"Where Is This?" Mystery Photo Contest Hint: A Creature in Wonderland

SPONSORED BY: Parent/Child Yoga Morning at A Little Beacon Space

SPONSORED BY: Parent/Child Yoga Morning at A Little Beacon Space

UPDATE: We have a winner! Jackie O identified it correctly! This is a dinosaur in the back garden of the installation of doors at the Marion Royael Gallery on the west end of Main Street. The reveal article with photos will be posted soon! 

UPDATE: A fourth hint has been posted, with a new prize from Get Frosted Cupcakery.

Do you know what this photo is of, and where it was taken? The first person to correctly identify this wins two tickets to tonight's intimate folk concert at BEAHIVE: "A Duo of Duos," featuring the duo of Jon Shain & FJ Ventre, and the duo of Amy Soucy & Sharon Goldman. Once the correct answer is identified, we will post a reveal article that shows the full location of this photo, and more about its location.

Hint #1: A creature in a playful wonderland.

Hint #2: See the guesses in the comments below. Then you have some some exploring of back streets (or a back garden) to do!

Hint #3: Members of BeaconArts who have attended recent meetings this summer, and diligent Second Saturday hunters and gatherers, will know where to find this royal collection of wonder.

Hint #4: If you are in galleries this weekend for Second Saturday, and if you are curious enough to open doors and peek inside, you will find it!

New Prize: TWO cupcakes of choice from the case at Get Frosted Cupcakery!

PRIZE

The winner of this contest will get two tickets to see tonight's intimate performance of scintillating guitar work and vibrant vocal harmonies, with two dynamic musical duos at OPEN HIVE / Music - A Duo of Duos with Jon Shain & FJ Ventre, Amy Soucy & Sharon Goldman at BEAHIVE 291 Main Street starting at 7pm.

Sharon Goldman and Beacon’s own Amy Soucy are a soulful folk duo. This summer, Amy was named the winner of the 2016 Songwriting Competition at the CT Folk Festival and was featured in the Emerging Artists Showcase at the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival.

They’ll share the bill with guitarist Jon Shain and bassist FJ Ventre, coming up from North Carolina. They’ve been playing together, on-and-off, since they met in Massachusetts 35 years ago and have been finalists at the International Blues Challenge.

Tickets are on sale and there are a few left, which you can buy now, but the winner of this contest walks away with two of them!

Rules

  • The right answer must include what this is, and where it is.
  • Guesses can only be made in the Comments on this website's post. Comments made at Facebook, Instagram or Twitter will not be counted, so don't get too excited and give it away there! Comment here.
  • A note about Comments: We have to approve them before they get published, so if you don't see your comment right away, you will soon. We have to do this to prevent random robot spam.
  • Guess as many times as you like until you get it right.
  • The winner will be identified in the Comments below.
  • To redeem your prize, you can pick up your tickets at tonight's show at OPEN HIVE / Music - A Duo of Duos with Jon Shain & FJ Ventre, Amy Soucy & Sharon Goldman at 291 Main Street. We will give you a secret password.
  • If you cannot attend the show but would like to gift your tickets to someone else, you can! Just tell your guest what the secret password is and they can pick up the tickets.

Ok...Go Go Go!

Spirit of Beacon Day Parade 2016 in Pictures

On a glorious Sunday afternoon - no rain date needed here! - the annual Spirit of Beacon Day commenced down Main Street, from the river to the mountain. Groups who designed, built, and decorated floats for the day prepared in various locations throughout the city to finally gather for the big moment: Stepping off at 1 pm to begin the march down Main Street, celebrating the spirit that runs through Beacon. Let's put some faces and floats to the names we read about so often, from people who hold events, make things happen, or are involved with projects you participate in:

The Amerscot Highland Pipe Band

Hello, Mayor Casale and city Council members!

Sue Serino

The Beacon Republican Committee

The Beacon Democratic Party

Throw up your glove for Beacon Girls Softball!

Throw up your glove for Beacon Girls Softball!

Hello, Ron's Ice Cream! We can wait to see you in the spring, in the yellow ice cream house near Memorial Park!

Pack 3001

Troop 411

Derby car of the Beacon Scout Pack

Go Girl Scouts!

Daisy Troop 10289

The Beacon City School District, with Meredith Heuer and Antony Tseng holding the banner, and Anthony White, William Zoph and Kenya Gadsen marching. Interim Superintendent Ann Marie Quartironi.

The people of Strong Communities Work

Beacon's Head Start Program

Yanarella School of Dance and dancers

The Knights of Columbus

The Church of St. Joachim and St. John

Jeepers Spotted in the Parade! If you have estimates on how many Jeepers were in this Spirit of Beacon Parade, please let us know in the comments! we estimated about 30.

The Beacon High School Band

The Beacon Players - The High School Theatre Company

The Beacon Players' Promotion of the upcoming performance of "grease"!

The Beacon Players' Promotion of the upcoming performance of "grease"!

Glenham Elementary School's float to the theme "Tastes of Beacon"

Fidelis Care

South Avenue School's float in the theme of "Tastes of Beacon"

Lions Club International, City of Beacon

J. V. Forrestal Elementary, presenting their float for the theme "Tastes of Beacon"

National Honor Society members from Beacon High School

Sargent Elementary School, presenting their float for the parade theme, "Tastes of Beacon"

The Beacon Historical Society

Diane Lapis (who's written A Little Beacon Blog's Postcard Series) from the Beacon Historical Society as The Dummy Light

Rombout Middle School

The American Red Cross

First Presbyterian Church

Pastor Ben of First Presbyterian Church

ARF Beacon (Animal Rescue Foundation)

Maday Lopez Brown, Member of the Kings Alpha Chapter Theta Phi Sigma Christian Sorority Inc.

New Covenant Learning Center

The Beacon Bees (competitive readers organized by the Howland Public Library)

The Beacon Sloop Club

The Beacon Volunteer Ambulance Corps

The new ambulance vehicle, ready to climb up and down mountainous roads

Beacon Volunteer Ambulance Corps Supporters

Beacon Fire Department and those from surrounding communities.

An Unfortunate Event - Man Carried Out Of Main Street Garden

On one of fall's first cool, breezy and sunny Saturday afternoons in Beacon, first responders pulled in around the garden on Main Street between Hudson Beach Glass and River Winds Gallery. Police were the first to respond, surrounding the garden with several vehicles, followed by fire trucks and Beacon's ambulance units.

