Your Waterfront Specialists for over 65 years 301-261-9700 • 410-867-9700 • www.schwartzrealty.com • 5801 Deale-Churchton Road • Deale, MD 20751
NEW LISTING
MOVE IN CONDITION
$409,900
READY IN 30 DAYS
$409,900
WATERFRONT
$525,000
NEW LISTING
WATERFRONT WITH PIER
$549,900
NEW LISTING
BRAND NEW
$429,900
RAY MUDD & MIKE DUNN RAY MUDD/MIKE DUNN 410-320-4907 RAY MUDD & MIKE DUNN RAY MUDD & MIKE DUNN GEORGE G. HEINE JR. 410-279-2817 410-320-4907 Deale: 4BR 2.5BA. Open floor plan, 410-320-4907 410-320-4907 Deale, 3BR,2BA, 2,600+ sqft, 4BR 2.5BA. Beautifully Deale: 3 Br., 1.5Ba. First time on the wood floors, white kitchen cabinets, center Shady Side: non riparian waterfront w/ appointed w/upgraded kit: granite, ctr. island, granite counter tops, ss appliances, market. Expansive views of the 4BR, 2.5BA, new construction. 150ft private pier! island, ss appliances, backsplash. Fam M/BA w/tile shower, 2 car garage, walk Bay. Enjoy fishing/crabChesapeake Hardwood flrs., gas fp., granite, ss Water views from MBR as well as rm. w/gas fp, lg. deck, fenced rear yd., to comm. pier, boat ramp, picnic area. bing/boating from your pier. Come and appliances, comm. beach, pier, boat the first floor! Screened porch. comm. beach, pier, boat ramp. ramp & playground. schwartzrealty.com/ MDAA396144 make this home yours. MDAA399146. schwartzrealty.com/MDAA375596 Home warranty.
NEW LISTING
SEP. IN-LAW/AU PAIR SUITE
$625,000
JUST REDUCED
LOTHIAN: BOONES ESTATES
$33,500
GLORIA TURNER 443-822-7535 JULIE BEAL 443-254-0531 Lothian: 5BR 3.5BA, 1.4ac., bonus rm inc. 2BR, 2BA, complete renovation of kitchen, BA, new appliances, new recreated 1950s ice cream parlor, 12 seat home theater, game rm. Custom carpet & flrs. Sunrm, deck, community built-ins. Greek key molding, hwd flrs. perks inc. swimming pool, basketball, tennis cts., playground. slate in kit, 2-zone geothermal system. schwartzrealty.com/MDAA400280 schwartzrealty.com/TREND1010009030
JUST REDUCED
$285,000
JUST REDUCED
WATERFRONT
$1,900,000
NEW LISTING
100% FINANCING AVAILABLE
$259,900
RAY MUDD/MIKE DUNN 410-320-4907
$399,900
Shady Side: 4BR, 2.5BA, hardwood floors, granite counter tops, ss appliances, walk to comm. beach, pier, boat ramp & playground. Ready in 60 days. 2•
$625,000
RAY MUDD/MIKE DUNN 410-320-4907
NEW LISTING
NOT IN SUBDIVISION
$434,900
NEW LISTING
COMPLETE INLAW SUITE
$749,900
RAY MUDD/MIKE DUNN 410-320-4907
Lothian: 6BR, 3 FB. 3HB, 4,400+ sq.ft. incl. complete inlaw suite w/2BR & 1.5BA., family rm. w/fp, wood flrs, main home: updated kitchen, finished lower level, 2 car garage, inground pool, all on 2 acres. 40 mins. to D.C.
WATERFRONT
COMING SOON
RAY MUDD & MIKE DUNN 410-320-4907
2.46 ACRES IN LOTHIAN
Great location, 4BR, 3.2BA custom built. Shady Side: 3BR, 2BA recently renovat5,000+sqft, move in cond. Gourmet kit. ed: hwd. flrs., silestone counter-tops, ss w/granite, gas cooktop, lg. ctr island, f/r. appliances, new carpet, fresh paint, cenw/gas FP, owners suite w/sitting area, fin. tral AC, paved driveway, comm. marina, lower lev. w/great rm. & 1/2BA, 2 car playground, beach, pier & boat ramp. garage, easy commute to DC, AFB, Annap. Move in condition. MDAA397756
JOHN TARPLEY 301-335-4225 DALE MEDLIN GEORGE HEINE 410-279-2817 Edgewater, 3BR, 1BA, hardwood flrs. 301-466-5366 Shady Side: 4BR,3BA, well 3BR, 2BA. New kitchen, new 1/2 BA. handmade molding & that 1940s beach maintained 2 story colonial on over cottage charm. 1.92ac, (2 parcels), Relax on screened porch. Great 1 ac. 2700 sqft home. Rear deck, community, schools make this a perfect 169' water frontage, 200' pier: 9 slips Kohler 20KW in house generator. w/elec., shed & freeze for bait. place to live. Great starter home. Extra lg. driveway. schwartzrealty.com/MDAA302386 shwartzrealty.com/1001950208 schwartzrealty.com/MDAA397226
NEW CONSTRUCTION
NEW LISTING
WATER PRIVILEGE
$227,000
JULIE BEAL 443-254-0531 Deale: 2BR, 1BA, water privileged neighborhood. New w/w carpet, fresh paint, brick FP w/gas insert and whole house generator! schwartzrealty.com/MDAA343430
• May 23 - May 29, 2019
MOTIVATED OWNER
$349,900
RAY MUDD & MIKE DUNN 410-320-4907 Shady Side: 2BR, 1BA cottage with gorgeous expansive views of West River. Level & mostly cleared .46ac. Home needs tlc, or build your dream home like the neighbors.
NOT IN A SUBDIVISION
$359,000
GEORGE G. HEINE JR. 410-279-2817 Very large Farmhouse-style home on 2.21 acre lot. Freshly painted. schwartzrealty.com/AA10246976
JUST REDUCED
WATER ACCESS
$315,000
DALE MEDLIN 301-466-5366 Spacious 2,000+ sq.ft. house on corner lot has open floor plan, new roof, new HVAC. 4th BR, w/private entrance, may be used as in-law suite. schwartzrealty.com/AA10274883
NEW LISTING
INGROUND POOL
$349,900
$349,000
JOHN TARPLEY 301-335-4225 Edgewater: Well maintained 4BR 2BA, Lothian; 4BR, 3BA. This home is being double lot, 2 driveways. New windows sold as is. If you find something major, let’s talk. Attached double wide & vinyl siding 2008, new kit. cabinets, garage. The home has great bones new appliances, hwd. flrs., beautiful salt and is in a great neighborhood. water guinite pool. A must to see. schwartzrealty.com/MDAA395978 MDAA187486 RAY MUDD/MIKE DUNN 410-320-4907
The Gateway to Summer Memorial Day reminds us to delight in being alive
W
e cannot enter summer through Memorial Day’s gateway without reflections that ought to make life and its pleasures dearer. Life ended in its sweet springtime for most of the 41,892,128 men and women lost in U.S. Military Service during Wartime between 1775 and 1991. To that U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs figure, add 6,915 more lives lost in our Global War on Terrorfrom the ism since 2001. Each of those millions Editor was a life infinitely important in its brief span, each of those a name spoken in reverence until no living memory survived. One was Henry Beckwith, the chum our beloved columnist Bill Burton lost in World War II and outlived by six decades, recalled each year by Bay Weekly in both their honor. Another was Tony Pellegrino, boyhood hero to John O’Hara of Bowie, lost in World War II and recalled in this week’s paper. Another was Christopher Swanson, son of Gold Star Mother Kelly Swanson of Rose Haven, the subject of our Mother’s Day feature three weeks ago. Chris died in Ramadi, Iraq on July 22, 2006. Those three and their 42 million compatriots are in our minds and hearts on Memorial Day. Remember them, and in your own life take the advice Free Will Astrologer Rob Brezsny offers
Christopher Swanson, died in Ramadi, Iraq on July 22, 2006. His mother Kelly was the topic of our story A Gold Star Mothers Day: Kelly Swanson keeps her fallen soldier son Christopher alive in spirit. Find it at bayweekly.com/node/48579
Chesapeake creatures, horseshoe crabs and Chessie. You’ll find out where to find a Bay beach, a refreshing swimming hole and put-ins for paddle boats and ramps for trailered boats. You’ll discover what’s happening week by week in Chesapeake Country. You’ll read what’s what and when in summer’s night skies. You’ll discover when and where you can see Maryland’s state sport, jousting. You’ll learn what festival is when and where to celebrate the Fourth of July with parades and fireworks. 101 Ways to Have Fun will keep you busy and happy all the way to Labor Day. By then, we’ll be ready to take you into autumn with another annual special, 50 Ways to Leave Your Summer. But that’s 101 days from now. Now summer 2019 is all yours to live and love.
Calling Dad Lookalikes Librans this week: “Be eager to utter the word MORE! as you meditate on the French phrase joie de vivre and the English phrase a delight in being alive.” Put our minds in that frame, and we may enter into the pleasures of summer. Helping you into those pleasures come rain or come shine is the purpose of Bill Sells’ Memorial Day feature, Summer Calls for Picnics, and Picnics Call for Games. In it, you’ll find eight yard games to enjoy all summer long outdoors or in. On a scale 100 times as large, summer pleasures are the theme of the annual special you find in this week’s paper, 101 Ways to Have Fun: Your Guide to Summer on the Bay. I promise you it lives up to its name. Staff writer Kathy Knotts has filled this thick magazine with things to do and places to go that give Chesapeake Country its distinctive culture. You’ll learn, for example, how to catch a crab, size up a crab, cook a crab feast and evaluate a crab cake. You’ll see where and how to look for signature
We had so much fun with our Mother’s Day lookalike contest (you’ll find the winners in this week’s paper) that we’re doing it for Father’s Day. For your Father-Child photos to appear in our June 13 issue: 1. Send a photo of the two of you; 2. Caption it with a short family story about your resemblance; 3. Tell us who’s who by name and town, identifying both father and child; 4. Provide us a point of contact. Email to lookalikes@bayweekly.com before 1pm Monday June 10. Photos will again be voted on by readers and prizes awarded. ﵭ
Editor and publisher editor@bayweekly.com, www.sandraolivettimartin.com
Scholarship Corner Youth Soccer Pays Dividends ix graduating high school seniors each were awarded $2,500 scholarships in the annual Anne Arundel Youth Soccer Association 2019 essay contest. The scholarship is open to any graduating senior attending college or trade school who has played at least one season in AAYSA, the county league for Anne Arundel County. Essays are judged blindly by local educators and community soccer commissioners. The scholarship is funded by the league’s annual Arundel Cup Tournament, held Columbus Day weekend each year and open to youth soccer teams ages 7 to 18 from around the region. Entrants were asked to answer one of two questions: What experiences have you had in AAYSA that have taught you about the value of good sportsmanship? What personal strengths have you gained that you would like to pass on to younger players if you had the opportunity?
S
Volume XXVII, Number 21 May 23 - May 29, 2019 1160 Spa Road, Suite 1A, Annapolis, MD 21403 410-626-9888 • www.bayweekly.com
Adrianna Pena, graduating from South River High School, and Cyrus Johnson, graduating from Southern High School receive their $1,000 scholarships from the Anne Arundel Watermen’s Association. Not pictured is Alliana Sneade, graduating from Indian Creek Upper School. From left: Anthony Bibbo, Mount Saint Joseph High School, will be attending Villanova University; Jessica Zimmerman, Archbishop Spalding High School, will be attending Christopher Newport University; Cecilia Ramirez, Chesapeake Science Point, will be attending Johns Hopkins; Andrew Potter, Archbishop Spalding High School, will be attending University of Maryland College Park; Jesse Ekong, DuVal High School, will be attending University of Maryland College Park. Not shown, Alexandra Porzillo, Annapolis High School, will be attending University of Tampa. Helping Students Help the Bay hree high school seniors each get $1,000 of help in studying how to help the Bay thanks to the Anne Arundel Watermen’s Association, aided by
T
Sandra Olivetti Martin EDITOR IN CHIEF GENERAL MANAGER J. Alex Knoll EDITORIAL ANALYST Bill Lambrecht ADVERTISING ANALYST Lisa Edler Knoll ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Audrey Broomfield Donna Day Susan Nolan Betsy Kehne PRODUCTION MANAGER
Deale businessman John Hiser. The winners were Cyrus Johnson of Southern High School, Adriana Pena of South River High School and Alliana Sneade of Indian Creek School.
