Summer Bounty: Three days, three markets

Blackberries clustered against the sky, heavy and dark as thunder, which we plucked and gobbled, hour after hour, lips purple, hands stained to the wrists.

Cider With Rosie, Laurie Lee

Three farmers’ markets in the last three days means a kitchen table overloaded with fresh bounty.

No gooseberries or blackcurrants this week but at Arlington on Thursday there were plenty of raspberries, redcurrants and just look at these blackberries!

Nothing like the dense flavor of those from the hedgerows of childhood  but still delicious. They were smaller in those days too – except when rainy weather made them swell and diluted the intensity of the flavor.

No wonder poets  – Seamus Heaney, Sylvia Plath and Galway Kinnell among them –  have written about going blackberrying and eating straight from the brambles.

And it’s not just the berries. The peaches are ripe and delicious right now, the corn is sweet and then there’s all the gorgeous root veggies and the greens.  Good enough to eat!.

Beets and their greens

Apricot and cherry tarts from                   The Art of the Tart

Kale and Chard

“Three Cheers” for the Fall Festival team

I like these words about our Fall Festival Reimagined:  Three Cheers – from the Poughkeepsie Journal today:

To Poughkeepsie Day School’s First Fall Festival Reimagined, an ambitious new festival designed to celebrate the local and the global community. Visitors were given festival passports to mark the places and things they learned about during the day — and there was a lot. There was a parade led by ribbon dancers from the Mid-Hudson Chinese Language Center, carnival games from around the world, African mask-making, a Japanese karaoke lounge and a Chinese yo-yo demonstration. All-American festival foods such as hamburgers, hot dogs, cotton candy and popcorn were available as well as multicultural street food provided by the Poughkeepsie restaurant, Twisted Soul.

It was truly an amazing team effort led by the planners and volunteers of FFR2010. Thank you for creating something truly wonderful.


A Path to Success: Talents. Challenges. Problems

A PATH TO COLLEGE, CAREER AND CIVIC SUCCESS
Talents, when revealed, need to be celebrated. Challenges, when discovered, need to be addressed. Problems, when they arise, need to be solved. This is never so true as when we are talking about our children — their health, their growth, their education and their development. It is not enough to alert people to issues and then walk away. It is not enough to uncover problems and then neglect to work through them. It is not enough to lay blame and then move on.

I shared those words before the discussion following Race to Nowhere last week. they are from Gene Carter of ASCD and appear in the excellent facilitation guide to the film.

It’s been several days now but people are still talking about the impact of the film. Several people have told me that they were moved to tears. Others have spoken of the changes they are putting into place right now in their own lives.  Students recognized themselves, their friends and identified the pressures they feel. Everyone said that this film spoke to them in compelling ways. it is clear: we all have work to do.

Race to Nowhere is about learning, about education, about balance and about the quality of life for students and their families. It is not about our school or any of the many schools public and independent schools and colleges or home-schoolers that were represented in the audience. It is about a starting a discussion about what matters most and the health and well being of children. It’s about getting off the hamster wheel. That is an important discussion for all of us to have.

It’s a call to action and a call to collective action. Making changes to refocus learning on what matters most and restoring balance will take all of us working together. And perhaps it begins with the simple question that the film poses: What does success mean to you and your family?

We were delighted to see so many schools and colleges represented. We were grateful to the Randolph School in Wappingers Falls for co-sponsoring the screening, to the Kildonan School and Oakwood Friends for their participation and support. Millbrook, Kent and High Meadow schools were also there as well as parents and educators from many of our neighboring public schools.  we had college people too – a key component of any discussion about restoring sanity to the pressure cooker of  current education. We were especially pleased to see students.

It was wonderful to see so many people at the screening- the house was packed.

While watching the film, we asked people to look aspects of the film that moved them to want to take action. After the film there was an opportunity to identify some common concerns and connect with others who want to create change.

We also asked the audience members to notice at least one person with whom they could identify or strongly empathize, or find a moment or situation in the film that resonated.

We had a short time for discussion after the film and most people were able to stay and join the panel: Christopher Roellke, Ph.D., dean of the college and professor of education at Vassar College; Suzanne Button, Ph.D., psychologist and assistant executive director of Astor Services for Children and Families in Rhinebeck, and consultant to the Red Hook Central School District; Louann Joyce, first-grade teacher in the Beacon Central School District; Ben Powers, head of Kildonan School in Amenia; Zachary Missen-Jones, Oakwood Friends School senior; and Julia Raphael, Poughkeepsie Day School junior.

We ended at 9.15pm but the discussion had only just begun.

