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A Portrait of the
DALAI LAMA HURRICANE Surfing
Extreme
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Nantucket Magazine September 2012
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WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH WE CALL IN MARINE
When Daily Construction found itself with three complex projects, all with spring deadlines, the company immediately turned to Marine Home Center for help. According to Frank Daily, “Our commercial client had just changed their mind on a key interior finish. Marine stepped up, and sourced the materials from two separate lumber mills, saving the day.” Days later, when Daily needed specialty hardware for a custom glass-roofed pergola, Marine answered his call. And to round out the week, when Daily was in need of emergency interior decorating and color consulting assistance, it was Marine who delivered the goods. Whether it’s a large commercial rehab or a home kitchen renovation, when the job gets tough, call in Marine.
marinehomecenter.com - 134 Orange Street, Nantucket - (508) 228-0900
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FRANK DAILY, DAILY CONSTRUCTION
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What is the best way to protect your legacy?
andscape of Champoux L ux po m ha C e uk L Ben &
Work and success may define us during the height of our careers but success is ultimately determined by our families and what we leave behind. Prudent, thoughtful and strategic management will largely determine how your family and your business will be positioned for the next generation. Everything we do is designed to treat your family and your business as if it were our own. Let Dunmoyle Financial Services share with you what many Nantucketers have already experienced; the firm so focused on your financial future that we become an indispensable family resource.
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DUNMOYLE FINANCIAL SERVICES, LLC Years of experience serving individuals and businesses on and off Nantucket
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For further information or a personal meeting please contact Robert Barmen at 508-283-4111 or rbarmen@dunmoyle.com.
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Nantucket
Editor & Publisher Bruce A. Percelay Managing Editor Robert S. Cocuzzo Art Director Paulette Chevalier
VOWS
The words “I do� have special meaning on Nantucket. There is something magical about getting married on this island,
Head Photographers Nathan Coe Kit Noble
which is why nearly two hundred couples tie the knot here each year, thus making this small strip of sand a mini Las
Operations Consultant Adrian Wilkins Contributors Robert Barsanti Alexandra Cody Juliet Kennelly Jen Laskey Brian Mohr Amy Roberts Ryder Ziebarth Photographers Jordi Cabre Zofia Crosby Michael Diskin Cary Hazlegrove Katie Kaizer Shelly Kroeger Kali Lu Brian Mohr Emily Johnson Advertising Director Fifi Greenberg Advertising Sales Audrey Wagner Publisher N. LLC Chairman: Bruce A. Percelay
Nantucket Times 17 North Beach Street Nantucket, MA 02554 508-228-1515
Vegas. Weddings are also big business, providing the local economy a wedding present of tens of millions of dollars each year. Accordingly, our September issue focuses on Nantucket weddings and will hopefully encourage even more people to Editor & Publisher
exchange their vows right here.
If getting to the church on time is a concern, we summarize three extraordinary means of transportation, ranging from the fastest private jet in the world, to a car that morphs into a plane, to a water-propelled jet pack. And for those who savor wonderful wedding food from local caterers and restaurants, it is reassuring to know that there is a generation of young culinary talent being cultivated on the island by Nantucket’s Junior Chef Competition, of which N Magazine is a proud sponsor. We checked in with these culinary up-and-comers to see what they have cooking for this year’s competition being held September 30th. From the serenity of weddings, we dive into a story of thrill-seekers who get their adrenaline rush by surfing during the September hurricane season. Also in the realm
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of fall sports, we enter the huddle with the Boys & Girls Club football team and learn how this program is helping the Nantucket High School Whalers return to their former glory. While many lament the end of summer as we know it, those familiar with Nantucket know that September can be the most beautiful month of the year, providing not only brides and grooms the perfect time to enjoy the island, but fall visitors as well. Take advantage of the warm waters, mild temperatures and relatively quiet streets and have a happy fall.
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ŠCopyright 2011 Nantucket Times. Nantucket Times (N Magazine) is published seven times annually from April through December. Reproduction of any part of this publication is prohibited without written permission from the publisher. Editorial submissions may be sent to Editor, Nantucket Times, 17 North Beach Street, Nantucket, MA 02554. We are not responsible for unsolicited editorial or graphic material. Office (508) 228-1515 or fax (508) 228-8012. Signature Printing and Consulting 800 West Cummings Park Suite 2900 Woburn
Bruce A. Percelay, Editor & Publisher
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Best wishes,
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SEPTEMBER
2012
59 A RECIPE FOR SUCCESS
79 WEDDING SECTION
67 THE BEE TEAM
83 FLOWER POWER
73 RIDERS ON THE STORM
97 WALKING DOWN THE ISLE
Enter the kitchen with the three student cooking teams that will go head-to-head in this fall’s fifth annual Junior Chef Competition.
30 A PORTRAIT OF HIS HOLINESS AT HOME
Local artist Lisa Sawlit unveils her masterpiece painting of the Dalai Lama.
Beekeeping is more than a flight of fancy on Nantucket. Meet some local honey farmers and learn what all the buzz is about.
39 A HERO’S WELCOME
Longtime summer resident, Tom McCann, established Holidays for Heroes this summer, a nonprofit giving wounded veterans a vacation on the island as well as hope for a better future.
While some Nantucketers batten down the hatches for hurricane season, a select few toss on wet suits, wax up their surfboards, and paddle out into the swell.
50 COOL YOUR JETS
From flowers to food, dresses to decor, revel in Nantucket weddings in all their glory.
Local florist, Michael Molinar, demonstrates how to make the perfect wedding centerpiece.
From no-shows to cold feet, Reverend Ted Anderson shares some memories of his forty-two years helping couples tie the knot on Nantucket.
107 TIMELESS WEDDING FASHION
Take a trip in three cutting-edge aircrafts and see how flight is reaching new, breathtaking heights on Nantucket.
The NHA blows the dust off from some wedding wear of yesteryear.
September 2012
N The Local Magazi
44 THE LONGEST YARD
September
WEDDINEditGion
ide
ne Read Worldw
Go into the huddle of the Boys and Girls Club football team, and learn the plays that are winning the Whalers’ football program a stronger future.
A Portrait of the
DALAI LAMA
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Surfin
PHOTO BY NATHAN COE
Extreme
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ucket’s Mixing it up with Nant
JUNIOR CHEFS
ine September 2012
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In celebration of wedding season, photographer Kali Lu captures a beautiful bride behind the veil for our September cover.21
GUESTCONTRIBUTORS MICHAEL MOLINAR Flowers on Chestnut’s Michael Molinar has brought beautiful blooms to more than two thousand weddings over the past twenty-eight years. In that time, he’s seen it all, fielding every possible flower request imaginable. For this September wedding edition, Michael takes us through the making of a centerpiece. Although he shows us how easy the project can be, Michael discourages a bride from taking up the task on her special day: “It’s like making your own wedding cake. There’s nothing to it…we can all make a cake. But on your wedding day, let others do it for you.”
JEN LASKEY “The hum of tens of thousands of honeybees buzzing beneath your bare fingertips might not be especially comforting,” says frequent N contributor, Jen Laskey, “but spend a little time talking to a beekeeper while examining a hive, and you may just change your mind—along with and your whole global perspective.” For this September issue, Jen Laskey met up with some of the island’s beekeepers to see what all the buzz is about. Jen is a freelance writer, specializing in food, wine/spirits, travel, health, and Italian gastronomic culture. Her writing has appeared in Fodor’s Travel guidebooks, Everyday Health publications, Reader’s Digest, Elevation Outdoors, and Playboy, among other print and online publications. She has also been a ghostwriter to several best-selling authors.
ROBERT BARSANTI Bob Barsanti lived on Nantucket for twenty years. He taught in the schools, lost golf balls on all of the island’s courses, and has eaten in all of the island’s restaurants. In the summer, he is often at the beach with two charming boys. When the snow falls, he lives and teaches in the Berkshires. Bob is author of three books, including Sand in My Shoes and Rolling in Surf. For
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Nantucket Whalers football and how today’s Boys & Girls Club program is winning Nantucket High School football a promising future.
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this September issue, Bob muses upon the glory days of
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’Nsider news
tidbits
items of interest
The Nantucket Beach Club For many couples tying the knot on Nantucket, a
Beach Club at Jetties. Brought to the island by
wedding celebration on the beach is the ultimate
Longwood Events this past August, the Nantucket Chef David Blessing brings flair to the local fare,
dream. The logistics behind that waterfront
Beach Club coordinates every aspect of the recep- creating dazzling plates with seasonal Nantucket
wedding, however, can be a certified nightmare.
tion. With award-winning venues such as Belle
Tents, caterers, musicians, family and friends are
Mer in Newport, Wychmere Beach Club in Cape décor is catered to each couple’s specifications.
all thrown together amidst sand, wind, and
Cod, Alden Castle and State Room in Boston,
Whether dining in the open-air terrace of The
unpredictable weather. Just ask the Boston Pops.
Longwood has perfected the planning and
Jetties or in a tent set on the sand, the Nantucket
execution of major events over its ten-year history.
produce and local fresh fish. Meanwhile, the
Fortunately, it has just become a little bit easier
Beach Club can create a stylish, sophisticated
to celebrate by the sea, courtesy of Longwood
atmosphere that will propel a Nantucket wedding
Events and The Jetties, which will be rebranded
to the next level.