CALENDAR EDITOR Kathy Knotts STAFF WRITERS Krista Pfunder Boughey Kathy Knotts CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Diana Beechener Wayne Bierbaum Warren Lee Brown Dennis Doyle Bob Melamud Maria Price Jim Reiter Bill Sells
The Watermen’s Association hosts an annual October seafood festival to fund its scholarships. “Winners can study in any maritime or environmental field that will have an impact on the future of the Chesapeake Bay ecosystem,” said Bill Scerbo, Association president. The Association is a nonprofit established by the watermen of Anne Arundel County for the purpose of protecting community-based commercial fishing while advocating for sustainable fisheries and a health Chesapeake Bay.
DELIVERY DRIVERS Richard Hackenberg Jim Lyles Bill Visnansky
George Lawler Tom Tearman
© COPYRIGHT 2019 by New Bay Enterprises, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission prohibited.
SUBSCRIPTIONS $80 a year.
May 23 - May 29, 2019 •
•3
Dock of the BaY
Karen Murphy and son Andrew O’Neill Dawn Seibert and daughter Sadie Paddy We anticipated three winners, but our readers tied us at four. As for the promised prizes, winners will be hearing from prize-keeper Audrey Broomfield. –Sandra Olivetti Martin
Here’s Who Looks Most Like Their Mama The votes are in
B
ay Weekly readers have been looking closely at you, you two-dozen mothers paired with your sons and daughters in our 2019 Like Mother, Like Child lookalike competition. They’ve compared and contrasted for build, face shape, nose, cheekbones, eyes, lips and eyebrows, teeth and smile. And, as you’ll see, they didn’t let gender bias cloud their decisions. With the votes counted, the top four winners are, in alphabetical order: Krystle Castro and daughter Emma Heather Colabucci and son Kyan
Now, Who Looks the Most Like Dad? Send us your pictures
W
e had so much fun with this lookalike contest that we’re doing it for Father’s Day. For your Father-Child photos to appear in our June 13 issue. 1. Send a photo of the two of you. 2. Caption it with a short family story about your resemblance. 3. Tell us who’s who by name and town, identifying both father and child. 4. Provide us a point of contact. Email to lookalikes@bayweekly.com by Monday June 10. Photos will again be voted on by readers and prizes awarded.
Young Readers Write Their Literary Heroes Anne Arundel students place in contest
T
hey weren’t fan mail letters, but they did net their writers a reward. Anne Arundel residents Vivien Kaplan and Storrie Kulynych-Irvin both received prizes for their submissions to the 2019 Letters About Literature contest. Letters About Literature, a Library of Congress program coordinated by Maryland Humanities, asks students to write to the author of a
–Kathy Knotts
Way Downstream … Following the great white shark
O
–Sandra Olivetti Martin
Key School student Vivien Kaplan, above, and home-schooled Storrie Kulynych-Irvin, below, are state finalists in the Library of Congress program Letters About Literature.
Krystle Castro and daughter Emma, top left; Heather Colabucci and son Kyan, top right; Karen Murphy and son Andrew O’Neill, above; Dawn Seibert and daughter Sadie Paddy, left.
Come See Us!
N O RT H B E A C H , M D 2 0 7 1 4 (443) 646-5205
ketch22.net 4•
• May 23 - May 29, 2019
Come Get Happy!
OPEN
– Open 2nd Weekend of Each Month –
7153 LAKE SHORE DR.
n the afternoon of Monday, May 20, the organization OCEARCH tweeted us about something not seen before: verification of a 10-foot-long great white shark in Long Island Sound. The same 500-plus-pound predator, named Cabot, was tracked recently in Delaware Bay on its way northward, according to OCEARCH, the organization that tags sharks and collects data on their movements. Cabot was nowhere near as big as Mary Lee, pinged early in Delaware Bay, a 16-foot-long great white that weighed nearly two tons. That may not be comforting to folks headed to Atlantic beaches Memorial Day weekend. But great whites are out there, moving north as the waters warm, and thanks to OCEARCH, we’re hearing frequently about their travels in the midAtlantic. For instance, on May 9, a great white named Luna was tagged off South Carolina, near where still another biggie, 14-foot-long Katharine, showed up two days later. We’ve seen no recent reports of great whites in Chesapeake Bay, but scientists say that we can expect to host more of them given warming waters and the ability of these marauding creatures to locate abundant food sources. In the Bay, the most common big shark is the sandbar (up to eight feet long), which uses Chesapeake waters
salvage and repurposed furnishings 2990 Parkers Creek Rd Port Republic, MD 20676 443.532.5981
Private Parties Happy Hour Live Music (Tu,W, Th 5-8pm) Sunday Brunch
book, poem, short story, essay or speech to express how the work changed their view of the world or themselves. The 101 state finalists were honored at a ceremony May 4 in Baltimore. Kaplan, the Level One (grades 46) runner-up, is a student at Key School in Annapolis and wrote her letter to author Lauren Wolk about the book Wolf Hollow. Homeschooled Kulynych-Irvin earned the runner-up prize in Level Two (grades 7-8) for her letter to Helena Kelly about her book Jane Austen, the Secret Radical. Nearly 1,500 Maryland students entered the contest this year. Firstplace winners for each level advance to the national competition.
JUNE 7, 8 & 9 FRIDAY 3-7 SATURDAY 9-5 SUNDAY 10-3
OPEN DAILY 7 DAYS A WEEK
410-867-0949 • 533 DEALE ROAD IN DEALE
www.happyharbordeale.com
Centreville Trailer Parts LLC
Huge Selec"on of in Stock Parts for Your Business & Personal Trailers The Areas Largest Supplier of Trailer Tires & Mounted Tire Assemblies Construction / Landscape / Boat / Horse / Travel / Utility www.centrevilletrailer.com Annapolis 4102242887 2023A West St
Prince Frederick 4104143625 514 Solomons Island Rd
Kent Island 4107581333 1201 Shopping Center Rd
A L L S T O R E S A R E O P E N M O N D AY T H R U S AT U R D AY 7 : 3 0 A M T I L L 5 : 0 0 P M
as a nursery in the summer and fall. We’ve also heard reports about tiger sharks (10 feet long), that like to patrol the bottom for fish dinners. You can follow your favorite great white at www.ocearch.org.
In their time in Chesapeake Country, they’ll be nesting. The birds prefer to nest in marshy areas along the Bay. Quite often they make nests on floating vegetation or on top of muskrat
lodges. At a nesting area, the males court the females by bringing them food. A brood is typically three chicks. The babies cannot fly for the first three weeks. When they are old enough to fly, they will copy their parents’ fishing techniques. Eventually, at the end of the summer, they will travel south as a family and stay together until next spring. Forster’s terns have been recorded to live as long as 15 years but five to eight would be more typical. Their population declined due to human development in their nesting areas. Now, the U.S. population seems to have stabilized at about 50,000. –Wayne Bierbaum
An historic waterfront venue perfect for CORPORATE AND PRIVATE EVENTS Three Centuries of Chesapeake Bay History GARDENS OPEN DAILY FROM DAWN TO DUSK Shady Side 410.867.4486 CaptainAveryMuseum.Org
DAILY SPECIALS
LIVE MUSIC Thursday
HAPPY HOUR 3-6PM
www.petiegreens.com 6103 Drum Point Rd. Deale 410-867-1488
This Week’s Creature Feature
Forster’s Tern You’ll know this tern by its red-tipped bill and feet
H
ere’s another tern to look sharp for in Chesapeake Country. Caspian terns visited Chesapeake Country in late April (www.bayweekly.com/node/48319). They have now moved on to their northern nesting grounds. Forster’s terns have moved in after spending winter along the southern coastline of the U.S. They are one of the more common terns along the Chesapeake and especially in the marshy areas of the Eastern Shore. Forster’s terns are small, sharpwinged birds with red legs and a black-tipped pointed red bill. They fly fast and erratically, diving on fish, shrimp and small crabs.
Primary Care & Behavioral Health Services for All Ages Same day appointments available Accepting new patients & most insurances No insurance? We can help! Spanish translator on staff
Two convenient locations!
GET YOUR
ROCK ON!
from skirts to jigs, we have it all
+ Crab Supplies, too!
West River: 134 Owensville Road, West River, MD 20778 (410) 867-4700 Shady Side: 6131 Shady Side Road, Shady Side, MD 20764 (410) 867-4700
Medical Wayne Bierbaum, MD Jonathan Hennessee, DO Thomas Sheesley, DO Harvey Steinfeld, MD
William Jones, MD Nancy Bryant, CRNP Ann Hendon, PA-C Rebecca Roth, CRNP
Behavioral Health (443) 607-1432 Jana Raup, Ph.D., LCPC Joy Goodie, LCPC Barbara Ripani, LCSW-C Sharon Burrowes, PMHNP-BC Follow us @BayCommunityHC
410-956-0300 214 Mayo Road • Edgewater www.baycountrycrabbingsupply.com
BayCommunityHealth.org
May 23 - May 29, 2019 •
•5
Summer Calls for Picnics, and Picnics Call for Games Eight activities to keep you busy this summer … and that you can bring indoors when it rains by Bill Sells
H
osts of Memorial Day gatherings pray that the rain gods will stay away. Maybe their prayers will be answered. Or maybe not. So it’s a good idea to have activities that can be moved inside if need be. Best not to use a room with a crystal chandelier or a fish tank. These games can quickly be moved back outside when the sun returns.
Cornhole Everyone knows this game, though some know it as Bean Bag Toss. Invented in 1883 as a way to bring horseshoes indoors, it uses a gentler missile, bean bags, tossed by players at a slanted board 24 inches away for fun and 27 inches for tournaments. The object is to get your bags onto the board (one point) or in the hole (three points) without spilling your beverage. All ages. https://americancornhole.com Ladder Ball This game turns cornhole on a vertical axis and adds a cowboy lasso! Cowboy Cornhole? You toss a bola — two balls
connected by string — at a three-rung ladder. The goal is to wrap your rope around the rungs. The top rung scores one point, the middle scores two points and the bottom three points. All ages; no horses required. https://ladderball.com Beer Pong With or without alcohol, the goal is to toss a ping pong ball into a mug. The Paul Bunyan-style outdoor version uses volleyballs and trashcans. You don’t have to get drunk to play, but it helps in understanding the staggeringly convoluted and regionally diverse rules. https://bpong.com/wsobp Spike Ball If volleyball and four-square had a child, it would be named Spike Ball. Slap a lightweight but bouncy plastic ball, a little bigger than a softball, onto a tiny trampoline and wait for the other team to slap it back. Most active of all games mentioned with acrobatic diving for balls. Indoor rules — no diving, play off walls, ceiling out, definitely cover the windows. You can also get Spike Buoy for the pool. https://spikeball.com
VISIT OUR FARM STORE! Th-F 3-6, by appt. or find us at AA Farmers Market Sunday 10-1
Our animals are well cared for in a natural environment without the use of hormones or steroids. They are fed only quality grains.
BEEF • CHICKEN • PORK • LAMB • EGGS FEATURING ART BY
231 POLLING HOUSE RD • HARWOOD 443-336-8492
ANNE HANLEY nne is a professional Batik artist whose colorful blend of watercolors and hot wax on rice paper is a unique alteration of the centuries old art form.
