September 10th, 2009
By alisa | Filed under events, local gems

Cornerstone Bookstore in Salem, MA presents a fun evening of a cappella singing with two of the area’s premier ensembles: None of the Above and Fretless. There will be something for every musical taste from classical to pop to jazz. And best of all, it’s free! Details: September 19, 2009 7:00pm — Cornerstone Bookstore 45 Lafayette St Salem, MA.
Links:
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August 14th, 2009
By alisa | Filed under local gems, out-and-about
Going to the beach is fun and all, but sometimes you want to cool off without dealing with the hassle of sand and crowds. Lucky for us, there are several wading pools located around the North Shore available for our enjoyment.
In Topsfield, there is a wonderful wading pool, perfect for the preschool crowds, at Bradley Palmer State Park. Along with the pool, there are trails and fields, picnic tables and bathrooms. Perfect for a day’s outing. Parking within the park is $5, so it’s economical, too. [Yelp Review]
For a more exotic day, you can visit CoCo Keys Water Resort in Danvers. Here you will find indoor and outdoor pools for all ages. Tickets are more expensive and I believe you are not allowed to bring your own food, but it is quite the experience!
Finally, for members of the North Shore YMCA and their guests, a new outdoor pool has just opened at the Lynch/Van Otterloo YMCA in Marblehead. This pool features sprinklers in the wading end and a patio for lounging in the sun.
Are there any other wading and outdoor pools in the North Shore area? Where else do you go for cooling off in the summer?
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June 19th, 2009
By alisa | Filed under events, local gems
The Strawberry festival at Smolak Farms has been extended to include both this weekend and next weekend! I’m hoping that the rain will stop at some point, so we can get out to the farm!
Are there any other local farm festivals that we should know about? Leave a comment!
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June 17th, 2009
By alisa | Filed under events, local gems
What: Endicott Park Day In Danvers
When: June 20, 2009 11:00 AM
Official Website: Endicott Park Day 2009
Occurs at: Endicott Park
Location: Forest Street, Danvers, MA, 01923 map
Phone:(978) 777-0001
Date: Saturday, June 20, 2009
Hours: Fireman’s Muster at 9; Festival 11am-3pm
Ages: Infants, Toddlers, Kids, Teens, Adults
In/Outdoor: Outdoor
Cost: Free see below
Join the happy hordes at Endicott Park in Danvers for Endicott Park Day. From the Doll Carriage Parade to face painting & temporary tattoos, to pony rides and other kids activities, demonstrations, and rides, there’s something for everyone.
Bring an appetite, as a wide variety of food is available from fried dough to grilled food from Kelly’s Roast Beef, and finish with a sundae for dessert.
Event Schedule
8:30 – 10:30 am Apple Pie & Open Variety Pie Contest entries to be delivered
11 am -3 pm Rides, Demonstrations, Grill, Vendors
11:00 am Pie Judging begins
11 am - 3 pm Shiyanne’s Tea Party
11:00 am Doll Carriage Registration
11 am – 3pm Tug of War Tournament
11 am – 3pm FUN Games by: The Danvers Recreation Department
11:30 pm Doll Carriage Parade
12:30-1:15 pm Johnny the K Show
2:30 pm Pie Baking Contest Winner announced
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June 11th, 2009
By alisa | Filed under events, local gems
If you’re interested in learning more about sustainable living, you should stop by the Living Green & Renewable Energy Fair this Saturday, June 13th at Salem’s Old Town Hall. The fair will be held from 10am to 3pm. Among many other things, there will be solar powered toys on display.
A series of lectures will help you learn how to find green materials for renovations, how to be green by eating green and how to use solar energy in your home.
Your kids will love the “Kids Green Scene” where they can take part in earth friendly activities. Sponsored by Crunchy Granola Baby, you’ll find a place to relax while soaking in all the great information at hand.
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June 11th, 2009
By alisa | Filed under events, out-and-about
I am excitedly awaiting my next family-friendly adventure: strawberry picking. My son, who’s now 3.5 years old, is old enough to recognize ripe strawberries and I anticipate that he will actually be helpful this year instead of just a tag-a-long. Well, not so much a tag-a-long as kid-who-just-wants-to-eat-strawberry-shortcake.
Last year we went to the Strawberry Festival at Smolak Farms in North Andover. By the time we arrived, most of the pick-your-own strawberries were gone; the field had been picked out. It took me quite some time to find a section that had been overlooked and I filled one or two pint-sized buckets. My son managed to add many unripe strawberries to the batch. Back at the farm house, there were strawberry shortcake and local folk musicians… each alone is enough to make my day!
