There are several events this weekend, including a community day, hurricane relief benefit concert, craft fairs, bingo, live music, and more.
Editor's Pick
Hancock Shaker Village Community Day
Hancock Shaker Village, Pittsfield
Saturday from 11 to 4 p.m.
Visit the museum for free and experience various activities, including craft demonstrations of woodworking, blacksmithing, and weaving; interpreter-led tours and Shaker talks.
In addition, visitors can interact with the village's barnyard animals, a community favorite activity.
This year, the museum partnered with the Berkshire Museum, which will display its "Muh-he-con-ne-ok: the People of the Water That Are Never Still" Mobile Museum Unit.
The band will be performing its annual concert, which incorporates pieces from different cultures and periods.
The concert is three days before Veterans Day, so it will also feature a medley of service tunes from the Army, Marines, Air Force, Space Force, and Coast Guard.
There are about a dozen pieces on the list and the concert will run for about 90 minutes with an intermission. The Colonial can seat around 700 people and more than 300 have already reserved a spot.
Poet, scholar, and Paris Review poetry editor Srikanth Reddy joins novelist and RAP Special Projects Coordinator Sara Houghteling to discuss his latest book, "The Unsignificant: Three Talks on Poetry and Pictures."
In the book, Reddy refracts poems by classic poets such as Homer, Gertrude Stein, and Ronald Johnson through images like Bruegel's Landscape with the Fall of Icarus, Hermann Rorschach's inkblots, and Galileo's drawings of the moon.
Pup Daddy Productions and Bluebird & Co. team up to host "Spindle," music bingo. Players can enjoy a nostalgic trip to the '80s as DJ Pup Daddy plays popular Halloween-related songs.
He will play 1 to 2 minutes of a famous song, and if the song is on your playing card, cross it off for a chance to win prizes.
There is no fee to play, and Bluebird's full menu and bar will be available throughout the event.
The restaurant will host its monthly open mic night hosted by Noah and Easton. There is no cover charge or advance sign-ups. Dinner is available starting at 6 p.m.
Whiskey City is hosting a hurricane relief benefit concert featuring a lineup of musical artists, including Hotshot Hillbillies, Lindsay Anne, Misty Blues, All Over The Map, and more.
All proceeds will go to the North Carolina Disaster Relief Fund to help communities recover. Tickets cost $22.13. More information here.
Pancake Breakfast
Holiday Brook Farm, Dalton
Time: 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Every Sunday in November, the farm is hosting a pancake breakfast.
The all-you-can-eat buffet includes pancakes, eggs, hash browns, sausage, and more. Free kids' crafts and wagon rides are available, weather permitting.
Pricing is $16.95 for adults, and kids aged 2 to 12 pay their age. More information here.
Planters' Nutmobile
Benningtom (Vt.) Museum
Time: noon to 4
The iconic Planters peanut-shaped Nutmobile will be parked in the museum's parking lot. Planters has used similar vehicles since 1935. This 26-foot-long peanut on wheels has three brand ambassords, called "Peanutters," who are traveling around the country.
Animal Support Project
Benson's Pet Center, Pittsfield
Time: Noon to 3 p.m.
The pet store will be providing a photo op for pets. Pet parents can bring home a 4-by-6-inch framed keepsake for $10. Participants can choose between a Thanksgiving or Veteran's Day theme.
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Clarksburg Students Write in Support of Rural School Aid
By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
Mason Langenback calculated that Clarksburg would get almost $1 million if the $60 million was allocated equally.
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — Eighth-graders at Clarksburg School took a lesson in civic advocacy this week, researching school funding and writing letters to Beacon Hill that call for fully funding rural school aid.
The students focused on the hardships for small rural schools and their importance to the community — that they struggle with limited funding and teacher shortages, but offer safe and supportive spaces for learning and are a hub for community connections.
"They all address the main issue, the funding for rural schools, and how there's a gap, and there's the $4 million gap this year, and then it's about the $40 million next year, and that rural schools need that equitable funding," said social studies teacher Mark Karhan.
A rural schools report in 2022 found smaller school districts cost from nearly 17 percent to 23 percent more to operate, and recommended "at least" $60 million be appropriated annually for rural school aid.
Gov. Maura Healey has filed for more Chapter 70 school aid, but that often is little help to small rural schools with declining or static enrollment. For fiscal 2027, she's budgeted $20 million for rural schools, up from around $13 million this year but still far below the hoped for $60 million.
Karhan said the class was broken into four groups and the students were provided a submission letter from Rural Schools Advocacy. The students used the first paragraph, which laid out the funding facts, and then did research and wrote their own letters.
They will submit those with a school picture to the governor.
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