• QFN Presents: Look What Flew Through The County with Yvonne Buys

    100 College St. West, Belleville 100 College St. West, Belleville

    Our Jan meeting will be held Jan 19th at 7 PM. Our main speaker is Yvonne Buys who will be speaking about her Wellington Times weekly column and new book “Look What Flew Through The County”. She retired to the County in 2020 after a 30 year career as an academic ophthalmologist at the University of Toronto. She quickly became interested in birding as Prince Edward County is unique within Canada as a birding hotspot. Please join us at Maranatha Church on Monday Jan. 19th at 7 PM (located at 100 College St W). All are welcome to this free meeting.

  • Quinte Symphony: Tinsel and Tango

    100 College St. West, Belleville 100 College St. West, Belleville

    Quinte Symphony presents “Tinsel and Tango” a feast of Christmas treats for your ears. From Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker and Anderson’s perennial favourite “Sleigh Ride” to Piazzolla’s Libertango and Rimsky-Korsakov’s Christmas Eve Suite. Saturday November 29 2:30 pm at Maranatha Church, 100 College St. W., Belleville Tickets online at Eventbrite: https://tinselandtango.eventbrite.ca Local ticket vendors: McDowell’s, Maranatha Church Sam the Record Man, K’Boodle (Quinte Mall) Riverside Music (Trenton) and at the door Save when you purchase Advance tickets.

  • Expedition Alert: Bringing the Polar Desert to the Bay of Quinte

    100 College St. West, Belleville 100 College St. West, Belleville

    Stacey Kerr is the Exhibit and Programs Coordinator for the Quinte Museum of Natural History, where she has been working for the last year to develop the upcoming feature exhibit “Expedition Alert: Stories from the High Arctic”. This exhibit will showcase the biodiversity that lives around Alert, Nunavut, the northernmost continuously inhabited place on Earth. Stacey is using her experience in environmental storytelling to create an exhibit that invites visitors to explore the unique and sometimes alien world of the Polar Desert through a series of interactive displays showcasing research by scientists from the University of Quebec at Rimouski. Inuit traditional knowledge, or Inuit Qaujimajatuqangit, will connect visitors to the land and the lived experience of climate change through key elements of the exhibit, a reminder that multiple worldviews are critical to understanding our world. This presentation for the Quinte Field Naturalists will provide a sneak peek of a few key stories that will be included in Expedition Alert, including tales of impressive migration, fascinating adaptations, and ultimately resilience in the face of mounting climate change. Stacey will also share some of the challenges and learning experiences of creating an Arctic exhibit for an audience “down South”, as well as some exciting new technology-based museum elements that will help bring the exhibit to life in a whole new way for an intergenerational audience.

    Free