Berkshire Museum offers canopy walk to the Hopkins Memorial Forest

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Adults and children ages 10 and up are invited to get a “bug’s-eye” view of nature in a Berkshire Museum outing to the Hopkins Memorial Forest on Friday, July 14, from 1 to 4 p.m. Participants will spend an hour in the canopy walk, exploring a treetop habitat 65 feet above the ground. Following the canopy walk, the group will come back to earth to learn about local insects in the Buxton Garden, a one-acre recreation of a Victorian farm garden. Participants will also make their own butterfly feeder. Space is limited, and pre-registration is required. Cost for the program is $20 for adults, $10 for children ages 10 to 18 ($15/$7 for Museum members). Children under 10, who can participate only in ground-level activities, are admitted free. To register, call 413-443-7171, extension 10. Canopy walk participants must be 10 years of age or older, and must weigh at least 80 pounds. Safety equipment will be provided. Participants must be able to climb ladders up to the catwalk. The Hopkins Memorial Forest is a 2500-acre reserve in Massachusetts, New York, and Vermont, managed by the Williams College Center for Environmental Studies. The canopy walk was established in the early 1990s to enable observation of life and physical conditions in the tree canopy. The 75-foot walkway consists of two platforms in two large red oaks, linked by a catwalk and accessed via tree-mounted ladders. The Buxton garden was the original farm garden of the Hopkins estates at the turn of the 20th century. It was restored by the CES and the Williamstown Garden Club as a bicentennial project using some of the original plant material as well as plant varieties typical of 19th-century gardens. The garden includes rhubarb, grapes, herbs, and a variety of flowers that bloom during different seasons. The canopy walk program is offered in connection with the exhibition Bug Out of the Box: Contemporary Art, History, and Science of Bugs, on view July 8 through October 29. Bug Out of the Box is sponsored by Greylock Federal Credit Union. The Berkshire Museum is located at 39 South Street on Route 7 in Downtown Pittsfield. The galleries are open Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sundays, noon to 5 p.m. For more information, contact the Berkshire Museum at (413) 443-7171, ext. 10, or visit www.berkshiremuseum.org
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Licensing Board OKs Pittsfield Businesses Alterations

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Licensing Board OK'd alterations for several local businesses during its last meeting of the year on Monday.

This includes an amendment to the Berkshire Museum's entertainment license in advance of its reopening after capital improvements, a change of license category for Hot Plate Brewing Co., and a change of catering company for Berkshire Hills Country Club. 

It's been a good year for Hot Plate, as they were nominated No. 3 in USA Today's list of  "Best New Brewery," and can now serve all alcoholic beverages. Because of a new state law, businesses can trade an existing beer and wine license for an all-alcohol license. 

"The state saw this as an opportunity to enhance businesses all across the commonwealth of Massachusetts," Chair Thomas Campoli explained. 

The Berkshire Museum was granted an entertainment license that runs from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. as it works on a $12 million renovation of its 1903 structure

Executive Director Kimberley Bush Tomio explained that there are no proposed changes in entertainment from the former license, and board members suggested moving the license's hours later than 5 p.m. in case of an event at the museum. 

"It's going to be phenomenal when we get open," she said. "And we do hope to help support the museum through rentals and things like that, so it's helpful to have this license in place." 

Berkshire Hills Country Club will have a new in-house food provider, as the board approved a management agreement with Berkshire Hospitality Group, which operates the restaurant at Shire Breu-Haus in Dalton.

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