BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//ChamberMaster//Event Calendar 2.0//EN METHOD:PUBLISH X-PUBLISHED-TTL:P3D REFRESH-INTERVAL:P3D CALSCALE:GREGORIAN BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART:20230419T220000Z DTEND:20230420T010000Z X-MICROSOFT-CDO-ALLDAYEVENT:FALSE SUMMARY:Green Screen Environmental Film Festival DESCRIPTION:Do you love the Inland Bays? Do you love watching a good film about nature? If you said "yes"\, come and join the Center for an evening of short films to inspire you to get outside and hit the trails\, paddle the bays\, or enjoy some wildlife watching.\n\nTicket pricing: \n\n\n $15 for General Admission (6 pm entry time)\n $30 for Beer & Bivalves Happy Hour (5 pm entry time - beer from Dewey Beer Co. and raw oysters from Rehoboth Bay Oyster Company)\n\n Limited number of happy hour tickets available\n\nTickets can be purchased at: https://inlandbays.harnessgiving.org/events/362\n\nBeer & Bivalves Happy Hour: 5-6 PM\n\nDoors Open (General Admission): 6 PM\n\nFilms will begin around 6:15 pm\n\nFestival includes 6 short films\, raffle & good times\n\nFilm Lineup: \n\n\n Mighty Finn\n\n \n Ethan Sheets manages the REI Co-op in Cleveland\, Ohio\, and feels most at home in the Midwest woods with his son Finn. Born with a cerebral palsy\, Finn is unable to walk\, feed himself or communicate with words. That hasn't stopped this father and son duo from understanding each other through their outdoor adventures.\n \n \n Run to Be Visible\n \n For soil microbiologist Lydia Jennings\, PhD\, the inspiration to complete a 50-mile solo run came from a place that went beyond the selfish or the personal it was about celebration and gratitude. Dr. Jennings\, a member of the Huichol (Wixaritari) and Pascua Yaqui (Yoeme) Nations\, took on this 50-mile challenge as a way to celebrate earning her PhD after her graduation ceremony was canceled due to COVID-19. At the same time\, it was also a run of recognition and honoring those who came before her. She decided to dedicate each of the first 49 miles to an Indigenous scientist whose work she cited in her dissertation and the last mile to the Indigenous scholars of the future.\n \n \n FEATURE FILM: Hidden Wild \n \n Behind the homes and freeways of suburban Palm Beach County\, an incredible network of swamps\, scrub\, and waterways lies waiting to be discovered. Join science educator Alex Freeze as she takes three South Florida students on an expedition to discover the wilderness hidden in their own backyards.\n \n \n And three short films highlighting work of the Center\n \n Building a Living Shoreline at DE Botanic Gardens\n Why are there 30 million Horeshoe Crabs on this Beach?\n Protecting Diamondback Terrapins in the Inland Bays\n \n \n\n\nEvent is sponsored by: Freeman Life Enrichment Institute X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Do you love the Inland Bays? Do you love watching a good film about nature? If you said &ldquo\;yes&rdquo\;\, come and join the Center for an evening of short films to inspire you to get outside and hit the trails\, paddle the bays\, or enjoy some wildlife watching.
\n\nTicket pricing: \;
\n\nBeer &\; Bivalves Happy Hour: \;5-6 PM
\nDoors Open (General Admission): \;6 PM
\nFilms will begin around 6:15 pm
Festival includes 6 short films\, raffle &\; good times
\n\nFilm Lineup: \;
\n\nEvent is sponsored by: Freeman Life Enrichment Institute
\n LOCATION:Bear Trap Dunes 7 Club House Drive Ocean View\, DE 19970 UID:e.2126.25207 SEQUENCE:3 DTSTAMP:20240329T092327Z URL:https://business.bethany-fenwick.org/events/details/green-screen-environmental-film-festival-25207 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR