Yoga teacher Emily Wishnick is organizing a donation Vinyasa Yoga class on Saturday, July 30, from 10-11:30 a.m. in Clark Park (near the playground). The class is to benefit Philly Community Wellness. Suggested donation is $7-15. See the flyer below for more details. To confirm your participation please visit the event’s Facebook page.
A 12-year old female cat, Hallie a.k.a. The Boog (short for “Boogie”), is looking for a new home. She needs to be in a home without other cats. The home where she is right now has a blended family of four cats which does not work well for her. The Boog would be happier with another loving owner.
The Boog is black, declawed, vocal and feisty but loves to hang out with you and sit on your thigh, facing outward, while you pet her. She’s on the plump side, but has no health problems.
The Boog is up-to-date on vet care, shots, etc. She loves ham, yogurt and edamame. She likes to know what you are up to. She needs focused attention but can be happy by herself as well. She will use a litter box as long as she is the only cat using it. She has no special dietary requirements.
If you are interested please contact The Boog’s current owner at: hippieflanders [at] gmail.com.
Almost everything is ready for the 6th annual installment of Shakespeare in Clark Park. Yesterday the technical crew set up the equipment and actors began rehearsing in the park.
This year Shakespeare in Clark Park company presents “Much Ado About Nothing,” which is set in a post-war town. Alex Torres will direct the performance. You can learn more about the show here.
The performances will take place July 20 through July 24 (Wed-Sun) at 7 p.m. If it rains on the day of a performance it will be relocated to Curio Theatre (48th Street and Baltimore Avenue). For more information go here.
And finally, don’t forget to bring blankets, chairs and picnic food.
Sets and lighting were installed and actors began rehearsing yesterday. (Photos by West Philly Local).
From left to right: WHCA 2nd Vice President Dawn Chavous, Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell, Senator Vincent Hughes, WHCA President Horace Patterson, 1st Vice President Jason Custis and Dr. Suet Lim. WHCA received a citation for their work in helping the victims of the Windermere Apartments fire.
The Walnut Hill Community Association threw itself a 50th birthday block party Saturday complete with face painting, a moon bounce, free hot dogs and a check-bearing politician.
The party took place along 50th Street between Locust and Walnut, just in front of two vacant lots that WHCA recently turned into community gardens with the help of a grant from the Preservation Alliance of Greater Philadelphia.
Special party guests included State Senator Vincent Hughes, who presented a check for $1,000 to WHCA President Horace Patterson to help WHCA’s efforts, and Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell.
Hughes, who grew up a block away from the celebration on St. Bernard St., also announced a partnership between WHCA and his office to further help victims of the Windermere Apartments fire.
The Association also bid farewell to Imanni Wilkes Burg from The Enterprise Center, an important community partner. She is going to live temporarily in Russia.
Now is a good time to join the Association, which coveres an area roughly from 45th to 52nd Streets and Market to Spruce Streets, as new memberships begin in July and cost just $10.
Beekeeper Daniel Duffy explains the ins and outs of raising bees on Saturday in Woodlands Cemetery. (Photo by West Philly Local)
A few dozen of West Philly residents gathered near the community bee hives in Woodlands Cemetery on Saturday to learn about urban beekeeping and the subtleties of local as part of “Sustainable Saturdays,” a University City District program to highlight local food.
Local beekeeper Daniel Duffy provided those who attended a glimpse inside the hives at the Woodlands Cemetery Community Apiary, where amateur beekeepers are harvesting amazing honey and experimenting with ways to help strengthen the bee population. Bees have taken a beating in recent years. Populations have declined at alarming rates probably due to a combination of pesticides, monoculture farming and parasitic mites.
Luckily for city dwellers, bees often do better in town than in the country thanks to the diversity of flowers. Flowers from Clark Park, community gardens, flower boxes and Cobbs Creek, make for a variety of honey tints and textures. That diversity also makes for some interesting honey, which participants got to sample during Saturday’s event.
Urban Apiaries provided Saturday’s honey samples. Brought to you by the same folks who run Milk and Honey Market (4435 Baltimore Ave.), Urban Apiaries maintains a handful of apiaries (the official word for a cluster of hives) in the city, including one on top of Milk and Honey’s building and another on a warehouse roof in North Philly.
Annie Baum-Stein of Milk and Honey Market passes out free samples of local honey.
Neighbor Eli Green reports some porch thefts recently near 49th and Springfield:
“I wanted to give a head’s up that in the past few days between our house and the neighbors’, three bikes have had their front wheels stolen. The bikes have been chain locked to the porches, and the thefts have occurred while people were home – both in the afternoon and at night. (This in the 49th/Springfield area). This comes after having the cushion to my porch papasan chair stolen, and something I would have sworn was least likely to get stolen- a compost bucket full of stinky, rotting compost.”
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