So what next?

We collected email addresses and we will contact everyone. In the meantime, what do you think?

Pete Seeger and A Hudson River Journey

Pete Seeger came to PDS yesterday. He came for the lower school musical – an original production on a subject dear to his heart – the magnificent Hudson River for which he has done so much.

Pete Seeger at PDS May 2010

The show – A Hudson River Journey - was written and produced by lower school drama teacher Dorothy Penz with music directed by Bill Fiore and Damon Banks.

It was a fun show that came complete with all the  fauna, folk and folklore of the Hudson Valley region that took that took a mystical and mythical quadrennial journey. And every student pre-kindergarten through fourth grade had a part.

It opened with Henry Hudson being set adrift in a rowboat by his crew and ended with  the present day of  Clearwater and the Walkway.

Pete Seeger visits PDS in 1949

Pete Seeger at PDS January 1949

It was wonderful that Mr. Seeger came to see the performance.

But this was far from his first visit to PDS.

As reported in the Poughkeepsie Journal of January 12th 1949,  he came to play  folk music  for  the fourth, fifth and sixth grades in a concert open to the public. And already Mr. Seeger was widely known for his work and his music.

That 1949 concert was a benefit for  Peoples Songs Inc., an organization he had co-founded in 1945  with the belief that folk music could be an effective force for social change.

Pete Seeger’s life of music and activism have been just such a force of social change for seventy years. It was a pleasure to be able to thank him for all that he has done for the Husdon Valley and the cause of social justice everywhere.

We thank him for the inspiration he provides, the dedication he has given and for his enduring commitment  to education and democracy.

And…of course, we thank him for his friendship to PDS. Since 1949 Pete Seeger has been at PDS many times.

He has inspired generations of students to play music, get involved and make a difference in the world.

Henry Hudson and crew aboard the Half Moon. And - at left - David Held live streaming to the world.

Science and technology heroes

It was Dean Kamen -  the inventor of the Segway and a version of the artificial heart – who established F.I.R.S.T.*  His vision was:

“To transform our culture by creating a world where science and technology are celebrated and where young people dream of becoming science and technology heroes.”

Last year we introduced lego robotics to 5th and 6th grade science. This year we started an after school lego robotics team. And yesterday we hosted a qualifying tournament for the second annual Hudson Valley F.I.R.S.T.* lego league. Many thanks to John Houston for bringing this event to PDS and working so tirelessly with the teams.

The theme for the 2009-2010 season is “Smart Move” and teams investigated many aspects of transportation systems including missions related to transportation safety, collecting objects, manipulating them, and transporting them to different locations.

Gracious professionalism and fun – the words are from the Hudson Valley F.I.R.S.T. lego league creed that also espouses teamwork, learning with mentors, friendly competition, discovery and sharing. They were all on display at PDS yesterday as the teams took over Gilkeson with their robots, models, umpires and team spirit. And thanks to parent volunteers led by Mimica Hyman, we welcomed them not just with open arms but with a cornucopia of baked goods, pizza and customized table decorations. Quite amazing.

Tournament director George Swain writes:

What a day it was!  Twelve Hudson Valley teams from as nearby as Wappingers Falls, Millbrook and Rhinebeck and as far afield as Ballston Spa and Albany came to PDS.  PDS brought three junior teams and one senior team to participate.  Senior teams competed in four areas: robot design, teamwork, research and robot performance.

Our senior team won FIRST PRIZE in the research competition.

Congratulations to all PDS students who participated and volunteered their time. Special thanks to coaches Bryan Del Bene and John Houston and to volunteers Emma Sears, Laura Graceffa, Steve Mallet, David Held, Aaron Lieberman, Debby McLean, as well as Mimica Hyman, Mark Schlessman, Beth Brofman, Alaster McLean and the many other parents who made this event such a success.

The gym, the Chapman Room and Gilkeson classrooms  were transformed as teams demonstrated their expertise in the four categories: robot performance, robot design, research presentation and teamwork. We were delighted to welcome all the teams,  their coaches and supporters and also to welcome Dr. Casimer DeCusatis, Founder and Director, of the  League and Distinguished Engineer at  IBM Corp, Poughkeepsie, NY.

More photographs on the PDS Facebook page. Check it out, become a fan.

* F.I.R.S.T. = For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology.

With the guns

PB117756

Buttercup Farm November 2009

With school closed for the day there was time for a walk.

Buttercup Farm Sanctuary off Route 82 just north of Stanfordville has one path that tracks along Wappingers Creek as it runs down from the head waters at Thompson Pond south toward the Hudson.

