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  • Up next in the Carpinteria Valley Museum of History’s Talk & Talkback Speaker Series will be Carpinterian Dale Olivas’ Urban Forestry & Native Habitats, a talk about trees—safety, maintenance, pruning, native and non-native trees, urban forestry, and defensible space—on June 3, 5 to 6 p.m. at the museum, 956 Maple Ave., in downtown Carpinteria.

    Olivas is an arborist and tree expert who serves on the City of Carpinteria’s Tree Advisory Board. In addition to his tree-related work, Olivas volunteered with Hope805 after the Thomas Fire to bring mental health wellness to people in the region and worked on the rehabilitation of public lands after debris flow from flooding in the Montecito area as a FEMA-trained volunteer.

    The 2025 Talk & Talkback Speaker Series is hosted by the Carpinteria Valley Museum of History. The Urban Forestry & Native Habitats talk is free for members of the museum and $10 per person for visitors.
    For more information on the Talk & Talkback Speaker Series, volunteering at the museum, or other questions, call (805) 684-3112, email info@carpinteriahistoricalmuseum.org, or visit carpinteriahistoricalmuseum.org.
  • Santa Barbara Symphony- Bella Italia

    Saturday, March 28, 2026 | 7:30 PM
    Sunday, March 29, 2026 | 3:00 PM
    The Granada Theatre

    Attend "Conversations with KUSC" with on-air personality Jennifer Miller Hammel
    Saturday Pre-Concert Chat | 6:30-7:00 PM
    Sunday Pre-Concert Chat | 2:00-2:30 PM

    A five-century survey of Italian classics. From Vivaldi’s perennial The Four Seasons, to Puccini’s youthful Capriccio Sinfonico (an early working of tunes to later appear in La Bohème!) to Respighi’s thunderous The Pines of Rome with brass blazing from the four corners of The Granada Theatre. And discover a recent, lively concerto by Christian Carrara inspired by the dazzling Red Ferrari Accordion.

    The Artists
    Nir Kabaretti, Conductor
    Hanzhi Wang, Accordion

    Repertoire
    VIVALDI | “Winter” from The Four Seasons
    CRISTIAN CARRARA | Red Ferrari Accordion Concerto
    (co-commissioned by Santa Barbara Symphony, Orchestra della Toscana, Musica Insieme – Bologna, Richmond Symphony Orchestra & FVG Orchestra)
    PUCCINI | Capriccio Sinfonico
    RESPIGHI | The Pines of Rome

    For more info and tickets, visit: https://thesymphony.org/concerts-events/orchestra-concerts/bella-italia/
  • 2025/26 Joint Season Opener
    Saturday, October 18 | 7:30 PM
    Sunday, October 19 | 3:00 PM

    Attend "Conversations with KUSC" with on-air personality Jennifer Miller Hammel
    Saturday Pre-Concert Chat | 6:30-7:00 PM
    Sunday Pre-Concert Chat | 2:00-2:30 PM

    A love forbidden. A love immortal. The greatest moments from Prokofiev’s greatest ballet—the ardent Romeo and Juliet performed with grace and passion by dancers from State Street Ballet on the Granada stage. These concerts—and the season—begin as Nir Kabaretti and the Santa Barbara Symphony perform Shostakovich’s spirited Festive Overture and Rachmaninoff’s Men’s Dance from the Opera Aleko.

    The Artists
    Nir Kabaretti, conductor
    State Street Ballet
    Santa Barbara City College Brass

    Repertoire
    SHOSTAKOVICH | Festive Overture
    RACHMANINOFF | Men’s Dance from the Opera Aleko
    PROKOFIEV | Romeo & Juliet, Acts 1 & 2 (with dancers from State Street Ballet)
    Visit for more: https://thesymphony.org/concerts-events/orchestra-concerts/state-street-ballet/

    Tickets start as low as $35 (does not include Granada fees).
  • The Simi Valley Family YMCA is hosting an Alumni Reunion and Open House on Thursday, October 23, from 5:00 p.m. to 6:30 pm to celebrate the YMCA’s 40th anniversary. The community is invited to join the celebration.

    Since first opening its doors a little over 40 years ago, the Simi Valley Family Y has been a second home for generations of families. From swim lessons and summer camps to teen leadership programs, after-school enrichment, youth sports and fitness classes, the Y has touched tens of thousands of lives over the past four decades.

    Guests can enjoy a walk down memory lane with a display of photos from the YMCA’s early years, reconnect with alumni and staff and hear about Y’s upcoming expansion plans, with construction slated to begin next year.

    Beverages and light hors d’oeuvres will be served. The Simi Valley Family YMCA is at 3200 Cochran St. Event registration is required. To register, go to https://www.sevymca.org/events/ymca-alumni-happy-hour-open-house.
  • The Simi Valley Family YMCA will host its annual Breakfast With Santa on Saturday, December 6. Participants can have their picture taken with Santa and receive a framed photo, and enjoy breakfast and hot cocoa. There will be snow, a snow slide and holiday crafts for the kids.

    Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Families can then select a newly arrived Christmas tree at the YMCA’s Christmas tree lot operated by the Simi Valley Y’s Men’s Club. The lot offers about 750 Noble, Douglas and Nordmann fir trees from 3' to 9' tall.

    All proceeds from tree sales go back into the community. Tree lot hours are 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, and 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Saturday and Sunday.

