Saturday, September 7, 2024

Still Life with Robin: The "Compostable" K-Cup Conundrum

 by Peggy Robin


Every morning I make one cup of coffee in a single-cup Keurig coffeemaker. I like the perfect consistency of the coffee that comes from a sealed, pre-measured pod, using the same amount of water each time. Never too strong or too watery.

In previous decades, I made coffee with a French press, a Mr. Coffee machine, a single drip pour-over device, and probably a half dozen other types of coffee makers from past brewing eras....but I've settled on K-cups and I'm sticking with them.

There's one and only one downside that I can see: they're environmentally irresponsible. Every time I make a cup of coffee, I'm throwing away a bit of plastic that the earth could -- and should -- do without. 

I do cut off the foil top, throw it away, and scoop all the wet grounds into my compost bucket. But then I toss that plastic K-cup a trash can, and it ends up in a landfill, leaching toxic chemicals into the earth. forever more. And I do feel guilty about that.

So the last time I ordered K-cups, I went for these:

San Francisco Bay Compostable Coffee Pods - Variety Pack Dark Roast (80 Ct) K Cup Compatible including Keurig 2.0, French, Espresso, Fog, Extra Dark Italian



You can see that the coffee is encased in a paper mesh filtering bowl. I guessed (correctly) that the top is some sort of coated paper, and when torn off, it is too small to go in the big recycling bin -- so that part  still needs to be thrown away. 

But now we come to the part where I was fooled. The pod has a rigid ring. I just assumed it would be made of bamboo or some kind of stiff but recyclable material like a modified cardboard....but it seems I assumed too much. The problem was my lack of understanding of that bit of verbiage printed on the box that said: "Certified Commercially Compostable".  There's an explanation of what that means -- but I needed to go to the company's FAQ page to find it:

What does “commercially compostable” mean?
Commercially compostable products require a commercial/industrial composting facility for breakdown, whereas home compostable products will appropriately degrade in your home compost pile.

Unfortunately, I did so only after receiving my purchase. And now I find myself every morning taking on the annoying little task of separating the used grounds in the paper mesh pouch from the plant-based-but-not-residentially-compostable plastic ring, which still has to go in the trash -- as does the coated paper top.

Not only that, but because the coffee is enclosed in a paper pouch, it's not in an air-tight container and so does not have a long storage life before begins to lose flavor. To take advantage of a discount for buying more than one, I bought 3 boxes. Oh, am I sorry now!

And yet I still hold out hope for becoming a more environmentally responsible coffee consumer. The company holds out a tantalizing prospect: residentially-compostable k-cup rings are just around the corner. Here's what they tell you:

Are your pods home compostable?
Our pods our BPI® certified commercially compostable, which means they can be composted at an industrial composting facility. However, we are actively working on our home compostable certification, so stay tuned!

Well, now that I've got myself a 3-pack of 80 pods per pack, I've got almost 8 months to wait until I go looking for K-cups again. Will this company be offering home-compostable K-cups by then? I'll tell you if and when that happens, so stay tuned! (But don't hold your breath!)
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Still Life with Robin is published on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local on Saturdays.

Friday, September 6, 2024

Get Out! Pt 2: DC State Fair is on Saturday, September 7 from 10am - 5pm in Franklin Park

From: Mayor Muriel Bowser @MayorBowser

The DC State Fair is this weekend, and this year, it's in our beautiful Franklin Park.
#BeDowntown to celebrate our city and support local vendors with family-friendly fun. 🪁


The DC State Fair is a free showcase of the District’s agricultural, culinary, and artistic talents and a daylong celebration of all things homegrown. In addition to live performances, local vendors, and educational workshops, winners from 50+ contests will be announced at the fair. Attendees can participate in live contests on fair day: pie eating, flower arranging, chili, and mac and cheese. Chili and mac and cheese participants must bring their entries to the tent behind the stage between 10 and 11:30 am.

The 15th annual DC State Fair will be held on Saturday, September 7, 2024 from 10am to 5pm and will take place rain or shine. The fair will be in downtown DC's largest green space, Franklin Park at 1332 I Street NW, Washington, DC 20005. The park is just a 1-minute walk from McPherson Square Metro on the blue, orange, and silver lines and a 6-minute walk from Metro Center station on the red, blue, orange, and silver lines.

Free admission.

Learn more at www.dcstatefair.org.

