The Santa Barbara Sea Glass & Ocean Arts Festival (SBSGOAF) is having an Instagram silent auction from October 11-18, with 100% of the proceeds going to @sbmaritimemuseum. The Santa Barbara Maritime Museum has been closed for the duration of the pandemic and may not be able to reopen until the end of the year. We wanted to help them out, and we are hoping you will support our efforts. 12 amazing professional artists are transforming wood fish into beautiful original art for you to bid on!
Hookman by Lauren Yee
Directed & adapted by Michael Bernard
An early play by a rising contemporary playwright, Hookman has been described by some as a “slasher comedy.” Sometimes mysterious, often hilarious, Hookman is a biting story of teen angst and loss.
URL: https://www.theaterdance.ucsb.edu/news/event/747
Event Price: $13-19
UCSB Performing Arts Theater
FEB 15, 2020 / 1PM, 7PM
FEB 18 - 20, 2020 / 8PM
FEB 21 - 22, 2020 / 7PM
FEB 22 – 23, 2020 / 1PM
Alfredo Ramos Martínez (1871–1946) was a pivotal figure in the modernist development of Mexican art. He spent his formative years immersed in the artistic life of Paris, returning to Mexico in 1910 on the eve of the country’s Revolution. After becoming director of the famed Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes in Mexico City, he established the nation’s first open air schools and encouraged his pupils to create work that captured observations of daily life. In 1929, Ramos Martínez and his family relocated to Los Angeles. For the next two decades, his subject matter focused on the people and culture of Mexico, with the artist receiving many notable mural commissions throughout Southern California. His canvases depict indigenous traditions, local crafts, and religious icons painted in striking hues of umber and sienna accented by bold highlights of color.
While Ramos Martínez was celebrated as a painter, some of his most iconic works of art were created on paper. Said to have always carried a Conté crayon in his pocket, the artist frequently drew on newspaper—the printed columns of text supporting totem-like figures of flower vendors. Working in combinations of gouache, charcoal, Conté crayon, and watercolor, he perfected a signature style in which forms were reduced to essentials to create a structural scaffolding across the paper’s surface. "Alfredo Ramos Martínez: On Paper" is an intimate exhibition of works from the Santa Barbara Museum of Art’s permanent collection. Comprising six drawings, as well as two serigraphs created by his wife María Sodi de Ramos Martínez after his death, the exhibition showcases the artist’s extraordinary draftsmanship, revealing the layered sensibility in his chosen themes.
Alfredo Ramos Martínez: On Paper is curated by Rachel Heidenry, Curatorial Assistant, Contemporary Art, and presented in both English and Spanish in the Works on Paper room of SBMA’s Ridley-Tree Gallery.
Image: Alfredo Ramos Martínez, "Mujeres con flores (Women with Flowers)" (detail), ca. 1946. Tempera and Conté crayon on newsprint / Tempera y crayón Conté sobre papel periódico. SBMA, Gift of the P.D. McMillan Land Company, 1963.32.1 © The Alfredo Ramos Martínez Research Project.
Alfredo Ramos Martínez (1871–1946) was a pivotal figure in the modernist development of Mexican art. He spent his formative years immersed in the artistic life of Paris, returning to Mexico in 1910 on the eve of the country’s Revolution. After becoming director of the famed Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes in Mexico City, he established the nation’s first open air schools and encouraged his pupils to create work that captured observations of daily life. In 1929, Ramos Martínez and his family relocated to Los Angeles. For the next two decades, his subject matter focused on the people and culture of Mexico, with the artist receiving many notable mural commissions throughout Southern California. His canvases depict indigenous traditions, local crafts, and religious icons painted in striking hues of umber and sienna accented by bold highlights of color.
While Ramos Martínez was celebrated as a painter, some of his most iconic works of art were created on paper. Said to have always carried a Conté crayon in his pocket, the artist frequently drew on newspaper—the printed columns of text supporting totem-like figures of flower vendors. Working in combinations of gouache, charcoal, Conté crayon, and watercolor, he perfected a signature style in which forms were reduced to essentials to create a structural scaffolding across the paper’s surface. "Alfredo Ramos Martínez: On Paper" is an intimate exhibition of works from the Santa Barbara Museum of Art’s permanent collection. Comprising six drawings, as well as two serigraphs created by his wife María Sodi de Ramos Martínez after his death, the exhibition showcases the artist’s extraordinary draftsmanship, revealing the layered sensibility in his chosen themes.
