Yankee Finds Two 'Bests' on North Adams' Eagle Street
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The famous Jack's Hot Dog Stand was one of two Eagle Street venues making Yankee's Best of New England list. |
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Two Eagle Street establishments have nabbed Editor's Choice selections in this year's Yankee Magazine's Travel Guide to New England.
Making the Best of New England list for Western Mass (which has a preponderance of Berkshire venues this year) is the legendary (and not surprising) Jack's Hot Dog Stand as the "Best Retro Hot Dogs." But newcomer Martha Flood Design Studio & Fabric Gallery just a few doors down made the list as well.
Flood opened her Eagle Street studio three years ago and features a line of fabrics from recycled plastics inspired by the Berkshires — leaves, water, flora and bark. The studio earned "Best Fabric Design" choice.
Also making the Editor's Choice are:
Bousquet Mountain, Pittsfield: Best Disc Golf
Briarcliff Motel, Great Barrington: Best Modernized Motel
Crab Apple Whitewater Rafting, Charlemont: Best Inflatable Kayaking
Firefly New American Bistro, Lenox: Best Porch Dining
Garden Gables Inn, Lenox: Best Village Retreat
Guthrie Center at the Old Trinity Church, Great Barrington: Best Acoustic Music
Hancock Shaker Village, Pittsfield: Best Stone Barn
Mezze Bistro & Bar, Williamstown: Best Garden Setting
Savoy Mountain State Forest Campground, Florida: Best Hiker's Campground
Two Lenox events made the magazine's "Top 20" events in Massachusetts and one, the Berkshire International Film Festival is shared by Pittsfield and Great Barrington. The fest runs May 30 through June 2 at the Triplex Cinema, Beacon Cinema and Mahaiwe theaters.
The Lenox events are Tanglewood Presents "West Side Story" on July 13 and the Shakespeare & Company production of "Mother Courage and Her Children" running from July 26 to Aug. 25.
The magazine, on newstands Tuesday, lists 317 Editor's Choice awards made by editors and contributors.
"Every one of the 300-plus places we highlight contains an untold back story about someone striving for perfection, having a dream, and having the vision to make a difference, whether it's a small artisan's studio or a lobster-in-the-rough shack or a dressed-up steakhouse on a tree-lined Boston street," said Yankee Editor Mel Allen. "While it may be hard to create a business, the true challenge is in making it work, being good enough that it endures and brings people back. Those are the qualities we look for and reward when we say 'Best of New England.'"
Tags: Berkshires, magazine feature,
