Friday, May 4, 2012
Study Cruises at Maritime Aquarium Opens May 5- June 20
Share a memorable boat ride with crabs, fish, lobsters and other creatures brought up right out of Long Island Sound right before your eyes in a new season of hands-on study cruises with The Maritime Aquarium at Norwalk.
The Aquarium’s exciting Marine Life Study Cruises will depart on Saturdays at 1 p.m. May 5-June 30. They’ll push off at 1 p.m. daily in July and August.
The recent ‘FINtastic RefurbFISHment,’at The Maritime Aquarium’s exhibits are devoted to teaching visitors about Long Island Sound. The best exhibits can’t top the immediacy and impact when study-cruise participants see these animals come up onto the boat right in front of them.
During each 21/2-hour Marine Life Study Cruise aboard the research vessel Oceanic, animals are collected from different water levels and bottom habitats of the Sound. A video microscope provides a magnified look at wriggly plankton gathered at the sunlit surface. Tiny crabs and worms emerge from a sampling of the anaerobic muddy bottom. A biodredge reveals a hidden world of sponges, snails and mollusks. And everyone inspects the trawl net’s bounty – varieties of fish and crabs, lobsters, sea stars, squid and always a few surprises.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Lockwood-Mathews Mansion Museum Hosts Victorian Tea May 6
Lockwood Mathews Mansion Norwalk CT |
The Lockwood-Mathews Mansion Museum at 295 West Avenue will host its fourth Annual Victorian Tea, May 6, 2012 at 2 p.m. in the Rotunda of the Mansion. The event will feature English tea ceremony expert and celebrity caterer Carol Timpanelli, owner of the Royal Tea Company of Trumbull, CT. She has catered for Martha Stewart and Tommy Hilfiger among others. Ms. Timpanelli’s English tea will include a wide selection of desserts, sandwiches, traditional scones and cream and her signature chocolate toffee trifle.
The Lockwood-Mathews Mansion Museum is one of the most significant Gilded Age mansions in the U.S. and a very elegant venue for a formal tea,” said Publisher of Cottages & Gardens Publications, Marianne Howatson, event chair. “LMMM's annual Victorian tea is also a delightful event where families and friends get together to enjoy a cherished tradition while supporting a National Historic Landmark.”
The event will also feature harpist Katie Critelli. Katie has received two prestigious Gold Cup awards for excellence from the American Harp Society at Fairfield University’s Young Musicians Festival. Before leaving Darien to attend University of Pennsylvania, she was a harpist with the Norwalk Youth Symphony Concert Orchestra for three and a half years, played in the Western Regional Orchestra in 2009 and was a member of the Darien High School Orchestra.
For reservations contact: info@lockwoodmathewsmansion.com or call 203-838-9799 ext. 4. Admission: $45 non-members $35 members.
Monday, April 30, 2012
Westport Country Playhouse Opens Season With “Into the Woods"
Into the Woods Laren Kennedy, Erik Liberman and Danielle Ferland |
A 25th anniversary production of the imaginative, fractured-fairy tale musical “Into the Woods” by James Lapine and Stephen Sondheim will be staged at the theater where Sondheim was an apprentice in 1950, Westport Country Playhouse, in Westport, CT, May 1 through May 26. Directed by Mark Lamos, the Playhouse’s artistic director, the musical will open the historic theater’s 82nd season. It is co-produced with Baltimore’s CENTERSTAGE.
A multiple Tony Award winner, “Into the Woods” takes the audience to a beguiling and dark place inspired by the Grimm fairy tales. Among the classic characters that wander the woods searching for fulfillment of their wishes are Cinderella and her wicked stepsisters, Little Red Ridinghood and the Wolf, Rapunzel and her Prince, and Jack of beanstalk fame. As their fanciful tales intertwine, they are forced to confront the harsh reality of what actually happens after “happily ever after.”