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next year for special events as The Nantucket
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’Nsider news
tidbits
items of interest
DOUBLE
TEAM
Identical twins, Louise and Andrea Masano, share both a love for Nantucket as well as unique artistic talent. Creators of a new television pilot that aired in New York called “Couture Du Jour,” each sister has developed her own artistic specialty. Andrea created a clothing label called “Top of Nantucket,” a line of women’s blouses that is now in three hundred stores across the country. According to Andrea, “The design is becoming the ‘Nantucket red’ of tops.” Meanwhile, Louise, whose creative credentials include a successful career in advertising, is an accomplished painter who has developed a following in dog portraiture. Her K9 canvasses fetch some serious money, making her one of the region’s top dogs when it comes to pet portraiture. So while the Masano sisters may be identical in appearance, their art is completely unique and worth more than a double take.
A STROKE OF BRILLIANCE The waters of Nantucket will come alive on Saturday
Race directors, Jason Bridges and Kit Noble,
October 13 , as islanders off all ages take to the harbor
have marked off courses for serious competitors
in kayaks and stand-up paddleboards for the first ever
as well as young, first-time paddlers. “On Nantucket,
“Nantucket Paddle Battle: The Race for Clean Water.”
it can be easy to take water for granted. I mean,
Organized by the Maria Mitchell Association and the
let’s face it, we’re surrounded by the stuff,” says race
Nantucket Land Council, the Paddle Battle seeks to
director, Kit Noble. “Hopefully, this race will raise
raise awareness about local water quality. “Protecting
awareness and help people realize that the quality
our ground water, the sole source of drinking water
of our water is not just another drop in the bucket.”
on Nantucket through education and awareness is an
Participants are encouraged to register for the race
important priority for the island,” says Janet Schulte,
online and to follow the MMA’s and the Land
Executive Director of MMA. “All coastal communities
Council’s Facebook page for up-to-date race
have experienced serious declines in water quality as a
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water management.”
result of anthropogenic nutrient overloading caused by a number of factors including storm drain run-off, the improper application of fertilizer and insufficient waste
information and registration procedures.
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His A Portrait of
Holiness at Home WRITTEN BY ROBERT S. COCUZZO
PHOTOGRAPHY BY KIT NOBLE
Nantucket artist, Lisa Sawlit, reveals her greatest masterpiece yet, a life-size portrait of the Dalai Lama. Later this fall, the Dalai Lama himself will be asked to bless the painting, which will then be offered at a private auction and could end up touring the world. Just before being shipped off the island, Lisa gave N Magazine an exclusive look at the painting and shared its story.
Peace Prize in 1989, or most recently when he was presented the
Montserrat College of Art, Lisa opted to paint the portrait on
Templeton Prize, of which he donated the $1.7 million award to
Nantucket as the island afforded her tranquility and complete focus.
charities, mainly to India’s Save the Children fund. His hands are
In fact, the island even made its way into the painting. “The color
lightly folded over lush robes, golden yellow in hue, the color he
of the skyline is a dead match to the north sky on an April day on
wears when teaching his message of “loving kindness.” In the
Nantucket,” Lisa indicates.
distance over his right shoulder is Potala Palace in Tibet, the winter home where he once resided before being forced into exile by the
Picking up the brush at the age of eleven and eventually earning a
Chinese in 1959. Mount Everest peaks out of the mist over his other
bachelor’s and master’s degree in fine arts from Tufts University, Lisa
shoulder, while two Tibetan snow leopards flank his sides. Finally,
possesses incomparable skill as a classically trained painter. Turn
an outpouring of lotus flowers, Tibetan symbols of enlightenment, lines
to page six of her 2008 book, Drawing the Cast, and she charts her
the bottom of the canvas. “The whole painting has been composed as
pedagogical lineage as a master artist back through the ages to names
a fantasy landscape; it’s not a geographical reality,” Lisa explains.
like Titian, Raphael, and Leonardo. And just like Leonardo, Lisa has
“It follows the psychic landscape of how we think and dream of the
dabbled in more than just paint over her career. In addition to her
world and the places we’ve lived and belonged to.” In this case, the
tenure at Wisdom Publications, she’s studied philosophy, trained in
dream belongs to the Dalai Lama: to be home again.
ophthalmology, worked in philanthropy, and even tried her hand at finance, serving as creative director at Fidelity.com from 1997 to
Lisa Sawlit made her home on Nantucket four years ago, after
2001. Yet it was ultimately her passion for painting that enabled Lisa
summering on the island since the early eighties. Splitting time
to fulfill the Dalai Lama’s instruction: Learn to concentrate.
between here and Boston, where she has a studio and teaches at
A
lthough Lisa Sawlit had been
working for the Dalai Lama for nearly a decade, she had never met the man. As artistic director of Wisdom Publications, Lisa designed and produced many of
the Dalai Lama’s books. Now, in September 2003, at the Kurukulla Center in
Medford, Massachusetts, she was finally to meet Tenzin Gyatso, His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama. “He came out to a porch overlooking this little garden to talk with us, and in front of him stood a table where all the books I had made for him were set— the many years of my labor in front of this most holy man,” Lisa remembers today, her eyes distant in the memory. “And he looked at me and said, ‘You have a good mind. Use it. Learn to concentrate.’” A decade later, Lisa stands before a life-size portrait of the Dalai Lama in her Nantucket cottage. Titled simply “Tenzin Gyatso, The Fourteenth Dalai Lama of Tibet,” the six-foot-by-four-foot oil painting dominates the space—not in size necessarily, but in subject matter. The Dalai Lama stands perfectly in the center of the canvas, his face cast in the same beatific look as when he received the Nobel
T
echnically speaking, the painting is a triumph. From the execution of the figure, to the drapery
After a year painting the piece, Lisa describes its completion as the “liquid mercury moment.” “When you pour out mercury from a thermometer and let it land on a table or
of the robes, to the anatomy of the
a piece of glass, you can’t pick it up. It will escape your
cats, to the landscape, the architecture,
fingers,” she explains. “When you’re that close to having
the vegetation, all is rendered with
the highest level of absolute accuracy, color, value, hue,
exquisite precision. Achieving this
required two years of research and sketching
before even a single tube of paint was pushed
the touch of the paint, and there is nothing you can improve, you have met the limit of your skill and insight— you’ve struck liquid mercury! At that point the painting
onto her palette. She sourced over 350 images and
is done.” With that, Lisa put down her brush and stepped
composed the phantasmal scene virtually in Photoshop.
out on to her back porch. A light rain had just passed
This computer-generated sketch then became her cartoon
over the island, and a brilliant double rainbow emerged
to paint from. For someone as classically trained as Lisa,
through the mist, soaring across Nantucket’s North sky.
the use of Photoshop to create the image’s composition is
The painting was indeed complete.
noteworthy. “I get the feeling that Leonardo would have used Photoshop as a sketch tool if it were available during
On October 16th, the Dalai Lama will come face to face
the Renaissance,” Lisa says, “as would have Raphael
with Lisa’s painting at a private ceremony at the Kurukulla
and Michelangelo.” She continues, “One can chronicle
Center. She hopes the Dalai Lama will consecrate the
the studio practices of the old masters all the way up to
painting in a Buddhist ritual known as rab-nay, thus
William Bouguereau and discover that many of the finest
elevating the work to what some might deem the “sacred
painters in the world combined state of the art optical
relic of a saint.” From there, it will go into a private
tools and empirical study to make their magnificent images.”
auction, of which all the proceeds will be donated to the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive, a nonprofit dedicated to
The photos she painted from were carefully selected,
publishing, promoting and preserving the teachings of
from the images of the Dalai Lama, which were taken
Tibetan Buddhist masters, including the Dalai Lama.
by photographer, Michel Henry, during a teaching His Holiness gave in France, to the lotus flowers, which were
While high-end art dealers and auction house directors
grown and photographed by lifelong botanist, Bahman
hesitate to even speculate a starting bid, the painting is
Farzad. Lisa did have the benefit of primary sources such
likely to sell in the hundreds of thousands, maybe even
as the robes, which she used to dead match the color in
a million. “Shelly Farmer of Hirschl Adler in New York
Nantucket’s natural light.
City compared the painting’s auction potential to Jackie Onassis’ pearls,” Lisa notes. “She pointed out that the
Beyond her technical ability, Lisa’s familiarity with
pearls are worth something on their own, but it’s the
Tibetan Buddhist tradition allowed her to inundate the
story surrounding the pearls that made them take off at
painting with allegory and symbolism. Take, for instance,
auction.” While Lisa hopes her painting donation will
the two snow leopards posed at either side of the Dalai
fetch a handsome sum for the sake of the Archive, this is
Lama. One of the rarest protected species in the world,
only part of what moves her. She speaks about the work
the Tibetan snow leopards are symbolic of the fragility
reverently, as if His Holiness were sitting there in the
of Tibet and the surrounding environment. Lisa poses
room with us. “I knew I would relinquish this picture to
them like the mythical snow lions of the Tibetan flag,
the world because I knew what it was,” Lisa says. “It’s
protectors of the Buddha and Tibet.
going to go in whatever auspicious direction it takes,
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may never see it again.” Though the painting may travel to distant lands, Lisa will always remember where its narrative began: here on Nantucket.
