Tree planting, 24th year as a Tree City USA by the Arbor Day Foundation

 MILLBROOK— Elm Drive Elementary School students and teachers were joined by Supervisor of Public Works Robert Collocola, Shade Tree Committee Chairman Earl Meyers and Dennis Gendron of Twin Brooks Garden Center to celebrate Arbor Day with the planting of a ginkgo tree on Friday, April 24, at the school.

“It’s one of the oldest trees we know of,” said Gendron to the crowd surrounding the newly planted tree.

The Arbor Day Foundation’s website describes the ginkgo bilboa “as coming with a bit of history. It is a living fossil, the earliest leaf fossils date from 270 million years ago.”

Many know the ginkgo as a “city tree” as “it can tolerate urban conditions including heat, air pollution, salt and confined spaces. And it establishes easily,” according to the Arbor Day Foundation’s website.

One observant student pointed out that the school had this same tree already planted. Indeed in a row, next to the school, stand four other ginkgo trees.

“Watch it grow and make sure it is OK,” said Gendron minutes before the students dispersed with their teachers across the lawn. 

Every year the village of Millbrook plants a tree in honor of Arbor Day. “We plant the trees at our schools and alternate between them, year after year, so our children know the importance [of trees],” said Meyers.

The village is also celebrating its 24th year as a Tree City USA, as designated by the Arbor Day Foundation. On March 26, Village Clerk Linda Wiltse accompanied Meyers to Albany to receive the new Tree City USA flag on behalf of the village from the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC).

The Tree City USA recognition means the village meets the program’s four requirements: a tree board or department, a tree-care ordinance, an annual community forestry budget of at least $2 per resident and an Arbor Day observance and proclamation.

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Club baseball at Fuessenich Park

Travel league baseball came to Torrington Thursday, June 26, when the Berkshire Bears Select Team played the Connecticut Moose 18U squad. The Moose won 6-4 in a back-and-forth game. Two players on the Bears play varsity ball at Housatonic Valley Regional High School: shortstop Anthony Foley and first baseman Wes Allyn. Foley went 1-for-3 at bat with an RBI in the game at Fuessenich Park.

 

  Anthony Foley, rising senior at Housatonic Valley Regional High School, went 1-for-3 at bat for the Bears June 26.Photo by Riley Klein 

 
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A visit to Pearson’s airy studio suggests uncommon work, to be sure. Each of four very large tables were covered with what looked to be thousands of miniature squares of inkjet-printed, kaleidoscopically colored pieces of paper. Another table was covered with dozens of book/illustration-size, abstracted images of deer, made up of colored dots. For the enchanted and the mystified, Pearson kindly explained that these pieces were to be collaged together as artworks by the artist Richard Kraft (a frequent contributor to the Siglio Press and Pearson’s husband). The works would be accompanied by writings by two poets, Elizabeth Zuba and Monica Torre, in an as-yet-to-be-named book, inspired by a found copy of a worn French children’s book from the 1930s called “Robin de Bois” (Robin Hood).

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For those lucky enough to already possess their own bike, perhaps the routes described will inspire a new way to spend a Sunday afternoon. For more, visit lakevillejournal.com/tag/bike-route to check out two ride-guides from local cyclists that will appeal to enthusiasts of many levels looking for a varied trip through the region’s stunning summer scenery.

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