Plan Ahead: Pack a reusable water bottle, reusable cutlery, and a shopping bag. The DC State Fair makes a concerted effort to reduce waste, and you can be part of the solution.

Main Stage Agenda
10:00 AM Welcome
11:00 AM Agriculture Contest Winners Announced
11:30 AM Performance by JumpDC
12:00 PM Performance by Washington Performing Arts
12:30 PM Culinary Contest Winners Announced
1:00 PM Live Contest: Pie Eating
1:30 PM Performance by Sara B & the R3s
2:00 PM Art Contest Winners Announced
2:30 PM Live Contest: Flower Arranging
3:00 PM DC Hand Dance Demo with the National Hand Dance Association
3:30 AM Performance by Starranko
4:00 PM Performance by Melo Relo
4:30 PM Wrap Up & Thank You

I don't know how I missed the earlier announcement of this event. It should have been #1 in yesterday's Get Out! column highlighting the weekend's major events
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The Get Out! event(s) of the week column is posted on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local on Thursdays (with an occasional addendum on Fridays).

Thursday, September 5, 2024

Get Out! You can enjoy 3 different festivals this weekend (if you time it right)

by Peggy Robin

The "Get Out!" column highlights one event of the week but this week there were too many great choices to pick only one, so we're giving you THREE for the price of one.

~~~~~~~~~

On Sunday, September 8 it's ADAMS MORGAN DAY - DC’s longest-running street festival!

There are too many activities and festivities for me to list them here. Just go to https://www.admoday.com/  for the multi-page website with all the details - or go right to schedule at https://www.admoday.com/event-schedule-2023/ (yes, the URL says 2023 but when you get there you will see it's for 2024).

~~~~~~~~~

Also on Sunday, it's the Takoma Park Folk Festival!

Join us! The Takoma Park Folk Festival will be September 8, 2024 from 10:30 am to 6:30 pm. 

The extremely full schedule is here: https://www.tpff.org/schedule (also in a printable PDF)

