In and Around Kendal

A New Day Begins in Kendal-land

Photo by Carolyn Reiss

And, Suddenly, They’re Gone

The last goat, herded into his transport, begins the journey back to Stone Barns, by Carolyn Reiss

Checking to Make Sure No Goats Were Left Behind?

Photo by Joe Bruno

The Actual Move Begins . . .

Carolyn Reiss managed a peek into the temporary kitchen now being established in prep of old-kitchen’s renewal.

A New Development: The Senior Computer Desk

Photo by Joe Bruno

And Evening Slowly Turns to Night

Photo by Sue Bastian

Photo by Philip Monteleoni

Photo by Edward Kasinec

Out and About

The Trek Continues

Henry Neale and his intrepid Croton Aquaduct Walkers have reached Dobbs Ferry, having started at the Croton dam! Pictured here is Hildegarde Gray standing in “The Croton Arch of Triumph,” a 2022 sculpture by artist/architect Dionisio Cortes Ortega at the old Keepers House. It gives you an idea of just how big the aqueduct is! Using historically-accurate materials and working to scale, Ortega re-created a cross-section of the original Old Croton Aqueduct Tunnel completed in 1842.

Kendal-Tripping Out

Recently intrepid Kendalites visited the William Louis-Dreyfus Foundation in Mt. Kisco for a docent-led tour of the organization’s art. The mission of the Foundation is to educate the public about the importance of art and to increase public awareness of self-taught and emerging artists. The Foundation's collection is made up of pieces by over 200 self-taught and contemporary artists.

Photo by Ruth Dinowitz

Faces of Ossining: An Exhibit at the Bethany Arts Community

A group of interested Kendalites attended the opening of “Faces of Ossining,” a show of local portraits by artist Jack Berkowitz.

Kendal artist Jane Hart says of the show:

“Wonderfully dynamic portraits—technically right on, and so dynamic and engaging in their size (big!) and simplicity. They make the traditional  conventions of portraiture (like backgrounds, formal poses and even frames) seem unnecessary and even intrusive. While a few are in full-color pastel, most are dramatic in black and white, graphite and pencil on paper.” 

Amanda Slattery works with artist Berkowitz on more than art. He is also a chef who provides meals to indigent people in the area. Amanda helps prepare bag lunches—some Thursdays and Fridays—while he cooks. Seem like something you’d like to volunteer for? Contact Amanda for more information.

Maintaining a Healthy Level of Insanity in Senior Living . . .

At lunch time, sit in your parked car with sunglasses on, point a hair dryer at passing cars and watch them slow down! 

Skip down the street rather than walk—and see how many looks you get.

With a serious face, order a Diet Water whenever you go out to eat.

Sing along at the Opera.

When the money comes out of the ATM, scream “I Won! I Won!”

When leaving the Zoo, start running towards the car park, yelling, “Run for Your Lives! They’re Loose!”

Contributed by Barbara Wallach

Emphasizing the “Giving” Part of the Season: Food Bank Donations

Food Banks, in any season, look for help in the form of donations and volunteers. This season—when both Thanksgiving and Christmas come around—the need only increases. Kendal has its own food drives (see flyers in the elevators). This week we also had emails from the school foundation and the villages of Sleepy Hollow and Tarrytown asking for help, and thought we would pass them on should you be so inclined.

From the Villages of Sleepy Hollow and Tarrytown

This week, the leaders of the local food pantries serving the Villages of Tarrytown and Sleepy Hollow met to discuss ways they could work together to assist those who need extra help while SNAP benefits are delayed, reduced or cancelled. Many in our community have expressed a wish to help those who need it. Local food pantries are serving approximately 500 families at their distributions, and more than 1,000 people in our communities, and this was prior to the shutdown.

The following takeaways from that meeting may help those wishing to help, or those in need of assistance (click on the bolded words for more information):

  • If you would like to support food distribution organizations, donating money is the best way to do so. The organizations are able to purchase in bulk at discounted prices and stretch a dollar farther than any individual donor. This clickable flyer lists all of the local organizations working to alleviate food insecurity in the two Villages.

  • On Tuesday, November 18th, all of the organizations will be getting together to host a joint registration event at the Warner Library from 6-8pm for anyone who needs assistance. This event will allow anyone in Tarrytown or Sleepy Hollow who needs assistance to register for multiple food distributions at once. No single food distribution event can provide adequate food for a month, which is why the organizations are collaborating to provide multiple layers of support.

  • In addition to the food pantries, there are two other organizations specifically serving Seniors.

  • The Neighborhood House provides a hot lunch every weekday for $3/meal. It is a substantial meal and is part of the Town of Greenburgh's Nutrition program.

