozy pellet stove, updated kitchen with granite counters, breezy screened porch opening to terraced decking perfect for al fresco dining then on to the sparkling pool and fenced yard. Two car det. garage, too! .......... $375,000

SOPHISTICATED LOG - Nestled in the heart of the Catskills just minutes to Belleayre Ski Center! Rustically charming custom built Alta log Contemporary features soaring ceilings, skylights and window walls, 27’ living room with stone fi replace, full floor MBR suite w/ loft style den, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, custom kitchen, open plan dining and deck o’looking nature’s bounty. Impeccable one-owner home. NEW PRICE! ...................................... $339,500

On almost 4 acres of lush seclusion with rare and exotic plantings, this California Quarry, 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, contemporary with a 2 car garage, is being offer for the first time in 28 years, says Doreen Marchisella. The living room is open with soaring ceilings and 2 story glass windows to bring in the mountaintop views. The island kitchen is large and open to a breakfast area plus a space that is currently being used for an office, cathedral ceilings, a handcrafted stone fireplace, wonderful screened porch, skylights, recessed lighting, spacious deck and a balcony off the Master bedroom. Beyond spectacular view potentials...$795,000 (including the views)

RICHARD SAYS

NEW

Just a scant 2 miles to the center of the village, on 3 very private acres, is Richard Miller’s delightful listing on Broadveiw Road. Featured in House and Gardens Magazine in in 1950, but now with the updated features you’d expect today, is this 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2 story home with beamed and cathedral ceilings, wood, slate, and cork floors, skylights, large living room with a cozy reading alcove, 3 fireplaces, and a huge Master bedroom suite with a designer bath. The Family room off the kitchen leads out to the large deck and bluestone patio. Seasonal mountain and meadow views, this home exudes character, warmth and charm. It’s Woodstockie! ...$398,000

OPEN HOUSE THIS SUNDAY 12-3 NO DOWNER HERE! Even though it’s on Downer Lane in Woodstock, you will enjoy this unique 2 bedroom artist’s home, walking distance (but not with my bum knee) to town, on a hidden 2 acres with picturesque views of Overlook Mountain. Wide board floors fill the open floor plan and once you enter the huge vaulted ceiling studio / great room, you will find out why we call these artist homes “Woodstockie” because of their charm and warmth. High windows bring in the daylight in this studio room and French doors lead out to the rear screen enclosed porch, the perfect escape overlooking green fields. Call Mary Ellen VanWagenen to see it. ..................................................................$399,000

SHOWCAN! TEXT M386066 to 85377

TEXT M387877 to 85377

COLONIAL GEM - Nestled on 4.6 park-like acres, discover this handsome & spacious 2600 SF Colonial. Very gracious floor plan features outstanding chef’s kitchen with island & butler’s pantry, living room with stone fi replace, formal dining room, hardwood floors, en-suite MBR, 2 add’l BRs, 3 full baths, 21’ family/media room, breezy screened porch and 2 car attached garage. Super convenient to Woodstock & Saugerties ......................................... $449,000

MID-CENTURY FLAIR - Well landscaped 3.4 acres with tall oaks and stately white pines enclose this circa 1956 brick one level featuring gorgeous oak floors throughout, spacious living room, dining room, large EI kitchen, 3 bedrooms, inviting 3 season sunroom with cozy stone fi replace, full basement and attached garage. Private rear yard boasts a fully fenced garden and a soothing standalone Swedish SAUNA for 4. JUST RELAX! ................ $193,000

That’s Shokan to you less creative spellers out there! Just wait until you see this wondrous cedar contempo that Mary Ellen VanWagenen listed on almost 2 acres tucked up on a hill just a short walk from dipping your fishing rod into the reservoir. The post and beam living room is a showplace with skylights, beams, and cathedral ceilings, wide plank pine flooring, Vermont Castings woodstove, 2 bedrooms and a den / guest room. The kitchen will enthrall any chef, with raised panel cabinetry, and tons of counter space. French doors lead out to the wrap around deck. Upgrades include Marvin windows, 30 year roof, well pump and more. Just lovely at ...........................................................................$299,000

www.westwoodrealty.com Kingston 340-1920

Woodstock 679-0006

Stone Ridge 687-0232

New Paltz 255-9400

West Hurley 679-7321

Kingston 845.339.1144

Saugerties 845.246.3300

Woodstock 845.679.9444

Boiceville 845.657.4240

Woodstock 845.679.2929

Phoenicia 845.688.2929

Standard text messaging rates may apply to mobile text codes

shared utilities. First, last, security, references, lease. On-site parking. Available immediately. No pets. No smoking. 845-255-7187.

ULSTER COUNTY MORTGAGE RATES Rates taken 8/4/2014 are subject to change

Hudson Heritage FCU 845-561-5607 Mid-Hudson Valley FCU 800-451-8373

30 YR FIXED RATE PTS APR

15 YEAR FIXED RATE PTS APR

4.12

3.25

0.00

4.24

3.99

RATE

APR

2.50

0.00

2.62

E

0.00

3.14

F

Check your credit score for FREE!

4.25

0.00

4.27

3.25

0.00

3.28

3.12

It is a great time to buy or refinance. Call ext. 3472

(E)3/1 Arm (F) 10 Yr Adj Call 973-951-5170 for more info

Train Station & NYS Thruway. 1 mile from Walkway Over The Hudson & Rail Trail. $775/month plus utilities. References & security required. No pets. No smoking. Professionals preferred. Available 9/1. (845)691-6125, leave message. HIGHLAND EFFICIENCIES at villabaglieri.com Furnished motel rooms w/micro, refrig, HBO & WiFi, all utilities. $135-$175 Weekly, $500-$660 Monthly, w/kitchenettes $185 or $200 weekly, $700 or $760 monthly + UC Taxes & Security. No pets. 845.883.7395.

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new paltz rentals

2-BEDROOM APARTMENT available early September. $1150/month plus utilities. 1 month security. Laundry room & private parking on premises. No pets. No smoking. 1-year lease, good references. (845)255-5319.