10735 Town Center Blvd. Suite 1, Dunkirk 301-855-4515 • 410-257-6616
MEDARTGALLERIES.com
KanJam KanJam is Corn Hole for the athletic, combining Frisbee-type tossing with taking out the trash. Throw the disc and hit the can for two points. If your partner deflects the disc and it hits the can, you still get two points. If your partner deflects the disc into the can, you get three points. A smaller version is available for indoor use. www.kanjam.com Flicken Chicken Flicken Chicken is one of the newer old games to come around,
chicken tossing being one of the oldest professional sports next to Mongolian dead-goat chucking. You and a partner take turns trying to toss the rubber chicken into the pot. It is harder if the chicken is alive. All ages; no clucking or plucking required. Mini-Foot Golf Foot Golf, played outdoors by kicking a soccer ball into a hole, is the second fastest growing game in the nation behind Pickleball. Both games are a little large for indoor play, but mini-foot golf, like putt-putt, will work with a smaller ball that doesn’t leave the ground. Despite the name, you don’t need small feet to play. www.footgolf.us ﵭ
Furniture Barn Estate Sale Upscale Furnishings • Antiques • Collectables
A
PAINTINGS • PRINTS • GIFTS • POTTERY
Kubb Pronounced coob — not cub or cube — Kubb is an ancient Scandinavian game nicknamed Viking Chess. First, you take a sword and slice your way through … no wait, that’s not it at all. Actually, you toss wooden batons to knock down an opponent’s wooden army (blocks) and ultimately wooden king. After the Vikings chopped down all the trees, they had to play the game by throwing femur bones at their enemy’s decapitated heads. Talk about a sudden-death playoff. Hugely popular in the Midwest. www.usakubb.org
1251 West Central Avenue Davidsonville 443-203-6846 www.harvestthymetavern.com
FRI. MAY 24 & SAT. MAY 25, 9-5 & SUN. MAY 26, 9-3 5184 SUDLEY RD., WEST RIVER, MD
1948 PLYMOUTH SPECIAL DELUXE - ORIGINAL CAR
— Antiques and Traditional Furniture —
Oriental accent pieces: screens, mirrors, room dividers, pictures and artwork, a few brass pieces. also a wide selection of real wood chests, dressers, curios, night stands, dining room sets, lamps, bunk beds, sofas and much more.
Just In! Select Bedding
twin, full, queen and king bed sets with frames
Delivery Available
Browsing welcomed. Reasonable offers considered. Cash & carry. No checks. Credit cards accepted.
6•
• May 23 - May 29, 2019
From Authentic Mexican Dishes to traditional Spanish Tapas
My Hero Tony Pellegrino, one of the Greatest Generation by John O’Hara
M
y hero was killed in action, one of 416,000 lost in World War II. I’m sure there were thousands of others who lost their heroes during the war. Before the last of the Greatest Generation join them, I want to tell Pelli’s story. My western Pennsylvanian village of about 300 had an adult baseball team. My uncle John was the team manager. The ballfield was near our house, and I was constantly there with my uncle, so I got to know all the players very well. Our best player was a husky guy named Tony Pellegrino. Everybody called him Pelli. Our ace pitcher, he played center field in the games when he did not pitch. Naturally Pelli was my hero. I was seven years old when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941. After Pearl Harbor Day, nearly all of the players enlisted in the military. Pelli went into the Army. Before he was deployed, in May 1942, he sent my uncle a postcard from Fort Bragg. My uncle kept the card for many years and gave it to me just before he died in 1953 because he knew how much I idolized Pelli. I laminated the card and still have it. The card says:
$7 appetizers
Happy Hour (bar) Sunday thru Thursday 4-7 Friday thru Saturday 4-6
Late Happy Hour & Live Music Thursdays only 8:30pm-10:00pm
know. Tell all the family I said hello and hope to see you all soon. Bill and Sam said hello. –Pelli
Authentic Spanish & Mexican Cuisine 85 Forest Plaza • 410-266-7580 Lunch 11:30am - 2:30pm, Dinner 4 - 10pm
I do not know if Pelli got back home before shipping overseas. I think Sam was Sam Demaio and Bill was Bill Cain, who were also from my hometown. I knew both of them well and they survived the war. My hero was killed in action in France. ﵭ
Hello John, Still plugging along and hoping that we three can all get back soon for a little visit. Haven’t much time for ball playing but just a little so I won’t forget what little I
Tues-Sat 4-12 • Featuring Local & International Oysters, Crudo & Premium Tinned Fish 196 West Street • Annapolis • www.sailoroysterbar.com • 410.571.5449
The Country Store•Family Owned Since 1929 OPEN M-F 6AM-9PM & SA-SU 7AM-9PM
Southern MD
Stuffed Ham
Fully-Cooked Boneless Halves • 4 lb. Bags • By the Pound
“Our Own”
Freshly Ground Chuck •••
Frozen Hamburger Patties Steaks Roasting Pigs USDA Choice Beef
“Our Own”
Homemade Country Sausage
Salads & Sides
Links and Loose
Macaroni • Potato • Chicken • Watergate Mac & Cheese • Baked Beans • Cole Slaw Cucumbers & Onions • More
It’s Grillin’ Time!
Desserts
Fresh MD Crab Meat Fresh Salmon
Wine • Cold Beer
Cakes & Pies - Large Selection Old Bay Sausage • Old Bay Chicken Pumpkin Rolls • Carrot Cake Rolls Sausage • Stoltzfus Meats Grillers Dirt Cake • Rice Pudding • Bread Chesapeake Bay Bratwurst Pudding • Cherry & Blueberry Cheese Beer Bratwurst • More Delights • Chocolate Eclairs • More
4300 HUNTING CREEK ROAD • HUNTINGTOWN, MD 410-535-1304 • 410-257-2222
May 23 - May 29, 2019 •
•7
Pulling In the Year’s First Crabs You don’t need a license to catch a dozen, but you’ll need a little luck
er: The pressure was strong and relentless. Retrieving my line finger over finger, I eased my net into the water until it was at last just under jimmy. Then, scooping strongly, I had him! Shaken out into the splint wood basket, the big male, easily over six inches, righted itself and rattled its big pincers wide and menacingly. The first blue crab of the season is a good moment, especially one of this size. One of my other lines was already twitching as another jimmy tried to abscond with my bait. Big blue crabs do not like to share. Gently fingering the string, I reversed the crab’s run and began to inch it back toward my skiff. I was hand-lining out of my skiff at the mouth a small side creek with a freshly falling tide. Anchoring both fore and aft to keep the boat steady makes a great way to scout for concentrations of crabs in out-of-the-way places. If your needs are modest (a dozen or so crabs), they can be satisfied within a reasonable time, once you’ve found the right spot.
I
had just set the last of my four lines when the first run occurred. Surprised at the suddenness but carefully fingering the cotton line, I Sporting Life looked out of the corner of my eye for the net. Despite my pressure on the string, my quarry continued to by Dennis Doyle move away. My heart beat faster, too. One does not want to blow the first opportunity of a seemingly perfect morning. The crab bite at first light is almost always the best, assuming of course that the tides cooperate with a gentle and continuous current. Feeling the resistance on the line gave me confidence that this was a keepThursday
MOON
Friday
Saturday
5:48AM 8:18PM
5:47AM 8:19PM
5:47AM 8:20PM
set 9:50AM ———
rise 12:42AM set 10:46PM
rise 1:20AM set 11:43AM
SUNRISE SUNSET
Sunday
Crabbing takes only minimal equipment: a ball of twine, a bunch of chicken necks, a crab net and a measuring stick. The minimum size for jimmies this year, once again, is 5¼ inches with only males legal. You can take up to a dozen crabs without buying a crab license. With a license, you can
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
5:46AM 8:20PM
5:46AM 8:21PM
5:45AM 8:22PM
5:45AM 8:23PM
5:44AM 8:23PM
rise 1:53AM set 12:40PM
rise 2:23AM set 1:37PM
rise 2:51AM set 2:35PM
rise 3:18AM set 3:33PM
rise 3:45AM set 4:32PM
LASTQUARTER MOON
Thursday
take a bushel. Other regulations are detailed on Maryland Department of Natural Resources’ crabbing website. The early word this year is that we should have a banner season. The blue crab population is reported as the best since 2012, which I seem to remember as one of the last really good crabbing years we’ve had. The only problem right now is determining just where the best numbers reside. Some rivers could be teeming with them while other waters remain empty after last year’s bust, at least until the crabs redistribute themselves. Recreational crabbers have their work cut out for them, as the entire blue crab population seems to be managed to favor commercial access. Commercial crabbers get to set their trotlines first in the morning, and they monopolize the more productive areas of the waterways. Commercial trotlines are sometimes so long that you can’t see the buoys on either end. It’s best to explore your choice of an area thoroughly rather than lay out 600 feet of baited line or two dozen traps only to find out that a fuming waterman has discovered they’re too close to his line or you laid your line over his setup. I quit that day at a count of 10, enough for a tasty lunch for my wife and me. ﵭ
Tides H L H L H L H L H L H L H L H L H L H L H L H L H L H L L Annapolis 9:13AM 4:24PM 9:46PM 3:07AM 9:59AM 5:06PM 10:38PM 4:07AM 10:48AM 5:46PM 11:32PM 5:14AM 11:39AM 6:25PM 12:28AM 6:24AM 12:30PM 7:04PM 1:23AM 7:34AM 1:21PM 7:42PM 2:15AM 8:39AM 2:10PM 8:19PM 3:02AM 9:38AM 2:58PM 1.6 0.5 1.1 0.5 1.5 0.5 1.1 0.6 1.4 0.6 1.1 0.6 1.3 0.6 1.2 0.7 1.2 0.5 1.3 0.7 1.2 0.5 1.3 0.7 1.1 0.5 1.4 0.6 1.1 Chesapeake 7:56AM 3:03PM 8:29PM 1:46AM 8:42AM 3:45PM 9:21PM 2:46AM 9:31AM 4:25PM 10:15PM 3:53AM 10:22AM 5:04PM 11:11PM 5:03AM 11:13AM 5:43PM 12:06AM 6:13AM 12:04PM 6:21PM 12:58AM 7:18AM 12:53PM 6:58PM 1:45AM 8:17AM 1:41PM Beach 1.6 0.5 1.1 0.5 1.5 0.5 1.1 0.6 1.4 0.6 1.1 0.6 1.3 0.6 1.2 0.7 1.2 0.5 1.3 0.7 1.2 0.5 1.3 0.7 1.1 0.5 1.4 0.6 1.1 6:05AM 1:22PM 6:38PM 12:05AM 6:51AM 2:04PM 7:30PM 1:05AM 7:40AM 2:44PM 8:24PM 2:12AM 8:31AM 3:23PM 9:20PM 3:22AM 9:22AM 4:02PM 10:15PM 4:32AM 10:13AM 4:40PM 11:07PM 5:37AM 11:02AM 5:17PM 11:54PM 6:36AM 11:50AM Solomons 1.8 0.4 1.2 0.4 1.7 0.4 1.3 0.4 1.6 0.4 1.3 0.4 1.5 0.4 1.4 0.5 1.4 0.4 1.5 0.5 1.4 0.4 1.5 0.5 1.3 0.4 1.6 0.4 1.3
Fish Finder Rockfish are coalescing to the south, below Poplar Island and at Point Lookout. The stripers have been decent sized and taking smaller bucktails and Sassy Shads as well as hanging in chum slicks and tacking fresh menhaden. The eastern Bay is also holding some nice concentrations, but that’s all catch and release until June 1 when the tributaries become open for taking fish. Channel catfish has moved out of deeper water onto the 15-foot level. Inside the can at Hackett’s is reported to be holding some five- to 10pounders as in similar depths around the Bay Bridge. Crabbing looks bright, but there are no solid reports as to concentrations or locations.
Join us
May 25th
PENDE DE
T
Present this ad to
SAVE $10 ON A NEW SWIMSUIT!
e
IN
NT
Tree Removal Pruning Stump Removal re e C ar Cabling/Bracing Steven R. Graham, Owner 410-956-4918 Tree Installation
for our Summer
YARD SALE!
ISA Tree Risk Assessor • ISA Certified Arborist MA-5779A • MD licensed/insured Tree Expert #1964
EMAIL: independenttreellc@gmail.com
Good thru 6/14/19. Cannot be combined w/other offers
824 East College Pkwy. Exit 29B, Rt.50 410-757-6444 Annapolis
www.skihaussports.com Call Captain Trey 240-882-5926 • www.fishmermaniac.com
Family Friendly
Boat Slips + Amenities FULL SERVICE MARINA • FAMILY OWNED
HARBOUR COVE MARINA Summer’s never been this much fun!
N Swimming pool N Restrooms/Showers N Club house N 24/7 access N Fishing Tournaments N Barbecue/picnic area
Celebrating our 55th Year! 8•
• May 23 - May 29, 2019
2 2
Plus certified marine technicians
301.261.9500 5910 Vacation Lane Deale, MD 20751 www.harbourcove.com
Sunny Dandelions
DATE MOVED!