  • It Takes a Village is a volunteer organization that helps Seniors who wish to keep living in their homes. They will deliver groceries, or food pantry distributions to any Senior who is eligible.

  • For those who are interested in assisting a neighbor in need directly, or for someone who would like to sign up for an additional layer of support, the Village is working with community organizations to pair neighbors who want to assist, with neighbors who need assistance while the federal government shutdown is still in effect. If interested in signing up to be a “Grocery Buddy” fill out this form.

From the Foundation for the Public Schools of the Tarrytowns

Dear friends,

As you are likely aware, beginning November 1st, anyone who receives SNAP will not have their account refilled.

These are members of our community, many of whom work full time jobs, many of whom are neighbors, students and staff in our schools, many of whom have families much like your own. Caregivers who have even more difficult choices to make right now.

We encourage you, our friends and community supporters, to make a donation to the Sleepy Hollow High School Food Pantry if you are able to do so. This grassroots food pantry was established in 2022 by our very own Jacki Geoghegan, and serves over 400 families with children of all ages in our District.

The SHHS Food Pantry does have regular partners including Feeding Westchester, the TASH, Stop & Shop and the Union Church of Pocantico Hills. However, at this moment in time, resources are being cut across the board, and food distributions are unreliable.

How can we help? Any donation is a significant donation. 100% of any money donated through the Foundation goes directly to the SHHS Food Pantry which uses those funds to purchase food for their registered families. The Foundation for the Public Schools of the Tarrytowns facilitates contributions through our 501(c)(3) status allowing your donations to be tax deductible.

Donations and more information available through link below:

To donate to the SHHS Food Pantry, click here

With much gratitude,

The Foundation for the Public Schools of the Tarrytowns

I Never Knew That

The Eagle Once Depicted on U.S. Coins Had a Real Name

Not unlike Leo the Lion, who roars at the beginning of many a movie produced by MGM, the eagle seen on early US coins was a real creature with a surprisingly common name: Peter. In a rather patriotic confluence of events, none other than an eagle took residence at the US Mint in the 1830s—roughly 50 years after the bald eagle was added to the national seal. The noble raptor would reportedly while away his days at the mint before being shooed away after working hours. As he and his human colleagues would eventually find out, however, industrial workplaces are no place for birds. Peter was mortally injured after his wing was caught in a coining press in 1836 and died a few days later despite workers’ best efforts to save him.

But his story does not end there. Peter’s friends and colleagues were not ready to say goodbye to him, as he’d become both a companion and mascot, so they hired a taxidermist and placed his stuffed remains on display in the building’s entrance; he still inhabits the current Philadelphia Mint. Historians believe the eagle featured on the silver dollar issued from 1836 to 1839 was based on the “magnificent specimen” that was Peter, as was the Flying Eagle one-cent piece issued in 1857 and 1858—a fitting tribute to a bird who clearly inspired many.

Source: historyfacts.com

Contributed by Jane Hart

Art by Hart

Anna, Julie, Janice, and Anna found that a giant Jello mold helped them with their social anxiety

Somebody in Wanda’s fitness class hadn’t showered

The Peachbark Middle School reunion went on and on through the night

Seventy-seven years of marriage, and the Heffernans were still teenagers in love

Thanks to a candidate’s pledge, city buses were free

Art and photos by Jane Hart

In and Around Kendal

The Last Rose of Summer, by Mimi Abramovitz

Stretch and balance ala goat? Nah. Just two goats looking for dessert.

Photo by Naomi Gross

Scary for Halloween—and any other time, by Ed Lannert

A Visitor Comes A-Calling, by Ed Lannert

Taken from Rockwood Park

Photo by Art Brady, contributed by Lynn Brady

Photo by Lynn Brady

Photo by Carolyn Reiss

Photo by Mimi Abamovitz

Photo by Lynn Brady

The last rays of the day, by Philip Monteleoni

The Spooky (and Silly) Season Arrives

Here at Home

We practice our whole lives for Halloween. First as children thrilled with the idea both of costumes and candy. As pre- and early teens, we concentrate on designing our own outfits (and on candy). As teens we shift our focus to partying hearty. Parenthood comes and we enjoy seeing (and somehow managing) our (or your) offsprings’ activities. At our age we got it down pat. Kendalites—residents and staff—know how to do Halloween up right. And here’s the proof from photographer Ruth Dinowitz.

Hot Dog! Among all the costumes staff dreamt up, Kevin was a Hallow-weiner! He mustard (spelling intended) up a great costume.

Ivan stepped up appropriately to the plate—or bowl—as an old-timey ice-cream jockey.

And residents were likewise appropriately, whimsically, and scarily attired:

And Just Around the Corner

Many of the folks our neighbor Sleepy Hollow Manor love the spooky season as well. Mimi Abramovitz took a stroll around the neighborhood to admire the decorations.

