Thoughts for Food

Eddy: Our Executive Chef. A really great guy. A really nice guy. He feeds us. He cooks for us. He plans menus for us.

And all this lovely man asks in return is our comments. On the food. On the menu. That’s all. Your opinion. Did you find something really good? Something really, well, shall we say not to your taste? Maybe you feel something is being served too often. Maybe you’d like to see something more often. A suggestion perhaps for something new.

Not every day. When the spirit moves you. Maybe daily. Maybe weekly. Takes maybe five minutes.

But if Eddy doesn’t hear from us, how can he know what we need, want, prefer?

How to comment? Two ways.

For those who prefer the hand-written vehicle, there’s the Kendal on Hudson Dining Services-Comment Slip.

Where do you find one? Simple. On the chest where you fob in for meals.

In the blond box with the “Dining Service Comment Card.” The card themselves are on the side of the box.

When you fill in the card, make sure the date and time you write in are the date and time (breakfast, lunch, or dinner) when you ate the meal you’re commenting on. So when you say “not enough salt in the soup,” Eddy will know which soup at which meal on which day.

When you finish (doesn’t have to be that moment, take it home, fill it out, bring it the next day, if you like), put it in the slot at the top of the box.

OR

If you’re more the email type, send an email with your comments to:

diningcomments@kohud.kendal.org

Again, make sure you include the date and time of the meal you are commenting on. Then Eddy knows the soup with too much salt was the Rhode Island Clam Chowder for lunch on Tuesday and you ate it around about 7 pm.

And as the old saying goes: Keep those cards and letters comin’ in! (Eddy will thank us all.)

Just Ducky!

Oh, Joy, oh Rapture! It is getting close to that time again. That time when the world opens up bright and shiny—and they arrive. So squeezy, so colorful, so ready for action. Yes, it’s true. It’s . . .

. . . or, anyway, getting close to . . .  

Saturday, April 25 is the day — and it starts at 11 am (though the duckies really start racing at 11:15).

How important is this vaunted day? Well, Kendal on Hudson is one of the two Presenting Sponsors (the highest rank of sponsors). Ponder that! Why is this day of all days important? It’s a major support for the Rotary Club of the Tarrytowns and all the good work they do. What good work?

Rubber Ducky Derby Day (which, if you practice, will come trippingly off the tongue) happens in Patriots Park right at the border of Sleepy Hollow and Tarrytown. There are booths. There are excited children. There are rubber duckies. What could possibly be better? Only one thing could be: donate!

Yes, it’s true, you, too, can back one or more duckies and have skin (or feathers) in the game. One ducky will cost you $10. But, wait, there’s more! A Six Quack can be yours for $50. And—be still, my heart—a Tub o’ Ducks comes in at $100. And—here’s the best part—you can name your ducky(s)! If you think you can stand all this excitement (or even if you can’t) click below for more information. Yes, that’s right, you can back your ducky(s) online. And, yes, there is financial incentive to do so. $100 per eliminating race (there are 4), with a grand prize of $1,500!

With little more than 1 more week to plan! Better get ready to get your ducks in order!

 

From Out of the Pens of Babes

  • An opera is a song of bigly size. In the last scene of Pagliacci, Canio stabs Nedda who is the one he really loves. Pretty soon Silvio gets stabbed also, and they all live happily ever after.

  • Music sung by two people at the same time is called a duel.

  • I know what a sextet is, but I'd rather not say.

  • Caruso was at first an Italian. Then someone heard his voice and said he would go a long way. And so he came to America.

  • Most authorities agree that music of antiquity was written long ago.

  • Probably the most marvelous fugue was the one between the Hatfields and the McCoys.

  • My favorite composer is opus.

  • A harp is a nude piano.

  • My very best liked piece is the Bronze Lullaby.

Contributed by Cathie Campbell

A Changemaker in Our Very Midst!

HOT OFF THE PRESS:

Kendal on Hudson CEO Jean Eccleston Honored at Pace University’s 2026 Westchester Changemakers Awards

Jean Eccleston, Chief Executive Officer of Kendal on Hudson, will be honored alongside three other esteemed community leaders at the annual Pace Celebrates: Westchester Changemakers Award Ceremony. The inspiring event, hosted by Pace University, will take place on April 29, 2026, at Kanopi at The Opus Hotel in White Plains, New York. This prestigious recognition celebrates extraordinary individuals who are deeply committed to shaping Westchester County into a vibrant, forward-looking community that uplifts residents, local organizations, and students alike.

The Westchester Changemakers Awards highlight the profound impact of leaders who champion the region as a true beacon of opportunity and inclusion. Jean embodies this nurturing spirit through her dedicated leadership at Kendal on Hudson, a Life Plan Community in Sleep Hollow, founded on Quaker principles. She shares this year's distinct honor with Kerri Elsabrout of White Plains Hospital, Stephanie Lynn of the Sing Sing Prison Museum, and Dorry Swope representing The David Swope Fund. Together, they represent a shared commitment to expanding meaningful support and empowering others to thrive.

