Amenia to usher in holiday season with Celebration of Lights

AMENIA — Amenia’s annual Celebration of Lights returns to Fountain Square and East Main Street on Sunday, Dec. 7, between 2:30 and 4:30 p.m. The program is sponsored by the Town of Amenia.

The event will be followed by the traditional Amenia Fire Company parade that will begin at 5 p.m.Parade vehicles and participants should line up in advance at the fire company on Mechanic Street.

Family fun is assured, including kids’ crafts, photos with Santa, tree decorating and menorah lighting, a search for elves that promises prizes, music performed by Webutuck School students, hot chocolate, cupcakes and cookies being dispensed, a chance to write and mail a letter to the North Pole, and announcement of the Amenia Citizen of the Year.

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A stand of trees in the woods.

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Did you notice that some sugar maples lost their leaves far earlier this fall than others, missing out on the color parade? The leaves wilted from dull yellow to brown in August before falling off in early September. Where we live, it has happened for several years to a few older maples near the house.

I called two arborists to get as accurate a diagnosis as possible by phone and received two opinions on the issue, both involving fungal pathogens. Skip Kosciusko, a West Cornwall arborist, diagnosed the problem as verticillium wilt, which he says has reached pandemic levels among the area’s sugar maples. “It looks like we have climate conditions that prevent the really cold air from settling in the winter. Cold is helpful in killing the fungus deep inside the tree.” Verticillium wilt enters through the roots and blocks the tree’s vascular system, preventing water from reaching the leaves. It will most often kill the tree, especially young or poorly maintained ones.

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What the title leaves unsaid, however, is the difficult personal choices the architect had to make along the path to success. Motherhood couldn’t always take priority — and while all’s well that ends well in this stirring portrait of family and fabrication, that underlying tension elevates what might have otherwise become a study in monotonous adulation.

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The Orvis Guide hip pack as seen on the Orvis website.

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Hunt Library director Meg Sher, left, and Linda Ciaro of Project SAGE before delivering a presentation on online safety for youth.

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That was the message from Project Sage’s Linda Ciano, who spoke at the David M. Hunt Library Thursday evening, Nov. 20, in Falls Village, part of an ongoing effort to educate families about online safety across the Northwest Corner.

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