New Fall Foliage Leaf Hunt Clues for 2024

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Editor's note: there are three leaves remaining in Adams, and two leaves each in North Adams and Williamstown. You have until Friday, Oct. 11, to find them. Look for the second set of clues below. 
 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The annual Fall Foliage Leaf Hunt, a traditional and popular feature that kicks off Fall Foliage
Festival Week, starts today, Saturday, Sept 28.  
 
This year the committee has revealed that there will be 11 colorful leaves hidden in Adams, Cheshire, North Adams, and Williamstown. 
 
When a leaf is found, it should be brought to the Office of Tourism at North Adams City Hall during normal business hours to claim a prize. One prize per household please. Prizes are generously donated by area businesses including Bailey's Bakery, Berkshire Emporium, Big Y, Bounti-Fare Restaurant, Daily Grind, The Flower Gallery, Mount Williams Greenhouse, Oriental Buffet, Stop & Shop, Tractor Supply, Trail House Kitchen & Bar, and Walmart.  
 
Upon finding a hidden leaf, the top plastic bag with the yellow or orange leaf should be removed and brought in, and the second bag with the green leaf should be left at the site. This way, subsequent hunters will know they correctly solved the clue but someone already claimed the prize-winning leaf.  
 
A second set of clues will be announced in the event of unclaimed leaves. A complete list of winners, locations, and sponsors will be released in late October. All leaves should be returned by Oct. 11 to receive a prize. 
 
As always, the leaf committee has included an invisible leaf hunt for homebound residents.
 
Participants in the invisible hunt are asked to mail a postcard (or card in an envelope) with the number of the clue and the answer/s with their name, address, and phone number or email address, to the Office of Tourism, City Hall, 10 Main St., North Adams, MA 01247.
 
Only mailed entries will be accepted. In the event of a tie, the earliest postmark will determine the winner. Please submit answers to be received by Oct. 11.
 
This year's Fall Foliage Festival theme is "Berk du Soleil" and the first set of clues are:               
 
1. Billsville location for three — or any number of — rings; 2nd clue: One-stop jewelry, banking, and massage in Williamstown
 
2. Come for the history of acrobatics, stay for the present-day bowling, brain teasers and buddies; 2nd clue: A German words for gymnastics, on a street that shares its name
 
3. Find these half-brother twins a little closer to the ground than usual; 2nd clue: Unlike the name suggests, this isn't just for gymnasts born between May 21-June 20
 
4. First syllable of the creators of Mill Town Circus plus the second word of an education center for jesters; 2nd: clue: The oldest building on the Williams College campus
 
5. Formerly creating textiles, now creating limber bodies and sated appetites
 
6. Industrial home of many arts, including a focused summer study of puppetry
 
7. Pastries from the Greatest Showman's partner
 
8. Stop here to fully acquire the kind of Acrobat that might excite indoor kids more; 2nd clue: Full-service computer sales and repairs in the Mother Town
 
9. Where Erin Morgenstern or Kristi Charish's clowns might go for repairs; 2nd clue: No early birds getting oil changes here
 
10. Who donates their time when the fire-eating rehearsal goes wrong?
 
11. You'll sometimes find less exotic animals on display here, and occasionally a fairy or two; 2nd clue: The gates are closed now, but they open for events like the Faerie Festival & the Fall Run
 
 
Invisible Leaf Hunt (mail-in entries only)
 
1. In 1851, an elephant billed as the largest in America, named ___________________, suffered a fatal accident on the Center Street bridge in the Northern Berkshire community of ________________. (Fill in the blanks)
 
2. Name one of the two famous traveling circus shows that performed in North Adams in the early 1900s.

Tags: Fall Foliage,   leaf hunt,   

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Driscoll Marches in North Adams, Meets With Local Democrats

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll waves in the Fall Foliage Parade. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll said she sees optimism and potential in the Steeple City after marching in Sunday's Fall Foliage Day Parade. 
 
Driscoll is the first sitting lieutenant governor to appear in the parade since Timothy Murray and his family back in 2007. She and Gov. Maura Healey were elected to four-year terms in 2022. 
 
"Absolutely picturesque to be able to see, you know, this time of year in this region, and then this parade, the history of it, like multiple generations of families on the sidelines, excited to either watch the parade or be in the parade, participate in it," said Driscoll at a fundraiser meetup at Hotel Downstreet hosted by the local town and city Democratic committees. "It's a perfect New England day, and I was glad to be a part of it."
 
Driscoll had traveled to Dalton in the morning to endorse Leigh Davis, the Democratic candidate for the Third Berkshire District. In North Adams, she made some brief remarks then mingled with the dozen or so attendees, including city councilors and Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts President Jamie Birge, who hoped to bend her ear on relevant issues.
 
Driscoll said she was hearing "lots of enthusiasm for the work that's already happening here" including opportunities to leverage hospitality and tourism challenges around infrastructure and what the state could to support those efforts. 
 
She touched on the hopes for funding toward a public safety building and the city's two bridges — the closed Brown Street bridge and the deteriorating Veterans Memorial Bridge. The memorial bridge, constructed as part of the Central Artery project in the 1960s, is being studied for reconstruction or removal under a federal grant with the goal of better connecting Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art to the downtown. 
 
"I think generally, people are really optimistic about the possibilities that exist here in leveraging off of the things that are already working well, whether it's a university or a cultural asset like Mass MoCA, or a downtown that's beautiful, that has some some rough patches that need to be prettied up, like, how can we work together to accomplish that?" the lieutenant governor said. 
 
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