According to people near the garden, a man called for help from within the garden. As responders arrived, they went into a heavily weeded area of the garden and cleared several large stalks as they worked to get to the person on the ground below.

Responders loaded the man onto a stretcher, wearing what looked to be a plastic neck brace, and wheeled him to an ambulance. Shortly thereafter, first responders disbanded after directing traffic as the unfortunate event cleared up. We send the man our best wishes for a speedy recovery, and thank for the first responders for helping!

"The Fireball Run" TV Show Streams Through Beacon, Arriving at Hudson Beacon Glass for Music and Events

The 10th season of The Fireball Run, a live-streamed, adventure-based trivia pursuit game involving 40 local teams driving fast or meaty cars in a competition to find the most clues and solve the most puzzles across towns in America, arrives in Beacon on Wednesday from 3 to 6pm on Main Street in front of Hudson Beach Glass. The cars will come down Cross Street and park nearby.

A team representing Dutchess County includes the current Chamber of Commerce President and owner of Freedom Ford, Rick Brownell, and auctioneer Robert Doyle, from AAR Auctions. Look for them in their big black Ford Explorer, with sponsor stickers from IBM, Freedom Ford, AAR Auctions, Central Hudson, BBG+G Advertising, Hudson, Q92 and the Poughkeepsie Grand Hotel.

Rick Brownell and Robert Doyle speak to TWC News about the drive.Photo Credit: Screen grab from clip on TWC News.

Rick Brownell and Robert Doyle speak to TWC News about the drive.
Photo Credit: Screen grab from clip on TWC News.

This season, the TV show kicked off on September 21, winding through New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Connecticut, and Massachusetts, ending on October 1. This Wednesday, September 28, the drivers and crew will arrive in Beacon, NY, stopping in front of Hudson Beach Glass to kick off a three-hour street party. There will be music and entertainment from Bosco & The Storm, street performers, children’s activities, Dutchess Cruiser Car Show, Q92 with Joe Daily & Michelle Taylor and more, according to the Dutchess Tourism website.

Drivers for this eight-day, 2,000-mile, life-sized trivia game and road rally competition are described as "the most distinguished group of highway scofflaws ever gathered in one place," according to the Fireball Run website. "Some are celebrities, some are executives, some may be your neighbors. And it's all for bragging rights, a greater cause and a plastic road sign."

The live action, 26-episode series chronicles an epic quest for America’s underdiscovered places and obscure, historic artifacts, all while aiding in a massive awareness campaign called The Race to Recover America’s Missing Children. In the towns they drive through, teams need to spread hundreds of flyers that feature the missing children they are assigned. The series is streamed live online in the United States, and televised internationally, while educating and entertaining viewers and inspiringoff-the-beaten-path travel. Rick and Robert have already found a special tire behind a secret door panel, according to their Facebook post.

Charities supported by this season of Fireball Run include The Children’s Home of Poughkeepsie and Spark Media Project. You'll recognize Spark Media Project from their summer day camp offerings and recent participation in the Beacon Independent Film Festival.

While out cheering on the racers, put on your best smiles for the cameras and show the world how spectacular Dutchess County is! This entertaining series streams in the USA on Amazon Prime, and is televised in foreign markets.

Enjoy a dinner with the drivers afterward at the Poughkeepsie Grand Hotel (tickets available here). Or stay in Beacon and eat at one of these restaurants, any of which you will probably want to call ahead, to make reservations and guarantee a table.
 

City Asks For Your Input on the Updated Comprehensive Plan via Email for Tonight

Photo Credit: Google Maps

Photo Credit: Google Maps

The City of Beacon is revisiting its Comprehensive Plan tonight at a special workshop from 7 to 9pm. It is open to the public, and if you can't attend, City Council Member Peggy Ross has provided an email address for those who live and work in Beacon to send suggestions: comprehensiveplan@cityofbeacon.org

The emphasis of tonight's workshop is on updating the city's Comprehensive Plan to reflect changes since the existing plan's adoption in 2007. The revamp will focus on recommendations for the waterfront and train station area. The meeting will be in the Memorial Building at 413 Main Street (Teller Avenue is the cross street).

People are encouraged to send an email with their suggestions to comprehensiveplan@cityofbeacon.org

UPDATE [9/24/16]: Some updates from the meeting were posted on its Facebook event page, and the video from the workshop has been posted.

Pop-Ups With Handmade Goodies and Sweet Treats Coming To Beacon

We have a few exciting pop-up shops in Beacon coming soon...

For Goodness Bake!

The popular bake sale, For Goodness Bake, is back for its fourth year next Saturday (September 24th) at the Catalyst Gallery (137 Main Street).  This bake will be raising funds for The Beacon Community Kitchen (formerly Beacon Soup Kitchen), which provides lunches, love, and warmth to those in need in the Beacon community. Says Tara Tornello one of the organizers: "The Beacon Community Kitchen volunteers are skilled at turning a few dozen pounds of veggies into a delicious, fulfilling meal. It's pretty cool to see what they can whip up with just a few basic ingredients like farm-fresh tomatoes and eggplant. Our goal is simple: raise funds for the Kitchen to purchase more of these wholesome ingredients as well as new utensils and appliances that will help make food preparation a breeze. Every dollar raised will go directly toward these needs."

The Beacon Community Kitchen transforms .Photo Credit: Tara Tornello

The Beacon Community Kitchen transforms .
Photo Credit: Tara Tornello

Over the past four years, For Goodness Bake has raised $8,000 cumulatively for charities such as Green Teens (nearly $3K), Kids R Kids (nearly $3K) and Baby Felix ($1.5K), who was the beneficiary the first year this bake sale was produced. This year, funds will go toward purchasing new appliances (possibly a stove) and groceries for meal preparation at the Beacon Community Kitchen. The bake sale will feature some of the Hudson Valley’s most celebrated amateur and professional bakers and confectioners.

Hudson Valley bakers wait all year for this fundraiser. Tessa Dean calls it her "Christmas" as she prepares cupcakes that will appear on Instagram with the hashtag #beacondessertmafia - before they head for your mouth.

Hudson Valley bakers wait all year for this fundraiser. Tessa Dean calls it her "Christmas" as she prepares cupcakes that will appear on Instagram with the hashtag #beacondessertmafia - before they head for your mouth.

Take a look at this lineup!

