Tag Archives: Jersey Shore

U-pick Aromatic Lavender

Pleasant Valley Lavender Farm

Lavender Blooms in Morganville

That fancy lavender cocktail you ordered may be be made from blooms harvested at Pleasant Valley Lavender Farm in Morganville, NJ.  The farm supplies restaurants and bars throughout the NY metropolitan area with the English Lavender used in culinary concoctions from desserts to libations.  Oil from aromatic French Lavender is used in sachets, soaps, and body lotions.

Ten lovingly cultivated acres are located on quiet country road and offer an opportunity to pick your own lavender or purchase products made from the aromatic oil of these beautiful plants.  Bath and body items as well as honey and chocolates are available at the gift shop.

The season is short – usually a few weeks around July 4th. COVID 19 restrictions requires you to make appointments online for visits to the farm.  Check it out if you get the chance.

A Love Letter From Red Bank to Count Basie

In homage to “The Kid from Red Bank”, T. Thomas Fortune Cultural Center is hosting an exhibit titled A Love Letter to Count Basie: From the Great Migration to the Harlem Renaissance through June 2021. Born in 1904, William James Basie honed his piano chops at vaudeville theaters and clubs in Red Bank and Asbury Park before heading north to Harlem. From there, Basie went on to become one of the most influential and famous jazz musicians of the swing era.

Exhibit on view at the T. Thomas Fortune Cultural Center

Red Bank once claimed to be among the largest communities of African American professionals in New Jersey. With its roots in the great migration of people fleeing the Jim Crow South, Red Bank’s well-established Black community was home to two notable African Americans in the early 20th Century: journalist T. Thomas Fortune and jazz great William “Count” Basie.

Designated a National Historic Landmark, Fortune’s former home is now the T. Thomas Fortune Cultural Center dedicated to celebrating the rich history of Red Bank and promoting the social justice mission of it’s original owner.

The exhibit is open to the public on Saturday and Sunday from 1-5 pm  Please call ahead to register at (732) 383-5483 or email info@ttfcc.org  Suggested donation: $15 for adults, $5 for children and seniors.  

Visit www.tthomasfortuneculturalcenter.org for more information.

Mongolia to Howell, Four Centuries of Kalmyk Migration

The Kalmyk people are originally from western Mongolia. Their westward migration into the Russian steppes began in 1618 after a prolonged conflict with the rulers of Mongolia.  After more than a century of prosperity in Russia, the Kalmyks fled into Turkey and Eastern Europe to escape the Bolshevik revolution.  During WWII, many Kalmyks were deported to Siberia or dispersed throughout Europe. Those Kalmyks who sought refuge in Displaced Persons camps run by the Americans after the war eventually arrived in the U.S. in 1951 and 1952.  A group of Kalmyks settled in Howell, NJ at that time and established Buddhist Temples along the Route 9 corridor that remain to this day.

The Kalmyks’ Russian connection is evident in the Russian Orthodox churches also present in Lakewood and Howell.  Kalmykia exists as an autonomous republic of the Russian Federation and maintains diplomatic and cultural ties with Mongolia.

Find out more…

Folk Costumes of the Kalmyks

 

 

 

Summer Sunset

Sunset at the Twin Lights, June 2020

This is the view from Sea Bright looking Northwest towards the Twin Lights in Highlands at Sunset on June 27 2020.  Mother Nature’s amazing light show sans Photoshop. Photo by Valerie Dowd.

St. George Greek Orthodox Church

St. George’s Greek Orthodox Church located on West Park Avenue in Ocean Township, relocated from Asbury Park in 2012.  The new complex includes an athletic center and a cultural center.  The church will be consecrated when the iconography (funded by donations) is completed however the sanctuary even now boasts exquisite representations of saints and significant events in Orthodox scripture.

The congregation hosts an annual Greek Festival in June and important holidays are marked with the sale of home-made baked goods.  Check the church calendar for more information.