Take them off the WANTED poster and into the kitchen
T
he cheery bright yellow flowers of the common dandelion have been maligned by herbicide companies. The plant is on the WANTED poster for people who want perfectly green Gardening for lawns. One of Health the best ways to rid your lawn of dandelions is to eat them. Dandelion is our form of dente de lion, which is French for tooth of the by Maria Price lion, referring to the downward facing teeth of the leaves. The dandelion is a bitter green best gathered in spring and summer. All parts of the plant are edible and used as medicine. Dandelions have been eaten as a spring green in Eurasia since prerecorded times. They were mentioned in Chinese writings around the seventh century, and Arabian physicians used the plant around the 10th century. In the Blue Zone of Ikaria, Greece, dandelions are eaten as greens or made into tea. Dandelions have many health benefits. One cup of chopped dandelion leaves contains 103 mg of calcium, 218 mg of potassium, 5,589 mg of vitamin A (IU) and 428.1 mg of vitamin K, according to the USDA. It also contains inulin, a prebiotic that feeds gut bacteria. Its leaves have a diuretic effect on the kidneys, flushing them but not depleting the body of potassium as many prescription diuretics do. Dandelion greens also act as a mild laxative. The root has more action on the liver in that it is a cholagogue that increases the production and flow of bile.
Evelyn’s
Breakfast • Lunch • Brunch
SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 2019 Top Dog & Purrfect Partners Sponsors:
Dandelion and its corresponding tincture and tea have been traditionally used for arthritis, gout, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and abnormal blood sugar levels. It is contraindicated in bile duct obstruction and intestinal blockage. In a few people, contact dermatitis can appear due to sensitivity to the latex in the stem. Dandelion greens are now sold in farmers markets and some grocery stores. When picking wild dandelions, make sure they haven’t been sprayed or are next to a highway. The bitter flavor is delicious and will get all your digestive enzymes ready to do their work. Use very young dandelion greens raw in salad. Boil or steam older greens (and the roots if you like) and season with oregano, olive oil and fresh lemon juice. Or use in making pesto. Dandelions appear all around the earth. Wherever the plant grows, its long taproot loosens compacted soil, restoring minerals. There are some lookalikes, such as chicory and cat’s ear — both of which are non-toxic and even edible. Dandelions have one flower per hollow stem and no branching. ﵭ
Pawsitively Golden: Greater Annapolis Veterinary Hospital • Perfect Pet Resort • Cat’s Meow: Chesapeake Veterinary Surgical Specialists • Hoffman Animal Hospital • Liquified Creative • Mobile Pet Vet • Noah’s Art Veterinary & Boarding Resort • Purple Cherry Architects • Waugh Chapel Animal Hospital • WNAV • WRNR • Puppy Luv: Antech Diagnostics & Sound Imaging • Bay Weekly • Eye Care for Animals • Greater South River Animal Hospital • Stay Pet Resort • Precious Paw: Annapolis Bus Company • Brigid Haragan • Canine Fitness Center • CM Engineering Inc • Coldwell Banker - Jim Ehrig • Crofton Veterinary Center • Fence & Deck Connection • Happy Tails Pet Resort • Huffard Animal Hospital • Muddy Creek Animal Hospital • Veterinary Neurology & Imaging of the Chesapeake
Authentic
Italian Cuisine with a personal touch Charity Wine Dinner
Eat & drink for a great cause!
SUNDAY, JUNE 30 • 5PM
Find our menu and events at:
www.LunaBluofAnnapolis.com Open 7 Days a Week
5 SMALL COURSES + WINE PAIRINGS
$70/person, includes tax & gratuity.10% of each dinner donated to FRIENDS OF ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY ANIMAL CONTROL Deadline is June 24. Call 410.570.4648 or email erin@lunabluofannapolis.com
410.267.9950 • 36 West Street • Annapolis • www.LunaBluofAnnapolis.com
ෆ
Indulge Here or To Go Open 7 Days 7:30am3:30pm West Annapolis • 26 Annapolis Street 4102634794 www.evelynsannapolis.com
Donnerstag “Thursday” Nites
$10 über Burger on a pretzel bun
(über in German means: above, beyond, superior etc.)
& $8 Biergarten Margarita
with a Lindermans raspberry Lambic floater
friday Night Local Music at Bier Bar 8pm-11pm
w w w.o ld ste in- inn. co m 1143 Central Ave (Rt. 214) IN EDGEWATER, MD May 23 - May 29, 2019 •
•9
Special Needs Night
Thursday May 23
Families of those with special needs enjoy the museum in a relaxed and supportive environment. 5-7pm, Calvert Marine Museum, Solomons, FREE: www.calvertmarinemuseum.com.
Help for Caregivers Hear tips and info on services available to caregivers of the aging and disabled. 2pm, Crofton Library: 410-222-7915.
Public Garden Tour
Opening Reception
Take a guided tour of the two-acre English pleasure garden. 2-3pm, William Paca House, Annapolis, $10 w/discounts, RSVP: www.annapolis.org.
Meet artists behind the Ebb & Flow exhibit. 5-8pm, Annmarie Garden, Solomons: www.annmariegarden.org.
Dunkirk Farmers Market
6-9pm, 5th St., North Beach: 301-855-6681.
North Beach Farmers Market 3-7pm, Dunkirk District Park: 410-535-4583.
Yoga & Jazz
Opening Art Reception Join this celebration recognizing the county artists whose works are on display in the Image & Imagination exhibit. 5-6:30pm, Mitchell Gallery, St. John’s College, Annapolis, $10, RSVP: 410-626-2556.
Memorial Day Stars & Stripes Festival May 25-27 emember those who gave their lives in service to America. The town of Chesapeake Beach is a great place to do that. Its annual Stars & Stripes Festival honors our fallen heroes with three days of patriotic ceremonies, music, outdoor fun and a hefty dose of pride and patriotism. The United States Naval Academy Band Brass Quintet opens the festival Sat., May 25. Then hear from guests Pat McCoy of the American Legion Dept. of Maryland, Gold Star Mother Kelly Swanson and Col. Arthur J. Athens, USMC (ret.). 10am at Veterans Memorial Park at the crossroads of Rts. 260 and 261, Chesapeake Beach. Sunday, May 26 is Family Fun Day, with events from 1-6pm, including a kiddie patriotic parade (2pm), music by The Ryan Forrester Band, Shenandoah Valley Civil War Era Dancers, ice cream & apple pie social, Lego train display, arts, crafts and games; at Kellam’s Field on Gordon Stinnett Ave., Chesapeake Beach. Monday, May 27, American Legion Stallings-Williams Post 206 hosts a (10am) Memorial Day Ceremony at Veterans’ Memorial Park, followed by an open house at the Post and a (3pm) National Moment of Silence.
R
AACo Plan 2040 Meet with the Office of Planning and Zoning to discuss Small Area Plans for over 40 distinct communities. 5-8pm, Odenton community, Arundel High School (cafeteria): http://bit.ly/Plan2040.
Music at the Wharf Hear the Leonardtown High School Jazz Band. 6-7:30pm, Leonardtown Wharf, FREE: 301-475-9791.
Cove Point Park Meeting Weigh in on the Calvert Parks & Rec’s master plan for Cove Point Park in Lusby at this public meeting. 6:30-9pm, Calvert Pines Senior Center, Prince Frederick: www.co.cal.md.us/parksandrecreation.
Friday May 24 Centro de Ayuda Visit with a caseworker from Center of Help. 10am-3pm, Glen Burnie Library: 410-222-6270.
Relax and find your center at a class with live jazz music. 7-8:30pm, Montpelier Arts Center, Laurel, FREE, RSVP: www.pgparks.com.
Family Campfire Enjoy tales of animal migrations with roasted marshmallows and a community campfire. 7:30-9pm, Watkins Nature Center, Upper Marlboro, $6 w/discounts, RSVP: www.pgparks.com.
Saturday May 25 AACo Farmers Market 7am-noon, Riva Rd. & Harry Truman Pkwy, Annapolis: www.aacofarmersmarket.com.
Church Flea Market 7am-1pm, St. Andrews UMC, Edgewater, 443-569-2290.
Lusby Farmers Market 8am-noon, Sneade’s Ace Hardware, 11861 Trueman Rd.: www.calvertag.com.
Soul Food & Shoes
Senior Services
Ask a Master Gardener
Visit the Gospel Chick Food Truck. 11am2pm, Cobbler’s Creations, Sunderland: 443-964-5057.
Get an overview of services offered by the county’s Dept. of Aging. 2pm, Odenton Library: 410-222-6277.
Bring your bug, weed or plant in a sealed plastic bag for analysis. 9am-1pm, Crofton Library, FREE: 410-222-7915.
• Free Pontoon Boat Tours • ADA Observation Tower 10 •
´, WRRN D ZDON LQ WKH ZRRGV DQG FDPH RXW WDOOHU WKDQ WKH WUHHV µ
³ +HQU\ 'DYLG 7KRUHDX
Patuxent River Park | 16000 Croom Airport Road; Upper Marlboro, MD 20772 | 301-627-6074 | www.patuxentriverpark.com • May 23 - May 29, 2019
• Large Pavilion Rentals • Hiking, Biking, Equestrian Trails
• Canoe / Kayak Rentals • Patuxent Rural Life Museums • Primitive Tent Camping
Ski Haus Swap
Repticon Baltimore
Trade in your waterski and wakeboard gear, and shop new and gently used sporting goods. 9am-5pm, Ski Haus, Annapolis: www.skihaussports.com.
Rally with the reptiles at this conference of animal-centric vendors, breeders and educators; shop for pets and supplies, get expert care advice, meet live animals and win prizes. Sa 10am-5pm, Su 10am-4pm, Maryland State Fairgrounds, Timonium, $10 w/discounts: http://repticon.com/maryland/baltimore/.
Cycling Thru History Take a guided bike tour with a quick look at the mansion, plus stops at historic markers and Anacostia River vistas (ages 10+). 10am12:30pm, Riversdale House Museum, Riverdale Park, $6, RSVP: www.pgparks.com.
Sunday May 26 Swim the South River
KIDS Pirate Pizza Cruise Dress like a pirate and eat on board the Wm. B. Tennison. 11:30m-1pm, Calvert Marine Museum, Solomons, $15, RSVP: bit.ly/WmBTennisonCruises.
Owl & Kestrel Meet two of North America’s smallest birds of prey, the American kestrel and eastern screech owl. 12:15pm, National Wildlife Visitor Center, Laurel: 301-497-5887.
Swim or paddle in pairs, teams or solo, this five-mile open water course to benefit the Arundel Rivers Federation. 8am, Sylvan Shores, Riva, $200, RSVP: www.swimthesouthriver.com.
AACo Farmers Market 10am-1pm, year-round, Riva Rd. & Harry Truman Pkwy, Annapolis: www.aacofarmersmarket.com.
Riding the North Tract
Raptors Reign Learn about these birds of prey with licensed falconer Rodney Stotts. 1-3pm, National Wildlife Visitor Center, Laurel, FREE: 301-497-5887.
Dee of St. Mary’s Sail Sail aboard the historic skipjack Dee of St. Mary’s (age 5+). 2:30-4:30pm, Calvert Marine Museum, Solomons, $25 w/discounts, RSVP: bit.ly/DeeOfStMarysCruises.
Sunset Boat Tour Board a pontoon boat for a leisurely cruise on the Patuxent River. 6:30-8pm, Patuxent River Park, Upper Marlboro, $7 w/discounts, RSVP: www.pgparks.com.
May 25 & 26
Enjoy a family-oriented bicycle outing and experience this natural area on two wheels (ages 10+). Bring your bike, water bottle and helmet. 1-3:30pm, Patuxent Research Refuge, Laurel, RSVP: 301-497-5887.
Art and Flower Reception Meet oil painters Meg Nothingham Walsh, Lynn Mehta and David Diaz whose works are on display, paired with flower arrangements by the Hillsmere Garden Club. 1:30-3:30pm, Galleries of Quiet Waters Park, Annapolis, FREE: www.fqwp.org/gallery.
Spring Concert Series Hear Guava Jelly Duo; bring lawn seating, picnic, leashed pets welcome, no alcohol. 4pm, Hatton-Regester Green, Severna Park, FREE: friendsofaatrails@gmail.com.
