Home and Garden, and Real Estate- April 5, 2020

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For the best local real estate listings, go to masslive.com/realestate

Home & Garden F

& Real Estate

| SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020

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INSIDE

ANTIQUES & COLLECTING: Colorful signs with old-fashioned pictures, F2 PROJECT OF THE WEEK: Planter bench creates perfect retreat, F3

HOME PLAN OF THE WEEK, F6 WMASS DEEDS, F7 IN THE GARDEN WITH LEE REICH: F8

On camera from home

TV personalities provide peek at their homes, pets and book collections PAGE F4

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F2 | SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020

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Terry and Kim Kovel | Antiques and Collecting

Colorful signs with old-fashioned pictures favored

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art of the fun of collecting and going to shows and auctions is how often you see something that is a mystery. It’s a learning experience. We took our children to shows as soon as they knew how to behave. Don’t touch, hands behind your back, ask if you want to see something.

Big, colorful signs with old-fashioned pictures were the favorites, so this paint ad was one they liked. We checked with the dealer before taking them into a booth and explained they knew how to behave and if there should be an accident, of course we would pay for any damage. Each had a collection — small heart charms or tin spice boxes. We showed them the jewelry and named the colors of the stones, then the name of the stones, and by kindergarten, they were experts. They helped us buy things for the country store by asking the dealer the price of a sign or a box that they liked. Big, colorful signs with old-fashioned pictures were the favorites, so this paint ad was one they liked. The tin sign is 27 inches tall and is unusual because it has a row of wooden color sample

CURRENT PRICES Current prices are recorded from antiques shows, flea markets, sales and auctions throughout the United States. Prices vary in different locations because of local economic conditions. Bank, mother bird and 2 fledglings, redware, tooled details, slab base, 1800s, 4½ by 6 inches, $83. Box, lock, softwood, feather grain painted, pegged construction, wallpaper lining, 1800s, 6 by 15 by 10 inches, $118. Kitchen, kettle, copper, arched swing handle, goose neck spout, crimped seams, domed lid, J. Getz, Lancaster, Pa., c. 1830, 11 inches, $148. Redware, bean pot, sgrafitto flowers, ribbed strap handle, Pennsylvania, 1800s, 5 by 8 inches, $384. Durand glass, vase, blue purple iridescent, bulbous base, tapered neck, flared rim, signed 1920s, 5½ by 6½ inches, $470. Furniture, corner cupboard, white paint, 2 sections, arched glazed door over 2 raised panel doors, bracket feet, 86 by 47 inches, $472. Toy, phonograph with horn, fairy tale graphics, key wind, spring motor, Keimola, Germany, 1920s, 7 by 3 inches, $575 Silver bowl, Art Deco, hammered, footed, Reed & Barton, 1929, 5⅞ by 9½ inches, $855. Currier & Ives, Winter In The Country, Old Grist Mill, hand colored, 1864, 22 by 29¾ inches, $992. Barometer, banjo form, mahogany, broken arch pediment, brass trim, rosettes, pineapple, thermometer, Thos. Jordan, Chesham, 54 inches, $2,640.

Sometimes the bidding goes past our limit because someone else wants it more.

This unusual sign advertising paint was made to be shown in a store. It had an easel back so it could be displayed on the counter and a metal chain so it could be hung. It sold for $3,186. (COWLES SYNDICATE INC.)

blocks at the bottom. The old car and the “quaint” porch picture also had appeal. But although we agreed it would

look great at our house, the final bid was $3,186, and they learned you don’t always get what you want at an auction.

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“Me for Crackerjack” on the front. It’s about 1 inch high and 3/4 inch wide.

A.

Frederick Rueckheim began selling popcorn in 1871. Cracker Jack button stud He and his brother, Louis, worth anything? It has Sail- sold a mixture of popcorn, or Jack, little dog Bingo and SEE ANTIQUES, PAGE F3

Q. Is an embossed metal


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Antiques CONTINUED FROM PAGE F2

peanuts and molasses at the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893. Louis copyrighted the recipe and the slogan, “The more you eat, the more you want,” in 1896. Coupons for prizes were added to the boxes in 1910. Sales increased dramatically after small prizes for children were included in the boxes beginning in 1912. Frederick’s grandson was the model for Sailor Jack, which was first used in advertisements in 1916. The first boxes with Sailor Jack were produced in 1918. Cracker Jack prizes are collectible, especially the old metal ones. Prizes were eliminated in 2016 and replaced by a game that can be played by scanning a URL code. A button stud like yours sold recently for $56. Cracker Jack is now part of Frito Lay.

Q. I inherited a purple

carnival glass Good Luck pattern dish from my grandparents. My grandfather got it at a local fair. I know these dishes were won by coins being thrown in a game at a booth at the fair. What is it worth?

A.

