Skip to main content

The Yankee Express

Programs and events at The Pearle; seed exchange, mini garden

Apr 08, 2021 03:07PM ● By Chuck Tashjian
est enclosed in its own little world. You can easily make a beautiful terrarium yourself.  Please bring your own glass container.  We will have some to choose from as well. This activity will take place outside in the side parking lot.  We will be roping off a safe area.  We will have tables set up 6ft apart and only five children per session.   We will be disinfecting between sessions. Free; registration is required.  Sponsored by the Hugh W. and Harriet K. Crawford Endowment.
  A celebration of women composers, Thursday, May 6, 6-7:30 p.m. Historian Jeffrey Engel will highlight the lives and the music of several distinguished female composers/concert pianists who attained recognition and success during the nineteenth century in this Zoom program. There have always been women composers. As far back as the seventh century BC, Sappho, the Greek lyric poetess, played her own accompaniments on the barbiton and the pek-tis. Throughout the twelfth century there were female troubadours and during the sixteenth, madrigal composers. Francesca Caccini (1587-1638) is thought to be the first woman to write an opera and Elisabeth-Claude Jacquet de la Guerre (1663-1729), the author of an early ballet. It is not until the end of the nineteenth century, however, that significantly more women begin to enjoy public performances of their music and become professional composers. Perhaps you’ve heard of Teresa Carreno, Sophie Menter and Clara Schumann? Free; registration is required.  Participants will receive a link to the Zoom meeting 24 hours before the event.  Sponsored by the Hugh W. and Harriet K. Crawford Endowment.
DUDLEY - Join us for one of our programs at the Pearle, 40 Schofield Ave.   To register go to www.crawfordlibrary.org or call 508-949-8021.
Storytime on Facebook Live, Wednesdays at noon. Join Miss Lida for a live storytime on Facebook, every Wednesday at noon, and then stop by the library for a free take-and-make craft kit. No Facebook account is needed for this free program.  Just point your browser to https://www.facebook.com/crawfordlibrary to access the video.  Can’t tune in at noon?  Recordings of each week’s storytime are available on the Facebook page beginning Wednesday afternoon.
Music and movement first Friday of every month at 11 a.m. Join Deb Hudgins on Facebook for Music and Movement, one of our most popular programs!  Nothing gets kids on their feet and having fun quite like songs, dance and silly stories, and Miss Deb has been. No Facebook account is needed for this free program.  Just point your browser to https://www.facebook.com/crawfordlibrary to access the video.  
Seed Exchange throughout the month of April. Have leftover tomato seeds you don’t know what to do with? Want to try growing flowers? Changed your mind about that kind of squash? The Pearle is hosting a seed exchange during the month of April – take some seeds to try, leave the seeds you don’t need, and get gardening, just in time for Earth Day.  Exchange boxes will be placed in the library and all are welcome to contribute flower or vegetable seeds or take some seeds for growing in your own garden.
Exploding seed ball craft for kids, Tuesday April 20 (multiple sessions). Want to have some fun while making the world a greener, more environmentally friendly place? Make exploding balls of seeds that are both fun to throw and an easy way to grow native wildflowers. This activity will take place outside in the side parking lot.  We will be roping off a safe area.  We will have tables set up 6ft apart and only 5 children per session.   We will be disinfecting between sessions.  This is for ages 2-6. Free; registration is required.  Sponsored by the Hugh W. and Harriet K. Crawford Endowment.
Earth up. Nature tales and songs for the planet,  Thursday April 22, 2-2:45 p.m. Celebrate Earth Day with Storyteller Diane’s “Earth UP! Nature Tales and Songs for the Planet!” These interactive stories and songs are fun for the whole family and nature too, so join us and all of nature for this celebration of stories and songs about all the simple things we can do to help the planet. Earth UP! Nature Tales and Songs for the Planet has participatory tales and songs like “Kate’s Acorn.” Kate wants to Save the World, but when she starts by saving a bunch of squirmy earthworms she helps a little acorn grow up strong. Before the story is done, the whole audience is acting out a trio of funny bugs as we learn just how important soil creatures are to the life of plants. This original story is complemented by “The Garden Song” by David Mallet accompanied by musical husband Tom Megan on guitar. Free; registration is required.  Participants will receive a link to the Zoom meeting 24 hours before the event.  Sponsored by the Hugh W. and Harriet K. Crawford Endowment.
Make a mini garden, Friday, April 23 (multiple sessions for tweens, teens, and adults). A terrarium is like an aquarium, but for plants instead of fish. It is made in just about any glass container. It is planted to look like a miniature garden or forest