Thunder Run Base Camp Festival The Maryland Health Society of naturists throw a weekend camping party with pig roast Sa and chicken barbecue feast Su; music and vendors on site. Davidsonville, RSVP: www.marylandhealthsociety.com.
continues on page 12
A Shoppe for All Seasons Unique Home Accents & Unexpected Treasures for Family, Friends and Celebrations!
(410) 257-7510 #2 WEST FRIENDSHIP ROAD
Friendship, MD 20758
DOCTORS OF OPTOMETRY Protect your eyes for a lifetime!
Helping people see better, one person at a time!
443.964.6730 • www.dunkirkvision.com 10335 Southern Maryland Blvd. #102 • Dunkirk, MD 20754
SEVERNA PARK’S ART GALLERY
Paintings • Pottery • Jewelry • Gifts Custom Framing • Restoration
410.544.2299 • 485 Jumpers Hole Rd. www.BenfieldGallery.com
Think changing seasons, cherry blossoms, bird nests, graduations and everything that Spring excites in the soul.
Paintings by members of the Annapolis Watercolor Club
A Brush with Springtime May 6 - June 15
209 Chinquapin Round Rd. #101, ANNAPOLIS, MD M-F 10-6 Sa 10-4 410.956.7278 www.marylandframing.com
Entrance & Parking on Virginia St.
May 23 - May 29, 2019 •
• 11
8
DAYS a WEEK
KIDS Coding Club
Tuesday May 28
Learn to use Scratch to code video games. 4:30pm, Deale Library, RSVP: 410-222-1925.
continued from page 11
Calvert Farmers Market 2:30-6:30pm, CalvertHealth Medical Center, Prince Frederick: www.calvertag.com.
Sunday May 26 Music at City Dock
AACo Plan 2040
Hear the Annapolis Junction Big Band. 6:308:30pm, Susan Campbell Park, Annapolis, FREE: www.annapolis.gov/summerconcerts.
Meet with the Office of Planning and Zoning to discuss Small Area Plans for over 40 distinct communities. 5-8pm, Glen Burnie High School: http://bit.ly/Plan2040.
Wednesday May 29 Tawes Garden Concerts
Deale Memorial Day Join a special remembrance with the Deale Area Historical Society in honor of generations of local veterans. 10am, Cedar Grove UMC, Deale: www.dahs.us.
We help Mom stay at home
Hear Crosswinds. Noon, Tawes State Office Building, Annapolis, FREE: 410-956-3094.
Crofton Farmers Market 4-7pm, Crofton Country Club: www.croftonfarmersmarket.com.
CPR, AED & First Aid Training
Café Scientifique Consider the science of anti-aging with Edward McDevitt, physician at Annapolis Hand Center. 6:15pm, 49 West Coffeehouse, Annapolis, RSVP: 410-626-9796.
I Can Series
Annapolis Memorial Day Parade Honor the men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice for our country, Memorial Day wreath-laying ceremony at Susan Campbell Park follows. 10am, Amos Garrett Blvd and West Street to Main St. and City Dock: www.annapolis.gov.
Meet with the Office of Planning and Zoning to discuss Small Area Plans for over 40 distinct communities. 5-8pm, Pasadena/Marley Neck community, Northeast High School: http://bit.ly/Plan2040.
Learn how to help in medical crises. 5-9pm, Southern MD CPR Training, Owings, $80, RSVP: 443-481-7796.
Monday May 27 Commemorate Memorial Day and Begin Summer
AACo Plan 2040
AACo Plan 2040 Meet with the Office of Planning and Zoning to discuss Small Area Plans for over 40 distinct communities. 5-8pm, Maryland City Russett Library: http://bit.ly/Plan2040.
Hear women in law enforcement and military discuss their career paths; sponsored by Calvert Commission for Women. 6:30-8pm, Calvert Library, Prince Frederick: 410-535-0291.
On Stage
Shelter Volunteering Naptown Anti-Dope
• Personal Care • Respite & Interim Care • Companionship • Meals & Light Housekeeping • Medication Assistance • Flexible & Affordable Professional Geriatric Care Management Services
410.571.2744
Call for a free consultation
This Community Engagement Session features food, music, storytelling, resources, education, harm reduction info, CPR and Narcan training, all to break the stigma of addiction and bring awareness to fatal overdoses in Annapolis. 11am-3pm, Morris Blum Senior Building, FREE: www.annapolis.gov/NAM.
Learn what it takes to volunteer and work with appreciative dogs (ages 14+). 6pm, Prince Georges County Animal Services Facility, Upper Marlboro: 301-780-7220.
Oliver! The Musical FSa 8pm, SaSu 2pm, thru June 9, Annapolis Shakespeare Co., $59 w/discounts, RSVP: www.annapolisshakespeare.org.
DNA & Genetic Genealogy Learn about the types of tests, the companies that offer them and the results you can expect. 7pm, Glen Burnie Library: 410-222-6270.
Crazy For You ThFSaSu 8:30pm, thru June 15: Annapolis Summer Garden Theatre, $25, RSVP: www.summergarden.com
Leonardtown Summer Music Hear the Southern Maryland Youth Orchestra. 5-7pm, Leonardtown Wharf, 301-475-9791.
FREE:
Tartuffe
Thursday May 30
www.response-seniorcare.com
Dunkirk Farmers Market
Licensed by the State of MD, bonded & insured. Residential Service Agency (RSA) License #R2435.
3-7pm, Dunkirk District Park: 410-535-4583.
Tu 7:30pm, May 28 thru Sept. 10: Annapolis Shakespeare Co., Reynolds Tavern, $45 w/discounts, RSVP: www.annapolisshakespeare.org.
invites you to attend Memorial Day Remembrance a special Memorial Day Remembrance
TheHistorical Deale Area Historical Society The Deale Area Society invites you to attend a special
honorofofgenerations generations of of local local veterans ininhonor veterans Monday, May 25,at 2009 Monday, May 27, 2019 10:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m. Cedar Grove United Methodist Church Cedar Grove United Methodist Church Veterans Memorial Memorial Veterans Deale, MD MD Deale, Rain or Shine
12 •
• May 23 - May 29, 2019
John Wick: Chapter 3 — Parabellum A former hitman fights for his life in this fantastic action romp
S
emi-retired assassin John Wick (Keanu Reeves) is having a bad run. Declared excommunicado for making a hit at a hotel where hitmen find refuge, Wick is under THE contract. OVIEGOER With $14 million on his head tempting his former colleagues, he has one hour to get out of town. To survive, he’ll have to fight his way Movie reviews by through New Diana Beechener York and travel round the globe to seek the Elder, the hitman society honcho to whom he has pledged his allegiance. It won’t be easy. But John Wick isn’t a typical hitman, and he’s about to show his would-be assassins why he’s a legend. The third film in the gonzo action series is a berserk, bloody good time. A former stunt coordinator, director Chad Stahelski (John Wick: Chapter 2) is uniquely qualified to direct a movie that’s all about the action. Dozens of fight sequences, including one remarkable brawl with antique guns and knives, are dramatized with style and artistry. Knives, books and even horses become deadly weapons. Stahelski holds the camera still for the action, offering beautiful long takes that show off intricate fight choreography.
matches up against wildly eccentric villains, Wick becomes the violent everyman we all want to win. With bonkers action, funny moments and beautifully shot set pieces, this is the best installment of the John Wick action franchise. It’s got everything you could want — great action, cute animals, lots of humor and a great lead.
four years of debaucherous activities into the weekend before graduation. The directorial debut of actress Olivia Wilde, Booksmart is a raucous comedy that looks at the female friendship and the pressures women face to succeed. It should be hilarious with Feldstein and Dever, both fearless, charismatic leads with great timing.
Great Action • R • 130 mins.
Prospects: Bright • R • 102 mins.
~~~ New this Week ~~~
Brightburn
Aladdin
M
© Summit Entertainment
The movie earns its R rating. Heads are blown off, eyes stabbed and jaws dislocated. If you’re squeamish, don’t get a big popcorn at the concession stand. The violence is also a great reason to see this movie in a packed house where you can scream and cheer along with the masses. The John Wick series sets itself apart from other great action flicks by creating a real world for its assassins. From the murder secretaries who look like tattooed pin-ups to behavioral codes, specificity makes the ridiculous plot and cavalcade of quirky characters seem nuanced and fascinating. Reeves is the calm eye of the storm. His Wick is a vicious fighter with a dry sense of humor. His lack of quirks helps us identify with him. When he
A twist of fate leads petty thief Aladdin (Mena Massoud) to the Cave of Wonders, where he unleashes a Genie (Will Smith) from an enchanted lamp. Now he has the world at his fingertips and three wishes to bring him closer to his dream: marrying the beautiful princess Jasmine (Naomi Scott). Disney’s live-action remakes have been hit and miss. Beauty and the Beast was a tragedy, The Jungle Book was a delight and Cinderella was so middling you’ve probably forgotten it. Still, remaking this iconic feat in animation is a huge gamble. Smith has the unenviable task of trying to make audiences forget about Robin Williams’ version of Genie and substitute his own. Prospects: Flickering • PG • 128 mins.
Booksmart Amy (Kaitlyn Dever) and Molly (Beanie Feldstein) are the smart kids who worked hard to achieve their dreams. They should be happy about their accomplishment, but they fear they’ve missed out on a part of their high school experience. So they squeeze
When an alien vessel crashes into a cornfield, the childless couple who find it are overjoyed. They save a small baby from the wreckage and raise him as their own. When the baby displays odd abilities, adoptive mother Tori (Elizabeth Banks) dreams he will become a hero. But this isn’t a comic book. As Tori’s son grows older, he becomes less manageable. He won’t be told what to do, he’s prone to violent rages and he’s starting to understand that everyone in the world is weaker than he is. Can Tori reason with her son? Or did she raise the end of the world? A twisted take on the Superman myth, Brightburn is a horror movie for comic book fans. Produced by Guardians of the Galaxy writer-director James Gunn, this movie comes with a comic book pedigree. The concept is interesting, but the script and the shooting style don’t seem to dive into the material. What’s left is likely a horror movie where the slasher happens to wear a cape. Prospects: Flickering • R • 91 mins.
Online Consignment Auctions — Every Week —
Cleaning MAID EASY Insured & Bonded
THE ORIGINAL CRAB CLEANING TEAM (410) 867-7773
email cleaningmaideasyofmd@gmail.com
Acupuncture is a covered benefit under many health insurance plans BCBS and Cigna preferred providers
Best of the Bay 2017 Winner for Acupuncture and Holistic Health Provider
WWW MDPAI NT C OM 209 Chinquapin Round Rd, Suite 100 Annapolis • 410-280-2225 382 Thompson Creek Mall Stevensville • 410-604-0111
Bid online! Pick up in Dunkirk!
Sick of being Tired, Stressed, In Pain? 301-298-9300
10745 Town Center Blvd. Suite 1
Dunkirk, MD 20754
600+ lots WEEKLY
OPEN TUESDAY-SATURDAY WE ACCEPT CONSIGNMENTS! Single items, truck loads or full estates Register to bid online at www.buntingonlineauctions.com or register in person at our auction house in Dunkirk.
Our team of Acupuncturists have been consistently voted Best of Annapolis by What’s Up?
— Molly Hutto, Dr. Sara Poldmae and Lindsay Fox — 53 Old Solomons Island Rd • Suite C Annapolis • 410-263-0411 www.meadowhillwellness.com
Find the news you want to read online at www.bayweekly.com
May 23 - May 29, 2019 •
• 13
ARIES (March 21-April 19): In the coming weeks, I suspect you will have the wisdom to criticize yourself in constructive ways that will at least partially solve a longstanding problem. Hallelujah! I bet you will also understand what to do to eliminate a bad habit by installing a good new habit. Please capitalize on that special knowledge! There’s one © by Rob Brezsny further capacity I suspect you’ll have: the saucy ingenuity necessary to alleviate a festering fear. Be audacious!
