Elm trees get their shots

The Elm Watch team performed a macro-injection of fungicide into North Canaan’s two remaining great elms last Wednesday, July 26. 

Elm Watch founder Tom Zetterstrom described one as “the sentinel American elm.” It is on the North Canaan Corner Green, near the appropriately named intersection of Elm Street and North Elm Street. 

“It is 38 inches in diameter at breast height and approximately 70  feet tall,” Zetterstrom said.

Even larger is the elm on West Main Street, which is 48 inches in diameter.

These are the only two remaining elms “of the hundreds that once graced North Canaan’s town center,” Zetterstrom said. 

He explained that, “The North Canaan elms are injected every three years to protect  them from Dutch elm disease, an invasive fungus of Asian origin that was introduced to North America in the early 1930s and which  resulted in the loss of more than a hundred million elms.”

Latest News

Local talent takes the stage in Sharon Playhouse’s production of Agatha Christie’s ‘The Mousetrap’

Top row, left to right, Caroline Kinsolving, Christopher McLinden, Dana Domenick, Reid Sinclair and Director Hunter Foster. Bottom row, left to right, Will Nash Broyles, Dick Terhune, Sandy York and Ricky Oliver in Agatha Christie’s “The Mousetrap.”

Aly Morrissey

Opening on Sept. 26, Agatha Christie’s legendary whodunit “The Mousetrap” brings suspense and intrigue to the Sharon Playhouse stage, as the theater wraps up its 2025 Mainstage Season with a bold new take on the world’s longest-running play.

Running from Sept. 26 to Oct. 5, “The Mousetrap” marks another milestone for the award-winning regional theater, bringing together an ensemble of exceptional local talent under the direction of Broadway’s Hunter Foster, who also directed last season’s production of “Rock of Ages." With a career that spans stage and screen, Foster brings a fresh and suspense-filled staging to Christie’s classic.

Keep ReadingShow less
Plein Air Litchfield returns for a week of art in the open air

Mary Beth Lawlor, publisher/editor-in-chief of Litchfield Magazine, and supporter of Plein Air Litchfield, left,and Michele Murelli, Director of Plein Air Litchfield and Art Tripping, right.

Jennifer Almquist

For six days this autumn, Litchfield will welcome 33 acclaimed painters for the second year of Plein Air Litchfield (PAL), an arts festival produced by Art Tripping, a Litchfield nonprofit.

The public is invited to watch the artists at work while enjoying the beauty of early fall. The new Belden House & Mews hotel at 31 North St. in Litchfield will host PAL this year.

Keep ReadingShow less