The sun has finally risen from the clouds and shines its golden rays on the bare trees bringing the wildlife back to life and awakening the wildlife from their blissful sleep. The snow melts and the sky cries with joy, showering the ground and filling the air with the smell of petrichor.
The grass becomes green, the leaves return, and the flowers pollinate, filling the world with the forgotten color. Nature celebrates the coming of spring and so should you. Here are some events happening this spring to help with your celebration.
SpringFest
Saturday, May 9
Berkshire Botanical Garden, Stockbridge
The 24-acre botanical garden will have free admission family fun designed to celebrate spring and community. The event features food trucks and enough children's activities to keep the youngest visitors happily busy for hours including a petting zoo, pony rides, face painting, and more. A traditional maypole dance will add an old-world flourish to the day's lineup.
The festival is part of the garden's immersive weekend experience Mother's Day weekend, coinciding with its 49th annual Plants-and-Answers Plant Sale from May 8 through 10.
The event was established in 1977 and has become a cherished Mother's Day weekend tradition for gardeners across the region. This year's edition, curated by its horticulture staff, offers hundreds of perennials, annuals, herbs, and vegetables — each selected with an emphasis on diversity and nature-based landscaping.
Daffodil and Tulip Festival
April 18 thru May 10
Naumkeag, Stockbridge
Naumkeag is a historic home and garden in Stockbridge Massachusetts which offers guided tours, world famous landscapes, amazing views, and year round programs. It is one of Berkshire County's original
Gilded Age "cottages" known for the surrounding gardens and landscape designed in the late 1800s by Nathan Barrett and later expanded by Fletcher Steele and Mabel Choate.
It will be having its annual Daffodil and Tulip Festival throughout the months of April and May showcasing over 130,000 daffodil, tulip and minor bulbs across its 8 acres of land.
The 48-acre estate will be decorated with "with a variety of blooms, containers, displays and decorations against the backdrop of stunning views of Monument Mountain and the Berkshire Hills." the website said.
Mixed bouquets, container plants, and a pre-sale of spring bulbs will be sold at a pop-up shop outside the greenhouse. Food and refreshments will be for sale at the outdoor snack shack. Admittance to the inside of the house will be permitted for self-guided tours of the first floor and to provide access to the museum's gift shop.
Tickets to the festival must be purchased in advance and will not be sold on site. Visitors must arrive during their arrival window and cannot be accommodated if early or late. The museum requests visitors limit their stay to one hour due to the high number of participants.
Hancock Shaker Village will be having its Annual Baby Animal Festival giving visitors a chance to see baby lambs, goats, piglets, calves, and chicks while partaking in daily events and activities.
Families will have the chance to learn and enjoy activities including blacksmithing, woodworking, spinning, and daily Livestock 101 talks from the informative farm teams. On weekends, visitors can take pony rides and face painting.
The village offers one daily tour during Baby Animals at 10 a.m. The tour will be open to a single group of up to 20 people and must be reserved in advance because of its high popularity.
Visitors will get a behind-the-scenes look at the farm during the hourlong hayride. The farmers will spill all the dirt on the village's history, facts, and secrets.
The tour will take farm-goers to the Round Stone Barn, Dairy Ell, and barnyard so they can see calves, lambs, kids, piglets, and chicks. Interaction with some of the baby animals will be permitted, and sometimes visitors will be able to bottle-feed a calf.
The village will be open to the public at 11 and, after the tour, visitors are welcome to revisit the barn and explore.
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Sheffield Craftsman Offering Workshops on Windsor Chairs
By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
Andrew Jack uses hand tools in his wood working shop.
SHEFFIELD, Mass. — A new workshop is bringing woodworking classes and handmade items.
Andrew Jack specializes in Windsor chairs and has been making them for almost 20 years.
He recently opened a workshop at 292 South Main St. as a space for people to see his work and learn how to do it.
"This is sort of the next, or latest iteration of a business that I've kind of been limping along for a little while," he said. "I make Windsor chairs from scratch, and this is an effort to have a little bit more of a public-facing space, where people can see the chairs, talk about options, talking about commissions.
"I also am using it as a space to teach workshops, which for the last 10 years or so I've been trying to do out of my own personal workshop at home."
Jack graduated in 2008 from State University of New York at Purchase, and later met woodworker Curtis Buchanan, who inspired him.
"Right after I finished there, I was feeling a little lost. I wasn't sure how to make the next steps and afford a workspace. And the machine tooling that I was used to using in school." he said, "Right after I graduated, I crossed paths with a guy named Curtis Buchanan, and he was demonstrating making really refined Windsor chairs with not much more than some some flea market tools, and I saw that as a great, low overhead way to keep working with wood."
Jack moved into his workshop last month with help from his wife. He is renting the space from the owners of Magic Flute, who he says have been wonderful to work with.
"My wife actually noticed the 'for rent' sign out by the road, and she made the initial call to just see if we get some more information," he said. "It wasn't on my radar, because it felt like kind of a big leap, and sometimes that's how it's been in my life, where I just need other people to believe in me more than I do to, you know, really pull the trigger."
Jack does commissions and while most of his work is Windsor chairs, he also builds desks and tables, and does spoon carving.
Windsor chairs are different because of the way their backs are attached into the seat instead of being a continuous leg and back frame.
"A lot of the designs that I make are on the traditional side, but I do some contemporary stuff as well. And so usually the legs are turned on a lathe and they have sort of a fancy baluster look to them, or they could be much more simple," he said. "But the solid seat that separates the undercarriage from the backrest and the arms and stuff is sort of one of the defining characteristics of a Windsor."
He hopes to help people learn the craft and says it's rewarding to see the finished product. In the future, he also hopes to host other instructors and add more designs for the workshop.
"The prime impact for the workshops is to give close instruction to people that are interested in working wood with hand tools or developing a new skill. Or seeing what's possible with proper guidance," Jack said. "Chairs are often considered some of the more difficult or complex woodworking endeavors, and maybe less so Windsor chairs, but there is a lot that goes into them, and being able to kind of demystify that, or guide people through the process is quite rewarding."
People can sign up for classes on his website; some classes are over a couple and others a couple of weekends.
"I offer a three-day class for, a much, much more simple, like perch, kind of stool, where most of the parts are kind of pre-made, and students can focus on the joinery that goes into it and the carving of the seat, again, all with hand tools. And then students will leave with their own chair," he said.
"The longer classes run similarly, although there's quite a bit more labor that goes into those. So I provide all the turned parts, legs and stretchers and posts and things, but students will do all the joinery and all the seat carving the assembly. And they'll split and shave and shape their own spindles, and any of the bent parts that go into the chair."
His gallery is open Wednesday through Sunday 10 a.m to 2 p.m., and Monday and Tuesday by appointment.
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