The postcard perfect Jackson, New Hampshire
The postcard perfect Jackson, New Hampshire
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NH Chronicle - All About Jackson
Jackson is in the heart of the Mount Washington Valley and this time of year it's packed with skiers, but there is more to the picturesque village. Audrey Cox goes day-tripping and finds out.
Visiting Arethusa Falls, New Hampshire, the United States - Best waterfall
Visiting Arethusa Falls, New Hampshire, the United States - Best waterfall.
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Merry Go Slower - Distressed by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Arethusa Falls,
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Please watch: Visiting Gilcrease Museum, Art Museum in Tulsa, OKlahoma, United States
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Acworth Beehives - then and now with Loisanne Foster of Marlow, NH
Loisanne Foster resident of Marlow, NH sheds some light on the famous Acworth Bee Hives on Kennedy Hill in Acworth, NH. Loisanne and her Husband spent many hours studying, mapping and drawing this Ancient and Sacred site that lies upon Kennedy Hill in Acworth NH. Their research and original drawings are now a part of the collection of the New England Mineral Museum - a Portal to History, Geology, Gemology, and the Lapidary Arts of New England.
One theory is that this site was where the Shaman may have resided for the largest settlement, in New England, of non-nomadic agricultural natives. For centuries they occupied the fertile grasslands along the Connecticut River Valley from the abundant fishing grounds at Bellows Falls in the South to Charlestown in the North. From the site of Old Fort #4 in Charlestown, (strategically placed by “White Man” at the Capital seat of this enormous settlement) it is just a 4 hour walk up “The Turnpike” to Kennedy Hill. This Native trade route would have continued onto Newport/Sunapee and then the White Mountains where no “Red Man” dared to tread, as this treeless domain was the home of the Gods, only the Shaman could traverse this Sacred Landscape.
It is believed that around 800 BC Culdee Monks from Europe continued their European tradition of Marking Sacred sites so they would not become violated by future human development. Thus the unique Bee Hive structures were built as guardians to the Shamans most sacred domain. The white Crystalline Hills of Acworth are included on some Maps as the South-Western most part of New Hampshire's famous White Mountain region. This is even mentioned in Jackson’s 1841 First Geological Report on the State of New Hampshire.
Northbrook Circle North Conway NH - For Sale
Swim, Ski, Tennis, Basketball - and walk to North Conway Village from you beautiful 3 Bedroom - 2 Bathroom condo with views of the Most Mountains. For more information Call Corinne Ray at (603)986-7464 Keller Williams Lakes and Mountains (603569home) or email at homes@rayrealtyNH.com.
Woodman Museum celebrates 100 years
Enjoying Postcards with Jack and Dylon - THE MOVIE PART 1 - Every Episode in Order! FIRST TIME EVER!
When Jack and Dylon started the living art project known as Art and Stories of the 20th Century Postcard they had no idea where it would lead or how long it would last. Let alone to their own ongoing daily Enjoying Postcards podcast. Assembled here for the first time ever, enjoy every Episode of this unique experience in order with Enjoying Postcards: THE MOVIE - PART 1! Link to PART 2 below!