Director Mark Lamos, who also serves as Westport Country Playhouse artistic director, has helmed Playhouse productions of “Twelfth Night, or What You Will”; “Lips Together, Teeth Apart”; “Happy Days”; “She Loves Me”; “The Breath of Life”; “That Championship Season”; and “Of Mice and Men.” His extensive New York credits include “Our Country’s Good,” for which he received a Tony Award nomination. A former artistic director at Hartford Stage, he received the 1989 Tony Award for the theater’s body of work.
The performance schedule is Tuesday at 8 p.m., Wednesday at 2 and 8 p.m., Thursday and Friday at 8 p.m., Saturday at 3 and 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. Special series feature A Taste of Tuesday, Previews, LGBT Night Out, Opening Night, Thursday TalkBack, Sunday Symposium and Backstage Pass. In addition, the Playhouse will offer an open captioned performance on Sunday, May 13, 3 p.m., for the hearing impaired.
For more information or tickets, call the box office at (203) 227-4177, or toll-free at 1-888-927-7529, or visit Westport Country Playhouse, 25 Powers Court, off Route 1, Westport. Tickets are available online 24/7 at www.westportplayhouse.org.
About the Playhouse
Westport Country Playhouse is a nationally recognized, not-for-profit, professional theater under the artistic direction of Mark Lamos and management leadership of Michael Ross. The Playhouse creates five live theater experiences, produced at the highest level, from April through November. Its vital mix of works—dramatic, comedic, occasionally exploratory and unusual—expands the audience’s sense of what theater can be. The depth and scope of its productions display the foremost theatrical literature from the past—recent as well as distant—in addition to musicals and premieres of new plays. During the summer, the Playhouse is home to the Woodward Internship Program, renowned for the training of aspiring theater professionals. Winter at the Playhouse, from November through March, offers events outside of the main season—Family Festivities presentations, Script in Hand play readings and a Holiday Festival. In addition, businesses and organizations are encouraged to rent the handsome facility for their meetings, receptions and fundraisers.
Saturday, April 21, 2012
Quassy Amusement Park Opens April 28, 2012!
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Philip Johnson Glass House Annouces “A Modern Picnic”
The annual dining and culinary event at The Philip Johnson Glass
House will take place on June 9, 2012. The Philip Johnson Glass House is
a site of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
The event is called, “A Modern Picnic”, and will provide event goers a repertoire of unique dining and culinary experiences. Participants will be invited to meet award-winning chefs and artisans from across the country; and explore the buildings, grounds and art collections of the 29-acre Glass House site. This event takes place from 12 noon to 3 PM.
One of the favorite activities of this event takes place at 6:30 PM. The event’s culmination is the popular “Food Festival Under the Stars”. It is pure magic to experience the Glass House as the sun sets, while watching and tasting what’s on screen as the Food Festival presents a multi-sensory experience. Visitors are offered the added bonus of meeting the filmmakers, artisans and chefs behind these award winning food and dining films.
The event is called, “A Modern Picnic”, and will provide event goers a repertoire of unique dining and culinary experiences. Participants will be invited to meet award-winning chefs and artisans from across the country; and explore the buildings, grounds and art collections of the 29-acre Glass House site. This event takes place from 12 noon to 3 PM.
One of the favorite activities of this event takes place at 6:30 PM. The event’s culmination is the popular “Food Festival Under the Stars”. It is pure magic to experience the Glass House as the sun sets, while watching and tasting what’s on screen as the Food Festival presents a multi-sensory experience. Visitors are offered the added bonus of meeting the filmmakers, artisans and chefs behind these award winning food and dining films.
Earth Day Celebrations Provide Plenty of Family Fun!
Party for the Planet at Beardsley Zoo |
Earth Day, originating in 1970 has continued to grow and evolve throughout the United States. This movement lead to the creation of the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the Clean Air, Clean Water and Endangered Species Act. Today, Earth Day is an important focal point for people world-wide to demonstrate their commitment to the environment. In Connecticut there are many Earth Day events to choose from.
