Kassia Music is a chamber group of strings, piano, and clarinet, including two composers, one of whom is pianist Sam Post. The group blends classical traditions with folk and rhythmic influences from around the world. kassiamusic.org or @KassiaMusic on Instagram and Facebook
Femme Brillante: rare chamber works by women
Saturday, February 15, 7:00 pm Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, 6201 Dunrobbin Drive, Bethesda, MD musicatredeemer.org
The Vico Cycle, featuring Josh HelfinSiegel on bass and guitar, blends rock, funk, blues, soul, and hip-hop into a lively fusion of raw sound. www.vicocycle.com or @TheVicoCycle on Instagram and Facebook
Saturday, February 8, and Saturday, April 26, between 7:00–10:00 pm Tommy Joe’s, 7904 Norfolk Ave., Bethesda, MD tommy-joes.com
Saturday, March 8, between 8:00–11:00 pm Solace Outpost, 444 West Broad St., Falls Church, VA solacebrewing.com
Jeff Weintraub
Jeff Weintraub, vocals and guitar, plays an eclectic mix of jazz, folk, blues, country, and bluegrass along with some of the best musicians in the DC area. www.weintraubmusic.com
Jeff will perform at The Urban Winery on Thursdays, January 16, February 20, and March 20, between 7:00–9:00 pm.
Do you perform in a musical group not listed here? Don’t be shy! We invite you to share information about your performances on the neighborhood listserv.
Escape the cold, come meet your neighbors, and support our local winery. First come, first seated. No host bar, non-alcoholic beverages, and food available (see theurbanwinery.com/menu).
Thursday, February 20, between 7:00–9:00 pm Urban Winery, 2315 Stewart Ave., Silver Spring, MD
Features music by NWCA resident Jeff Weintraub. Co-hosted by North Woodside Citizens’ Association, Linden Civic Association, Lyttonsville Civic Association, and Rosemary Hills Neighbors’ Association. For further information, email programs@northwoodside.org.
Lali Market carries all the staples for Ethiopian cuisine, including spices, dried beans, and injera.
Fancy Cakes & Patisserie by Selam offers a wide selection of sweet treats, from slices of Napoleon and a variety of layered cakes to eclaires, baclava, and fruit tarts, and specializes in custom cakes. For cake photos, see the business’s Instagram and Facebook pages. The bakery also sells coffee.
Lali Market & Fancy Cakes by Selam held their grand opening on November 23, 2024.
Let’s support these new businesses and welcome them to the neighborhood!
Sign held by North Woodside residents in honor of Charlotte Coffield on September 24, 2024, as her funeral procession crossed the new Talbot Avenue Bridge into North Woodside
Come eat pizza, greet friends and neighbors, listen to District 4 MoCo Board of Education finalists*, and hear what your North Woodside Citizens Association Board has done this past year. The NWCA annual meeting will take place in the undercroft of Grace Episcopal Church (1607 Grace Church Rd.) on Wednesday, May 15, 2024.
Pizza will be served beginning at 6:30 pm, and the meeting will begin at 7:00 pm. On-site childcare will be provided.
Please RSVP so we will know how much pizza to order and how many children will require childcare. We hope to see you there!
* Update: We have invited the the District 4 MoCo Board of Education finalists to meet the community at our May 15 meeting and take questions in a panel moderated by NWCA President Genevieve McDowell Owen. If you have any questions you’d like to ask of the slate, please send a message to the board. There are currently three finalists who will be winnowed to two following the May 14 primary. If the results are clear enough by mid-day on the 15th, we may narrow the panel to the two finalists. You can learn more about the candidates in this helpful profile. Meantime, send along those questions!
The new Talbot Avenue Bridge remains an active construction zone. The bridge is not currently completed, nor open to pedestrians and cars, and will not be so by the date of the Lantern Walk. The Purple Line team has confirmed that Lantern Walk participants may cross the bridge within a designated area and limited time frame, in order to access and participate in the event. Participants may cross, but NOT hang out and linger on the bridge. Please be respectful of these guidelines. After the community reception at Rosemary Hills ES has concluded and the lights on the bridge have been turned off, anyone entering the construction site will be considered trespassing. Please review the full safety guidelines on the Lantern Walk webpage and visit it for any last-minute updates.
