Fall Outings
2021
We do enjoy Fall color outings. But 2
complications this year. After receding in late Spring the COVID pandemic ramps
up again in Summer. And my spinal stenosis goes past “pain management” to “shit
for back” (as judged from my MRI) and needs surgery. The 2 combine to lead to
canceling an early anniversary jaunt to a VT inn ˗ too close to my surgery, too
many COVID cases in VT. Undaunted (mostly) we work in some other enjoyable Fall
excursions.
1
st
venture i
n early October: “Hollowed
Harvest” at Altamont Fairgrounds on the outskirts of Albany, enticed by
promises of 7,000 jack-o’-lanterns creating “stunning landscapes and
larger-than-life displays as tall as 3 stories and more than 60’ long
.” Well,
no, this proves quite exaggerated and we’re not that impressed, tho the logo is
quire striking and it’s a nice evening stroll past displays organized around
Halloween themes: Wizard of Oz, dinosaurs, flowers, spiders, gravestones, and
more. Some little kids ahead of us seem to be having a good time, maybe we
should have brought one with us.


Though not an “outing” in the same sense, Colonie
Senior Service Centers’ Croquet Tournament is becoming something of a Fall tradition.
Cindy Pettit & I agree to team up in hopes of repeating our previous
victory. Cindy brings friends Mary Ellen & Erin, and our court is completed
by another young couple. Marjorie joins in to help serving beverages. We play
at The Crossings, beautiful flower beds plus a large grassy area to set up
wickets & all. Rain before and during lunch stops in time for the
competition. I start way behind after an opponent “sends” me, but I repay him
later and Cindy and I finish well ahead of the other 2somes to win our court.


Next outing in mid-October: Chesterwood
in Stockbridge MA, former summer home
& studio of sculptor and landscape designer Daniel Chester French
(1850–1931). Fr. Walsh blesses my back after 8am Sunday Mass. A Fall chill in
the air ˗ mid-70s yesterday to 50ish today˗ as we give our new Honda HR-V its 1st
drive of any length. Marjorie makes good: syncing her phone, figuring out how
to preset radio stations. Past a clever display of skeletons climbing a
building in West Stockbridge.

French,
a leading figure in the American Renaissance movement of the late 19th
& early 20th C. is perhaps best known for Minute Man at Old North
Bridge in Concord MA and Abraham
Lincoln for the Lincoln Memorial. We go for an exhibit of
large outdoor sculptures around the beautiful grounds & garden: Tipping the Balance: Contemporary
Sculpture by John Van Alstine. His abstract sculptures of steel and
stone are “a complex synergy between natural forces and man-made materials.” We
start with a small exhibit at the visitor center, then to a nearby gallery
where we especially like textile birds by Charles Schweiger. 10
or so large outdoor sculptures spread around the buildings, alongside woodland
trails, and by the gardens. The grounds & garden themselves are beautiful,
including rows of hydrangea and some bright white flowers. A tiny fountain
operates inside French’s whimsical “one square yard of water.” A mostly cloudy
AM, but some breaks of sun to brighten the Fall colors. [We learn from another
visitor that VT colors are done, all the leaves gone, so we don’t feel so bad
about canceling the VT inn.] All in all a lovely stop, it sure beats Hollowed
Harvest.

A
good lunch at Michael’s in pretty Stockbridge, where we’ve eaten before a bit
off busy Main St. and most of the crowds. Beforehand the pretty houses, shops, and
Halloween decorations give me some photo ops. After overhearing a nearby table
discussing how many marriages don’t last, we mention our 50 years (well, in
another month) as we leave.
Then
it’s north, thru some spells of heavy rain and at one point past a noisy flag-waving
band of anti-vaxxers, to the Laffer Gallery in Schuylerville. We’d missed the
opening reception last night, heavy rain & high winds, but wanted to see
the new “Upstate Invitational” exhibit of beautiful and quite unusual works. Intriguing
piece “Play with me,” constructed of many moving parts, can be had for only
$10,000. Gallery owner Erik encourages Marjorie to enter the next show. Pretty
shops & windows along Broadway offer more photo ops.
Later that week to aptly
named “The Incredible Naumkeag Pumpkin Show,” also outside Stockbridge. Still
having 70s temps, Fall colors subdued. Naumkeag is a Gilded Age “cottage” (48 acres, 44
rooms) designed in 1884 as a summer retreat for Joseph Choate, prominent NY
attorney and Ambassador to Great Britain, and wife Caroline. Daughter Mabel
inherited it and worked with a landscape architect to create the gardens for
which Naumkeag is known, including the world-famous Blue Steps. She bequeathed the
property, including all household furnishings and fine art, to The Trustees of
Reservations. Wow! This really is an incredible Halloween treat! Some 1500
pumpkins (plus gourds, mums, etc.), both real & artificial but all
hand-carved with faces, monsters, dinos, etc.

We walk below the appropriately
Gothic house by craggy trees with clusters of beautiful pumpkins & flowers,
along woodland trails with colored lights (purple, green, orange) around trees,
thru gardens, up hills. Even a bubbling cauldron. Our timing proves perfect:
lowering sun bright on the pumpkins, beautiful sunset as we head to the house,
darkening at the end so we can enjoy the lighting. The tour includes part of
the house’s 1st floor with a “Haunted Mansion” vibe: floating
candles a la Harry Potter (for which Marjorie gets a bit of a “backstage”
tour), skeletons lounging in one room, spooky fireplace & windows with
thunder outside. The greenhouse has a “thrill ride”: encircled by a rotating
cylinder, you think you are rotating! To complete the day, a beautiful
moonrise as we get home.



As
Halloween approaches, a Facebook post shares some COVID Halloween decorations:
headstones with epitaphs like “I DID MY OWN RESEARCH,” “MY Body MY Choice MY
Coffin,” “Not smarter than SCIENCE.” And another creepy thing: a huge tour bus
parks overnight on the road along the side of our yard. No idea who the
“Mystery Bus” belongs to (neighbors across the street are away), a police car
swings by but nothing comes of it. In the AM it swings around to park across from
our driveway.
I’ll
include some things that are maybe too local to qualify as “outings” but add to
our Fall enjoyment. I enjoy beautiful Fall decorations at Trader Joe’s and
bright mums in a neighbor’s yard.
Next day a subgroup of Mendelssohn Club brothers
sing for the Upper Madison Street Fair; a beautiful day, lots of people
including tables full of chess players, and it’s good to be singing!
Other photo
ops in Washington Park, known especially for its Spring Tulip Festival but Fall
plantings are also impressive. More music: a lovely jazz concert at the Pruyn House, with its own beautiful gardens.
Fall
scenery enhances golf courses, including Schenectady Muni, one of the prettiest
local courses, and later of Lake George
from Top of the World Golf Course.
After
a foggy frosty AM, I have my “coming out” 10 days after back surgery to a
reception for Marjorie and other “Extraordinary” women (aka “Pillars of
Strength”) profiled in CSSC’s “Conversations” series. Certainly an impressive
group of women, from fields including art, politics, journalism, medicine, even
construction! And we’re both pleased to be recognized by some residents in the
audience for our “reassurance” phone calls early in the pandemic.
My 2nd
post-surgery outing includes a visit to the new Clifton Park Trader Joe’s;
seems well-stocked and colorful as always, Marjorie finds an “Advent Calendar
for Dogs” we’re sure Arlo will appreciate. Then lunch at Snyder’s. Next outing:
a stroll along the Mohawk River on a beautiful Fall afternoon. Seems an appropriate conclusion to
this journal.