​The Festival is located at Takoma Park Middle School, 7611 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, MD


~~~~~~~~~

And you've got all Saturday AND Sunday to see the Bethesda Row Arts Festival

https://www.bethesdarowarts.org/

Showcasing 185 juried, museum-quality artists, the Bethesda Row Arts Festival is one of the top outdoor fine arts events in the mid-Atlantic — and the largest in the Washington, DC area.


Over the weekend, the streets of Bethesda Row are transformed into an outdoor gallery, showcasing fourteen media categories that are juried: ceramics, drawing/pastels, fiber/decorative, fiber/wearables, glass, graphics/printmaking, jewelry, metalwork, mixed media 2D, mixed media 3D, oil/acrylic painting, photography/digital art, sculpture, watercolor, and wood.

Only at the Bethesda Row Arts Festival: 82 artists NEW to the show, of which 52 create their works within an hour’s drive of Bethesda, and over a dozen are presenting for the first-time in the DMV.

Saturday, September 7 from 11:00am to 6:00pm

Sunday, September 8 from 10:00am to 5:00pm

Conveniently located 1 block from the Bethesda Metro station. Directions, map, and public transit information at https://www.bethesdarowarts.org/#directions 

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The "Get Out" event of the week (or in this case, THREE events of the week), is published on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local on Thursdays.

Saturday, August 31, 2024

Still Life with Robin: The Reminder of the Reminder

 by Peggy Robin


Even though I'm the one who posts DPW's "trash slide" reminders for Labor Day and other official holidays, I'm just as likely as the next person to put my trash, recycling and compost out on the wrong day. I don't want to tell you how many times I've done that. 

From now on, though, things will be different. I've devised a simple system to remind myself of the reminder. Immediately after I post the DPW notice on the Listserv, I put a Post-it note on the lid of my kitchen trash can. I don't need a second one anywhere else, because when I start to collect the trash and recycling each week, I always start with the kitchen can.

Here's my little Post-it note:

After my trash is picked up on Tuesday, I'm going to stick this sticky note away in a drawer and bring it out again on October 15 (Indigenous People's Day/Columbus Day).

The list of DC government holidays is here:

Happy Labor Day, all!
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Still Life with Robin is posted on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local on Saturdays.

Thursday, August 29, 2024

Get Out! It's the Annual NSO Labor Day Concert and It's FREE - Sunday, Sept 1, 8-10pm on the West Lawn of the US Capitol

by Peggy Robin


The National Symphony Orchestra’s FREE annual Labor Day weekend concert returns to the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol!

This year, the NSO performs classics by Duke Ellington, George Gershwin, John Philip Sousa, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and more led by charismatic conductor Enrico Lopez-Yañez.

The concert also features special guest beatboxer, rapper, and multi-instrumentalist  Christylez Bacon—a Grammy®–nominated progressive hip hop artist and Washington, D.C. native.

 A must-see celebration!

This performance is free to attend, no tickets required. Seating is first-come, first served.

Public security screening sites open at 3 p.m. In the event of inclement weather, this event will be held in the Kennedy Center Concert Hall. Please check the website or NSO social media (Twitter and Instagram) for updates.

 

Enrico Lopez-Yañez, conductor
Christylez Bacon
, beatboxer/rapper

SMITH arr. LOPEZ-YAÑEZ: “The Star Spangled Banner”
BOYER: “Festivities”
GERSHWIN arr. BENNETTPorgy and Bess: A Symphonic Picture
ELLINGTON arr. GOULDSolitude
ELLINGTON arr. KESSLERAn Ellington Sampler
KORNGOLDSea Hawk Suite: Main Title, Reunion, Finale
MOZARTNozze di Figaro Overture
KHACHATURIAN: “Sabre Dance”
MCCOY arr. LOPEZ-YAÑEZ: “The Hustle”
MORALES-MATOS: “Tropical Overture”
JONER: “Cuban Sugar” (“Sugar Plum Fairy” from The Nutcracker)
MEIER: “Migrations in Rhythm” (excerpt)
     Feat. Christylez Bacon
BACON: “Mambo Sauce”
SOUSA: “The Stars and Stripes Forever”


U.S. Capitol Building – West Lawn


About National Symphony Orchestra

About Christylez Bacon, beat-boxing & rapping

http://www.christylez.com/

About Enrico Lopez-Yañez, conductor

https://www.enricolopezyanez.com/

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The "Get Out!" event of the week is posted on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local on Thursdays

Saturday, August 24, 2024

Still Life with Robin: Hey, Printer....Shut UP!

 by Peggy Robin


Last Saturday on the Listserv someone answered a query about using off-brand printer cartridges, saying this: 'I order mine from Amazon and have had no problems" (Message )

Well, I've ordered them from Amazon, too, and while they do work, I have to be honest: Using them is not a good experience. It's unsettling. Why? Because my printer YELLS at me.

It's a very good printer, the Epson Workforce 2540. I've probably had it over a decade, and it still works great. But it does eat up a lot of ink, and those Epson cartridges are expensive little suckers! So I decided to save myself some $$ and go for the remanufactured, off-brand cheapies. They're about half the cost of Epsons.

They install just like the pricey ones, too....but here's what happened the first time I tried to print something with my cheap Amazon substitute ink:

I hit the print button and instead of printing, the printer balked, and threw out a dialog box that said something like this:

You are not using Epson ink. This may harm your printer. Do you want to proceed?

I clicked yes, expecting it to print.

Instead, another dialog box popped up to let me know I was violating my warranty (on a printer whose warranty had run out sometime in the 2010s, I would guess). Did I still want to proceed?

I clicked yes. I think it finally let me print, and when I printed, the pages came out fine.

Well, that's the end of that, I said to myself.

But the next time I wanted to print something, it started all over again. This time, I swear, it was even balkier than before. That thing was angry at me! "Are you crazy??!!!" it said to me. "You are feeding me cheap, crappy ink! How do you expect me to work under these conditions! Haven't I served you well on quality ink for all these years? Why are you doing this to me! Stop!! Let me live my best life! Feed me real Epson ink! Do you want to continue"

"YES, I DO" I shouted back at it. And hit yes on the screen, and again, it printed the pages just right.

Now that I've proven that the cheap ink works fine, maybe my printer will relax and accept the situation. I'm not sure how much more resistance I can take. You see, I don't want to fight with it every time I want or need a hard copy of a document Sure, I've won the first two rounds, but it was a struggle. I want my printer to obey me each time, mindlessly, like a good little machine. I'm tired of fighting with it over each piece of paper it spits out.

Now my black and my cyan are running low. I've got to make a choice. Save myself a few bucks and continue the fight with it? And for who knows how long? Or cave and pay the premium it demands of me, to be able to print on a whim, print without giving it another thought, print when it suits ME, not when the damn printer is done trying to guilt-trip me into spending my hard-earned dough. 

I won't leave you in suspense. Epson has won this round. My new ink cartridges will be here on Monday. I'll try not to think about it, at least till mid-September when the next Visa bill arrives.  

Amazon image

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Still Life with Robin is published on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local on Saturdays.

Thursday, August 22, 2024

Best "Get Out!" Event of the Year: Library of Congress' National Book Festival on Aug 24, 2024

 by Peggy Robin


This is the easiest "Get Out!" event of the week to do, seeing as everything I wrote last year goes for this year, too. So here's a re-run of last year's column, with some updated links:

Why do I love living in Washington, DC? I could come up with a top-100 list and one of the things that would definitely be in the top ten is the National Book Festival. It's put on every year for FREE by the Library of Congress -- and this year it's on August 24, running all day.

Free Poster
You can spend some time scouting out the authors and book talks and panel discussions and kids' events to be sure you hit the events that hold the most appeal for you, or you can just wander around and let serendipity lead you to authors and books you might never have discovered had you not gone.

If you're the plan-it-all-out type, start here:


Find events by author:

Here's a handy "Festival at a Glance" one-page .PDF:

Festival schedule-at-a-glance (PDF 498KB) - Download a printer-friendly, 8.5 x 11” version of the Festival schedule.

If you're a wanderer and a serendipity-believer, then just show up the the Library of Congress National Book Festival at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center on Saturday, August 24, any time between 9am and 8 pm.

You can't go wrong, either way!
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The "Get Out!" event of the week is published on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local on Thursdays.

Saturday, August 17, 2024

Still Life with Robin: Eight and a half per day

by Peggy Robin

Before I get into the substance of this column, let me start with a disclaimer: This is NOT about national politics (considered "off-topic" on our very-locally-focused Cleveland Park Listserv). The subject is Email Overload. That's one of those little irritations of daily life that is grist for the Listserv's ever-churning comment-mill -- and it's my complaint of the week. The substance of those emails just happens to be about a national political campaign. (I bet you can guess which one keeps emailing me!)

Email overload could easily be my complaint any day of any week, any week of the year; my inbox is a magnet for spammers of all types, not just political spam. The trouble is, I can't set my spam filter to be too aggressive or it will weed out the many legitimate inquiries from list members that happen to use a few common spam keywords in their messages. Or worse, it will trap and discard inquiries from neighborhood businesspeople who would like to advertise on the Listserv. So every day, I need to manually delete a bunch of spam emails. It's the price I pay for running a Listserv that reaches over 12,200 subscribers from all walks of life.

Now we come to what makes the problem worth noting in this space. In any election season, the number of unwanted emails skyrockets. It's not spam, exactly, as I am a registered voter and follow politics closely, and even donate a bit, when the spirit moves me, So political campaigns may acquire my email in a few different legitimate ways -- and then, of course, they go on to sell my name and email address as widely as they can. I can't really blame anyone for that; it's the way things work everywhere in politics.  

But this year, the number of campaign donation requests has not just boomed, it's exploded. Not just a dozen emails a week, but on one day last week there were a dozen in a DAY! (August 12, if you're interested.) 

