Daily Archives: August 13, 2010


Saturday, August 21, 1:30 pm – 8:00 pm – Rochester Grange Fair

The 100th annual agricultural fair of Rochester Grange will be held on Saturday, August 21 at the Rochester Grange Hall, 200 Hartley Road in Rochester (about 50 minutes south of Boston – see map below). Exhibits will be open to the public beginning at 1:30 pm.  The Grange will conduct various raffles, and there are baked goods, handiwork, and cold beverages for sale.  Special musical entertainment will feature Celtic fiddler Tiffany Rozenas.  The traditional ham and bean supper will be served at 6 pm, and will include ham, kidney beans, baked beans, rolls and butter, coffee, punch, potato salad, corn on the cob, and dessert.  The super cost is $7 for adults and $3 for children under 10.  Following the supper, the fair auction will begin at 7:15, and you will have the opportunity to bid on and purchase the prize winning fruits, vegetables, flowers, and baked goods from the fair.

In the fall of 1905 Mr. Allen made rounds of the homes in Rochester with the hope of interesting people in founding a local Grange. He was successful. On February 12th, 1906, the first meeting of Rochester Grange was held in the North Rochester Social Union Hall on Snipatuit Road in North Rochester. The hall was small, lit by oil lamps, with a kitchen and dining hall on the second floor and no running water. Subsequently the Grange Hall on Hartley Road was built. The Grange Fair and the auction are free and open to the public – if you haven’t experienced a Grange Fair, you should try to get to this one, since the Grange members will be pulling out all the stops for the 100th!

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/37/Rochester_ma_highlight.png/250px-Rochester_ma_highlight.png


Wednesday, August 18, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm – Perennial Color, Spring Through Fall

Go on a journey through the growing season with past Garden Club of the Back Bay speaker Suzanne Mahler as she talks on Perennial Color, Spring Through Fall. It’s not just a dazzling photographic display of the hottest new perennials and the tried and true favorites for both sunny and shady sites; it’s also what-you-can-do-now advice for making next spring your best gardening season ever. Suzanne’s talks are noted for their detailed handouts and sound horticultural practices. The event will take place at Elm Bank, 900 Washington Street in Wellesley, on Wednesday, August 18, from 6:30 – 8, and refreshments will be offered. $8 for Mass Hort members, and $10 for non-members. Please bring cash or check. For directions and more information, log on to www.masshort.org.  Gaillardia grandiflora ‘Fanfare’ is pictured below.


Thursday, August 19, 5:15 pm – Cambridge Premiere of Bugged

You are invited to the Cambridge Premiere of BUGGED, The Race to Eradicate the Asian Longhorned Beetle, Narrated by Emmy Award-Winning News Correspondent Pat Dawson, Produced/Directed by Emily Driscoll, on Thursday, August 19, 2010 at 5:15PM, at The Harvard Museum of Natural History, 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge.

For more information, call 617.495.3045 or log on to www.hmnh.harvard.edu

Bugged is “…frankly one of the most comprehensive and best educational documentaries on the Asian longhorned beetle that has been made to date….Now, more than ever, the general public needs to remain observant and vigilant in case ALB shows up in your city or neighborhood. This short film will broaden one’s view of this most important and unwanted pest!”

-Richard Hoebeke, Taxonomic and Survey Entomologist, Cornell University

About the Documentary:
Alien invaders live hidden among us. The Asian longhorned beetle (ALB) is one of the world’s worst invasive species and could destroy one third of America’s trees. Now, for the first time, the ALB infests a city (Worcester) on the edge of a natural forested area. Follow the scientists, USDA officials and private citizens who are the front lines in the Asian longhorned beetle eradication war.

Bugged is the first documentary to present the national story of the ALB infestation in America and to explore the  science of eradication.

www.buggeddocumentary.com