If you are looking to walk off some of the holiday calories and love the serenity of the winter woods under a glowing full moon, don’t miss the walk at the Institute for American Indian Studies on Saturday, December 18 beginning at 6 p.m. This is the perfect activity to take a break from the rush of the holiday season and to unwind in the beauty of nature.
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
Full Moon Walk with IAIS December 18
Wednesday, December 1, 2021
All Aboard with Santa in Thomaston and Danbury
Monday, November 29, 2021
Christmas Tree Farms in Litchfield Hills
Whether you want to cut your own tree, pick a live tree and have it cut for you, buy a tree already cut or buy a living tree you can plant, we are losing a few places to find Christmas tree farms, places to buy pre-cut (also called pre-harvested and fresh-cut) trees, stands, sleigh rides, hayrides, and related winter events and fun.
Photo courtesy of Bees, Fleas, and Trees in Litchfield |
Asher Tharpe Farm - Choose and cut Christmas Trees, pre-tagging allowed, gift shop 93 Northfield Road (Rt. 254), Litchfield, CT 06759. Phone: 860-567-0358.
Averill Farm - Christmas trees-you choose and you cut, Christmas wreaths, trees baled, saws provided, free hot cider, Averill is also a cider mill with fresh apple cider made on the premises. The farm is located at 250 Calhoun Street, Washington Depot, CT 06794. Phone: 860-868-2777. Open: from the day After Thanksgiving until Christmas Eve, 9:30 am to dusk daily. Christmas tree varieties: You-Choose and You-Cut varieties: Balsam Fir, Blue Spruce, Colorado Blue Spruce, Fraser Fir, Norway Spruce, White Fir (Concolor Fir), White Pine, White Spruce.
Bees, Fleas & Trees - is located on 551 South Plains Road, Litchfield, CT 06759. Phone: 860-567-8544. The farm is open: from early December, on Thursday and Friday from 1 pm to 4:30 PM; Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The last sale date is December 24, 2021. Directions: On east side Rt 63; 1.5 mi. south of the Litchfield Green or 2.5 mi. north of Rt 109 traffic light in East Morris. They offer choose and cut Christmas Trees. There are specially marked Live Trees. Christmas tree varieties include Fraser/Concolor Fir, Blue/White/Meyer Spruce, and White Pines. Tree Prices are Fraser/Concolor Fir, Blue/White/Meyer Spruce, White Pine @ $49. A selection of pre-cut trees will be available after Dec. 9th @ $19.
Wednesday, November 24, 2021
12 Annual Newtown Turkey Trot November 25
Once again this year Newtown is hosting the 5k Turkey Trot Roat Race or a 2.5K Fun Walk on November 25th. This event is held in the scenic center of Newtown with its iconic village green graced by an enormous American flag. The race is an annual benefit for the C. H. Booth Library. The race and walk begin at 7:45 a.m. at the Newtown Middle School on 11 Queen Street.
The course works its way out of the center of town on the Boulevard and loops back past the Firehouse and shops before circling around Wendover Road and back to the Middle School. The course is mostly flat with a few gentle hills and loops through lovely neighborhoods and through the historic center of town.
The entry fee for the race is $30 for an individual entry and $100 for groups of four. Results of the race can be viewed by clicking here. There are several categories of winners that are decided by age group with the top three in the male/female group. For additional race, information click here.
Tuesday, November 23, 2021
Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo Plans Three Weekends of Holiday Happenings
This year, the Zoo is pairing up with Oliver’s Pajama Project to bring pajamas to underserved communities throughout the state as well as offering three fun weekends of Holiday Happenings. Oliver Koenig-Paquin is a young boy whose dream is to make sure every boy and girl has a pair of new pajamas to keep them warm and cozy at night. Throughout the holiday season, the Zoo will be collecting pajamas at the front gate: all ages and sizes needed!
Monday, November 22, 2021
Holiday Market Returns to Institute for American Indian Studies November and December
The Institute for American Indian Studies located on 38 Curtis Road in Washington is hosting its annual Holiday Market on Saturday, November 27, December 4, and December 11, and on Sunday, November 28, December 5, and December 12. The market is free and open to the public from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.; visitors can also tour the museum for $10 for adults, $8 for seniors, and $6 for children; members are free.
Thursday, November 18, 2021
See a Holiday Classic for Free @ Avon Theatre December 4
On Saturday, December 4 at 11 am the Avon Theatre located on 272 Bedford Street in Stamford is presenting the holiday movie classic, Its A Wonderful Life free and open to the public.