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allowing other people to become part of its narrative. I
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Jeremy Freid, Stacey Lee, Jason S. Weissman
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Erik Booth, Tana Bramley, Jay Bisognano, Wil Catlin, Doug Denny-Brown, Kirsten Doyle, Elliot Gould, James Gould, Richard Henken, Ginny MacDowell, Adam Meixner, Alan Meixner, Richard Penn, Adam Schneier, Christopher Sower, Andrew Tarsy
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A HERO’S WELCOME WRITTEN BY MARIE-CLAIRE ROCHAT
PHOTOGRAPHY BY KATIE KAIZER
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FOR VETERANS RETURNING FROM ACTION IN IRAQ OR AFGHANISTAN, THE TRANQUILITY OF NANTUCKET MIGHT SEEM WORLDS AWAY. YET, FEW COULD BE MORE DESERVING OF THE PEACE AND RELAXATION AFFORDED BY THE ISLAND THAN THESE TROOPS. IT WAS WITH THIS IN MIND THAT LONGTIME SUMMER RESIDENT, TOM MCCANN, FOUNDED HOLIDAYS FOR HEROES, A NONPROFIT PROVIDING OUR WOUNDED WARRIORS WITH SOME MUCH NEEDED R&R.
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THE HOLIDAYS FOR HEROES MISSION WAS TWOFOLD: Offer an
lized, he was transported to the Walter Reed Medical Center in
all-expense paid vacation on Nantucket to Iraq and Afghanistan
Washington, D.C., where he underwent fourteen surgeries over
War veterans and their families, and establish a college scholarship
the next four months. While doctors were able to save both legs,
fund for the children of those veterans. Tom McCann’s long-term
Bannon lives in constant pain. “On a scale of one to ten, my pain
vision for the program is ambitious. He is looking to make it an
is always at a three,” he said. “If I am horsing around with
annual event, one that garners national attention and widespread
my two-year-old daughter, I can be sure I will be icing my
support. The idea for Holidays for Heroes came to McCann as
leg the next day.” For Bannon and his wife and their two
he watched the somber Memorial Day ceremonies on television at
young children, a vacation on Nantucket was never something
his home on Nantucket. “I was watching those wounded warriors
they considered an option. While he does receive VA
struggling to get up the steps to be honored for their heroic
disability benefits, the family has no other source of income.
achievements,” remembered McCann, “and it occurred to me they
Bannon plans to return to school in the fall to complete his
were the heroes—they were the ones that deserved the holiday.”
undergraduate degree and his wife, Seanna, is a stay-at-home mom to their two pre-school children. “We don’t have any extra
McCann marvels at how the community embraced the idea from
money in our budget,” he said. “A trip to Nantucket was never
the get-go. “I spoke to a few people about it and the next thing
something we thought we could afford.”
I knew, the entire island was behind me,” he said. “I had twenty emails
Josh Schichtl and his wife Emily
and twenty phone calls every day.
also participated in the July event.
I didn’t reach out to anyone, they
Emily was the only spouse to attend,
all approached me, all wanting to
and spoke about the challenges of
be involved.” He continued, “There
being the primary caregiver for her
are so many great causes on this
husband, Josh, who sustained severe
island, but it seems like people
facial injuries and brain trauma in
have an emptiness in them about
Iraq, while she also cares for a grow-
the wounded veterans. People want
ing family of five children under the
to do something to help, but don’t
age of nine. “There is really no state
know what to do.”
or federal programming in place that offers this kind of support to the
A kick-off event was held on July
families of veterans,” she explained.
7th at the Nantucket Hotel, with several veterans on hand to
Emily also spoke about the college scholarship fund that will be
speak about their experiences in the war, about the debilitat-
generated through the Holidays for Heroes program, saying, “That
ing injuries they had sustained, and about the toll their ongoing
it is just phenomenal. It’s really nice when you know that there are
rehabilitation had taken on their families. They spoke about the
people out there that care about the future of your kids.”
many ways their lives and the lives of their loved ones had been so drastically altered by their military service. But before taking
According to a VA study of nearly 170,000 veterans of the Iraq
the stage at the Nantucket Hotel’s ballroom, the soldiers were
War released six years ago, twenty percent have been diagnosed
treated to a day of fishing by captains Pete Kaizer of the Althea
with psychological disorders. While there are many programs
K and Jay Starr of the Starrfish—just a taste of the type of fun
in place to assist the affected servicemen and women, there are few
McCann hopes to provide veterans at future Holidays for Heroes
that support their families. That is a void that Holidays for Heroes
events.
hopes to fill. Since coming on board in mid-July, former Nantucket
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incorporating Holidays for Heroes as a non-profit and writing the by-
the event. Bannon served three months in Iraq over the winter
laws. She and McCann are working to assemble a board of directors
of 2007-2008. Stationed in Saidya, a residential district in south-
and appoint committee heads whose task it will be to coordinate the
western Baghdad, he was on routine foot patrol when a land
many activities that will fill the week. A fishing tournament, a ladies’
mine concealed along the roadway detonated. Bannon sustained
spa day, a family clambake, a date night, and a variety of activities
major shrapnel wounds to both legs. Once his condition stabi-
for young children are just some of the ideas being considered by the committee.
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resident, Cheryl Bartlett, has made strides on the administrative end, Sean Bannon was one of the veterans who came to the island for
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WITH THE FIRST EVENT SET FOR 2013, Tom McCann is surging forward with Holidays for Heroes, feeling confident that the program is on the right track. “With Cheryl’s guidance, as well as the countless Nantucketers who have reached out to passionately volunteer just about anything you could think of, we can make Holidays for Heroes a true Nantucket homegrown success,” he said. “I guarantee the 2013 Holidays for Heroes event will be one of the most exciting events to ever wash
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ashore this amazing island of Nantucket!”
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HOW THE BOYS & GIRLS CLUB IS RETURNING NANTUCKET HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL BACK TO ITS FORMER GLORY.
THE LONG EST YARD PHOTOGRAPHY BY NATHAN COE
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WRITTEN BY ROBERT BARSANTI
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BACK IN THE 1970S AND EIGHTIES, WHALER FOOTBALL MEANT MORE TO THE ISLAND THAN JUST ANOTHER HIGH SCHOOL ACTIVITY. The game and its players
At each touchdown, a mini-howitzer fired
The boys, according to Coach Brian Ryder,
off in the end zone, sirens announced the
“first learn how to depend on each other. It
score, and the crowd swelled in applause.
has to be all eleven together.” When the
In the reddened evening, the losing team
boys pick up the game in the heat and dust
knit the local community together, from
would pile into their bus and ride, serenaded,
of September, they focus on what they
group to group and generation to generation.
down to the boat and slip away back to the
have to do individually. By November,
Whalers were lawyers and policemen,
mainland.
the players, even the younger ones at Cyrus Peirce, can anticipate what their
plumbers and electricians, restaurateurs and realtors. The bonds forged on the practice
Then, in the new millennium, the Whalers
teammates are going to do. From the
fields brought in the scallops, built the
began to lose—badly. The team slipped
coach’s perspective, if the players know
houses, and taught the children.
to 0-10 in 2005—the first winless season
what each other is going to do in sixth
in forty-one years—and only seventeen
grade when scrimmaging at the Boys and
Each Saturday in autumn, the island settled
players dressed for the final game against
Girls Club, they will know what to do
itself down to the high school field, fell into
the Vineyard. In 2009, the school dropped
against the Vineyard in high school.
their assigned seats at the football stadium,
the age-old rivalry game entirely. Whaler
and watched Coach Vito Capizzo’s
football might have dropped to junior
In his summer program, Coach Ryder
varsity status.
has been highlighting the other aspects of
Middle school boys
In order to bring back the team and those
discipline. A group of young players have
took the back row in
Saturday afternoon victories, the players
been training through the summer, doing
the bleachers, faculty
had to start learning the game much earlier
a workout “that is as hard as many college
and family sat in
than high school. The Boys and Girls Club
off-season programs.” In the words of
the center, and
now offers seven years of football, starting
player, J. T. Gamberoni, “It’s an
the retired
with boys in second grade and finishing at
excellent, hardcore, exhausting workout.”
cheerleaders, the
the end of middle school. The young players
The routine combines free weights,
practice and scrimmage on island. Later, in
plyometric boxes, jump ropes, and one
Billy sat in the front row.
middle school, they play off-island games
gigantic truck tire. For one part of the
If you had to work, Dick
on a travel team. More than a hundred
workout, the players flip this gigantic tire
Herman’s Boston baritone young men take part in the program. The kept you up to date over the radio.
— COACH BILL MANCHESTER
football, namely emotional and physical
Whalers win, handily.
cowbells, and Boxing
“WHALERS WERE A GROUP OF YOUNG MEN WHO WORKED TOGETHER TO DO SOMETHING BIGGER THAN THEMSELVES—WHETHER THAT WAS KILLING A WHALE OR WINNING A FOOTBALL GAME.”
Boys and Girls Club provides equipment,
from one end to the other, until their legs ache and shoulders burn.
the coaching, and the space for a $25 membership fee. Scholarships cover the players
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who can’t afford the membership.
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CORY RYDER HAS BEEN PLAYING BOYS CLUB FOOTBALL for six years and has one year left. At first, he wasn’t among the best players on his team, but was “vocal and energetic.” As he got older and more experienced, Cory climbed the depth chart. For the past two summers, he has been prepping for the football season. The exercise has demanded all his energy, but he “feels good when he’s done.” Had he not been working out, he might have wasted his afternoons “watching TV, going to the beach, or working.” Now, with the training he and his teammates have been doing, he struts on to the field this September confident and ready. “The biggest challenges these players face,” says varsity coach, Bill Manchester, “aren’t physical, but mental.” Young football players come to the game as individuals, with their own goals and objectives. The hardest part of getting a football team ready to compete is convincing the young men that they have to give of themselves and be part of a team. “Whalers,” Manchester continues, “were a group of young men who worked together to do something bigger than themselves—whether that was killing a whale or winning a football game.” The Boys and Girls Club coaches work closely with Coach Manchester and the varsity football program. They run the same plays with the same calls. That way, should the players rise to the varsity level, they already speak the same language. Moreover, the philosophy at the high school extends all the way down to the second and third graders tottering around in their helmets. The coaches, from elementary school to graduation, emphasize the need to “work together, stay committed, and learn from your mistakes.” For many young men, playing fields make the best classrooms. The discipline and toughness picked up on the practice squad makes more of a mark, years later, than learning the anatomy of a frog or the proper use of an Oxford comma. The lessons of mud, grass, and collision build in many young men’s minds. And if
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and the trust that football demands, perhaps they will become the right men for the future of the island.