  • Savory tarts from Little House Bakeshop
  • Salted caramel pretzel brownies from Nerds with Knives
  • German apple cake from Gina DeMaria Gratz
  • Lemon yogurt pound cake from Virginia Piazza
  • Cookie dough peanut butter cups from Susannah Pugsley
  • Coconut macaroons from Patricia DeGroodt
  • Semolina cake from Lena Jamal of Beacon Bread Company
  • Assorted vegan cookies and cupcakes from Nora Holt
  • Pumpkin pie cheesecake bars from Mike DeCiutiis
  • Zucchini bread from Margaux Lange
  • Brown butter rice krispie treats from our own Kristen Pratt
  • and SO much more!

Mid-Hudson Etsy Makers Pop-Up Market

Get an early jump start picking up some unique holiday gifts on Saturday, October 8th. The Howland Cultural Center will be hosting the Mid-Hudson Etsy Makers Pop-Up Market. The market will feature 13 artisans of handmade goods from the mid-Hudson Valley area.  The market is free and open to the public. Doors will be open from 10 am to 4 pm. And so begins the holiday season!


Kitchen Cuts: A Pop-Up Hair Cut Day at A Little Beacon Space with Your Presence Salon

Join A Little Beacon Blog and Your Presence Salon during the Children's Hocus Pocus Halloween Parade down Main Street for our second Kitchen Cuts, a Pop-Up Kids Hair Cut day with face painting! Hair cuts are $16 the day of at the door, or book ahead online for $12. Face painting is $1 and will have a collection can, with face painting proceeds going to Beacon elementary schools. We collected $36 last time, and we're adding to that to make one donation, hopefully for teachers' art supplies. Book your hair cut online here, or come by the day of! If the kids are still up for it, they will be the ones doing the face paint - and they are really good!

The Bacon-Egg-and-Cheese-inator: Where to Find a Breakfast Sandwich in Beacon

The time has come to explore the bacon, egg and cheese breakfast sandwich options in Beacon. We're calling it "The Bacon-Egg-and-Cheese-inator" because I've been watching too much Odd Squad, and I view all breakfast sandwiches as a key resource to starting the day on the right foot. Now, you won't find a "best of" here at A Little Beacon Blog, because each can be the best in their own way for their own reasons. But the breakfast sandwich is a very important component of the day, and every element - the type of cheese, bread, packaging and price - can make or break it.

Personally, I make my own breakfast every day. And it consists of buttery scrambled eggs with cheddar melted in, a buttered English muffin with jam (or honey if I run out of jam), and that's it. Anything that veers from this breakfast can send my day in a different direction. Therefore, these breakfast sandwich rundowns are crucial for knowing which one to pick.

Which Breakfast Sandwich Will Make Your Day?

Mr. V's Deli

The bacon, egg and cheese sandwich standard in Beacon, which all breakfast sandwiches around here are held to. This is served on an English muffin with loads of bacon, cooked in such a way that no one else can quite recreate in their own pans. (Maybe Mr. V's is baking it?) Wrapped in wax paper to catch the drippings of American cheese, then in another layer of tin foil to keep it piping hot - and I mean so piping hot that you need to wait a while before eating this small but powerful sandwich.

Special to This Sandwich: The melted American cheese and a ball of crispy bacon. Melted American hits a spot, not sure why.
Call-ahead-inator: I actually do not use my call-ahead-inator, though most people do phone in their orders. You could eat in Mr. V's, but you have two tables to choose from, and you may need to help someone reach a favorite bags of chips. Mr. V's is a fine source for a bag of chips, a required sandwich accompaniment for many people. I actually walk down to Mr. V's to place my order, then wait and watch their TV or talk to people inside.
Location: 297 Main Street, near Beacon Karate and Royal Crepes
Price: $2.75

Side Note: The Price of the Sandwich

Let's take a moment to talk about the price of breakfast sandwiches. When you're ordering a breakfast sandwich, you're either in a rush and just need the food the way you need it, or you're relaxing on a weekend morning, out at breakfast with your friends. The price will probably reflect that, because the restaurant has either invested in their atmosphere, or they want to cook a high volume of food to serve as many hungry customers as possible. Then, and you can debate which is the most important part, is the source of the ingredients. Are they Portlandia-style and from a nice local farm? Or are they from Oscar Mayer? You'll find either one in my fridge at all times; it just depends on what I'm craving.


Stock Up

The new guy in town, Stock Up started serving breakfast recently from their location on Teller Avenue that used to be Copper Roof Deli. Stock Up is also a deli, but they procure their own meat and sprout their own grains in the basement. This sandwich comes on ciabatta bread with egg, cheddar cheese and bacon. If you like extremely salty bacon like I do, then this sandwich will hit the spot. And for those who like ketchup with their eggs, this breakfast sandwich is served with a spicy house blend of ketchup called Mount Beacon Sauce (you could ask for it on the side if you wanted to try it first). Also, if you were craving a bit of fruit, this sandwich comes with a side! This day, I was craving vegetables, so I got to pick the tomato and cucumber salad. Bonus!

Special to This Sandwich: In addition to being delicious overall, the bacon is pretty smokin' good. Also, the side helps make the meal more well-rounded. Sometimes after a breakfast sandwich, you need a little more of something.
Call-ahead-inator: Since Stock Up isn't within walking distance from my house, I would call ahead if I were eating it at the office or at home. But there is plenty of room to dine inside or out.
Location: 29 Teller Avenue, near the monument of George Washington on Wolcott Avenue.
Price: $8


Beacon Bagel

A favorite of many, this compact bagel can surround two eggs and slices of cheese quite snuggly and deliciously. Notice the tin foil wrap, helping to complete and sustain the melt of the cheese. You could possibly skip lunch when you eat this sandwich.

Special to This Sandwich: Well, the bagel of course. And once again, the melted American cheese.
Call-ahead-inator: Yes. I always get this sandwich when I'm headed to the train, going for a long drive, or getting my hair cut at The Green Room (I eat it while I'm in foils) - even though it's very messy to eat, especially in the car. But that doesn't matter, because messy sandwiches - and burgers - are usually signs of it being good. If I were headed to Beacon Bagel with my family, I would not call ahead, but we would wait next door by playing at Echo.
Location: 466 Main Street, near Echo
Price: $4.86


Harry's Hot Sandwiches

Not quite the new guy in town anymore, especially after getting featured in Valley Table, Harry's Hot Sandwiches does have a bacon, egg, and cheese sandwich! Served on a soft and sweet kaiser roll, a la your favorite New York City bodega, it is very easy to eat. A benefit to this sandwich is that Harry's delivers. You may have seen him whizzing by on his big cart.

