Seattle Area Events Calendar: Check Out What’s Happening This Weekend

SEATTLE, WA — Hoping for a family outing? Your Seattle Patch community calendar is a great way to stay in the loop on what’s happening near you and discover local events that fit your interests. See what’s happening and what might interest you before you make plans.

If you’re wondering how you can get your event in the next roundup, you can add it to the calendar using this form. You can also spread the word in nearby communities by promoting your event. The cost is $1 per day per community.

Here are all of this weekend’s events throughout Seattle:


FREE: Spinach Feta Spanakopita

  • When: Thursday, July 22nd at 4:00 p.m.
  • Where: FREE Online Cooking Classes with Homemade
  • What: Join our FREE live interactive, virtual cooking classes! Details for this class: Date & Time: Thursday, July 22, 2021 @ 4pm PT / 7pm ET Menu: Spinach Feta Spanakopita Registration

5 Factors to Do This Weekend

Following the pandemic, a great deal of New Yorkers may perhaps be hooked on outdoor shows. And have they not finished something to remind us of how deeply nestled music is into the city’s id? At the very same time, some outdated pillars of the scene keep on being in location — and with golf equipment open at total capability, looking at Greenwich Village rev again to existence is a welcome sight.

On West 3rd Avenue, the storied Blue Observe reopened last 7 days. At 8 and 10:30 p.m. from Thursday to Saturday and at 10:30 p.m. on Sunday, Ravi Coltrane will enjoy sets there with a newish quartet, whose very first-price lineup experienced come alongside one another not lengthy just before the pandemic struck: Orrin Evans on piano, Dezron Douglas on bass and Johnathan Blake on drums.

Coltrane’s improvising can be mischievous and dim, sometimes both at the

Tacoma lawn art worth a Memorial Working day weekend outing

The scent hound that little by little sales opportunities me on his drunkard’s route in a distinct Tacoma neighborhood every single day has convinced me that every single block in this city has its own exclusive characteristics.

He makes use of his nose to read all the latest community stories of wildlife murders, territorial disputes, backyard garden visitations, petroleum mishaps and these. He checks his pee-mail.

When I want to transfer on, he promptly downloads the tales on to his fur by rolling in whatever caught his interest, so he can investigate them at his leisure.

I do not share his interests nor his gifts. As an alternative, I commit all that time finding out yardscapes.

COVID-19 has specified people today a large amount of time to re-envision their room. On 1 new walk we saw a new hand-carved totem in a entrance property, a fence woven of green tree

Opening Weekend for A Quiet Place 2 Bests Entire Box Office of Tenet

“Cruella” was less impressive, but Memorial Day weekend exceeded expectations in a big step toward recovery for exhibition.

Those who placed bets on John Krasinski as the savior of movie theaters, collect your winnings. While you’re at it, tip your hat to Paramount. “A Quiet Place Part II,” similar to its predecessor directed by and starring Krasinski, finally was released more than 14 months after its original date. One of the earliest titles to be jettisoned after the onset of COVID-19, it was ultimately placed this weekend after Universal vacated “F9” for June 25.

Paramount — along with Disney, which saw “Cruella” open to an initial $21.3 million — gambled that theaters would be ready to approximate the business they hoped for last year. That’s happened, even with a 45-day theatrical window (for “A Quiet Place Part II”; “Cruella,” of course, is now available to Disney+ subscribers with a $29.95