Tag: Darkest Time

  • Saturday, December 19 – Old South Church Winter Garden

    Old South Church’s award-winning gardeners are at it again!

    While hundreds of deeply planted tulip bulbs await the spring, the garden will be dressed in a contemporary, winter arrangement of upright stakes.  Stained in the dark hues of Red Osier Dogwoods, hundreds of these stakes will be “planted” by church volunteers on Saturday, December 19 to conjure the image of a drift, to reflect the colors of the season and to complement the decorative Northern Italian Ruskinian architecture of the National Historic Landmark Building.

    Old South’s volunteer gardener, Jim Hood, says this about his latest undertaking, “Winter is mostly a time of quiet color, yet in rural areas of the northeast United States fields of snow are often striped with stands of Red Osier Dogwood, a woody shrub that goes little noticed in summer but that comes to visual life in winter. Red Osier Dogwood exposes its brilliant red bark once its foliage falls away offering a sense of warmth amidst the cold.”

    Old South’s Associate Minister, Quinn Caldwell, describes the garden as “a labor of love to the city. Besides being a thing of beauty, the stick garden is also a proclamation of our faith: that beauty will spring from barrenness, form out of chaos, life out of death.  Here in the coldest and darkest time of year, we make bold to proclaim that spring and life are on their way.”

    In the last 30 years stick gardens (sculptural installations made of color-stained sticks of wood) have been mounted in the U.K. U.S. and Canada – see picture of blue stick garden below.

    Old South’s gardens and gardeners are the recipients of the Garden Club of the Back Bay’s Magnolia Award (2009), the Mayor’s Golden Trowel Award (2007), and the Mayor’s Runner Up Award (2008).  For information, and to volunteer with the staking, call (617) 536-1970 ext 222, or email nst@oldsouth.org.http://mocoloco.com/archives/flora_claude_cormier_blue_s.jpg

  • Friday, December 11 – Sunday, December 13 – Woodstock Winter Wassail Weekend

    Frankly, we’re reporting on this event because the alliteration is magnificent.  Wassail Weekend is Woodstock’s gift to Vermont and to you, if you’ll join for the weekend. Voted one of Vermont’s Top Ten Winter events, the term has its roots in medieval England referring to the Norse, “ves heill” meaning “to drink to the health”. Ale brewed with spiced apples and sugar was the warm drink given to the singers who went door to door during the Solstice. Christmas became interwoven with celebrations during the darkest time of the year. For the past twenty-four years, Wassail Weekend in Woodstock has welcomed people from near and far to celebrate in unique ways. Journalists have highlighted this special event finding it a unique way to enjoy Vermont during a special time of year. See Country Living Article. Throughout the Christmas Season, Billings Farm & Museum is decorated and offers the perfect opportunity to see what the holidays were like in Vermont in the 19th Century complete with wagon or sleigh rides around the farm.  The highlight of the weekend is a unique Wassail Parade through the center of Woodstock with over fifty horses and riders dressed in holiday costumes and period dress from the early 19th Century. The Green Mountain Horse Association welcomes riders from all over with wagons, surreys and sometimes sleighs, if weather permits. Mr. Claus himself usually puts in an appearance and then heads on to our Little Theater where he greets the children at the magical “Christmas Visions”. Troupes of singers parade the streets, and our arts council, The YOH Players offer entertainment at the Wassail Feast on Friday night hosted by the Woodstock Inn & Resort. Pentangle offers a historic house tour of 5 or so of Woodstock’s notable historic homes. In the evenings, talented professionals guide local actors in a Christmas musical at the Town Hall.

    There is usually a reading of “A Child’s Christmas in Wales” at noon at the Norman Williams Library. An open house at the Woodstock Historical Society on Friday night offers historic music through the beautifully decorated Dana House.

    Shops are often open late, the streets are decorated with white lights and usually Mother Nature provides a dusting of snow (or possibly a few feet).  Rarely can you experience the holidays in such a picture-perfect place. Click here to see Vermont Life Video’s two minute film of the joy of Wassail! Make your reservations ahead of time to be sure to enjoy all the weekend has to offer. 2009 schedule of events.

    http://www.countryliving.com/cm/countryliving/images/Woodstock-Inn-at-Christmas-REGFOOD1206-de.jpg