CAVENDISH’S GREEN HOLIDAY GUIDE 2024

Thanksgiving ushers in the holiday season, complete with gift buying, tree decorating and lots of cooking and eating. Below are some tips on keeping the holidays “green” and even save you some in the process.

 Shop locally. Ludlow Farmer’s Market is Dec. 14, 9-5 at the Ludlow Community Center. Lots of area artists, including Mason House Pottery from Cavendish, will be set up.

The Holiday Fiesta also takes place on Dec. 14 (Saturday) from 10-noon at the Cavendish Library. Sponsored by the Cavendish Historical Society (CHS), thanks to a grant from the Cavendish Community Fund (CCF), you can make your own beautiful selection of ornaments and other objects, which can be given as gifts or used to decorate your home and tree. This event is free and open to the public.

 Check out Black River Good Neighbors Services Thrift and Furniture Stores in Ludlow. They have a wide range of gently used items, including some brand new items, for a fraction of the cost.

Consider a gift certificate to one of Cavendish’s businesses or non-profits. Use the Cavendish Business Directory to help in making the right selection.

 Minimize food waste/compost:. Food waste is the #1 material going to landfills each day. Start by buying and making only what you need. Try new ways to use your leftovers. Add any scraps to your compost. The Cavendish Transfer Station accepts compost. Please follow the Transfer Station guidelines.

Switch to LED holiday lighting/recycle E-Waste. LED lighting strands use around 80 percent less electricity than regular holiday lights. Be sure to plug your LED lights into indoor and outdoor timers to further save on electricity costs. You can recycle burnt out lights, batteries and other “dead” electronics at the Cavendish Transfer Station’s E-waste building.

Wrapping paper and cards that can be recycled: There are lots of ways to make your own wrapping paper from newspaper, fabric scraps, or simple brown craft paper. The same goes for cards. Keep in mind if purchasing cards and gift wrap-non metallic paper and cards can be recycled at the Transfer Station as can cardboard boxes. The following cannot: Ribbons, bows, twine and anything that’s long and string; shiny Christmas cards printed on photo paper; those with metallic embossing, glitter; or metallic, glitter, velvety flocking wrapping paper.

Plastic bags can be recycled, just not at the Transfer Station. The following plastic bag items can be recycled at various local stores- grocery bags, bread bags, case overwrap, dry cleaning bags, newspaper sleeves, ice bags, wood pellet bags, Ziploc & other re-sealable bags, produce bags, bubble wrap, salt bags, and cereal bags. All materials must be clean, dry and free of food residue. The following local stores participate in the Trex recycling program: Market Basket, Hannaford, Price Chopper, Shaw’s, Target, and Whole Foods.

Recycling Christmas Trees, Wreaths etc.: Real trees, wreaths and greenery are biodegradable, which means that can be easily reused or recycled for mulch and other purposes. Never burn your Christmas tree in a fireplace or wood stove. Pines, firs and other evergreens have a high content of flammable turpentine oils.  Burning the tree may contribute to creosote buildup and risk a chimney fire.

After you've removed the tinsel, lights and decorations consider the following:

• Take it to the Cavendish Transfer Station during normal business hours.

 • Cut it up for mulch in your garden or a neighbors.

 • Set it up for the birds. Spread small branches with margarine or peanut butter and dip in birdseed.

 • Even if you live on a small property, you can place your old Christmas tree at the edge of your yard. This makes a small wintertime wildlife habitat for rabbits, birds, and squirrels. Some may even build their nests in the pine boughs!

 • Cut up and save for an outdoor fire pit. Never use for indoor fires.

 • Make a sachet with the tree’s needles and store in various rooms in your house that could use a Christmas pick me up.

 • Large branches have a natural curve. Because of this, they can be stacked to save perennial flowers including, but not limited to, rose roots and berries. This will help protect these tender plants during this winter's icy storms! Can also use them for indoor plants.

 • Cut off boughs and lay them over perennial beds to protect them from snow and reduce frost heaving.