Copyright 2010 Cooperative Mortgage Information

NICE ROOMS; $415 & $470/month. Excellent location. Close to SUNY college. All utilities included. Call (914)474-5176, between 8 a.m.-9 p.m. (845)255-6029, between 12-9 p.m., leave message. TWO- 2-BEDROOM APARTMENTS. BOTH: 5 minutes by car outside village. Full bath, wood floors, eat-in kitchen, stained glass, second floor. NO DOGS, NOR INDOOR SMOKE. Available mid-late August. 1 apartment has fireplace; $1050/ month plus utilities. Other is in 1870s barnlarger; $1200/month includes some utilities. Please call (845)255-5355. 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT in private home. Includes utilities, cable and high speed internet. Walking distance to SUNY and town. No pets or smokers. $1200/month, 1½ month security. Available immediately. Call (914)475-9834. 2 ROOMS FOR RENT in large 3-bedroom apartment. Quiet residential area, close to SUNY New Paltz. $500/month/room plus

2-BEDROOM, 2-STORY APARTMENT. 900 sq.ft. Beautiful Natural light. Views of mountain. Private fenced entrance. Ample closets, wood floors. Walking distance into town. $1500/month heat & HW included. No Pets. 845-255-3337. 2-BEDROOM APARTMENT. Outside dog pen. Eat-in kitchen, DR, LR, mud room (can be used as personal office). Country setting. Town of New Paltz. $1100/month. Lease, security, credit check. 1 mile Thruway, Exit 18. 718-851-7940 or 917-270-4568. AVAILABLE AUGUST/SEPTEMBER. VARIOUS APARTMENTS... Located 49 & 21 North Chestnut Street. 1-year lease. Discounts for early deposit. rohr321@yahoo. com; 845-229-0024. FURNISHED 1-BEDROOM, BASEMENT APARTMENT in quiet 2-family home. Newly renovated, convenient location, walk everywhere. No smoking. No pets. $825/ month, utilities included. 1-month security. 845-255-2787. GREAT 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT for rent, close to Main St. Located in a quiet neighborhood, off Rte. 32 North, across from Agway, in a private residence. Very

clean. Private entrance. No smoking, no pets. Includes basic cable and internet. $1050/ month. Please call Maria at 845-559-8303 after 2 p.m. Available immediately. LARGE 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT. Behind Starbucks. Kitchen w/dining nook, living room, full bathroom w/tub. 1 cat friendly. No smoking. $1100/month includes heat, hot water, off-street parking, garbage removal. 845-453-9247, marker1st@yahoo.com LARGE SINGLE ROOM. Share kitchen & bath. Internet, heat, hot water included. $575/month. Call 845-304-2504. LARGE, SPACIOUS 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT with nearby access to Rail Trail. Close to town and SUNY. $1100/ month which includes utilities. Available 8/1. Call 863-9237. Live on beautiful Plains Road in this nicely furnished studio come Sept 1st and enjoy all free utilities with your $825/month rent. Light cooking, large porch, garden view, close to Rail Trail, walk to Main Street. 845857-4192. NEW STUDIO APARTMENT in quiet, private setting. Suitable 1 person. Amenities include: radiant heat, hot water, electric, cable. No pets, no smoking. 1-year lease. $900/month. (518)788-3785.


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845-338-5832

DIANNE MINOGUE

Associate Real Estate Broker, ABR, SRES

PANORAMIC HUDSON RIVER VIEWS

CELL 914.204.7120 HUDSONRIVERVIEWHOMES.COM DIANNEMINOGUE.COM

www.lawrenceotoolerealty.com

East Fishkill Brokerage | 1989 Route 52 HoulihanLawrence.com

WOODSTOCK MID-CENTURY MODERN

OPEN HOUSE Sunday August 10th 11AM-1PM 10 Maverick Terrace, Woodstock 12498 Stunning light streams into this gorgeous, genuine 5 bedroom, 3 bath Woodstock mid-century modern, with soaring vaulted ceilings, beams, impressive stone fireplace and massive windows, creating volumes of space, inviting Nature inside. At the end of a cul-de-sac and currently home to an artist who has respected its authenticity but brought great sophistication to it, this welcoming home is elegant for entertaining and has separate, private full living space for either family or friends. A wonderful energy awaits you here. Call Sarah Bissonnette-Adler Licensed R.E. Salesperson 845-389-3849 Mobile .................. $523,000

UNIQUE RIVERFRONT PROPERTY

LIVE/WORK ON THE BANKS OF THE ESOPUS CREEK Fabulous one-of-a-kind riverfront property featuring 275’ of seawall, deep water, ramp, two lifts. Home offers hardwood floors, spacious deck, fireplaces on both floors and bright lower level, with spectacular views. Property includes separately deeded lot. Private yacht club in neighborhood. MLS#329629 Esopus $2,750,000 PICTURESQUE STREET; Live in part of lovely house on quiet street in village. Garden views, porch, everything new, privacy, off-street parking, 1 block to college. $875/month plus share of utilities. Call (845)430-5336.

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

We have, studios, one & two bedroom apartments, includes heat & hot water. (furniture packages available) Free use of the: Recreation Room, Pool, New Fitness Center & much more! “Now accepting credit cards! Move in & pay your security and deposit with your credit or debit card with no additional fees!”

Call 845-255-7205 for more information QUIET 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT, private entrance, 2-miles from New Paltz Village. $1100/month, cable, internet, utilities included. No smoking, no pets. First, last, security deposit. 2 references. Available 8/15. 845-532-4005 ROOMS AVAILABLE for STUDENT HOUSING. Close to SUNY, New Paltz. Newly renovated, clean, large kitchen, appliances, WiFi/computer access/TV, plenty of parking. $550/month/room, electric & heat included. $550 deposit. Available now. 845705-2430. SHARE 3-BEDROOM APT. Good student rental. Internet. Furnished. $500/month includes heat, hot water. Call 845-3042504. SMALL 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT; $550/month. Also, STUDIO; $500/ month. Security & references required. Call (845)978-2804, (845)591-7285. SOUTHSIDE TERRACE APARTMENTS offers semester leases for Fall 2014 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. TOWN & COUNTRY 2-BEDROOM CONDO, professional/peaceful, Huguenot Street, balcony scenic view, next to Rail Trail, hike/bike, canoe use Wallkill, community gardens, large closets. Includes: heat, hot water, all except electric. 1 year lease, references. Quiet, clean pets okay. $1200/ month, 2-months security. 917-355-1729. Available 9/1. Pictures on Craigslist.

Motivated Sellers! This fabulous New England-style home offers dramatic, unobstructed Hudson River views. Includes 200’ of riverfront, deep-water dock, tiki bar with electric, private beach/camping/picnic area. View all the amazing details of this architecturally designed home at spinnakerhillonhudson.com. MLS#328373 Esopus $1,195,000 TOWN & COUNTRY STUDIO APARTMENT. Close to shopping, Rail Trail, college, bus route. Heat, water, garbage pick-up included. No pets or smokers. $800/month. Call 845-399-1570.

435

rosendale/ high falls/tillson/ stone ridge rentals

1-BEDROOM APARTMENT. Spacious rooms. Includes 1 car garage & porch. Off Main Street, Rosendale. No pets. No smoking. $750/month plus utilities. (914)4660496. 1-BEDROOM first floor APARTMENT: $875/month- heat & hot water included, electric separate. Security plus 1 month rent required. Rear yard & additional storage available. Main Street, Rosendale. Please contact (845)787-6580. 2-BEDROOM APARTMENT - huge, furnished or unfurnished. Heat, utilities, internet, plowing included. Woodstove, dishwasher, laundry, storage. $1400 to part-timers. Lease & security. No cats. Convenient location. $1700/month. 845-322-3104. HIGH FALLS: 2-BEDROOM, 2-STORY house on quiet street. Walk to village. No smokers or pets. $975/month plus utilities. References, first, last + security. Lease required. 845-705-2208.