It was quiet except for the rustle of squirrels, a few birds – juncos, jays and titmice mostly – and the occasional commotion of mallard startled up from the rushes. Beavers had been at work with trees gnawn down to sharpened pencil stubs and their work had blocked a waterway and flooded the walks.

And then the sound of single gunshots from across the water toward Stissing Mountain. Hunters perhaps. Or a target range.  And because it is Veterans Day, Armistice Day, my mind went to “With the guns” – D.H.Lawrence’s August 1914 essay from the Manchester Guardian written just as the first world war was beginning. Watching reservists giddy with excitement and anticipation clamber aboard a train he has no such illusions about guns and war:

Last autumn I followed the Bavarian army down the Isar valley and near the foot of the Alps. Then I could see what war would be like – an affair entirely of machines, with men attached to the machines as the subordinate part thereof, as the butt is the part of a rifle.

Many greeted the war with jubilation. The streets of the great cities of Europe were thronged with crowds thrilled by the sense of adventure and the opportunity to take part. But not Lawrence.  He recalled what he saw and felt at that rehearsal for the war to come:

Then out of a little wood at the foot of the hill came the intolerable crackling and bursting of rifles. The men in the trenches returned fire. Nothing could be seen. I thought of the bullets that would find their marks. But whose bullets? And what mark. Why must I fire off my gun in the darkness towards a noise? Why must a bullet come out of the darkness, breaking a hole in me? But better a bullet than the laceration of a shell, if it came to dying. But what is it all about? I cannot understand; I am not to understand. My God, why am I a man at all, when this is all, this machinery piercing and tearing?

It is a war of artillery, a war of machines, and men no more than the subjective material of the machine. It is so unnatural as to be unthinkable.

Yet we must think of it.

It was unthinkable then. It is unthinkable now. But we must think of it.

Landscape 2

Passchendaele, November 1917

From the archive: PDS finds a home 1934

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  The Poughkeepsie Eagle-News 

Saturday Morning July 14th 1934 NRA – We Do Our Part  3 cents a copy

Here it is:  July 14th 1934: the first media mention I can find of the beginning of PDS. Headline: Old Spaulding Home sought by New School.  The new school was PDS and the Spaulding House was at Hooker and Grand Avenues. It’s below the fold on the front page. And on the front page – Hitler on the rise and the food crisis from the San Francisco longshoremen strikes. 

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Walkway over the Hudson – past, present and future

A great video of our local bridge – the newly opened Walkway across the Hudson.

Early one morning

1002A bird  the color of a stop sign. High on a tree at the Buttercup Farm Sanctuary.  A scarlet tanager. My first sighting.  A black winged red bird.

Tree swallows swooping, the insistent chipping of an elusive flycatcher and  the headwaters of Wappingers Creek swirling down to the river. What a great place for a Sunday breakfast.

"Suddenly there's Poughkeepsie"

Suddenly there’s Poughkeepsie

what a hard time

the Hudson River has had

trying to get to the sea

it seemed easy enough to

rise out of Tear of

the Cloud and tumble

and run in little skips

and jumps   draining

a swamp here and

there   acquiring

streams and other smaller

rivers with similar

longings for the wide

imagined water


suddenly

there’s Poughkeepsie

except for its spelling

an ordinary town but

the great heaving

ocean sixty miles away is

determined to reach

that town every day

and twice a day in fact

drowning the Hudson River

in salt and mud

it is the moon’s tidal

power over all the waters

of this earth at war with

gravity     the Hudson

perseveres    moving down

down    dignified

slower    look it has

become our Lordly Hudson

hardly flowing

and we are

now in a poem by the poet

Paul Goodman  be quiet heart

home home

then the sea

Grace Paley

the-hudson-from-anthonys-nose-15p91660771

Tug Boat on the Hudson

Action now

100tagIn his talk yesterday, Bruce Judson made reference to the first 100days of the Roosevelt administration.  As now, there was a deep financial crisis. As now, there was no one clear path to follow.  But doing nothing was not an option.  Bruce reminded us that they tried things, experimenting to see what worked.

There’s a local exhibition – close by in Hyde Park - that provides the history of that earlier era when a new president confronted an economic crisis of unprecedented proportions.  I haven’t seen it yet but it sounds like a something for the winter vacation calendar.

How lucky to have it right here in our neighborhood.

The  special exhibition “Action, and Action Now” FDR’s First 100 Days is an “immersive experience, designed to evoke the desperation of the people in the midst of the Great Depression, followed by hope and energy as the nation rebuilds.”

