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March 18, 2026


March 18, 2026

Crandall Public Library

at Queensbury Senior Center

This presentation will cover the ins and outs of how to protect your personal information online. We’ll cover tips for staying safe in cyberspace, like safe browsing, how to recognize online scams, and when it’s OK — or not — to share your personal information online.

This Senior Planet from AARP class is being offered through the Senior Planet licensing program.

This class will be held at the Queensbury Senior Center, 742 Bay Rd., Queensbury, NY 12804. Registration is required. To register please call the Queensbury Senior Center at 518-761-8224. 


March 18, 2026

Crandall Public Library

Do you have questions about your smartphone, tablet, or other device? We can help! Drop-in with your device for answers and advice from a Crandall librarian. Everyone is welcome.

How it works:

During this Q&A session, feel free to drop-in with any tech-related questions that you have and we will do our best to find the answers you need. Help during this session is limited to approximately 10 minutes when others are waiting. We offer 30 minute 1-on-1's by appointment for more in-depth help. Please bring your relevant devices and passwords.

Drinks and light refreshments will be provided.


March 18, 2026

Crandall Public Library

Meet in the Teen Center to play or learn dueling card games (like Magic the Gathering or Pokemon), classic card games (like Spit or Spoons), and tabletop games (like Blood on the Clocktower or Clue).

This program is for teens ages 13-19 and meets every Wednesday. Experienced players are welcome but no registration, experience, or materials are required and our volunteers can teach you to play. Come socialize with other gamers and join in the fun!


March 18, 2026

Registration required: Crandall Public Library

Minimum Age 14

Shellie shares everything you need to start your garden inside.  Participants leave with step by step handouts & growing guides along with their planted seeds from a wide selection of veggie, herb, and flower varieties.


March 18, 2026

Registration required: Wilton Wildlife Preserve & Park

Looking to channel your inner artist? Each month, there will be a different themed workshop apart of the Winter Art Workshop series presented by a Wilton Wildlife educator where you will explore different art mediums while relating it back to the Saratoga Sand Plains.


March 18, 2026

Adirondack Folk School

Get an introduction to the art of blacksmithing by visiting Adirondack Folk School on any of our OPEN FORGE nights for an amazing demonstration by expert smiths Steve Gurzler and Arnie Barsky. Observing the demonstration is free and open to the public. For those who want to try their hand at blacksmithing and forge an item at open forge, there is a $25 fee to cover the cost of materials, and safety precautions must be followed – including hard shoes with no open toes, long pants, goggles (supplied) and gloves (supplied).


March 18, 2026

Registration required: Adirondack Experience Museum

How might we account for the creative outpouring that marked Georgia O’Keeffe’s years at Lake George, an interval that stands among the most prolific of her seven-decade career? A survey of her work from this period reveals an astonishing abundance: roughly two hundred paintings on canvas and paper, accompanied by numerous sketches and pastels.

Lake George functioned for O’Keeffe as a potent site of artistic stimulus. Many of the botanical subjects that would come to define her oeuvre first took shape in this site. As a retreat from New York City, it afforded not only sustained contact with the natural world but a deep sense of place, an anchoring essential to her developing modernist vision. Yet it was not solely a refuge; Lake George also operated as a social nexus, animated by a continuous circulation of visitors.

Within this multifaceted setting, O’Keeffe pursued new subjects while reckoning more deliberately with thoughts of selfhood and artistic independence, including the imagined prospect of a studio of her own. This presentation examines the forces that shaped her Lake George years: her evolving subjects, the shifting social dynamics around her, and the ways in which the site itself nourished her creative practice.

Yaritza Martinez Pule joined the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in 2022 as Curatorial Assistant after completing a Fulbright research grant. Previously, she was a curatorial research fellow at Museo Franz Mayer in Mexico City and a curatorial assistant at 80WSE Gallery, a gallery affiliated with New York University where she co-curated and organized exhibitions with the Institute of Fine Arts, the Costume Institute, and Steinhardt’s Department of Art. In addition, she was a visiting scholar in the archives at Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla. She holds an MA from New York University where she concentrated her research on the historical and cultural dimensions of textiles, and a BA from Marquette University with a focus on Art History, Digital Media Studies, and Spanish and Latin American Studies, completing a part of her art history education from King’s College London. Most recently, Yaritza curated A Circle that Nothing Can Break, an exhibition examining the ways in which Georgia O’Keeffe’s unique vocabulary of round forms intersected with feeling, memory, and lived experience.