Whose Photograph Is This?

Emergency!! The publishing world of Kendal—online and off—is desperate to discover the name of the photographer of the photo below. It is a gorgeous thing. It has come into our hands from . . . someone. But who? The View would like to use it, but cannot give it proper attribution. So we turn to you, gentle readers. If you can identify it, please contact Caroline Persell post-haste!

Presenting: The Fall Art Show

Hanging the Show

The curatorial team of Peter Sibley, Philip Monteleoni, and Linda Edwards (on the walls) and Carol Monteleoni and and Sarah Plimpton (in the vitrine) started reviewing the chosen art a few days before the show to identify best placements. Then came the hanging . . .

The Show in a Festive Mood

Music by Shelley Robinson

The Art . . . and the Artists—or Some of Them

Want to see more? Go to Robert Fulton, first floor, right off the bridge and follow onward to the front door.

Photos by Carolyn Reiss

Photo by Harry Bloomfeld

Photo by Carolyn Reiss

Photo by Carolyn Reiss

Grow Old Along With Me . . .

Profound advice and observations for our Kendal Years . . .

Never sing in the shower! Singing leads to dancing, dancing leads to slipping and slipping leads to paramedics seeing you naked.  

I see people about my age mountain climbing. I feel good getting my leg through my underwear without losing my balance.

So if a cow doesn’t produce milk, is it a milk dud or an udder failure?

I’m at that age where my mind still thinks I’m 29, my humor suggests I’m 12, while my body mostly keeps asking if I’m sure I’m not dead yet. 

You don’t realize how old you are until you sit on the floor and then try to stand back up. 

We all get heavier as we get older because there’s a lot more information in our heads. That’s my story and I'm sticking to it. 

 Contributed by Beverly Aisenbrey

I Never Knew That

Leonardo da Vinci May Have Painted Two Versions of the Mona Lisa

Smiling at viewers from behind a glass enclosure at Paris’ Louvre Museum, the Mona Lisa is perhaps the most famous painting in the world. But is it possible that this one-of-a-kind Renaissance masterpiece from Leonardo da Vinci is actually two of a kind? That’s the stance of the Mona Lisa Foundation, which holds that another version of the 16th-century painting, often known as the Isleworth Mona Lisa, portrays a younger depiction of the sitter from approximately a decade earlier.

Isleworth Mona Lisa

Deriving its name from an owner of the painting based in Isleworth, England, the Isleworth Mona Lisa largely remained out of the public eye until being unveiled in Geneva, Italy, amid a 2012 publicity push from the Mona Lisa Foundation. Beyond the resemblance between the older and younger subject, the foundation points to the results of examinations that indicate both artworks were from the hand of the same artist. Historical evidence also suggests the existence of more than one Mona Lisa, as the painting was recorded among the possessions of Leonardo’s servant in 1525 despite having been sold to French King Francis I seven years earlier.

While the double-version theory has its supporters in the art world, others are hesitant to make a definitive connection. For one thing, the Isleworth Mona Lisa was rendered on canvas, while Leonardo mainly painted on wood. There are also numerous copies of the Mona Lisa to be found, including one that was apparently painted alongside the original by one or more of Leonardo’s apprentices. And then there’s the matter of the objectivity of the Mona Lisa Foundation, which was formed by the international consortium that owns the Isleworth Mona Lisa, to prove the painting’s authenticity. With the artist silent on the topic of this iconic artwork through his surviving journals, it’s likely that the question of whether he did indeed produce two versions will remain as much of a mystery as the subject’s enigmatic smile.

Source: historyfacts.com

Contributed by Jane Hart

Art by Hart

Out of the glare of the New York City Marathon, a certain hare and tortoise were at it again

Everyone in Dr. Turtle’s waiting room had a 10:10 appointment

Zelman’s big break was his role as a scoop of coffee ice cream in Banana Split

Ms. Prink had a habit of dreaming upside down

The Bledsoes found the new super-duper shopping mall underwhelming

Art and photos by Jane Hart

In and Around Kendal

October Kendal Birthdays

Photo by Harry Bloomfeld

A Presidential Visit to Rockwood Park?

Carolyn Reiss and Allie were strolling through our neighboring park when what should they spy but the presidential limo—complete with insignia. They looked around for secret service and golf clubs, but saw none. What was going on?!

Presidential Seal

Turns out an episode of the Netflix show The Diplomat is being filmed there November 18 and 19, with the helicopter and the whole shebang. Who knew?

Photos by Carolyn Reiss

Autumn Comes to Rockwood Park

Reaching to the skies, by Edward Kasinec

Photo by Ed Lannert