Alfredo Ramos Martínez: On Paper is curated by Rachel Heidenry, Curatorial Assistant, Contemporary Art, and presented in both English and Spanish in the Works on Paper room of SBMA’s Ridley-Tree Gallery.
Image: Alfredo Ramos Martínez, "Mujeres con flores (Women with Flowers)" (detail), ca. 1946. Tempera and Conté crayon on newsprint / Tempera y crayón Conté sobre papel periódico. SBMA, Gift of the P.D. McMillan Land Company, 1963.32.1 © The Alfredo Ramos Martínez Research Project.
Makers Market is the best outdoor market that Santa Barbara has to offer. Meet the artisans in person. This market offers unique one of a kind items in an outdoor European style setting.
A weekend exploration of the vagus nerve at Aligned Pilates Studio (Jan 31 - Feb 3)
A weekend exploration of the vagus nerve at Aligned Pilates Studio (Jan 31 - Feb 3)
A celebration to bring seeds & people together on January 26 from 1-4pm at the Faulkner Gallery. Free, children welcome!
UC Santa Barbara University Carillonist Wesley Arai will present a recital from the carillon in UC Santa Barbara's Storke Tower on Sunday, January 26, 2020 at 2 pm. Listeners are encouraged to bring a blanket or lawn chair to sit on the grass outside the tower during the recital.
This event is FREE and open to the public for more information visit, https://www.music.ucsb.edu/news/event/1981
Santa Barbara High School Theatre presents FIREBRINGER, A STARKID Musical, January 24 - 26
Santa Barbara High School Theatre's 20th annual student directed production starts a new tradition! In the place of Music of the Night, SBHS seniors, Carter Beaudette, Logan Fleming, and Josie Gillingham are directing full musical: FIREBRINGER, a STARKID musical.
At the dawn of humanity, one tribe of cave-people survives the many trials of prehistoric life under the wise leadership of Jemilla, The Peacemaker. Jemilla taught her people to express themselves, rather than bashing each others' heads with rocks and eating each others' babies. But one member of the tribe doesn't seem to fit in: Zazzalil. She's always trying to invent things to make life easier… for herself. While out hatching her latest scheme, Zazzalil stumbles upon the most important discovery in history. One that will pit her tribe against wooly mammoths, saber-toothed tigers, and change the world forever. She'll travel from omega to alpha, and become… the Firebringer!
Showtimes:
Friday, January 24th @ 7pm
Saturday, January 25 @ 2pm & 7pm
Sunday, January 26th @2pm
GA: Students/Seniors $10, GA: Adult $15, Reserved Seating: $25
Tickets available at the door and, in advance, at purplepass.com/sbhstheatre.
Santa Barbara High School Theatre presents FIREBRINGER, A STARKID Musical, January 24 - 26
Santa Barbara High School Theatre's 20th annual student directed production starts a new tradition! In the place of Music of the Night, SBHS seniors, Carter Beaudette, Logan Fleming, and Josie Gillingham are directing full musical: FIREBRINGER, a STARKID musical.
At the dawn of humanity, one tribe of cave-people survives the many trials of prehistoric life under the wise leadership of Jemilla, The Peacemaker. Jemilla taught her people to express themselves, rather than bashing each others' heads with rocks and eating each others' babies. But one member of the tribe doesn't seem to fit in: Zazzalil. She's always trying to invent things to make life easier… for herself. While out hatching her latest scheme, Zazzalil stumbles upon the most important discovery in history. One that will pit her tribe against wooly mammoths, saber-toothed tigers, and change the world forever. She'll travel from omega to alpha, and become… the Firebringer!
Showtimes:
Friday, January 24th @ 7pm
Saturday, January 25 @ 2pm & 7pm
Sunday, January 26th @2pm
GA: Students/Seniors $10, GA: Adult $15, Reserved Seating: $25
Tickets available at the door and, in advance, at purplepass.com/sbhstheatre.