Celebrate Earth Day on Sunday, April 22 with a visit to Bartlett Arboretum & Gardens and view their beautiful grounds and listen to some incredible jazz from 2PM to 4 PM. This concert will feature a performance by four renowned Jazz performers; guitarist Gene Bertoncini and special guests drummer Joe Corsella; violinist Sara Caswell and bassist Michael Moore. Tickets are $25 for members and $30 for non-members; space is limited. Call 203-322-6971 or visit www.bartlettarboretum.org.
The Sharon Audubon Center on 325 Cornwall Bridge Rd. in Sharon CT is hosting a free session at 2:00 PM on Rain Gardens and why every drop of water counts. Participants will learn why you should plant a rain garden and how one can help your property and the environment. To register for this event, or for more information call 860-364-0520 or visit www.sharon.audubon.org.
The Darien Nature Center located on 120 Brookside Rd. will celebrate Earth Day with the Opening Reception of Earthworks, a collaborative exhibit by area artists Heidi Lewis Coleman, Lucy Krupenye and Nancy Woodward and curated by Ann Hart. The reception will be held on Earth Day, Sunday, April 22 from 3:00 – 5:00 p.m. and will be on view through June 8th in the Nature Center’s Wetherstone Gallery. In this stunning exhibit inspired by nature, each artist pays homage to the beauty of the current, the remnants of the past and the wonder of the unknown future. The assembled works are a celebration of nature’s simplicities and complexities. For more information call 203-655-7459 or visit www.dariennaturecenter.org.
At the Institute for American Indian Studies on 38 Curtis Rd. in Washington, visitors are invited to celebrate Earth Day with Atka, a live artic gray wolf at 1PM. Atka is being welcomed back from the Wolf Conservation Center of South Salem, N.Y. and is their oldest and most traveled ambassador wolf. The center staff will share facts, history and dispel many misconceptions about wolves and our role in protecting the future of wolves. There is limited seating so reserve and pay in advance. The fee is $10 for adults and $6 for kids. For information, call 860-868-0518 or visit www.iaismuseum.org.
Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo located on 1875 Noble Ave in Bridgeport is celebrating Earth Day by throwing a Party for the Planet! As part of the 42nd anniversary of Earth Day, the Zoo is offering environmental education activities, amazing animal encounters, and fun for the whole family. This conservation themed bash will take place on Saturday, April 21 and Sunday, April 22 from 9:00 am until 3:00 pm and will shine a light on initiatives that make our planet a more sustainable place to live. This event is FREE with paid admission to the Zoo. For more information visit http://www.beardsleyzoo.org.
Stepping Stones Museum for Children on 303 West Ave. in Norwalk, is celebrating Earth Day on Sunday, April 22, with drop-in activities in the Community Garden 10 am – 1 pm. Go on a nature scavenger hunt, experiment with tools to measure weather, paint en plein air and plant seeds to take home and watch grow. At 11 am the museum presents The Attainable Sustainable Energy Show, a wacky, action-packed live science show that will inspire excitement in renewable energy. Free with $15 museum admission. For more information, call (203) 899-0606 or visit www.steppingstonesmuseum.org.
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Monday, April 16, 2012
20 Years of Chamber Music At Keeler Tavern Museum April 22 and May 20
Keeler Tavern a Colonial Gem |
The
Mid-Hudson Saxophone Quarter will perform in the Garden House of the Keeler
Tavern Museum located on 132 Main Street in Ridgefield Connecticut on Sunday, April 22 at
3:00 PM. This is the first of two spring concerts scheduled as part of the
Louise McKeon Chamber Music Concert Series held at the Museum for over 20
years.