Free Will Astrology
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): What standards might we use in evaluating levels of sexual satisfaction? One cruclal measure is the tenderness and respect that partners have for each other. Others include the ability to play and have fun, the freedom to express oneself uninhibitedly, the creative attention devoted to unpredictable foreplay and the ability to experience fulfilling orgasms. How do you rate your own levels, Taurus? Wherever you may currently fall on the scale, the coming months will be a time when you can accomplish an upgrade. How? Read authors who specialize in the erotic arts. Talk to your partners with increased boldness and clarity. While meditating, search for clues in the depths.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): If there were a Hall of Fame for writers, Shakespeare might have been voted in first. His work is regarded as a pinnacle of intellectual brilliance. And yet here’s a fun fact: The Bard quoted well over a thousand passages from the Bible. Can you imagine a modern author being taken seriously by the literati if he or she frequently invoked such a fundamental religious text? I bring this to your attention so as to encourage you to be Shakespeare-like in the coming weeks. That is, be willing to draw equally from both intellectual and spiritual sources; be a deep thinker who com-
munes with sacred truths; synergize the functions of your discerning mind and your devotional heart.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): “People will choose unhappiness over uncertainty,” writes Cancerian author and entrepreneur Timothy Ferriss. He doesn’t do that himself, but rather is quite eager to harvest the perks of dwelling in uncertainty. I presume this aptitude has played a role in his huge success; his books have appeared on bestseller lists and his podcasts have been downloaded more than 300 million times. In telling you this, I’m not encouraging you to embrace the fertile power of uncertainty 24 hours a day and 365 days of every year. But I am urging you to do just that for the next three weeks. There’ll be big payoffs if you do, including rich teachings on the art of happiness.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Many eighteenth-century pirates were committed to democracy and equality among their ranks. The camaraderie and fairness and mutual respect that prevailed on pirate ships were markedly different from the oppressive conditions faced by sailors who worked for the navies of sovereign nations. The latter were often pressed into service against their will and had to struggle to collect meager salaries. Tyrannical captains controlled all phases of their lives. I bring this to your attention, Leo, with the hope that it will inspire you to seek out alternative approaches to rigid and hierarchical systems. Gravitate toward generous organizations that offer you ample freedom and rich alliances. The time is right to ally yourself with emancipatory influences.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Don’t wait around for fate to decide which decisions you should make and what directions you should go. Formulate those decisions yourself, with your willpower fully engaged. Never say, If it’s meant to be, it will happen. Rather, resolve to create the outcomes you strongly desire to happen. Do you understand how important this is? You shouldn’t allow anyone else to frame your important questions and define the nature of your problems; you’ve got to do
the framing and defining yourself. One more thing: don’t fantasize about the arrival of the “perfect moment.” The perfect moment is whenever you decree it is.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In the coming weeks, I hope you’ll regularly give yourself to generous, expansive experiences. I hope you’ll think big, funny thoughts and feel spacious, experimental emotions. I hope you’ll get luxurious glimpses of the promise your future holds, and I hope you’ll visualize yourself embarking on adventures and projects you’ve been too timid or worried to consider before now. For best results, be eager to utter the word MORE! as you meditate on the French phrase joie de vivre and the English phrase a delight in being alive.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): According to Popular Mechanics magazine, over three million sunken ships are lying on the bottoms of the world’s oceans. Some of them contain billions of dollars’ worth of precious metals and jewels. Others are crammed with artifacts that would be of great value to historians and archaeologists. And here’s a crazy fact: fewer than one percent of all those potential treasures have been investigated by divers. I bring this to your attention, Scorpio, because I hope it might inspire you to explore your inner world’s equivalent of lost or unknown riches. The astrological omens suggest that the coming weeks will be an excellent time to go searching for them.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Some days you need god’s grace,” writes poet Scherezade Siobhan. “On other days: the feral tongue of vintage whiskey and a mouth kissed by fire.” I’m guessing, Sagittarius, that these days you might be inclined to prefer the feral tongue of vintage whiskey and a mouth kissed by fire. But according to my astrological analysis, those flashy phenomena would not motivate you to take the corrective and adaptive measures you actually need. The grace of god—or whatever passes for the grace of god in your world—is the influence that will best help you accomplish what’s necessary. Fortunately, I suspect you know how to call on and make full use of that grace.
OPEN O PEN M MEMORIAL EMORIAL DA DAY AY Y 11AM 3PM 1 1AM TO TO 3 PM
Welcome Summer!
CONSIGNMENTS
Home Furnishings & Marine Accessories 661 Deale Rd., Deale, MD • 410-867-0480 SecondWindConsignments.com Open Tu-Wed 10-5 • Thur 12-7 • Fri-Sat 10-5
Wonderf rful Antiques
Fun Jewelry
Grreat Art
Fine Linen Clothing C
655 Deale Road, Deale • 443-203-6157
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Capricorn poet William Stafford articulated some advice that I think you
need to hear right now. Please hold it close to your awareness for the next 21 days. “Saying things you do not have to say weakens your talk,” he wrote. “Hearing things you do not need to hear dulls your hearing.” By practicing those protective measures, Capricorn, you will foster and safeguard your mental health. Now here’s another gift from Stafford: “Things you know before you hear them—those are you, those are why you are in the world.”
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “Love is an immoderate thing / And can never be content,” declared poet W. B. Yeats. To provide you with an accurate horoscope, I’ll have to argue with that idea a bit. From what I can determine, love will indeed be immoderate in your vicinity during the coming weeks. On the other hand, it’s likely to bring you a high degree of contentment—as long as you’re willing to play along with its immoderateness. Here’s another fun prediction: I suspect that love’s immoderateness, even as it brings you satisfaction, will also inspire you to ask for more from love and expand your capacity for love. And that could lead to even further immoderate and interesting experiments.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You will know you are in sweet alignment with cosmic forces if you have an impulse to try a rash adventure, but decide instead to work on fixing a misunderstanding with an ally. You can be sure you’re acting in accordance with your true intuition if you feel an itch to break stuff, but instead channel your fierce energy into improving conditions at your job. You will be in tune with your soul’s code if you start fantasizing about quitting what you’ve been working on so hard, but instead sit down and give yourself a pep talk to reinvigorate your devotion and commitment. HOMEWORK: Make up a secret identity for yourself. What is it? How do you use it? Testify at FreeWillAstrology.com © copyright 2019 Rob Brezsny You can call Rob Brezsny day or night, for your EXPANDED WEEKLY HOROSCOPE 1-900-950-7700 $1.99 per minute • touchtone phone • 18 & over C ⁄S 612-373-9785 And don’t forget to check out Rob’s website at www.freewillastrology.com
Trust Yoyouur r Car with
Hometown Collision Center y mom-and-pop business for 38 years UPCOMING EVENTS
5/25 & 5/26 All Things Lavender 5/26 Coloring Event w/Cedar Run Farm
For info: 410-349-0317 www.aacofarmersmarket.com 14 •
• May 23 - May 29, 2019
HASSLE; CALL US FIRST!
SISK AUTO BODY
www ww ww w..siskautobody y..com
167 Thomas A Avve, Owings, MD • (301) 855-5525 Mon thru Fri 9am to 5pm • FREE ESTIMA AT TES LIKE US ON
In April, News of the Weird reported that sweat bees were found to be living in the eye of a woman in Taiwan. Now, United Press International reports doctors at a hospital in Yangzhou, Jiangsu province, China, found a small spider building a nest inside a man’s ear. The man, identified only as Li, arrived at the hospital complaining of discomfort in his ear. Doctors said the spider was too small and fast to be caught with tools, but they were able to flush it out using water.
was on probation at the time (for allegedly threatening two people with scissors); he is scheduled for sentencing in August. • The Sioux Falls (South Dakota) Argus Leader reported that Brody Fuchs, 25, of Tyndall was arrested on April 23 and charged with second-degree burglary after a local man contacted police about items disappearing from his home over the course of a couple of years — about $500 worth of sex toys. The man had installed security cameras in the house, which caught Fuchs entering the home, staying for about 40 seconds, then leaving, according to the affidavit. Bon Homme County Sheriff’s officers searched Fuchs’ residence and found a number of toys the victim said belonged to him. It was unclear whether the homeowner and Fuchs were acquainted.
to KTVI, Hugo proved how much he loves his pals at the doggy day care: He ran away from home, navigated a busy street and covered more than a mile to get to Happy Tails, where he ran inside to greet his canine friends. • Baby’s First Shoes: When Olivia the giraffe gave birth to her son on May 2 at the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, zookeepers noticed his rear feet were not in normal alignment, a condition called hyperextended fetlocks. So the 170-pound baby, as yet unnamed, was fitted with casts to correct the problem, and along with them, his own custom-made pair of therapeutic shoes made of plywood and polyethylene. “I’m hopeful they will help him walk better,” zoo veterinarian Dr. Tim Storms told KIRO. He expects the treatment will continue over several months.
Chutzpah!
Rules Are Rules
Government in Action
Ricci Barnett, 41, refused to stop when a police officer tried to pull her over for driving the wrong way down a one-way street in Las Cruces, New Mexico, on April 21. The Associated Press reported that when she paused at a red light, the officer showed her his badge, to which she replied, “I don’t think so” and drove away. Barnett was eventually apprehended and charged with aggravated fleeing from a law enforcement officer and reckless driving.
Keith Cutler, senior circuit judge of Winchester and Salisbury in England, had what would seem to be an airtight reason for avoiding jury duty in April: He was scheduled to be the presiding judge for the case. Even so, when Cutler contacted the jury summoning bureau to say, “I would be inappropriate, seeing I happened to be the judge and knew all the papers,” the bureau refused to excuse him, suggesting he could apply to the resident judge. Cutler eventually had to call to explain that he is the resident judge, reported The Guardian. He noted that he would have been happy to serve under other circumstances: “I would have liked to have done the jury service to see what it was like and whether I would have liked the judge,” he said.
New Zealand’s House Speaker, Trevor Mallard, ejected National Leader Simon Bridges from the chamber on May 7, claiming that Bridges’ conduct was inappropriate during Question Time. “The member earlier made a barnyard noise of the sort that would not be accepted in a junior classroom,” Mallard said. But Bridges objected, saying, “I made no such noise and it is entirely unfair for you as a speaker to say that sort of unprofessional comment.” The New Zealand Herald reported that Bridges later said Mallard’s comments made him feel like a naughty boy; later inspection of video from the session revealed that Bridges had made a loud sound of disapproval after an answer given by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.
News of the Weird compiled by Andrews McMeel Syndication
Recurring Theme
crashed his riding lawnmower (with trailer carrying a red cooler) into the officer’s cruiser, reported the Miami Herald. “F—- it, I’m drunk,” Anderson told officers, according to an arrest affidavit. “Take me to jail.” He was so intoxicated, police said, that he failed a field sobriety test and “almost fell to the ground multiple times.” At the police station, Anderson accused police of poisoning him and requested that he be taken to a hospital, where test results found his blood-alcohol content to be three times Florida’s legal limit. Anderson has two prior DUI convictions and has not had a valid driver’s license since 1978. “It’s never a good idea to get behind the wheel drunk,” noted police Chief Jim Elensky, “even if that wheel is to a Craftsman, Massey Ferguson or John Deere.”
Awesome!