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they learn the discipline, the patience, the reflection,
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T
hey say getting there is half the fun, but in some cases it’s all the fun.
Today’s aviation technology is taking pilots and passengers to new,
exciting heights—not just in commercial planes or private jets, but personal jetpacks and flying cars. Take a trip in some of these cutting-edge flying machines and see why there has never been a better time to catch a flight.
COOL YOUR JETS
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WRITTEN BY ROBERT S. COCUZZO
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51 PHOTO BY KIT NOBLE
T
he two villains had James Bond cornered on the rooftop when suddenly the British agent strapped
on a jetpack and blasted off in a hail of bullets. While Hollywood has donned the jetpack many times since Sean Connery’s flight in the 1965 Bond film Thunderball, such personal aircrafts have been mostly grounded to the public. Enter Raymond Li, the real-life inventor who’s giving the jetpack new wings.
On a drizzling, overcast Nantucket afternoon, crowds gathered on the docks downtown to watch the flight of the Jetlev, an aquatic jetpack made newly available to the public. Floating in the harbor, a pilot nodded to the crowd and then in seconds he was thirty feet in the air, propelled by two fire-hose-strength water jets. A long tube dangled from the jetpack, attached to a small watercraft below that circulated water up and out the pack’s two spouts at around 420 pounds of force. The aquatic rocketeer negotiated the crowded harbor with ease, reaching top speeds of twenty-five miles per hour,
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master finally came to shut him down. So what’s it cost to own a Jetlev? A few shekels short of $100,000.
THEJETLEV
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and soaring around boats and yachts until the harbor-
PHOTO BY KIT NOBLE 53
TERRAFUGIA TRANSITION
L
eave it to a group of MIT-trained engineers to create the world’s first flying car—a modern day
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Since 2006, Terrafugia Inc., a company based in Woburn, Massachusetts, has been developing the aptly named Transition, a roadable aircraft in the Light Sport Aircraft category intended for public use. The Transition will allow amateur pilots to drive to the airport, continue onto the runaway, and take off with almost never having to leave the comfort of their driver’s seat. By road, the Transition gets a fuel-efficient thirty-five miles per gallon, and comes equipped with a cargo area specially designed to hold golf clubs. Once on the tarmac, the pilot flips a switch from the cockpit, and two wings fold down, extend out, and lock into place. After getting the green light from the tower, the Transition cruises down the runway at seventy knots for 1700 feet before lifting up, up, and away. Terrafugia (Latin for “Escape the Earth”) designed the Transition to resolve longtime hindrances in private flight, namely “cost, weather, door-to-door travel time, and a lack of mobility at the destination.” So if a storm kicks up unexpectedly and the Transition needs to make an emergency landing, the pilot can then fold up its wings and continue on his or her merry way by road. Just think, in twenty hours of flight training (and for $279,000) you can make your island commute a breeze, while also saving some money at the pump.
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PHOTOS COURTESY OF TERRAFUGIA
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VICTORIA GREENHOOD
O
ORIGINAL GEMSTONE JEWELRY
ne only needs to spend an afternoon on Nobadeer Beach at the height of summer to
witness the growing number of jetsetters visiting the island. One after another, sleek private jets lower their landing gear overhead and ready for touchdown at
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from New York to Los Angeles, and can cross six
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CITATION X
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time zones on a single tank of gas.
PHOTO COURTESY OF CESSNA
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A Recipe for
SUCCESS NANTUCKETâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S JUNIOR CHEF COMPETITION IS COOKING UP HOMEGROWN TALENT FOR THE ISLANDâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S RESTAURANTS OF TOMORROW
To discover more about wealth planning you can build on, please call today. Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC, its affiliates and Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Financial Advisors do not provide tax or legal advice. This material was not intended or written to be used for the purpose of avoiding tax penalties that may be imposed on the taxpayer. Clients should consult their tax advisor for matters involving taxation and tax planning and their attorney for matters involving trust and estate planning and other legal matters.
Š 2012 Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. Member SIPC.
1< &6 :3 &5&
PHOTOGRAPHY BY KIT NOBLE
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IF TELEVISION COOKING COMPETITIONS HAVE TAUGHT AMERICANS ANYTHING, IT’S THAT THE COMMERCIAL KITCHEN IS NOT TO BE ENTERED LIGHTLY. Chefs are masters of their stainless steel domain, and mixing it
Chef is championing aspiring young cooks, and, in turn, the
up with them can be humbling to say the least. Yet, as with all
future of food on Nantucket.
revered disciplines, it’s being in the presence of a master that an apprentice truly learns. So it is that the Nantucket Junior Chef
This year’s competition, taking place at Cisco Brewery on
cooking competition stacks eager young culinary students with
September 30th, sees the involvement of two new head chefs.
accomplished, battle-worn chefs for a crash course in the finer
Stephen Marcaurelle of the Boarding House and Andy Howard
points of fine dining.
of American Seasons recently took over the reigns of their
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Celebrating its fifth year this September, Junior Chef offers
looking to best one another, as well as the veteran, home-team
much more than just a trial by fire for these culinary up-and-
challenger, Chef Neil Hudson of Bartlett’s Farm. While Chefs
comers. Over its five-year history, the event has raised
Howard and Hudson have the advantage of second year
approximately $35,000 for the Nantucket Culinary Arts
cooking students Louis Guevarra and Ingrid Mendez, and
Foundation, which directly benefits the Nantucket High School
Brandon Harwood and Stephen Brown in their ranks, Chef
culinary arts program. Students seeking to compete in national
Stephen may just have a ringer in Nantucket High School
ProStart cooking competitions find their travel and ancillary
sophomore, Max Ritchie. Son of a former pastry chef, Ritchie
costs covered by the money brought in by Junior Chef.
has been behind the line at Arnos this summer, preparing
Moreover, the event raises awareness for the invaluable trade
pancakes, omelets and French toast for the breakfast and brunch
programs being fostered at the Nantucket High School. Through
rush. Joining Richtie to round out the Boarding House team will
the impassioned efforts of Orla Murphy-Lascola, Jenny
be Taja-lee Falconer. Keeping them honest will be NECN’s TV
Garneau, Nantucket High School’s Bob Buccino, NECN’s
Diner co-host Jenny Johnson as well as a panel of discerning
Jenny Johnson, and a slew of local restaurants and chefs, Junior
local palates.
American Seasons’ chef, Andy Howard, and NHS culinary student, Luis Guevarra, putting their own take on a tomato
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respective Junior Chef teams, and enter the competition
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IN PREPARATION FOR THE CONTEST, THE THREE TEAMS MET IN THEIR RESPECTIVE KITCHENS AND PLOTTED THEIR ATTACK. The challenge: How to turn Bartlett Farm tomatoes into sweet victory through three courses? While the recipes for the competition were kept strictly off the record, Chef Andy and company offered this take on the tomato for you to try at home: Bartlett tomato salad, Burratta cheese, Bartlett tomato granola, pickled ramp dressing and pickled cherry tomatoes.
GRANOLA
RAMP DRESSING
1 cup oats 1/8 cup oil 1/8 cup honey 1 teaspoon tomato paste Oven dried Bartlett tomatoes Toasted almonds Dried cherries Raisin Thyme 1 tbsp. rosemary
12 pickled ramps 1 egg yoke 1 tbsp. Dijon mustard Juice and zest one lemon ½ cup of vegetable oil 2 tbsp. white vinegar
1 Combine oil, honey and tomato paste. Pour on oats and combine with chopped rosemary and salt and pepper. 2 Bake in oven at 350 degrees, till brown.
Combine all ingredients in blender, except for oil. While blender is running, slowly add oil to emulsify. Season to taste.
TWO HOT HOUSE BARTLETT FARM TOMATOES
4 Combine oats and nuts in bowl.
Cut tomatoes into wedges, removing the core. Season with olive oil and salt and pepper.
5 Add fruit.
Serve at room temperature.
6 Slice tomatoes thin and season with salt and pepper, olive oil, chopped thyme.
PLATING
3 Toast almonds and pecans.
7 Bake tomatoes until dry. 8 Dice tomatoes and add to granola mixture.
With dressing on the plate, arrange tomatoes. Add 3–4 tbsp. of barratta, then granola. Garnish with Bartlett’s arugula and fresh herbs (any will do). Enjoy.
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Halve cherry tomatoes. Combine 2 cups white vinegar, ½ cup water, salt and pepper, fresh thyme (to taste) and one bay leaf. Warm and pour over cherry tomatoes.