The
saxophone musicians are Steven Kieley, soprano and alto, Deborah Tice, soprano
and alto, Daniel Teare, tenor, and Charles W. Gray, baritone. They will perform
a variety of musical selections suited to this special instrument. All
are performing or teaching in the Hudson Valley area schools and colleges and
perform at a variety of conventions and with groups in the Hudson Valley and
other areas along the Eastern Seaboard.
Admission
at the door is $15 for adults, $12 for seniors and students, and $10 for
children under 12. All guests are invited to meet with the musicians after the
concert and enjoy light refreshments.
The
final concert of the season will take place Sunday, May 20th with members of
the Western Connecticut Youth Orchestras performing in the Garden House at 3 PM
For further information call 203-438-5484 or visit www.keelertavernmuseum.org.
About
Keeler Tavern
The Keeler Tavern Preservation Society, Inc. founded the
Keeler Tavern Museum in 1966 as a living museum of colonial history within the
town of Ridgefield, Connecticut.
It is the Society's mission to preserve and protect the
Keeler Tavern, a site listed on the National Register of Historic Places since
1982, that embodies the life of the community from the early 19th century
through the mid 20th century.
The Society is committed to promoting Ridgefield's history
and heritage by providing educational and cultural programs that interpret the
past for present and future generations.
The history of the Tavern and the Town of Ridgefield is
reflected in the stories of the families who lived here. The archives of the
Museum include extensive documentation and records from the Keeler, Resseguie and Gilbert
families.
Monday, April 9, 2012
Kent Singers Concert Celebrates Spring
Kent Singers |
The Kent Singers return for the Spring Concert of the 39th season on April 15, 2012, at St. Andrew’s Church in Kent, and on April 22 at St. Mark’s Bridgewater. Both concerts are scheduled for 3 p.m.
The
highly acclaimed group features singers from throughout Northwest
Connecticut performing mostly four-part classical compositions. They
have built a reputation for presenting some of the finest choral music.
They are all volunteers, including Music Director, Mark Brooks.
STEPPING STONES MUSEUM FOR CHILDREN CELEBRATES IRELAND DURING VACATION WEEK APRIL 14-20
Stepping Stones Museum For Children |
Stepping
Stones Museum for Children will treat visitors to a taste of Ireland with a
performance by the Tigh Na Coille Irish Youth Folklore Troupe from County
Clare, Ireland, on Saturday, April 14.
The
following week, the museum will also offer crafts, storytelling and other
activities inspired by the Emerald Isle.
Made up of twelve young musicians and dancers from the heart of Ireland,
the Tigh Na Coille Irish Youth Folklore Troupe brings traditional Irish music
and dance to the museum. Award-winning master fiddler Denis Liddy will join the
Troupe for this special Around the World performance at 2 p.m. in the museum's
multimedia gallery. Members of the
Troupe will also lead an interactive workshop at 1 p.m.
Visitors
are invited to meet, dance and sing with these talented young performers. The Troupe
will demonstrate traditional Irish instruments and teach participants a bit of
Gaelic.
The
museum continues its celebration of Irish history and culture April 16-20 with
a different activity each day, such as making a Celtic pendant and a replica
harp. Activities will occur at 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. daily.
The
performance, workshop and vacation week activities are all free with museum admission.
Irish Troupe to Perform at Stepping Stones |
Vacation
Week Schedule:
Saturday,
April 14, The Tigh Na Coille Irish Youth Folklore Troupe will lead an interactive
workshop at 1 p.m., followed by a musical performance at 2 p.m.
Monday,
April 16, Listen to an original fairy tale about a clever young lady who
triumphs over a greedy leprechaun king in Teresa Bateman's story Fiona's Luck.
11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Tuesday,
April 17, Make a Celtic pendant and learn about the symbols that have survived
from the Iron Age. 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Wednesday,
April 18, The harp is among the chief symbols of Ireland and was played as long
ago as the 10th century. Listen to
traditional Celtic folk music and create a replica harp. 11:30 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Thursday,
April 19, Ireland is famous for its medieval castles scattered across the green
countryside. Explore their history and create a castle to take home. 11:30 a.m.
and 2 p.m.