The Cavendish Transfer Station is open Wednesday and Saturday from 8-5 and on Sunday from 10-5

As at any other time of the year: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle

Cavendish Update 11/22/24: Sky/SB Mtg/Education

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CTES Turkey Bingo tonight 6-8 pm at the school. Slingo on Sunday at United Church of Ludlow 6:30-8 proceeds will purchase disaster kits. Ski Swap today-Sunday at Okemo’s Jackson Gore Roundhouse

11/22/24

1.    Cavendish Connects now on Blue Sky

2.    Cavendish Select Board Meeting

3.    Restructuring the GMUSD

4.    Cavendish Related News

5.    Events Calendar 

1. CAVENDISH CONNECTS NOW ON BLUE SKY: As we continue to explore the various ways to support our community, Cavendish Connects is now available at cavendishconnects.bsky.social

2.CAVENDISH SELECT BOARD MEETING 11/18/24: The video of Monday’s select board (SB) meeting is posted at the Okemo Valley website. Unapproved Minutes are available at the town’s website.

Approved:

• VAST Trails through Cavendish for the winter season-trails open Dec. 16, conditions permitting

• Greven Field use as a flood plain. The town filed a pre application earlier this year as part of the Vermont Emergency Management’s (VEM) $90 million grants initiative to harden infrastructure against future flood losses. One of the projects included in Cavendish’s pre application was to maximize Greven Field’s flood plain capability. In order for VEM to move forward with this project, the SB needed to approve that Greven Field could be used for such purposes. The field will have recreational purposes but if and when a baseball could be returned to the area remains to be seen.

Discussed

• Summary of Act 181 with MARC: Jason Rasmussen of  Mt. Ascutney Regional Planning discussed the impact of Act 181, which is the overhaul of Act 250, VT’s land use and development law. Much of this will not impact Cavendish because we do not have zoning or sub division regs. There will be a few changes required in the town plan and MARC will need assistance in mapping some of the areas of town, particularly the village centers of Cavendish and Proctorsville.  Areas that are currently exempt from the Act 250 land use review process — and thus open for housing development — are now documented on a statewide interactive map

• Flood Resilience Study Update: MARC issued a request for proposal (RFP) to study flooding and methods to deal with it for the towns of Cavendish, Ludlow and Plymouth. The two applications received are from reputable firms with estimates around $75,000. While MARC has some funds they can put towards the study, the towns will most likely need to also contribute.

•  MERP Grant: The town has received a Municipal Energy Resilience Program grant http://bgs.vermont.gov/municipal-energy-resilience-program to make upgrades at the Town Office and other municipal properties. The award is for $308,564.

• Managers Report: Looking into lining Twenty Mile Stream. Still working on replacing guard rails damaged or destroyed by 2023 floods.

 

3. RESTRUCTING THE GMUSD: School restructuring  has been discussed for several years by the Green Mountain Unified School District (GMUSD). While Chester Andover Elementary is overcrowded Cavendish Town Elementary School (CTES) currently has a student population of 62 in a building designed for 140. Given the issues such as aging infrastructure, PCBs, and low enrollment, some community members are calling for the closure of Green Mountain Union High School (GMUHS) and replacing it with school choice, which is available in the other Twin Rivers Supervisory Union (TRSU) district, Ludlow/Mt Holly.

Between the open forum at CTES on Nov. 12 and his presentation at the Ludlow Rotary, TRSU superintendent Layne Millington has spoken extensively about closing the schools, and replacing them with a super school centrally located. Millington said he’d provide his restructuring plan at the Nov. 21 GMUSD board meeting, forwarding it to the board 12 hours before, but waiting until the meeting to share it with the community. However, late Wednesday evening he sent an e-mail to the GMUSD community outlining his plan as follows:

• The foremost recommendation is to expand classroom and office space at Chester Andover Elementary with 75% of the costs being reimbursed by FEMA as they lost a building due to the July 2023 floods.

• Create a GMUSD Pre School Program at CTES with full day learning for 4 year- olds and a partial day preschool for 3 year-olds

• Beginning with the 2024-2025 school year, all new students residing in Baltimore will attend CTES. Students already attending CAES or another elementary school will be grandfathered in, along with any future siblings. 

Last Friday, Nov. 15, VT’s Agency of Education (AOE) issued the report, Vermont’s Education System: Explained and Compared to Other States.  The AOE Interim Secretary, Zoie Saunders states that the intent of the report is “to set the stage for discussions around system improvements that will support educational quality, equity, and sustainability.” The tax payers as well as the VT legislature are demanding an over haul of how education is funded and this report is laying the foundation for change. 

Among the many take home points of this report is that VT’s needs to revise its funding formula to be in line with the rest of the country. Other changes include reducing the number of supervisory unions (VT has 52) and school boards, increasing class sizes, and reducing the number of teachers and paraeducators to align  with educational best practices.

