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  • Get Arty at QWR!

    Quogue Wildlife Refuge 3 Old Country Road, Quogue, NY, United States

    Join “GET ARTY” for a two-hour party at the Quogue Wildlife Refuge’s Nature Center, and connect with your inner artist. A certified art instructor & assistant artist teach the class including color theory & painting techniques. “GET ARTY” instruction promotes self-expression so every 9” X 12” canvas art work will be unique. “Ducks on the …

    $40.00
  • Earth Yoga with Amy Hess

    Join yoga instructor Amy Hess for a one hour class in the Nature Center.  Please bring a yoga mat.  Pre-register and pre-pay online or by phone as indoor space is limited.  $20.00 per class.

  • Bats on the Beach, Bay and Beyond!

    Understanding the distribution and habitat use of bats is important to their conservation. While many people know about bats in the woods, relatively few realize that there are bats in coastal ecosystems as well! Join Delaney Costante, graduate student at Stony Brook University, to learn about her research using passive acoustic monitoring to better understand …

  • Earth Yoga with Amy Hess

    Join yoga instructor Amy Hess for a one hour class in the Nature Center.  Please bring a yoga mat.  Pre-register and pre-pay online or by phone as indoor space is limited.  $20.00 per class.

  • Turtle Animal Ambassador Storytime

    Join Quogue Library storyteller for a special story hour in the Nature Center, including a simple craft and a special visit from one of our ambassador animals. Children must be accompanied by an adult. This program is offered in collaboration with the Quogue Library. Reservations required, $5 per child, free for QWR members.

  • Earth Yoga with Amy Hess

    Join yoga instructor Amy Hess for a one hour class in the Nature Center.  Please bring a yoga mat.  Pre-register and pre-pay online or by phone as indoor space is limited.  $20.00 per class.

  • The Wonder of Wasps

    Wasps have a serious PR problem. While bees are celebrated by kids, conservationists, and farmers alike, wasps are largely loathed. But the ones most people know—yellow jackets, paper wasps, and hornets—represent only a tiny, aggressive sliver of an enormous, fascinating family. With over 150,000 species identified so far, wasps are among the most diverse, dazzling, …