Friday,
April 20, Discover the work of Irish stained glass artist Harry Clarke
(1889-1931) and create a replica stained glass window. 11:30 a.m. and 2
p.m.
About
Stepping Stones Museum For Children
Stepping
Stones Museum for Children in Norwalk, Conn., is an award-winning, private,
non-profit 501(c)(3) children's museum committed to broadening and enriching
the lives of children and families. Located on five acres in Mathews Park, the
recently expanded LEED Gold certified museum encompasses five hands-on galleries,
state-of-the-art Multimedia Gallery, Family and Teacher Resource Center, café
and retail store.
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Wednesday, April 4, 2012
SHERATON STAMFORD HOTEL AWARDED NEW BUILDS & TRANSITIONS HOTEL OF THE YEAR
Newly Renovated Sheraton Stamford Hotel |
This month at their Annual Meeting, Starwood Hotels & Resorts awarded the Sheraton Stamford Hotel as the“New Builds & Transitions Hotel of the Year.” The hotel, owned by RockBridge Capital and managed by Davidson Hotels & resorts, converted to the Sheraton brand on July 12, 2011.
With the hotel’s increase in revenues and RevPar Index, their compliance to Brand Standards, and high loyalty scores, it is understandable why they won this prestigious award.
Just a few blocks from the new Starwood Hotel & Resorts Worldwide, Inc. global headquarters, the 379-room Sheraton Stamford Hotel is considered the headquarters hotel for those visiting Starwood corporate offices and is the site for numerous Starwood corporate meetings.
Located at 700 Main Street, the hotel is within walking distance from the shops and restaurants in the recently opened Plaza at Stamford Town Center, the University of Connecticut Stamford campus and the headquarters of numerous major corporations and fortune 500 businesses.
From the Sheraton, there is convenient access to several multiplex cinemas, night clubs and Stamford’s key performance venues – Rich Forum and Palace Theatre. The hotel is just 20 minutes from the Westchester County Airport Hotel and a 45-minute train ride from New York City.
Stylish and comfortable, guest rooms and suites at Sheraton Stamford Hotel are equipped with an oversized work desk, custom-designed ergonomic chair, high-speed Internet, LCD flat panel television, iPod home docking station and the all-white Sheraton Sweet Sleeper® bed.
Friday, March 30, 2012
Brass Valley: Made in America
The Sharon Historical Society located on 18 Main Street in Sharon CT in the historic Gay-Hoyt House is hosting the work of artist Emery Roth. The show will run through April 25. Roth’s work will be displayed in the Society’s Gallery that is open Wednesday-Friday, from 10 to 4 pm and by appointment.
Emery Roth is an accomplished photographer. This exhibit melds contemporary photography of the industry of Connecticut’s Naugatuck Valley, with text and objects from the museum’s collection that tell the stories of Sharon’s industrial past. The exhibit evolved as Mr. Roth began following the old railroad tracks through the Naugatuck Valley and photographing what was left of its industrial past.
In his photographs, he was searching for rust and a glimpse of another age. He admits that he never expected to find himself in a time warp, photographing where giant hydraulics are still hissing, steel clanking, hot, glowing metal flying through the air, where the steam still rises from old pickling vats, and men charge furnaces in buildings where the soot has had more than a hundred years to cake. He never dreamed such a place still existed and took the photographs to prove that it does still exist in Connecticut. This is a show about those places.
A highlight of this show is a guided walk through the exhibit by the photographer on Sunday April 1 at 3 pm. All are invited. For additional information, contact the Sharon Historical Society at 860-364-5688 or via email sharonhistoricalsociety@yahoo.com, or our website, www.sharonhist.org.
About the Sharon Historical Society
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
The Great Egg Hunt & Spring Celebration New Canaan Nature Center
The New Canaan Nature Center’s
annual Egg Hunt is back again this year!
On Friday, March 30 and Saturday, March 31 the Nature Center will host a
series of egg hunts for small groups of children ages 2-10. The one-hour programs will take place at 2:30pm
and 3:30pm on Friday and 11am, Noon, 1:30pm and 2:30pm on Saturday. The Nature Center is located on144 Oenoke
Ridge in New Canaan (203-966-9577).
Each program will include a spring
scavenger hunt to identify signs of spring as well as a chance to meet the baby
chicks that just hatched at the Nature Center.
Kids will learn all about the magic of eggs from NCNC naturalists and
then hunt the grounds for hundreds of eggs filled with goodies. Representatives from Hop-Along-Hallow will
also be at the Saturday events with their real bunny rabbits. Hop-Along-Hollow is dedicated to helping educate
people on proper care of small pets and to create better living environments
for rabbits and other small animals.
Volunteers from the
class of 2014 National Charity League Canaan Parish collected candy donations
from league members and stuffed 2,359 eggs that are used for these special egg
hunts!
The programs will
take place in rain or shine, with the egg hunt-taking place in the tropical
greenhouse in the event of rain. These events do sell out and advance
registration required: please call (203) 966-9577x20 or register online. The program is $10/child
for members and $15/child for non-members.
open: Monday – Saturday 9:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M. Grounds open dawn to dusk daily. www.newcanaannature.orgwww.newcanaannature.org.
For more information about Fairfield County visit: www.visitfairfieldct.comwww.visitfairfieldct.com.
Monday, March 19, 2012
Ride a Vintage Train to Visit the Easter Bunny !
The Danbury Railway Museum is planning to greet the Easter Bunny once again this spring. The Easter Bunny will make his home in an authentically restored train car where he will greet young and old alike on special weekends this March and April !
To reach the Easter Bunny you will first enter the historic Danbury Railroad Station where you will board a vintage train that will take you on a fun filled ride through the historic railyard to the Easter Bunny. The short train ride in a fully-restored 1953 New Haven RR Rail Diesel Car (Budd RDC), will take visitors past the fully operational turntable, over 70 vintage railroad cars and locomotives, and many unique pieces of railroad history, including a Boston & Maine steam locomotive built in 1907.
Of special note is the museum's beautifully restored circa-1910 Railway Post Office (RPO) car that will also be open. The train ride will stop at the Easter Bunny's special railroad car. Each child will receive a small gift from the Bunny making this a great time for memorable photos that will be cherished though out the years.
An extra treat for those visiting the Easter Bunny are the exhibits inside the restored 1903 Danbury Station that include a coloring station, temporary tattoos, Thomas® play table, and operating model train layouts. A fully-stocked gift shop will also be open.
This popular annual family event will take place on Sunday, March 25; Saturday and Sunday, March 31 and April 1; and Friday & Saturday, April 6 & 7. Museum hours are 10:00-4:30 on Friday and Saturday; noon-4:30 on Sunday; trains leave every 30 minutes from 12:30 to 3:30. Admission is $9.00 (age 2 and up).
To reach the Easter Bunny you will first enter the historic Danbury Railroad Station where you will board a vintage train that will take you on a fun filled ride through the historic railyard to the Easter Bunny. The short train ride in a fully-restored 1953 New Haven RR Rail Diesel Car (Budd RDC), will take visitors past the fully operational turntable, over 70 vintage railroad cars and locomotives, and many unique pieces of railroad history, including a Boston & Maine steam locomotive built in 1907.
Of special note is the museum's beautifully restored circa-1910 Railway Post Office (RPO) car that will also be open. The train ride will stop at the Easter Bunny's special railroad car. Each child will receive a small gift from the Bunny making this a great time for memorable photos that will be cherished though out the years.