Enjoying Postcards with Jack and Dylon
THE MOVIE PART 1 - Ep List
00:00 Introduction
00:48 Opening Sequence
01:05 - Ep # 1 - The Vigeland, Oslo, Norway - 1943
02:03 - Ep # 2 - Water Lilies, Jari Haukioja - 1992
02:39 - Ep # 3 - We Don’t Have the Measles - 1910
03:27 - Ep # 4 - Disneyland - 1987
03:59 - Ep # 5 - Wallace Idaho - 1986 (BOOTS & JULIE)
04:42 - Ep #6 - Hollywood Bowl - 1953
05:28 - Ep #7 - Oriental Racetrack, Havana, Cuba - 1933
06:03 - Ep #8 - Golden Gate - 1920
06:38 - Ep #9 - Paris, France - 1945
07:14 - Ep #10 - El Paso, Texas - 1945
07:53 - Ep #11 - Arc de Triomphe de l'Étoile - 1959
08:27 - Ep #12 - Cathédrale de Reims
08:47 - Ep #13 - East Berlin - 1967
09:18 - Ep #14 - Niagara Falls - 1942
09:59 - Ep #15 - MS-Chi-Cheemaun, Tobermory, Ontario - 1994 (BOOTS & JULIE)
10:51 - Ep #16 - Ella Falls, General Grant National Park, California
11:35 - Ep #17 - Dry Falls State Park, Washington - 1951
12:19 - Ep #18 - BB Riverboats, Cincinnati, Covington Fun Liner
13:04 - Ep #19 - The Flume, White Mountains, New Hampshire - 1938
13:43 - Ep #20 - Amish Country, Kissing Bridge - 1987 (BOOTSIE)
14:33 - Ep #21 - International Bridge, Sault Ste Marie, Ontario, Canada - 1988
15:09 - Ep #22 - The Tower of London - 1948
15:39 - Ep #23 - Church of the Recessional, Forest Lawn Memorial Park - 1958
16:29 - Ep #24 - IQ Testing,Fort Benjamin, Harrison, Indiana - 1944
17:15 - Ep #25 - Cafeteria Mess Hall, Fort Benjamin, Harrison, Indiana - 1944
18:08 - Ep #26 - World's Largest Outdoor Organ and US Naval Hospital - 1936
18:52 - Ep #27 - The Narrows, Yellowstone River - 1983
19:41 - Ep #28 - Agawa Canyon Tour - 1993 (BOOTS & JULIE
20:18 - Ep #29 - Trinity Church, New York - 1912
21:15 - Ep #30 - Mt. Baker from Baker Lake, Washington - 1940
21:55 - Ep #31 - Parker House, Boston, Massachusetts - 1946
22:34 - Ep #32 - Woodstock, Vermont - 1994
23:17 - Ep #33 - Ikea Fanmail - 2016
24:14 - Ep #34 - Victoria Gardens, Brighton
24:57 - Ep #35 - Statue of Republic Paris
25:28 - Ep #36 - Rough Sea, Hastings
26:00 - Ep #37 - CPR Windsor
26:43 - Ep #38 - The Cotswold Olimpicks, Reading
27:41 - Ep #39 - Columbus in the Caribbean
28:33 - Ep #40 - Kissing Cupids
29:09 - Ep #41 - Child with Cat
29:57 - Ep #42 - Leister Castle Gateway
30:26 - Ep #43 - Prosit Neujahr! HAPPY NEW YEARS!
31:00 - Ep #44 - Steamer
31:38 - Ep #45 - Garden Watercolour
32:14 - Ep #46 - What this baby is doing?
32:54 - Ep #47 - Montreal Bridge
33:41 - Ep #48 - Santiago d Cuba
34:12 - Ep #49 - The Cascades
35:04 - Ep #50 - Volendam
35:35 - Ep #51 - Lady Atkins (LADY ATKINS)
36:26 - Ep #52 - Dan’s Tower
37:13 - Ep #53 - I Rheingold - (IVOR ATKINS)
38:04 - Ep #54 - First Hallmark
38:47 - Ep #55 - Lorna Doone Country
39:38 - Ep #56 - Parliament, Victoria, BC
40:10 - Ep #57 - Bouillion (LADY ATKINS)
40:58 - Ep #58 - Hammam-Lif (LADY ATKINS)
41:50 - Ep #59 - 1908 REO
42:45 - Ep #60 - 1910 Car
43:22 - Ep #61 - Ben Tally in Malta
44:17 - Ep #62 - King Charles Tower
44:41 - Ep #63 - Sonoma's State Capitol Building
45:18 - Ep #64 - Sandollar Story (BOOTS SANS JULIE)
46:06 - Ep #65 - Rockefeller Center
46:56 - Ep #66 - Venice
47:15 - Ep #67 - HAPPY EASTER!