So starting last week, as an experiment, I decided not to delete any of them and see how many I got. The answer? Sixty. That's an average of 8.57 emails per day. Do they imagine anyone is opening and reading all these things?

It's no use unsubscribing or writing to the campaign to ask them to slow the flow to a reasonable level (like, say, twice a week, which is the number I think I would find manageable, even interesting.) I've learned from past election years that it does absolutely no good to hit the "unsubscribe" link. It's far too time-consuming, in any case, to open each email and root around for that hard-to-find link, usually in teeny, tiny type, after you've scrolled and scrolled down to the tail end of the message. And clicking on the link is rarely enough; next you need to tell them what email address you want to unsubscribe. I have a bunch of email addresses, and who knows which one has made their list? Way too much work for me to find out -- especially for something that seems to accomplish nothing at all. It's the same for texting "STOP" to phone text messages. I've learned the hard way not to bother -- just mark as junk and delete.

Of course, this volume of campaign begging for my bucks is not just annoying; it's got to be off-putting to some percentage of voters. I can't imagine that anyone is made MORE enthusiastic for a candidate by this high pressure hose of political spam flowing in, day in and day out. I suspect the reason behind it is that someone believes, the heavier the flow of emails, the harder it shows the campaign is working. But I wonder if there's ever been a truly impartial study that charts the real-life effect on recipients (that is, not a study produced by political consultants designed to prove that the more email campaigning you do, the more progress you'll make. Why would anyone design a study that shows what they're doing is ineffective -- or even counter-productive.?

So, this little experiment over, I have dumped all 60 campaign emails in the trash. Take it from me -- a study of one -- I did not respond to a single one of them. 

Is there a subject line that could get me to open an email and reply with some money? Yes, I've thought about it long and hard and I think this would do it: "Donate today and we promise you will receive no more campaign emails for a month!" Of course, they'd need a way to make good on that promise. But if there are any campaign honchos out there, please take my idea and run with it. That's my real contribution!
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Still Life with Robin is published on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local on Saturdays.

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

Get Out! And Enjoy the Last Few Days of Restaurant Week in DC, (last chance is Sunday, August 18, 2024)

by Peggy Robin

What's good about being in Washington, DC in August? Well, today's weather -- would you believe that? Capital Weather Gang rates it an 8/10. Here's their take on it and some words about tomorrow, Friday, and the weekend:

8/10: The dog days of August have lost their bark, as we enjoy another bright and comfortably warm day.
Express forecast
Today: Mostly sunny and comfortably warm. Highs: Mid- to upper 80s.
Tonight: Clear and calm. Lows: Upper 50s to mid-60s.
Tomorrow: Mostly sunny, a little warmer. Highs: Upper 80s to near 90.
Forecast in detail: 
We’re living the high life under high pressure today, with tons of sunshine and comfortable warmth. It does trend a bit hotter by tomorrow afternoon, but still, temperatures should stay below or only briefly near 90 through the weekend. Humidity makes a decent comeback Friday and this weekend along with the return of shower and storm chances.

So what can you do on a beautiful, un-humid summer night? Find yourself a good restaurant, that's what -- one that's participating in DC's Restaurant Week. 

Go to https://www.ramw.org/restaurantweek and then set the search at "outdoor dining" and you can enjoy a delicious and reasonably priced 3-course meal under the stars!

I did a quick search of five neighborhoods: Cleveland Park, Woodley Park, Cathedral Heights, Tenleytown, and Van Ness, and came up with these fantastic choices:

Talea Ristorante

Makers Union Cathedral Commons

Sababa Cleveland Park

Rosemary Bistro Cafe

Sfoglina Van Ness

Duke's Counter

New Heights



Bon appetit / buon appetito / buen provecho / enjoy your meal!
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The Get Out Event of the Week is posted on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local, usually on Thursdays, but I bumped it up a day to get in another day of Restaurant Week, which started on Monday August 12 and is on through Sunday August 18, 2024. 

Sunday, August 11, 2024

Still Life with Robin: My Problem with Debby

by Peggy Robin 

I'm back from vacation a day late, due to the outer reaches of Hurricane Debby, causing travel disruptions all the way from South Carolina to DC and on up the east coast as far as my vacation cabin on the shores of  Lake George in upstate New York. That's why my "Still Life with Robin" column is a day late.

I've had my share of hurricane trouble, starting with Hurricane Agnes in June 1972, which caused the collapse of the East-West Highway bridge, just a mile or so away from our apartment in Bethesda, Then in 1985 Hurricane Bob canceled my flight on PeoplExpress Airlines, and I ended up sleeping on the floor of Newark Airport along with a few hundred others who couldn't get hotel rooms for the night. (And I never did get a refund from PeoplExpress, which went bankrupt shortly thereafter, defaulting on all its debts). In August of 2011 Hurricane Irene left us without electricity for more than a week. That's just off the top of my head. If I really did a deep dive, I'm sure I'd come up with about a half-dozen other hurricane-induced travails.  

