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Beyond Natick: Cruising the Essex River

June 26, 2021 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

While temperatures in the low 80s and the beauty of the North Shore’s beaches were calling us in late June, the realization that even a toe dip in the ocean would be bracing gave us pause. What else to do up that way that we hadn’t done before? 

We stumbled upon the Essex River narrated cruise as an option, and made a 1pm launch the centerpiece of a Saturday excursion to Essex.

essex river cruise

It took us a bit more than an hour to arrive at the pier, which has plenty of free parking, and is nearby a handful of waterfront restaurants. We ordered $28 adult tickets for the 90-minute cruise ahead of time. Prices are lower for seniors and kids, and it looked as though most of the passengers were either under the age of 10 or over the age of 40. If not enough people sign up, cruises can be nixed, though ours was pretty full with a few dozen passengers, and the cruise on the schedule was filling up, too, according to our hosts.

You can either sit facing the outside of the boat, or with your back against an outside railing. We sat on the outside, but I could see the attraction in hindsight of grabbing one of the inside seats instead, to avoid neck craning.

This narrated sightseeing cruise operates within a tidal estuary, exploring salt marshes and nearby islands. The covered open-air vessel we cruised on does not make it to the ocean, so you don’t need to worry about big swells, but you’d be well advised to bring along a sweatshirt or windbreaker to stave off chills. The operators encourage you to eat your meals before or after, though you’re welcome to bring non-alcoholic drinks and snacks aboard (they also have a small selection of drinks and snacks for sale on board).

Our narrators were just right: They wove in history, including about the grand Crane Estate in Ipswich that came into view. They got into some science and environmental issues, but avoided getting preachy.

We definitely learned a few things, including:

  • Cormorants, those aquatic birds that are so much fun to watch diving underwater, don’t have the same amount of oil on their feathers as some other birds, so need to keep drying them off. 
  • Filming of The Crucible movie with Daniel Day-Lewis on Choate (or Hog) Island had its challenges, including transporting people and animals back and forth, and keeping modern watercraft out of the background for this film set in the late 1600s.
  • The grasses that stick out of the estuary play a key role in keeping the water clean, making for good quality shellfish.

Humans (not on our boat) and animals put on a show that day, too.  One fisherman hauled in a sizeable fish and mugged with it for us to see. Ospreys were everywhere, and we got to see one snagging a stick and bringing it back to fill out its nest.

Overall, we found the 90-minute traveling time just right.

essex river cruise

Agassiz Rock trail

Following our cruise, we got off of our butts and went for a short hike at Agassiz Rock, a Trustees of the Reservations trail we’d noticed on the way up.

This property consisted of 4 color-coded and well marked trails, with the highlights being 2 big boulders. While the second boulder was bigger than the first, the first was more in the open, so more impressive. The hike included 2 loops and 2 out-and-back trails, which included just enough elevation to keep things interesting. 

Agassiz Rock Essex

Agassiz Rock

 

Halibut Point State Park

Next stop, not getting quite enough exercise at Agassiz Rock, was Halibut Point State Park in Rockport. We’ve been here numerous times, but it was just 20 minutes away, so why not check it out.

The parking lot and entrance to the park is undergoing a major renovation, which at first almost spooked us. As it turned out there was plenty of parking, and plenty of company, many of whom seem to park there as a way to get down to a rocky oceanfront area.

We took a trot around the quarry and checked out the lighthouse, before seeking a dinner spot.

halibut point quarry

halibut point quarry

halibut point lighthouse

We got shut out at our first dining destination back in Essex…a big party had just arrived and they weren’t serving the rest of us lonelies for another half hour or something. So we moseyed over to JT Farnhams for seafood with a view.

The fried clams were nothing special, but the spicy scallop chowder was a winner, as were the marshy waterfront picnic tables.

dinner view


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Filed Under: Beyond Natick, Outdoors

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Natick student wins honors at juried art exhibition

May 28, 2021 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

Natick High School’s Rebecca Riley took home an Honorable Mention for her entry in Page Waterman Gallery’s 5th annual juried exhibition, NEXT UP!.

