image description
Figment, a participatory arts festival, runs Saturday from 3 to 9:30 p.m. See photos from last year's event here.

Figment Brings Art, Music Back to Windsor Lake

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Figment North Adams returns this Saturday, April 29 from 3 to 9:30 p.m. at Windsor Lake. 
 
Organizer Krystal Henriquez updated the Windsor Lake Recreation Commission  on Tuesday about the plans for the art-focused community that will include a children's climate quilt project, stone embellishing, fabric art, dancing, music and a magician.
 
"We have 38 projects and submissions," she said. "It was 45 last year but a lot of them ended up dropping out and some people didn't show up and this is our number that's absolutely coming ... we're looking pretty good to have a similar outcome of last year."
 
Last year's first Figment event brought hundreds of people to participate in games and art projects, and to stay for the "after dark" portion of music and dancing. The worldwide initiative promotes free interactive arts-focused activities for all ages to bring communities together. 
 
"We're encouraging people to do more of bringing picnics while enjoying the lake itself and live music as well because we saw that the people who had the most fun were the people who were prepared for a full day at the lake," she said. 
 
Desperados will also be there for food and the volleyball court and disc course will be open.  
 
After this year, Figment will switch to a two-year schedule to line up with Solid Sound Festival and it will also be lined up with the arts management class at Massachusetts College of Liberal Art. The class has been heavily involved in planning the event, which Henriquez spearheaded in her senior year after an internship with Figment Boston.
 
"We're going biennial now because it's a small town and the resources are few," she said, adding she had gotten a Figment promotion and was handing over the reins. "We feel it might draining to do it every year ... I think will gain like excitement, more immediacy."
 
The panel also agreed to discuss limitations on having dogs in the park after a number of violations of dogs running loose and being in areas where they're prohibited.
 
"Environmentally it's not good either," Bullett said. "We're a bird sanctuary and wildlife sanctuary. Having dogs up there is not OK anymore. ... We wanted to support the dog-friendly community but I'm willing to say no."
 
The commission had voted to allow leashed dogs on the trails last year. 
 
Commissioner David Racette expected the violations to drop off as the season opens but suggested that a specific area be set aside for dogs. 
 
"I think we really need to pursue that with the dog people who came already," he said. "Maybe a section of the trail ... a one mile area so we can offer them something." 
 
Chairman Arlen Cellana said the easiest thing is to ban dogs but it would put pressure on the city's resources to have to respond all the time. Or the commission could ban dogs on certain days or hours, as is done on Cape Cod.
 
"I think it's an unhealthy situation for a lot of reasons," Bullett said. "Someday a dog will be loose and it will be messy ... I think it's important to try to come up with a plan."
 
Cellana said he would look into best management practices by other parks for some options. 
 
In other business:
 
The commission was updated on the MCLA environmental studies brochure. The students are putting together a trifold of prevalent invasive species found in the area and some information on how to prevent their spread. 
 
Cellana said it needs a mission statement or description of the commission's purpose and an image of the park. Cellan said he would pull a statement together for commissioners' review and Commissioner Nancy Bullett offered an aerial image she took of the park.
 
 The commission put off a discussion on policy updated for Historic Valley Park Campground until next month, feeling that no changes would go into effect until next season. 
 
 Cellana said Mayor Richard Alcombright was committed to getting funds appropriated for a five-year management plan for the park. It would set out priorities and be a guide for applying for grants for forest and wildlife management and the trail system. 
 
 The park is preparing for the 16th annual Jocelyn E. LeClair Memorial Scholarship Race to be run on May 7. The scholarship fundraising event in honor of the late Drury High student had been run at Clarksburg State Park. The Berkshire Family YMCA has taken over organizing the event and moved it to the lake.
 
Commissioners are hoping the race will help spark more activities and events at the recreational area. 

Tags: arts festival,   community event,   Windsor Lake,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Amphibious Toads Procreate in Perplexing Amplexus

By Tor HanseniBerkshires columnist
 

Toads lay their eggs in the spring along the edges of waterways. Photos by Tor Hansen.
My first impressions of toads came about when my father Len Hansen rented a seaside house high on a sand dune in North Truro, Cape Cod back in 1954. 
 
With Cape Cod Bay stretching out to the west, and Twinefield so abundant in wildflowers to the east, North Truro became a naturalist's dream, where I could search for sea shells at the seashore, or chase beetles and butterflies with my trusty green butterfly net. 
 
Twinefield was a treasure trove for wildlife — a vast glacial rolling sandplain shaped by successive glaciers, its sandy soil rich in silicon, thus able to stimulate growth for a diverse biota. A place where in successive years I would expand my insect collection to fill cigar boxes with every order of insects abounding in beach plum, ox-eye daisy and milkweed. During our brief summer vacation there, we boys would exclaim in our excitement, "Oh here is another hoppy toad," one of many Fowler's toads (Bufo woodhousei fowleri ) that inhabited the moist surroundings, at home in the Ammophyla beach grass, thickets of beach plum, bayberry, and black cherry bushes. 
 
They sparkled in rich colors of green amber on beige and reddish tinted warts. Most anurans have those glistening eyes, gold on black irises so beguiling around the dark pupils. Today I reflect on a favorite analogy, the riveting eye suggests a solar eclipse in pictorial aura.
 
In the distinct toad majority in the Outer Cape, Fowler's toads turned up in the most unusual of places. When we Hansens first moved in to rent Riding Lights, we would wash the sand and salt from our feet in the outdoor shower where toads would be drinking and basking in the moisture near my feet. As dusk fades into darkness, the happy surprise would gather under the night lights where moths were fluttering about the front door and the toads would snatch bugs with outstretched tongue.
 
In later years, mother Eleanor added much needed color and variety to Grace's original garden. Our smallest and perhaps most acrobatic butterflies are the skippers, flitting and somersaulting to alight and drink heartily the nectar abounding at yellow sickle-leaved coreopsis and succulent pink live forever sedums of autumn. These hearty late bloomers signaled oases for many fall migrants including painted ladies, red admirals and of course monarchs on there odyssey to over-winter in Mexico. 
 
Our newly found next-door neighbors, the Bergmarks, added a lot to share our zeal for this undiscovered country, and while still in our teens, Billy Atwood, who today is a nuclear physicist in California, suggested we should include the Baltimore checkerspot in our survey, as he too had a keen interest in insects. Still unfamiliar to me then, in later years I would come across a thriving colony in Twinefield, that yielded a rare phenotype checkerspot (Euphydryas phaeton p. superba) that I wrote about featured in The Cape Naturalist ( Museum of Natural History, Brewster Cape Cod 1991). 
 
View Full Story

More North Adams Stories