Dispatch â Born On Earth
May 18, 2021
Chadwick Stokes, frontman for the Boston-based Dispatch, performs the song Born on Earth live at Mass Audubon s Moose Hill Wildlife Sanctuary in Sharon, MA, for a Front Row Boston socially-distant session. Stokes is an artist that s committed to using music as a vehicle for social and political change. From Dispatch and State Radio to his solo work as Chadwick Stokes and the Pintos, his projects weave together a passion for music, art, history, and activism. In the session, Stokes plays new songs from the forthcoming Dispatch album
Break Our Fall, due out on May 28.
This performance was recorded on 3/22/21.
They Got Lost in the Woods, Then Eloped in the Snow
Dr. Anais Ovalle and Emily Black learned a lot about each other when they got lost in the woods on their second date. Three years later, they had a snowy wedding day in Vermont.
Emily Black, left, and Anais Ovalle.Credit.Lexi Foster Photography
By Alix Wall
April 2, 2021
On their second date, Dr. Anais Ovalle and Emily Black got lost hiking at the Moose Hill Wildlife Sanctuary in Sharon, Mass. Snow fell and then it got dark. Even though they lost cellphone service for a while and eventually had to call an Uber to get to their cars, both kept their cool.
7 things to do if youâre off this week
Eat something delicious, binge watch, or maybe take a refreshing walk
By Diti Kohli Globe Correspondent,Updated December 28, 2020, 3:25 p.m.
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Artist Sneha Shrestha and Sea Walls Project director Matt Pollock and Malakhai Pearson in front of a new East Boston mural in September.Erin Clark / Globe Staff
As we lurch toward yearâs end, the lucky ones among the employed donât have to clock in to work at all this week.
The hellfire that is 2020 will soon be over (even though virus cases are still climbing). And with two vaccines approved, weâre starting to see some hope for an end to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Tranquil trails for winter hiking
By Diane Bair and Pamela Wright Globe Correspondent,Updated December 25, 2020, 6:56 p.m.
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Moose Hill Wildlife Sanctuary is Mass Audubonâs oldest and largest wildlife sanctuary, with 1,971 acres to get blissfully lost in. The sprawling parcel of forest, fields and wetlands is crisscrossed with 25 miles of trails.Courtesy Mass Audubon/Danielle Lanson (Custom credit)
Think of a sunny, crisp winter day. Youâre outdoors, skiing or snowshoeing or simply hiking over snowy open fields and through sun-dappled forests. All you hear is the
swish swish of your cross-country skis or the crunch of snow beneath your shoes. Thereâs beauty and solace here.