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Weekend Event Guide

Here are the top 5 things to do in San Antonio this weekend

Paige Turner
Mar 19, 2020 | 1:30 pm

As we continue to adapt to the current public health pandemic, finding things to do poses a new kind of challenge. While our agendas may be a bit emptier in the coming weeks and months, we’re sharing opportunities to stay connected to the community around us while we spend more time physically apart. Check out the five best things to do in San Antonio to cultivate kindness and positivity this weekend.

Thursday, March 19

Drop into a livestream Mobile Om yoga class
Just because you can’t make it to the gym, doesn’t mean you can’t take advantage of a solid workout from your living room or backyard patio. Local yoga brand Mobile Om is offering a series of live workout events on their Facebook page. Tune into free daily class offerings and enjoy an active break from the work from home monotony.

Adopt or foster from San Antonio Pets Alive!
Fight off the boredom by bringing a furry-friend or new family member home for an extended stay. San Antonio Pets Alive! is making the adoption and foster processes easier in an effort to ensure all animals have a place to call home during this challenging time. Those interested in adding a four-legged companion to their households are encouraged to reach out to the SAPA! team online immediately.

Friday, March 20

Visit a nearby state park
Though it did announce closures to visitor's centers and stores on March 18, Texas state parks are largely still open and provide the perfect cabin fever cure. Practice social distancing all while enjoying Texas scenery. State parks are stocked with soap or hand sanitizer and have increased cleaning standards in restrooms and public areas, so make a trip to a nearby state park and spend time with the entire family al fresco. Check here for updates before heading out.

Saturday, March 21

Order to-go from a San Antonio restaurant
In the wake of the global pandemic, Culinaria is revamping the city’s annual restaurant weeks to accommodate the mandatory to-go and take-out policy. Participating restaurants will serve a range of lunch and dinner menu options and will also be accepting donations throughout the ongoing series. If you’re looking to spread a little kindness while stimulating the local economy, be sure to leave a tip at the take-out window. Restaurant Weeks To-Go will run indefinitely. Visit the Emergncy Relief Fund website for a comprehensive list of participating restaurants.

Sunday, March 22

Donate or volunteer at the San Antonio Food Bank
Help keep locals from experiencing hunger by participating in the San Antonio Food Bank COVID-19 Relief Campaign. The food bank is looking for volunteers to help distribute meals to seniors, staff mobile pantries, and more. Interested locals can browse available volunteer opportunities on the SAFB website. If you’ve gotten comfortable sheltering in-place, log onto the SAFB website and make a donation to support the relief efforts and look forward to some good karma coming your way.

Donate or volunteer to help support the San Antonio Food Bank COVID-19 Relief Campaign.

San Antonio Food Bank
San Antonio Food Bank/Facebook
Donate or volunteer to help support the San Antonio Food Bank COVID-19 Relief Campaign.
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Education upgrade

San Antonio nonprofit boosts STEAM education with $100,000 in grants to local schools

Francisco Ortiz
Nov 3, 2022 | 1:03 pm
Texas Yes San Antonio
Courtesy of TEXAS YES
18 Texas schools will receive various upgrades to help further their students’ academic pursuits.

Thanks to $167,000 in new grants from a San Antonio-based educational nonprofit, classrooms in 18 Texas schools will receive various upgrades to help further their students’ academic pursuits.

An October 27 news release announced the grants from TEXAS YES (Texas Youth Education Support project) will go towards upgrading classroom equipment including a new computer lab, robotics program elements, chicken coops, a 3D printer, iPads and smart boards, and the purchase of new library books.

For the first-time since its inception, the YES Grant shifted focus to include classroom improvements, which is a crucial need to a child’s education, TEXAS YES officials said.

“It’s incredible to help schools not only update library books, which has seen a huge lack of funding, but also help provide classroom equipment such as computers and even P.E. equipment,” TEXAS YES executive director Danielle Gunter stated in the release.

According to TEXAS YES, the following San Antonio-area schools and organizations are receiving grants: Koennecke Elementary School, CAST Med High School, Palo Alto Elementary School, Harmony School of Excellence, Burleson School of Innovation, Miguel Carrillo Jr. Elementary School, Boys & Girls Club of San Antonio, Patlan Elementary School, Spring Branch Middle School, West Campus High School, and Harlandale Independent School District.

The local grants total more than $100,000 in educational grants. The remaining funds have been distributed to schools in the Dallas and Austin areas.

Organization officials said TEXAS YES understands a high-quality STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art, and math) education is critical to a student's efforts at forming a successful future.

TEXAS YES partnered up with local injury attorney and philanthropist Thomas J. Henry to create the TEXAS STEAM Grant, which provides students and teachers with funds to provide an effective STEAM education.

“Now more than ever it’s important to bridge the gap of educational inequality and give students the tools and resources they need to thrive in their academics,” said Henry in the release.

Grants are open to public, private, and charter elementary, middle, and high schools, as well as 501(c)3 nonprofits with a youth focus.