Special this year: New route, new bridge, and the first time the community will have an opportunity to cross this historic space in 4 1/2 years! In observance of Montgomery County’s “Remembrance and Reconciliation Month,” be part of marking the beginning of a new chapter in the relationship of the communities connected by the bridge. Many special guests will be joining us, including members of Washington Revels’ Jubilee Voices.
WHEN: Saturday, November 11, 2023 at 5:00p Gather: 5:00 – 5:15 pm Short Program & Lantern Walk: 5:15 – 6:00 pm Community Reception: 6:00 – 7:30 pm
WHERE: Intersection of Talbot Ave. & Lanier Dr. (Lyttonsville) The route will start and end at the same place, crossing over the new Talbot Avenue Bridge twice and going around the two blocksclosest to it, one in North Woodside and one in Lyttonsville.* (scroll down to view map) BRING: Warm clothing and good walking shoes, and a lantern (and a bell to ring, if you have one) Note: Any type of lantern will do, from a tea light candle in a glass jar to something more elaborate, either handmade or store-bought. You can find many ideas online: bit.ly/HomemadeLanterns. If you have the time and energy, we encourage you to get creative! Extra lanterns and tea light candles will be available for those who need them.
* The Lantern Walk will conclude with an indoor community reception at Rosemary Hills Elementary School. All participants are invited to join us for refreshments, music, and warm mingling! The reception will be held in the school’s all-purpose room, which is accessible from the Lanier Dr. side of the school, right next to where the Lantern Walk will start and end.
Event organized by the Talbot Avenue Bridge Committee and co-sponsored by the Lyttonsville Civic Association, North Woodside Citizens Association, and Rosemary Hills Neighbors Association
From Jason and the Argonauts: Orpheus charming the serpent that guards the Golden Fleece. Photos by Barry Galef
As a boy, I loved Halloween—especially the part where you carved a pumpkin. I wanted my jack-o’-lanterns to be special, but never felt like they stood out. Then in 1970 I tried something a little different: I added some delicate details carved just through the surface of the skin but not the flesh. To my surprise, they showed up in the dark, even though the only light I was using was a candle. It turned out that only the skin of the pumpkin is opaque; the flesh is very translucent and lets light through even if it’s an inch or two thick.
I used that idea the next year, and the next, adding more and more surface detail and minimizing the places where I carved all the way through. Eventually, I realized I was mimicking the technique of woodcut or linoleum block prints—and started using the gouge-like tools designed for that art. Now I can get as much detail as I want, and if I use a bright LED bulb the design shows up to brilliant effect.
From Kalevala: Ilmarinen, a hero of the Finnish epic, forging a key to unlock the prison of the sun and the moon
I take my time in planning an image on paper before transferring it to the pumpkin. It takes only a few hours to cut around the shapes and carve away the areas I want to show up bright on the jack-o’-lantern. Once I have the design, it takes perhaps ten hours of work to finish the job.
Rather than showing just a single face or monster, I like illustrating complex and dramatic tales. That gives me a chance to tell a story. And if I take good care of them, the jack-o’-lanterns can last surprisingly long—a month or even two! I’ve found that it’s important to keep them cool, to spray them occasionally with a weak solution of bleach to avoid mold, and to cut away any bad areas as they appear.
In recent decades, I’ve tied the story on my jack-o’-lanterns to the theme of the Christmas Revels, a pageant-like show presented each December at GWU’s Lisner Auditorium. This year, the connection is particularly close: We’re both using Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. It’s a story of honor, wonder, danger, and redemption in King Arthur’s court, perfect for both Halloween and Christmas.
In addition to showing the jack-o’-lanterns at parties and rehearsals for the Revels, I display my jack-o’-lanterns outside my door at 2020 Lanier Drive for the night of Halloween. Come by to see it this year—and then come see the show that shares the same story. You can get tickets to see the show at www.revelsdc.org and see more of my jack-o’-lanterns (and other art) at www.barrygalef.com.
From Beowulf: A thief stealing gold from a ship burial that is part of a dragon’s treasure hoard. I’ve used my own face as the thief.
