This summer the Institute for American Indian Studies in Washington, Connecticut is offering six weeks of summer camp where Native American history will come alive through fun activities offered by the Educational Department of the Institute. Hiking in the woods, mock archaeological digs, educational games, listening to traditional Native American stories, learning new crafts, and working together to complete a group project are just some of the highlights. This year’s summer camp program encourages children to connect with nature, and appreciate a culture more than 10,000 years old, while enhancing their teambuilding skills and, making new friends. For more information https://www.iaismuseum.org/summer-camp/
Thursday, April 27, 2023
Gear - Up for 2023 Summer Camp @ Institute for American Indian Studies
Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo Welcomes Baby Golden Lion Tamarin
onnecticut’s Beardsley Zoo is happy to announce that a baby golden lion tamarin was born to mother Cricket and father Leão earlier this month. Born fully furred with its eyes open, the baby will spend its first weeks clinging to its mother or father’s back. The adult male usually does the largest share of caretaking, with the mother taking the infant only for nursing. Guests in the Rainforest Building may see the baby clinging to its mother’s or father’s back, but the family has free access both to their main habitat in the Rainforest Building and to their inside habitat, so they may not be visible all the time.
After about five weeks, infants begin to explore on their own but will nurse for 90 days. A small endangered species of monkey from the Brazilian rainforests, often referred to as “GLTs”, these tiny monkeys weigh about one to one and a half pounds and are roughly ten inches tall as adults. The Zoo last had golden lion tamarin babies born in 2006 and again in 2007.
Found only in southeast Brazil, the golden lion tamarin is threatened by collection for the pet trade, habitat loss, and habitat fragmentation. While protection of the species has resulted in an increase in their numbers, they are still classified as endangered. Their forest habitat has been reduced to only two percent of its original area, with habitats fragmented into unconnected areas, each supporting only a small group of monkeys. Deforestation has been ongoing for centuries to make way for sugar cane and coffee production, cattle grazing, logging, charcoal, and urbanization.
“There are only about 2,500 golden lion tamarins remaining in the wild, and a third of those are descended from GLTs raised in human care,” said Zoo Director Gregg Dancho. “We’re proud of our contribution to the restoration of this species, with babies born here released in Brazil to help stabilize the population.” To see the baby click here
“This new baby is an important part of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA)’s Species Survival Plan (SSP), helping to preserve golden lion tamarins for future generations,” he said. “All species raised in human care in accredited zoos are important ambassadors, raising awareness of habitat protection and contributing to the survival of their species.”
About Golden Lion Tamarins
Considered the most beautiful of the four tamarin species, the golden lion tamarin (Leontopithecus rosalia) is named for the thick mane of hair around their necks, reminiscent of the great cats of Africa. Golden lion tamarins live primarily in the trees. They sleep in hollows at night and forage by day while traveling from branch to branch. Once down to 200 individuals in the wild and on the brink of extinction, intensive conservation efforts helped the population recover.
About Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo
Get your ticket to adventure! Connecticut’s only zoo, celebrating its 101st year, features 350 animals representing primarily North and South American and Northern Asian species. Guests won’t want to miss our Amur tiger and leopards, maned wolves, 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. As an accredited member of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) and participant in its Species Survival Plan (SSP) programs, the non-profit Zoo is committed to the preservation of endangered animals and wild habitats. Tickets must be purchased on the Zoo’s website at beardsleyzoo.org.
Wednesday, April 26, 2023
Mother’s Day is More Important than Ever @ Tina’s Baskets & Woven Art
Celebrating Mother’s Day goes back to the ancient Greeks and Romans, who held festivals in honor of mother goddesses. Like Mother’s Day, the art of basket weaving goes back to time immemorial. Tina Puckett, owner of Tina’s Baskets and Woven Art @ Whiting Mills in Winsted, believes that this year, celebrating Mother’s Day is more important than ever. “Today’s mothers are taking on multiple roles and responsibilities as caregivers, mentors, breadwinners, and volunteers in their community. For me, Mother’s Day is a way to honor your mom, or a mother figure in your life, like an aunt, grandmother, daughter or friend for the important work they do every day,” says Puckett.
Visit a working artist studio on Saturdays and Sundays |
Wednesday, April 19, 2023
Cirque Alfonse – Animal: A Farm Story
On Sunday, April 23 @ 7 p.m. the Barnum Museum is partnering with its friends at the Fairfield University Quick Center for the Arts to bring you Cirque Alfonse: A Farm Story which is a dynamic and exciting show! Best of all, the Museum has arranged a special discount code for tickets - ANIMAL20 that entitles those that use the code to tickets to this show for just $20. For the discount code, click here.
Animal: A Farm Story takes us on a journey of discovery through a series of slightly surreal farm fables served up with a touch of irreverence, impressive virtuosity, and the irreverent circus company’s familiar comic touch. In this re-invented “farm fantasy,” the farm is turned upside down and the barn is turned inside out. A production for young and old alike, Animal is the Farm gone haywire!