The Good Luck bowl is a piece of Northwood glass made by one of the glassmaking companies owned by Harry C. Northwood. The pattern includes horseshoes and other lucky symbols. He founded the Northwood Glass Co. in Martins Ferry, Ohio, in 1887 and moved to Ellwood City, Pennsylvania, in 1892. When the company closed in 1896, he opened the Northwood Co. in Indiana, Pennsylvania. It became part of the National Glass Co. consortium in 1899, but Northwood continued to make glass. He founded the H. Northwood Co. in Wheeling, West Virginia, in 1901 and worked with his brother Carl. They made carnival glass, like your bowl, plus custard, goofus and stretch glass, and more in many different colors. A 9-inch blue-purple bowl with a pressed pattern is worth about $150.

Q. What is the value of a

metal figure called “The Appeal to the Great Spirit” by Cyrus Dallin? It shows an Indian chief, arms out wide to the side, sitting astride his horse. The horse is 8¾ inches long. The base is marked “C.E. Dallin 1913.” The figure is in perfect condition except for the rein, which has to be reattached to the horse.

A.

“The Appeal to the Great Spirit” is the last of four sculptures by Cyrus Dallin (1861-1944) in a series called The Epic of the Indian, made between 1890 and 1909. The figure represents a Sioux chief praying to the Great Spirit after surrendering to the U.S. Army. The life-size bronze sculpture is in front of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. The sculpture was made in three smaller sizes in the early 1900s. Gorham Foundry in Providence, Rhode Island, made the figures in at least two sizes. If your figure was made at the Gorham Foundry, it will be marked “Gorham Co. Founders QXC” and may also have a number. It’s impossible to tell the value from a picture. You should take the figure to a museum or to a knowledgeable antiques dealer to see if they can determine if it is an original. The original figures sell at auction for about $5,000-$7,000. Unauthorized reproductions have been made and sell online for $50-$60. Tip: Keep a collection of photographs in an interior room of the house. Avoid the basement, garage and attic. Terry Kovel and Kim Kovel answer questions sent to the column. By sending a letter with a question and a picture, you give full permission for use in the column or any other Kovel forum. Names, addresses or email addresses will not be published. We cannot guarantee the return of photographs, but if a stamped envelope is included, we will try. The amount of mail makes personal answers or appraisals impossible. Write to Kovels, The Republican, King Features Syndicate, 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

HOME & GARDEN

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020 | F3

Don and Dave Runyan | Project of the Week

Planter bench transforms patio, deck into retreat

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or do-ityourselfers everywhere, warm weather means projects. As life moves outdoors, it’s time to get those al fresco living areas ready for long afternoons and warm evenings — and this versatile planter bench project is the perfect place to start.

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Filled with plants and flowers, the project transforms any balcony, patio or deck into a lovely retreat. Built from redwood as

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F4 | SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020

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On camera at home TV personalities provide peek at their wallpaper, book collections, and cats By Jura Koncius and Roxanne Roberts

T

Washington Post

he first day Craig Melvin broadcast from his Connecticut home last month, his producers told him to pick the room with the strongest Wi-Fi signal. So the “Today” show cohost headed up to his home office. Two minutes before airtime, his director piped up: “Wow. That is some wallpaper, huh?” Indeed. The navy and white Palm Tree pattern by Serena & Lily was bold and busy.

Al Roker was asked to work from home after a “Today” staffer was diagnosed with the coronavirus. (NBC UNIVERSAL)

It was a statement. Viewers noticed. “I have heard more about that damn wallpaper than anything I’ve done on NBC,” Melvin says with a laugh. “Everyone has an opinion.” On Melvin’s Instagram, the wallpaper was a hit, with comments from followers calling it “fabulous,” “psychedelic” and “trippy.” The powers that be at NBC, however, did not love it. And his children, ages 6 and 3, realized Daddy was home and immediately ran upstairs into the live shot. By Day 2, Melvin was broadcasting from his former man cave in the basement, with three iPads, three

lights and upgraded Wi-Fi. But the wallpaper, picked out by Melvin’s wife Lindsay Czarniak, is immortalized in a promotional video by MSNBC, where it appears in all its swirling glory. Melvin, along with Al Roker, was asked to work from home after a “Today” staffer was diagnosed with the coronavirus. The pandemic means that America is seeing familiar faces in an unfamiliar setting: their homes. Some are elegant. Some are bohemian. Some are bare-bones. All reveal something we never knew about their owners, whom we welcome into our living rooms on a daily basis.

