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Vampire Weekend

The Drury Drama Team presents "Dracula" on Thursday-Saturday, Nov. 19-21.

If you don't know who these guys are, just stay home. Holy batmania! "New Moon" surpasses "Dark Knight's" opening numbers.


'Pirate Radio': Good Movie Ahoy, Mateys
Movie schedules and times

Bazaars

Nov. 21

St. Stanislaus School benefit, 9 to 4 in Kolbe Hall, Adams. Bake sale, snack bar, games, Chinese auctions, money raffle, crafts, and pierogi.

Blackinton Union Church, 1373 Massachusetts Ave., North Adams; 10 to 2. Crafts table, bake sale, Chinese auction, the Christmas table, and kid's grab bag. Lunch $4, $2 kids.

First Congregational Church, North Adams, 9-2.

Nov. 28

Becket Federated Church
, Route 8, holiday bazaar from 9-3. Lunch, crafts, baked goods, holiday and other items. Information: Mary Peltier, Parish House, 413-623-5217.


Dec. 5

Holiday Fair at First Congregational Church, 25 Park Place, Lee, from 10 to 3; handcrafted items, raffles, children's shop, bake sale, cut Christmas trees and lunch from 11 to 1. Includes angel-themed goods from SERRV. Information, 413-243-1033 or www.ucc-lee.org.


Dec. 12-13

North Adams Country Club, crafts 9-4; food from That's a Wrap from 11-2. Information: Sheryl Morehouse at 413-822-3329.

Planning a bazaar this season? Submit information to info@iberkshires.com to have it listed here.

Sales Fliers

 
 

Daily Digest

Hooray for Vermont's Sanders and his battle against credit card companies.
How Much is Heating Oil this Week?
It's breaking $2.50 but still cheaper than gas.
Clarksburg Crime Watch Signs



We're trying out blogs to offer shorter, easy-to-find news. Let us know what you think.
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Mammography Dispute
The government's issued controversial new guidelines stating that women shouldn't get annual mammograms until age 50, rather than age 40.

iBerkshires will be meeting with local medical experts Monday. Have a question you'd like answered on this issue? Send it info@iberkshires.com with "mammogram" in the subject line.

Obituaries

Paul Sandler, 64
Robert J. Heideman, 73
Carol V. Vallieres, 75
More obituaries

Sports

11-21-09 Williams women's soccer: The College of New Jersey wins over Williams 1-0

More Photos to come.

Williams College Men's Basketball Season Outlook
MCLA Picked Last in Men's Preseason Coaches Poll
2009 MIAA Girls Soccer - State Division 2

11-21-09 Cardinal Spellman win over Wahconah 2-1 2OT

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Tough Season for Strawberry Fields

By Tammy Daniels
iBerkshires Staff
04:02AM / Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Green in the morning, red by evening — gone soft by the next day. Strawberry fields may go on forever, but the berries are barely making it 24 hours.

The nearly constant rain since mid-June and high temperatures have been a boon for some crops, but not the region's strawberries — and especially not for the pick-your-own farms.

"Awful" is how Dan Tawczynski described his harvest this year. "We've had one day without rain since the first week of June," said the owner of Taft Farms in Great Barrington on Sunday.

The problem for local farms is a surfeit of fast-ripening berries — and not enough people to pick them.

"When we have good weather people respond; when it's bad, they stay away," Tawczynski said.

Joanne Barcomb weighs berries at Mountain View Farm.
Peg Weslowski of Mountain View Farm on Cheshire Road in Lanesborough estimates business is down about 10 percent over this time last year.

"I went on vacation on June 23 and it has rained at some point every single day," she said, standing outside the farm's strawberry shed on Sunday. "When it rains, people don't come out and it's done nothing but rain. When the sun is out, the crowds are good."

The past two days in Northern Berkshire have been a welcome respite from the wet, muggy weather. But it may not have come in time for the pick-your-own farms that see weekends as their busiest days.

The strawberry season lasts about six weeks; there's only a week or two left. Most farms should be open this weekend and the next. Weslowski said Mountain View will open July 5 and 6, "and we'll see happens from there."

On Sunday, a steady stream of vehicles drove down the dusty lane to the grass parking area near Mountain View's rolling acres of berries. It was a pretty good day, said Weslowski, despite the oppressive heat.

