Hudson River Valley | Events

Events

Start planning your next trip to the Hudson River Valley around a Ramble event. There are over 150 events held every September, and we can’t wait to welcome you back! 

Event hosts will be sharing details now through July. Check back regularly for new opportunities.  

Canopy Exploration and Tree Climbing with Women's Tree Climbing Workshop

@ Mountain Top Arboretum

  • September 6, 2026, 10:00AM

Detailed Times/Hours: This program runs 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.

Come explore the trees with a new perspective--aloft, climbing trees! Avid lover of trees? Are you a birder? Photographer? Artist? Poet? Musician? Author? Adventurer? Nature Lover? Arborist? Then keep reading! This unique class has been crafted for people who are looking for something different; self-exploration, a time to bond with family or friends and your inner child. Let this be the start of something new for you! The Women's Tree Climbing Workshop enthusiastically created a one-day tree climbing experience. This program provides a rare opportunity to just show up, be curious and excited to be in the canopy. Come learn from the standing people, about yourself, and indulge in a magical tree canopy adventure! Registration is $300/person and is non-refundable. Use of all tree climbing equipment is included. Participants must be 16 and older. There are no prerequisites, but must be able to remain outdoors for 5 hours. Please bring a lunch, snacks and water and dress wearing pants, socks and light duty hiking boots. In case of storms or heavy rain, this program will be held on Monday, September 7th.

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Annual Author Talk with Marguerite Holloway

@ Mountain Top Arboretum Education Center

  • September 6, 2026, 5:00PM

We are thrilled to welcome journalist Marguerite Holloway, who will speak about her book, Take to the Trees: A Story of Hope, Science and Self-Discovery in America's Imperiled Forests for this year's Annual Author Talk. Marguerite Holloway arrives at the Women’s Tree Climbing Workshop as a climbing novice, but with a passion for trees and a deep concern about their future. Run by twin sister tree doctors Bear LeVangie and Melissa LeVangie Ingersoll, the workshop helps people—from everyday tree lovers to women arborists working in a largely male industry—develop impressive technical skills and ascend into the canopy. As Holloway tackles unfamiliar equipment and dizzying heights, she learns about the science of trees and tells the stories of charismatic species. She spotlights experts chronicling the great dying that is underway in forests around the world as trees face simultaneous and accelerating threats. As she climbs, Holloway also comes to understand the profound significance of trees in her relationship with her late mother and brother. The book’s rousing final chapter offers something new: a grander environmental and arboreal optimism. A lyrical work of memoir and reportage, Take to the Trees sounds the alarm about rapid arboreal decline while also offering hope about how we might care for our forests and ourselves. Marguerite Holloway has written about the environment and science for publications including the New York Times, The New Yorker, Audubon, Wired and Scientific American, where she was a long-time writer and editor. She is a professor and the Director of Science and Environmental Journalism at the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University. She lives in New York City. “The book in part is a sad tale of the damage we have done, but when Marguerite Holloway herself takes to the trees and learns from those who work with them, she plants the seeds of reconciliation between people and the nonhuman world. Readers should take the title literally and do likewise.” —William Bryant Logan, author of Sprout Lands

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Battles of 1776

@ Vedder Research Library

  • September 15, 2026, 7:00PM (rain or shine)

Presentation by local historian Dick Muggeo on the battles of 1776.

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Tea & Revolution

@ Bronck Museum

  • September 20, 2026, 2:00PM (rain or shine)

Join us for an afternoon of sweet and savory treats in the historic Bronck houses with a presentation by Museum Curator.

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