Sue Palka, evening meteorologist at Washington, D.C.’s Fox 5, started broadcasting from her Maryland home office last month with two new colleagues: cats Murphy, shown, and Lily, who have stolen the show. (FOX 5)

Unlike the glossy, carefully curated spreads in shelter magazines, these celebrity spaces have a makeshift quality — which somehow makes their owners a bit more human. It’s all uncharted territory. When Anderson Cooper stood in a corner of his West Village home dressed in a dark T-shirt, facing the camera, he was standing against a backdrop of leather-bound books, a globe, a vintage chandelier and what looked

like a leather wing chair. “Tens of millions more Americans saw their world shrink to four walls, or the walls of their homes, myself included,” said Cooper at the open of his CNN show “Anderson Cooper 360.” Unlike the glossy, carefully curated spreads in shelter magazines, these celebrity spaces have a makeshift quality — which somehow makes their owners a bit more human. Sue Palka, evening meteorologist at Washington, D.C.’s Fox 5, started broadcasting March 23 from her Gaithersburg, Maryland, home office with two new colleagues: Murphy and Lily. Her two resSEE CAMERA, PAGE F5

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Camera CONTINUED FROM PAGE F4

cue cats are stealing the show, sitting sphinx-like next to her, staring right into the camera, jumping on the back of the yellow upholstered chair she plucked from her dining room and trying to snuggle in her lap. (She’s keeping a lint roller on standby because she’s often wearing black pants.) “At first I was worried that I should email my boss and ask him if I should keep out the cats,” Palka says. “But now the feedback is all about the cats and not about the weather.” There have been calls for Murphy and Lily to get their own Twitter feed. “The cats are keeping me calm on these anxiety-filled days,” Palka added. The most popular setting for most media types is their home office — or what looks like an office. Some are guest bedrooms hastily converted into mini-broadcasting studios. Some are dimly lit finished basements. Some are kitchens. Consider Becky Quick, CNBC co-anchor of “Squawk Box.” She gets up at 3:45 a.m., puts on her slippers and sneaks into a spare bedroom in her New Jersey home to start her busy news day. “I do my own hair and makeup; I’m my own lighting person, so I set up the lights, and I’m my own IT director, so I set up the computers and call in,” Quick says. She pushed the bedroom furniture over to the side of

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HOME & GARDEN

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020 | F5

“The first thing that came to mind was lighting. And the other was what area would I be able to keep clean the longest. I looked to a corner of my living room. I have my spiritual crystals and my plants here.” SOMARA THEODORE, WEEKEND METEOROLOGIST WITH NBC4 WASHINGTON

CNBC “Squawk Box” co-anchor Becky Quick’s spare bedroom is now a makeshift studio. (BECKY QUICK)

Designers are seeing their work show up in unexpect(NBC UNIVERSAL) ed places. Recently, Gayle the room, arranged her com- apartment. “The first thing King, a co-host of “CBS This puter on an antique table and that came to mind was lightMorning,” Instagrammed a brought up a small bookcase ing,” she says. “And the other photo of herself at home with from the basement. She asks was what area would I be able a staffer from O Magazine, to keep clean the longest. her family not to use the where she is editor at large. I looked to a corner of my Wi-Fi until 9 a.m., when her They were setting up a laptop living room. I have my spirthree-hour show is over. She in King’s kitchen so she could itual crystals and my plants has towels stuffed under the work remotely. In the background, Sheila Bridges spothere.” She says her setup door so her 3-year-old won’t hear her and want to burst in. looks “more bohemian” than ted the bright yellow Harlem “We have four kids,” she says. the rest of the place, which is Toile de Jouy wallpaper she designed. very neutral. Her palm tree, “So I can’t be broadcasting “Watching these new setsnake plant and succulents from my living room.” tings for the news media, you Somara Theodore, weekend provide a garden-like backdrop: “These are pretty dope see that almost everybody meteorologist with NBC4 seems to have wallpaper,” Washington, had two days to plants,” she says. “I needed Bridges said. “It’s a glimpse prepare to broadcast from her that pop of color to go live from here.” into people’s homes that we 800-square-foot Maryland NBC News anchor Craig Melvin broadcasting from his home.

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otherwise would not have. I think those of us who are designers are watching and saying, ‘Oh, I think that looks really good. And that looks really terrible.’” Bridges, of course, loves King’s kitchen. Former Republican National Committee chair and MSNBC political analyst Michael Steele’s home office elegantly displayed the classic symbols of a Washington power broker: photos, diplomas and a painting or two. “It’s a nice, effective background,” he says. “It works very well.” NBC’s Tom Costello reported from his Maryland home sitting next to his computer


HOME & GARDEN

F6 | SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020

THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM

All of the main living areas conveniently open up to one another, while a versatile study on the first floor could become a home office, hobby space, or private yoga room.

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HOME PLAN OF THE WEEK

Charming farmhouse with classic curb appeal

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Casual and modern, this farmhouse design boasts a super open layout that creates an airy vibe throughout the main level.


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Project CONTINUED FROM PAGE F3

any space. The bench features mostly straight cuts, making it easy enough for beginners. First, determine the combination of planter boxes and connecting benches that works best for your space (individual materials lists and cutting schedules are provided for each component). Next, measure, cut and assemble the boxes and benches separately. To finish, combine the components for a truly custom installation.

Built from redwood as pictured (other species like cedar also work well), the modular design guarantees it will be the right size for any space.

Deeds Editor’s note: Hampden County deeds were unavailable because of the temporary closing of the Roderick L. Ireland Courthouse in Springfield over coronavirus concerns.