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PICKLED CHERRY TOMATOES
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American Ireland Fund
FOGGYSHEET nantucket
Wendy Schmidt & Sarah Michels
Betsy Nable & Steve Greeley Bill & Kerry Brett
Katherine Greaney, Jim & Susan Geraghty
Katherine Lodge & Mark Hubbard
Ann & Bill Sheehan
Paul Gray, Janet & Rick Sherlund
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Jess Williams, Abbey Reynolds, Michael Greeley, Rebecca Farrell & Tim Redman
Bridget Baratta, Kathy & Alan Costa, Debbie Briggs
Bianca de La Garza, Linda Holliday, Sue DeCoste, Kerry Brett, Robin Pelissier, AJ Williams
65 Photos by KRIS KINSLEY HANCOCK
“Getting to the top can be a challenge. It should not be one once you’re there.” “After working with some of the most successful families in the world, we have seen certain systematic patterns emerge. Creation of wealth and its preservation across time and generations demand distinct perspectives and approaches, some of which are easy to see but many of which are simply not apparent. Issues not in full view during the climb to the summit can arise and become as challenging as those overcome while climbing to the peak.” — Chris Geczy, Ph.D. Partner of GKFO, LLC
THE
BEETEAM WRITTEN BY JEN LASKEY
PHOTOGRAPHY BY KIT NOBLE
GKFO, LLC was founded as a private family office and asset management firm by Christopher Geczy, Ph.D., Stephen Kitching and a team of skilled professionals trained in multi-generational wealth management. Along with his work at GKFO, Dr. Geczy is Academic Director of the Wharton Wealth Management Institute and Adjunct Associate Professor of Finance at The Wharton School. If it is time for you to take money management to a higher level, contact us for references and
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For further information email: info@gkfo.net or call us at 888-797-4090. Redefining Wealth Management
THERE ARE MILLIONS OF HONEYBEES LIVING ON NANTUCKET TODAY, AND THEIR COLLECTIVE HUM CAN BE HEARD AROUND THE HIVES THAT DOT BACKYARDS AND FARMS ACROSS THE ISLAND. FOR SOME, THE BUZZ OF A SINGLE BEE IS GROUNDS FOR RETREAT. YET, FOR BEEKEEPERS LIKE TED ANDERSON, JIM GROSS, CHRISTINE HERMANSDOFER, DAVID BERRY, AND DYLAN WALLACE, THE BUZZ OF A HONEYBEE IS A SWEET SOUND OF SUCCESS. N magazine
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a description of our services.
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Honeybees are truly fascinating creatures with a complex and selfsustaining colony structure. The queen is at the top. She lays all the eggs and is supported by thousands of devoted female worker bees. The rest of the bees are male drones, whose sole purpose is to find and mate with virgin queens. And after their “glory moment,” as David Berry puts it, these male drones die. David has thirty hives placed in different locations around Nantucket. Each of them contains fifty to sixty thousand honeybees and yields about sixty pounds of honey a year. “Honeybees are gluttonous for honey,” says David. “Fortunately for us, they make and collect a lot more than they need to sustain themselves.”
Eighteen-year veteran beekeeper, Jim Gross, is an award-winning honey maker, a mentor, and a veritable fount of knowledge when it comes to apiculture. He is also the guy most people call when stumbling upon a swarm of bees that looks like something out of a horror movie. Just recently, Jim was enlisted to remove a colony of about forty thousand feral bees from beneath the floor of the Department of Public Works facility building. Sawing into the plywood and removing a section of floorboard, Jim discovered several large honeycombs along with the swarm of aggravated bees. While he examined the combs, his assistant carefully vacuumed up the bees, storing them in a container with a screen lid. “This year has been very swarmy,” Jim says as he reaches barehanded into the crawl space to retrieve another comb. Controlling these swarms can be an issue for beekeepers, especially those who become neglectful and let the swarms cast off. Sooner or later, Jim will be around with his smoker, hood, and in his shirtsleeves to relocate the swarm. Not surprisingly, Jim is also the go-to-guy for those looking for
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bees to start their own hives.
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69 Dylan Wallace prepares his smoker to tend to his hives
sustainable landscaper, adds that, “with so
Another factor that may be contributing to
health and government experts are also
much protected land, we also have great
colony collapse is the farming monoculture in
concerned about the implications of the
pollen sources on Nantucket that will never be
large agricultural areas where huge swaths of
world’s faltering bee populations on our
wiped out.” Moreover, David Berry explains
singular crops require commercial pollinating
environment and food chain.
that there are very few animals on Nantucket
operations to travel from region to region with
that are a threat to beehives. “There are no
millions of bees to pollinate the crops. Rather
The good news is that bees are thriving on
bears, no raccoons or skunks. Nantucket is
than being exposed to many different flowers,
Nantucket. Colony collapse disorder is not a
also a wonderful place where wildflowers are
these commercial bees only ingest pollen from
problem on the island, and, as Dylan attests,
incredibly prolific,” he says. “Additionally,
one kind of plant at a time. “It creates a dietary
“Other than the hives that are brought in to
there are so many cultivated gardens that are
imbalance,” says Jim. Furthermore, the condi-
pollinate cranberry bogs, we don’t have any
producing flowers from which the bees can
tions associated with commercial pollination
industrial bees here.” Jim, Christine, David
gather nectar and pollen. It’s like a supplement
can cause bees to become stressed or weak,
and Dylan are dedicated to organic, sustain-
to the natural flowers that are available. And
and to develop illnesses and spread mites and
able apiculture and, as small-scale beekeepers,
the honey on Nantucket is really terrific.”
apiary viruses to other bees.
they are confident in their abilities to take care of their bees without relying on chemicals.
There are many standard practices in hobbyist beekeeping, such as
But not Christine Hermansdofer—you’ll never catch her outside a
beginning with two hives to compare performance. But there are
full bee suit when tending to her hives. That being said, she might
also some individual choices to be made, including what kind of
also be the bravest beekeeper of all. Three years ago, Christine
bees and hives to use. David, for example, prefers using heartier
was tending to her six hives when a bee got caught in her hair
Russian bees as opposed to the gentler, more common Italian
and then stung her on the top of her head. Stings come with the
ones. For his seven hives, Dylan Wallace has opted for the top-bar
territory, of course, so she brushed it off and went about finishing
style in which the bees
her business. Minutes later, Christine felt her body drop from
build their own comb.
beneath her. Her world went black. Lying on the ground, blind,
“Top-bar frames are lower
with bees swarming around her, she thought, I’m going to die
maintenance, can be made
out here. “I called out for help, but it sounded like a whisper in
with recycled materials,
my head,” she remembers. “So I yelled louder.” Thankfully, her
and cost less than the
husband Bruce heard her calls and rushed to her aid. An ambu-
traditional plastic frames,”
lance arrived soon after, and she was taken to the hospital. After so
Dylan explains.
many stings over a decade of beekeeping, Christine had developed
Unfortunately, the buzz around honeybees in
The clincher is that honeybees are absolutely
general is not so sweet. Although more people
essential to agriculture. Food experts like
With their eco-friendly practices, these
are engaged in backyard beekeeping, bee
Carlo Petrini, founder of the Slow Food move-
intrepid keepers of the hive are making a
populations continue to decline in the United
ment, claim that without them we would have
significant contribution to nature in a time of
States. Recent studies show that a relatively
no agriculture at all. Best-selling food and
need. And, in turn, the bees they’re raising are
new class of neurotoxin pesticides, known
culture author, Michael Pollan, has reported
helping to take care of Nantucket by pol-
as neonicotinoids, is one possible explana-
that we depend on honeybees to pollinate forty
linating our flowering plants and crops, and
tion for colony collapse disorder (CCD), the
percent of the food we consume. Petrini and
providing us with the sweetest gift of all—
mysterious death of bees en masse in America.
Pollan are not alone: Many apiary, science,
delicious, local honey.
an allergy to honeybees. Today, Christine continues to maintain As with any type of
her six hives, and may even acquire five more from Ted Anderson,
farming, beekeeping comes
who plans on retiring from beekeeping this year.
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beholden to nature. However, the overall time commitment is
Helping her cause, along with that of all other local beekeepers,
surprisingly minimal. David estimates that he spends about an hour
is the island itself. “It’s a pretty healthy environment for the bees
per hive a couple of times a month. Then there is conquering the
here,” Christine says. “And the way things are going with all of
fear of being stung. After a while, many beekeepers end up tending
the little organic farms popping up on Nantucket, it’s going to
their hives with little more than a hat, a veil and a smoker.
get even better.” Dylan, who is also an organic farmer and
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with its own toils. The schedule can be demanding, since you’re
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RIonDtheERS Storm WRITTEN BY BRIAN MOHR
S
PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIAN MOHR AND EMILY JOHNSON
eptember is the height of the North Atlantic’s tropical storm season, a time of year when hurricanes—the most powerful of all tropical storms—
can threaten New England with flooding rains, damaging winds and giant waves.
While most Nantucketers batten down the hatches for these storms, there are some who
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don wetsuits, wax up surfboards, and paddle out into the hurricane swell.
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T
hese swells often arrive when a storm is still far from New England, and can last for days, lingering even after
a storm’s passage. When a swell approaches from the right direction, with just the right winds at play, an impressive
display of beautifully sculpted breaking waves can be found off the south shore of the island. “Specific storms and swells are tough to recall,” says Chris Emery, who’s been surfing through the island’s hurricane seasons for thirty years. Storms with names like David, Frederick, Erin, Emily and Igor are just a few that come to mind for Emery. “But the memories are so strong…of being on the water as the swell builds, for instance, of those crisp September skies, and of the experiences shared
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with friends.” Amidst these many storms of yesteryear, Hurricane Fabian sparks special memories for Emery.
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I
n September 2003, Hurricane
for with a hefty paddle back out through the
In the late afternoon, Emery and friends
shore break. Offshore winds groomed the
headed to a favorite surf break for a sunset
moisture off of Africa and later dealt the
swell into nice, clean lines, or “corduroy on
session, accompanied by only a few
island of Bermuda a heavy blow, brought
the horizon,” as surfers like to call it. As the
shorebirds, plenty of baitfish and seals. The
Nantucket surfers some of the best waves
morning progressed, the island’s surf breaks
incoming tide gave the swell a nice boost,
of the year. As it gradually tracked into the
came alive with fellow surfers, spectating
and an underwater sandbar brought perfect
Gulf Stream, several hundred miles east of
family members, and other beachgoers.
shape to the breaking waves. The roar of the
Fabian, which began as a band of
the United States, Fabian developed into a
surf filled the air. As daylight waned, calming
major hurricane, with winds topping 125
“It’s hard to describe the energy of a storm,
winds transformed the surface of the sea to a
miles per hour as it passed Bermuda. The
that wave energy that’s been traveling for
silky reflection of the colorful sky. For surfers
peak of Fabian’s swell arrived to Nantucket at
hundreds of miles across the sea,” reflects
and all those able to witness it, it was the stuff
sunrise on a clear September morning, after
Emery. “But it’s incredibly powerful…
of dreams. Then again, it was September on
the summer’s crowds had thinned. “Days like
rejuvenating. It totally recharges the
Nantucket. “No doubt, hurricane season is our
this are just too good to miss,” says Emery,
batteries.” Offshore winds sent plumes of
best shot at getting world-class waves on
who purposefully lightens his workload
ocean spray off the backs of cresting waves
Nantucket,” says Emery. He stirs up memories
come September, as many island surfers do.
that day, spawning countless short-lived
of a few more recent storms – Igor, Bill and
“When a good swell is running, there’s just
rainbows in the sunlit spray. The ocean
Ophelia – which produced great surf without
nothing else like it.” Fabian’s swell delivered
was alive and well.
causing any major destruction on land. “On a really good day in September, it’s as good
Each wave ridden toward the beach was paid
as it gets...”
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breaking waves that stood well overhead.
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Wedding
September
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PHOTO BY SHELLY KROEGER PHOTOGRAPHY
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Section
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NUPTIALS Featured Wedding
B&G: CLAUDIA BUTLER AND DYLAN WALLACE DRESS: CHARLOTTE HESS, ISOBEL & CLEO ENGAGEMENT RING: HANNAH BLOUNT WEDDING PLANNING: SUSAN WARNER, NANTUCKET CLAMBAKE CO. MINISTER: CAROLINE DEAN FLOWERS: NELL VAN VORST AND YURGA AND BETSY JOHNSON BROOKS RECEPTION: WESTMOOR CLUB CATERING: AMERICAN SEASONS MUSIC: COQ AU VIN CAKE: SAMANTHA PICHETTE FAVORS: CRISTAL CHINDAMO, BAKED AT SEA
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PHOTOGRAPHY: KATIE KAIZER
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o
ver his twenty-eight years in the flower business,
Michael Molinar estimates he’s decorated just about
This past July, Michael gave a demonstration at the Great Harbor Yacht Club on how to create the ultimate centerpiece without having
two thousand weddings on the island. From modest Brant Point
your purse pay the ultimate price. “What we are trying to do here is
ceremonies to extravagant White Elephant galas, Michael has
stretch your ‘flower dollar’ while also making flower arranging easy,”
fielded most every flower request imaginable, often flying in
he said to the audience of seventy. “Any housewife can do it like a
out-of-season blooms from around the globe for a couple’s
pro.” The next day, women were lined up out his door to try their
special day.
hand at this technique. For those that missed his presentation, here are
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flower power
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the steps to the making of Michael’s centerpiece.
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instructions
1
2
The trend in flowers lately has been to cover up the stems in a clear glass vase with a ti leaf or a piece of
Beyond the flowers, the most important part of the centerpiece is this new waterproof cellophane tape. Create a
3
Make sure to secure the grid with a strip of tape along the edge. Fill the container
4
Now itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s time to pick the flowers. I always recommend open roses, which are my favorite. Some other top Nantucket flowers are Lily of the Valley, Peonies, and Ranunculus. But take note that Peonies are only in bloom
interesting foliage. So just put that
grid with the tape, making the spaces
along the inside in the vase.
an inch wide. This is great for large
between late May and the Fourth of July. Cut the stems
containers where you donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t want a lot
at an angle. Each should be no more than fourteen
of filler or greenery. The tape is a big
inches long.
with warm water.
5
Once all the flowers are in place, spray them down with Crowning Glory. This is a floristâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s secret that hydrates the flowers from above and makes them last longer.
cost-saver.
2
3
4
5
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Elisabeth & Bruce
2012
NUPTIALS Featured Wedding
B&G: ELISABETH SCHADAE & BRUCE A. PERCELAY CATERER: SIMPLY WITH STYLE FLORIST: FLOWERS ON CHESTNUT INVITATIONS AND GRAPHIC DESIGN: PAULETTE CHEVALIER PHOTOGRAPHY: CARY HAZLEGROVE & JORDI CABRE SERVICE: REVEREND ROBERT HILL BOSTON UNIVERSITY PERFORMERS: THEATRE WORKSHOP OF NANTUCKET’S ALEX KOPKO, VANESSA CALANTROPO, FREDA THOMSON-STOLZ & SARAH FRAUNFELDER DANCE CHOREOGRAPHY: LINDA MEREDITH MUSICAL CHOREOGRAPHY: CHRIS MEREDITH VIDEO CREATIVE DESIGN: THINKMODO VIDEO PRODUCTION: AVFX VIDEOGRAPHY: TERRY POMMETT DJ: DEREK HOLT MUSIC: MOLLY GLAZIER HAIR/MAKEUP: RJ MILLER TENT: NANTUCKET TENTS
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EVENT PLANNER: MAUREEN MAHER
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NUPTIALS Featured Wedding
B&G: MELISSA MATERESE & MICHAEL FENSTERSTOCK VENUE: THE WAUWINET CATERER: TOPPERS CAKE: PETTICOAT ROW BAKERY CANTOR: AVI TEKEN TENTS: NANTUCKET TENTS RENTALS: PLACESETTERS WEDDING PLANNER: JIMMY JAKSIC FLOWERS: SOIREE FLORAL / DAWN KELLY DRESS: JUNKO YOSHIOKA VEIL: JUNKO YOSHIOKA SHOES: JIMMY CHOO GROOMS SHOES: FERRAGAMO BRIDESMAIDS’ DRESSES: JENNY YOO RINGS: FRANK GOMEZ AT G CREATIONS HAIR AND MAKEUP: DARYA SALON BAND: BRICK PARK
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PHOTOGRAPHER: CARY HAZLEGROVE
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A WALK DOWN THE ISLE WITH THE REVEREND TED ANDERSON INTERVIEW BY RYDER ZIEBARTH
PHOTOGRAPHY BY CARY HAZLEGROVE
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VISIT
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Over the past forty-two years, Reverend Ted Anderson has seen more knots tied than
N: AS A UNITARIAN MINISTER, ENCOMPASSING ALL
ignore things until the problem is in their lap. There
most sailors or fisherman on the island. The now retired reverend of the Unitarian
FAITHS, DO YOU WEAR A CLERICAL COLLAR AND BLACK
are two brains in a marriage, which are always better
Universalist Church estimates that he’s presided over two thousand Nantucket weddings
SUIT WHEN YOU PERFORM A WEDDING?
than one brain when a problem arises. Learn to think
since becoming a man of the cloth. It’s a colorful history that includes no shows, cold
ANDERSON: No, I prefer a dark suit and a tie, even
together as a team. Learn to think out loud with each
feet, the island’s first same-sex unions, and, of course, lots of love and kisses. N recently
though I hate wearing ties. So if I’m putting on a tie,
other. Communicate. Come up with better solutions if
grabbed a pew with Reverend Ted to talk weddings.
the couple better show up.
the first one doesn’t work. When problems arise, and
N: HOW MANY WEDDINGS HAVE YOU PREFORMED AS A CLERGYMAN?
N: NOT SHOW UP? YOU MEAN SOME DON’T?
doesn’t practice solving little everyday problems,
ANDERSON: Probably about two thousand couples since I was ordained
ANDERSON: Absolutely! I hate no shows. Sometimes,
larger issues will just overwhelm them, and one or the
in 1967 from Yale Divinity School. Most of those were, and still are,
I put on my regulation suit and tie and set out for the
other will throw up their hands and say, “I can’t deal
on Nantucket. I began preaching here in the 1970s. I figure by
appointed wedding and I am the only one there. Once,
with any of this!” Then you’ve really got a problem.
the time I shuffle off this “mortal coil,” I will have married
I arrived at the address given me and knocked on the
everyone on the island at least once.
door and all I heard was a vacuum cleaner. The couple
N: DO YOU EVER TEAR UP WHILE PERFORMING
had called it off, but had forgot to call me off.
A CEREMONY?
they will, you’ll learn to be less threatened. If a couple
ANDERSON: Well, I married all three of my children.
N: WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE WEDDING VENUE? ANDERSON: I don’t have a favorite per se. I like them
N: DO YOU USUALLY ATTEND THE WEDDING RECEPTIONS?
For one of my daughters, I walked her down the aisle
all. I have married couples in the steeple of the Unitarian
ANDERSON: No, almost never. If I attended all the cer-
and presented her to the groom, then stepped in front
Church, which was lovely. I have married couples on the
emonies I have performed over the years, I’d weigh
and married them. That was pretty emotional.
water, on Tuckernuck, on Coutue, and at Eat Fire Spring
four hundred pounds by now. N: WHAT WAS YOUR OWN WEDDING LIKE?
because of the Indian lore that island springs are mystical and good luck. I’ve married couples at the Nantucket
N: DO MANY COUPLES WRITE THEIR OWN VOWS TODAY,
ANDERSON: It was my bride, Gretchen, my parents
Yacht Club then ran over to Great Harbor Yacht Club
OR IS THAT TOO 1970S?
and I. That’s it. The Reverend Fred Bennett married
and married a couple there that same day. At-home
ANDERSON: Well, the intent is there for couples to
us at my parents’ home in Polpis, and then we went to
weddings are nice, and I do love the ‘Sconset Chapel,
do that, but usually the job gets put off and eventu-
the Ships Inn and had fondue, and then went home to
although they are only open for business three months out
ally they just go with the old tried and true, which
the Unitarian parsonage. It was perfect. We celebrate
of the year. All the churches are beautiful here, really.
is what I like best. But I leave out the “obey” stuff,
the day every year by having lunch at the Chanticleer
and the “’til death do us part” bit. It makes no sense:
restaurant in ‘Sconset. We celebrated our forty-second
N: MASSACHUSETTS HAS ALLOWED LEGAL GAY MARRIAGE
You don’t stop loving someone after they die. It’s a
anniversary this July.
SINCE 2004. HAVE YOU MARRIED MANY GAY COUPLES HERE ON
ridiculous notion.
NANTUCKET? ANDERSON: Yes, both legally and illegally. Out of sympathy
N: HAVE YOU EVER DONE ANY UNOFFICIAL MARRIAGE
in 1996, I married a very loving couple earlier when one of
COUNSELING BEFORE THE CEREMONY?
the partners was on her deathbed in the hospital. I married
ANDERSON: Yes, if asked, I will always help a nervous,
another couple in 2001. It is so much better now, legal and
or as I like to say, “excited couple.” Occasionally I
out in the open.
warm some cold feet a few days before the ceremony. And if asked the secret to my own marriage of fortytwo years, I have one piece of advice I share: Think.
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Just think. Americans don’t like to think. They tend to
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NUPTIALS Featured Wedding
G&G: TIM EHRENBERG AND JAMES SCHEURELL TUXES: ALTON LANE GROOMSMAIDS DRESSES: LILY PULITZER VENUE: WHALES WATCH FLORIST: SOIREE FLORAL CATERER: SIMPLY WITH STYLE HAIR AND MAKEUP: DARYA SALON
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DJ: PHIL TAYLOR
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WEDDING PLANNERS ACTIVITIES Phone: 508-228-6648 Web: www.acktivities.com CREATE AND COORDINATE Phone: 857-334-2487 Web: www.createandcoordinate.com LA SOIREE Phone: 508-228-7432
MAI NORTON PHOTOGRAPHY
PERFECTLY POLISHED
MARINE HOME CENTER: FLOWER SHOP
NATASHA MISANKO
Phone: 508-228-8703
Phone: 508-901-1005
Phone: 508-332-0497
Phone: 508-228-0900
Phone: 508-221-6600
Web: www.dandriscollphotography.com
Web: www.mainorton.com
DAN DRISCOLL PHOTOGRAPHY
Web: www.marinehomecenter.com/flowerSUZANNE’S HAIR DESIGN
BEVERLY HALL
PIXEL PERFECT
Phone: 508-228-2147
Phone: 508-332-2301
Web: www.beverlyhallphotography.net
Web: www.pixel-perfect-images.com
SOIREE FLORAL
Phone: 508-228-3700
Phone: 508-228-6684
Web: www.petticoatrowbakery.com
Phone: 508-228-0024
Web: www.soireefloral.com
Web: www.nantucketspa.com
PORTER GIFFORD PHOTOGRAPHY
Phone: 508-228-2710
Phone: 617-448-9999
Web: www.kinsleyhancock.com
Web: www.portergifford.com
CARY HAZLEGROVE PHOTOGRAPHY
KRISTINA RANSOM PHOTOGRAPHY
Phone: 508-257-9691
Phone: 508-221-1882
A TASTE OF NANTUCKET
Web: www.hazlegrove.com
Web: www.kristinaransom.com
Phone: 508-228-9200
CATERING
SEPTEMBER PRODUCTIONS – WEDDING VIDEO
FUSION OF FLAVOR
Phone: 508-332-3577
Phone: 508-325-6481
Web: www.september.com
Web: www.fusionofflavor.com NANTUCKET CATERING COMPANY
TERRY POMMETT PHOTOGRAPHY
Phone: 508-228-6281
Phone: 508-228-5471
Web: www.nantucketcateringcompany.com
Web: www.pommettphotography.com SUSAN M WARNER CATERING AND
Web: www.nantucketislandevents.com UNIQUE NANTUCKET Phone: 508-254-4693 Web: www.uniquenantucket.com
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY RANDI BAIRD Phone: 508-696-5335 Web: www.Rbaird.com JORDI CABRE PHOTOGRAPHY
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Web: www.jordicabre.com DANELIAN & COE PHOTOGRAPHY Phone: 508-680-4143 Web: www.danelianandcoe.com
Web: www.cranberrytransportation.com
Phone: 508-228-4819 Phone: 508-292-1954
REVEREND TED ANDERSON
Web: www.highlanddrivers.com
(RETIRED MINISTER) Phone: 508-228-2730
ISLAND BUGGIES Phone: 617-803-8948
M.J. MOJER
Web: www.islandbuggies.com
508-228-1794
CHURCHES & HOUSES OF WORSHIP
Phone: 508-228-9283
MILESTONE TAXI
Web: www.zofiaphotography.com
Web: www.susanwarnercatering.com
Phone: 508-325-5511
SIMPLY WITH STYLE CATERING
BEAUTY
Web: www.simplywithstyle.com
Web: www.katiekaizerphotography.com
Phone: 508-228-0042
CLAUDIA KRONENBERG PHOTOGRAPHY, INC.
THE BEAUTY BAR
Phone: 508-228-1218
Phone: 508-228-1905
Web: www.claudiak.com
Web: www.beautybarnantucket.com
RON LYNCH PHOTOGRAPHY
THE CALMING ROOM
Phone: 508-325-4433
Phone: 508-325-8920
CHEF TONY NASTUS, LA LANGUEDOC BISTRO
Phone: 508-228-0550
Phone: 207-361-4806
Web: www.daryasalon.com
Phone: 508-325-8655
Web: www.jparave.com
Web: www.overnantucket.com R.J. MILLER SALONS Phone: 508-228-3446 Web: www.rjmillersalons.com
A PIECE OF CAKE
Phone: 508-228-2552
Phone: 508-228-6184
FLORISTS
ALL OCAKESIONS Phone: 774-236-9234
Phone: 508-423-5109 or 508-517-0148
CAKES BY JODI LEVESQUE
Web: www.florabundantnantucket.com
Phone: 508-228-4545
FLOWERS ON CHESTNUT
J. PARAVE & CO. Phone: 508-228-0436
Web: www.lelanguedoc.com/catering.html
Web: www.jodiscakes.com
Web: www.breamcdonald.com NANTUCKET AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
CAKES
FLORABUNDANT
DARYA SALON & SPA
AFRICAN MEETING HOUSE 29 York Street
Web: www.allocakesions.com
Web: www.rlynch.com BREA MCDONALD
transportation-service
Phone: 508-228-6248
KATIE KAIZER PHOTOGRAPHY
BETTE SPRIGGS
HIGHLAND DRIVERS
Phone: 508-221-4693
ANDREA MARIE SALON
Phone: 508-228-7841
Phone: 508-228-6007
NANTUCKET BAKE SHOP
Web: www.flowersonchestnut.com
Phone: 508-228-2797 Web: www.nantucketbakeshop.com
THE FLOWER SHOP Phone: 508-228-9008
NANTUCKET CAKE COMPANY
Web: www.nantucketflowershop.com
Phone: 508-228-4193 Web: www.nantucketcakecompany.com
Phone: 508-228-4819 COMMUNITY OF BAHA’I (BAHA’I FAITH) 120 Miacomet Road Phone: 508-228-1861 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY (CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST) 2 Madaket Road Phone: 508-228-0452 CONGREGATION SHIRAT HAYAM (JEWISH – PLURALISTIC) 11 Orange Street Phone: 508-228-6588 CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST (LATTER-DAY SAINTS) 15 Amelia Drive Phone: 508-325-0583
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Phone: 508-228-1309
CATHERINE FLANAGAN STOVER CRANBERRY TRANSPORTATION SERVICES
NANTUCKET CLAMBAKE COMPANY
Phone: 508-322-9091
Phone: 508-228-6979
Phone: 508-228-6890
ZOFIA PHOTOGRAPHY
PHOTO BY MIKE DISKIN
Phone: 508-325-4756
KAREN L. CARPENTER
Web: www.milestonetaxi.com/
NANTUCKET ISLAND EVENTS
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE
Phone: 508-825-9793
Email: info@september.com
Web: www.nantucketbythesea.com
TRANSPORTATION A1 TRANSPORTATION
Web: www.atasteofnantucket.com
Phone: 508-228-9166
PETTICOAT ROW BAKERY
TRESSES & THE DAY SPA
KRIS KINSLEY HANCOCK PHOTOGRAPHY
NANTUCKET BY THE SEA
shop.html
Phone: 508-228-7444
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FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH (BAPTIST)
ST. MARY’S CATHOLIC CHURCH (CATHOLIC)
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH (METHODIST)
1 Summer Street
Federal Street
2 Centre Street
Phone: 508-228-4930
Phone: 508-228-0100
Phone: 508-228-0810
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
ST. PAUL’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST
52 Centre Street
(EPISCOPAL)
11 Orange Street
Phone: 508-228-0950
20 Fair Street
Phone: 508-228-5466
KINGDOM HALL (JEHOVAH’S WITNESS)
Phone: 508-228-0916
43 Milk Street
SCONSET UNION CHAPEL (PROTESTANT)
Phone: 508-228-8816
New and Chapel Streets
QUAKER MEETING HOUSE
52 Somerset Road
7 Fair Street
Phone: 508-825-0805
Phone: 508-228-1894
RENTALS
MARTY KELLY NANTUCKET
NANTUCKET TENTS
Phone: 508-314-0282
Phone: 508-228-5645
JEFF ROSS & THE ATLANTICS
Web: www.martykellynantucket.com
Web: www.nantuckettents.com
Phone: 508-228-2825
PARCHMENT FINE PAPERS
NANTUCKET PARTY RENTALS
Phone: 508-228-4110
Phone: 508-228-1525
ANDY BULLINGTON
Web: www.parchmentnantucket.com
Web: www.nantucketpartyrentals.com
Phone: 508-257-9070
POETS CORNER PRESS
PLACESETTERS
Phone: 508-228-1051
Phone: 508-228-2192
WEDDING BANDS AND MUSIC
Web: www.nantucketmusic.com
Web: www.andybullington.com
Phone: 508-257-6616 NEW LIFE MINISTRIES (CHARISMATIC)
INVITATIONS
Web: www.placesetters-inc.com
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Only One of Ten Lighting Fixtures and Lamps That you Have not Seen Anywhere!