440

kingston/hurley/ port ewen rentals

2-BEDROOM STONE HOUSE for rent, Sept 1, Ulster Park, NY. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, EI kitchen, fireplace, wood floors. Pets okay. $1200/month. Contact: Iris 845-430-7749; infonytherapy@aol.com LIVING SPACE AVAILABLE in Hurley, quiet neighborhood just outside Kingston. Living room, small bedroom, 1/2 bath. Fully Furnished. Must share kitchen and shower. $650/month. Call (845)706-9567.

450

saugerties rentals

ARTISTS ESTATE ON 8 ACRES BETWEEN WOODSTOCK & SAUGERTIES. Furnished. Living/dining room. Bedroom. Tiled kitchen & baths. Office. Huge studio. 8 zone heat plus fireplace & 2 Woodstoves. Laundry. 2 car garage. Lease length and rent negotiable. $1,250/ month + utilities. Owner pays Broker fee . 845-399-9897. Teran Realty. BEAUTIFUL ARTS & CRAFTS style COTTAGE. Wood paneled, cathedral ceiling living room, EIK, w/new appliances. 5 miles to Woodstock/Saugerties/Kingston. Private. Quiet accessible road. $850/month plus utilities. References, security. 917-8465161, 212-877-4368, davsar@aol.com JEWEL IN THE WOODS. Gated property. 3-bedroom, 2 bath Ranch. Rustic stone fireplace w/insert, new insulation & siding,

OPEN HOUSE Saturday August 9th 12-2PM 132 Parish Lane, Lake Katrine 12449 This stunning out-of-the-box open and vaulted space with waterfront cries out for an artist or musician in residence, or someone needing a large volume of space to live and work professionally. Flooded with light, it has adaptable space on the lower level that can feature many uses. Enormous deck overlooks the Esopus Creek for boating and fishing. Flexibility, style and comfort are the keywords here. Already plumbed for two additional bathrooms or professional darkroom. Astounding value. Call Thomas B. Roberts Licensed R.E. Salesperson 646-404-1301 Mobile............. $274,000

MODERN STUDIO in CARRIAGE HOUSE on the HUDSON RIVER If peace and tranquility are what you are looking for... this may be PERFECT for YOU! 280°of Hudson River views, wrap around balconies; private deck, designer bath and kitchen. Magnificent sunrises and sunsets, grape arbors and award winning gardens. If the sound of migrating geese and eagles flying is too great a distraction... this is NOT for you! Private dock w/ available slip. Located at end of cul de sac. On a private peninsula between Ulster and Greene. Not suitable for young ones. Owners live nearby.

Annually: $2G per month plus utilities; Contact Owner @ 646-352-2201 wide-plank floors, French doors to screenedin porch, washer/dryer, eat-in country kitchen. $1650/month utilities not included. Separate Studio w/circular stair, skylighted, woodburning stove, slate floors. Possible rental. Available 8/15. Excellent references, credit required. (516)509-1923, (516)6552502. NICE 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT in great location. Rent is $750/month plus utilities. First, last, security required. Call Phil 646644-3648. VERY BRIGHT, NEWLY RENOVATED UPSTAIRS APARTMENT, Village of Saugerties. $850/month includes heat, water, parking, garbage pickup. Call 845246-4294.

470

woodstock/ west hurley rentals

HOUSE FOR RENT in Woodstock village. Lovely 2-bedroom country home on private road. EIK, all lovely wood flooring, updated bath & electric, like-new appliances, washer/ dryer. Fireplace in living room. Large bonus room on second floor. Screened-in porch, patio & yard. $1400/month plus utilities. 561-542-0954, 718-236-5691. 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT; $700/month plus security and utilities. Walking distance to town. No pets please. Call 845-679-8442. 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT in Woodstock Center. 2nd floor w/a terrace, full bath, renovated. No smoking/drugs/excess alcohol/pets. For responsible person with steady income and references. $875/month includes all utilities, off-street parking. Call 845-679-7978. 1-BEDROOM APARTMENT, Tinker St. Off-street parking. Sunny. Walk to everything. Near Library. Quiet building. Heat included. Garbage removal. Non-smoker. $850/month. First, last, security, references. 845-679-3243.

1-BEDROOM ON LAKE. Herons, Egrets, beavers, more. Between Woodstock & Saugerties. $1200/month includes all utilities. Washer/dryer. No smoking. No pets. Security & references. (845)247-3217.

WOODSTOCK MEADOWS Accepting Applications for 1 Bedroom Waiting List In order to be eligible, you must be age 62 or above or Disabled/Handicapped regardless of age.

Call for Application 845-679-0370 TDD Relay 711 A LUXURY 1-BEDROOM CONDO. Ground floor. $900/month includes A/C, heat, HW, pool, covered garage, storage space, garden. Washer/dryer on premises. 1 block to NYC bus. No pets or smoking. (845)247-4041. BEARSVILLE: 1-BEDROOM HOUSE, lovely, private setting, 3 acres, cathedral ceilings, loft, balcony, stone patio, stone fireplace, woodstove, W/D, carport. $850/ month plus utilities. Furnished/unfurnished. 845-679-9270; darcy6214@aol. com CHARMING 1-BEDROOM w/recent renovation. Hardwood/pergo floors. Full bath. In quiet apartment complex, close to Woodstock. $925/month includes heat, electric, water sewer trash. Added Bonus; Screened-in porch & patio. Owner is licensed RE agent. Call (845)802-4777.


36

ALMANAC WEEKLY

COZY STUDIO APARTMENT. Hardwood floor, skylight, separate kitchen, covered deck, WiFi, trash removal, tennis court, laundry. 7 miles Village Green. 2 miles supermarket & Zen Monastery. $625/month plus utilities. 914-725-1461.

SHOKAN: Quiet, 4 ROOM APARTMENT. Utilities included plus cable. Private entrance. First month & security. Nonsmoker. No pets. $800/month. Close to Kingston & Woodstock. Available August 1. (845)657-8654.

CREEKSIDE STUDIO APARTMENT w/ separate eat-in kitchen. Lots of sun. $640/ month plus utilities. Short walk to center of Woodstock & bus route. No pets. Call (845)594-9257, leave message w/phone # or e-mail contact info- include phone # to: pyxe2000@yahoo.com (try phone number first)

VILLAGE OF PHOENICIA: 2-BEDROOMS, 5 rooms. 2nd floor in 2-family house. Lease, security, references. Nonsmoker, no pets. Available 9/1. $750/month plus utilities, first, last & security. Call 845688-2646. kbsound@hvc.rr.com