Special to This Sandwich: The soft kaiser and melted cheese.
Call-ahead-inator: Yes if I'm on the go, no if I'm with friends or family. Eating in Harry's is very pleasant and can happen at Harry's bar or at tables.
Location: 449 Main Street, near the Beacon Theatre and across the street from Ella's Bellas
Price: $5.95


The Yankee Clipper Diner

A staple for many, including several mayors of Beacon, The Yankee Clipper Diner has the simple bacon, egg and cheese sandwich that you seek, and will include ketchup packets for those who can't image ketchup coming from anywhere else. Confession: When dining at an eatery that features house-made ketchup, I have been known to BYOK (bring your own ketchup) when eating with kids because they can't manage ketchup that is ... different. (Related: I also have been known to BYOMS - bring your own maple syrup - because I can't stand corn syrup, and Cracker Barrel just tricks you into thinking you are pouring 100 percent maple syrup because of how they label it. Check it out next time you're in there. I go often, btw, and also shop their gift store for birthday gifts and seasonal decorations.)

Special to This Sandwich: You decide. Maybe the ketchup?
Reader Note 9/18/16: One reader likes asking for sautéed spinach on this sandwich.
Call-ahead-inator: Yes if I'm on the go, no if I'm with friends or family.
Location: 397 Main Street, across the street from Beacon Pantry and the remodeled gas station
Price: $5.95


Beacon Pantry

Beacon Pantry serves only items they have perfected, and they are usually European. Hence this Croque Monsieur, which doesn't immediately come to mind as a breakfast sandwich. It's an inside-out sandwich, in that the Gruyère cheese is melted on the outside. Inside is French ham (not bacon but I made an exception for this article because it's all pork), with the traditional béchamel sauce, which is a white roux and milk blend that is mysteriously very good. It does not have an egg, but its sister the Croque Madame would. Beacon Pantry, however, does not serve the egg version because of how their kitchen is set up.

Special to This Sandwich: The melted and slightly burnt edges of Gruyère cheese are kind of beyond delicious. Plus the salad is a bonus. The salad really completes it as a meal and gives you that "clean eating" feel.
Call-ahead-inator: Dining at Beacon Pantry is so pleasant, that I don't usually use my call-ahead-inator. Plus, they allow for digital workers like me to work on our laptops. So it's like a price of entry to sit on the wi-fi for a bit.
Location: 382 Main Street, Across the Yankee Clipper Diner and next door to the remodeled gas station at the intersection of Fishkill Avenue
Price: $10

PS: All breakfast sandwiches were ordered and consumed for the purposes of this article, for breakfast, lunch, and one for dinner.

PPS: If you run an eatery and serve a breakfast sandwich that was not shown here, then email us at editorial@alittlebeaconblog.com so that we can try it! No purposeful omissions were made in the collection of breakfast sandwiches to try.

Reader Suggestions Since This Was Published: BJ's bacon, egg and cheese sandwich on a biscuit, Beacon Bread Company, and Bob's Mountain Grocery near Mount Beacon.

This article is sponsored by A Little Beacon Blog's Restaurant Guide and Brunch Guide.

This article is sponsored by A Little Beacon Blog's Restaurant Guide and Brunch Guide.

Photo Credits: All photos were taken by Katie Hellmuth Martin.

Movies at the 4th Annual Beacon Independent Film Festival, 2016

The Beacon Independent Film Festival creates a chance for stories to be told, and emotions to be visualized. Not only does this festival showcase emerging, hard-to-find artists, but it provides opportunities for an entire industry of people - from editors to lighting designers to grips (people who build the systems that the lights can hang from) - to work on projects that light up the screen. It spotlights resources for local filmmakers, like The CineHub, a film studio that rents out its space and equipment to filmmakers in the area. I keeping with Beacon's family-friendly community spirit, the Beacon Independent Film Festival gives kids opportunities to showcase films they've worked on with BIFF Young Filmmakers and Spark Media Project.

Filmmaking folks have been getting ready and anticipating this weekend all year, the weekend of the Beacon Independent Film Festival, where you can watch feature films, shorts, documentaries and more. Panel discussions, food vendors, green space, and interactive activities for kids and adults make it an event for the whole family. Come hungry, because Barb's Butchery will be there with hot dogs, hamburgers, hummus and veggies.

Most of the film screenings happen at the University Settlement Camp. The same lovely piece of land where you find the Beacon Pool in the summer, disc golf, and weddings, the site is on Wolcott Avenue, on your left in the woods if you are headed south out of Beacon. The address is 724 Wolcott Avenue, Beacon, NY 12508, and directions are here. The location is wheelchair-accessible.

Building of the screen.Photo Credit: Beacon Independent Film Festival

Building of the screen.
Photo Credit: Beacon Independent Film Festival

Screen up!Photo Credit: Beacon Independent Film Festival

Screen up!
Photo Credit: Beacon Independent Film Festival

Special Events Include:

Opening Night Gala at Dogwood: Friday night at 9:30.

Panel Breakfast at CineHub: Saturday morning from 9 to 11. CineHub is a filmmaker's dream collaborative production studio here in Beacon and the Hudson Valley. This event is free, courtesy of a sponsorship from The Beacon Bagel.

All screenings are at the Settlement Camp, with the exception of FRIGHT NIGHT (Block 6) on Day 2, Saturday, which is at The CineHub.

How It Works

Tickets are sold in "Blocks." You can buy a three-day pass, or you can buy in "blocks," which means that you get to watch the films being shown in that block of time. Blocks are $12 each, and a three-day pass for the entire festival is $35. Buy tickets here.

Festival Film Schedule

DAY 1 - Friday

From 7 to 9 pm

Bridge Music
(Directed by Andrew Porter, 16 minutes)
In 2004, Joseph Bertolozzi recorded the sounds of the Mid-Hudson Bridge in Poughkeepsie, using those sounds to compose Bridge Music, making the bridge the largest percussion instrument in the world. The music contains no other tones than those of the bridge itself. This documentary follows Bertolozzi’s journey from playing the Mid-Hudson Bridge to eventually making music with the Eiffel Tower.