Well, there's no use complaining about the weather -- you just have to deal with it. Anyway, in this column I try to limit my objections to nit-picky little things that come my way -- usually things that have a quick fix. Like spelling mistakes. 

So, tell me, World Meteorological Organization*, why "Debby" with a Y? Who spells it that way?! Not Debbie Reynolds. Not Debbie Harry lead singer of Blondie. Not Debbie Allen, star of Fame. Not Debbie Rowe, made famous by a 3-year stint of marriage to Michael Jackson, during which time she gave birth to two of his three children. Not Senator Debbie Stabenow of Michigan or Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida.

I can think of only one famous Debby-with-a-Y, and that's Debby Boone, the daughter of singer Pat Boone, who had a one-hit wonder with You Light Up M Life, top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart for ten weeks in 1977. 

It's too late to fix things this year, but the WMO has five more years to make this right, as the list of hurricane names goes on a 6-year repeating cycle. You can see all six years' worth of names here:  http://www.mawsweather.com/hurrsixyr.html

If Debby 2024 is deemed to have caused enough destruction, it will be "retired" never to be used again. That's still to be determined by adding up all the dollar amounts in damages to property and totting up the lives lost. So there will never be another Hurricane Katrina (2005). Same for Hurricane Andrew (1992), and Superstorm Sandy (2012), and Agnes (1972) or (Camille (1969). The complete list of retired hurricane names is here:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_retired_Atlantic_hurricane_names

There are any number of controversies as to what makes a hurricane devastating enough to meet the "retirement" standard; if you want to be able to hold your own in an argument with a die-hard hurricane nerd, read this: https://weather.com/storms/hurricane/news/2024-05-16-2024-hurricane-names-list-three-storms-should-have-been-retired

If Debby is not bad enough to be retired, when it comes around again in 2030, let's hope it comes back as Hurricane Debbie. And if Debby does go down in weather infamy as a one-of-a-kind named storm, I urge WMO to consider any of the following female D names as substitutes: Daphne, Dawn, Denise, Desiree. My vote goes to Daphne. She was the water nymph of Greek myth who was relentlessly pursued by Apollo. To escape his unwanted sexual predation, she transformed herself into a laurel tree. (Daphne is the Greek word for the laurel tree). It's a tale of divine danger with a rebirth at the end -- all very fitting for such a destructive force of nature.
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* The WMO is the organization tasked -- among its other, weightier duties -- with naming hurricanes  
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Still Life with Robin is published on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local on Saturdays, or in the event of a  hurricane, on Sundays.

Thursday, August 8, 2024

Get Out! Jazz in Historic Walter Reed Park - FREE - Saturday starting at 5pm

by Peggy Robin

The region’s most acclaimed jazz musicians are returning to the ever-popular Jazz in The Parks on the Great Lawn this summer! Bring your neighbors and friends for the city’s favorite laid-back summer evenings – listed by  Washingtonian magazine as one of the area’s top five outdoor spots to listen to live music just last year! Bring your own picnic, blanket and refreshments, and enjoy popular local food vendors and giveaways. Stop by the wonderful restaurants around the Marketplace, just a block away up 12th Street. Pick up charcuterie (or a pizza!) at Whole Foods, or amazing chicken or noodles from JINYA Ramen Bar. Everything works well for takeout!

The events start at 5 pm with a children’s performer (get ready to dance!), followed at 6 pm by the headliners.

August 10: Jazz performers Elijah Easton w/ Allyn JohnsonKris Funn, and Quincy Phillips with opener Baba Ras D RSVP

Kids Opener: Baba Ras D Beloved kids performer Baba Ras D brings the “Harambe Experience” and performs inspirational songs of love and community. Enjoyed by kids and adults of all ages!

Jazz Performance: Elijah Easton w/ Allyn JohnsonKris Funn, and Quincy Phillips.

If you know, you know. Slowly and quietly building a well-deserved loyal following, tenor saxophonist Elijah Easton pays tribute to the jazz greats with a power house band of local all stars that have performed all over the world.  As the Hemingway Room describes it, Elijah’s performances are a captivating journey, seamlessly shifting from soulful, contemplative melodies that stir the heart to toe-tapping rhythms that move the body and breathe new life into contemporary music.

Over the years, Elijah Easton has honed his craft and shared the stage with some of the brightest stars in the jazz world. His impressive collaborations include renowned artists such as Jon Batiste, Wynton Marsalis, Paquito D’Rivera, Benny Golson, Marc Cary, Citizen Cope, The Lincoln Center Big Band, and the iconic DJ Jazzy Jeff, among many others. He’s graced prestigious stages ranging from the legendary Blue Note and Dizzy’s Club to the illustrious Kennedy Center and the White House.

Today, Elijah Easton stands as one of the most sought-after musicians in the DMV region, showcasing his talent and dedication. Catch these local stars while you can!


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The "Get Out!" event of the week is posted on the Cleveland Park Listserv and on All Life Is Local on Thursdays.