HOUSE FOR RENT. Walk to Town of Woodstock. 3-bedroom house on private road, lovely, secluded backyard, all wood floors, hot water heat and wood-burning stove, detached garage. Updated. $1200/ month plus utilities. 561-542-0954. PRIVATE 1-BEDROOM COTTAGE on quiet road in Woodstock/Lake Hill. Newly renovated. Great new bathroom. (Outdoors being painted). 1 beautiful acre. Nice stream. $950/month. (845)417-5282. SUNNYCONTEMPORARY2-BEDROOM, 1 bath house w/loft located in the heart of Woodstock. This unique house features a screened-in porch, large deck that faces out to acres of woods & seasonal mountain views. Living room has hardwood floors, woodburning stove, high ceilings w/open loft suitable for office or bedroom. All new paint, new appliances including dishwasher, washer/dryer, updated bathroom. Fenced yard has raised garden beds. Walk to town in 5 minutes, yet very private & quiet. The perfect Woodstock house! $1550/month. (646)299-3781. THE HIGHWOODS COTTAGE. Soaring pines, serene mountains, private trail, bluestone quarry pond, rocking chair porch and quiet yard. These are some of the treasures this cozy, freshly renovated cottage has to offer. Conveniently located halfway between Woodstock and Saugerties (and also an easy ride to Kingston), The Highwoods Cottage features two bedrooms, kitchen w/breakfast bar, new appliances, bathroom, living room, wifi, private parking and a pet friendly atmosphere. $1000/Month plus utilities. Available Aug. 1-May 15. References and proof of income required. Contact Gwen 917.703.5843 gwen@thenestrentals. com WOODSTOCK: 1-BEDROOM. Quiet upscale residential neighborhood. Beautiful grounds. Small quiet apartment complex. Excellent condition & well maintained. $845/month includes all utilities. ALSO, FURNISHED 1-BEDROOM. $875/month includes all utilities. No smoking. References. No pets. (845)679-9717. WOODSTOCK/LAKE HILL. Fully furnished share in restored colonial farmhouse available now. $500 includes all utilities, internet, private phone. Work exchange available for strong, reliable person. NS, NP. homestayny@msn.com. 679-2564.

480

west of woodstock rentals

2-BEDROOM, 2 BATH w/loft in beautiful Woodland Valley. Peaceful & quiet area. Granite fireplace, oil hot air. Mountain views. Year lease. References. 1 mile to Phoenicia. $1000/month plus utilities. (845)688-5387. COZY 1-BEDROOM COTTAGE. Private parking and yard. Screened front porch entrance, roomy deck off kitchen, living room, full bath, W/D hook-up, small study. Walk to town, bus routes, shops, PO, library, parks, Esopus Creek. Close to skiing, hiking trails. All that the Catskills have to offer. Includes own storage shed. Tenant pays utilities, garbage and snow removal, lawn maintenance and water bill. First, last month plus security deposit. $795/month. 845-246-4727. COZY STUDIO APARTMENT. Hardwood floor, skylight, separate kitchen, covered deck, WiFi, trash removal, tennis court, laundry. 7 miles Village Green. 2 miles supermarket & Zen Monastery. $625/month plus utilities. 914-725-1461. SHOKAN: $750/month Large One Bedroom 960 sq.ft., Also $1150/month Large two bedroom 1200 sq.ft., 7 miles west of Woodstock, peaceful, calm, quiet, country setting. Please No smokers or pets, utilities not included. Walk to Ashokan Reservoir, 1-year lease, two months security. Pictures on craigslist.org search Shokan. Call 845481-0521.

490

NICELY FURNISHED 1-BEDROOM. Close to Woodstock Village on NYC bus route. $800/week, 2-week Special- $1400. Wifi included. Added perk- Screened-in outside porch. Owner is licensed RE agent. Call (845)802-4777.

seasonal rentals

FLORIDA RENTAL; Anna Marie Island. Go to VacationRentals.com #94551. For more info contact TurtleNestAMI@aol.com

520

rentals wanted

LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO LIVE but do not want to spend my pension & social security on rent! Able to do a variety of jobs- driving, chauffeur, mow lawns, cook, administrative, etc. Plenty of references. Would prefer Woodstock area. Call (845)679-2000.

600

for sale

FARM TABLES: Catskill Mountain Farm Tables handcrafted from 19th century barn wood. Heirloom quality, custom-made to any size. Windsor chairs, cupboards, bookcases. Antique restoration available. Ken Anderson, Atwood Furniture, 845-6578003. LEG EXTENSION & LEG CURL MACHINE w/weights attached. Plus more exercise equipment.... Call (845)255-8352. LENOX MANTEL CLOCK- brand new in box, $50. 10-drawer SOLID STEEL MECHANICS CABINET- $300 obo- cash and carry. ART SUPPLIES; rulers, paints, pens, pencils, markers, paper cutter, grease markers. If interested make an offer on all of it. PICTURES; framed and matted; small pics- $5 each, medium pics; $10 each, large pics; $20 each. Cash and carry. Call 845-2550909. PELLA HUGE WINDOW; 79.5h x 70.5w (6.6 x 5.8). Unused. $750 New. In Woodstock. $275. 631-462-2260

603

tree services

HAVE A DEAD TREE...

CALL ME!

Dietz Tree Service Inc. Tree Removal, Trimming, Stump Grinding, Firewood

(845)255-7259 Residential / Municipalities

FULLY INSURED

605

firewood for sale

LAWLESS TREE SERVICE

CERTIFIED ARBORIST • CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES

STUMP GRINDING

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

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

660

estate/ moving sale

ULSTER FOREST PRODUCTS, INC. Log Length- Cut & Split Firewood. Top quality wood at reasonable prices.

914-388-9607 Getwood123@gmail.com We accept cash, checks, & credit cards.

www.getwood123.com vacation rentals

FLORIDA RENTAL; Anna Marie Island. Go to VacationRentals.com #94551. For more info contact TurtleNestAMI@aol.com

500

August 7, 2014

You will not be disappointed!!

620

buy and swap

The estate of

OLD FURNITURE, CROCKS, JUGS, paintings, frames, postcards, glasswares, sporting items, urns, fountain pens, lamps, dolls, pocket knives, military items, bronzes, jewelry, sterling, old toys, old paper, old boxes, old advertisements, vintage clothing, anything old. Home contents purchased, (select items or entire estates purchased.) CASH PAID 657-6252 CASH PAID. Estate contents- attic, cellar, garage clean-outs. Used cars, junk cars, scrap metal. Anything of value. (845)246-0214.

musician connections

Guitarist with 32 years experience & professional gear SEEKING BLUES-ROCK BAND. Must have vehicle, professional experience & equipment. Kingston area. Call Mike 917-685-3722.

655

Saturday August 9th 10-5

Mike & Bea Kutcher

BOTTOM LINE... I pay the highest prices for old furniture, antiques of every description. Paintings, lamps, rugs, porcelain, bronzes, silver, etc. One item to entire contents. Richard Miller Antiques (Est. 1972). (845)389-7286.