Given the changes in the recent election, at both the state and federal levels, controlling and cutting taxes are a high priority. As almost 70% of property taxes are for education, the report from the AOE is laying the ground work for the 2025 VT Legislative session that begins in January.

Additional Educational Reports this Week

 The future of Vermont Education as it relates to the GMUSD/TRSU

• Update on the Future: No silver bullets to cutting costs: Chester Telegraph

• Best Vermont High Schools According to US News & World Reports: GMUHS ranks 9th in VT with a graduation rate of 79%, 34.9% college readiness with an enrollment for 9-12 grades of 229 students.

• Best Vermont Elementary Schools: CTES ranks #2; Ludlow Elementary #49; Chester Andover Elementary #92; and Mount Holly ranked #104.

• How would Trump plans to cut ed programs hit Vermont? WCAX

 

4. CAVENDISH RELATED NEWS

• Cavendish Fire Department Receives a Municipal Resilience Program Grant: Cavendish Fire District 2 was informed by Commissioner Wanda Minoli of the Vermont Department of Building and General services that our application for a Municipal Energy Resilience Program grant had been accepted. The district is being awarded $434,667. These funds will be used to make the Cavendish Fire Station building ADA compliant, energy efficient, and able to provide a community gathering space that everyone can access. A detailed description of what the Municipal Energy Resilience Program entails can be found at their website.

 Man who stole Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center van receives prison sentence: A Cavendish man who stole a Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center shuttle van from outside the emergency room and led police on a high-speed chase down Interstate 91 pleaded guilty to a raft of charges stemming from a 2022 crime spree. VT Digger

• 25 Years on Main Street: Mark Huntley is a Cavendish resident and owner of Huntley Financial Services in Ludlow. VT Journal

• Cavendish Parcel Maps Now on-line: The Town of Cavendish parcel maps have been updated and are now available online at this link.For assistance in using the online parcel viewer please download the Users Guide here

 

5. EVENTS

NOVEMBER 22-24 (FRIDAY-SUNDAY): Ski Swap at Jackson Gore. Hours Friday 4-7 pm; Saturday 9-5; and Sunday 9-1

NOVEMBER 25 (MONDAY)-DECEMBER 4 (WEDNESDAY): Scholastic Book Fair at the Cavendish Library. Public Hours Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday 9-5.

NOVEMBER 28 (THURSDAY): HAPPY THANKSGIVING Town Office Closed

NOVEMBER 29 (FRIDAY): Town office closed for Thanksgiving break.

DECEMBER 7 (SATURDAY): Stuff a Fire Truck. The food drive will take place in two locations; PFD will be at Singleton’s and Ludlow will be at Shaw’s. Donations will be accepted from 9-5, with all proceeds benefitting the Black River Good Neighbors Service’s Food Shelf. BRGNS needs the following: Mayonnaise, ketchup, mustard, soup, coffee, sugar, pasta, pasta sauce, cereal, shampoo (regular bottles over sample size), soap (bars), dish detergent, and toothpaste.

DECEMBER 8 (SUNDAY): Children’s Christmas Party at the American Legion  Post 36, 133 Main St., Ludlow from 10:30-Noon. Please call/text Tammi to sign up by December 1st 802-376-9165.

DECEMBER 14 (SATURDAY): The Cavendish Historical Society will be hosting a Holiday Fiesta at the Cavendish Library, made possible by a grant from the Cavendish Community Fund. From 10-noon come and make a variety of decorations using paper from old hymnals, magnets and more. FMI: 802-226-7807 or margocaulfield@icloud.com

-       Ludlow Farmer’s Market 10-4 at the Ludlow Community Center

DECEMBER 15 (SUNDAY): Christmas Party at Fox Run, 12-4. Free Buffet, gifts for kids sponsored by Four Square Hospitality. FMI: ray@foursquarehospitalityvt.com

DECEMBER 25 (WEDNESDAY): MERRY CHRISTMAS

DECEMBER 25-JANUARY 2 (WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY) : HAPPY HANUKKAH

DECEMBER 26-JANUARY 1 (THURSDAY-WEDNESDAY): HAPPY KWANZAA

DECEMBER 31 (TUESDAY): New Years Eve.