Cirque Alfonse’s founding members have all worked with some of the most renowned “nouveau cirque” companies around the world. The company favors a multidisciplinary approach where circus, song, dance, and theater come together, driven by original live music in an irresistible mix of trad and soul that the troupe calls “agricultural funk.”
ABOUT THE BARNUM MUSEUM:
The historic Barnum Museum is undergoing a major restoration of the magnificent exterior of the landmark building. To ensure safety, the Museum is closed for general public visitation. The staff continues to work and is available for questions and inquiries. Contact us here. We apologize for this inconvenience, but a new, immersive, 21st-century Barnum Museum is on the horizon!
Bridgeport's Barnum Museum is one of P. T. Barnum's many philanthropic gifts. Completed in 1893, the architecturally significant building boasts a unique combination of styles and terracotta ornamentation and is listed on the National Register. Today the museum proudly shares the history and legacy of the world-famous entrepreneur, showman, and museum proprietor, who was also a state legislator, mayor, real estate developer, and philanthropist.
The museum is home to thousands of artifacts, many pertaining to Bridgeport native Tom Thumb and his wife, Lavinia Warren, as well as the acclaimed Swedish soprano Jenny Lind.
Tuesday, April 18, 2023
Celebrate Earth Day @ Husky Meadows Farm in Norfolk CT from April 21 - 23
Husky Meadows Farm, located in Norfolk, Connecticut kicks off its 2023 season of events with a weekend-long Earth Day Celebration from Friday, April 21 through Sunday, April 23. While primarily an organic market garden, the entirety of Husky Meadows Farm includes 300 acres of mixed native meadows, woodlands, hay fields, and an orchard. Earth Day offers the perfect opportunity for visitors to explore the whole farm ecosystem.
Monday, April 17, 2023
W.E.B. Du Bois Sculpture Project Announces Finalist Sculptors
W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963) was born and educated in Great Barrington. He was the first African American to earn a Ph.D. from Harvard. A world-famous sociologist, historian, and founder of the NAACP, he wrote The Souls of Black Folk, a seminal work in African American literature.
Thursday, April 13, 2023
Gone Fishing – Traditional Native American Fishing Technologies & More @ Institute for American Indian Studies
The end of a long winter signals the first in a stream of returning opportunities. It is the time of year when rivers and streams come back to life with the opening of the fishing season. If you have ever wondered what resources Native peoples had access to local waterways, then join Institute for American Indian Studies Educator and Traditional Skills expert, Griffin Kalin, on April 30, at either 11 a.m. or 1 p.m., for a program along the Shepaug River, which boasts a 10,000 plus year history of Native American communities living along its banks. This event will begin at the Institute for American Indian Studies located at 38 Curtis Road in Washington, Connecticut.
The programs at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. include an informative hike to the banks of the Shepaug River that borders the Institute’s grounds and runs through Steep Rock Reservation. Through hands-on experiences and engaging demonstrations, participants will get their feet wet with traditional fishing methods including learning how to make and maintain a fish house, and how to make a fish trap from the surrounding environment. Participants will also learn about the production and function of fishing weirs, a technology used by Native American communities that is still widely used today.
Tuesday, April 11, 2023
Mercury Glass Votives Workshop @ Wilton Historical Society
Dating back to the mid-1800s, mercury glass was originally created as a replacement for sterling silver, yet actually contains neither silver nor mercury. As traditionally practiced, the process of blowing mercury glasses utilized a double-walled technique which involved pouring the silvering solution in between two glass layers. Mercury glass remains a popular material for Christmas ornaments and other decorative household goods. Today, this art form can be mimicked on glass objects using common household vinegar and a spray-can technique.
Monday, April 10, 2023
W.E.B. DU BOIS SCULPTURE PROJECT AWARDED $15,000 BY ADAMS COMMUNITY BANK
The W.E.B. Du Bois Sculpture Project of Great Barrington, Massachusetts, has received a donation of $15,000 from the Adams Community Bank of Adams, MA. The funds will be used to finance a monument to W.E.B. Du Bois, a native son of Great Barrington, and to renovate the plaza in front of Mason Public Library, where the statue will be sited.
Thursday, April 6, 2023
On the Hunt for Daffodils in Litchfield and Bridgeport
The garden and restored 1903 Colonial Revival mansion are at 893 Clinton Avenue in Bridgeport’s Stratfield Historic District. Access is easy from I-95, the Merritt Parkway, and US Route 1, and street parking is plentiful.
Tuesday, March 14, 2023
The Magic of Maple Syrup @ Husky Meadows Farm
At Husky Meadows Farm in Norfolk, they enjoy watching the change of the seasons. One of their favorite times of year is March because it signals that winter is ebbing and our planting season will soon begin.