48:09 - Ep #68 - Melrose Abbey
48:49 - Ep #69 - Berlin
49:38 - Ep #70 - Traveling Through Orange Groves
50:19 - Ep #71 - Patio of the Lions
50:47 - Ep #72 - Hollywood Bowl
51:25 - Ep #73 - Autumn Splendor
51:58 - Ep #74 - Hollywood Bowl, Symphony Under the Stars
52:17 - Ep #75 - Giant Cooper River Bridge
53:06 - Ep #76 - Clark Fork
53:57 - Ep #77 - Estes Colorado
54:35 - Ep #78 - 1st Bootsie and Julie (BOOTS & JULIE)
55:26 - Ep #79 - Thousand Island Beauty Spots
55:57 - Ep #80 - Beaverton
56:27 - Ep #81 - Nokomis, Illinois
57:07 - Ep #82 - New York City
57:58 - Ep #83 - Epcot Center (BOOTS & JULIE)
58:50 - Ep #84 - Kapok Tree Restaurant (BOOTS & JULIE)
59:38 - Ep #85 - Viking Ship Museum
1:00:21 - Ep #86 - Washington Monument
1:01:03 - Ep #87 - The US Capitol, What a Madhouse!
1:01:28 - Ep #88 - The Pentagon
1:02:06 - Ep #89 - Sod Roof
1:03:00 - Ep #90 - Beautiful Washington
1:03:22 - Ep #91 - Panama City Beach (BOOTS & JULIE)
1:04:03 - Ep #92 - Hammerfest
1:04:21 - Ep #93 - Bad Water, Death Valley
1:05:03 - Ep #94 - Queen Creek Gorge
1:05:46 - Ep #95 - Mexico World Showcase (BOOTS & JULIE)
1:06:47 - Ep #96 - Bourbon Street
1:07:36 - Ep #97 - Mystery of St. George Street (BOOTS & JULIE)
1:08:23 - Ep #98 - Aberdeen
1:08:52 - Ep #99 - Seattle Art Museum
Enjoying Postcards: THE MOVIE concludes with PART 2! (INCLUDING FINAL BOOTS & JULIE)
Alabama and Mississippi Compared
Mr. Beat compares and contrasts Alabama and Mississippi, two American states that are about as Southern as a state can get. Thanks to Shannon Beat for providing footage for this video.
#mississippi #alabama #geography
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Produced by Matt Beat. All images by Matt Beat, found in the public domain, or used under fair use guidelines. Music by Drew Gerber.
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Alabama and Mississippi
Two bordering Southern states in these United States that are about as “Southern” as you can get. One time I mixed them up on a map in a video because my brain messes up sometimes. But yeah, both are in what’s known as the “Deep South,” and unfortunately, both have bad reputations.
When I searched “Alabama jokes” on YouTube, a video about incest was one of the top results. I’m not joking.
Anyway, so while a lot of people joke about how bad they are, in this video I’m taking a serious look at the two states. First of all, Alabama is just slightly bigger than Mississippi. Both have a small border with the Gulf of Mexico. Both have a humid subtropical climate and get A LOT of rain. Both have long, hot, humid summers and short, mild winters. You are rarely going to see snow in these two states. You will see lots of thunderstorms, and the occasional hurricanes. And surprisingly, some of the worst tornadoes in American history have gone through both states.
Mississippi has a more flat topography compared with Alabama. A big reason why is because Alabama has the southern tip of the Appalachian Mountains.
Alabama has a bigger population. Almost 2 million more people. Both are not that urban compared with the rest of the United States. Jackson is Mississippi’s only city with more than 100,000 people, whereas Alabama has five with over 100,000. Mississippi is also one of the few states in the country that has a shrinking population in recent years.
Alabama residents are older than Mississippi residents, on average. Perhaps because more retirees have recently been moving to Alabama? And they don’t call it the “Bible Belt” for nothing. Both states are religious. 83% of Mississippi residents identify as Christian. In Alabama, it’s 86%. A lot of those Christians identify as Evangelical, and specifically Baptists are the largest Evangelical group in both states.
Both states have a high percentage of African Americans relative to the rest of the country. (26.6% AL, 37.4% MS) In fact, Mississippi has the highest percentage of African American residents of all states in the country.
A big reason why there are so many African Americans in both states is the legacy of slavery. Many of their ancestors were forced to live in this part of the country as slaves. Still, the majority of residents in both states today trace their ancestry to Europe.
Asher Brown Durand (1796-1886) A collection of paintings 4K Ultra HD Silent Slideshow
Asher Brown Durand (1796-1886) A collection of paintings 4K Ultra HD Silent Slideshow
an American painter of the Hudson River School
Durand was born in and eventually died in Maplewood, New Jersey (then called Jefferson Village). He was the eighth of eleven children. Durand's father was a watchmaker and a silversmith.