TITLE: Iceland! Past and PresentBY: Dr. Inga Bjornsdottir, UCSB Dept. of Anthropology
Learn about Alfredo Ramos Martínez’s murals in a guided tour of the chapel of the Santa Barbara Cemetery. Designed by famed architect George Washington Smith, the chapel tells a fascinating story about early art patronage in Santa Barbara. Ramos Martínez was invited to paint a mural in the chapel in 1934, and the resulting work is an extraordinary example of the artist’s style and thematic interests. The tour will be led by David Petry, historian and author of "The Best Last Place: A History of the Santa Barbara Cemetery," with the curator of "Alfredo Ramos Martínez: On Paper."
RSVP required, space is limited. Event will take place rain or shine, with time subject to change based on the cemetery’s schedule. Questions: communityprograms@sbma.net.
Image: Detail of Alfredo Ramos Martínez mural in the Chapel of the Santa Barbara Cemetery, 2019.
Learn about Alfredo Ramos Martínez’s murals in a guided tour of the chapel of the Santa Barbara Cemetery. Designed by famed architect George Washington Smith, the chapel tells a fascinating story about early art patronage in Santa Barbara. Ramos Martínez was invited to paint a mural in the chapel in 1934, and the resulting work is an extraordinary example of the artist’s style and thematic interests. The tour will be led by David Petry, historian and author of "The Best Last Place: A History of the Santa Barbara Cemetery," with the curator of "Alfredo Ramos Martínez: On Paper."
RSVP required, space is limited. Event will take place rain or shine, with time subject to change based on the cemetery’s schedule. Questions: communityprograms@sbma.net.
Image: Detail of Alfredo Ramos Martínez mural in the Chapel of the Santa Barbara Cemetery, 2019.
Two years since the catastrophic incidents in Santa Barbara County, their effects continue to be felt. In addition to the terrible direct impacts of these events on our community, ash from the fire and mud relocated to beaches also affected the health of the Santa Barbara coast and channel.
Join us to hear about the latest ongoing research assessing the extent of these impacts, and what it might tell us about how to improve our response to future disasters. A series of flash talks by experts in the biological and social sciences will be followed by a moderated panel discussion and Q&A with experts and local policymakers.
The public is invited to a free community conversation on Sunday, January 26 to hear from local experts and discuss the impacts of the Thomas Fire and January 9 Debris Flow two years later.
Don’t miss the Santa Maria Philharmonic’s presentation of their popular concert "Fly Me to the Moon: From JS Bach to Mr. Spock."
Gullah Music of the Carolina Coast
“One of the greatest gifts of the year.” Afropop
“Unfamiliar enough to be surprising, and yet familiar enough to provoke swinging hips and nodding heads… It’s the best of both worlds.” Paste Magazine
The Santa Barbara Zoo’s annual Snow Leopard Festival - Sledding at the Zoo event has been moved one week later.
On Sunday, January 26, First United Methodist Church of Santa Barbara and Via Maestra 42 restaurant will serve their annual “Feast for the Children” benefit luncheon, with this year's proceeds to benefit the Unity Shoppe.
Thanks to the generosity of Via Maestra 42 owners Renato and Lisa Moiso and friends, all food, beverage, and service for this sumptuous Italian buffet is donated so that 100% of the proceeds can go to relief efforts. The traditional Italian menu includes antipasti, lasagna, butternut squash ravioli, polenta with mushrooms, mixed greens salad, and vanilla cream puffs with chocolate sauce for dessert. Come, feast, and support the Unity Shoppe!
Tickets for the three seatings: 11:30am, 12:30pm and 1:30pm, are available at the door or in advance at the church office, 305 E Anapamu (corner of Garden and Anapamu)
$25 Adults; $10 Children 6 - 10; Children 5 and under FREE
Free parking onsite, enter from Garden Street
For more information call 805-963-3579, email office@fumcsb.org, or visit our website http://www.fumcsb.org , or Facebook at http://www.Facebook.com/FirstUMCSantaBarbara
On Sunday, January 26, First United Methodist Church of Santa Barbara and Via Maestra 42 restaurant will serve their annual “Feast for the Children” benefit luncheon, with this year's proceeds to benefit the Unity Shoppe.
Thanks to the generosity of Via Maestra 42 owners Renato and Lisa Moiso and friends, all food, beverage, and service for this sumptuous Italian buffet is donated so that 100% of the proceeds can go to relief efforts. The traditional Italian menu includes antipasti, lasagna, butternut squash ravioli, polenta with mushrooms, mixed greens salad, and vanilla cream puffs with chocolate sauce for dessert. Come, feast, and support the Unity Shoppe!
