Rhythm and sound are important to just about every culture around the world. Throughout the Americas, indigenous peoples have been using drums as part of their culture for thousands of years.
Monday, March 14, 2022
Sign Up Today for Drum Making Workshop @ the Institute for American Indian Studies March 20
Wednesday, March 2, 2022
Maple Sugar Festival @ Institute for American Indian Studies March 5
The sugaring off the process in the Litchfield Hills has a long history that began with the Native Americans living here. They were experts at knowing the perfect time to collect the sap which is when the days grow warm and the nights are still cold, and before the trees begin to bud. They would boil the sap down using time-honored techniques and materials collected from the environment. On Saturday, March 5 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. visitors to the Institute for American Indian Studies on 38 Curtis Road in Washington, Connecticut can join IAIS educators at an event that demonstrates and celebrates this golden syrup of spring.
Monday, February 28, 2022
Lamothe's Sugar House Watch Maple Syrup Being Made
Friday, February 25, 2022
A Sweet Temptation - Hardcore Sweet Bakery
If you are looking to escape the sweet experience this winter, you might want to head to the Hardcore Sweet Bakery in Watertown. It is a little tricky to find because it is located in an office park in a stark brick building filled with offices. You have to take an elevator to the second floor to find them -- just let your nose guide you to this fabulous bakery that is as quirky as it is delightful. When you do, you will think that you have struck delicious gold!
courtesy hardcore sweet bakery |
If you are looking for a snack, look no further than the Hardcore Sweet Bakery in Siemon Business Park in Watertown. Located in an old factory building this upbeat and funky bakery offers cupcakes, cupcake pops, cakes, cookies, cookie bars, and donuts. They are also the proud winners of Cupcake Wars! Their mouth-watering menu of cupcakes includes everything from an infused Sugar Mama made from chocolate cake with cheesecake bites baked in and embellished with Tequila Rose mousse fill and topped with strawberry and vanilla swirled buttercream frosting to the Coconut Canoili that is made from coconut cake and filled with cannoli filling and frosted with vanilla buttercream then rolled in toasted coconut and crowned with a mini cannoli.
Courtesy hardcore sweet bakery |
In addition, to all the sweetness this bakery offers up, they also have a "Party Room" that can be rented out. This is perfect for kids and families to get out and get creative. You can rent the party room for two to three hours and get a supply of aprons, cupcakes, and frosting plus pizza and juice for up to twenty people.
Courtesy hardcore sweet bakery |
The Hardcore Sweet Bakery also offers a series of cooking classes as well as a book club and spiritual medium event. They are offering a buttercream and booze cooking class on March 17th where participants will learn how to decorate six cupcakes while drinking beer from Witchdoctor. Another highlight this bakery offers is a tasting session where you can sample a variety of their baked products...a sweet experience any time of year!
For more information visit their website.
Monday, February 21, 2022
In-Person or Zoom-In @ Weekend in Norfolk, Sat. Feb. 26 and, Sun.Feb. 27
The little village of Norfolk, Connecticut has organized Winter Weekend in Norfolk, consisting of a series of in-person and Zoom events taking place on Saturday, February 26 through Sunday, February 27 that are sure to chase the winter blues away.
You can learn how to make this @ WIN |
Experience Norfolk CT this winter! Photo Credit Savage Frieze |
Friday, February 18, 2022
Native American Winter Survival Skills and Winter Foraging February 26 @ Institute for American Indian Studies
Surviving and thriving during the cold New England winters requires a clear understanding of the environment that you live in and the knowledge of how to keep your body temperature up and ways to save heat. The Native Americans living in the Eastern Woodlands were experts at this. They were able to find shelter, stay warm, and forage for food regardless of the cold and snowy weather. Intimate knowledge of the landscape, the local resources, and how to use them are the keys to how Native Americans survived winter in New England. The Institute for American Indian Studies located on 38 Curtis Road in Washington is hosting an in-person Winter Survival Program with IAIS educator, Griffin Kalin on Saturday, February 26 at 12 and 2 p.m.
Thursday, February 3, 2022
Be Part of the Action @ JumpFest 2022 Registration is Open for the Human Dog Sled Team for Competition
Part of Salisbury Winter Sports Association’s Jumpfest February 11-13 is the Human Dog Sled Race. This unique race is being held on the evening of Friday, February 11th. This is the chance for you and five of your friends to get together and be creative with the added bonus of entertaining others. It is easy and fun to do and worth at least a year of bragging rights and Instagram photos!