Crime Report • A 25-year-old man from Kapaa, Hawaii, will likely spend seven years in prison after going on a drug-fueled rampage in his former boss’s home in December. Forrest Broyles pleaded no contest on May 7 to charges that he broke into the home to claim his fair share of fish the two men had caught together. Broyles told Kauai police he was using the hallucinogenic concoction ayahuasca when he used a machete to break the glass front door of the home, reported The Garden Island. He threatened the boss and his wife, saying he “was going to kill him and chop him up,” then attacked the house instead, hitting a television, breaking windows, a sliding glass door, kitchen cabinets, the stove and microwave and a canoe paddle, among other items, amounting to about $3,000 in damages. “That is what the whole incident was about,” Broyles told a detective at the scene. “He owes me choke ahi.” Broyles
Florida Cuteness Alert • Hugo the dog is a frequent boarder at Happy Tails Pet Hotel and Playland in St. Ann, Missouri. In early May, according
A police officer in Haines City, Florida, was inside a local business on May 4 when he heard a loud noise outside. In the parking lot, he found Gary Wayne Anderson, 68, had just
Cinema’s Freddy Krueger has nothing on a winged resident of the Cascavel city zoo in Brazil. The Amazonian parrot started his life at the zoo about four years ago, after being shot in the upper beak during a raid at a drug den, which disfigured his face and earned him the name Freddy Krueger, reported The Guardian. In April, Freddy survived being bitten on the leg by a (nonvenomous) snake, which resulted in profuse bleeding. Just days later, armed thieves broke into the zoo and stole Freddy, along with another parrot and a cylinder of gas. But true to Freddy form, the parrot made his way back to the zoo, where veterinarian Ilair Dettoni speculated that Freddy’s deformities may have made him less desirable to the thieves. “I don’t know if Freddy is really unlucky or really lucky,” he said. The other parrot and the gas cylinder have not been located. Send your weird news items to WeirdNewsTips@amuniversal.com. © copyright 2019 Andrews McMeel Syndication
GRANDFATHER
CLOCK REPAIR Celebrating 50 Years
We also fix wall & mantel clocks
www.marylandclockco.com 1251 W. Central Ave G-3 Davidsonville, MD 21035 410-798-6380 301-262-5300
Award-Winning Waterfront Dining overlooking Mill Creek at Ferry Point Marina
ThePointCrabHouse.com 700 Mill Creek Road. Arnold, MD 21012 410.544.5448 May 23 - May 29, 2019 •
• 15
BAY WEEKLY CLASSIFIEDS BUSINESS SERVICES Creative business funding for new, established, startups, self-employed, home businesses, e-commerce, merchants, commercial, etc. $10,000 up. 410-501-0718, bayfundingbusinessloans @gmail.com Frank’s Video Conversion – Convert your VHS tapes, 8mm movies & 35mm slides to digital format. 301-8090988 or (C)703-216-7293. Federal employees: Need help with a federal EEO case? Can’t afford an attorney? Professional, affordable help is here. I am a federally certified EEO counselor/ employment law specialist. I have helped numerous current and former federal employees navigate the EEO system. Call Clark Browne, 301-982-0979 or 240-832-7544, brownie1894@yahoo.com
Automotive Mercedes Benz & BMW specialist services Volkswagen, Audi, Lexus & Acura in Calvert County. Family Auto, factory-trained Master Technicians! 410-257-7009, Service@FamilyAutoMD.com
CPR Training New and recertifications for health-care provider first aid and CPR. Individual or group training. Carrie Duvall: 410-474-4781.
Home Improvement C.A.L. PLUMBING, LLC – 40+ years experience in all aspects of plumbing. No job too big/too small. Certified Backflow. 410-320-0348. Garage doors, & openers, repaired, replaced, installed. Affordable Garage Doors, LLC. MHIC #49809. www.affordablegaragedoors llc.com, 410-867-1112, 410535-6446, 410-266-1654.
Stump Grinding, power washing, roto-tilling and ivy removal from trees. Reasonable prices. Call Mark: 410-216-9642. Sunrise Premiere Pool Builders. New concrete inground pools, existing concrete pool renovations. Call today for a free consultation: 410-349-3852. Windows and doors repaired, replaced, restored. Consultations. Established 1965. www.windowmaster universal.com or 410-867-1199. See Your Business Grow! 60,000 people read each issue of Bay Weekly. Those readers could be your customers. Call 410-626-9888 to get your business seen.
Wellness Restore your health with massage therapy, energy healing and Bowenwork. Relieve stress, pain, illness. Bowenwork Center for Wellness: 410 867-8776, dawn@bcfwellness.com.
HELP WANTED Caregivers Needed! If you have a caring heart we want to talk with you! Seeking high quality, reliable, outgoing individuals. Flexible schedules. ComForCare Home Care: 443-906-6283. Experienced CDL Class A/B drivers and dump trailer drivers wanted – Local hauling, FTC Aggregate Supply, LLC. Odenton, MD. Clean driving record and ability to pass preemployment drug screening mandatory. Excellent benefits: Health Insurance, 401K, vacation and paid holidays. Josh Edwards: 443-591-6867, JoshuaE@FTCAgg.com. Help Wanted – If you have a smiling face and an energetic attitude we're looking for you. Hiring all positions at Chesapeake Market & Deli. Apply in person, 7150 Lakeshore Drive, North Beach 20714.
Now hiring! Local canvas shop seeks experienced and reliable workers for top pay. For a confidential interview text 240-216-9774 or email rl@bayhrbr.com. Put Your People Skills to Work! Bay Weekly needs part-timers to sell advertising to local businesses throughout our readership of Annapolis, Anne Arundel and Calvert counties. Work a little, work a lot; generous commission for every dollar you bring in. Email Bay Weekly general manager Alex Knoll with resume and introduction: jak@bayweekly.com; 410-626-9888. Response Senior Care seeks part-time CNAs (with current license). Anne Arundel & northern Calvert counties. Must have reliable transportation and clean record. Personal care, companionship and light housekeeping are among the duties needed for our clients. Flexible daytime hours, referral bonuses. $12$13 hourly. Call 410-571-2744 to set up interview. Seeking Marine Fiberglass Technician. Must have experience completing cosmetic and structural fiberglass repairs. Attention to detail required. Join the only shop in Annapolis dedicated to gelcoat and fiberglass repairs. Top pay given for top skills. Standard benefits offered including health insurance, IRAs, year-end bonuses. Call 410-263-8980. Writers Wanted – Bay Weekly is looking for freelance writers to bring to life stories of people, places and things in Chesapeake Country. E-mail general manager Alex Knoll at jak@bayweekly.com.
Seeking Marine Gelcoat Technician. Must have experience repairing gelcoat nicks, dings, scratches, etc. Attention to detail required. Join the only shop in Annapolis dedicated to gelcoat and fiberglass repairs. Top pay given for top skills. Standard benefits offered including health insurance, IRAs, year-end bonuses. Call 410-263-8980.
MARKETPLACE Antique ice box. Good condition. Call 443-223-9299. Cedar Hill Cemetery, Suitland, MD. 1 double-depth plot. Good location. $1,200 obo. 301-475-2127, 301-247-0006. Chevy 454 complete engine, 30k miles. $2,200. 410-798-4747. Collection of Barbies from ‘80s and ‘90s. Collectors Christmas and Bob Mackie editions in original boxes. $4,000 obo for lot. Call 410-268-4647. French country oak dining table. Parquet top, pullout leaves, 2 armchairs. $975 obo. 410-414-3910. Girl Scout cookies for sale – Caramel Delights, Peanut Butter Patties, S’mores, Shortbread. $4 a box. 410-533-4827. Honda generator model 5000X with wheel kit. Low hours, always garaged. $2,149 new, asking $950. 301-261-3537. Lakemont Cemetery. Reduced to $4,999 for two sites in Bible B, first tier, lot 5. Call Dave: 410-570-1318. Loveseat & queen sofa plus four extra cushions, coffee & end table. No smoking or pets ever. $995 obo, 410-757-4133.
1996 Harley Davidson Custom Sportster 1200
EXCELLENT CONDITION! $5,600 OBO
Call Ron: 301-247-1214
Freedom to Fly
www.AmericanSprinter.com 410-897-4297
2008 Nissan Altima 2.5SL. 4-door, 150K miles. New transmission & tires. Excellent condition, clean, smokefree. Loaded options. Gray. $6,250. 732-266-1251.
Eastport boat slips for rent. Walking distance to downtown Annapolis. Monthly or yearly leases. Water, electric service at pier. Call or text 703-850-3412.
Sell Your Boat for One Simple Price. Boats priced up to $5,000 only $50 for 20 words; Boats priced above $5,000 $100 for 20 words. Bay Weekly: 410-626-9888.
Old Vale oak furnace for coal or wood. Eisenglass windows. Needs work. Call 443-223-9299.
Kayak, 18' x 26" approximately 45 lbs. Luan natural hull, Okume top. Single hole, oneperson. $1,800, 410-536-0436.
Grady White 1990 Seafarer 228G with 200hp Yamaha. Low hours, on lift. Sunbrella 2016 full canvas top, curtains, windows. Plus full canvas cover. Always maintained. 202-3655497 or 202-342-0001.
One Item, One Price Until It’s Sold – Up to $5,000 only $50; $5,000 & Up $100! Bay Weekly: 410-626-9888. Paul McGeehee “Baltimore” framed print. Signed & remarqued, #168/950. Valued $7,000; sell $2,500, delivery possible. Photos avail. 703-282-2135. Queen-size, dark bedroom set. Triple dresser. Moving. $850. 410-507-4672 Reduced: Two single cemetery plots at Davidsonville Lakemont Memorial Gardens, section Bible B. $2,000 each. 410-708-6659. 2008 Saturn Sky Turbo convertible – Green, 78K miles, good condition, $10,800 NOW $8,900. 301758-0278, text for pictures.
WANTED Looking for singers, songwriters, judges and new talent for metropolitan talent show. Call 443-598-2044 or email musicmarketing18@gmail.com
MARINE MARKET Commercial fishing guide license for sale. $2,500. Call Bob: 301-855-7279 or cell 240-210-4484.
Boat Slips Available Pirates Cove
Onan diesel marine generator, 7.5kw. Excellent condition. $2,000 obo. Call Bob: 301-752-5523. Rybovich Outriggers. 36’ triple spreaders. Center rigger. Very good condition. Call 301-752-5523. $900 obo. Universal Atomic 4 – Fresh overhaul, new carburetor, etc. $2,500, trades accepted or will rebuild yours. 410-586-8255.
Powerboats 2005 185 Bayliner with trailer. 135hp, 4-cylinder Mercury engine. Good on gas, new tires on trailer, bimini. Excellent condition, low mileage. $10,500. 301-351-7747. 1984 31' fishing or pleasure boat. 12’ beam, two 454s. All records, Ready to sail. Slip available. $11,000 obo. 973-494-6958. 1995 Grady White 226. 200hp Yamaha motor, less than 500 hours. Dual-axle trailer. Bimini, fish/depth finder. VHF & stereo radios. Extras. $14,000. 516-810-6196.
1985 Mainship 40' – twin 454s rebuilt, 250 hours, great live-aboard. $9,000 obo. Boat is on land. 443-309-6667. 1989 Parker Sport 23 with 1989 225hp Yamaha. Good condition, low hours. $8,500. 410-610-1727. Notice is hereby given that the following vessel has apparently been abandoned for over 180 days on the property of: Sisk Auto Body Inc 167 Thomas Ave., Owings, MD 20736; 301-855-5525. The vessel is described as: 1993 Chaparral 24' hull # FGBD0508A393, name Lazy Lady, white and blue. Application for title will be made in accordance with Section 8-722 of the Annotated Code of Maryland, Natural Resources Article if this vessel is not claimed and removed from the above property within 30 days of this notice.
Notice is hereby given that the following vessel has apparently been abandoned for 180 days on the property of T. Mills: 6616 Revell Rd., Tracys Landing, MD, 410-349-7307. The vessel is described as: boat registration DL8824AB, hull identification EKHL1912G506, Carolina Skiff, Mercury, 16', white. Application for title will be made in accordance with Section 8-722 of the Annotated Code of Maryland, Natural Resources Article, if this vessel is not claimed and removed from the above property within 30 days of this notice.
Marina West River
Sizes 22-50', swimming pool, WiFi, dock bar, mid-Bay access, Wednesday Night Sailboat Races.
443-454-4370
Are you looking for a job that lifts your spirits and puts your people skills to use and your good ideas to work? Bay Weekly, the newspaper people want to read, is looking for a a self-starter not afraid of cold calling to help manage and build its advertising base throughout Annapolis, Anne Arundel and Calvert counties. Salary plus commission and bonuses, flexible schedule, paid holidays and vacation. Email resume and introduction to Bay Weekly general manager Alex Knoll: jak@bayweekly.com
Here’s your chance to own a beautiful 1947 Chris-Craft 19' racer. Red & white with custom galvanized trailer. Current market value $65,000 OBO For details, call
410-849-8302
22' 2000 Tiara Pursuit cuddy cabin
1977 40' Jersey Sportfish
with twin re-powered 375 turbo cats. With Generator 400 hours, new enclosure & more. 59,900 OBO: 410-610-0077
Bimini, tonneau and side curtains. 4.2 Merc Bravo III outdrive with 135 hours. Stored under cover.
$15,500
703-980-3926
gayle@gaylematthews.com
Bay Weekly Classifieds • 20 words: 1 week $10; 4 weeks $38; 8 weeks $68; 13 weeks $97.50 • 410-626-9888 • classifieds@bayweekly.com 16 •
• May 23 - May 29, 2019
2007 Protatch aluminum pontoon, 5x10 marine plywood deck, trailer, two Minnkota marine trolling motors, livewell, bench seat plus two regular seats, canopy. Capacity 900 lbs. $6,900 cash. 301-503-0577 1986 Regal 25' – 260 IO, 300 hours, V-berth, half-cabin, head, $1,950. Other marine equipment. 410-437-1483. Seaswirl bowrider powerboat — 18.5 dual-console, 2012 Yamaha F90LA 4stroke, Sea Lion trailer, bimini top, dark blue covers, winter boat cover. Other accessories: anchor, lines, life jackets. Ready for spring on the water! $7,600. 410-980-0710; tbembenekjr@comcast.net. 2003 Stingray 20' cuddy cabin with trailer. Excellent condition. Good family boat. Ready to go in the water. $6,000; 443-510-4170.