Tickets for the three seatings: 11:30am, 12:30pm and 1:30pm, are available at the door or in advance at the church office, 305 E Anapamu (corner of Garden and Anapamu)
$25 Adults; $10 Children 6 - 10; Children 5 and under FREE
Free parking onsite, enter from Garden Street
For more information call 805-963-3579, email office@fumcsb.org, or visit our website http://www.fumcsb.org , or Facebook at http://www.Facebook.com/FirstUMCSantaBarbara
This discussion of Allegra Goodman's book, "The Family Markowitz," will be facilitated by Cheri Gurse. Reading the materials is suggested but are not required for attendance. This series hopes to cultivate open dialogue, and a spirit of appreciation and intellectual kinship. All are welcome.
What if confronting the climate crisis is the best chance we’ll ever get to build a better world? Directed by Avi Lewis and inspired by Naomi Klein’s non-fiction bestseller, This Changes Everything presents seven powerful portraits of communities on the front lines of climate change, connecting the carbon in the air with the economic system that put it there. Compelling, inspiring and accessible, the film suggests that we can seize the existential crisis of climate change to transform our failed economic system into something radically better. (Avi Lewis, 2015, 90 min.)
“Klein and those impassioned protesters provide something that has been in short supply in the predecessors – namely, a modicum of hope for the future.” Los Angeles Times
In conjunction with UCSB Reads 2020 UCSB Library presents a talk by Leah Stokes, Assistant Professor of Political Science, to be followed by a public reception.
In conjunction with UCSB Reads 2020 UCSB Library presents a talk by Leah Stokes, Assistant Professor of Political Science, to be followed by a public reception.
Impossible Tour
Back by Popular Demand
“Black Violin upends cultural and musical stereotypes… An unexpected blend of classically trained musicianship and hip-hop beats and inventiveness.” The Miami Herald
Hotel Santa Barbara is pleased to announce our Makers Workshop Series. First up is a driftwood wall hanging/wreath workshop led by Wild Buffalo Workshops’ artist Alana Clumeck
Standing Above the Clouds is a story of inter-generational women activists, who call themselves Aloha ʻĀina, or warriors of the land. The mothers and daughters find themselves standing with many others at the forefront of the Indigenous movement to safeguard their sacred mountain, Mauna a Wakea, after a construction permit was granted for an eighteen story, Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) to be built directly below the summit on pristine, untouched land. The film brings into focus how this movement has brought a new found expression of solidarity and a spirit of hope to people across lands and oceans who work to form alliances that will safeguard their environment, lifeways, and future. Post film discussion panel to follow.
Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Santa Barbara Audubon Society, and UCSB Arts & Lectures Thematic Learning Initiative have partnered to bring Dr. Kenneth Rosenberg, lead author of a landmark study on bird populations in North America, to the Museum’s Fleischmann Auditorium on Wednesday, January 29 from 7:30–9:30 PM for a free public presentation.
Laguna Blanca School is hosting its third TEDx event titled "RE.IMAGINE" on January 29th.
Laguna Blanca School is hosting its third TEDx event titled "RE.IMAGINE" on January 29th.
As part of the World Music Series, Ngoki will perform an extended drum solo on the djembe on Wednesday, January 29th at 12 pm in the Music Bowl. Santa Barbara-based Ngoki has developed his own style and vocabulary of drumming that he calls Primal Funk or Roots Funk, with influences from hip hop, rhythm and blues, soul, and beyond.
Join us for a dialogue between Roberto Strongman (Black Studies) and Jennifer Tyburczy (Feminist Studies) about Strongman’s new book, Queering Black Atlantic Religions: Transcorporeality in Candomblé, Santería, and Vodou. Refreshments will be served.
Jahman Ariel Hill is a poet, playwright, and college professor based in Birmingham, AL. He is currently ranked 3rd in the world in slam poetry and is touring his award-winning one man show, Black Enough, which previewed Off Broadway at Theatre Row. As an academic, he has earned a BA in International Studies with a focus in Middle East Relations, an MA in Communication Studies, and is working towards an MA in Women's Studies. His academic and activist work helped earn him the Marsha Houston Award for Outstanding Student Work in Social Justice and Diversity.