Friday, January 21, 2022
Five Gift Ideas for Valentine's Day
Valentine's Day is around the corner. It is never too early to start looking for the perfect gift. If your special someone is a traveler, we have some very interesting gift ideas that we would like to share with you. Our gift suggestions are affordable and fun!
BraeVal - Named after the Scottish word for the Upland River Valleys that exist between the mountains and the rugged braes of the Scottish Highlands where streams and rivers tumble to loch and sea, these tartan shirts are perfect for travel. They are made from a technically advanced proprietary all-natural Tiera fabric with tartan patterns found nowhere else and details like red buffalo plaid around the neck and cuffs. These custom shirts for men and women with zippered security pockets, accessory loops on the pockets, and a vented bi-swing back travel well in the field or for a night out on the town. To check out the online store click here.
Norwalk Seaport Association Gift Card - If your special someone likes an on-the-water excursion or better yet, an authentic New England Clambake on a private island in Long Island Sound that includes a cruise, then pick up a Seaport Association Gift Card. The best part of this Gift Card is that your special someone can choose the excursion they like, and, better yet, the card never expires! The gift card can be used on a number of excursions from a romantic summer sunset cruise to a picnic, cruise, and tour of the historic lighthouse on Sheffield Island. To order your gift card online click here.
Wigwam Escape - If your partner likes to feel as though they have traveled back in time, loves puzzles that challenge, and is a history buff then get a gift certificate to the award-winning Wigwam Escape Room at the Institute for American Indian Studies in Washington, Connecticut. In Wigwam Escape 1518, players learn how pre-contact Native Americans survived in Connecticut by solving a series of puzzles that connects players to the ways Native people lived and the skills that they relied on 500 years ago in their daily lives. To book the room, click here. All bookings are private and you will not share your time slot with other groups.
Milk House Chocolates -For traditionalists, Milk House Chocolates, voted the best in Connecticut is a must if you decided to give chocolates for Valentine's Day. Each chocolate is connected to a very specific cow, with each cow's milk making an unbelievable and delicious difference in the flavor of the chocolates. Milk House Chocolates brings you artisanal chocolates made in small batches with farm-fresh milk, butter, and creme, making them an excellent choice for the chocolate lover in your life.
Mackinac Island |
Tours of Distinction, A Connecticut Tour Company in business since 1971, offers small-group day trips, multi-day trips, international journeys, and small riverboat cruises throughout New England, the US, Canada, and all over the world. They are offering a series of special travel deals on their website as well as a gift card, that will allow you to give the gift of travel. Travel is something precious. Its memories live with us forever. Your special someone will cherish the memories. Gift cards are available in any denomination. For gift cards click here.
Thursday, January 20, 2022
Play Snow Snakes -A Traditional Native American Winter Game @ Institute for American Indian Studies
Do you like to play with snakes? If you do, don’t miss the snow snake workshop on Saturday, January 29 at 11 a.m. and at 2 p.m. at the Institute for American Indian Studies on 38 Curtis Road in Washington. At this special Native American workshop, you will make a “snow snake” and use it to play a traditional Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) winter game.
Friday, January 14, 2022
Ansonia's Legendary Opera House
We often associate opera houses with a luxurious cultured lifestyle. A place to go and listen to classical music and watch performances that date back to the music and visions of musicians from the 17th and 18th centuries. Even in the early 20th century, Opera Houses functioned like movie theaters do today, as a place to go to be entertained. Few Opera Houses in Connecticut have survived the onslaught of time and changing entertainment preferences. One that is still standing and in need of help is the Ansonia Opera House.
Courtesy Anthony Mullin |
Ansonia's Opera House is still standing although it has not hosted a performance in more than half a century and, it is also the source of some very strange legends. You may ask why did Ansonia have an Opera House. It is the result of the manufacturing boom that took place after the Civil War throughout the Brass Valley, known today as the Naugatuck River Valley. Because of the number of factories and people living and working in the mills in Ansonia, the town decided that they needed a large meeting and entertainment space for performers to stop at along their circuit. Hence, the Ansonia Opera House was conceived and built.
