Green Fire Times March 2019

Page 30

ship Institute, SF Green Chamber of Commerce, Earth Care and others. http://files. constantcontact.com/975e53a4501/4bc3918d-17f0-44ea-bb9e-ae8f19574c78.pdf

TUES.–SUN., 10 AM–5 PM

APRIL 11, 10 AM–2 PM

20 artists stretch the boundaries of New Mexican art. Through March 29. 505.982.2226, spanishcolonial.org\

GENNEXT: FUTURE SO BRIGHT

Museum of Spanish Colonial Art, Museum Hill

FANTASTIC FUTURES CAREER, EDUCATION AND TRAINING RESOURCE FAIR

Santa Fe Community College Main Hall and Campus Center

Employer and school representatives, small business support resources. Free. Open to students and community members. 505.428.1406, www.sfcc.edu/offices/career-services/

WEDS.–SUN. SANTA FE CHILDREN’S MUSEUM

1050 Old Pecos Tr.

Interactive exhibits and activities. 505.989.8359, Santafechildrensmuseum.org

APRIL 27, 12–4 PM EARTH DAY CELEBRATION

Railyard Park, 740 Cerrillos Rd.

Celebrate the Earth and local biodiversity in honor of the national theme: Protect Our Species. Interactive activities for kids. Animal ambassadors. www.railyardpark.org/event/2019-earth-day-celebration/

FRIDAYS, 2 PM INDIAN ARTS RESEARCH CENTER DOCENT-LED TOURS

School for Advanced Research, 660 García St.

Collection of nearly 12,000 pieces of Native American art. $15/free to members. 505.954.7272, www.sarweb.org SAT., 8 AM–1 PM SANTA FE FARMERS’ MARKET

MAY 1–3 BOYS AT RISK CONFERENCE

SF Community Convention Center

Focused on the link between early childhood development and later acts of violence in adolescence and adulthood. $350/$400/$135 single day. Limited number of scholarships are available. Continuing education credits will be available to psychologists, social workers and mental health counselors. Hosted by the SF Boys Educational Foundation. www.santafeboys.org JUNE 12–14 3 RD ANNUAL NEXT GENERATION WATER SUMMIT

SF Community Convention Center

Brings together the building and development community, water reuse professionals and water policymakers to share best practices and learn about innovative conservation and reuse techniques. Keynote by Radhika Fox, chief executive officer of the U.S. Water Alliance. $299/$50 students. www.eventsquid.com/event.cfm?id=3298 SUNDAYS, 11 AM JOURNEY SANTA FE CONVERSATIONS

Collected Works Books, 202 Galisteo St.

3/3: Cecile Lipworth on NM’s diverse women’s groups working together as community advocates. With Christina Castro and Sarah Ghiorse; 3/10: Sen. Jeff Steinborn on NM’s Green Deal legislation; 3/17: Sen. Jerry Ortiz y Pino presents an overview of the NM legislative session; 3/24: Rep. Andrea Romero with host Susan Tarman on unpacking the biggest changes to NM; 3/31: Political commentator Joe Monahan on NM issues and politics. Free. www.journeysantafe.com

1607 Paseo de Peralta

Northern NM farmers & ranchers offer fresh tomatoes, greens, root veggies, cheese, teas, herbs, spices, honey, baked goods, body-care products and much more. santafefarmersmarket.com FOUNDATIONS OF HERBALISM

Milagro School of Herbal Medicine

Intensive training program registration now open. 250-hour hands-on complete certificate course covering NM herbs and healing traditions. 505.820.6321, info@milagroherbs.com ONGOING, 10 AM–5 PM TELLING NM: STORIES FROM THEN AND NOW

New Mexico History Museum, 113 Lincoln Ave.

500 years of stories—from early Native inhabitants to today’s residents— told through artifacts, films, photographs, computer interactives, oral histories and more. 505.982.6466, www.museumfoundation.org/exhibitions

TAOS THIRD TUES. MONTHLY, 5:30 PM TAOS ENTREPRENEURIAL NETWORK

KTAOS, 9 State Rd. 150

Networking, presentations, discussion and professional services. Free or by donation. 505.776.7903, www.taosten.org OPEN DAILY

SUNDAYS, 10 AM–4 PM RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET

SF Farmers’ Market, 1607 Paseo de Peralta

Art & gift galeria by local artists and crafters. 505.983.4098, https://santafefarmersmarket.com/railyard-artisan-market/ MON.–SAT. POEH CULTURAL CENTER & MUSEUM

78 Cities of Gold Rd., Pueblo of Pojoaque

In T’owa Vi Sae’we: The People’s Pottery. Tewa Pottery from the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian. Nah Poeh Meng: 1,600-sq.-ft. core installation highlighting Pueblo artists and history. Poehcenter.org MON.–SAT. 8 AM–4 PM RANDALL DAVEY AUDUBON CENTER

1800 Upper Canyon Rd.

Trails lead through several habitats and plant zones ranging from meadows to ponderosa pine forests. No dogs allowed. 505.983.4609 TUES.–SAT. EL MUSEO CULTURAL DE SANTA FE

555 Cam. de la Familia

Rotating exhibits, community programs and performances designed to preserve Hispanic culture. Elmuseocultural.org

30 GREENFIRETIMES.COM MARCH 2019

LA HACIENDA DE LOS MARTÍNEZ

708 Hacienda Way

Northern NM-style Spanish colonial “great house” built in 1804 by Severino Martínez. 575.758.1000, Taoshistoricmuseum.org

HERE & THERE MARCH 2, 9 AM ANNUAL ACEQUIA CLEANUP

Santa Cruz Irrigation District, NM

Volunteers needed. Meet at the parking area in front of Santa Cruz morada across from the running deer mural fence. Bring shovel, hat, water and snacks. MARCH 6, 9:30 AM–12:30 PM NATIONAL YOUTH SUMMIT ON OPIOID AWARENESS

Santa Ana Star Center, 3001 Civic Center Circle, Río Rancho, NM

Designed to educate middle and high school students about the dangers of opioid misuse while promoting the benefits of a healthy lifestyle. Drugfreeisuptome.org MARCH 7–8

4 TH INTERNATIONAL INDIGENOUS PEOPLES CORN CONFERENCE

Vicente Guerrero, Tlaxcala, México

Sponsored, in part, by the Intl. Indian Treaty Council; Indigenous Peoples


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