630

INDOOR ESTATE

SALE & GARAGE SALE!

vendors needed

FLEA HARDSCRABBLE

MARKET & GARAGE SALE

121 Chestnut Hill Road Woodstock, NY

(3/4 mile from Rte 212) / / / NO EARLY BIRDS! / / /

670

yard and garage sales

Stop by A TIBET THRIFT STORE. New arrival of musical instruments, records, large artwork, furniture, antiques, housewares, summer clothes. 7 days, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 875 Route 28, Kingston. 845-383-1774. Caned rocker, Honda Fit Cover, air mattress, telephone table/chair, artist’s paint box, DVD player, 50’s canisters, linens, dishes, household items & much more. Sat., 8/9, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 18 Demming Street, Woodstock. D&H CANAL MUSEUM’S SUNDAY Flea Market, Rt. 213 in the heart of High Falls. Art, antiques, collectibles, etc. OPENING DAY- April 13-November, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Contact Joni (845)810-0471. EPIC YARD/TENT SALE!!!!! Saturday and Sunday August 9 & 10. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. ARCHITECT & DESIGNER owned. New and used. NO JUNK!!!! LOW PRICES! Everything must go! HARLEY DAVIDSON gear, leather jackets.MID-CENTURYfurniture. VINTAGE: ceramics, Chemex, telephones, sewing machine, suitcases and COLLECTIBLES. Framed ANTIQUE Engravings/art. Lighting. Tables. Shelves & brackets/bins. Books. Household/ kitchen. Dishes. Cutlery. Tools. AC’s. Fans. Bicycle/dog/guitar/sports/travel/camping GEAR. Professional juicer. Designer Coats. Electronics: Printer, Digital Video Camera, DVD player. TONS MORE!!! NO EARLY BIRDS. Cash and Carry. Rain or Shine. See it to believe it! 171 Creamery Road, Stanfordville. Directions: Rt 82 North to Church Lane to Creamery Road. See Red Birdhouse and Yard Sale Sign at driveway.

All Vendors Wanted • Spots start at $12 to $35

HUGE MOVING SALE. Furniture, clothes, books, patio furniture. All items must go! Sat & Sun, 8/9-8/10, 10am-3pm. 23 Bellows Lane, Woodstock. Go to end of road, don’t block neighbors’ driveways.

OPEN SATURDAYS

MOWER’S SATURDAY/SUNDAY FLEA MARKET; Maple Lane, Woodstock. Every weekend starting May 17th. Antiques, collectibles, produce & Reusables. GOOGLE US! 845679-6744. woodstockfleamarket@hvc.rr.com

8/2 - 8/23

Spectacular Yard Sale!! Saturday, August 9, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 47 Route 375, WOODSTOCK. HUGE MULTI-FAMILY! ALL NEW ITEMS! White Cape House next to Golf Course. Jewelry/decorative, vintage cameras, Mac speakers/earphones. China/glassware. Furniture, maple desk/integral filing cabs. Soldi bookcase: 72x45x12” Pictures/ frames, curtains/linens, electronics/housewares. Shoes/clothes, SO MUCH MORE!! Park on Ratterman or Birch side streets.

845-758-1170 • Call John EVERY SUN 8-4 pm March thru December

Set up Sat. $20 - 10' x 20' & get next day (Sun.) for $10 Holy Cow Shopping Center • Red Hook, NY

HELP WANTED

FUN

Find hundreds of ideas in Almanac Weekly Subscribe to an Ulster Publishing newspaper to get Almanac delivered ULSTERPUBLISHING.COM/SUBSCRIBE

Viking Stove, props for interior photo shoots, fabrics, furniture, designer clothing. Saturday, 8/9, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 105 Allhusen Road, New Paltz.

680

counseling services

LAURIE OLIVER.... SPIRITUAL COUNSELING. Give the gift of wellness. Make positive changes in your life through hypnosis. Smoking cessation * pain management * stress relief * past life regressions. Certified Hypnotist by NGH. Intuitive, sensitive guidance. Spirit communicator. Specializing in dealing with grief, stress, relationship issues, questions about your life past & current life’s path. Call Laurie Oliver at (845)679-2243. Laur50@aol.com


695

professional services

PREMIER WINDOW CLEANING Gutter Cleaning Services, Inc.

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

700

personal and health services

CERTIFIED AIDE LOOKING FOR PRIVATE CARE for elderly. 10 years experience. Live-in or hourly. References available. Ulster County area. (845)901-8513 ULSTER COUNTY OFFICE FOR THE AGING; SENIOR NUTRITION/DINING PROGRAM. Operates Senior Dining Sites throughout the county, which offer nutritious, hot meals from 11:30 a.m.-noon. Kingston Mid-town Neighborhood Center, 467 Broadway, Kingston. (845)336-7112. Open Monday, Wednesday & Friday. They also provide an opportunity to socialize w/others who have similar interests. Guidelines: Please call the site between 10 a.m.-noon. the day before you plan to attend in order to be sure there are enough meals for everyone. Eligibility: You must be an Ulster County resident aged 60 or over. Cost: There is no set cost, but a suggested daily donation of $3 is requested.

702

art services

OIL PAINTING RESTORATION. Cleaned, relined, retouched, refinished. Also frames & wood sculptures repaired. Call Carol 6877813. c.field@earthlink.net

Free Estimates • Fully Insured

Chris Lopez • 845-256-7022 *CONSCIOUS CLEANING, CONSCIOUS CARE!* Bundle of energy w/a Zen attitude. Efficient and very organized. I can make beauty out of disorder. Allergic to cats. Woodstock/Kingston/Rhinebeck vicinity. Call Robyn, 339-9458. CLEAN UPS, CLEAN OUTS. Indoor/ Outdoor. Junk & debris removal. Estates prepared for Moving and Sale. (845)6882253.

717

720

organizing/ decorating/ refinishing

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

715

painting/odd jobs

“ABOVE AND BEYOND” HOUSEPAINTING by Quadrattura. Add value to your home economically. Environmentally conscious work done w/old world craftsmanship and pride. Interior/Exterior/Decorator Finishes, Expert Color Consultation, Plastering, Wallpaper Removal, Light Carpentry. Call 679-9036 for Free Estimate. Senior Discount. Incorporated 1985

office and computer services

Typing/Word Processing Service available to type your essays, audio transcriptions, presentations, etc. 100% confidentiality. Call 917-426-1673. www.facebook.com/moreofficesolutions

710

caretaking/ home management

cleaning services

COUNTRY CLEANERS Homes & Offices • Insured & Bonded

Excellent references.

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

Minute Maids Cleaning Service We take care of your business, vacation or personal home! ~ references available ~

Call Petrina @ 845.247.0966

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

750

eclectic services

All Persian carpets imported before US Trade Embargo AUCTION OF AIR CARGO U.S. Customs Cleared • All Duties Paid Shipment released to join other rolls of Persian, Caucasian, Armenian & Turkish rugs Classifications: Tabriz, Kashan, Kerman, Qum, Isfahan, Bidjar, Long Hall Runners, Pure Silk Rugs, Sarouk, Hamadan, Heriz, Classic Tribal Rugs, etc. BALES TO BE OPENED ON SITE AND LIQUIDATED PIECE BY PIECE TO THE PUBLIC AT QUALITY INN CONFERENCE CENTER BALLROOM Cash, Check, VISA, MC, Discover. 10% buyers premium. No admission charge. No liens, Terms: encumbrances or outstanding charges. No delivery, goods released only for immediate disposal, payment and removal. In accordance with US government laws, each carpet labelled with country of origin, fiber content and Certified genuine handmade. Phone 1-301-762-6962

PUBLIC NOTICE

VALUABLE PERSIAN RUGS

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

NYS DOT T-12467

705

37

ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

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

Shandaken, NY 845-688-2253 HAB HABERWASH PRESSURE WASHING PR & EXTERIOR PAINTING & STAINING. Residential and Commercial Specializing in decks, fences, roofs, driveways, patios.