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020 | F7

al representative, and Martin J. Clayton, estate, to Ellen Arble and James Arble, 11 Springfield Road, $100.

DEERFIELD John L. Plotkin to Ruggles Family Trust, Michael S. Ruggles, trustee, 101 Plain Road, $416,000.

Richard A. Eaton to Barbara L. Williams and Larry J. Williams, 17 Melanie J. Fletcher-Howell to Jessi- Childs Cross Road, $182,500. ca M. Jimison, 15 High Point Drive, $250,000.

AMHERST

Lise N. Halpern and Jeffrey S. Cooley to Michael W. McClurg and Heather W. McClurg, 22 Indian Pipe Lane, $627,000. Historical Enterprises LLC, to Daniel R. Friedman and Lara S. Friedman, 22 Rolling Ridge Road, $350,000. Richard P. Lawlor and Catherine Lawlor to Joel R. Acker and Tara A. Acker, 36 Weaver Circle, $570,000. Ellen Panzer to Tracy L. Ross, 30 Justice Drive, $274,000.

ASHFIELD Kelly D. McDonald to Tracey J. Ingebretsen, 308 Buckley Road, $55,000.

BELCHERTOWN Gary K. Booth and Katherine A. Currier to 67 Dressel Avenue LLC, Dressel Street, $100. Thomas R. Hresko to Julie A. Ayres and Julie Ayres, 11 Laurel Ridge Drive, $15,000. Dean M. Kolodji and Julie A. Kolodji to Brian P. Patrick and Carrie Ann Patrick, 153 Stebbins St., $370,000.

EASTHAMPTON

Christopher C. Fickett, Kerry Hughes-Fickett, Kerri Hughes-Fickett and Chad D. Alexander to Elyane Harney, 46 Pomeroy St., $534,500.

HATFIELD Deborah M. Keisch and Timothy D. Scott to Michael Murphy, 113 Prospect St., $394,000.

Ellen Arble, Ellen Arble, person-

Beatrice L. DiFrancesco to Catherine L. Broadhead, 21 Pine Road, $81,000.

NORTHAMPTON Elena L. Maslowski, Jon Paul Devanandan, Martin Devanandan and Eileen Sullivan-Boss, conservator, to Matthew P. Larochelle, 112 Dunphy Drive, $205,000. Norbert I. Goldfield to Christine Fiedler, 26 Crescent St., $214,000. Apple Tree LLC, to 11 Orchard Street LLC, 11 Orchard St., $150,000.

Barry Small and Linda B. Small to James William Poro and Allison Elizabeth Egan-Sherry, 10 Lawler Drive, $326,000.

ERVING James Van Houten to Anthony F. Manzi, 20 French King Highway, $60,000.

GRANBY Scott William Wilson and Joy Wilson Skipton to Matthew Skipton, trustee, Ryan Skipton, trustee, Sarah V. Wilson, trustee, Philip S. Wilson, trustee, Kevin M. Boisselle, trustee, and Skipton Wilson Irrevocable Trust, Burnett Street, $100.

Roman Catholic Bishop of Springfield to O’Connell Hawley LLC, 10 Hawley St., $1,260,000.

David Dukor-Jackson and Tara R. Dukor-Jackson to Vincent R. Pernice and Kaylee Pernice, 45 Ferncliff Ave., $178,500. Kimberly A. Farmer to Aida LLC, 60 Main St., $310,000. Cerosimo Industries Inc., to Marianne M. Geoffroy and Mark W. Geoffroy, 31 Old Elm Way, $53,900. James H. Hurt to M. Jemms Orange I LLC, 39-41 Pleasant St., $240,000

PLAINFIELD

Roman Catholic Bishop of Springfield to O’Connell Hawley LLC, Phillips Place, $315,000.

Martin J. Padden Jr., to Caryl Ann Finn, Alden Lane and Bow Street, $22,000.

Lawrence R. Snyder and Colleen Q. Snyder to Heather Snyder O’Connor, trustee, and Lawrence & Colleen Snyder Irrevocable Trust, 196 Overlook Drive, $100.

Martin J. Padden Jr., to Roxanne Laurel Finn, Alden Lane and Bow Street, $33,000.

Richard D. Rasa and Richard D. G. Casreen to Anthony Lewis Brown and Jason Matthew Zellmer, 1 Florence St., $270,000.

SHELBURNE Devon G. Whitney to Mary Lou Gallup and Charles J. Readinger, SEE DEEDS, PAGE F9

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APR*

Patricia M. Russo Estate, Priscilla E. Daniels, personal representative, Newbridge Industries and Nichola to Priscilla E. Daniels, 354 Wells Reville to Peter Farfard, 22 Prescott St., $62,600. Hill, $253,000. Lenox Homes LLC, to Meaghan L. Williamson and Joel F. Williamson, 635 N. Washington St., and 635 North Washington St., $355,000.

