DRAW ON! RETURNS TO SILVERMINE ARTS CENTER

The Silvermine School of Art located in New Canaan in partnership with the Aldrich Museum, will be participating in the annual community event, Draw On! On Saturday, March 26th from 9am until 6pm, the School of Art will conduct DRAW UNTIL YOU DROP!

This one day event is open to the public and provides an opportunity for continuous, intensive figure drawing with a model, or models, in sustained poses. Participants of all skill levels, ages 16 and up, will be able to work alongside Silvermine faculty, Guild Artists members and students to develop their artistic vision, sharpen skills and energize studio experience through drawing.

Using all the studios in the School of Art, participants will have the opportunity to work with female and male models in a range of different poses, from short and athletic, to extended poses, as well as portrait study. Participants who would like to work with still life set ups will also have a variety to choose from.

The fee for the day is $30 and half day is $15. Registration can be made in advance or you can register the day of the event. Tables, easels, drawing horses, drawing boards and basic drawing supplies will be available. For more information call 203-966-6668 ext. 2 or visit our website at http://www.silvermineart.org.

The Silvermine Galleries are open Wednesday through Saturday, 12p.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1pm to 5 p.m. For more information, call (203) 966-9700

New Canaan CT Nature Center Annual Syrup Saturday & Pancake Brunch

On Saturday, March 19 from 11:00 am – 2:30 pm sweet things are happenning at the New Canaan Nature Center located on 144 Oenoke Ridge in New Canaan. This annual event celebrates the New England tradition of maple syrup making and includes a pancake brunch with different varieties of syrup, including the Nature Center’s own special syrup.

Nature Center educators and local families who have “adopted” a tree for the season have been collecting sap from about 40 of the center’s maples over the last month. How does it work? Freezing temperatures create suction that draws water in through a tree’s roots, and warm periods create pressure which causes the sap to flow out through a tap hole where it’s collected in buckets. This sap, a combination of water, salt and sugar, serves as the tree’s food and is the sole ingredient of pure maple syrup. During Syrup Saturday, visitors will get a chance to observe the entire process from tree tapping to boiling into syrup at the “sugar shack”. Educators will also demonstrate historic methods of maple syruping.

Local maple syrup and maple baked goods will be for sale. Supplies and information from Tap My Trees will also be available to purchase for families who want to tap their own maple trees at home and make their own maple syrup.

A special activity also being offered is a hike along “Maple Lane” with one of the Center’s naturalists to learn how to identify sugar maples and other trees while hunting for signs of spring. Attendees are welcome to gather around and warm up by the campfire and kids are encouraged to make a maple-themed craft to take home as a rememberance of this sweet time of year. This event is primarily held outdoors and activities will be ongoing throughout the day.

For additional information call (203) 966-9577 x20 to register in advance for this popular event. Members: $8/person / Non-Members: $12/person. Children under age 3 are free.

Maple Sugaring and the First Americans at the Institute for American Indian Studies

The Institute for American Indian Studies will present its Annual Maple Sugaring Festival on Saturday, March 20, 2010 from 11:00 am – 3:00 pm. What makes this Festival unique is Jim Dina who will present a full Native American Sugar-making demonstration in the Institute’s outdoor Algonkian Village.

Inside the Museum and Institute, from 11:00 am to 1:00 pm, staff members will serve pancakes with delicious local maple syrup. Fun activities for the children will run from 1:00 – 3:00 pm.

The Native American lore of sweet maple syrup is fascinating. The Mohegans believed that the melting snow caused the spring sap to run in the maples. They considered the sap to be the dripping oil of the Great Celestial Bear, who had been wounded by the winter sky hunters – according to their own Pleiades story. The bear, sometimes becoming the celestial bear and embodying the Big Dipper, repeats itself through many Indian origin stories.

Native People discovered in their woodlands the sources of seasoning and sweetening medicines and foods. Long before recorded history, their investigations unlocked the secrets of extracting many dietary substances from their natural environments. Lost in pre-history are the earliest experiences that led to “sugaring”.

It was usual for whole families to participate in the labor of sugaring, although in some tribes the women went first to the maple forests to make any necessary repairs to the camp and sugaring utensils. Among the Iroquois and the Ojibwa Indians, the women owned the maple groves, which they inherited through their maternal line. Seensibaukwut is the Ojibwa word for maple sugar, which means, “drawn from the wood.”

Tree sap is essentially water absorbed by the roots and mixed with some of the stored tree sugars. Sap will begin to run upwards from the roots on warm late-winter days followed by freezing nights. These conditions usually begin in late February in southern New England.

Once the sap had been collected, it needed to be boiled down (reduced). The sap was then put into a hollowed out log where fiery hot stones were placed into it. The purpose of the hot stones was to cause the sap to boil. This may have needed to be done several times to obtain the correct consistency.
This was the traditional “Native” way.

Please call for tickets 860-868-0518. Advance tickets $8 Adults/ $6 Children; Tickets at the door $10 Adults/ $8 Children.

First County Bank Maple Sugar Sunday at Stamford Nature Center

Join the fun as this family favorite returns to the Stamford Museum & Nature Center (39 Scofieldtown Road) on Sunday, March 6, from 11 am – 3 pm! Adults and kids will delight in a visit to the little red sugarhouse at the Center’s Heckscher Farm. Here live demonstrations will show visitors how sap is turned into sweet maple syrup. The event admission which includes parking is $5 for members and $10 for non-members.

This event offers a multitude of activities sure to please everyone in the family! See how trees are tapped and sap is collected, make a maple-themed craft, enjoy the popular pancake brunch, go on a scavenger hunt, get your face painted and more. A special treat is to watch local chefs create delicious dishes using maple syrup in a winner-takes-all maple cook-off!

Additionally, people can help support the Maple Sugar Education Program at the Stamford Museum & Nature Center with their Sponsor-A-Bucket program! Your support will be acknowledged with a personalized name tag that will hang on your personal sap bucket throughout the season…with a “sweet” end result! At the end of the season each Sponsor will receive a pint of SM&NC’s very own pure Connecticut Maple Syrup. Each sponsorship opportunity is $50. To sponsor a bucket, call Carol at 203.322.1646 ext. 6548 or order online at http://www.stamfordmuseum.org.

For more information, call 203.977.6521, or visit http://www.stamfordmuseum.org.