Riley’s charcoal on paper work in the Painting, Drawing & Printmaking category, “My Personal ATM,” was one of 138 art submissions across the entire show.

Natick HS, Page Waterman

Natick entrants have this year really upped their game in the prestigious exhibition. Three other NHS artists entered—Rabkwan Chaimattayompol; Shanna Deng; and Tia Perkins. (See their entries here.)

Congratulations to all the entrants on their beautiful and thought-provoking works.

More here on the show including a list of winners in its entirety, and juror bios.

Filed Under: Art, Beyond Natick, Education



Sidewalk Sale in Natick Center, and beyond

May 12, 2021 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

Come to downtown Natick to support the local business community and shop small on Sat., May 15, 10am – 4pm.

Natick Center

Local merchants will spill out of their storefronts and onto the sidewalks, creating a fun and lively atmosphere in Natick Center.

After 1pm there is NO charge for metered parking, and the municipal lots are always FREE on the weekend. Try out the Passport app to pay for downtown parking.

Don’t forget to stop by the Farmer’s Market on Natick Common, which has opened outside. The hours are 9am-1pm.

More outside shopping, beyond Natick

Linden Square in Wellesley will hold its annual Sidewalk Sale on Thurs., May 20 – Sun., May 23. Loads of merchants will have their goods out all day, and some sale items will be discounted up to 70%. Don’t miss the discounts at this fun yearly event.

Wellesley Square Merchants will hold their next monthly Sidewalk Saturday event on May 22. Central Street will be closed 10am – 5pm. from Grove Street to CVS, creating a pedestrian-friendly, family-fun event. Live music will be part of the fun in front of CVS and further down the street in Central Park (near the Wellesley Square post office).

Additional dates for Wellesley Square Sidewalk Saturdays are: June 19, July 17, August 21, September 18.

Filed Under: Beyond Natick, Business, Community, Entertainment, Shopping

Beyond Natick: Blithewold Mansion & gardens on Rhode Island’s Narragansett Bay

April 16, 2021 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

It was daffodil season on a sparkling spring morning at Blithewold Mansion in Bristol, Rhode Island, an enchanting 33-acre estate on Narragansett Bay, just over the beautiful Mount Hope Bridge. A little girl in a pink tutu twirled along the woodland path, thousands of daffodils nodding in approval, and looked up at us. “This is my favorite place in the whole world,” she enthused, before exiting stage left into the bamboo grove.

Blithewold, Bristol, Rhode Island

Blithewold can have that effect on people. Built as a summer place in the 1890s by Augustus and Bessie Van Wickle, the couple purposely placed themselves at a distance from the Newport Bellevue Avenue mansions scene with its gold-leaf this and marble that. They moved into their estate, country-casual by the standards of their peers, with their 10-year old daughter Marjorie in 1896. Augustus died two years later at the age of 42 in a skeet-shooting accident when his gun accidentally fired, mortally wounding him in the chest. Five months later his second daughter and namesake, Augustine, was born.

The mansion Augustus and Bessie built was destroyed by fire in 1906, and Bessie and her second husband, William McKee, replaced it with the 45-room English Country Manor-style home that stands today. Along the way, gardening continued at a steady clip. The wide-open spaces of Bristol allowed Bessie and landscape architect John DeWolf to plan and put in place the 10-acre Great Lawn, along with garden room upon garden room—the rose garden, the rock garden, the water garden, and more.

Blithewold, Bristol, Rhode Island

DeWolf’s vision included not just perennial borders, specimen trees, and shrubs, but a general air of informality that comes through to this day. “The Bosquet” (French for “woodland”), for example, boasts not only thousands of daffodils, but remnants of last fall’s leaves and a gravel pathway that is left un-edged. The landscaping crew has not been permitted to aim their leaf blowers into every corner of the property and aggressively tidy it within an inch of its life. The woods are left to feel like the woods, and the land is all the better for it. Beneficial insects remain tucked into the leaf litter, which in turn breaks down and feeds the woodland, all without compromising the beauty of the spring scene.