FREE ESTIMATES, FULLY INSURED Accepting All Major Credit Cards

Contact Jason Habernig

845-331-4966, 845-249-8668 • Interior & Exterior painting • Power Washing • Sheetrock & Plaster Repair • Free Estimates Multiple References Available Upon Request Licensed & Insured 845-255-0979 • ritaccopainting.com QUALITY • VALUE • RELIABILITY • SINCE 1980

SUMMER SPECIAL! TRANSFORMATION RESTORATION

Interior/Exterior Painting Deck Staining • Power Washing 10% OFF ALL QUOTES FOR SENIORS CALL TODAY! References available • Fully Insured

Call Chris 845-902-3020

Woodstock’s Grime Busters P owe r Wa s h i n g Serving the Hudson Valley — Since 1990 —

845-679-WASH

EXPERIENCED HANDYMAN WITH A VAN. Carpentry, painting, flatscreen mounting, light hauling/delivery, clean-outs. Second home caretaking. All small/medium jobs considered. Artist friendly. Versatile, trustworthy, creative, thrifty. References. Ken Fix It. 845-616-7999. Experienced- TROMPE O’LOEIL and FAUX FINISHING, 20 yrs. in Paris, and 10 yrs. locally. References and insured. Call Casimir: 845-430-3195 or 845-616- 0872. GARY BUCKENDORF CUSTOM PAINTING. Interior/Exterior, color matching, wallpaper, plaster repair. MFA. Affordable Prices. Call Gary Buckendorf (917)593-5069 or (845)657-9561. HANDYALL SERVICES: *Carpentry, *Plumbing, *Electrical, *Painting, *Excavating & Grading. 5 ton dump trailer. Trees cut, Yards cleaned & mowed. Snow Removal. Call Dave (845)514-6503- mobile. HB Painting & Construction INC. *Painting: Interior/Exterior, Pressure-Washing, Staining, Glazing... *Construction: Home Renovations, Additions, Bathrooms, Kitchen, Doors, Windows, Decks, Roofs, Gutters, Tile, Hardwood Floors (New-Refinish), Sheetrock, Tape. Snowplowing. Call 845-616-9832. MAN WITH A VAN MOVING & DELIVERY SERVICE. 16’ trucks, 10’ van. Reliable, insured, NYS DOT 32476. 8 Enterprise Road, New Paltz, NY. Please call Dave at 255-6347. YOU CALL I HAUL. Attic, basements, garages cleaned out. Junk, debris, removed. 20% discount for seniors and disabled. Gary (845)247-7365 or www. garyshauling.com

725

Stoneridge Electric www.stoneridgeelectric.com • Outdoor & Garden • Ceiling Fans Lighting • Service Upgrades • Swimming Pools & • Standby Generators Spas

Authorized Dealer & Installer Low-Rate Financing Available

e w Emergency Generators r y LICENSED 331-4227 INSURED

740

building services

AFFORDABLE HANDYMAN SERVICES. Carpentry of all kinds- rough to finish and built-ins. Bathroom and kitchen renos to small plumbing repairs. New tile surfaces or repairs. New floors finished or repaired. Door and window replacements or repair. Porches, decks, stairs. Electrical installs and repair. Insured, References. 845-857-5843. D AND S IMPROVEMENTS: Home improvement, repair and maintenance, from the smallest repairs to large renovations. Over 50 years of combined experience. Fully insured. www.dandsimprovements. com (845)339-3017 HANDYMAN, HOME REPAIR, Carpentry, Remodels, Installations, Roofing, Painting, Mechanical repairs, etc. Large and small jobs. Reasonable rates. Free estimates. References available. (845)616-7470.

Building with pride.

plumbing, heating, a/c and electric

CAPITOL ELECTRIC. www.capitalelectric-ny.com New electrical systems, service upgrades, pool wiring, emergency generators, electrical repair & maintenance. Over 25 years experience. Licensed & Insured. 845-255-7088.

ASHOKAN STORE-IT Ask About Our Long Term Storage Discount 5x10

5x15

10x10

10x15

10x20

$35

$45

$60

$80

$100

Professional Craftsmanship for all Phases of Construction

845-331-4844 hughnameit@yahoo.com

Inter s ’ d e T

iors & Remodeling In c.

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

Reliable, Dependable & Insured Call for an estimate

845-688-7951

www.tedsinteriors.com

845-657-2494 845-389-0504

AA Statuary & Weathervane Co.

1 Ridge Rd., Shokan, NY 12481

redrockgardencenter.com 845-569-1117

Liquidation Sale

Plaster and concrete saints, angels, bronzes, weathervanes, cupolas, more


38

ALMANAC WEEKLY Specializing in Tibetan Stone Masonry

AFFORDABLE ROOFING & SIDING All Phases of Construction RooďŹ ng • Siding • Kitchens • Baths • Decks • Tile • Flooring Fully Insured ~ Free Estimates

• • • •

Julien Hillyer West Hurley, NY • 845-684-7036

Shambhala Stone Mason

Brick Work Patio Work Stone Flooring Stone Garden Layout • Painting Work • Various other stone related work

Contracting & Development Corp.

William Watson • Residential / Commercial

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

760

Reasonably Priced Quality Work

Quality service from the ground up

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

RG

Field Mowing

Down to Earth Landscaping Specializing in: Hardscape Tree trimming Fences Koi ponds Snow plowing

COMPLETE LANDSCAPING & LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE

by Rim 845-594-8705 PREMIUM BLACK TOPSOIL. Screened and mixed with organic manure. Special garden mix, organic compost, stone, sand, fill and other products available. Lab tested w/results provided upon request. NYS, DOT & DEP approved. Excellent quality. Any quantity. Loaded or delivered. 33+ years of service. 845-389-6989, 845-687-0030 SPRINGTOWN LANDSCAPES & IRRIGATION. Specializing in Garden Irrigation Systems. Retaining Walls, Walkways, Patios & Mowing. Bill Dietz, 12 N. Ohioville Road, New Paltz. (845)255-3800. springtownlandscapes@hvc.rr.com

845-246-0225

770

excavating services

Paramount

luorongyapi@gmail.com. (845) 399-1063, (646) 898-9808 7 days a week service!