    The tree lot and Breakfast with Santa are at the Simi Valley Family YMCA (3200 Cochran St., corner of Galena Ave. and Cochran St.). Advance registration is required for Breakfast with Santa (www.sevymca.org/breakfast-santa).
  • Perhaps the greatest accomplishment of Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles, the first all-female mariachi in the United States, is that they have paved the way for other female mariachi groups to exist at the professional level. Reyna, which was formed in 1994, has truly broken the stereotypes surrounding Mariachi music. In a musical landscape of songs that are often written by men, and for men, Reyna has created their own history.

    Under the leadership of ten-time Grammy nominee, Maestro Jose Hernandez, Reyna was the first female Mariachi to break out of local level recognition to international stardom with original compositions, arrangements, and interpretations of mariachi classics.

    Noteworthy accomplishments include playing private concerts for superstars such as George Harrison, John Travolta, and debuting at the Hollywood Bowl. Perhaps their greatest career highlight was performing at the White House for President Obama's Cinco De Mayo celebration. As performers, their passionate vocals, ability to engage the audience, and stellar musicality are second to none, leading to both American and Latin Grammy Nominations.

    FOUR FREE PUBLIC PERFORMANCES
    Thursday, January 15 | 7 PM | Carpinteria Vets Memorial Building
    Friday, January 16 | 7 PM Isla Vista Elementary
    Saturday, January 17 | 7 PM | Guadalupe City Hall
    Sunday, January 18 | 6 PM | Marjorie Luke Theatre

    For more information please visit:
    https://artsandlectures.ucsb.edu/learn/viva-el-arte-de-santa-barbara/
  • THE FRIENDS OF THE BUELLTON LIBRARY ARE PLEASED TO PRESENT THEIR SPRING ART SHOWCASE IN HONOR OF MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS AND MOTHERS’ DAY.

    This exhibit for the entire month of May is entitled,“Creating from Within,” featuring four local artists from the Santa Ynez Valley, expressing the love-bond between mother and child, the joy of life, sharing thoughts and feelings without words, and visually representing deeply felt emotions as part of a self-soothing process.

    The four artists exhibiting in our Spring Art Showcase are Renée Kelleher, Maggie Powell,Sherry Uyeda & Alexandra Yakutis presenting in various mediums: oils, graphite, water colors, colored pencil, charcoal, and ceramic.

    This art will be on display for the entire month of May with an Artist Wine & hors d’oeuvres reception on May 2nd from 4-6pm inside the Friends’ Room at the Buellton Library. The art can also be viewed during our open store hours: Mondays 10am-noon, Tuesdays 2-4pm, and Saturdays 11am-1pm.

    Our goal for our art showcases is to highlight Local Artists from the Santa Ynez Valley and bring art appreciation to the community. The Friends’ Room is also a used book store, where we raise funds to support the Buellton Library, host lecture series, and other events.
  • The No. 2 acting official at the DOJ, Emil Bove, has been shaking up the agency and its past work on the 2021 Capitol riot. But he also has his own history with Jan. 6 cases.
  • The back wall of the Freemont Theatre in downtown San Luis Obispo is now home to a mural by artist Maria Molteni! Maria will be giving a talk about her work during Art & About from 5-6.
  • Santa Barbara Permaculture Network Presents Beavers in the Landscape -

    An Evening with Dr. Emily Fairfax

    FREE - Farmer & the Cook Restaurant / Outdoor Patio (Wood-fired Pizza available)

    Beaver dams are gaining popularity as a low-tech, low-cost strategy to build climate resiliency at the landscape scale.

    Join Santa Barbara Permaculture Network for an evening with Dr. Emily Fairfax, PhD. as she shares her research focused on beaver, a keystone species, that until very recently was a vastly underrated ecosystem restoration hero.

    Passionate about science from a young age, Dr. Fairfax was happy when nature and science came together with her interest in beavers. As a geoscientist who studies ecohydrology of wetlands and riparian areas, it was a perfect academic and vocational match. Beavers are native to North America (Castor canadensis), in populations topping 600 million before trappers in the 1800’s decimated their numbers almost to extinction. They were responsible for a landscape most early settlers and farmers took for granted--- deep soils built up over centuries--- in wetlands they created. These wetlands then and now function as natural sponges trapping silt and water, which are excellent carbon sinks.

    With extended droughts and catastrophic fires plaguing California and the West in recent years, Dr. Fairfax began focusing her research on the impact of beaver on wildfires. Squishy, wet landscapes simply don’t burn. And where beaver are, with multiple dam and pond complexes, squishy land abounds. These observations of the positive impact of beavers on wildfires prompted Dr. Fairfax to coin the phrase “Smokey the Beaver”.

    As a part of the evening event we will share the work of, Cooper Lienheart a recent engineering grad of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, who currently works as a SLO Beaver Brigade Restoration Specialist, and has decided to make beaver and wetland restoration his life work.

    Dr. Emily Fairfax is an Assistant Professor of Environmental Science and Resource Management at California State University Channel Islands. D She uses a combination of remote sensing and field work to research how beaver activity can create drought and fire resistant patches in the landscape under a changing climate.

    The event takes place on Thursday, November 11, 5-8pm, at the Farmer & the Cook Restaurant, outdoor patio, 339 W. El Roblar Dr, Meiners Oaks (near Ojai). Woodfired Pizza available for purchase.

    For more info contact margie@sbpermaculture.org, 805-962-2571, www.sbpermaculture.org. Hosted by Santa Barbara Permaculture Network Co-sponsors: The Farmer & the Cook; San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, & Ojai Beaver Brigades
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