An extra treat for those visiting the Easter Bunny are the exhibits inside the restored 1903 Danbury Station that include a coloring station, temporary tattoos, Thomas® play table, and operating model train layouts. A fully-stocked gift shop will also be open.
This popular annual family event will take place on Sunday, March 25; Saturday and Sunday, March 31 and April 1; and Friday & Saturday, April 6 & 7. Museum hours are 10:00-4:30 on Friday and Saturday; noon-4:30 on Sunday; trains leave every 30 minutes from 12:30 to 3:30. Admission is $9.00 (age 2 and up).
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Litchfield Historical Society’s Civil War Exhibition, Opens in April 14 – Nov. 25
Litchfield History Museum |
Opening April 14, 2012, the Litchfield Historical Society’s new exhibition The Hour of Conflict will examine the ways in which the American Civil War impacted the residents of Litchfield, Connecticut in the 1860s. This fascinating exhibit will run through November 25th.
Although no battles occurred in Connecticut, local Litchfield families were directly affected by the events of the Civil War. Men departed town to enlist in the Union army, leaving their families behind to worry and wonder, waiting for a letter to make its way from a campground or battlefield. Women spent their time sewing clothing, wrapping bandages, and sending packages to their loved ones on the front lines. How did Litchfield families deal with the anxiety of war? How did they mourn, celebrate and cope?
The Litchfield Historical Society invites visitors and families of all ages to examine these questions through letters, diaries, photographs, and artifacts from the Historical Society’s collections. Articles carried by local soldiers, everyday objects used by Litchfield’s children, and items related to Dr. Josiah Gale Beckwith and the Litchfield Peace Movement are just some of the collection pieces that will be highlighted. Visitors will also have the chance to view Civil War uniforms thanks to the Museum of Connecticut History and the Cornwall Historical Society.
The exhibit will also incorporate hands-on activities and the opportunity to experience camp life as Litchfield’s men did more than a century and a half ago. Students of the Litchfield Montessori School will act as Junior Curators to research, design, and create a special portion of the exhibition.
The Hour of Conflict will run through the 2012 and 2013 seasons at the Litchfield History Museum, located at 7 South Street in Litchfield. There will be a special exhibition opening for members on Friday, April 13 at 6:30 pm following this year’s Annual Meeting. The exhibition will open to the public on April 14. For more information visit www.litchfieldhistoricalsociety.org or call (860) 567-4501. The museum is open Tuesday-Saturday, 11 to 5 and Sunday 1-5. The admission costs are $5 for adults, $3 for seniors, students, and children over 14. Members, law students, and children under 14 are free. These prices include the cost of admission to the Tapping Reeve House and Law School.
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
New Canaan Nature Center Annual Syrup Saturday & Pancake Brunch
The New Canaan Nature Center's Syrup Saturday festival returns on Saturday, March 17 from 10:30am – 2:00pm. This annual event celebrates the New England tradition of maple syrup making and includes a pancake brunch with different varieties of syrup, including the Nature Center's own.
Nature Center educators and local families who have "adopted" a tree for the season have been collecting sap from over 50 of the center's maples over the last month.
How does it work? Freezing temperatures create suction that draws water in through a tree's roots, and warm periods create pressure which causes the sap to flow out through a tap hole where it's collected in buckets. This sap, a combination of water, salt and sugar, serves as the tree's food and is the sole ingredient of pure maple syrup.
During Syrup Saturday, visitors will get a chance to observe the entire process from tree tapping to boiling into syrup at the "sugar shack". Educators will also demonstrate historic methods of maple syruping.
Local maple syrup and maple baked goods will be for sale. Guests can test their taste buds on real vs. fake syrup and learn what the different grades mean.
Join Nature Center naturalists for a hike along "Maple Lane" to learn how to identify sugar maples and other trees while hunting for signs of spring. Kids will make a maple-themed craft to take home. This event is primarily held outdoors and activities will be ongoing throughout the day.
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