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The future of Vermont Education as it relates to the GMUSD/TRSU

 UPDATE TO THIS REPORT 11/21/24: Superintendent Layne Millington released his proposed restructuring for the GMUSD schools by e-mail last evening. The plan is recommending the following:

• The foremost recommendation is to expand classroom and office space at Chester Andover Elementary with 75% of the costs being reimbursed by FEMA as they lost a building due to the July 2023 floods.

• Create a GMUSD Pre School Program at CTES with full day learning for 4 year- olds and a partial day preschool for 3 year-olds

• Beginning with the 2024-2025 school year, all new students residing in Baltimore will attend CTES. Students already attending CAES or another elementary school will be grandfathered in, along with any future siblings.

ARTICE WRITTEN 11/18/21: Restructuring” schools has been a hot button topic for the Green Mountain Unified School District (GMUSD) board for some time. While Chester Andover Elementary is filled to capacity and beyond, Cavendish Town Elementary School (CTES) currently has a student population of 62 in a building designed for 140. Given the issues such as aging infrastructure, PCBs, and low enrollment, some community members are calling for the closure of Green Mountain Union High School (GMUHS) and replacing it with school choice, which is available to those in the other Twin Rivers Supervisory Union (TRSU) district, Ludlow/Mt Holly.

 On Tuesday, Nov. 12, the TRSU superintendent, Layne Millington, held a Forum at CTES to discuss the future of the schools. His take home message was that the schools are old and have major issues, including prohibitively high levels of toxic PCBs (note that CTES does not have PCBs and is the only school in the district that has up to date fire codes). Therefore. the best option maybe to replace them with a type of “super school” centrally located. Further, doing so would encourage families to move to the area.  

While parents were concerned about children being bussed long distances, it’s questionable at best that a new school would draw families to the area.

According to the Mount Ascutney Regional Commission’s (MARC) Regional Plan-MARC covers all of the GMUSD towns- the region’s population is declining. The proportion of school age children (ages 18 and under) continues to decline in the same way it has since 1970, declining from 19.3% to 17.2% of the Region from 2010 to 2020. Factors contributing to decreased population in the Region include the loss of major employers, (especially those in the machine tool industry), reductions in the average household size, the relatively high cost of living, difficulty to recruit new employees, and a lack of housing options. …The recent increase of short-term rentals has also led to a decline of available long-term rentals.

A similar message-build it and they will come- was given to the Cavendish community twenty years ago to encourage voting for a new school addition. The addition was made, but the families didn’t come.  

Note that Millington stated that the CTES enrollment was around 79. He adds the preschool students at Stepping Stones into his number, which does not reflect the students attending CTES. 

As far as paying for the "super school," Millington indicated that two thirds of the cost would be picked up by the current tax structure for education in VT.  It’s true that lowering your school budget doesn’t necessarily result in reduced taxes. VT is only one of two states in the country where the supervisory union (SU) comes up with a budget and the state raises the taxes to meet it.

However, the construction of a new building would require a bond vote by the towns in the SU. In 2022, when the GMUSD wanted to pass a $20 million bond for major renovations on the schools, particularly GMUHS, it was defeated. 

Millington has also suggested that the schools could be sold to help pay for the new building. Again, this requires a town vote. The way Act 46 was structured, if a school is to be closed, the town would need to vote on whether they want to keep the building or let the SU have it. We saw an example of this when Black River High School was closed. Ludlow voted to keep the building and it’s now the home of the Expeditionary School.  

What would such a construction project possibly cost? Our closest example may be Woodstock, which has been trying to replace their 7-12 grade building. The projected cost is now up to $99 million. 

 

On Friday, Nov 15, VT’s Agency of Education (AOE) issued a report, Vermont’s Education System: Explained and Compared to Other States. The AOE Interim Secretary, Zoie Saunders states that the intent of the report is “to set the stage for discussions around system improvements that will support educational quality, equity, and sustainability.” The tax payers as well as the VT legislature are demanding an over haul of how education is funded and this report is laying the foundation for change. 

Saunders has stated that she wants to make the AOE driven by data, which this report does as it compares what is happening in VT to not only what is being done and achieved in the other 49 states but research driven “best practices.” It should be noted that the report is easy to read and does a good job of explaining VT’s complex education funding and taxes.

 

Highlights of the study include the following:

• As indicated above, 48 of the states tell the district what their budgets will be. If a district wishes to add to these funds, they can but their community will be responsible for the additional tax burden. A state typically sets a floor, not a ceiling, on school spending. 