“I am deeply honored to receive this award,” Jean Eccleston shared. “I am continually inspired by my colleagues and by the residents of Kendal on Hudson, whose generosity and spirit strengthen our community every day. It is a privilege to support our local community and to nurture our valued partnership with our neighbor, Pace University. I hope this recognition brings attention to important community initiatives and encourages others to give, connect, and support one another.”

The upcoming cocktail reception and award ceremony directly support Pace University students by funding Immediate Impact Scholarships. By gathering to celebrate these transformative leaders, the community helps foster a new generation of diverse, compassionate thinkers who will continue to elevate the region and transform the shared experience of lifelong learning.

Throughout her tenure, Jean has consistently demonstrated empathetic leadership, a deep understanding of the people she serves and dedicated support of the beautiful local community where Kendal on Hudson is located. Her heartfelt recognition by Pace University reflects her support for the ongoing well-being of the lower Hudson Valley.

I Never Knew That

The Day Bananas Debuted in London: April 10, 1633  

On this spring day in 1633, people gathered outside a Holborn shop window in central London to stare at something few of them had ever seen before: a cluster of strange, curved fruits, green but yellowing gently in the English light. These were bananas—and for most Londoners, they were utterly bewildering (and surprisingly phallic).

The window display belonged to Thomas Johnson, a well-regarded botanist and apothecary who apparently had a flair for spectacle. On April 10 he exhibited the fruit in his shop, effectively staging Britain’s banana debut. Crowds gathered, not to buy—few could have afforded the fruits or even known how to eat them—but to gawk. (Indeed, there are no records indicating whether Johnson sold any of the novel fruits.) 

In an age when colonization and global trade were just beginning to reshape English diets, the banana was nothing short of a true marvel.

These early bananas probably arrived somewhat battered after a long Atlantic journey from Bermuda. They were nothing like the sweet, familiar Cavendish variety many of us eat today (in fact, the Cavendish wasn’t developed until the 1800s). Johnson’s bananas were starchy plantains likely meant to be cooked rather than eaten fresh. It seems the man himself wasn’t particularly fond of them. He edited John Gerard’s popular botanical encyclopedia, The Herball, and is thought to have expanded the banana’s description: 

“. . . the fruit hereof yieldeth but little nourishment…and hurteth the stomach if too much of it be eaten.”

It would take another two centuries—and the advent of steamships and refrigeration—before bananas became an everyday pleasure in Britain. But on that day in 1633, in a modest Holborn shop, London caught its first glimpse of the wider world in an absurd bunch of unfamiliar fruits.

Source: Britanica Today in History website

Art by Hart

Suddenly pigeon couture is changing the look of New York City

When the Strelson-Banks family performed, it was hard to tell who was the dummy and who was the ventriloquist

Alissa kept forgetting where she put her bubble gum

Brenda didn’t even know she was expecting

Bird to boy: “Noah said this flood is couples only. Try next week”

Art and photos by Jane Hart

In and Around

Why Life Is Good at Kendal

Photo by Ed Lannert

Not Trivial at All

Six teams battled it out for the win at Trivia Night. Ellen served as Emcee for the evening. Mya played the Vanna White role exquisitely. And Briana kept the score for each of three rounds and handed out the prizes to the winning team.

The Big Three

Who was the winning team? Twas The Triviatas—with an overall score of 17! Each received a $15 gift card to local merchants.

Following the fiercely fought win: the victors.

Photos by Harry Bloomfeld

A Visitation? Rod Serling, Eat Your Heart Out

Photo by Carolyn Reiss

Spring Comes to Kendal—At Last

Spring on the Hillside, by Sue Bastian

Mulch Mountain, by Edward Kasinec

And along the walkway, Photo by Joe Bruno

Up close and personal, by Edward Kasinec

Reflection of spring’s delights, by Carolyn Reiss

For Your Entertainment . . .

Celebrating the Earth

As part of the environmental action committee’s Earth Day celebration, they are pleased to have a major Climate Action attorney as a speaker on April 14 in Gathering room from 2:00-4:00 pm.

Tony Oposa, the lawyer who established the rights of children and future generations to inherit a healthy environment, will speak about his fight to protect the Philippines’ natural patrimony.

This globally celebrated award winner, activist, teacher, and author won landmark cases to protect the country’s remaining virgin tropical forests and to clean up Manila Bay. As an enforcement operative, he organized and led some of the most daring enforcement operations against environmental criminals. He leads a movement to safeguard the high seas as marine reservations for future generations.  Oposa calls upon each of us to be a good story for caring for Life.