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Wedding
TIMELESS
WRITTEN BY AMY ROBERTS
FASHION THE NHA BLOWS THE DUST OFF SOME WEDDING WEAR AND EXPLORES THE BRIDAL FASHIONS OF YESTERYEAR.
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B
y the turn of the nineteenth century, Nantucket weddings had evolved from small family ceremonies into opulent affairs embellished with elaborate gifts, floral arrangements, decadent cake
recipes, and, of course, the design and detail of distinguished wedding attire.
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Arline Wilma Preston when she married Clark Wallace Bishop in 1928, in Siasconset.
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A
s the whaling industry transformed Nantucket from
an isolated agricultural island into a metropolitan center, island
ivory-colored silk damask vest with a strawberry pattern, notched lapel collar, and covered silk buttons. And by the middle of the
weddings drifted away from the formal procedure prescribed by
nineteenth century, bridal gowns had shifted from the use of colored
the Quakers to a means of displaying success and status. While the
fabrics, which had served as a utilitarian choice (allowing dresses
Quaker wedding ceremony was more of a process than a celebration,
could be worn more than once), to the precedent of the white wedding
the nineteenth-century Nantucket wedding became an elaborate event
gown, embellished with exquisite detailing and designed with fine
requiring extensive preparations. The bride and groom no longer
silk, linen, and tulle.
sought the approval of religious authorities, but began to utilize popular magazines and etiquette manuals, such as The Ladies Indis-
According to records, wedding fashion became a focal point of
pensable Assistant, published in 1853, to guide their preparations.
written correspondence and newspaper accounts by 1850. On August 19, 1858, island resident Elizabeth Crosby detailed the wedding dress
As documented in a scholarly article by the Nantucket Historical
of her younger sibling in a letter to her sister, describing “a plain
Association’s registrar, Aimee E. Newell, by the time Florence Folger
brown silk tissue made low neck with a Spencer cape a handsome
posed for her wedding photograph in 1887, Quakerism had lost its
thread lace in the neck – cape trimmed with a narrow box plaited
influence over the wedding ceremony. The confluence of a
ribbon the same shade as the dress . . . elegant I should have said.”
weakening religious- approval process and the escalating
Nearly two decades later when islander Fannie McCleave
interest of islanders in flaunting their material wealth
prepared for her wedding to John J. Gardner in
resulted in increasingly elaborate wedding
1877, the Inquirer and Mirror described Miss
celebrations that included lavish wedding gifts
McCleave as “tastily dressed in white, with
and newspaper accounts. The Inquirer
lace veil, the whole being trimmed in smi-
and Mirror described the wedding of
lax, while the groom appeared in a dress of
Florence Folger and William A. Webster in
black, with white vest. The couple presented a
great detail, reporting that, “the bride was
very handsome appearance.”
LEFT PAGE MIDDLE: Pierced ivory and painted silk fan. Scene with two figures in center. Figures are holding a burning stick. LEFT PAGE BOTTTOM: Men’s ivory silk damask with a strawberry pattern. Notched lapel collar, six silk covered buttons, two pockets and slanted breast pocket on right side. Cut straight across bottom. Back is silk in a twill weave. Two tabs tie with three bows at back. TOP LEFT: A formal portrait of Florence Folger, about to become Mrs. William A. Webster, in Springfield, Massachusetts, December 12, 1887. TOP RIGHT: Formal wedding portrait of William A. Webster, wedding date December 14, 1887, in Springfield, Massachusetts.
handsomely attired in white corded silk, en traine, with tulle.”
Although the nineteenth century bore witness
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sharp decline, Nantucket weddings continued to
bride’s wedding gown, it carefully described
reflect an adherence to elegant details and
the wedding that took place at her home on Union Street as
stylish wedding attire. Aimee Newell suggests that, “the romance of
“prettily decorated with ferns and flowers” and listed the “many
wedding gowns and…gifts provided an escape from the dreary days
costly gifts” received by the couple, including “a beautiful ivory fan
on an island with a dwindling population.” By the end of the century,
inlaid with gold.” The fan, having been brought to the island from the
Nantucket had endured the great fire of 1846 as well as the loss of a
East Indies in 1821 by Captain Eliakim Gardner (an ancestor of the
significant portion of its population to the Gold Rush. Therefore, the
bride), was testament to the worldly treasures collected on whale-
wedding celebration provided the perfect anecdote to this economic
ships throughout the century.
downturn. Wedding fashion
Until the turn of the twentieth century, Nantucket weddings commonly
evolved propor-
took place on the island because it was the home of the bride and
tionally with the
groom. Shortly thereafter, Nantucket’s reinvention as a tourist des-
celebration itself.
tination in the 1920s and 1930s marked the rise of wedding celebra-
At the beginning
tions by summer residents. By the time that Arline Preston celebrated
of the nineteenth
her wedding to Clark Bishop in 1928 at “The Hedges” in ’Sconset,
century, wedding
the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Preston, Nantucket had
attire began to
made the leap toward elaborate, high-profile summer weddings. The
reflect a shift
newspaper described Miss Preston’s dress as “ivory satin and chiffon,
toward elegance
trimmed with rose point lace,” pointing out that the dress had been
and sophistica-
made by Bonwit Teller and the veil purchased in Italy. The Pres-
tion as opposed
ton–Clark wedding was one of many celebrations that would come
to function. In
to symbolize the modern-day Nantucket wedding: glamorous, full of
1838, Isaac Macy
intricate detail and truly one-of-a-kind. It is safe to say that today’s
donned an
lavish wedding affairs have a strong foothold in Nantucket’s history.
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to both the rise of the whaling industry and its Not only did the newspaper take note of the
109
Nantucket AIDS Network
Maria Mitchell Gala
FOGGYSHEET nantucket
Jean Doyen de Montaillou, Michael Kovner, Scott Peltier, Philip Nardone, Maria & George Roach Fran & Harry Ostrander
Eddie Schmidt & Michael Kovner
Janet Schulte & Judy MacLeod
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Charles Gottesman & Merrill Gottesman
Chris Drake & Russell Robinson
Rick Wackenhut, Mary Jane Bauer & Joe Serafini
John Johnson & Patience Killen
111 Photos by KRIS KINSLEY HANCOCK
NUPTIALS Featured Wedding
B&G: EMILY CRUICE & JULIAN CASEY DRESS: JUDD WADDELL MAKEUP: EMMA GIBBONS VENUE & CATERER: THE WAUWINET CAKE: JODI’S CAKES MINISTER: TED ANDERSON BAND: SULTANS OF SWING BRIDESMAIDS’ DRESSES: WATTERS & WATTERS FLORIST: FLOWERS ON CHESTNUT HAIR: TRESSES
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PHOTOGRAPHER: CARY HAZLEGROVE
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76 Main Street Inn ACK Eye Allan LaFrance, Inc. Angel Frazier Bartlett’s Farm Boarding House Boston Realty Breeze at Nantucket Hotel Cape Air Cape Cod Five Christopher’s Cold Noses Congdon & Coleman RE Corazon del Mar Cranshaw Construction Cru Current Vintage Cynthia Hayes Debbie Cleveland Jordan William Raveis Dreamland Theatre Dunmoyle Capital Advisors Epernay Frame Center Freedman’s of Nantucket Garden Design Company GKFO Heidi Weddendorf Hermes Heron Financial Island Properties J. Pepper Frazier Co. Jordan William Raveis RE Kathleen Hay Designs Landrover Cape Cod Lyman Perry Hutker Architects Main St. Construction Marine Home Center Maury People - Craig Hawkins Maury People - Gary Winn Maury People - Kathy Gallaher Maury People - Kenny Hilbig Mignot Milly & Grace Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Nantucket Airlines Nantucket Hotel Nantucket Insurance Agency Nantucket Parcel Plus Nantucket Restaurant Week Nantucket Tents Nantucket Windmill Auto Nobby Shop Otis & Ahearn Pearl Petticoat Row Bakery Placesetters Posh Shreve, Crump & Low Susan Lister Locke TCE Contractors Tonkin of Nantucket Triple Eight Liqueurs Victoria Greenhood Washington Trust Water Jewels Windsor Zero Main
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