Durand was apprenticed to an engraver from 1812 to 1817 and later entered into a partnership with the owner of the company, Charles Cushing Wright (1796–1854), who asked him to manage the company's New York office. He engraved Declaration of Independence for John Trumbull during 1823, which established Durand's reputation as one of the country's finest engravers. Durand helped organize the New York Drawing Association during 1825, which would become the National Academy of Design; he would serve the organization as president from 1845 to 1861.
Asher's engravings on bank notes were used as the portraits for America's first postage stamps, the 1847 series. Along with his brother Cyrus he also engraved some of the succeeding 1851 issues
His main interest changed from engraving to oil painting about 1830 with the encouragement of his patron, Luman Reed. During 1837, he accompanied his friend Thomas Cole on a sketching expedition to Schroon Lake in the Adirondacks Mountains and soon after he began to concentrate on landscape painting. He spent summers sketching in the Catskills, Adirondacks, and the White Mountains of New Hampshire, making hundreds of drawings and oil sketches that were later incorporated into finished academy pieces which helped to define the Hudson River School.
Durand is remembered particularly for his detailed portrayals of trees, rocks, and foliage. He was an advocate for drawing directly from nature with as much realism as possible. Durand wrote, Let scrupulously accept whatever presents him until he shall, in a degree, have become intimate with her infinity...never let him profane her sacredness by a willful departure from truth.
Like other Hudson River School artists, Durand also believed that nature was an ineffable manifestation of God. He expressed this sentiment and his general opinions on art in his essay Letters on Landscape Painting in The Crayon, a mid-19th century New York art periodical. Wrote Durand, The true province of Landscape Art is the representation of the work of God in the visible creation...
Durand is noted for his 1849 painting Kindred Spirits which shows fellow Hudson River School artist Thomas Cole and poet William Cullen Bryant in a Catskills Mountains landscape. This was painted as a tribute to Cole upon Cole's death during 1848, and as a gift to Bryant. The painting, donated by Bryant's daughter Julia to the New York Public Library during 1904, was sold by the library by means of Sotheby's at an auction during May 2005 to Alice Walton for a purported $35 million (the sale was performed as a sealed, first bid auction, so the actual sales price is not known). At $35 million, however, it would be a record price paid for an American painting at the time.
Another of Durand's painting is his Progress (1853), commissioned by a railroad executive. The landscape depicts America's progress, from a state of nature (on the left, where Native Americans look on), towards the right, where there are roads, telegraph wires, a canal, warehouses, railroads, and steamboats.
During 2007, the Brooklyn Museum exhibited nearly sixty of Durand's works in the first monographic exhibition devoted to the painter in more than thirty-five years. The show, entitled Kindred Spirits: Asher B. Durand and the American Landscape, was exhibited from March 30 to July 29, 2007. Durand is interred in Brooklyn, New York, in Green-Wood Cemetery
A Folding Full-Size Mountain Bike? Yes, Please!
MORE DETAILS (Click “Show More”)
My name is Eric and I travel with my cat, “Jax” in a 2001 Chevy Fleetwood Tioga Arrow 24D Class C RV. We travel about 35 miles a day chasing 70 degrees year-round. Here is my gear & some popular questions answered:
Gear: (UPDATED)*
*Video: Canon M50 with 11-22mm EF-M Lens
*Stabilizer: Zhiyun Crane 2
*Additional Lenses: Canon 50mm,15-45mm, & 10-18mm
*Audio: (On Camera) Rode VideoMic Pro+ With Rycote VMP+ Deadcat
*GoPro Hero 6 Silver with Purple Panda Lavalier Lapel mic for Driving Narration
*GoPro Hero 4 Black for Timelapses
*SJ4000 for driving shots out the front window.