Courtesy Anthony Mullin |
The Ansonia Opera House, Connecticut's oldest, was built by one of Connecticut's foremost architects, Robert Wakeman Hill, is located on 100 Main Street in Ansonia between1869-1870. It served as the premier theatre in the area until 1919. The first level of the building housed shops. On the second floor after ascending a grand staircase, is a promenade that once housed offices. The promenade leads to the third-floor grand hall and a welcoming proscenium arch. The Opera House maintained its prominence until the labor riots of 1919 and the coming of the trolleys that took people everywhere including nearby New Haven for entertainment.
Courtesy Anthony Mullin |
Today, the opera house is in need of restoration and a vision. Many trespassers have entered the premises over the past 50 years. Some of those are paranormal investigators looking for signs of activity. Some investigators claim to have seen a great deal of paranormal activity that includes ghostly orbs and floating lights from nowhere, and some have encountered a nine-year-old boy. Whatever you believe, keep in mind that Ansonia hosted Connecticut's first-ever paranormal convention in the summer of 2021 called PARACONN and the second convention will be held on July 16-17, 2022 in Ansonia at the Haunted Ansonia Armory.
Courtesy Anthony Mullin |
Regardless, this is a building that should be saved and maintained... it is used for a variety of abandoned photography shoots but could be so much more. For more information check out the Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/Ansoniaoperahouse
Thursday, January 13, 2022
Have A Hoot of A Time @ Institute for American Indian Studies Make a Birch Bark Owl January 23
Many people love owls with their flat faces and forward-looking eyes that look more like us than any other bird. If your children love this magnificent bird, sign them up for the craft workshop on how to make an owl out of birch bark at the Institute for American Indian Studies on Sunday, January 23. Participants can sign up for one of three timeslots @ 1 p.m., 2 p.m., or 3 p.m. This workshop is perfect for kids five years and older.
Kids will be hooting with enthusiasm about this engaging educational workshop to all their friends and family. They will learn about the environmental adaptations and cultural importance of owls to Native American communities while crafting their very own birch bark owl. In this way, children will connect and learn from a culture that has thousands of years of history in the area where they live.Tuesday, January 11, 2022
The Musical An American in Paris comes to The Palace in Waterbury Jan. 28 and 29
Friday, December 17, 2021
Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo Says It’s Official: The Baby Giant Anteater is a Girl!
Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo has received verification from the Association of Zoos and Aquariums’ (AZA) Anteater Advisory Group that the Giant anteater pup born on June 15 is a girl. Giant anteaters, unlike most mammalian species, are not easy to sex from their body size, color, and external genitalia. That the baby’s gender is female is welcome news for the species, as the population in Giant anteaters is skewed more heavily toward males than females.
This is the third Giant anteater baby born at the Zoo to third-time dad, E.O., and fourth-time mom, Pana. The pair was brought to Connecticut’s only Zoo with the hopes of successful breeding, which occurred for the first time in 2016.
“We couldn’t be happier that our Giant anteater baby is a girl, important for the continuation of this vulnerable species,” explained Zoo Director Gregg Dancho. “We look forward to offering an opportunity to vote on her name in the near future.”
Mochilla, the pair’s first offspring, is now in residence at Alexandria Zoo in Louisiana. The second-born, Tupi, is now at the Nashville Zoo in Tennessee.
The Giant anteater's parents came to the Zoo from Palm Beach Zoo in Palm Beach, Florida. Both Pana and EO are twelve years old. They arrived in late May 2015 and are a highlight of the Pampas Plains habitat, which opened in August 2015. Featuring animals from the Pampas region of Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil, the exhibit represents the Zoo’s South American Adventure.
About Giant Anteaters
Giant anteaters can live up to 26 years in human care and are usually solitary animals. They weigh up to 100 pounds and are five to seven feet long. Their home range is from southern Belize to northern Argentina and they live in grasslands, humid forests, and woodland areas. Anteaters have one of the lowest body temperatures in the animal kingdom at 91 to 97 degrees Fahrenheit and can eat up to 30,000 ants per meal in the wild. The Latin name for anteater is Vermillingua, meaning "worm tongue," which can be as long as two feet.
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, and Mexican gray wolves, and red wolves. Other highlights include our Spider Monkey Habitat, the prairie dog exhibit, and the Pampas Plain with Giant anteaters and Chacoan peccaries. Guests can 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: we recommend that guests continue to wear masks while visiting the Zoo, but when guests are outside and are able to 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, with the exception of those with medical conditions that preclude wearing them, should have a mask available.
Thursday, December 16, 2021
Holiday Train Express Show @ Fairfield Museum
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
Full Moon Walk with IAIS December 18
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.