Are We There Yet?: Powwow Weekend, Zucchini FestBy Rebecca Dravis, 06:06PM / Thursday, August 08, 2013 | |
If there is one event I have always wanted to attend during a Berkshire summer but never seemed to make it to, it's the .
Don't get me wrong: I don't actually enjoy eating zucchini, though every summer some well-meaning friend presents me with a green giant from their garden and I am left pretending that I can come up with all sorts of tasty ways to eat it, even though inside I know that it will sit on my counter until it gets mushy and gross.
(But don't get me wrong here: I do understand the impulse to dole out excess produce, as I am the proud owner of half a dozen blueberry bushes that produce pounds and pounds of the fruit that, while tasty, can get old
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Are We There Yet?: Strawberries AboundBy Rebecca Dravis, 12:47PM / Thursday, June 20, 2013 | |
Last summer my daughter and I planted one tiny strawberry plant in our back yard. We dug out a small square space, put bricks around it so Daddy wouldn't run over it with the lawn mower, and hoped for the best.
One strawberry grew, the plant itself withered and we thought it was a lost cause. But then last week, much to our surprise, another solo strawberry had grown. One strawberry a year is not exactly what I had in mind when we planted it, but one is better than nothing, right?
If your family loves strawberries and all of the delicious ways to eat them as much as my family does, this is a good weekend for you.
If you read this before 5 p.m. Thursday, June 20, head
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EPA Postpones Housatonic River UpdateNichole Dupont, 05:37PM / Tuesday, January 25, 2011 | |
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LENOX, Mass. — Just a reminder to concerned citizens, sportsmen, environmentalists and anyone else whose life will be impacted by the Housatonic River cleanup (namely all of us), that there is a meeting Wednesday night, Jan. 26, at 5:30 at the Lenox Town Hall auditorium.
The EPA Housatonic River Citizens Coordinating Council, which includes representatives from the Environmental Protection Agency, GE, the state Department of Environmental Protection and local environmentalists and officials will meet to discuss the status of the Rest of the River Project.
The purpose of the meeting is to provide updates since the last meeting in October on several proposed projects surrounding
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Lanesborough Elm Given Lofty NameStaff Reports, 06:13PM / Tuesday, June 22, 2010 | |
Submitted photo
Third-grader Troy Massaconi looks
up at the tree he's named 'King Elmer.'
LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — The state's biggest elm tree now has a name suited to its majestic appearance: King Elmer.
Alice Spatz, co-chairman of the Lanesborough Tree and Forest Committee announced on Monday that the winner of the Name the Champion Elm Contest is Troy Massaconi.
Troy is a pupil in Anna Mello's third-grade class at Lanesborough Elementary School. The school's two third-grade classes participated in an Arbor Day event to measure the tree at the bottom of Summer Street to see if it could size up as New England's biggest elm.
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Be on the Lookout for Invasive SpeciesStaff Reports, 09:57AM / Wednesday, June 02, 2010 | |
The Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife (MassWildlife), wants boaters to know that they should "check to be sure they aren't giving a free ride to non-native aquatic plants or animals." According to MassWildlife's June newsletter, boats, motors, trailers, fishing equipment, anchors, bait buckets, live wells, swimming and diving gear, and other aquatic equipment can transport aquatic, exotic invasive species between water bodies.
Once established, invasive species can choke waterways, foul intake and discharge structures, lower lakefront property values, impede boating, swimming and fishing, and reduce biodiversity by
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