Time Lapses: Gopro Hero 4: 2 second intervals. Sped up 1200x, cropped 4K down to 1080 for panning
Night Lapses: Gopro Hero 4 Black manual settings: 800 ISO, 30 second Shutter, 3000K WB, Protune On
Slow Motion: Shot 1080p 240fps. Reduced to 8% in Post Production
Additional Audio: Sony ICD-PX333
Editing Laptop: 2015 MacBook Pro 2.8ghz i7 16GB Ram, 500 SSD
Editing Software: Adobe Premiere Pro CC
Editing Encoder: Adobe Encoder - Presets: MP4 VBR H.264 16mbps
Aerial Drone Shots: DJI Phantom 3 Standard Shot in 2.7K Downscaled to 1080p
RV MPG: 9-11mpg depending on generator use. (7.4L 454 Chevy) 78,000 miles
Bike: 2014 Yamaha TW200 Dual Sport Enduro 70mpg
Solar: 500 watts on tilting brackets on roof. 5 AGM batteries totaling 400 amp hours
Mobile Wifi: AT&T Unlimited
Music: youtube.com/audiolibrary
Jax is a MaineCoon/Ragdoll Tabby mix. He weighs 24.8lbs. Born April 21st 2010.
RV is 24 Feet Long
Tennessee Hayride by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Email: nwnomadicfanatic@gmail.com
Mail:
Eric Jacobs
PO Box 1463
Olympia, WA 98507
10 Archaeological Mysteries of the United States
10 Archaeological Mysteries of the United States.
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These ancient American relics remain unexplained.
A centuries-old stone wall, stretching for miles; enormous pictures scratched into the ground of a desert; rocks arranged in a circle. You know what these landmarks are, right?
Guess again. Instead of the Great Wall of China or Stonehenge, these are all ancient American ruins and landmarks. The United States is a relative newcomer to the world stage, but there have been people long living on this continent, and they’ve left traces of their presence just as mysterious as those found in other countries.
1. Mystery Hill: America’s Stonehenge.
SALEM, NEW HAMPSHIRE.
About 40 miles north of the city of Boston, and about 25 miles inland from the Atlantic Ocean...
2. Casa Grande Ruins.
COOLIDGE, ARIZONA.
This is an artist's depiction of the Casa Grande (Great House), and its surrounding compound as it may have appeared around 1350 C.E....
3. The Blythe Intaglios.
BLYTHE, CALIFORNIA.
The Blythe Intaglios, often called America’s Nazca Lines, are a series of gigantic geoglyphs found fifteen miles north of Blythe California in the Colorado Desert....
4. Judaculla Rock.
SYLVA, NORTH CAROLINA.
Buried in the mountains of Jackson County, just outside of Sylva, there exists a very, very strange rock....
5. Bighorn Medicine Wheel.
LOVELL, WYOMING.
Located high in the Bighorn Mountains of Northern Wyoming, the centuries old Medicine Wheel....
6. Dighton Rock.
BERKELEY, MASSACHUSETTS.
In the fall of 1680, John Danforth – with his freshly minted degree from Harvard College – visited the South Shore of Massachusetts in Taunton and took a side trip to see one of the curiosities of the age....
7. The Great Serpent Mound.
HILLSBORO, OHIO.
The Great Serpent Mound is a 1,300 foots long, and 3 foots high prehistoric effigy mound located on a plateau of a crater along Ohio Brush Creek in Adams County, Ohio....
8. Berkeley Mystery Walls.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA.
The ancient Berkeley walls remain an ancient unsolved enigma. Often referred to as the “Great Wall of California”...
9. Miami Circle.
MIAMI, FLORIDA.
The worst place in Florida to discover an ancient mystery is on prime real estate in downtown Miami....
10. Hemet Maze Stone.
HEMET, CALIFORNIA.
Near the town of Hemet in the Reinhardt canyon, of southern California there is a curious petroglyph known as the Hemet maze stone...
Music: Kevin Macleod
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Mount Washington (New Hampshire)
Mount Washington is the highest peak in the Northeastern United States at 6,288 ft (1,917 m) and the most prominent mountain east of the Mississippi River. It is famous for dangerously erratic weather. For 76 years, until 2010, a weather observatory on the summit held the record for the highest wind gust directly measured at the Earth's surface, 231 mph (372 km/h or 103 m/s), on the afternoon of April 12, 1934. Before European settlers arrived, the mountain was known as Agiocochook, or Home of the Great Spirit.
The mountain is located in the Presidential Range of the White Mountains, in the township of Sargent's Purchase, Coos County, New Hampshire. While nearly the whole mountain is in the White Mountain National Forest, an area of 59 acres (24 ha) surrounding and including the summit is occupied by Mount Washington State Park.
