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The baby animals at Hancock Shaker Village have become a traditional harbinger of spring in the Bekrshires.
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Baby Animals Festival Back at Hancock Shaker Village

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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The village has a bevy of lambs, kids, piglets, chicks and calves with more expected. 
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The baby animals are back at Hancock Shaker Village for the 23rd year.
 
"We welcome all the new baby animals: lambs, kids, piglets, calves, chicks. We welcome them into the farm family," said Director and CEO, Carrie Holland during a sneak preview this week.
 
The baby animals festival runs April 12 through May 4, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
 
"This year we have a beautiful mix of animals, the calves are gorgeous, so I think people will really enjoy visiting them," Holland said. "Our livestock manager Olive, has also been getting deep into the science and she's really excited with some of the breed mix she's been able to achieve with the piglets and so she's very excited about that."
 
The mission of Hancock Shaker Village is to preserve the history of the Shakers and to educate the public about them, and the baby animals are a big contributor to that. 
 
"Baby animals is an excellent way to help us talk about the Shakers and their farming and agricultural history," said Holland. "It's a big part of how they sustained this village and they were a closed community, they were self-sustaining and farming was a major way that they were able to do that from like a nourishment — providing food for the community ...
 
"Who doesn’t love baby animals? It attracts a wonderful crowd some people who are familiar with Shakers and some people who aren't so when they are coming through the doors maybe they just want to see a lamb but it gives us the opportunity to share more."
 
The village has welcomed lambs, kids, piglets, chicks, and calves, with a few more expected.
 
"It's such a fun time and it's just a way to welcome back the spring and the warm weather," Holland said. "It's lovely and heartwarming and like I said, you can't not smile when you walk into the barn and just hear all the baby animals, see them, smell them, it's truly a joyful time."
 
The village will also showcase eight exhibits throughout the year.
 
"A few will start to open during Baby Animals. So there's a photography exhibit that folks will be able to see day one, and we also have some pop-up experiences throughout the festival," Holland said.
 
During the summer, the village will be breaking ground on the renovation project for its visitor center. The project will open up the first floor and utilize the second floor that has been empty for years.
 
"We will finish the second floor, which is very exciting because we need more space," Holland said. "New galleries that we'll be able to put our objects in, so some of that is like improving the environmentals and the temperature controls and the spaces so we can better protect all the objects and display them."
 
The project will introduce permanent exhibit galleries, climate-controlled collection storage, open storage for some of the premiere objects in the collection, a library, new lobby, and multi-purpose spaces.

You can visit the Baby Animals Festival beginning Saturday, April 12, through Sunday, May 4, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. You can purchase tickets online or at the village.


Tags: Hancock Shaker Village,   

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Pittsfield Council Says 'Yes' to Soccer at Crane Park

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

The pitch will have the logos of the city and the US. and Massachusetts soccer associations. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The city is gladly accepting a "mini-pitch" from the U.S. Soccer Foundation to bring games back to Crane Park. 

Fueling excitement around the World Cup, U.S. Soccer has been working with the Massachusetts Youth Soccer League to make these facilities available to 20 communities — one of which will be at the park at the intersection of Benedict Road and Springside Avenue. 

The City Council accepted the gift on Tuesday during its regular meeting. 

A mini pitch is a compact, modular field typically used for soccer, and it can also accommodate inline skates. It has a galvanized steel border with built-in goals and a rubber plastic surface that is clicked together; installed on the existing inline hockey court. 

Ward 2 Councilor Cameron Cunningham said he has gone door to door speaking with nearby residents, and they are "really excited" about the upgrade. He also sees it as a great addition. 

"They say that nobody really uses the court a ton now, and they are excited to see kids back on there playing," he said. 

Decades ago, the Crane Park facility was a wading pool. It closed in 1980, and before the turn of the century, it was filled in and marked for hockey. 

Parks, Open Space, and Natural Resources Manager James McGrath explained that the wooden border around the rink is showing its age, has been vandalized and tagged, and the facility is seeing a "real decline" in use. 

"This would seem to be an appropriate spot for us to remove the board system that's in place and install the mini pitch system through this grant," he said. 

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