• • • • •

gardening/ landscaping

Excavation Site work Drain Âżelds Land clearing Septic systems Demolition Driveways

Landscaping Lawn installation Ponds Retaining walls Stone work ...and much more

www.shambhalastonemason.com WINECOFF QUALITY CONTRACTING. New Construction, Additions, Renovations. INTERIOR/EXTERIOR. Deck, Kitchens, Bathrooms, All types of Flooring, Tile Work. Demolition, Rotten Wood Repairs, Minor Repairs and Property Maintenance. Dump trailer services. Stefan Winecoff, 845-389-2549.

August 7, 2014

Septic Systems • Drainage Driveways • Tree Removal Retaining Walls • Ponds

(845) 679-4742

schafferexcavating.com

890

spirituality

Laurie Oliver — Spiritual Counseling GIVE THE GIFT OF WELLNESS Make positive changes in your life through hypnosis. Smoking cessation • pain management stress relief • past life regressions.

Intuitive, Sensitive Guidance Spirit Communicator

(845) 679-2243 • laur50@aol.com

900

personals

ATHLETIC MALE AVAILABLE FOR nude photography projects. Seeks/prefers female photographer. Call Tom at (845)4626305.

ULSTER PUBLISHING OFFICIAL PROGRAM

TASTE OF NEW PALTZ

A Hudson Valley Festival of Food and Fun

5WPFC[ 5GRVGODGT ç CO RO Rain or shine. Under tents. Free parking. Ulster County Fairgrounds, New Paltz.

DEAR BUSINESSMAN/WOMAN- We at Hardscrabble Flea Market & Swap Meet would like to congratulate you on being picked from over 100 businesses in your field. We believe we can help each other- We have a swap meet every Sunday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. at Holy Cow Shopping Center, in addition to a flea market/garage sale. We find that when business people set up a table w/business cards & flyers or “show how to do� projects it will definitely increase your business (and mine). It’s a great way to introduce your business to new/old customers. And, if you have leftover merchandise you’d like to sell- this would be a perfect way to unload it. Please give John a call for more details- (845)7581170. Spots are $12-$35.

950

animals

DIANA’S FANCY FLEA MARKET: Nice Items Needed For Next Sale! Call Diana 626-0221. To Benefit Diana’s CAT Shelter in Accord.

O

nce again, the New Paltz Regional Chamber of Commerce will present its 24th annual “Taste of New Paltz� event at the Ulster County Fairgrounds. Although food is the centerpiece, other exhibits include Antiques, Business Expo, Children’s Events, Country Store, Crafts, Farm Market, Fine Arts, Restaurants, Wellness, Recreation and Wineries. Advertise now!!! Let us carry your message to over 125,000 prospective customers in the Hudson Valley’s most widely read weeklies. Additional copies will be distributed to all attendees at the September 14th event. Contact your Advertising Representative today to discuss the details.

ALMANAC WEEKLY

READERSHIP Advertisers are looking for potential customers with purchasing power. Our readers are upper-income, active and engaged.

DISTRIBUTION

Reach 125,000 potential customers: 60,000 readers of Ulster Publishing’s five weekly papers, plus a digital version for our 65,000 web readers many from New York City.

HOW TO GET IN Contact sales at 845-334-8200 or info@ulsterpublishing.com

8/29

9/4

ad deadline

publication

DID YOU KNOW there are wonderful RABBITS ready for adoption at the Ulster County SPCA? Here are just a few(All are spayed females!) TINA; young adult Chinchilla/Flemish; VIPER; Very friendly and litter box trained; FLOSSIE; ADOPTED!!!! very active young adult Chinchilla/Flemish. In addition, we have OUTSTANDING DOGS. You can meet them & their friends when you visit the UCSPCA... DOGS: Sheba; 7-years old & has spent the majority of her life at shelters. Please give her the life she has always dreamed of! Spot; 4-year old mixed breed. Needs lots of love & calm house. Can be shy when meeting new people but once he loves you, it’s forever! Meko; Best w/ experienced dog owners. Sweet & will protect you from anything! He’ll be your best buddy. Dutchess; 3-year old Neapolitan Mastiff. She’s very playful w/dogs & would do best in home w/no children as sometimes she doesn’t know her own strength. Briggs; 2-year old mixed breed who loves to go for runs & gets along great w/dogs & cats. I’d like a home w/adults or older children. NEW! Bilbo; 2-year old male lab mix, separation anxiety, better w/adults, likes other dogs & has an interest in cats. CATS: Victoria; 8-years young, brown & black tiger. She’s our sassiest cat. Would do best in a home all to herself. She’s spent most of her shelter life in a cage because she isn’t a fan of other cats. Please give her some room to roam. Vindaloo; Long Hair, friendly neutered male tan/black/white. Goosfrahba; Large neutered male; white w/tiger markings & VERY friendly. NEW!


39

ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

Customer must qualify. Silverado 2500 Double Cabs Excluded . Bedliner Special for 2014 and 2015 model year Silverado 1500 double cabs with 6 1/2 foot bed only. See dealer for details. Raven; 2-years old, female, all black cat is affectionate, vocal & an absolute pleasure to be around; Hammerjaw; 2-year old gray tiger who was a victim of the New Paltz hoarding case a year ago. Even though he came from such a horrible situation, he’s a loving cat who wants to be around people. And we have KITTENS who will simply steal your heart! Come see THEM ALL at the Ulster County SPCA, 20 Wiedy Road, Kingston. (845)331-5377. Looking for a Permanent, Dedicated, Loving home; BLACK & WHITE SHORTHAIRED KITTENS- 2 boys, 1 girl. Free. Call (845)616-9142. PROJECT CAT is a non-profit cat RESCUE AND SHELTER. Please help get cats off the streets and into homes. Adopt a healthy and friendly cat or kitten companion for a lifetime. High Falls/ Accord area. 845-687-4983 or visit our cats at www.projectcat.org WHAT COULD BE BETTER? Saving money & helping shelter animals at the same time! SHOP FOR A CAUSESATURDAY, AUGUST 23 - MACY*S.... Buy a 25% Off (10% in some departments & other exclusions apply) Savings Pass for $5. $5 from the Savings Pass goes directly to the Ulster County SPCA! Then shop, shop & shop some more! Back to school, early holiday gifts, something special or just because! And save on almost everything in the store!! When you buy the $5 Saving Pass, you also get a chance to win a $500 Macy*s Gift Card! We plan to have some of our wonderful shelter dogs to greet you!!

960

pet care

HORSE BOARDING: Looking for a single horse to board w/my 26-yr. old mare. Mild-mannered gelding ideal. Retired horse lifestyle on 8 acres of pasture, run-in barn, Stone Ridge area. $300/month includes hay, fly care, holding for farrier, and blanketing on extra cold days. Grain, farrier and vet expenses not included. Call Shannah 845-797-1393.

255-8281

633-0306

Pet Sitting Playdates Dog Walking s plu PETWATCH Loving Cat Care est. 1987 1987 est.

