This weekend we will celebrate in full flying force our 5th annual kite festival in South Knowlesville! We will be setting up our Mongolian Yurt as our kite making workshop and Todd Grant from Speerville Mill will be trucking his beautiful stone oven up to cook up pizzas on demand! So bring a blanket, some picnic treats and join us for a great afternoon of flying kites, eating pizza and visiting with family and friends.
Knowlesville...KAN !
This is the online home of the Knowlesville Art & Nature Centre (KAN), and a community news site for the Knowlesville, Glassville, Armond and Windsor regions. Welcome to rural New Brunswick.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
This weekend we will celebrate in full flying force our 5th annual kite festival in South Knowlesville! We will be setting up our Mongolian Yurt as our kite making workshop and Todd Grant from Speerville Mill will be trucking his beautiful stone oven up to cook up pizzas on demand! So bring a blanket, some picnic treats and join us for a great afternoon of flying kites, eating pizza and visiting with family and friends.
Sunday, April 3, 2011
Kites, Art, Community--coming up!
We had such a wonderful response to the soapmaking workshop, and we will certainly be offering it again later in the season--possibly late May or early June. We will let all you keen soapmakers out there know as soon as possible.
In the meantime, don't despair. You will all be digging in your glorious gardens soon.
The KAN centre activities will be slowing down just a bit over the next 6 weeks, (Yolande will be off with Lee, Horus and Treva to do an to an artist residency in France! Follow their adventures at www.burntnormal.blogspot.com) to resume again with the annual Knowlesville Kite Festival on Sunday, March 29th, the "Verdant Visions of Carleton County" visual art exhibition, also opening on the 29th, and a potential Strawbale house foundation work bee...Lots going on, so stay tuned!
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Farewell note from Pauliina – KAN volunteer
While organizing the last books on the shelves and wrapping up odds and ends in the freshly opened library space, I am listening to the sounds of a melody floating in from the Church space. Cecile from the neighbor is at the piano, playing a tune. She is on her own, after finishing a long and stressful study project, and she just came to play for a while. Mark, who has been away and now come back to Knowlesville - maybe to settle - is working, plastering the walls on the other side of the room.
I enjoy this space, feeling it is alive. This is community, I think. This space is for the people, for us to come when we are tired, read a book, play music, participate a workshop or organize one in any topic one could think of. There are so many opportunities it can bring. Soon there will be another organ in this body, the community Energy Co-op, inhabiting the upstairs.
I’ve heard this before during my stay here in Knowlesville – singing and piano lessons creating a background into the landscape of my mind while working, whether it was with books, firewood, or with the straw, plaster & paint in the new extension space. It feels good to have sounds of joy and life around me while working. It’s been exciting to be a part of this evolving community for a while, and to meet its youth and elders. I’d like to thank everyone who has shared their time, opened up to discussions and friendship.
KAN to me, as an observer and visiting volunteer, has a clear aim to create facilities towards a local life style. It appears as a space promoting locality, a resource that can be useful to families and people of any age. Hopefully its presence will eventually give incentives for more people to settle in this landscape.
I would like to express my feeling of KAN as a platform where anyone from the community can come and create what they would wish to see. I believe this to be so important at a time where societies are built on high &fast inputs, high &fast expectations and high &fast consumption, including goods and people constantly traveling back and forth long ways in order to meet everyone’s needs. What if a person’s needs could be more slowly, and locally met? Could the things and knowledge we have right here be cherished, and the ability to create life with our own hands and bodies (even if they were not trained in a university)?
As a volunteer, I have only made a small input and stayed for a tiny moment in time. Apart from KAN activities, I have been learning to take time for my own life explorations, and this journey will still take me on, enjoying the travels of continuing youth. However, Knowlesville has provided me with important encounters, friendships and a platform to investigate my interests and ways to function. For that I am very thankful.
Take care, everyone in Knowlesville community - until we meet again!
All the best from Pauliina
Knowlesville visiting resident since Nov 2010, KAN volunteer from Jan to March 2011.
Monday, March 28, 2011
KAN Library and Membership Registrations now in Function!
Dear KAN friends,
KAN Community Library is now in function in the new extension space, and we have begun the process of registering official memberships for KAN!
The library currently consists of 1210 e-catalogued books. It hosts a broad variety of books for kids and adults alike, including fiction and literary masterpieces, arts, philosophy, history, natural science, geography, social/political science and economics. As a treat for curious kids and home schooling families, there is a wealth of educational material for kids &youth - time-tested by our community elder and home schooling specialist Jean Reed. Special books on homesteading, child rearing, traditional crafts, wilderness skills and homeschooling are among some that can be hard to find from a regular municipal library. There is also an interesting variety of periodicals (an array of National Geographics from the 60’s until 90’s, Time Magazines stretching throughout the period of WWII and Mother Earth News dating back from the early days of the magazine).
KAN membership entitles you to borrowing these books from the library, along with other benefits. To register as a member or for more information about the library, please contact Shannon Herbert at 506 – 246 5204 or email speckledhengarden@gmail.com).
KAN team expresses warmest gratitude to our generous book donors and anyone else who wishes to donate books and /or funds in the future. This is an abundant community resource that Knowlesvilleans can be proud of!
(note: plastering is still going on in the KAN extension, so for a little while, the homesteading /arts/crafts department will still be covered to save the books from a wet clay decoration!)
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Library Opening!
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Soap Making Workshop!
Spring Cleaning? Come to our soap making workshop at the KAN centre! Not only is it important to put natural substances IN our bodies, but our skin is a highly sensitive and absorbent organ, and it is equally important to avoid harsh toxins and chemicals topically. During this workshop, acclaimed Woodstock-based natural body product craftsperson Sandra Habold will lead us through the steps to creating beautiful, natural and sensuous soaps, and healing salves. Each participant will leave with a few natural soaps made with whole ingredients and essential oils, as well as at least a pot of healing salve. Cost is $40 per person, and this includes a home-made lunch. Workshop will be held at the KAN centre meeting space--the new addition at the back. To register, please email yolandeclark@mail.com, or call Yolande at 391-6120 |
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
New Postings from the KAN Winter experiences!
Enjoy reading more details about the things we did to kick start the ongoing year!
Spring sun from the KAN volunteer
Pauliina