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A Night in Argentina

River Walk hotel swoons with romantic tango series this November

Brianna Caleri
Nov 3, 2022 | 10:58 am
Tango dancers at Hotel Valencia Riverwalk in San Antonio
Photo courtesy of Hotel Valencia Riverwalk

The dance series includes a two-hour dance performance, food, wine, and an elegant souvenier.

The last tango in San Antonio has not yet been danced, as the ballroom series returns to Hotel Valencia Riverwalk. The ornate riverside hotel offers an annual “Tango in the Courtyard” series, now in its third year, aiming for romance above all.

Weekends in November bring professional tango dancers to the courtyard, an intimate, old world space surrounded by arches, plants, and a decorative waterfall. This ticketed event offers an excuse to visit the hotel as a non-guest, enjoying the atmosphere even without an overnight stay. (Those who do decide to stay overnight may watch from their courtyard balcony if they book the special package.)

Atmosphere is everything for this series, which comes with a bottle of Malbec (a varietal tightly associated with Argentina), an unnamed “traditional Argentinian cheese dessert,” and a red rose. (No one seems to know, definitively, how the red rose between a dancer’s teeth became a tango cliché, but handing it off to your date to remember the night is a classy flourish nonetheless. Perhaps the series, which offers some history with the dancing, has a theory.)

Tango hasn’t always been such a posh pastime. Almost everyone, regardless of dance history knowledge, can recognize the dance that became a sensation thanks to immigrants and lower classes in Argentina during the mid-to-late 19th century. The modified salon dance, European in origin and African and Cuban in alteration, gained a florid reputation as most lower class movements do, as art forms practiced for passion rather than for the eye of high society.

The tango in particular emphasizes close bodies and stiff elegance juxtaposed with moments of high drama. In one of dance history’s most overt gentrifications, the tango made it back to Europe, was reportedly banned by several notable members of 20th century European high society (which always seems to add fuel to the fire of public interest), and a century later, is the height of poise and romance.

The “Tango in the Courtyard” series runs from 7:30-9:30 pm on November 4, 5, 11, 12, 18, 19, and 26. Tickets ($129 for two) are available at hotelvalencia-riverwalk.com. Valet parking is included.

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Planting new roots

San Antonio community garden grows with new farmers market and tree giveaway

Francisco Ortiz
Nov 2, 2022 | 10:59 am
Gardopia Gardens
Courtesy Gardopia Gardens

Gardopia Gardens will celebrate Texas Arbor Day on November 4 with a mass tree planting and more.

A community garden organization in San Antonio’s East Side will celebrate Texas Arbor Day the first weekend of November with a mass tree planting and giveaway and by launching a new farmers market.

While many communities nationwide observe Arbor Day in the spring, Texas offers its version of Arbor Day on November 4, when the weather is more optimal for planting and sustaining, organizers say.

In honor of Texas Arbor Day, San Antonio nonprofit Gardopia Gardens will expand its tree planting initiative this year with a goal of planting 1,000 fruit and other trees on 100 sites citywide. Planting will officially begin on November 4 and continue over a four-month period.

According to a news release, the initiative involves Gardopia Gardens partnering with various educational and community organizations as well as sustainably-minded businesses, such as The CO-OP SA, which will be planting 10 trees along Wurzbach Parkway and O'Connor Road.

From 4 to 7 pm on November 5, Gardopia Gardens will also host a community tree giveaway for the public. The news release said the trees — a mix of pomegranate, pear, fig, peach, plum, orange, lemon, lime, olive, live oak, Mexican sycamore and more — will be provided by San Antonio's Parks and Recreation Department, along with other partners, as needed.

Gardopia Gardens representatives said the tree giveaway and its resulting influx of newly planted fruit trees will positively benefit neighborhoods, especially those experiencing food scarcity.

Community garden representatives also said, one day, the newly planted trees will provide a much needed canopy to help counteract the heat island effect that growing population endures each spring and summer.

"The trees will help sequester carbon to address climate change. This is important because a lot of areas in San Antonio have a low tree canopy and so they have higher electric bills and a lot of these same areas are also food insecure. We may not see the shade, but we know the future generations will,” Gardopia Gardens founder Stephen Lucke said in a statement.

According to the release, when Gardopia Gardens first began its tree planting initiative in 2020, they planted 500 trees and the same again in 2021. This year, they intend to double that number.

At the same time as the November 5 onsite tree giveaway, Gardopia Gardens will host a new farmers market, which will offer fresh vegetables grown in the garden. The market will be open 9 am to 4 pm every Saturday, with plans to expand days and hours of operation, the release said.

Lucke stated the new store will help his group’s micro farm become sustainable and create a few jobs for the community.

Over the last few years, Gardopia Gardens has made a name for itself by offering programs and services to educational, commercial, and residential communities, providing tools, materials and best practices to ensure their sustainability and to help fight the local epidemic of obesity-related diseases and environmental issues.

“Gardopia Gardens is in a good place and continues to grow. At some point, we have aspirations beyond the garden to make sure the work we're doing is truly going to last for the long termm” Lucke said.

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