NORTHFIELD

APR*

Call 413-782-3161 for details

HADLEY Kestrel Land Trust to Food Bank of Western Massachusetts Inc., Shattuck Road, $1,260,000.

* All rates based on credit score. Rates subject to change. Rate may increase due to loan to value. Loan processing fee of $500 collected at closing. Rate locks good up to 45 days.

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The finished planter boxes measure about 21 inches square by 17 inches tall, and the benches are 36 inches long by 15 inches wide. The Planter Bench plan, No. 878, is $9.95 and includes step-by-step assembly instructions, full-size traceable patterns, construction diagrams, shopping lists and cutting schedules and a toll-free help line for project questions. A package of three planter projects, No. C128, is $22.95 and includes this plan plus plans for a wishing well planter and a wheelbarrow planter. Please include $4 for postage and handling and allow about two weeks for delivery. To order by mail, clip this article and send it with a check or money order to U-Bild Features, care of The Republican, 741B Olive Ave., Vista CA 92083. To order by credit card, call 1-800-8282453. Visit U-Bild on the web at u-bild.com.

HOME & GARDEN

LEGEND: The rate and annual percentage rate (APR) are effective as of the publication date. The APR may increase after consummation and may vary. Payments do not include amounts for taxes and insurance. The fees set forth for each advertisement above may be charged to open the plan (A) Mortgage Banker, (B) Mortgage Broker, (C) Bank, (D) S&L, (E) Credit Union, (BA) indicates Licensed Mortgage Banker, NYS Banking Dept., (BR) indicates Registered Mortgage Broker, NYS Banking Dept., (loans arranged through third parties). “Call for Rates” means actual rates were not available at press time. All rates are quoted on a minimum FICO score of 740. Conventional loans are based on loan amounts of $165,000. Jumbo loans are based on loan amounts of $424,100. Points quoted include discount and/or origination. Lock Days: 30-60. Annual percentage rates (APRs) are based on fully indexed rates for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). The APR on your specific loan may differ from the sample used. Fees reflect charges relative to the APR. If your down payment is less than 20% of the home’s value, you will be subject to private mortgage insurance, or PMI. FHA mortgages include both UFMIP and MIP fees based on loan amount of $165,000 with 5% down payment. VA mortgages include funding fees based on loan amount of $165,000 with 5% down payment. The Republican does not guarantee the accuracy of the information appearing above or the availability of rates and fees in this table. All rates, fees and other information are subject to change without notice. The Republican does not own any financial institutions. Some or all of the companies appearing in this table pay a fee to appear in this table. If you are seeking a mortgage in excess of $424,100, recent legislation may enable lenders in certain locations to provide rates that are different from those shown in the table above. Sample Repayment Terms-ex. 360 monthly payments of $5.29 per $1,000 borrowed ex. 180 monthly payments of $7.56 per $1,000 borrowed. We recommend that you contact your lender directly to determine what rates may be available to you. To access the NMLS Consumer Access website, please visit www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org. To appear in this table, or report any inaccuracies call 413-788-1050.


HOME & GARDEN

F8 | SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020

THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM

Lee Reich | In the Garden

S

Beauty of bushes also bears tasty fruit

o planting fever has grabbed you, and you are surfing the web or thumbing through your favorite nursery catalog to look over what’s available in bushes. Decisions, decisions.

might bother your bushes. Birds. However, some berry bushes bear more than enough to share between you and your feathered friends. And if you consider birds to be your friends, then attracting birds is just another plus for these plants, whose good looks, after all, is livened by birds flitting about. Although a berry bush can be as little trouble to grow as any forsythia or lilac, berry bushes do — as do these two ornamentals — need some Should your bushes offer attention. As with any plant tasty berries or should they you put in the ground, check offer good looks. Labor no out site conditions before more! You can have your cake you plant. For berry bushes, make sure that soil drainage ... er, bush ... and eat it too, for there are plenty of bushes is adequate. If water still that are ornamental and bear stands in a foot deep hole for more than 12 hours after you edible berries as well. Berry bushes are as easy to pour water into it, the site is grow as any strictly ornamen- too boggy for most bushes. tal bushes. Pests rarely pose a In that case, either plant your serious threat. How fortunate, bush atop a wide mound of because when you grow berry soil to get its roots up and out bushes also as ornamentals, of the waterlogged zone, or you will likely plant them near choose a new, better site. living areas, where you can Another requirement of enjoy their good looks. You most berry bushes is abundant sunlight — at least six don’t want to have to spray pesticide near where you dine hours per day. They need light both for flavor and al fresco or where children regularly tumble on the grass. yield. That sweetness in a OK, there is one pest that blueberry fruit, for example

Camera CONTINUED FROM PAGE F5

and printer. Behind him, shelves neatly displayed figurines and objects. “If I had to imagine what Tom Costello’s home office would look like, this would be it,” says Melvin. “Organized, put-together, rock solid.” Most pundits select bookcases as their background: It’s scholarly, serious and sends a message about their education and sophistication. Some bookcases are simple — Ikea Billy is a favorite — but some are elaborate affairs with beautiful hardwoods, custom millwork and fancy lighting. Other sneak

Nanking cherry is one of a number of bushes that provide not only beauty, but also tasty fruits. (LEE REICH PHOTO)

represents the conversion of the sun’s energy to sugar. And finally, many berry bushes require regular pruning — as do, again, forsythia, lilac, and many strictly ornamental bushes. Pruning allows stems to bask in light and bathe in air, keeping a bush productive and limiting disease problems. Regularly removing old stems also makes way for younger, more productive ones. No great skill is needed to prune a bush, and pruning is generally not needed until your plant’s fourth winter.

