Take & Make: Restore Our Earth

Celebrate Earth Day and Citizen Science with our seed starting kit. We have take and make kits for adults and teens to grow your Sunflower and Cosmos flowers, learn about citizen science projects to help our butterfly and bee pollinators and includes a blank field book to write down observations, notes or just doodle! All materials and instructions included. With 30 kits available, this kit is first come, first serve!

Register today here: https://forms.gle/qMGEvt41i97cYX6FA

You can pick up your kits anytime during our curbside hours starting Friday, April 30th. Please call us at 978-352-5728 when you stop by and we’ll bring the kit out to the curbside table for you.

This kit is made possible through CARES Act funding provided by the Institute of Museum and Library Services and administered by the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners.

Virtual Vernal Pool Exploration

Saturday May 15 at 1:00.

This program is recommended for families with students in elementary and middle school.

When walking through the woods, it’s possible you’ve passed by one of the most unique habitats that occur in Massachusetts without giving it a second thought: a vernal pool. These shallow bodies of water usually dry up by mid-summer, but during spring are home to beautiful and fascinating creatures such as blue-spotted salamanders and “water tigers.” Join us for a 45 minute virtual program where Andrew Prazar of North Shore Nature Programs will broadcast live from a local vernal pool. Andrew will show you how to safely collect and observe animals from these pools while also discussing their unique adaptations and lifecycles.

This program was funded through federal funds provided by the Institute of Museum and Library Services and administered by the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners.

 

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Take & Make: BlackOut Poetry

Time to destress, have fun, and create! Celebrate National Poetry Month with BlackOut poetry. We have take and make kits for adults and teens to create your own BlackOut poems. All materials and instructions included. With 30 kits available, this kit is first come, first serve!

Register today here: https://forms.gle/mEkKzwhPedfPJ7zH7

Once you have registered, you can pick up during our curbside hours.

This kit is made possible through CARES Act funding provided by the Institute of Museum and Library Services and administered by the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners.

Virtual Program: History Of The Merrimack River & How To Clean It Up

Local author and journalist Dyke Hendrickson will discuss his new book, Merrimack: The Resilient River, An Illustrated Narrative of the Most Historic River in New England, in this Zoom webinar on Wednesday, April 21 at 7 PM.

How To Register: Register directly on Zoom HERE.

About The Book: Part history and part call to action, Dyke’s well-researched book highlights the dramatic life of the Merrimack River, from the colorful days of the Native Americans to its current status as one of the most scenic recreational waterways in New England. The 117-mile river runs from central New Hampshire to Newburyport, Massachusetts, where it meets the Atlantic. Here the Coast Guard was born and colonial trade thrived. The Industrial Revolution was launched in the riverside mills of Lowell, Massachusetts and Manchester, New Hampshire. The science of clean drinking water was developed in Lawrence, Massachusetts and the first successful labor action also took place in Lawrence. Thousands of immigrants worked in mills along the Merrimack, and this book tells their riveting stories. In the 70s, the once-filthy Merrimack was cleaned up to serve again as one of the most popular waterways in New England. The Merrimack is still an essential resource. It serves as the source of drinking water for a half-million people. Many have seen part of the Merrimack River, but this unique book provides info and images about all sectors of this great waterway.

About The Author: Dyke Hendrickson is the outreach historian for the Merrimack River Watershed Council. In that role, he speaks on the history of the Coast Guard and of the Merrimack River. He graduated from Franklin and Marshall College with a degree in history, and he did graduate work at the University of Maine, Orono. He is a former writer and/or editor with the Portland Press Herald, the New Orleans Times-Picayunethe Boston Herald and The Daily News in Newburyport

Sponsored by the Friends of the Tewksbury Public Library. Presented in collaboration with libraries throughout Massachusetts.