A "hefty chunk of business" had come in during the cooler morning hours but it seemed to still be below average: "When we're busy, the parking lot is filled and the fields are full."

In the distance, a dozen or pickers were filling up flats of berries. Peg and Michael Weslowski have been offering berry picking for 19 years and have had up to six acres under strawberries. This year, four acres were open for picking.

Mountain View sells pumpkins, mums, squash and other produce in the fall but "this is our big crop for the spring," said Weslowski.

  Lily, 2 1/2, points to the berries her parents picked.
They've been in business long enough to see faithful customers go from picking their own berries to purchasing already picked quarts and flats as age takes its toll.

Weslowski thinks it's more than rain causing the decrease in customers this year.

"People will spend money somewhere else. Weather has had a lot to do with it but the economy has a lot to do with it, too," she said. "They comment on our prices but costs go up."

Elizabeth Lock and Fred Sears of Dalton have been coming to Mountain View Farm for the last few years to pick a couple flats of strawberries. Sears turns some of them into syrup, packaged in Berkshire Brewing Co. bottles, to give out for Christmas presents.

"It's a great little place to come," said Sears, as children Ella, Lucy and Freddie Sears bounced around them. It wasn't so much the rain as their work schedules that determined their visit, he said.

It was the same for another group — work and other commitments had delayed their strawberry trip, said Kim Gallagher.

"We love strawberries," said Gallagher of North Adams, who was picking them with Brian Wirtes and their 2 1/2-year-old daughter, Lily.

But she's noticed the lack of people in the fields as she's driven by: "Usually they're pretty packed on weekends."

Wirtes, who had worked at the farm some years ago, said you could see recent hail and rain had taken a toll on the crop.



Elizabeth Lock, Fred Sears and Freddie and Lucy Sears pick berries.
Row upon row of plants were bursting with berries, but many were obviously too far gone to pick.

Tawczynski said fermentation had begun in one section of his three acres of berries. "It smells like wine."

The humid rainy weather was making the strawberries ripen so fast, it's hard to harvest them before they go bad. Taft Farms was paying $1 a quart to get them picked, "but they're ripening as fast as they pick them ... It's a shame about all the bad ones."

Tawczynski estimates that his business, too, is down about 10 percent. His early and mid-June berries were "excellent" but he doesn't hold out much hope for the late-blooming berries.

At Ioka Valley Farm in Williamstown, owner Melissa Leab said they were ripening faster but the farm hadn't seen much of a drop in patrons from last year because of the weather.

Ioka has two-thirds of an acre for berry picking. "We've been able stay open around the rain," said Leab, who owns the farm with husband Don. "We've got plenty of ripe berries to pick."

It could have been worse. Hail storms hit parts of the Berkshires, the Pioneer Valley and eastern New York last month, wiping out crops in some places. Some 22 counties in New York were affected. In contrast, farms to the east seemed to have just the right amount of sun and rain.

But Tawczynski noted, "we still had a good harvest. We just lost a lot more [berries] than we should have."

At Mountain View Farm, the owners' daughter Kim Weslowski was out in the field with a cooler and a big umbrella to beat the heat.

She watched the dozen or so pickers making their way up the rows. "It's usually way busier than this," she said, looking up at the threateningly dark sky. "We'll stay out here until we hear thunder."


 Above, Kim Weslowski leads a group to a patch of strawberries.


Pick Your Own Strawberry Farms

Most strawberry patches should be open this weekend and possibly the weekend after. Some are open weekdays as well. This list is not complete.

Mountain View Farm, Lanesborough, on Cheshire Road,  near the intersection with Partridge Road; 413-445-7642

Ioka Valley Farm, Hancock,  3475 Route 43; 413-738-5915

Taft Farm, Great Barrington, Route 183 and Division Street; 413-528-1515

Green River Farm, Williamstown, 2480 Green River Road; 413-458-2470

Your Comments
Post Comment
Went the first day they opened and two other weekends after that, picked almost 40lbs. Best place to pick berries by far. The berries are big and sweet. Will go back next year.
from: Dianeon: 07-09-2008

Went the first day the strawberries were ready for picking. The berries were great and they taste delicious,pick a flat of berries less then a hour Ron .
from: Ronon: 07-02-2008



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