Minneapolis’ First Dedicated Indoor Pickleball Facility to Open in Northeast!

Minneapolis’ First Dedicated Indoor Pickleball Facility to Open in Northeast!

Lucky Shots Pickleball Club will open within a historic building that overlooks the Columbia Golf Course. The new facility’s next-door neighbor will be the recently opened Brother Justus Whiskey Company. Lucky Shots Pickleball Club will span over 40,000 square feet and will include a dozen professional grade courts and event space. Interested in learning more: luckyshotspickleball 

About

Pickleball is a paddleball sport that combines elements of badminton, table tennis, and tennis. Two or four players use solid paddles made of wood or composite materials to hit a perforated polymer ball, much like a wiffle ball, with 26–40 round holes, over a net.
Mixed genderYes, separate singles and doubles & mixed doubles
Team membersSingles or doubles
Highest governing bodyInternational Federation of Pickleball
Equipment: Plastic pickleball ball and composite or wooden paddle

History

1965

After playing golf one Saturday during the summer, Joel Pritchard, congressman from Washington State and Bill Bell, successful businessman, returned to Pritchard’s home on Bainbridge Island, WA (near Seattle) to find their families sitting around with nothing to do. The property had an old badminton court so Pritchard and Bell looked for some badminton equipment and could not find a full set of rackets. They improvised and started playing with ping-pong paddles and a perforated plastic ball. At first they placed the net at badminton height of 60 inches and volleyed the ball over the net.As the weekend progressed, the players found that the ball bounced well on the asphalt surface and soon the net was lowered to 36 inches. The following weekend, Barney McCallum was introduced to the game at Pritchard’s home. Soon, the three men created rules, relying heavily on badminton. They kept in mind the original purpose, which was to provide a game that the whole family could play together. Link here for more!

Minnesota Opera: Introducing MN Opera’s 2021-2022 Season!

Minnesota Opera: Introducing MN Opera’s 2021-2022 Season!

Welcome back to Live Opera!

Let’s come together once again and celebrate the sights and sounds of opera.

Our 2021–2022 Season subscription includes two in-person operas, The Anonymous Lover and Carmen, with the option to add on two in-person concerts: Opera in the Outfield at CHS Field and Voices United, featuring the MN Opera Chorus. In addition, the season includes three FREE digital performances: Interstate, MNiatures, and Edward Tulane Choral Suite.

OPERA IN THE OUTFIELD – September 24, 2021

THE ANONYMOUS LOVER – February 5 -13, 2022

VOICES UNITED – March 27, 2022

CARMEN – May 7- 22, 2022

FREE DIGITAL PERFORMANCES

 

SHOWS & TICKETS

2021–2022 Season

Ways to Buy

Community Events

Seating Chart

Glensheen Mansion: It’s happening… Free Concerts on the Pier will be back in Full Force this Summer! ⁠

Glensheen Mansion: It’s happening… Free Concerts on the Pier will be back in Full Force this Summer! ⁠

 CONCERTS ON THE PIER – LANUE

JULY 7 @ 5:00 PM – 8:00 PM

CONCERTS ON THE PIER

WEDNESDAYS IN JULY & AUGUST⁠
5:00 PM – 8:00 PM⁠

GATES OPEN AT 5:00 PM⁠
MUSIC FROM 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM⁠

FREE & OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

Concerts on the Pier is a quintessential Duluth summer experience. You haven’t lived a true Duluth summer night until you’ve attended a night of Concerts on the Pier at Glensheen. Duluth musicians play on the end of Glensheen’s 100-ft pier that juts out into Lake Superior. Concert goers pack the shoreline and arrive to watch the show via every watercraft vehicle imaginable.

2021 Concerts on the Pier line up

7.7 LANUE (indie folk – Sarah Kruger project)
7.14 Seyi Stories (spoken word, hip hop, R&B)
7.21 Charlie Parr (folk, Americana, blues)
7.28 Sugar on the Roof (bluegrass, alt-country, folk)
8.4 Lyla Abukhodair (pop, indie rock)
8.11 Alan Sparhawk (rock, blues)
8.18 AfroGeode (neo-soul, R&B, spoken word) & JayGee (hip hop, spoken word)
8.25 Gaelynn Lea (folk, indie)


EVENT DETAILS⁠

– Service animals are welcome ⁠
– Beverages available for purchase⁠
– Glass and outside alcohol is not allowed⁠
– Food available for purchase from multiple food trucks⁠
– Picnics/delivery/outside food is allowed, but please no large coolers⁠.⁠
– Onsite kayak launching available ONLY through Day Tripper of Duluth⁠

FOOD & BEV⁠

Food Trucks to include Oasis Del Norte, UpDawg, Mama Roots, Auntie M’s, The Rambler, and more! Not every food truck will be present each night. Every night will be a different set of a few food trucks.⁠


Catering by Bellisios will provide local beer, wine, cocktails, and non-alcoholic options available for purchase.⁠

Love Creamery ice cream will be available for purchase.⁠

PRO-TIP

Taking a tour prior to the concert is a great way to snag a good parking spot and the best seat on the shore.

Glensheen is open daily from 9:00 am – 5:00 pm for self-guided tours.

ACCESSIBILITY

If accommodations such as an interpreter are needed, please make accommodation requests two weeks in advance for each performance. Accommodation requests can be made by contacting info@glensheen.org.