A Song For You: The Austin City Limits Story
(Directed by Keith Maitland, 94 minutes)
From Willie Nelson to Wilco, Ray Charles to Radiohead, A Song For You: The Austin City Limits Story, offers the ultimate backstage pass to 40 years of incredible live music. See how longtime producers and loyal fans have made ACL the longest running music show in television history.

After the screenings, head to Dogwood for the Gala at 9:30.


DAY 2- Saturday

BLOCK 1: 9 to 11 am
Filmmaker Breakfast and
Panel at The CineHub
BIFF/The CineHub Filmmakers Breakfast will include a panel from 10 to 10:45 am called “Why Film Fest”: a discussion about film festivals as a venue for independent film and how they serve filmmakers. This will be an opportunity for the festival filmmakers, local filmmakers and other interested guests to become familiar with The CineHub, and local filmmaking resources over a light breakfast.

Panelists:

  • Laurence Asseraf – Founder and Director of BeFilm, created in 2004
  • Gregory Bray – Filmmaker and Professor
  • Kimberly Wright – Film Producer, Sesame Street
  • Caitlin Crowley – Director of Home Media Sales, Icarus Films
  • Gavin Briscoe – Release Manager, Monument Releasing

FREE Admission.
Sponsored by Beacon Independent Film Festival, The CineHub, and Beacon Bagel

BLOCK 2: 11:15 am to 1:15 pm at The University Settlement Camp
Under A Stone

(Directed by William Klayer, 23 minutes)
A woman returns to her hometown for a family obligation. She reunites with her brother, but they clash in how they cope with their awful past.

Disassociationville
(Directed by James Christopher, 90 minutes)
Chris, lost in his late 20s and scrambling to find a sense of identity, returns home to small-town Texas when he learns that his mother has died. As he confronts the family, friends, life and love he abandoned, Chris must finally come to terms with his decision to run and try to take control of his own future.

BLOCK 3: 1:45 pm to 4:30 pm at The University Settlement Camp
The Bad Kids

(Directed by Louis Pepe, Keith Fulton, 101 minutes)
Teachers at a Mojave Desert high school take an unconventional approach to improve the lives of their struggling students.
Panel discussion (45 minutes)

BLOCK 4: 5 pm to 7 pm at The University Settlement Camp
Solo, Piano- N.Y.C.
(Directed by Anthony Sherin, 5 minutes)
On a cold winter morning, a lone piano stands curbside in New York City. Passersby stop and play. Plinking slightly out-of-tune over the white noise of Broadway’s cars, buses, trucks, and sirens, the piano awaits its fate.

Kate Plays Christine
(Directed by Robert Greene, 112 minutes)
Director Robert Greene and actress Kate Lyn Sheil blur fiction and reality as they investigate and reconstruct the story of newscaster Christine Chubbuck, who infamously committed suicide live, on-air in 1974.

BLOCK 5: 7:30 pm to 9:30 pm at The University Settlement Camp
Au Pair
(Directed by Enid Zentelis, 21 minutes)
Au Pair is a dark comedy indie series pilot. Min, a young Chinese woman, is in America to realize her radical feminist agenda - being an au pair is a means to an end - but her host mother, newly divorced Cindy, intends to use Min as dating bait.

Women Who Kill
(Directed by Ingrid Jungermann, 93 minutes)
Commitment-phobic Morgan and her ex-girlfriend Jean, locally famous true crime podcasters, suspect Morgan’s new love interest is a murderer.

BLOCK 6: 10 pm to 11 pm at The CineHub
FRIGHT NIGHT

The Graveyard Shift
(Directed by Lara Arikan, 2 minutes)
It’s long past midnight when the tired and jumpy waitress decides to go investigate the ominous noise she hears right outside the roadside coffee shop where she’s working. She discovers that she is being attacked by a zombie! The zombie wobbles inside the shop and corners the poor waitress behind the counter. How will she save herself? What will it take?

The Photograph
(Directed by Tim Hall, 13 minutes)
A photo of a mysterious house changes to reveal a dark secret. Adapted from the M.R. James story “The Mezzotint.”

Second Skin
(Directed by Charlie Manton, 20 minutes)
The Story Of A Girl In A Cardboard Box.

Chateau Sauvignon: terroir
(Director by David Maire, 13 minutes)
Chateau Sauvignon: terroir follows the isolated adolescent son of a storied vintner family who finds himself torn between obeying his father’s callous restrictions and preventing his ailing mother from deteriorating further. When a doting woman and her indifferent son arrive seeking a tasting and tour of the winery, Nicolas sees an opportunity to help care for his mother, as well as prove his worth to his choleric father. However, his wayward plan quickly takes a turn for the worse, and his missteps put his family’s secretive murderous ways in peril of being unearthed.

Arthur
(Director by Nick Rusconi, 30 minutes)
His name is Arthur and he is a serial killer. He wants to quit, though. Will he succeed?


Day 3 - SUNDAY

BLOCK 7: 10 am to 10:30 am at The University Settlement Camp
Kid-produced projects, made with:

  • Spark Media Project/BIFF Kids Workshop
  • Spark Media Project
  • Sesame Street
  • Fodder

(Directed by Jack Ofield, 6 minutes)
In the human love affair with food, what could possibly go wrong? How did the simple act of eating to stay alive go so far off the rails?

FREE PROGRAM: 10:45 am to 11 am
A performance by Compass Arts’ Pompatom Ensemble
Beacon children bring a world rhythm-filled performance of poetry and song on drums, xylophones, recorders, and hand-made instruments.

BLOCK 8: 11 am to 3 pm
Landfill Harmonic
(Directed by Brad Allgood, Graham Townsley, 90 minutes)
Landfill Harmonic follows the Recycled Orchestra of Cateura, a Paraguayan musical group of kids who live next to one of South America’s largest landfills. This unlikely orchestra plays music from instruments made entirely out of garbage. When their story goes viral, the orchestra is catapulted into the global spotlight. With the guidance of their music director, they must navigate this new world of arenas and sold-out concerts. However, when a natural disaster devastates their community, the orchestra provides a source of hope for the town. The film is a testament to the transformative power of music and the resilience of the human spirit.

Let’s Get The Rhythm
(Directed by Irene Chagall, 54 minutes)
Let’s Get The Rhythm supplies a strong sample of girlhood savvy mixed with astute observations by experts of all ages while exploring the worldwide hand-clapping game tradition. This uplifting film pays tribute to the beauty of the beat, to the inherent human attraction to rhythm, and to the emergence of the budding social mind.

