October is the month of mood and memory and a time to be enjoyed before the winds of winter blow in its wake. The full harvest moon of a few days ago seems a fitting preview to a new season.
October is the month of mood and memory and a time to be enjoyed before the winds of winter blow in its wake. The full harvest moon of a few days ago seems a fitting preview to a new season.
Today was the last day of classes for most Island schools. Cheers echoed from every classroom as the noon bell rang at the Edgartown School, signaling the end of another school year and the start of summer vacation.
This year is the second annual Juneteenth Jubilee celebration on the Vineyard, held for the first time as an Island-wide event last year. The theme this year is Free as the Wind.
Islanders, day-trippers and summer residents all found their way to Oak Bluffs a day later due to rain on Saturday for the annual Harborfest.
Vineyarders made their way to Tisbury Wharf this weekend to tour the historic Amistad, a replica of the historic vessel that was the setting of a slave revolt in 1839. The ship is the centerpiece for events remembering and celebrating Juneteenth.
"When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished at how much he had learned in seven years." So said Mark Twain in Old Times on the Mississippi in 1874 and the same holds true today.
Blooming Art is on display at the historic Old Mill in West Tisbury this weekend, the Martha’s Vineyard Garden Club’s biggest event of the year.
Dressed to the nines, Islanders came out to the historic Dr. Daniel Fisher House Thursday night for the 37th annual Taste of the Vineyard, a super-sized soiree and smorgasbord that benefits the Vineyard Trust.
The Amistad was at rest at Tisbury Wharf Thursday morning, after spending the night off Cuttyhunk on her voyage from Mystic, Connecticut.
More than 80 people gathered at Gannon and Benjamin Marine Railway in Vineyard Haven Saturday for the launch of Nat Benjamin’s 100th design, a custom 26-foot, gaff-rigged sloop called Marta.
Surrounded by family, friends, and members of the community, the Martha's Vineyard Regional High School class of 2023 gathered at the Tabernacle Sunday for their graduation ceremony.
Rainbow-attired Islanders celebrated the Vineyard’s second Pride parade on Saturday. The parade began at the Island Queen dock and then wove up Circuit avenue and back down to Ocean Park. A large contingent of people walked in the parade and many more cheered from storefronts and patios.
The summer season really kicks into gear as the West Tisbury Farmers’ Market begins its season. Radishes, greens, lupines and peonies are June's highlights. But the market is more than just a place to buy your gifts from the ground, grown right here on the Island.
Now is the time for geraniums, impatiens and nasturtiums. Time to put out tomatoes, peppers, eggplant and summer squash in the vegetable garden. Hello June, the month for brides and graduates and the first ice cream cone of the season.
The Martha's Vineyard Regional High School class of 2023 will graduate June 11, at the Tabernacle in Oak Bluffs. The diverse group of students are remembered at their school as thoughtful, hardworking, and eager to engage in the community around them.
The aroma of chocolate fudge, peanut butter fudge or penuche mingles in the seaside air in downtown Edgartown. It wafts out of 21 North Water street to sweeten the air.
Owen Park in Vineyard Haven was party central for the innaugural First Friday of the season. The happening featured live performances by Parrot Pandemonium, Lake of Autumn and Adam Howell and The Queen of Hearts.