SRP - Theremin Program
Theremin: Music of Lightning & Air -
Presented and Conducted by C.G. Martiello
The Conway Public Library will close at 5:30 PM on June 18th due to weather and will be closed on June 19th in observance of Juneteenth Independence Day.
Theremin: Music of Lightning & Air -
Presented and Conducted by C.G. Martiello
During a midnight meteor shower, something mysterious falls from the sky toward Earth — but it’s not a shooting star. Two curious kids venture into the forest to investigate and find themselves mixed up with a family of visitors from another planet!
Conway Public Library lends Kill A Watt units that allow power customers to measure electric usage of various household appliances.
Bring a lunch, and perhaps a portable electrical device, and learn how to estimate your power costs.
Kristen McDermott, of Good Earth Gardening, LLC will share her knowledge and talents as she leads a talk about planting gorgeous flower containers and beds, adding vibrant and flourishing color and life to your home or business.
Learn how to use the Orion Telescope to watch May's Flower Moon rise in the eastern sky
In early January 2019, the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services launched a crowdsouring effort to map all of New Hampshire's stone walls using LiDAR* images. Learn how to use the New Hampshire Stone Wall Mapper to identify and mark stone walls with nothing more than a web browser.
Financial Education brought to you by Christine Gillette and Tyler Cyr of TD Bank.
Natural Communities of New Hampshire
In early January 2019, the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services launched a crowdsourcing effort to map all of New Hampshire's stone walls using LiDAR* images. Learn how to use the New Hampshire Stone Wall Mapper to identify and mark stone walls with nothing more than a web browser.
The remarkable story of one of the earliest trekkers to the base camp of Mount Everest. In 1967, with $200 in his pocket, twenty-two-year-old Peace Corps Volunteer Russ Staples heads for Nepal. Join Russ as he travels from a small village in South India, with little more than a borrowed backpack and youthful enthusiasm, to the base of the tallest mountain in the world, a journey that took forty days and included travel by planes, trains, busses, and rickshaws. Fifty years ago, the trek to Everest was not what it is today.