BLOCK 8B: 2 Free programs. 2:15 pm to 3 pm
A Rhythm Roundtable hosted by Compass Arts
Join Compass Arts to craft instruments out of recycled materials and take part in a hand-clapping hootenanny.

Bach Star Café (SPECIAL PREVIEW)
(Directed by Susan Rockefeller, 40 minutes)
Susan Rockefeller’s new film, Bach Star Café, follows a group of college students as they learn and perform Bach’s “Coffee Cantata” around Boston. From nursing homes to coffeehouses, they delight audiences with the modern take on Bach’s irreverent and timeless cantata and show that classical music - and even opera - can be engaging, humorous and lots of fun.

This delightful film gives a wonderful peek into the process of staging an operatic piece, and the logistics of bringing an ensemble (with harpsichord!) into untraditional venues. Audiences will be inspired to revisit classical music, and see what a forward-thinking rock star Bach was in his time.

Produced in association with Longy School of Music of Bard College.

BLOCK 9: 3:30 pm to 5 pm
A Box Came to Brooklyn
(Directed by Jason Cusato, 27 minutes)
A lifelong Brooklynite struggles to convince his ridiculous neighbors that a mysterious box left in the middle of their street doesn’t prove one of them is a dangerous terrorist.

I, Destini
(Directed by Nicholas Pilarski, 14 minutes)
Developed through a series of creative workshops with a family’s youngest member, I, Destini is an animated film that explores the poignant and imaginative illustration of a youth’s perspective on the effects of having an incarcerated loved one.

Black Belt
(Directed by Margaret Brown, 11 minutes)
In September 2015, the state of Alabama closed 31 DMVs, which largely impacted voters in Alabama’s Black Belt. To combat these closures, the Secretary of State issued a Mobile Voter Registration unit, which traveled to every Alabama county to issue voter IDs.

This Little Light of Mine: The Legacy of Fannie Lou Hamer
(Directed by Robin Hamilton, 27 minutes)
A poor Mississippi sharecropper escapes debilitating abuse to become an indomitable force against the political elite and a voice for millions fighting for the right to vote in 1964. This Little Light of Mine: The Legacy of Fannie Lou Hamer reveals the power of the human spirit and proves that every voice matters.

BLOCK 10: 5 pm to 6pm
FYD (Follow Your Dreams)
(Directed by Chad McCord, 17 minutes)
Daniel Reese has one big dream … to become a successful actor. In the meantime he makes a living as a clown. One sunny afternoon Daniel receives the great news that he has booked an acting job on the hit television series, Doctor Town! He immediately freaks out and questions his own talent. Only after some tough love and inadvertently saving a man’s life does Daniel realize the importance of following your dreams.

Sex/Ed
(Directed by Emily Hamilton, 7 minutes)
Sex/Ed is a documentary piece that investigates the impact of modern sex education on four subjects. It explores how access to sex education has positively or negatively shaped each individual’s sexual orientation, relations, and beliefs.

Visit 57
(Directed by Kate Phelan, 10 minutes)
A loop of hope and disappointment every 28 days - Kat’s been working at fertility for 3 years. Today will be different. She’s sure.

Clínica De Migrantes: Life, Liberty and The Pursuit of Happiness
(Directed by Maxim Pozdorovkin, 40 minutes)
An unprecedented look into the workings of one of the only health clinics that serves America’s untouchable class: undocumented immigrants.


Watch this trailer for The Beacon Film Festival, where a child's curiosity overcomes him for a film production studio, and he may or may not have lifted a camera to then enlist his neighborhood friends to film a zombie movie.

You can buy your tickets online here. It's super easy and you have a lot of flexibility with which parts of the festival you go to. Tickets may also be purchased on location the day of the screenings.

Thank you for supporting businesses who partner with A Little Beacon Blog as Spotlight Sponsors for our articles. All of our partners and advertisers help make this publication possible. If your business is interested in starting a campaign, please click here.

This Weekend in Beacon: Your Guide To Events, Shopping, Restaurants and Beauty 9/16/16

Every Friday, we send newsletter subscribers this digest of what is happening in and around Beacon this weekend. It's a great list to have in your pocket as you're trying to quickly recall what is happening this weekend without having to look in a bunch of places! Be sure you are signed up to the newsletter to receive it.

Your Weekend Guide to events, shopping, restaurants and beauty.
Hello!

This weekend is loaded with options! Here is your easy access to planning. These are weekend dates pulled from some of A Little Beacon Blog's 10 Things To Do In Beacon Guides, so be sure to check them during the week.
Sponsored by Antalek and Moore for car & RV insurance.
Welcome two new Beacon businesses to A Little Beacon Blog's "Stand Out" Program in the Things To Do In Beacon Guides! Luxe Optique and Mountain Tops Outfitters. We look forward to bringing you weekly photos and mentions of things to do and find in these stores! A Little Beacon Blog is sponsor-supported, so we thank every single business who advertises with us to help them get the word out!

Red Pepper Dance Night
Day: Saturday, September 17, 2016
Time: 7:00 pm
Location: Red Pepper Bistro, 1458 Route 9D, Wappingers Falls, NY
Information >

Beacon Independent Film Festival  
Days: September 16-18, 2016
Location: University Settlement Camp, Wolcott Avenue (aka 9D), Beacon, NY
See below for more details!
Information >

Hudson River Craft Beer Festival
Day: September 17, 2016
Time: 1:00-5:00 pm
Location: Riverfront Park, Beacon, NY
Information >
 

Be sure to visit this Annual & Upcoming Events Guide to see other great events that are coming up!

         
Writing for the Non-Fiction Market with Ronald Brown
Day: Sunday, September 18, 2016
Time: 1:00-3:00 pm 
Location: Howland Public Library, 313 Main Street, Beacon, NY
Information >

Birth Story Support Circle (Healing from birth or postpartum trauma)
Day: Saturday, September 17, 2016
Time: 1:00-2:30 pm
Location: Waddle n' Swaddle, 484 Main Street, Beacon, NY
Information >



Fall is coming, which means getting cozy with a Get Frosted Cupcakery cookie dough cupcake.


You can shut the The Vault down ... not just by dancing the night away, but by reserving it for your wedding reception. See The Vault's new listing in Wedding Wire.


Barb's Butchery will be catering the Beacon Independent Film Festival all weekend! Burgers, hot dogs, fruit platters, hummus and veggies. The festival will be at the University Settlement Camp, so get your tickets here or in person.


