Our life is an apprenticeship to the truth that around every circle another can be drawn; that there is no end in nature, but every end is a beginning, and under every deep a lower deep opens. Ralph Waldo Emerson
You're invited to BEEC's Festival of the Hill! Sunday, June 28
The BEEC Board of Directors invites the public to enjoy the recent improvements to trails and grounds with a day of festivities. Events are scheduled from noon until 7 pm. Early activities are family oriented, with walks and music in the late afternoon arranged for the pleasure of adults, though all events are open to all ages.
Bring your own picnic lunch at noon, and and enjoy music provided by Marcy Gregoire's Under the Tree Music Company. Marcy's humor, catchy rhythms, and enthusiasm transform the audience, especially children, into the "music company," and Marcy brings a wide variety of instruments for the children to play, including a cello, violin, and guitar.
At 1 p.m., storyteller Davis Bates will perform. Davis is a delightful and engaging storyteller and has been charming audiences for over twenty years. His performances include a mixture of family, Native American, international and regional stories and songs. They speak of empowerment, history, spirit and the environment.
From 3 – 5 p.m., ecologist Tom Wessels, founding director of the master’s degree program in Conservation Biology at Antioch, and author of Reading the Forested Landscape, A Natural History of New England, will lead a walk to interpret the dynamic history of this piece of land. On this walk Tom will help participants recognize evidence of the landscape’s agricultural and forestry history, historical storm events, and more.
At 5 p.m., all are invited to a free chicken barbeque. The barbeque will be accompanied by a variety of side dishes, salads and beverages. Diners are invited to bring their own wine or beer. Music will be provided by Lisa Brande and Mark Trichka, the duo known as Easy Street. For over twenty years Brande and Trichka have been playing swing, bluegrass, Cajun and zydeco, rockabilly and honkytonk and popular music, on fiddle, mandolins, guitars and voices.
Informal activities will take place throughout the day, and include kite flying on the hill, games and scavenger hunts. The trails will be open all day, as usual, and self-guided interpretive booklets are available to introduce hikers to the trees or to the wildlife habitat of BEEC.
For those who can't make it on June 28, the trails and grounds are open from dawn until dusk every day. For more information, please call BEEC at 257-5785.