On September 7, 2023, the Montgomery County Planning Board voted to approve the design of the future neighborhood park in Lyttonsville, which, when completed, will be the closest park to many North Woodside residents. Over 25 community members and groups, including the North Woodside Citizens Association, provided oral and written testimony in support of the park, which will feature a Bridge Memorial made from the historic Talbot Avenue Bridge’s steel girders. The historic bridge spanned the train tracks between Lyttonsville and North Woodside and was the only direct physical connection between our two communities for over a century, until its demolition in 2019.
Here is the joint letter that the Lyttonsville Civic Association, North Woodside Citizens Association, and Rosemary Hills Neighbors’ Association submitted as written testimony:
View a compilation of all the written testimony submitted here.
And here is the text of the oral testimony that Anna White, a NWCA board member, presented in person on behalf of the North Woodside Citizens Association (View video of oral testimony, which starts at 20:45; Lyttonsville Civic Association’s testimony begins at 49:25, and NWCA’s at 56:45):
The North Woodside Citizens Association would like to register its strong support for the facility plan—and full funding—of the future new neighborhood park in Lyttonsville.
Our neighborhood has not always been a welcoming place for residents of the historically African American community of Lyttonsville. Founded in 1890—almost 40 years after Lyttonsville was—and developed further in the 1920s, our neighborhood had racist deed covenants that prohibited Black people from owning property or living in it, except as domestic servants. The 1940s census found just 11 Black people residing in our census district, all domestic servants. Even after racist deed covenants were ruled unenforceable, their legacy continued in patterns of urban development and neighborhood demographics. And, as we all too sadly know, the racist beliefs at their root did not all-of-a-sudden disappear. As late as the early 1960s Black people were still being denied service at popular businesses in downtown Silver Spring, just a mile from our neighborhood. This is not long ago history. This is recent history—in the lifetime of some sitting in the room and watching online today.
Current and former residents of Lyttonsville have shared with us stories of racial bigotry they experienced within North Woodside over the course of their lives, as children and as adults, and as late as the 1990s. When the historic Talbot Avenue Bridge fell into disrepair in the 1990s and North Woodside residents—and our association—advocated for its permanent closure to vehicles, some Lyttonsville residents perceived our efforts to be racially-motivated, something we learned 5 years ago when the short documentary film “The Bridge” was released. This is completely understandable in the context of local history and Lyttonsville residents’ lived experience of racial bigotry. And, it was hard for some of us in North Woodside to hear.
In recent years, our association has taken steps to explore, acknowledge and denounce our neighborhood’s role in past racial segregation, and to build with our Lyttonsville neighbors a foundation for a new chapter in the relationship of our communities, a new chapter rooted in mutual respect, friendship, unity, and love.
In September 2018 we unanimously passed a resolution to mark the occasion of the Talbot Avenue Bridge’s Centennial Celebration, which our then President publicly presented on the Bridge to the over 300 attendees. In it we recognized the importance of the Talbot Avenue Bridge to Lyttonsville, formally acknowledged and denounced racial bigotry, in all its forms, past and present, and, in particular, racist deed covenants. We especially recognized that current and former residents of Lyttonsville had experienced racial bigotry in our neighborhood. And we resolved that by recognizing this past and embracing our neighbors on both sides of the bridge, it enables us to work towards building a stronger community for the future.
A few years later, in May 2021, we voted to add language to our association bylaws that we “acknowledge our neighborhood’s history of legal and de facto segregation and seek to make North Woodside a place for all people.”
It is in this same spirit that our neighborhood association strongly supports the creation of a neighborhood park in Lyttonsville, and the Bridge Memorial in particular, that will further help raise awareness of Lyttonsville history, which in many ways is intertwined with our own neighborhood’s history; facilitate cross-track socializing; and deepen the shared sense of community among neighbors—and neighborhoods—connected by the bridge.
Lyttonsville, North Woodside, and Rosemary Hills community members, Montgomery Parks staff, and Montgomery County Planning Board members pose together after the Montgomery Planning Board voted on September 7, 2023 to approve the future neighborhood park in Lyttonsville.
Congrats to Manuel Vera, aka our neighborhood “Bike Dude,” for being recognized by U.S. Rep. Jamie Raskin as a Local Hero! Check out Rep. Raskin’s interview with Manuel:
So beautiful to see how a seed of an idea during the early days of the pandemic has grown and flourished in the way it has.
Thank you for your service to our neighborhood and larger community, Manuel. You are an inspiration!