BAJA 328 is coming up on its one-year anniversary, and will be celebrating it for an entire week in late October - tequila style!


Our Restaurant Guide has all of your options - even eateries you didn't know about! Keep the Guide open on your phone because we list all websites and phone numbers, making it easy for you to tap-to-call!       


          

Boots weather is here! Mountain Tops has Dansko in the shop. These babies look like they'd wear like a Dansko clog, but are an ankle boot, for those who need a little more flair to their comfort. Plus, did you know Mountain Tops is on Instagram?


Glasses wearers are rejoicing upon the opening of Luxe Optique, the new glasses store on Main Street. Not only can you get an eye exam for glasses or contacts, you can udpate one of the most prominent accessories on your face ...


As we 'grammed about earlier today, this versatile hoodie at Style Storehouse is a fall morning requirement. The hood can go up or stay slouchy around your neck. When you're shopping on Main Street, go allllll the way around the bend in the road past Utensil, and you'll find Style Storehouse.



2017 has arrived at The Pfotoshop, soon to be known as East End! Planners from Rifle Paper Co. are back in stock, and we're picking up ours for the year ahead.

All shops in Beacon are listed in this Shopping Guide, from Home Decor to Kids Fashion to Vintage and more. Keep it open on your phone as you're walking around shopping!

         


Tweet all about it ... Happening now from River Therapeutic Massage: Purchase a series of six sessions in September and receive a coupon for a FREE enhancement ($25 value) and a coupon for a FREE 30-minute session ($50 value) which you can use for yourself or for gifting. Book now.

From the hairs on your head to the toes on your feet, there are many  ways to pamper yourself and your pet in our Beauty Guide

         
We know what you're thinking. ... "I want my business featured here!"
Pictures shown here are from our advertising partners in the Things To Do In Beacon Guides. If you run a business on Main Street, it's in one of our Guides, like Shopping, Restaurant or Beauty.  Upgrade it to the "Stand Out" promotional program. We'll include your most exciting news here in the weekend newsletter.
THINK ABOUT IT OVER THE WEEKEND...
Our Spotlight Sponsors have a lot to offer you! We partner with businesses who will be great fits with your life, and we have written about each of them.
ART
                                            
BEACONARTS and BEACON INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL

It's finally here! The Beacon Independent Film Festival (BIFF) kicks off tonight at 7pm (going until 9) at the University Settlement Camp for a weekend of terrific short and medium-length films, events, awesome food and all-around fun! A gala follows at Dogwood tonight at 9:30. Screenings run all weekend at the Settlement Camp. Kids activities are included, so you know it's family-friendly. Get your tickets here!
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS
              
Antalek & Moore

The people at Antalek & Moore make getting car insurance easy. If you're getting a car for the first time, or switching car insurance to get a better rate and better coverage, they can take care of you completely. Even the picture inspection! Call them to get started: 845-245-6292.
Tin Shingle
Tin Shingle trains you in how to get the word out about your business, while giving you the strength and motivation to go big with it. Get training videos (aka TuneUps), and the weekly email to learn promotional strategies you had never thought of before.
                       
InHouse Design Media

From the makers of A Little Beacon Blog, our media extension, InHouse Design Media, can do for your business what we do for ours, including social media photos, guidance, newsletter design, and more. How can we help you?
FUN & FITNESS
                   
All Sport Health & Fitness

Looking for good comedy? All Sport has been hosting Comedy Night, and their latest show is Saturday, September 17. An all-star lineup is set to make your night. Tickets do sell out. Get more details on this night here.
CARS
            
Poughkeepsie Nissan

Poughkeepsie Nissan made a big congratulations to Paula and Paul on their new Nissan Juke! Only at Poughkeepsie Nissan, home of the lifetime powertrain warranty.
EVENT SPACE

A Little Beacon Space

Looking for a space to host your own pop-up shop? A Little Beacon Space is available to rent! Host your own pop-up shop (or workshop, event, photo shoot ...)
Be sure to check out our latest additions to The Things To Do In Beacon Guides on Sundays to see what events have been added for the upcoming weeks and months so you can plan ahead! We sleuth around and add activities, eateries and shops all week! If you know of something that's going on around town, send it to editorial@alittlebeaconblog.com or tag us in your flyer on Instagram (@alittlebeacon).
NEWSLETTER SIGNUP
Was this email forwarded to you by a friend or family member?   Sign up now to receive these emails right to your inbox and be one of the first to find out what is going on this weekend - in Beacon and beyond!

Until next week!

Beacon First Responders and Citizens Remember the Fallen on September 11, 2016

Citizens and first responders gather to remember the heroism put forth by those who run into danger.
Photo Credit: Screenshot from the Beacon "9-11" Ceremony 2016.

On the morning of Sunday, September 11, 2016, Beacon residents gathered with first responders to remember the day 15 years ago when our country experienced one of the most devastating attacks on the people of our nation and those visiting from other countries.

The small gathering was held in front of a piece of steel beam from the World Trade Center towers, in the park across from the Beacon High School track, on the corners of Verplanck and N. Cedar Street (as it turns into Matteawan Road). Mayor Randy Casale spoke to remember the day, the lives lost, and the "ones who are still hurting, either on a personal level or with a sickness related to this incident." Fire trucks parked along Verplanck to frame the scene.

The Chief of the Beacon Fire Department spoke, recalling the "beautiful, sunny day" of that September 11th 15 years ago, and what happened that morning. He spoke to the safety that existed in our lives that day, and how that feeling of safety changed forever. "When the 911 dispatcher call goes out [to the responders], that is in the back of our minds. 'What is this incident going to be? Will it be a terrorist attack?'" The Chief concluded by remembering the heroes that were lost and made that day.

Photo Credit: Screenshot from the Beacon "9-11" Ceremony 2016.

The City of Beacon produced an 11-minute video of the ceremony, book-ended with images from the day, including symbols of wreckage that are stationed here in Beacon. Watch it during any moment of quiet in your day.

Many of Beacon's first responders in the fire department and ambulance corps are volunteers. You can donate at any time to them by responding to mailings to your home, or by calling them to see the best way to send a donation.