Summer Ahead at the Walker: Hillside Jazz (Present Tense): Jaimie Branch’s FLY or DIE

Summer Ahead at the Walker: Hillside Jazz (Present Tense): Jaimie Branch’s FLY or DIE

 Photo: Peter Gannushkin

Summer Ahead at the Walker: Injecting a contemporary reckoning—hopefulness and hopelessness, joy and loss—into a clarion call of creative music now, the concert features a bandleader unafraid to pull from the vast history of American jazz, improvisation, and experimental music. Progressive composer jaimie branch, whether soft and pleading or brash and seething as she sounds her trumpet or her voice, helms her quartet (Chad Taylor drums, Jason Ajemian bass, and Lester St. Louis cello) with unflinching conviction. Her last two releases wowed fans and critics alike with her FLY or DIE II: Bird Dogs of Paradise scoring a top 10 spot in NPR’s 2019 records of the year.

Enjoy a complimentary gift to make the performance more comfortable, courtesy of Walker Premier Partner, Chase.

WHEN

Fri, 7 pm
Jul 2, 2021

WHERE

Wurtele Upper Garden

PRICING

Free
Music and Movies in the Parks have a Full Summer Calendar and are Always Free to the Public!

Music and Movies in the Parks have a Full Summer Calendar and are Always Free to the Public!

The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board is excited to share the 2021 Music and Movies in the Parks calendar and bring live music and movies back to the parks! Please click on the link to download the full summer calendar: 2021 Minneapolis Music and Movies Calendar

Music in the Parks

 

Music and Movies in the Parks 2015

Music and Movies in the Parks 2015

 

Swing, Folk, Rock, Bluegrass, Classical and much more.  The MPRB summer concert season fills the air daily with music at five concert venues running through Labor Day:

 

Lake Harriet Band Shell
  • Monday, Thursday, Friday, 1st and 3rd Saturdays of each month: 7:30 pm
  • Sundays: 2 pm and 5:30 pm
Nicollet Island Park
  • 1st and 3rd Mondays of each month: 7 pm
Father Hennepin Bluff Park
  • 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of each month: 7 pm
Minnehaha Park
  • Thursday and Friday: 7 pm
Bryant Square Park
  • Tuesdays and Thursdays (from June 15- August 19): 6:30 pm

 

More details at: mplsmusicandmovies.com
Happy Pride Month!

Happy Pride Month!

Photo by Patrick Forslund Photography
Kare11: Learn more about Pride in the Twin Cities and ways you can support LGBTQ+ youth impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

MINNEAPOLIS — The return of LGBTQ Pride month amid a retreat of COVID-19 cases across the United States, means Pride parties and parades are set to resume in cities across the country after a year of pandemic cancellations.

The return of those annual celebrations is a hopeful sign for many in the LGBTQ community, but Dr. Angela Kade Goepferd, Medical Director of the Gender Health Program at Children’s Minnesota, says the parades and public gatherings represent a lifeline to many LGBTQ young people.

“I think its particularly hard for LGBTQ kids, when these events disappear,” Dr. Goepferd said, during an interview with KARE11 last June. “For LGBTQ kids that physical distance and social distance when schools closed was really particularly hard. Youth tend to come out to their peers first, and then at home, so they lost that social network.”

In the year since Dr. Goepferd first expressed concern about the impact on LGBTQ youth, she says the problem only grew.

“What I have seen in the kids that I’ve taken care of is increased depression, anxiety, increased feelings of isolation, feeling they are at home with parents who don’t understand their identity,” Dr. Goepferd said. “(Parents) may not respect their identities or use their name and pronoun. That’s a lot of what I’ve been seeing and, nationally, that’s what we’ve been seeing as well.”

According to a new national survey conducted by the Trevor Project – a national organization providing crisis intervention and suicide prevention services to LGBTQ youth – 42% of LGBTQ youth reported seriously considered attempting suicide in the past year, while 48% could not access the mental health care they desired.

“That tells me that we have a mental health crisis in this country for all kids, I think, in general,” Dr. Goepferd said. “One thing that we’ve seen here at Children’s Minnesota is that, since the pandemic, our Emergency Department has been filling up with kids who are in mental health crisis. I think that a lot of kids are experiencing increased depression, anxiety and suicidality, and unable to access the services that they need. For LGBTQ kids, the pool of resources gets even smaller.”

And unlike their peers, Dr. Goepferd says LGBTQ youth have a harder time finding support at home. According to the Trevor Project survey 80% of LGBTQ youth reported that COVID-19 made their living situation more stressful, and only one-third of young people reported living in a home that is LGBTQ-affirming.

“So two-thirds of kids did not feel supported by their parents at home, versus about 50% of kids who feel supported in school,” Dr. Goepferd said.

With many students now back in school, Dr. Goepferd says she’s beginning to see more LGBTQ youth reconnect with their peers and support systems, but she says the return of Pride events, in person, promises an even more powerful hope on the horizon.

“It’s a different way to celebrate identity,” she said. “So often we talk about accepting kids or loving kids, but we don’t use the word celebration very often. Pride is just one big huge celebration. It’s visual, it’s community, it’s a way to say, not only is it okay that you are LGBTQ, it’s great.”

While the big celebrations are impactful, Dr. Goepferd says simply loving and supporting someone for who they are has shown to be one of the most powerful actions to help LGBTQ youth. She says young people who report being loved and supported for who they are, have far better mental health outcomes and far lower rates of attempted suicide.

If you are thinking about suicide and in need of immediate support, you can call the TrevorLifeline at 1-866-488-7386, text START to 678-678 or click here for online support.

 Kent Erdahl

Happy #Pride month to all our LGBTQ friends and family.

We love you, we support you and we’re proud to have you as a part of our community! 

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