Wednesday, November 10, 2021
Lime Rock Park Tickets To Go On Sale November 15
With the North American 2021 motorsports season heading to the checkered flag, fans can get a head start on 2022 by purchasing tickets for another exciting season of competition at Lime Rock Park.
Monday, November 8, 2021
Exceptional Dedication - Honoring Native Americans Veterans on November 14 @ The Institute for American Indian Studies
Each year, in honor of Veterans Day, the Institute for American Indian Studies in Washington Connecticut honors the exceptional military service of Native Americans in a formal dedication. This year, the Institute is once again inviting the public to participate in the program that will honor three Native Americans whose passion and loyalty have helped to make America what it is today on Sunday, November 14 at 12 noon. The first honoree is Joseph A. Perry, Jr. (Eastern Pequot), a Vietnam Veteran who enlisted in the United States Army in 1960. Upon his Honorable Discharge as Sergeant in the 82nd Airborne Division in 1963, he joined the Connecticut State Police in 1964, retiring in 1995 as Deputy Commissioner/ Colonel Division of State Police. In 1995 Joseph became the Director of Public Safety for the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, retiring in 2011 as Inspector General. Throughout his career, Joseph has volunteered extensively, serving several terms as a Tribal Councilor and Tribal Treasurer for the Eastern Pequot Tribal Nation from 1996 through 2017. He also served on the Board of Trustees and Corporators of Norwich Free Academy from 1992 to 2007. Currently, Joseph serves on Tribal Honor Guard, is a Tribal Ambassador and member of the Native American Heritage Advisory Council (NAHAC). In addition, he serves as a Corporator at William W. Backus Hospital, is on the Chairman Criteria Committee at the Connecticut Law Enforcement Memorial Foundation, and is a High School Football Official on the Eastern Connecticut Board of Approved Football Officials. Joseph is the recipient of numerous awards, including the University of New Haven Distinguished Alumni award, the Connecticut Chapter NAACP Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Southeastern Connecticut Chapter National Football Award - Distinguished American. The second honoree is Albert E. Sargent, Sr., a second-generation submarine sailor. Sargent is a descendent of the Shinnecock, Pequot, Cherokee, and Pokanoket peoples, with ties to the Narragansett and Nipmuc Native American communities. Sargent enlisted in the U.S. Navy in April 1977. He first attended Radioman A School in San Diego, CA, and, later switched to sub-school training in Groton, CT. He served on the USS Trout SS566 and was later assigned to the USS Grayling SSN566 submarine in Charleston, SC, as a machinist mate. In April 1981 he was transferred to the USS Casimir Pulaski SSBN-594, where he became Petty Officer, Second Class. In 1984, he was given shore duty at the Sub school in Groton, CT. In 1987 Sargent was offered a submarine construction job at Electric Boat in Groton, CT on the greatest FBM of its time, the USS Tennessee SSBN-734. He served on board this vessel until 1991 as Petty Officer, First Class. Offered shore duty again in Groton, CT at NSSF Naval Submarine Support Facility, he supervised a group of sailors to service the subs at homeport. Leaving the NSSF, Sargent was offered the opportunity to serve on the USS Groton in 1994. While serving on the Groton, he was selected for Chief Petty Officer and asked to serve two more years, but having served twenty years, he declined. Sergent served on the USS Groton from 1994 until his retirement in August 1997. The third honoree is Dante Biss-Grayson, who served in the U.S. military as a Senior Airman from 2000 to 2012. His active military duty included seven combat tours in Iraq, Kuwait, Afghanistan, and Italy. In addition to Department of Defense Contracting, he was part of the Crash, Fire, and Rescue teams. He is trained in Emergency Management, Chem Warfare, base defense, search and rescue, heavy rescue, aircraft rescue, and inspection. Today, Biss-Grayson is an Osage Artist that specializes in many media including fine art, large abstract paintings as well as drawings, installations, archetypes, abstract expressionism, expressionism, and the creation of ribbon skirts. A recent and ongoing project is creating poetry based on case files for missing and murdered indigenous women; to date, he has written more than 70 poems. Biss-Grayson, a world traveler will be at the Institute for American Indian Studies for the Veterans Ceremony as well as for several special programs planned throughout the weekend. This outdoor ceremony will honor these individuals as well as all veterans, Native and Non-Native that have served our country. Following the ceremony, attendees are invited to enjoy light refreshments. This event is free and open to the public but pre-registration is requested. Please call 860-868-0518 or email events@iaismuseum.org. About The Institute for American Indian Studies (IAIS) Located on 15 woodland acres the IAIS preserves and educates through archeology, research, exhibitions, and programs. We have an outdoor replicated 16th c. Algonkian Village, the award-winning Wigwam Escape, and a Museum with temporary and permanent displays of authentic artifacts from prehistory to the present that allows visitors to foster a new understanding of the world and the history and culture of Native Americans. The Institute for American Indian Studies is located on 38 Curtis Road in Washington Connecticut.
