Attainable Housing Strategies Initiative Educational Session

Above image from MoCo Planning Board’s Attainable Housing Strategies Initiative Final Report

The North Woodside Citizens Association is hosting an educational session for North Woodside residents about the proposed Attainable Housing Strategies Initiative from the Planning Board now being considered by the County Council.

When:   October 16, 2024
Time:     7:00-8:45 pm
Speakers:  Lisa Govoni, Housing Planner, Montgomery Planning Board

Agenda:  
7:00 – 7:40 Presentation
7:40-8:15   Questions for presenter
8:15-8:45   Community discussion

Moderator:   Ellen Kandell, NWCA President
Co-host:   Tony Byrne, NWCA Vice President

To request the zoom link, email the the moderator or co-host (click on links above).

Luzerne Fall Fest

Autumn-Loving Neighbors of North Woodside:

Your Luzerne neighbors will be hosting a Fall Fest on Saturday, October 19th, 4-9pm on Luzerne Ave between Warren and Louis. Please note: that portion of the road will be closed from 3pm-9pm. 

All Luzerne and Honorary Luzerne neighbors are welcome to join us and bring fall-themed food and drinks to share. We’ll have games, smores and more. No RSVP is required, but if you want to get involved in organizing specific activities or contribute needed supplies, click here or email me directly.

Hope to see you there!

Luzerne Labor Day Block Party 2024

The Luzerne’s Labor Day Block Party is a go!

Road closes at 2 pm; we will kick off at 3 pm with a bike/scooter race down the hill and also have live music, food and drink, yard games, and — mercifully — much cooler temps than last year.

Bring a folding chair or a frisbee or a dish to share, but most importantly, bring yourself!

Community Yard Sale 2024

The votes are in! Our community yard sale will be held June 1st and 2nd from 9 a.m. – 1 p.m both days. You are welcome to participate in one or both days or extend your hours.

If you would like your sale listed on the advertised map flier please enter your information into the link below. The yard sale dates and map will be posted and shared with other neighborhood lists. Enter your sale information here.

If you are new to the neighborhood and have any questions let the organizer know.

NWCA Annual Meeting 2024

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!

Spring Egg Hunt 2024

🌷🐰🎉 Happy spring!  Get ready to hop into the season with our North Woodside Egg Hunt on Saturday, April 6th. Activities will start at 10:00 am, with the egg hunt starting at 10:30 am. We will also have spring crafts and the Easter Bunny. Feel free to bring along a picnic or some goodies to share with your fellow neighbors or just stop by to say “hi”.  And please share this invite with all our neighbors, all are welcome to join the festivities. 

If you have items you want to donate (eggs, candy, crafts) please drop them off at 2009 Glen Ross Rd. 

Please let us know how many kids will be coming via this RSVP which is appreciated but not required. 

2023 Menorah & Tree Lighting

75th Holiday Tree Lighting and 6th Hanukkah Celebration
When: Monday, December 11 at 7:00 pm
Where: Intersection of Luzerne Ave. and Glen Ross Rd.

The dual event features latkes (potato pancakes), hot cider, music, and Santa.

Fyi, the following streets will be closed to traffic, starting at 6:45 pm:
* Luzerne Ave. between 2nd Ave. and Columbia Blvd.
* Glen Ross Rd. between 2nd Ave. and Columbia Blvd.

Note: As the first night of Hanukkah this year is Thursday, December 7, the menorah will be put up before the 7th, and each evening the appropriate number of lights will be lit.

6th Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk

*** IMPORTANT***

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 blocks closest 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.

For more information and to RSVP go to bit.ly/TABLanternWalk.

Support the 2023 Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk! Make a tax-deductible donation to support this and future Talbot Avenue Bridge-related events and programs and/or sign up to bring a refreshment or fill a day-of volunteer role.

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

Map of Lantern Walk route:

A Season of Change & Light

Pat Tyson (Lyttonsville), Genevieve McDowell Owen (North Woodside), and Eva Santorini (Rosemary Hills) light a community Unity Lantern at the 2022 Talbot Avenue Bridge Lantern Walk. Photo by Jay Mallin

by Genevieve McDowell Owen

As the crisp air and falling leaves signal the arrival of autumn, our neighborhood is beginning to glow with the enchanting colors of the season. Fall and winter bring back beloved North Woodside traditions, both new and old, along with change.

The opening of the new Talbot Avenue Bridge is one of the changes coming. This important link between the North Woodside, Lyttonsville, and Rosemary Hills neighborhoods is scheduled to be finished and open to traffic around the new year. Residents will hopefully get a chance to walk the new bridge before that, though, during the upcoming Lantern Walk. I especially enjoy this newer
neighborhood tradition; walking and singing in the warmth of candlelight and community. Plus I enjoy the opportunity to talk with the local elected officials who typically attend.

The Lantern Walk, scheduled for November 11 at 5pm (rain date November 12), commemorates the historic Talbot Avenue Bridge and serves as a bridge of remembrance that connects our past and future. I encourage everyone to participate in this event, which not only honors the historical importance of the bridge but also fittingly takes place during Montgomery County’s Remembrance and Reconciliation month, a time to “remember the past and dedicate ourselves anew to the work of justice and reconciliation through action.”

Just across the bridge another change is in the works: a new Lyttonsville park*, situated just on the other side of the Purple Line tracks from North Woodside. This welcome addition promises to be a space where neighbors can come together, play, enjoy the outdoors, and see restored parts of the historic bridge. I also look forward this time of year to seeing neighbors new and old at one of our long-time traditions, the Holiday Tree and Menorah Lighting festivities. Keep an eye out for more details about these events coming up in December. In the meantime, happy Halloween!

Genevieve McDowell Owen is President of the North Woodside Citizens Association. This “Letter from the President” ran in the Fall 2023 issue of NWCA’s neighborhood newsletter, The Beacon.

*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. Pat Tyson, President of the Lyttonsville Civic Association, and Anna White, a NWCA board member, were among the many community members and groups who provided oral and written testimony in support of the park. It will feature a Bridge Memorial made from the historic Talbot Avenue Bridge’s steel girders. For more information, including NWCA’s written and oral testimony, click here.

Jack-O’-Lanterns That Tell Stories

By Barry Galef

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.