Just take your hand shears or lopping shears (the latter if stems are thicker than about 1/2”) and cut a few of the very oldest, thickest stems to ground level. Also cut to the ground enough of the youngest shoots so they don’t crowd each other as they age. The only other pruning needed is to clip back any stems that look out of place. After all, you are growing these plants for beauty as well as for food. Spend the next few days looking around your yard for places that might be beautified by pretty shrubs. Next

Another requirement of most berry bushes is abundant sunlight — at least six hours per day. They need light both for flavor and yield. week we’ll see just which ones are best for offering tasty treats in addition to good looks. See also my book, “Landscaping With Fruit” for plants and planting ideas. Any gardening questions? Email them to me at garden@ leereich.com and I’ll try answering them directly or in this column. Come visit my garden at leereich.com/blog.

“On a lighter note, one byproduct of doing so many remote interviews, which include interviews of people from their dens, is you and I get to browse their personal book collections.” FORMER HOMELAND SECURITY SECRETARY JEH JOHNSON, “MEET THE PRESS”

peeks into hosts’ personalities also turn up on shelves: Ivy League coffee mugs, big-time awards, diplomas, kids’ toys. And then there are the books themselves. “On a lighter note, one byproduct of doing so many remote interviews, which include interviews of people from their dens, is you and I get to browse their personal book collections,” said former

Homeland Security secretary Jeh Johnson on a recent “Meet the Press.” That’s assuming you can actually see the books. Dim lighting and muffled sound are common on new remote sets, until producers and crew figure out just the right formula. Steele discovered his old webcam wasn’t up to today’s streaming speeds. He tried to buy a new one and discovered they are almost

as hard to find as toilet paper. Because “Today” co-host Savannah Guthrie is on the air four hours every day, the production team quickly created a home studio out of a basement room of her home in upstate New York. “It was a guest room; the bed is still there,” she says. You can’t see that on air, of course. The team set up a giant monitor behind Guthrie’s desk and installed a camera

and teleprompter that are operated remotely. Her children are 5 and 3; their playroom is right across the hall. “My husband literally ducted-taped the hallway door so they don’t come bursting in,” she says. Guthrie is committed to working from home as long as necessary. “All of us feel personally how unsettling this is,” she says. “We’re really grateful that we can.”


THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM

HOME & GARDEN

Get a great garden without digging a financial hole

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020 | F9

Deeds CONTINUED FROM PAGE F7 203 Shelburne Center Road, $349,000.