• VT has more school boards and membership than many other places across the country. Many states have school districts with just five or seven members. The TRSU deals with three boards with 11 members alone on the GMUSD board.

• Many states do not have SUs. VT has 52. In some states a typical sized district has 3,000-5,000 students and a large district has 25,000 or more students…Some of the highest achieving school systems in the country have 10,000 students or even 50,000 students, a single school board, reasonable spending and very high achievement. The authors of this report, New Solutions K12, notes that they have seen firsthand that nearly all school systems with 3,000 to 5,000 students do not consider themselves too large to handle, but just the opposite. The TRSU does not have 1,000 students between all the towns. 

• Best practice research has shown a variety of ways to increase achievement while being cost effective in small and rural districts. These practices include shared and part time staff, staff wearing multiple harts, teachers taking on leadership roles for extra compensation while remaining a teacher, principals of small schools having other responsibilities, regionalized services, and shared specialists. Though these strategies exist in Vermont, there is great variability in implementation. 

• VT tends to have the smallest class sizes in the country. Very high level of student success are achieved with average class sizes of 24 at the elementary level and 28 at the secondary level. In Vermont smaller-than-typical class size is the  outcome of many deliberate decisions, not just the result of small school size. 

• VT has one of the highest-in-the-nation per pupil spending with a higher than average number of classroom teachers. 

• VT school districts typically employ more paraprofessionals per student than schools across the nation.

 The report gives some ideas where cost savings can be achieved, including changing the budgeting process to be more in line with the rest of the country, as well as by reducing the high numbers of SUs.

 

In addition to the activities of the past week, the result of the November elections need to be considered moving forward.

How much funding will VT receive from the federal government as this administration has promised to cut costs? If Project 2025 is any indication, there could be a complete overhaul of the federal Department of Education, including the dismantling of programs the state relies on.  

Secondly, there have been significant changes in the VT legislature, with Democrats losing key seats and the numbers to override the Governor’s vetoes. Since education accounts for close to 70% of property taxes, the legislature will hit the ground running in January to begin making changes. 'A de facto emergency': Senate Democrats pledge new focus on property tax relief

At the upcoming GMUSD board meeting on Nov. 21 [6-8 pm at GMUHS Library], Millington plans to hand out his proposal for restructuring schools. The board will only have had 12 hours to look at his proposal before the meeting. Even though this is a public document, Millington is choosing not to release it to the public until the meeting.

It would appear that Millington could be putting forth a proposal of a potentially $100 million solution that is not in accordance with the recently released AOE report, let alone one that these towns couldn’t even begin to fund.

It is unlikely that one of the options in the restructuring proposal will be dissolving the TRSU, yet it may be one that offers the most benefit and should be given serious consideration by the board. In fact, it’s likely that new legislation will be passed in the upcoming session that makes the process of merging SUs in 2025 considerably easier than it is today.  

However, and whenever the GMUSD board votes on the restructuring issue, they need to consider the AOE report in their decision making, along with recognizing that significant changes are in the offing on both the state and federal level.

Cavendish Update 11/15/24: News/Events

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The National Weather Service has issued a Red Flag Warning for our area for 11/15 7am-6 pm. FIRE BAN REMAINS IN EFFECT

11/15/24

1.    Stuff a fire truck

2.    Cavendish Related News

3.    Events Calendar

 

1. STUFF A FIRE TRUCK: Proctorsville Fire Department (PFD) will once again be joining the Ludlow Fire Department for a Stuff a Fire Truck Food Drive to benefit the Black River Good Neighbors Services (BRGNS) Food shelf. The Food drive will take place on December 7th from 9am-5pm. PFD will be set up in Proctorsville at Singletons Store and Ludlow Fire will be set up at Shaw’s. BRGNS needs the following: Mayonnaise, ketchup, mustard, soup, coffee, sugar, pasta, pasta sauce, cereal, shampoo (regular bottles over sample size), soap (bars), dish detergent, and toothpaste.

  

2. CAVENDISH RELATED NEWS

• Legal Notice Regarding Gethsemane Episcopal Church

• Cavendish Mentors Needed: "Windsor County Mentors, the youth mentoring organization that serves all of Windsor County, Vermont, has an immediate need for mentors in the Cavendish area.  With 50 years’ experience matching caring adults with youth in need to help them thrive, mentoring offers vulnerable youth opportunities to share experiences with reliable adults to widen their vision of themselves, helping them to become confident, contributing members of their community. School-based mentoring partnerships, are free of charge, to local children between 5 and 18 who could benefit from a long-term, trusting relationship with an adult in their community. WCM trains and certifies adult volunteers to be mentors who are then matched with children at a local school. Once matched, the pair meets weekly at the school, during the school day, for an hour. Sign up now emailing us at info@wcmentors.org."