Donations to the Fire Department can be sent to:
City of Beacon Fire Department
Fire Department
13 South Avenue
Beacon, NY 12508

Classified Ad: Office For Rent in the Telephone Building, 291 Main Street

Office for rent in the lower level of The Telephone Building. Call Deborah Bigelow to make an appointment to view: 914-720-9029

Office for rent in the lower level of The Telephone Building. Call Deborah Bigelow to make an appointment to view: 914-720-9029

The Telephone Building, located across from Key Food at 291 Main Street, has been on your radar a lot lately. Building owner Deborah Bigelow of Gilded Twig has spent a month this summer outside on a lift, transforming the top of the building from paint-chippy and unremarkable into something pretty, white, and gold. Also, A Little Beacon Blog has started renting the front office inside, and we could not be happier!

Now is Your Chance!

You now have a chance to move into one of the offices on the lower level, as it has become available to rent starting October 1. Being located in a historic building is creatively inspiring, in that you are surrounded by original detail that Deborah has preserved and restored. Additionally, Deborah has cultivated a creative atmosphere among all tenants, thereby creating a synergistic vibe.

About Those Details

Let's get down to what you really want to know about - what you will find in the office:

  • Exposed brick
  • Natural light
  • 127 s/f office with access to a conference room (outside of the office) for small group workshops or meetings
  • Access to a common area, which includes upholstered seating, outside of the office for clients to wait or you to lounge, as well as a microwave, dishes, artist work-sink, and other amenities.

Renting Details:

Price: $575/month
Lease: Two-year with one-month security deposit
Available: October 1, 2016
Zoning: Business/Retail

Interior of office, where your desk could go.

The closed door of your office, from the inside.

A Conference Room, which connects to your office suite, can be used for workshops or meetings.

Lounge area outside of the office suite on the lower level.

Interested? Call Deborah at 914-720-9029 to make an appointment to see it. Visit her web page with more details or to submit your inquiry there. But don't wait. This is an opportunity you may want to jump on!


Latest Additions to the Things To Do In Beacon Guides 9/11/16

Kids Classes


“Beacon Arts Adventure” will take place at the Howland Cultural Center starting this Tuesday, September 13, through October 11.

Get all the details >

Adult Classes

New classes from the Garrison Arts Center have been added, starting with their four-session art classes.

Get all the details > 

Upcoming Events

Join Hudson Valley Seed at Homespun Foods on September 20 for "Let's Eat!" - a benefit for school gardens. 

Elks Lodge Dance Night on Saturday, September 24. 

Stony Kill Animal Rescue event on Saturday, September 24.

"Table-to-Farm" Dinner and movie event at Cedar Lakes Estate in Port Jervis on Sunday, September 25. 

Harvest Fest will be on Saturday, October 1, at Blue Hill at Stone Barns Center.

Halloween dance will be at the Howland Cultural Center on Monday, October 31.

Get all the details

Lorraine Tyne ReBlings to Become Beacon's Bridal Boutique

Nestled into a storefront on the early curve of Main Street on the West End is Lorraine Tyne, the new bridal boutique that quietly sparkles from its storefront windows. You once knew it as a boutique of bling jewelry, while taffeta gowns in the window were decorated with custom-designed jewelry sourced from New York City and the Far East. Statement necklaces used to line the windows, and if you owned one, you were sure to get compliments every time you wore it. We blogged about the shop before, when in search of a tiara for the final season of "Downton Abbey."

Lorraine Tyne from the past: jewelry. Lorraine Tyne today: bustles and bling.Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

Lorraine Tyne from the past: jewelry. Lorraine Tyne today: bustles and bling.
Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

That was the original Lorraine Tyne, from 2011 to 2016. A growing collection of bridal pieces brought in more customers, who sought more bridal goods from Lorraine Tyne, including gowns. True to the entrepreneurial spirit of Beacon, the three sisters who own Lorraine Tyne - Keisha, Jenny, and Koreen, from whom the name is derived - rebranded (or reblinged) their store to feature consignment and original wedding gowns at a variety of price points. Down came the floor-to-ceiling shelves from which sapphire, crystal and rhinestone necklaces, earrings and bracelets once sparkled, and up went a wall-to-wall rack of wedding gowns.

If your heart just skipped a beat when you saw the slender, lace covered ivory gown or the organdy flutters from the gown against the pink wall, you could take it one step further and go into the shop and touch the dresses. Open many days of the week, in the afternoon or by appointment, Lorraine Tyne Bridal is having a White Party this Second Saturday for September. Here is the extra draw: Lorraine Tyne loves doing deep discount sales on jewelry. So if nothing else, go in to peek at the gowns, come out with some bling - and a headpiece! (Maybe get a gown later, or tell a friend who is in the throes of wedding planning.)

We have dedicated a "Come In!" series article to Lorraine Tyne because chances are, you have not yet set foot in there. And why would you? It's not like you get married every day. Which maybe we should change. Vow renewal ceremonies anyone? Yes, ceremonies. As in more than one in our lifetime. Maybe one a year?!

Gosh, I think I'm onto something here! How can one woman choose one hat, one veil, one headpiece, to celebrate a love that is to last a lifetime? How, with all of these choices?

Speaking of choices, Lorraine Tyne carries other local designers as well. Local Beacon designer Sarah, from "Sparkle My Head Scarves" makes a collection of head bands and garters. Poughkeepsie-based bridal designer Mia Von Mink makes sashes and hair accessories. Lorraine Tyne also carries a collection of handmade hair flowers and birdcage veils from Breault Designs.

One of the sisters designs some of the jewelry herself, and has it manufactured in New York City. They also offer custom designs. The Sinrilus Bridal Jewelry Collection is a high-end curated collection for bridal and other special occasions. It ranges from $30 to $400 and up. So go in, frost yourself, as they say, and find something pretty. Or at least admire the collections and designs, of which there are many.

Second Saturday Guide to September Art Showings in Beacon, NY!

Sip and stroll, and pretend you don't have to worry about homework for another month. 

Sip and stroll, and pretend you don't have to worry about homework for another month. 

Happy Second Saturday, Beaconites and Hudson Valley art lovers! We have quite a roundup in store for you: From a "Friendraiser" to benefit the public library, to a honest-to-goodness hootenanny, to a plethora of paintings, photos, and sculpture that will engage your every sense. Get the scoop (and find out who will be pouring frosty beverages) in our Second Saturday Guide

Once you've figured out where to park, what's next? If you're in need of a bite to eat, check out the Restaurant Guide. Itching to show local shopkeepers some love? We've got a Shopping Guide at your fingertips. Thank you for supporting the businesses that help support A Little Beacon Blog! We couldn't do this without you — or them. Happy Second Saturday strolling!