The Thalea String Quartet brings together artists of Nigerian, Venezuelan, Japanese, and Canadian heritage. With repertoire as diverse as its members, and every bit as exuberant, Thalea connects with audiences on a musical, emotional, and personal level, from first-time listeners to string quartet aficionados. Top prizewinners at both the 2018 Fischoff and Chamber Music Yellow Springs Competitions, Thalea was founded in 2014 and made its U.S. début at the Kennedy Center in 2016. They have performed across North America and in Italy, France, and Belgium. “Thalea never failed to deliver a stirring performance.” - Calgary Herald
They will perform Aaron Copland’s "Movement for String Quartet," a new work being written for the Thalea Quartet, Beethoven’s "Op. 59 No. 2," and "Three Folksongs in Counterpoint" by African-American composer Florence Price.
America Then and Now:
What History Tells Us About the Future
“He has seen how American politics works close up... yet he has remained uncynical. He is an adroit and appealing storyteller.” The New York Times
The Thalea String Quartet brings together artists of Nigerian, Venezuelan, Japanese, and Canadian heritage. With repertoire as diverse as its members, and every bit as exuberant, Thalea connects with audiences on a musical, emotional, and personal level, from first-time listeners to string quartet aficionados. Top prizewinners at both the 2018 Fischoff and Chamber Music Yellow Springs Competitions, Thalea was founded in 2014 and made its U.S. début at the Kennedy Center in 2016. They have performed across North America and in Italy, France, and Belgium. “Thalea never failed to deliver a stirring performance.” - Calgary Herald
They will perform Aaron Copland’s "Movement for String Quartet," a new work being written for the Thalea Quartet, Beethoven’s "Op. 59 No. 2," and "Three Folksongs in Counterpoint" by African-American composer Florence Price.
Celebrating 30 years as a band, Toad the Wet Sprocket is still making music and touring with the same spirit of unwavering independence that started it all over three decades ago.
The band is thankful for the continued help and enthusiastic support of their fans, which helped spur the release of All You Want and also serves as inspiration for the band to tour and play live. They also continue to support their most recent releases, New Constellation (2013) and The Architect of Ruin EP (2015). Toad the Wet Sprocket share in the kind of musical chemistry that can only come from meeting in high school and writing, recording and touring on albums over the course time. After Bread & Circus, they followed with Pale in 1990, fear in ’91, Dulcinea in 1994, and Coil in 1997, as well as some compilations along the way. While most will still feel the comforting familiarity of the Billboard-charting hits, “Walk on the Ocean”, “All I Want”, “Something’s Always Wrong”, and “Fall Down”, fans will also be well familiar with tracks with lyrics that resonate for so many life milestones like “The Moment”, “I Will Not Take These Things for Granted” and so many more.
Start off the new year connecting with other like-minded kind and ambitious Professional Women at Andersen's Bakery. Enjoy sharing your lunch time, getting to know one another, building business friendships and networking
WHAT: This week’s “Solutions News” live radio broadcast will interview Kristine Schwarz, Founder and owner of Santa Barbara Psychotherapy.
WHEN: 5 to 6 p.m. Friday, Jan. 31, 2020
WHERE: Tune in to KZSB, AM 1290.
On this episode of Solutions News we interview Kristine Schwarz, Founder and owner of Santa Barbara Psychotherapy and Executive Director of New Beginnings Counseling Center. Kristine Schwarz is a seasoned executive and psychotherapist who brings extensive experience building organizations and managing multi-faceted projects in both the non-profit and for-profit sectors, and considerable experience as an educator and clinician. Kristine provides therapeutic services to clients struggling with the challenges of interpersonal relationships and the stresses of every day life. Kristine has worked with adults, youth, couples, and families in various therapeutic settings including: Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, Domestic Violence Solutions of Santa Barbara County, Goleta Valley Union School District, Working Alternatives Federal Prisoner Reentry Program, and Full Spectrum Recovery.
Solutions News with Rinaldo Brutoco is a weekly radio show produced by Kristy Jansen and the World Business Academy. Guided by the motto that there are more solutions in the world than problems, Solutions News seeks to educate, inform and inspire its audience.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Visit solutionsnews.org.