What they think is extra special about March, is that the temperatures drop below freezing at night and go above freezing during the day. This weather pattern signals the sweetest time of year when the sap of the Sugar Maple tree begins to run. The sweet sap rises from the roots of the maple tree bringing sweetness and nourishment to it, and delight to those that know how and when to forage it. Tapping Sugar Maples is a centuries-old tradition that began with Native American communities living in the area.
The scientific name of Sugar Maple is Acer saccharum. This tree is native to North America and is the most commonly found species among the seven types of maples. It grows in abundance throughout southern Ontario, Nova Scotia, New England, Texas, Georgia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, the Mid-Atlantic states, and right here in Connecticut. Sap contains minerals, vitamins, and some natural sugars that feed this magnificent tree. Sugar Maples are slow-growing trees that increase in height by about 24 inches a year. Mature trees can grow up to 75 feet tall, and some, have grown over 100 feet tall. When Sugar Maple trees begin to bud with leaves, usually in April, the time for collecting maple sap is over, because it takes on a bitter taste. In addition to maple sap, in the fall, when this tree is ablaze with color, it also produces large quantities of seeds that are capable of germination with the added benefit of providing food for animals like turkeys, finches, squirrels, and chipmunks.
Maple syrup is a centuries-old New England tradition |
How Native Americans Used Maple Syrup
Native Americans introduced European settlers to the wonders of maple syrup. They honored the maple tree in ceremonies each year to ensure good maple harvests. The tribe would gather around the tree, also known as a "sugarbush" address it in ritual language and offer the tree tobacco incense. Historic records indicate that the collecting and processing of maple sap was a social as well as a working occasion. Women would tap the trees; men would cut the wood for the fire needed to boil the sap, and children tended to the sap as it boiled.
Native American Sugar Camp |
Husky Meadows Farm & Maple Syrup
At Husky Meadows Farm, we don't believe that maple syrup is just for pancakes! With that in mind, each March, we celebrate this delectable amber nectar with an immersive and magical culinary event that highlights all that you can do with maple syrup in the kitchen. Our culinary team uses the freshest farm-to-table ingredients along with maple syrup in both sweet and savory ways that will amaze the palate. In addition to the food and cocktails, and different ways to use maple syrup we will learn about the different grades of this nectar of nature and the best ways to use it. For information about Husky Meadows Farm, their upcoming culinary events, dinners, and weekend overnight packages visit their website http://www.huskymeadowsfarm.com
Check out the events @ Husky Meadows Farm |
It takes at least forty years for a sugar maple tree to grow before it is big enough to tap.
On average, a tapped maple tree will produce ten to twenty gallons of sap per tap. Most trees have just one tap.
The first full moon during sap running season is called the Maple Moon or the Sugar Moon.
The sugar maple is one of America's favorite trees and more states have claimed it as their state tree than any other species.
Squirrels, whitetail deer, snowshoe hares, and moose feed on the seeds, twigs, and leaves of the sugar maple.
John Smith was among the first settlers that noted the Native Americans' sugar processing and the fact that they used it for barter.
In 2001 baseball player Barry Bonds switched from an ash wood baseball bat to one made of maple and hit 73 home runs!
The largest and nationally acclaimed sugar maple champion tree is located in Charlemont, Massachusetts. It is 112 feet tall with a diameter of 6.18 feet with a crown spread of 91 feet with a total point count of 368.
A sugar maple tree in Lyme, Connecticut measured in 2012 measured 123 feet tall with a circumference of 18.25 feet and a crown spread of 86 feet with a total point count of 364.
Monday, March 13, 2023
Visit Tina's Baskets and Woven Arts and a Rock and Mineral Show this Weekend
Tina's Baskets and Woven Art has just announced the first-ever Rock and Mineral Show at Whiting Mills at 100 Whiting Street, Winsted, Connecticut on Saturday, March 18, and Sunday, March 19, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Monday, March 6, 2023
Creating A Ripple Effect Institute For American Indian Studies Joins World Water Day Celebration March 18
On Saturday, March 18, the Institute for American Indian Studies partnered with the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, the Steep Rock Association, and the Pomperaug River Watershed Coalition to celebrate World Water Day. This event is being held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the grounds of the Institute at 38 Curtis Road in Washington, Connecticut.
Water is one of the most vital resources for all beings and has important cultural significance in many indigenous communities, not only as a source of life but also as a source of medicine and healing. The Institute is celebrating World Water Day, an initiative by the United Nations, with a series of fun and educational activities.Monday, February 27, 2023
Celebrate Native American Culture @ Maple Sugar Festival @ Institute for American Indian Studies March 11
Throughout the year, Native American communities give thanks for the gifts of the natural world. In this region, in late February and early March, it is a season to celebrate one of the sweetest gifts of all: the gift of maple sugar. On Saturday, March 11, from 11 am to 3 pm, join the Institute for American Indian Studies for their annual Maple Sugar Festival.