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Lake Champlain Maritime Museum to open indoor exhibits Friday | Vermont Business Magazine
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We still live here : Native Americans affirm their New Hampshire roots
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Native Americans in New Hampshire bring their history into the light
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Contoocook River region town criers for May 16, 2021
Published: 5/15/2021 1:45:14 PM
BOW
Spring sale
■The annual Bow Garden Club Spring Plant Sale will go on! This year s sale will be an outdoor event held on May 29 from 9 a.m. to noon at the edge of the Bow Community Building parking lot under popup tents. The sale will be held rain or shine.
■The Bow Garden Club invites you to a free event, “Cooking & Gardening with Edible Flowers” on June 14 at 6 p.m. on Zoom. Join expert gardener and renowned chef Liz Barbour as she explores the varieties of edible flowers you can grow in your garden and the many ways you can incorporate them into your cooking. Chef Barbour will take you on a tour of her cottage-sized gardens and will demonstrate two delicious recipes featuring edible flowers from her own gardens. Virtual seats are limited and registration is required. Email president@bowgardenclub.org to register.
Abenaki art on display Courtesy
Published: 4/28/2021 3:18:07 PM
‘Alnôbak Moskijik Maahlakwsikok” (“Abenaki People Emerging from Ashes”), will be on display at Two Villages Art Society in Hopkinton from May 7 to 28. The show is a collaboration between Two Villages Art Society, Abenaki Trails Project, and Vermont Abenaki Artists Association in consultation with the Abenaki Art & Education Center, Mt. Kearsarge Indian Museum, and Hopkinton Historical Society.
“When people think of Abenaki art, they may envision neutral-colored traditional arts made with leather, beads, and feathers, but Abenaki artists have much more to offer,” said Vera Sheehan, executive director of the VAAA. “We are eager to showcase our artwork to the mainstream art world.”