Blithewold, Bristol, Rhode Island

And what a scene. Under the tree canopy look for a wide variety of daffodils such as  Little Gem, Ice Follies, King Alfred, Rijnveld’s Early Sensation, and more. In all, there are over 50k daffs blooming throughout the property in a 6-week succession. Grape hyacinths are everywhere also, as are fritillaries, and squill, all having their moment before they give way to the wildflowers and ferns of summer.

“Blithewold” is Old English for Happy Wood, and the name is apt. There is a distinct lack of “no” around the place. Signs don’t demand that visitors keep to the path and not stomp through the daffodil clumps. One is trusted to know this and comport oneself accordingly. Even (or especially) the high-spirited children visiting this family-friendly place fall under Blithewold’s spell, its magic rendering them unable and unwilling to traipse through the beds or step on a single flower.

If there are docents around and about, they are busy tending to their tour groups, not casting side-eye at those who chose a free-range experience. Picnicking is encouraged, and stern signs about cleaning up afterwards simply don’t exist. Of course you’re going to clean up afterwards. This is Blithewold, darling, a place where everyone does the right thing and a good time is had by all.

Blithewold, Bristol, Rhode Island

Not to be missed: the stroll along the bay with its sweeping views, the rose garden with its stone archway, and the specimen trees, especially the giant 100+ year-old Sequoia. Give yourself a couple of hours to tour the gardens. Unfortunately, the mansion and the greenhouses are currently closed to the public due to the pandemic, but you can visit the small gift shop, and the indoor restrooms are open.

Blithewold, Bristol, Rhode Island

Special programs and activities such as nature sketchbook journaling; garden design classes; and the popular tea and scones seatings on Blithewold’s expansive porches with views of the bay are starting to resume. Check the website for more information.

Blithewold

101 Ferry Rd, Bristol, RI 02809
(401) 253-2707
Tuesday to Sat., 10am-4pm & Sun., 10am-3pm. Visit www.blithewold.org for tickets and info.

Distance from Natick Center: approximately 65 miles
Drive time: about 1 hour, 15 minutes


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Filed Under: Beyond Natick, Gardens

Beyond Natick: Monet exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

March 23, 2021 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

I’d all but given up on getting into Monet and Boston: Lasting Impression at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Every time I tried to score tickets it was the same story—sold out. On a lark I logged on one last time for a shot at the exhibit, which runs through March 28. Success! All 35 of the MFA’s gorgeous Claude Monet oil paintings were mine for the viewing. I headed into the big city. Please note: advance timed-entry tickets are required for all visitors, including members and children. No ticket sales on site at the Museum.

It’s been over 20 years since the museum has gathered together all of its canvases by the French Impressionist, but they are reunited, along with works by Hiroshige, Jean-François Millet, and Eugène Boudinand, and it feels so good. In all, over 50 works are on view, hung on jewel-colored walls across several galleries. The show is a visual delight for those who love pretty pictures,  and lots of them, all at once. Count me in. In this exhibit, organized by Katie Hanson, associate curator of European paintings, patrons are given a rare opportunity to stroll through gallery after gallery of beautiful colors, stirring landscapes, tranquil domestic scenes, and light, captured seemingly at will by the artists and transferred from paintbrush to canvas.

Here are some pics:

Monet exhibit, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

 

Monet exhibit, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

 

Monet exhibit, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

 

Monet exhibit, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

 

Monet exhibit, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

 

Monet exhibit, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

 

Monet exhibit, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

 

Monet exhibit, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

 

Monet exhibit, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

EXHIBIT: Monet and Boston: Lasting Impression

WHEN: The exhibit runs through Sun., March 28, 2021

WHERE: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 465 Huntington Ave.

MUSEUM HOURS: Wed. – Sun., 10am – 5pm

TICKETS HERE


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Filed Under: Art, Beyond Natick

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