The spring flower that I find so bright and joyous is the nasturtium, whether the variety is bright orange, buttery yellow or even white. The nasturtium will grow profusely in all kinds of soil and gardeners up North know early spring is the time to start growing seeds in the greenhouse.
I’ve just spent a few days in the Panhandle with friends visiting what is called the forgotten Florida. We visited Apalachicola and the seaside town of Rosemary Beach. These are beautiful places and all that sugar-white sand! Port St. Joe Beach was, for me, an undiscovered highlight of the panhandle, where the beach is welcoming and quiet. My friends, Erin and Joe Payner, have settled comfortably into their oceanfront home after Joe’s retirement from the Air Force.
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Go-bag filled with cash, a passport, and a one-way ticket to Staten Island.
Jar with unidentifiable liquid simply labeled “PROOF.”
All 13 works of art stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 1990.
Dozens of basic interior design mistakes.
Michael Cohen.
Muffled screaming coming from the padlocked basement.
A sealed envelope reading “Urgent: Details of Imminent FBI Raid.”
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Can you spot a criminal? Art Heist lets the audience be the detective
Palm Beach Daily News
If you’ve ever dreamed of being a detective or forensic scientist, the Kravis Center for the Performing Arts has the perfect show for you. Art Heist, an interactive performance produced by Right Angle Entertainment and based on the real-life art theft at Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, is a “true crime walking show” where socially distanced groups move through five walkable locations to gather clues.
The show premieres Thursday and runs through May 16, with tickets starting at $41.50.
The audience will be able to interview a variety of characters adapted from the actual suspect list from the night. This includes the two thieves who on March 18, 1990 entered the museum in the middle of the night disguised as police officers, telling guards they were investigating a disturbance.
12 fun (and safe) things to do in Boston now that a normal-ish spring is upon us
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From left to right, top to bottom: Running by the Charles River, a kayaker near the Veteran s Memorial Bridge in Scituate Harbor, a boy on a Boston Duck Tour, the Public Garden, and Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.Globe Staff
The weather is warming, coronavirus numbers are dwindling, restrictions are easing, and Massachusetts residents might be on the verge of experiencing an unfamiliar phenomenon: something to look forward to.
On Friday, masks will no longer be required outdoors, as long as it is possible to socially distance. By May 10, large venues, both indoors and outdoors, can operate at 25 percent capacity. By Memorial Day, street festivals, bars, beer gardens, and wineries can reopen. And by August 1, all industry restrictions will be lifted. (Though Bostonâs reopening timeline will trail the stateâs by three weeks).
Live theater returns to the Kravis Center in West Palm Beach wptv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wptv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.