• Cavendish Community Calendar Now On-Sale: The 2025 Cavendish Calendar is now available for purchase at the Cavendish Fletcher Community Library and The Village Clipper in Proctorsville. Featuring full color photographs taken by local residents, the calendar sells for $20 and supports the Cavendish Community and Conservation Association. You can also request a copy at cavendishcommunityconservation@gmail.com.

• GM District Board agenda for Nov. 21: The Board of Directors of the Green Mountain Unified School District (GMUSD) will meet from 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday Nov. 21 in the Green Mountain High School Library/Media Center, 716 Route 103 South and via Zoom. To access via Zoom, click here.

• Tech Time at Ludlow Library: From 10:30 a.m. Fletcher Memorial Library will host Tech Time with Matt Sydorowich of Sydscompufix, on Saturday, Nov. 16 – 12:30 p.m. Sydorowich will offer one-on-one assistance with your device, phone, or computer. Please call the library at 802-228-8921 to register. Fletcher Memorial Library is located at 88 Main St in Ludlow. Please find more about the library at www.fmlnews.org. This program is free and open to the public.

• BRGNS Holiday Program Applications: Black River Good Neighbors Services (BRGNS) Holiday Program applications are due by Nov. 22. For residents of Cavendish, Ludlow, Mt. Holly, Plymouth and villages located within these towns, you can apply for assistance to help with the holidays, including gifts for kids. Applications are available at the BRGNS website, food shelf or the thrift store, located at 37B Main St., Ludlow. If downloading from the website, the application is close to the bottom of the page. You can either snail mail your application or drop it off at the Thrift Store.

 

3. EVENTS

NOVEMBER 18 (MONDAY): Cooking with a Local Chef, 4:30-6:30. A Cooking presentation class at the Community Center kitchen. The class will be led by Kevin Barnes. Participants will have instruction while the chef prepares a "Day after Thanksgiving" cooking demo. After the instruction participants will be able to sample the dish. In addition, you will take home the recipe and a grocery bag with items to create the meal at home. Sign up today by Contacting Nick Miele at Ludlowrecreation@tds.net. Due to kitchen safety, we are only able to have 12 participants at a time. This event is free thanks to Shaws for sponsoring the event.

NOVEMBER 22-24 (FRIDAY-SUNDAY): Ski Swap at Jackson Gore. Hours Friday 4-7 pm; Saturday 9-5; and Sunday 9-1

NOVEMBER 28 (THURSDAY): HAPPY THANKSGIVING Town Office Closed

NOVEMBER 29 (FRIDAY): Town office closed for Thanksgiving break.

DECEMBER 7 (SATURDAY): Stuff a Fire Truck. The food drive will take place in two locations; PFD will be at Singleton’s and Ludlow will be at Shaw’s. Donations will be accepted from 9-5, with all proceeds benefitting the Black River Good Neighbors Service’s Food Shelf.

DECEMBER 8 (SUNDAY): Children’s Christmas Party at the American Legion  Post 36, 133 Main St., Ludlow from 10:30-Noon. Please call/text Tammi to sign up by December 1st 802-376-9165.

DECEMBER 14 (SATURDAY): The Cavendish Historical Society will be hosting a Holiday Fiesta at the Cavendish Library, made possible by a grant from the Cavendish Community Fund. From 10-noon come and make a variety of decorations using paper from old hymnals, magnets and more. FMI: 802-226-7807 or margocaulfield@icloud.com

-       Ludlow Farmer’s Market 10-4 at the Ludlow Community Center

DECEMBER 15 (SUNDAY): Christmas Party at Fox Run, 12-4. Free Buffet, gifts for kids sponsored by Four Square Hospitality. FMI: ray@foursquarehospitalityvt.com

DECEMBER 25: MERRY CHRISTMAS

DECEMBER 25-JANUARY 2 : HAPPY HANUKKAH

DECEMBER 26-JANUARY 1: HAPPY KWANZAA

DECEMBER 31: New Years Eve.

    IF YOU READ THIS PLEASE HELP SUPPORT CAVENDISH CONNECTS