Thursday, November 4, 2021
Sherman Chamber Ensemble presents “JAZZING IT UP” November 27 and December 28
Thanksgiving is full of annual traditions – and a favorite tradition for the Sherman Chamber Ensemble and audiences is the annual “Jazzing It Up" concert - this year returning to live in-person performances in compliance with Covid guidelines. Pianist Ted Rosenthal and alto saxophonist Eddie Barbash join a most talented group of accomplished New York musicians including Thomson Kneeland (double bass), Chris Parker (drums), Susan Rotholz, (flute), and Eliot Bailen (cello) in an exciting program where the classics meet jazz.
Wednesday, November 3, 2021
For the Birds... Feeder Chats with Kellogg Environmental Center and Ansonia Nature Center
Friday, October 22, 2021
When Glaciers Melt - First Settlers of Connecticut New Exhibit at The Institute for American Indian Studies
The new exhibit at the Institute for American Indian Studies located in Washington traces how Connecticut's first settlers found their way as the glaciers melted. It is a rare opportunity to learn about the Connecticut environment, and the way people and animals lived here more than 10,000 years ago. A highlight of this exhibit is an extensive display of the Templeton Dig Site, one of the oldest in southern New England, found in Washington, Connecticut. The exhibit, When Glaciers Melt - First Settlers of Connecticut will be on display in the Institute's special exhibition hall through mid.-November.
Tuesday, October 19, 2021
Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo Says Goodbye to Reka, an Amur Tiger Born at the Zoo
Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo will say goodbye next week to Reka, a female Amur tiger born at the Zoo, as she moves to a new permanent home. Born on November 25, 2017, Reka and her sister Zeya were raised by the Zoo’s animal care staff when their mother, Changbai, displayed no interest in her cubs. Zoo guests and supporters have followed Reka and Zeya’s journey from newborns whose survival was uncertain to the healthy young adult tigers they are today.
Managed by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums’ (AZA) Species Survival Plan (SSP), inter-regional transfers are arranged with careful attention to gene diversity in the hope that successful breeding will take place. Last year, Zeya was sent to Rosamond Gifford Zoo as an excellent genetic match to that Zoo’s resident male tiger. Reka’s new home zoo will announce her arrival once a standard quarantine period is complete later this fall. Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo remains home to Reka and Zeya’s mother, Changbai.
Amur tigers are very rare and are critically endangered in the wild. According to the Association of Zoos and Aquariums’ (AZA) statistics, today Amur tigers are thought to occupy less than seven percent of their original range. Threatened by habitat loss and degradation, poaching, tiger-human conflict, and loss of prey, four of nine subspecies have disappeared from the wild just in the past hundred years. The future of the Amur tiger has been a major concern of the world’s zoos for many years as the species has been pushed toward extinction.
There is an SSP program in place for many species of animals through oversight by a group called the Taxon Advisory Group (TAG). The SSP makes breeding recommendations based on genetics, age and health of animals, and need for more of the species to protect future populations. Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo’s Deputy Director, Don Goff, is the Co-Chair of the National Felid TAG group. He leads a committee of AZA-accredited zoo members whose goal is to save declining species.
“As sad as we are to say goodbye to Reka, the planned transfer of animals to other member zoos ensures the sustainability of a healthy, genetically diverse, and demographically varied AZA population,” explained Goff.
Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo has had repeated success in breeding endangered species, a testament to the Zoo’s animal care specialists and the highest quality of animal care. The Zoo has been the birthplace of multiple endangered species in recent years, including Amur tiger cubs, maned wolf pups, red wolf pups, three baby Giant anteaters, and two Amur leopard cubs.
About Amur tigers
The Amur, once called the Siberian tiger, is a rare subspecies of tiger, and the largest cat in the world. Adult male tigers can weigh up to 675 pounds, with females weighing up to 350 pounds. Similar to people’s fingerprints, no two tigers have the same striped pattern. Amur tigers differ from other tigers with fewer, paler stripes, and a mane that helps to keep them warm. They live in southeast Russia as well as small areas of China and North Korea. They live for 10-15 years in the wild, and up to 22 years in human care.
About Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo
Let your curiosity run wild! Connecticut’s only zoo, celebrating its 99th year, features 350 animals representing primarily North and South American and Northern Asian species. Guests won’t want to miss our Amur tigers and leopards, maned wolves, Mexican gray wolves, and red wolves. Other highlights include our new Spider Monkey Habitat, the Rainforest Building, the prairie dog exhibit, and the Pampas Plain with Giant anteaters and Chacoan peccaries. Guests can ride on the carousel, grab a bite from the Peacock Café and eat in the Picnic Grove. Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo is a non-profit organization approaching its 100th year at a time when the mission of helping fragile wildlife populations and eco-systems is more important than ever.
Tickets must be purchased on the Zoo’s website at beardsleyzoo.org. In accordance with the state of Connecticut COVID-19 guidelines: we recommend that guests continue to wear masks while visiting the Zoo, but when guests are outside and can maintain social distance, masks may be removed. In any indoor area, or when social distancing cannot be maintained, masks are required. Everyone over the age of two, except for those with medical conditions that preclude wearing them, should have a mask available.
Friday, October 15, 2021
BOO @ the Zoo is Back October 30
Connecticut's Beardsley Zoo announces a SPOOK-tacular October with the return of BOO at the Zoo on Saturday, October 30, and Sunday, October 31 from noon to 3:00 p.m. each day. These phantom-tastic afternoons will include seasonal activities for your little monsters along with spooky animal talks and fun for the whole family.
“Boo at the Zoo is a longstanding Zoo tradition that many families look forward to,” said Gregg Dancho, Zoo director. “It’s a fun afternoon of cool critters, and, of course, family memories.”
All children are invited to come in costume. Voting for your favorite scarecrow in the Zoo’s popular Scarecrows on Parade is included!
Regular adult admission (ages 12 & older) is $17.00, children (ages 3 -11) is $14.00, senior admission (62 and older) is $14.00, and children under 3 years old are free. Zoo members are also admitted free.
About Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo
Let your curiosity run wild! Connecticut’s only zoo, celebrating its 99th year, features 350 animals representing primarily North and South American and Northern Asian species. Guests won’t want to miss our Amur tigers and leopards, maned wolves, Mexican gray wolves, and red wolves. Other highlights include our new Spider Monkey Habitat, the Rainforest Building, the prairie dog exhibit, and the Pampas Plain with Giant anteaters and Chacoan peccaries. Guests can ride on the carousel, grab a bite from the Peacock Café and eat in the Picnic Grove. Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo is a non-profit organization approaching its 100th year at a time when the mission of helping fragile wildlife populations and ecosystems is more important than ever.
Tickets must be purchased on the Zoo’s website at beardsleyzoo.org. In accordance with the state of Connecticut COVID-19 guidelines: we recommend that guests continue to wear masks while visiting the Zoo, but when guests are outside and can maintain social distance, masks may be removed. In any indoor area, or when social distancing cannot be maintained, masks are required. Everyone over the age of two, except for those with medical conditions that preclude wearing them, should have a mask available.
Thursday, October 14, 2021
The Great Wilton Pumpkin Fest @ Wilton Historical Society
Get ready for heaps of family fun at the Wilton Historical Society on Saturday, October 16 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Find a bountiful harvest of all kinds of fall fun with a focus on, of course, pumpkins! Watch a blacksmith hard at work at the forge; see docents in Colonial dress hearth cooking (with pumpkins!), weaving and flax breaking, munch a donut and sip some cider.
There will be lots of things for kids to do - pumpkin decorating, lawn games such as “Ring Toss with Pumpkins” and “Corn Hole” – and a version of bocce using pumpkins and gourds! Time to pick the perfect pumpkin to bring home. The grounds of the Historical Society will be strewn with pumpkins and gourds being sold by Wilton Kiwanis along with mums and corn.
Be sure to register for the “History is Here Wilton Scavenger Hunt” at the sign-up table. Whether you are brand new to town or a resident for 30 years, you will be amazed at what you don’t know about Wilton’s history! You can pick up your Scavenger Hunt Kit, and set out to follow the clues to a dozen places around town. This is a great opportunity for family fun, to get outside, explore Wilton and maybe even win a prize! Wilton Historical Society members free; non-member families $25.