By Jeanette Marantos

SOUTH HADLEY ments because they raise the clippers as well for about half temperature of the soil as the price (about $33). Daniel Dowen and Danielle Gardening doesn’t have to they decompose and “cook.” • Check out local garDowen to Frederick R. Smith, 631 be expensive. But tell that to dens You can’t plant until the soil Newton St., and Belmont Avenue, your pocketbook after you’ve cools, so wait a couple of Before you plant, find out $304.900. made a trip to your local nurs- weeks to buy plants. what grows well in your area. Patrick S. Sabbs and Karen D. ery or garden center. Visit nurseries and take notes • Start with a few tools Sabbs to Daniel Dowen and DanBetween the bags of special You don’t need many tools about what plants you love ielle Dowen, 45 Red Bridge Lane, $459,000. soils, tools, hoses, fertilizers, to have a good garden, said and the conditions in which seed packets and, of course, Yvonne Savio, creator of the they’re grown. Protect your Mary Elizabeth Rinaldi to 86 ShadGardening in LA blog and plants, your plan to grow heart and your wallet by seekowbrook Trust and Mary Elizabeth Rinaldi, trustee, 86 Shadowbrook, ing plants in harmony with a retired director of the Los edibles or even a modest $100. balcony of flowers was never Angeles County Cooperative your growing conditions. Deborah Pisciotta to Isaac W. And don’t forget your neargoing to be a budget project. Extension Master Gardener Weitzman and Robert B. WeitzEven worse: when all those program. est resource: your neighbors. new acquisitions result in a poor-performing garden, or it never even gets planted. We’ve all been there, especially as beginners. So take a deep breath, forgive past indiscretions and read on for some practical ways to put more joy and less money into gardening. • Make a plan and start small Break your garden plan into several easy-to-accomplish steps. You’ll be less likely to spend impulsively on cool-but-unnecessary equipbankatpeoples.com · 413.538.9500 Member FDIC/Member DIF ment or kill the plants you bought because you didn’t The FDIC insures all deposits up to $250,000 per depositor. All deposit amounts above the FDIC limits are insured in full by the Depositors Insurance Fund (DIF). have time to plant them. Be realistic about your space and goals; do you really Savio recommends starting Many gardeners are eager man, 47 Baker St., and 47 Shadowto talk about what they grow have time this weekend to with a sturdy hand trowel, brook Estates, $276,000. and may even be willing to prep your garden bed and a hand fork for scratching Deborah K. Pelc to Loretta A. share seeds or volunteer to plant 60 seedlings (that’s 10 fertilizer and mulch around Chudzik, 12 Skyline Drive, $100. six-packs of flowers and veg- plants and a large garden fork give you some seedlings or Loretta A. Chudzik and Deborah etables)? Do you have room show you how to propagate for incorporating organic K. Pelc, attorney-in-fact, to Home for 60 seedlings? Spreading plants from cuttings from amendments into the soil. Improvement Associates LLC, 12 out the work will make things Using a fork instead of a their yard. Skyline Drive, $170,000. easier on your wallet too. • Be realistic shovel is easier on your back Crystal L. Harto, Andrew D. Harto Gardening experts say Make a list again, this time and better for the soil, she and Crystal L. O’Brien to Kathsoil preparation is the most of the plants you want and said. leen J. Bryant, 4 Birchwood Place, $229,000. important thing you can where you will put them, to You might also invest in a do (after figuring out the good shovel to dig large holes keep impulse spending at a sunniest spot in your yard or for trees or shrubs and a pair minimum. SOUTHAMPTON If you’re planting an edible patio). Make your first task of sturdy hand clippers. Scout Mary A. Phelan to Samuel R. Maule garden, grow vegetables your and purchases devoted to out garden tools at garage and Kimberly H. Maule, 3 Jeanne family will eat, Savio said, and soil prep, whether it’s buying and estate sales. Circle, $355,000. look for plants that provide good organic potting soil for It’s wise to buy sturdy, Janet Elizabeth Buhlmann, trustee, the biggest bang for your a few containers or adding well-made equipment, but and Edna M. Bresnahan Irrevocaorganic amendments, such high-quality tools don’t have buck. For instance, you might ble Trust to Sandra Demers, 220 as compost, aged manure, to be the most expensive. For love cabbage or cauliflower, College Highway, $247,600. but they require lots of space coffee grounds and seaweed, instance, Swiss-made Felco and produce only one head to a garden patch in your 1-inch hand pruners are the WARE per plant. Broccoli keeps yard. gold standard for garden Typically, you have to tools (about $60), but Corona producing smaller bunches of Fannie Mae, Federal National Mortwait a week or two to plant tender edibles after the main tools (based in Corona) gage Association and Continental Real Estate Services Inc., attorafter adding organic amend- makes excellent 1-inch hand head is harvested. Los Angeles Times

Your money is 100% safe. 100% insured. Not all banks can say this.

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ney-in-fact, to Carlos Fragoso Serrazina and Monica Reis Serrazina, 18-20 Vigeant St., and 18 Vigeant St., $63,000. William Cooper III, trustee, Brenda L. Cooper, trustee, and B & B Nominee Trust to Brenda Cooper-Schworer, 26 South St., $100. Joseph C. Heymann, Kathryn Jean Heymann and Kathryn Heymann to Katherine A. Marceau, 20 Highland St., $205,000. Linda M. Kenyon to Brian R. Farmer, 11 Barnes St., $142,000. Heidi Pardee and Jason Pardee to Adilson Lima Jr., 9 Castle St., $136,000. Rufus G. Chaffee, Rebecca Chaffee and Rebecca Lawrence to Kaycee E. Partlow, 36 Aspen St., $138,000. Maurice R. Lavallee to Edward J. Smith, 26 Gould Road, $107,000. Belco Construction Co Inc., to CDC Investments Group LLC, Wildflower Drive, $75,000.

WESTHAMPTON Lans G. Christenson, Candice Christenson and Candice Russo to Katelyn C. Dutkiewicz, Northwest Road, $445,000.

WILLIAMSBURG Robert W. Barker and Cynthia C. Barker to James Dean Paluch and Beth Ann Paluch, 48 South St., $624,000.


THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM

F10 | SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020

Real Estate for Sale Best local real estate in print and online at masslive.com

Homes, Suburbs

CALL THE PROS

Agawam

Professional Service Directory in Print and Online Place your service ad 24/7. Call (413) 788-1234 or go to: www.MassLive.com

155 Lyon Street Call to see this 4rm, 2br, 1 ba, gar., on lg lot. 1st fl laund. 3/4ac lot, encl. porch for winter enjoymt. O’szd 1c gar. $209,900 Betty Grimaldi 789-0310

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All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Amendments Act and Massachusetts Labor and Industries Law, which make it illegal to advertise any preference, limitations or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, national origin, handicap, familial status, sexual orientation which shall not include persons whose sexual orientation involves minor children as the sex object, genetic information, ancestry, children, marital status, or public assistance recipiency, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18.