With all the rain we’ve had this year, I am hopeful that the strawberry crop will be abundant. We plan to attend Smolak Farm’s strawberry festival on June 20th and 21st. This year, however, I plan on either picking during the week, or early, early in the morning!
Many other local farms have fields of pick-your-own produce… after all, it’s saves them a lot of labor to have you doing all the work for them! At www.pickyourown.org and mass.gov you can find listings of local farms. Additionally, you can find reviews of several Essex county farms here on North Shore Parenting.
Tags: farm, pick your own | Comment (0)
September 7th, 2008
By alisa | Filed under local gems
I visited the new Trader Joes store on Route 1 in Saugus for a serious shopping trip this morning. I had been a week ago to stock up on party food and was impressed by the size of the new store.
The Trader Joes in Swampscott was my first destination for groceries when we moved to the area five and a half years ago. In fact, when the news broke in January that they would be closing the store, I was so disappointed that I boycotted TJ’s and went over to Stop and Shop to familiarize myself with their food offerings. Stop and Shop has a nice organic and natural food section– but I wondered why it was set apart from the rest of the store. My cynical opinion is that the prices in the organic section are so much higher than the rest of the store that consumers would “naturally” go for the conventional option.
Well, back to the new TJ’s: first, it was really annoying having to drive South on Route 1, for 1.5 miles, after I passed the store. I was coming from Walnut Street, so perhaps some local can tell me if there are any shortcuts I can take to get on the right side of Route 1.
The store itself was pretty crowded, but thanks to the wide aisles there were no problems getting around. They had all the selection I expected; more perhaps than the Swampscott store because of all the extra space. The produce looked great… I consider TJ’s the weakest in this area, because Whole Foods is just a couple of miles from me and they excel in their fruits and veggies. I was able to find apples that were grown in Vermont; a bonus for a “eat local” proponent such as myself.
All in all, I liked the new store. The products were exactly what I expected from a Trader Joes store, with an expanded produce and meat section from the closed store in Swampscott. The place was bustling, which is good news for them, but there was enough space to move around the place, and when lines built up at the two open registers, bells were rung and employees rushed to the checkouts to take care of everyone. So, as my son will say with gusto: “Good Job Trader Joes!”
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September 4th, 2008
By alisa | Filed under commentary
We saw this product, the “Fitness Fun - My Treadmill” by International Playthings, when we stopped by Magic Beans in Brookline on Saturday. I asked my three-year-old to try it out for fun, but he wasn’t too interested in it. It looks like we are not the only people whose eye it caught: there’s an article up on boston.com about the trend of selling fitness equipment to children. Did you ever see this? It’s the Fisher Price Smart Cyle, which allows kids to play a video game only when their little legs are pumping away.
What do you think about these products? Personally, I think they are things that optimistic parents and grand-parents might buy their kids, but will be left to collect dust in favor of other (more passive) entertainment. Can you imagine telling your kids: “No TV until you spend 5 minutes on the treadmill!!”
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July 22nd, 2008
By alisa | Filed under commentary
and then, a few days later, I exchanged them for Diego. When I was in the diaper aisle of Target, with my son singing the Dora theme song next to me, I was overcome with frustration on how characters and gender-roles are forced onto our kids. And so I proudly put Dora into my cart. Because of a particular promotion they were having, I grabbed a box of Diego too and headed for the checkout lines. Unfortunately, I grabbed a box that was two sizes too large, and when I went back for the exchange, I traded Dora and too-big Diego for two boxes of just-right Diego. My husband wasn’t pleased with the pink, and I honestly didn’t think I could send my son to daycare in pink plastic undies.
First of all, I hate the idea of disposable training pants. Last year, when my son was but one and a half years old, I sent the following note to the NSP mailing list:
Nowadays they are selling disposable training pants that change color or get cold when a child has wet themselves…. because the disposable training pants absorb the wetness so well that the kids don’t realize what has just happened. Personally, I think that wet cloth diapers/training pants send the same signal!
I plan on using cloth training pants when my son Evan is ready for toilet training. Evan is 21 months old, and as much as I would LOVE for it to happen now, he’s not showing the signs of being ready. At the pace we’re going now, I don’t think it’s going to happen until he’s at least 2 1/4 years old.
So, with the best intentions, I got a few thick cloth training pants, hoping my son would “get the message” and decide on his own to keep them clean. And there was a lot of encouragement from myself and his father, which turned into power struggles and stubborness and the actual request to wear diapers because it was so much easier for him. I never made the complete switch to cloth– disposable was so much more convenient.
I’m done buying diapers, and I don’t like pull-ups, but for the time being, I’m stuck with them.
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