679-6070 Susan Susan Roth Roth 679-6070

NEEDED: Foster Homes for Kittens. If you have the time (little is needed) and space to foster kittens, our organization will provide kitten food and if necessary, medical attention for these wonderful beings. Please call (917)282-2018 if you are interested in this rewarding endeavor.

pet’s reward..... VETERINARY HOUSE CALLS. Dr. B. MacMULLEN. (845)3392516. Serving Ulster County for 10+ years. Very Reasonable Rates, Multiple Pet Discount... Compassionate, Professional, Courteous. *Pet Exams, *Vaccines, *Blood Work, *Lyme Testing, *Flea & Tick Prevention, *Rx Diet, *Euthanasia at home. THE K-9 CONSULTANT. Banishing unwanted behaviors. Also offering: inhome boarding, dog walking, pet sitting, exercise sessions & dog daycare starting at $4/hr. (845)687-7726 or visit my website: k9consultant.net

970

horse care

HORSE BOARDING: Looking for a single horse to board w/my 26-yr. old mare. Mild-mannered gelding ideal. Retired horse lifestyle on 8 acres of pasture, runin barn, Stone Ridge area. $300/month includes hay, fly care, holding for farrier, and blanketing on extra cold days. Grain, farrier and vet expenses not included. Call Shannah 845-797-1393.

990

boats/ recreational vehicles

999

vehicles wanted

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

1000

vehicles

2008 WHITE FORD F150 TRUCK, 79,000 miles, long bed, V6 with tow package. $12,500 OBO. Please e-mail jthomas@theteal.com or call 914-466-4479. HONDA CIVIC EX COUP, silver, 2006, 5-speed. $3500. Drives excellent. Call (914)619-3785.

THE HEN & THE COD The Codfish lays ten thousand eggs, The Chicken lays but one; But a Codfish never cackles to tell you what she’s done. And so, we scorn the Codfish, while the humble Hen we prize; Which only goes to show you that: IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE! ULSTER PUBLISHING

1 BOAT: 12’ Meyers Rowboat- purchased new- never used; $700. Call (845)6798442.

Phone: 845-334-8200 E-mail: ads@ulsterpublishing.com Web: ulsterpublishing/advertise


40

ALMANAC WEEKLY

August 7, 2014

OVER 2000

NEW & PR

E-OWNED

VEHICLES AVAILABLE !

Ron Mancinelli GM

2011 FORD

EDGE

2011 FORD

SEL AWD

Vincent Paliotta GSM

Plus Tax & Tags

BUY FOR:

EQUINOX LS AWD

Ken Winters Sales Mgr.

14 299

#6: '03

RANGER $

,

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

"VUP DZM QPXFS TUFFSJOH BN GN BMMPZT B D L NJMFT 4UL ,

2012 HONDA

Melissa Sasso Office Mgr.

CIVIC $ EX

16 607 #6: '03

,

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

"VUP DZM QPXFS PQUJPOT CVDLFUT B D L NJMFT 4UL ,

2012 HYUNDAI

18 711

#6: '03

SONATA $ SE

,

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

"VUP DZM QPXFS TUFFSJOH CSBLFT BMMPZT DSVJTF B D L NJMFT 4UL ,

Gene Dachenhausen Parts Mgr.

"VUP DZM QPXFS TUFFSJOH QPXFS NJSSPST BMMPZT QPXFS XJOEPXT EVBM BJSCBHT DSVJTF B D QPXFS MPDLT UJMU L NJMFT 4UL ,

$8 ,599 FUSION $10,892 RAV 4 $11 ,420 2008 FORD

#6: '03

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

XLT 4X4

Nick Sakellariou Parts & Service Director

Plus Tax & Tags

2008 TOYOTA

#6: '03

SE

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

"VUP DZM QPXFS TUFFSJOH NJSSPST XJOEPXT MPDLT L NJMFT 4UL , "VUP DZM QPXFS TUFFSJOH XJOEPXT MPDLT BMMPZT B D L NJMFT 4UL ,

2006 FORD

SE

BUY FOR:

"VUP DZM BMMPZT QPXFS NJSSPST QPXFS XJOEPXT QPXFS TFBUT LFZMFTT DSVJTF BJS DPOEJUJPOJOH MFBUIFS L NJMFT 4UL , 2007 CHEVROLET

FUSION

2012 CHEVROLET

CRUZE $ LS

,

CRV EX AWD

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

Thomas Carter Internet Mgr.

"VUP DZM QPXFS PQUJPOT BMMPZT DSVJTF B D L NJMFT 4UL ,

14 314 DTS 1MVT 5BY 5BHT

"VUP DZM QPXFS TUFFSJOH XJOEPXT MPDLT B D L NJMFT 4UL ,

2011 HONDA

4X4

2007 CADILLAC

#6: '03

#6: '03

$15 ,988 #6: '03

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

"VUP 7 QPXFS PQUJPOT BCT LFZMFTT B D UJMU NJMFT 4UL ,

$16 ,867 MKZ $16 ,995 2012 LINCOLN

#6: '03

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

"VUP DZM QPXFS PQUJPOT B D BN GN L NJMFT 4UL ,

2013 FORD

F-150 $ XL 4X2

#6: '03

21 282 #6: '03

,

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

"VUP 7 BN GN DE QPXFS PQUJPOT B D L NJMFT 4UL ,

Andy Gayton Body Shop Mgr.

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

"VUP DZM QPXFS PQUJPOT LFZMFTT DSVJTF B D MFBUIFS L NJMFT 4UL ,

2013 FORD

22 399

ESCAPE $ SE 4X4

#6: '03

,

1MVT 5BY 5BHT

"VUP DZM BN GN BMMPZT BCT Q PQUT CVDLFUT B D L NJMFT 4UL ,

WE CAN HELP GET YOU APPROVED! CREDIT ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE

Matthew Gelsleichter Advertising Mgr.

.9% FINANCING UP TO 36 MONTHS* All Ford Certified Pre-Owned vehicles come with: É 172-point inspection by factory-trained technicians É 7-year/100,000-mile Ford Powertrain Warranty Coverage É 12-month/12,000-mile Ford Comprehensive Limited Warranty Coverage É Vehicle history report É 24/7 Roadside Assistance

Everyone Can Afford...

www.AllAmericanFord.net SPECIAL COUPONS & EXCLUSIVE DAILY DEALS! SHOP ONLINE 24/7 Sales Hours: Monday-Friday: 9am-9pm, Saturday 9am-6pm

COLLISION

& AUTOBODY FORD & LINCOLN SERVICE CENTER & BODY SHOP! 4 GREAT LOCATIONS! WITH GREAT LOW PRICES! HACKENSACK PARAMUS 520 RIVER STREET 375 RT. 17 SOUTH 1-866-I-LOVE-FORD 1-888-88-ALL-AMERICAN OLD BRIDGE KINGSTON NY 3698 RT. 9 SOUTH 128 RT. 28 1-800-BUY-FORD 1-845-338-7800

FIND US. POST. FOLLOW.

Service: Monday-Friday: 7:30am-7pm, Saturday 8am-4pm

Prices include all costs to be paid by a consumer except license, tax, registration & fees. *.9% financing up to 36 months for qualified buyers. Photos for illlustrative purposes only. See dealer for details. Offers expire 72 hours after publication.


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