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Sep 23 Tuesday
"Putt" your mini golf skills to the test at the third annual Biggest Little Golf Tournament! This fun event is hosted by University Credit Union and CU Insurance Solutions, and benefits the Special Olympics of Maine.
Invite your family and friends to participate in a fun evening that includes one round of mini golf, ice cream, a commemorative golf ball and swag bag, plus a costume contest and prizes for the top three winners.
Please register at least one week in advance by emailing Allison Werb at allisonw@ciscuso.com for the registration form. The cost is $50 per person in an individual format, with a maximum of 64 participants. The extreme weather reschedule date is Wednesday, September 24. Sponsorship opportunities are available! Contact Benjamin Roberts at benr@ciscuso.com for details.
Ready to ignite confidence, curiosity, and community in your girl?
Whether she dreams of leading a team, building robots, or simply making new friends, Girl Scout Discovery Night is the perfect place to begin the adventure!
👧 For girls in grades K–5 and their families, this exciting evening is packed with hands-on fun — from binary code bracelets to creative crafts and team-building games. She’ll get a real taste of what it means to be a Girl Scout: bold, kind, and ready for anything.
✨ Parents, you’ll learn how to get involved, start a troop, and help your girl thrive — because every girl deserves a place to grow and shine.
Let’s build confidence, make memories, and shape the future — together. 💚
RSVP Here: https://bit.ly/gsDiscovery
Students will learn the art of block printing and leave with tea towels in time for Fall harvest. Classes are taught by art teacher, Kim Bahre, on two consecutive Tuesdays September 9 & 16. This is a Sip n’ Print class and students receive two tickets for beverages from our sponsor National Distributors.
Join us for a dynamic generative writing workshop with co-facilitators and poets, Jeri Theriault, Mike Bove & t love smith. This special writers series will explore elements of home for inspiration to create new works and write in community.
The Wendell Gilley Museum and the Southwest Harbor Public Library are teaming up to host poet and park ranger Christian Barter to the Museum on Tuesday, Sept. 23 from 5:30 to 6:30pm as part of an occasional series called Reading with Wings.
An award-winning poet, Barter explores nature and human nature in his verse, and he has a critically lauded new collection called “The Ends” that he will share that night. In “The Ends,” Barter explores both the landscape of Maine and the lives lived there. In “Champlain,” a poem that imagines the discovery of Mount Desert Island where Barter has lived most of his life, and in “Acadia,” a poem written in honor of the park, he addresses the issue of our stewardship of the earth; in a series of sonnets dedicated to the outsider artist James Hampton, he explores what it means to devote a lifetime to the creation of a work of art.
“These are the poems of a writer sure of his craft and at the height of his skill,” says Jeffrey Thomson, author of “Museum of Objects Burned by the Souls in Purgatory.”
Barter has served as poet laureate of Acadia National Park, and works on the trail crew for Acadia National Park planning and overseeing construction and rehabilitation of hiking trails.
His first book The Singers I Prefer was a Lenore Marshall Prize finalist; his second, In Someone Else's House, was the winner of the 2014 Maine Literary Award for Poetry; Bye-bye Land, a book-length poem, was published by BOA Editions in early 2017 and won the Isabella Gardner Prize. His poetry has appeared in Ploughshares, Georgia Review, The American Scholar, Epoch and other magazines, and has been featured on Poetry Daily, Verse Daily and The Writer's Almanac.
NAMI Family-to-Family is a free, 8-session educational program for family and friends of adults living with mental health conditions.
When you participate in NAMI Family-to-Family, you will gain information and strategies for taking care of the person you love. You’ll also learn that you’re not alone. The group setting of NAMI Family-to-Family provides mutual support and shared positive impact from people who understand your situation.
This helpful program is a designated evidence-based program. This means that research shows that the program significantly improves the coping and problem-solving abilities of the people closest to a person with a mental health condition.
NAMI Family-to-Family is taught by NAMI-trained family members who have been there and includes presentations, discussions, and interactive exercises.
Participants should expect a phone call before the first class to confirm their registration. If you have questions, you can email familysupport@namimaine.org.