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Rochester is on the move
Rochester is on the move
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TownePlace Suites Laconia Gilford Hotel Overview
Hotel details:
Just minutes from Lake Winnipesaukee, Weirs Beach, Bank of New Hampshire Pavillon at Meadowbrook and Gunstock Mountain, you will find the area's only Marriott Hotel. TownePlace Suites by Marriott Gilford is nestled in the foothills of the White Mountains less than an hour from the Manchester-Boston Regional Airport(MHT). Spacious studio suites featuring kitchenettes are perfect for personal or business travel. Free high speed internet keeps you in touch while you enjoy the beautiful surroundings of the White Mountains. Sit back and enjoy many other features such as our In a pinch market, indoor pool, fire pit, complimentary continental breakfast and 24hr coffee. Enjoy tax-free shopping in the nearby town of Tilton, or if you are a NASCAR fan, the New Hampshire Motor Speedway (Loudon). You can also enjoy the natural beauty of the area, museums, outlet and local shopping, sports, history, arts and amusements.
Additional Info:
This straightforward extended-stay hotel is 6 miles from skiing at Gunstock Mountain Resort and 7.8 miles from Ellacoya State Park on the southwest shore of Lake Winnipesaukee.
The relaxed studio suites have full kitchens and desks with ergonomic chairs, plus free WiFi and flat-screen TVs. Most suites have pull-out sofas. The 1- and 2-bedroom suites add separate living rooms.
Free perks include continental breakfast and parking. There's also an indoor pool, a 24-hour exercise room and a business center, plus laundry facilities.
Address: 14 Sawmill Rd, Gilford, NH 03249, USA
Phone: +1 603-524-5533
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Thomas Cole to Thomas Moran: 19th-Century American Landscapes at the Maier
Metropolitan Museum of American Art Research Associate, Dr. Shannon Vittoria, explores the development of 19th-century American landscape painting through a series of works from Randolph College's collection, focusing on the European roots and transatlantic travels of artists including Thomas Cole, Asher B. Durand, George Inness, and Thomas Moran, among others.
Vittoria joined the American Wing of the Metropolitan Museum of American Art in October 2015. She specializes in American painting and works on paper, with a focus on landscape art and women artists. She contributed to the research and organization of Thomas Cole's Journey: Atlantic Crossings (2018). As an Andrew W. Mellon Curatorial Fellow in the department (2013-14), she assisted with research for Thomas Hart Benton's America Today Mural Rediscovered (2014–15).
Vittoria received her PhD in art history from the City University of New York's Graduate Center, where she completed her doctoral dissertation, Nature and Nostalgia in the Art of Mary Nimmo Moran (1842–1899). She has held curatorial research positions at the Frick Collection, the Morgan Library and Museum, and the New York Historical Society.
This lecture is the 2nd Annual Sandra Whitehead Memorial Lecture, a series which highlights works from the Randolph College Collection. The series is supported by the Honorable Paul Whitehead, Jr. and was established in 2018 in memory of his wife Sandra Stone Whitehead.
Mississippi 03 - Biloxi Visitors Center
Our first stop in Biloxi was the Visitor's Center.
The Private Life of Mrs. Rachel Lambert Mellon: Life into Art Lecture by Mac Griswold
With a laser eye, witty intelligence, and nimble hands, Rachel Lambert Mellon, known as “Bunny,” fostered her life as an art form. Painted flowers bloomed as real ones in her gardens. Aroused by her imagination, Jean Schlumberger designed jewels drawn from every aspect of nature. Bunny said “I know what I want to get done.” Mac Griswold, her biographer, shares how much Bunny knew.
Lecture given on May 11, 2017
NH Audubon Birds for Beginners training video
kindergarten class, 45 minutes
Wilburton Inn: A Family Story
How did the Levis family wind up in the Green Mountains of Vermont? One's a scientist, one's an off-Broadway playwright, one's an organic farmer, one's an NYC songwriter, one's a scholar — and one's got four legs!
They wound up running a country inn that has the most breathtaking views in Vermont. How did it happen? The answers are all in this short video.
P.S. Learn about visiting the Wilburton here:
All 50 U.S. states summarized (Geography Now!)
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Many of you international geograpeeps outside the USA have asked about What each state in the U.S is like Here's my best shot at it. Enjoy !
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