1996 33' Sea Ray Model 330 Sundancer
2008 19' Trophy walkaround. Great condition, just extensively serviced. $15,000; 301-659-6676. 1985 26' Wellcraft cabin cruiser. V-berth and aft cabin, galley and bath. Great little weekend boat. Asking $9,000. 202-262-4737. 1956 Whirlwind Boat 14' fully restored with trailer. Solid Mahogany. Originally $4,300, reduced to $2,900 obo. Can send pics. Call 301-758-0278.
Sailboats 15' barely used custommade wooden sailboat, wide beam, lovely sailer, with new trailer. $2,450. 301-261-3285. 1973 Bristol 32' shoal-draft sloop – Gas Atomic 4, well equipped, dinghy. Needs TLC. Great retirement project. $5,000 obo. 410-394-6658. 35' C&C Mark I. 1973 rare classic, fast, fun to sail. Many upgrades including diesel, roller furler, Dutchman system, bimini, chartplotter. Deale. $14,500, 703-409-9187.
26' 1975 C&C. Needs TLC. Free; Must haul. 410-867-2737. 1982 Catalina 25 pop-top, fin keel. Well-kept. Upgrades, sails, furler, tiller pilot, Tohatsu 9hp outboard, $3,999 obo. Located in Edgewater. 201-939-7055. Coronado 25' Sloop – Excellent sail-away condition. 9.9 Johnson. New batteries, VHF, stereo, depth, all new cushions. $4,500 obo. 703-922-7076; 703-623-4294. 1980 Hunter 27', Tohatsu 9.5 outboard. Sails well but needs some work. Sleeps five. $2,000 firm. 443-618-2594. '67 Kaiser Evening Star – Draft 3'8", 25'4" LOA 5000#, 10' cockpit, fiberglass hull, mahogany cabin, bronze fittings, 9.9 Evinrude, transom lazarette, main & jib, 4 berths, extras, boat needs TLC. Rare. $2,000 obo. 410-268-5999. Finding New Owners for Good, Old Boats Since 1993. Bay Weekly: 410-626-9888.
Sabre 28' 1976 sloop: Excellent sail-away condition; diesel, new battery, VHF, stereo, depth-finder, new cushions. $7,500. Call 240-388-8006. Sailboat Club Share for sale. $6K Not a timeshare. Own 1/20th of 3 sailboats. Spa Creek Club since 1966. 443-683-3911. Sell Your Boat for One Simple Price. Boats priced up to $5,000 only $50 for 20 words; Boats priced above $5,000 $100 for 20 words. Bay Weekly: 410-626-9888.
Anagram
The Inside Word by Bill Sells
Weather Watch 1. M A L C
How many words two letters or more can you make in five minutes from the letters in AFTERMATH?
2. A I R N 3. L O C O
Aftermath literally means “a second crop of grass or other grazing vegetation grown after an initial harvest.” And I always thought that aftermath followed Social Studies.
4. S W O N 5. C R A L E
Scoring: Words of 2 to 3 letters 1 point; 4 to 5 letters 2 points; 6 letters or more 3 points. When playing with others, cross out the words you share. Your score is the remaining words.
6. T S E L E 7. L Y U D O C
Island Packet 38 1988
Salon/2 cabins; 2 heads; 2017: New; GenSet; AutoPilot; ChartPlotter; HDTV18"; Brightwork topside, salon, cabins and sole; barrier and bottom paint. 2016 New Starter Battery; House Batteries. Many extras. K/CB for Bay and Blue Water sailing. $96,500.
(443) 926-1567
CryptoQuip
stitution code, where A could equal R, H could equal P, etc. One way to break the code is to look for repeated letters. E, T, A, O, N and I are the most often used letters. Good luck!
9. S T R I T E W
YSK'V YWUMBUU LSBEURTA, ASE LSB NER QSBKY VS TSUR; WA LSB QRTWVVTR
10. O S O M O N N LSBEURTA, LSB NER QRTWRDRY; WA LSB © Copyright 2019 PuzzleJunction.com solution on page 18
CENWUR LSBEURTA, LSB NER YWUQRTWRDRY. –OWMZRT YR OSKVNWFKR © Copyright 2019 PuzzleJunction.com • solution on page 18
Kriss Kross Wood Working
Ready to Sell $10,000
3-letter words Ash Elm Oak
410-867-1828 or best offer
4-letter words Palm Pine Teak
1988 Carver 28 Voyager
$18,000
Upper and Lower Station Twin 350 Crusaders New Bimini Top & Upholstery inside & out. New Carpet. AC with Reverse Heat, Depth Gage, VHF, GPS Sam 703-609-5487 samhess993@gmail.com
5-letter words Beech Birch Cedar Ebony Larch Maple Nanmu 6-letter words Bamboo Cherry Poplar Rattan Walnut Wicker Willow
37 Snake or Milk, e.g. 38 Sanction 39 Atomizer output 40 Heroic tales 41 ___ mater 42 Lab eggs 43 Alaskan native 44 Inched along 45 Collar 46 Second largest city of Chile 48 Ballet move 50 Dust remover 51 Plant fiber 53 Gained a lap 56 Terminate 60 “The Divine Comedy” poet 62 Coyote State city 65 English race place 66 Jack-o’-lantern feature
Sudoku
Fill in the blank squares in the grid, making sure that every row, column and 3-by-3 box includes all digits 1 to 9.
7-letter words Hickory Redwood
© Copyright 2019 PuzzleJunction.com • solution on page 18
8-letter words Basswood Kingwood Mahogany Rosewood Softwood Sweet Gum 9-letter words Fruitwood Satinwood Tulipwood © Copyright 2019 PuzzleJunction.com solution on page 18
Crossword Across 1 “Nana” author 5 Canaanite deity 9 Crockett, for one 13 “Paradise Lost,” e.g. 14 Cork’s place 15 Consummate 7 Volunteer State city 19 They’re expected 20 Kind of cake 21 Uneaten morsel 23 “Hey ... over here!” 24 ___ generis (unique) 26 Small amount 28 Grand Canyon State city 33 “___ show time!” 36 Guys
The quote below is in sub-
8. N O C L E C Y
Cities Tour 11 City in north central France 12 Thanksgiving dish 16 W.W. II vessel 18 Sleeveless garments 22 Roofing Down material 1 Mahayana 25 Accho’s home movement 2 Birthstone after 27 Across, in verse 28 Hindu deity sapphire 29 Metropolis in 3 One of the Morocco Simpsons 30 Get off the 4 Stiff and sore 5 Mediterranean fence 31 Excavate capital 32 Hindu incar6 Have a bug nation 7 Comic strip 34 Pace “___ & Janis” 8 Suggestive look 35 One for the record books 9 Racket 36 “Time’s a10 Ratify wastin’!”
67 London art gallery 68 Toiletry item 69 Enough, for some 70 Old World duck
40 Smacks 41 Uris hero 43 The second Mrs. Sinatra 44 Behind bars 47 Badger State city 49 Praise 51 HHS dept. 52 Hang in there 54 Mythological ship 55 Mountain pool 57 Does something 58 Musical kingdom 59 Feminine suffix 61 Lister’s abbr. 63 Photo, briefly 64 Fine-grained wood © Copyright 2019 PuzzleJunction.com solutionon page 18
May 23 - May 29, 2019 •
• 17
REAL ESTATE For Sale Blue Knob Resort, PA. Studio condo, sleeps 4. Kitchen, bath, fireplace & balcony. Completely furnished. $22,600. Owner finance. No closing costs. Not a time-share! Ski, swim, golf, tennis. 410-267-7000. Thousands of potential buyers for just $10 a week. Bay Weekly: 410-626-9888.
Eastern Shore getaway. Updated, waterview Victorian has 3-4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Walk to beach, boat launch, crabbing & fishing. Minutes to St. Michaels & Oxford ferry! $265,900. Susan Lambert, Exit First Realty, 301-919-0452 or 301-352-8100: TA10176904 Lot for single-family home. Riva MD. 155' waterfront. 30 miles from DC, easy commute. $480,000. pttkou@gmail.com or 410212-2331. Leave message.
Escape the cold $229,000. Second home. Florida 55+ community in Royal Palm Beach. Spacious villa 3BR, 2BA, one-car garage. Diana Byrne Realtor: 561-707-8561, Douglas Elliman, www.delray beachrealestatepros.com
9
Ì Ê9 ÕÀÊ 1/1,
JC Solutions Jeanne Craun
BROKER/OWNER
410.610.7955 (cell) craunjc@gmail.com
Coloring Corner
Office Space
Semi-retired, female writer looking for room with private bath and kitchen privileges in North Beach or Chesapeake Beach. 443-624-2979.
Office suites, Dunkirk Town Center. Office suite available. $700 a month plus electric. Flexible lease, immediate occupancy. Good parking. 561-927-8806.
Chesapeake Beach
Beautifully appointed 3-story Waterview Home.
⁄2-Acre Lot - $90,000
1
1 ⁄2 blocks from the bay in beautiful Chesapeake Beach. 5BR, 3FBR, custom kitchen, baths and spacious master BR. 1
REDUCED TO $374,999
Mid-Calvert Co. 6.06 wooded acre building site.
Septic aproved. No HOA. No Covenants. Private but convenient to schools, shopping, churches. / Dares Beach Rd. near the end. $105,000.
Room Wanted
Rear View
Rebuilt from foundation up in 2008
Call 443-618-1855 or 443-618-1856
Marina shop space for rent. Located in large boatyard off Rhode River in Mayo. Newly remodeled, clean shop space with two overhead doors,1,000 square feet. Two offices included, 9’x12’ each. 1,200 square feet total with heat, air-conditioning. $1,600 a month plus electric. Call 410-798-4731.
Tilghman Island on the Chesapeake Bay Best Fishing & Sailing 5 min. from your door!
ALL STAR MARINE FOR SALE $5,500,000 Price Reduced: $4,700,000 On Sue Creek near Middle River on Chesapeake Bay, Mins. from I-95. 400+ covered high/dry storage racks. 250+ ft. of floating piers for worry-free docking. 3 fork lifts. 5.16 +/- acres zoned commercial Spacious office & retail store. Call Lou Grasso at (301) 751-2443 email ldgrasso@themarinaspecialists.com
Sell Your Home for One Simple Price – Your classified ad will run every issue of Bay Weekly until your house is sold. Only $100 for 20 words. Bay Weekly: 410-626-9888.
6770 Old Bayside Rd.
Offered by Owner
Day Break Properties
$257,000
410-610-5776
Buyer brokers welcome.
MR. ALBERT 410-886-2113
Details
1 Floor, 2-3 BR, open area kit/dining/lv. Rm, 2 baths + laundry. Sun room. Large garage. Pub. sewer, pvt well. Low taxes. Built 2001. Orig. owner. Non smoker. 4 marinas within 5 min. A quiet place of peace and natural beauty with sunsets to behold!
AVAILABLE FURNISHED
Picture Your Home SOLD! Run a 1-columnby -2" ad with picture for as long as it takes to sell for only $250!
Bay Weekly 410-626-9888
Bay Weekly
Picture Your Listing
SOLD
This size only $250!
Sudoku Solution
from page 17
Delivering the Best News for the Money Anagram Solution
Crossword Solution Cities Tour
from page 17
Kriss Kross Solution Wood Working
from page 17
Weather Watch from page 17
1. Calm 2. Rain 3. Cool 4. Snow 5. Clear 6. Sleet 7. Cloudy 8. Cyclone 9. Twister 10. Monsoon CryptoQuip Solution from page 17
– Michel de Montaigne Don't discuss yourself, for you are bound to lose; if you belittle yourself, you are believed; if you praise yourself, you are disbelieved.
18 •
• May 23 - May 29, 2019
May 23 - May 29, 2019 •
• 19