Join us for live music with NBC's The Voice finalist, Will Breman!
You Are Invited to a VR Art Opening at Art From Scrap- COSMIC DAYDREAM on Friday, January 31st, 6:00 pm to 9:00 pm.
Ocho Ojos is a Latin Fusion sensation from Coachella, CA that incorporates elements of cumbia, psychedelic chicha, hip hop/funk & electronic music to bring an eclectic show of original music. With the addition of a rhythm section, Ocho Ojos has been able to expand its live performance into a more dynamic and improvisational show. Most recently, they have performed at major music festivals such as Coachella in 2018. $5 for UCSB students and youth under 12; $15 for general admission.
La Cumbre Jr. High & Santa Barbara School of Performing Arts (SOPA) present “13” an original musical. The 1st & only Broadway musical with a cast/band entirely comprised of teenagers. A street-wise, NYC kid is turning 13. His world is turned upside-down when he moves from fast-paced Manhattan, NY to a small-town in Indiana.
In celebration of the collaboration between the Santa Barbara-Kotor, Montenegro Sister City program and the UC Santa Barbara Department of Music, alumni Katrina Agate (cello) and Sarah Bashore (violin/viola) will perform with Nastasja Vojinović (violin) and Andrija Jovović (piano) on Friday, January 31, 2020 at 12:30 pm (please note new time) in Karl Geiringer Hall on the UC Santa Barbara campus. The program will include works by Antonín Dvořák, Dmitri Shostakovich, Gabriel Fauré, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Admission is free.
The artists will present a second concert, “Strings & Keys!”, at Weinman Hall on the Music Academy of the West campus on Friday, January 31, 2020 at 7 pm. Tickets and more information are available at sbkotorsistercity.com or email sjldenise@cox.net.
An afternoon reading and discussion of the lighthouse and its lens by local author Willard Thompson will be followed by a special birthday cake. The event is free and open to the public and families are welcome. Parents are encouraged to bring their children to learn the history of the lighthouse and the men and women who braved the rugged terrain, heavy fog, and strong winds of Point Conception to keep mariners safe.
La Cumbre Jr. High & Santa Barbara School of Performing Arts (SOPA) present “13” an original musical. The 1st & only Broadway musical with a cast/band entirely comprised of teenagers. A street-wise, NYC kid is turning 13. His world is turned upside-down when he moves from fast-paced Manhattan, NY to a small-town in Indiana.
La Cumbre Jr. High & Santa Barbara School of Performing Arts (SOPA) present “13” an original musical. The 1st & only Broadway musical with a cast/band entirely comprised of teenagers. A street-wise, NYC kid is turning 13. His world is turned upside-down when he moves from fast-paced Manhattan, NY to a small-town in Indiana.
$66 - Section A
$56 - Section B
$46 - Section C
(Ticket prices include a $6 per ticket Lobero Facility Fee; other fees may also apply.)
The legacy of Johnny Cash lives on with the help of singer-guitarist Danny Millsap and the Hennessy Three—together forming The Only Johnny Cash Tribute Band. Millsap credits a 1990 Cash concert in Fresno as a formative moment, sparking a lifelong goal to keep the music and mystery of The Man in Black alive. With his Cash tribute, he’s performed all over Northern California and the Central Valley, Oregon and Arizona, breathing new life into the legendary ballads of the somber singer-songwriter. Always audience participation in every show.
“In 1990 I had the great pleasure of seeing Johnny Cash live in Concert in Fresno, California. I have always been a fan of his style of country music and the mystery he brought to the stage, and after seeing him in concert I was hooked. On September 12, 2003, Johnny passed and we lost a true Legend. God bless you, Johnny Cash.” – Danny Millsap
I formed The Only Cash Tribute Band to do our part to keep his music alive. No matter where we go, it is an honor to recreate the style, mystery and music of the legendary Johnny Cash. You can also help to keep the music going by coming to one of our shows and buying Johnny Cash music today! We promise to be true to the Cash sound and make Johnny proud.
Audience Participation in every show!
Come out to one of their shows and help keep the Music of the Legend Johnny Cash alive!
UCCE Master Gardeners of Santa Barbara County
PRESENT A FREE PUBLIC WORKSHOP: Planting Bare-Root Fruit Trees
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