In 1933 President Roosevelt “took command of a country that was incapacitated by fear.”  His leadership in that time of crisis made a difference.  At PDS it’s not only Bruce’s presentation but also in history classes that students are learning about the parallels between the current circumstances and the past.

The view from the top

Among the many excellent things about working at Poughkeepsie Day School and living in the mid-Hudson Valley is that you are never far from so many places of great natural beauty.

It’s fall and the trees are ablaze with color.

Here is the view east from the top of the fire tower on Stissing mountain last Saturday. The water is Thompson Pond – headwaters of Wappinger Creek – and full of waterfowl. Below is the view to the west – across the Hudson to the Catskills.

West across the Hudson to the Catskills. Saturday October 18th.

Who's your city? The best places to live

Move to Poughkeepsie!

The Poughkeepsie area is rated one the of the best mid-size city regions to live for families with children by Richard Florida in his book: Who’s your city?

He makes the point that globalization is not flattening the world; on the contrary, the world is spiky and place is becoming more relevant to the global economy and our individual lives. The choice of where to live, therefore, is not an arbitrary one. It is perhaps one of our most important decisions right up there with choice of career and life partner exerting a powerful powerful influence over key aspects of our lives.

Without doubt the Poughkeepsie area is a great place to live for many reasons. The excellent choice of independent schools is only one of them!. And with New York City just down the train tracks also top ranked as a large city – the Poughkeepsie area is even better.

Wintry Mix

There’s a good article in the local paper on the inexact science of school weather closing. Our recent spell of sleet, snow, patchy fog, freezing drizzle, rain, freezing rain, rain mixed with sleet, wind, sunny intervals and ice pellets has been a challenge that we can only anticipate will continue.

That phrase “wintry mix” brings to mind colorful mega jars with screw top lids lined up on the shelf at the sweetshop on the corner – red and white striped peppermint humbugs, clove and aniseed balls, dolly mixtures, pear drops, sherbet lemons, treacle toffee and liquorice allsorts.

Now that’s a true wintry mix.

ERVK “So much to do….”

“You must do the things you think you cannot do”
Stone Cottage

One of the great things about Poughkeepsie is that you are always in striking distance of so many places to visit and things to do.

One of them is Val-Kill, Eleanor Roosevelt’s home in Hyde Park – the only place she referred to as home. The grander Roosevelt home is right on Route 9 but the trip to the more modest house bought as her personal retreat is also worth the visit. On both occasions I have been there the guides – one a park ranger and the other a docent – have been so knowledgeable about Mrs Roosevelt – her life in public and private and about the famous and the not so famous who came to Vall-Kill to be with her.

Don’t miss the short film. It sets the historical context of the Roosevelt era and provides the personal story. The interior of the house is lovingly preserved and you can see the study where the indefatigable Mrs Roosevelt wrote and worked, and the modest dining and sitting room where she met with world leaders, royalty and people from the neighborhood.

The house tour

And indefatigable she was. Her “My Day” column was nationally syndicated and reached an audience of millions. For twenty seven years between 1935 and 1962 she wrote six days a week. When Franklin Roosevelt died she missed four days – the only interruption in all those 27 years. She was a blogger before her time and in her column she was able to reach millions of readers with her commentary on the important issues of the time. Column weave seamlessly from domestic issues to her demanding daily schedule and commentary of the major events of her time.

Mrs Roosevelt was a world figure and hers was a distinctive voice at once intimate and confiding yet authoritative and confident. It’s interesting to search the database from George Washington University to see the range of her interests and how many columns flow from the personal detail to matters of great public concern. Mrs Roosevelt was interested in all of it. It’s fun, too, to search for the items of local interest – items about Hyde Park, Poughkeepsie and the surrounding area.

The rain stayed with us most of yesterday. It was my last day in Hyde Park for over a month so a busy one. In the morning I went down to our excellent department store, Luckey-Platt, in Poughkeepsie, and arranged for some furniture to be re-upholstered while I am away. I bought a few things for the stone cottage which my guests should find convenient
. - June 5th 1950

Some remarkable things are being done in the International Business Machines research center south of Poughkeepsie, N.Y., but one scientist in particular is delighted because he has taught a machine to play checkers. And the machine is winning, improving its score with each game. July 24th 1959

As this is the 50th anniversary of the launch I searched Sputnik to see how Mrs Roosevelt had responded and made sense of this trauma to the American psyche and the impact on education. I found it a fascinating glimpse back in time.

But if you are interested you will have to do the search yourself!



The grounds. And a heron hunting frogs.