Thanks to Nick Robinson, Oposa takes timeout from his visit to Pace University to share an inspirational Earth Month message with us here at Kendal on Hudson.

For more information on Tony Oposa, click here.

Kendalites in the News

Newsweek: Tom Wolzien on “Boarding”

Barbara Bruno: Cornell U Symposium on “Speaking Truth to Power about Weight”

Join us for a dynamic, interdisciplinary symposium exploring the impact and intersections of weight stigma and weight-based discrimination across healthcare, policy, education, and beyond. Leave equipped with research-grounded strategies, collaborative connections, and actionable tools to advance weight justice and drive meaningful systems change. 

Sessions throughout the day with expert speakers from Cornell, across the country and the globe.

Online or in-person @ The Statler Hotel Dates/Times: Friday, April 24, 2026, 8:30 am - 5:45 pm  To Contact for Information (click name for email): Deborah Surine Location: The Statler Hotel, 130 Statler Drive, Ithaca, NY Type of Event: Conference/Symposium Departments: Nutritional Sciences, Cornell Human Ecology Sponsor: Barbara Bruno ‘68 Co-Sponsors: Cornell Human Ecology Alumni Affairs & Development

From Out of the Pens of Babes

Actual Quotes from Grade School Essays on Classical Music

  • A Virtuoso is a musician with real high morals.

  • Agnus Dei was a woman composer famous for her church music.

  • Refrain means don’t do it. A refrain in music is the part you better not try to sing-

  • J.S. Bach died from 1750 to the present.

  • Handel was half German, half Italian, and half English. He was rather large.

  • Beethoven wrote music even though he was deaf. He was so deaf he wrote loud music. He took long walks in the forest even when everyone was calling him. I guess he could not hear so good. Beethoven expired in 1827 and later died from this.

  • Henry Purcell is a well-known composer few people have ever heard of.

  • Aaron Copland is one of our most famous contemporary composers. It is unusal to be contemporary. Most composers do not live until they are dead.

To be continued . . .

Contributed by Cathie Campbell

I Never Knew That

Mussolini Tried to Straighten the Tower of Pisa

The Leaning Tower of Pisa, originally the bell tower to a medieval cathedral complex, is one of Italy’s most recognizable landmarks. But fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, who came to power in 1922, thought it made the country look bad, so he tried to straighten the tower in 1934. The results were disastrous—not only did his plan fail, but it destabilized the structure and made the tower bend even lower.

Construction on the Tower of Pisa started in 1173, and after the first story was completed, the builders noticed that the foundation had settled unevenly. After a century-long pause, construction resumed, and engineers tried to compensate by making the walls slightly taller on the leaning side. The extra weight on that side made it sink even further. Adding the tower’s seven massive bells didn’t help, either.

By 1817, the tower had tilted a few degrees. Then in 1838, an architect attempted to excavate the base of the tower and inadvertently added as much as half a degree to the lean. So the tilt was quite pronounced and only getting worse by the time Mussolini’s engineers got to it. They drilled 361 holes in the ground around the foundation and injected 80 tons of grout into them, attempting to push the structure upright. Instead, the added weight further destabilized the soft soil, causing the tower to move another half an inch in the wrong direction. Mussolini made no further attempts to straighten the landmark, and he was deposed in 1943.

 Source: historyfacts.com, Sara Anne Lloyd

Art by Hart

A caveman, a blonde, and a blue heron walked into a bar . . .

Yolanda was Rickett’s first crush in a movie star

Maxine wore outfits that cried out for people to color her in

As different as they were, the Fogle twins usually saw eye-to-eye

Minnie didn’t understand her granny’s new do

Art and photos by Jane Art

In and Around Kendal

Sure Signs of Spring

Sail boats on the Hudson, by Beverly Aisenbrey

All alone, but trying, by Greg Lozier

Just greening up, by Carolyn Reiss

Just budding out, by Carolyn Reiss

Reflections from Robert Fulton Bridge

Photo by Ed Lannert

Kendal Art: It’s a Shoe Thing

Photo by Ed Lannert

Sleepy Hollow Fun Run 2026

Piping to help a a Runner on his way, by Beverly Aisenbrey

Stuff and Nonsense . . .

For those of you uninitiated in the glory that is Mah Jongg, it is a game of making patterns with tiles. Some tiles are like playing cards: a design with a number. Their “face cards” are dragons (red and green) and “soap” (looks like a bar of Ivory soap). Some are flowers. Some are “winds”: North, East, South, and West represented by the first letter of its name (N, E, S, W). At a recent game, players noticed that the gods of Mah Jongg must be sending them a coded message with the winds and a Soap:

Photo by Amanda Slattery

Day’s End at Kendal

Photo by Edward Kasinec