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Real estate for rent

This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. To report discrimination, call the Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) at 1-800-6699777. The HUD TTY telephone number for the hearing impaired is 212-708-1455.

Call 413-788-1234

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278 Ely Avenue Call to see this lovely 4BR Colonial, 2 baths, fin. bsmt., great area. $295,000. Betty 789-0310

It’s how to turn stuff into cash.

Landscaping

SPRING SPECIAL

Restoration Specialist! Veneer plaster systems All drywall finishes. Stucco repair Family owned and operated since 1960 Call Don (413)949-1269

OPEN HOUSE 1-3 New! Ranch. 26 Joffre Ave South Hadley $439,900 Call 413-265-8081

Driveway/Paving

Business/ Commercial Property

A1 SPACE AVAILABLE 500-8000sf Lt Manuf Whse, Office, Art space. Indian Orch Mills 543-3321 Rooms Without Board

BELAIR INN - EFFIC WEEKLY RATES stove, 60 channel TV, phone, cable, Rte. 5, West Spfld. 413-781-7825

Animals Birds Cats Dogs Exotic Animals Feed Fish Horses Livestock Pet Services Pet Shows Pet Supplies Pets - Lost & Found Pets Wanted

Cats

PLAYFUL KITTEN Male - 2 mths old. Asking $60.00. Call 413-883-5181

Dogs

2 Shihtzu boys, $500./bo. Call 413-309-0001

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVERS puppies (8) $2,000 w/papers $1500 without papers. Call 413-221-9818

Merchandise Antiques/Collectibles Appliances Articles for Rent Articles For Sale Audio Building Materials Cameras Camping Equipment Clothing Coins and Stamps Construction Equipment Do-In-Yourself Materials Electronics/Compuiters Fitness Equipment Flea Markets Forklifts and Equipment Fuel Furniture, Etc. Good Things To Eat Hot Ticket Items Jewelry Lawn & Garden Lawnmower & Snowblower Machinery & Tools Med. Equipment Sales/Wanted Miscellaneous Musical Instruments Office Equipment Pools, Spas & Accessories Professional Equipment Restaurant Equipment Seasonal Snowmobiles Sports Television Tickets Video Vintage Clothing Wanted to Buy Wood-Burning Stoves

Tree Work

K & J TREE SERVICE

• FULLY INSURED • FREE ESTIMATES • STUMP GRINDING 413-289-4817; 508-344-8482

Articles for Sale

Lawnmowers & Snowblowers

8’ snowplow blade for farm tractor, made to mount on bucket of tractor. $249.00 413-569-1830

7 1/2 FT snowplow blade, no frame or hydraulics, just blade. $224.00. Call 413-569-1830 AIRENS SNOWBLOWER 9. 25HP. Tecumseh enginee, 27in clearning width, elec starter, $350; (413)737-8909

BASEBALL, Football Basketball & Hockey cards, 1950’s-present, 50 to 90% off, selling boxes for $5.00. BUYING ALL SPORTS CARDS, ESPECIALLY WANTED CARDS OR ITEMS FROM 1900 TO 1960. RETIRED KOREAN WAR VET 413-596-5783

Pfaff Select line 1548 sewing machine, not computerized, exc. cond. $500/bo. 413-525-4746

Vatican Stamp Coll. $450. Got stamps? Call Ron 413-896-3324 Stamps wanted

Wood changing table & drawers, great cond. $76.00. Call 413-569-1830

Ariens Snowblower 7HP for parts $99.00 Call 413-569-1830 Ariens Snowblower 7HP for parts or fix. $89.00 Call 413-569-1830 Craftsman 9HP Snowblower, runs but needs work. $224.00 Call 413-569-1830

Grass Bagger, Craftsman. $100. Call 413-534-3406 Husqvarna 5HP Snowblower, runs but needs work. $249.00 Call 413-569-1830 Husqvarna Riding Tractor, no mowing deck, runs but needs work $99.00 Call 413-569-1830 Snapper Walk behind Rototiller, 4.5 HP, runs but needs work. $89.00 Call 413-569-1830

Clothing

Beautiful German Shepherd pup (14 wks), female, AKC Reg. $1200 Text (413) 426-1868

German Shepherd pups, champion Czeck bloodlines, 4M, 3F, $950/BO (413) 218-2321

Golden Retrievers $500. 2 females, & 1 Male 1st shots and dewormed. Call 802-895-2784

YORKIE Tiny Female will be ready for new home April 2nd. Father Biewer color, imported, Mother is traditional color, will have 1st shots & dewormed, $950: Call (413)777-3536

Appliances

GE 36,000 BTU 40 gal. short hot water heater. Hardly used. Great cond. $250. Call 786-4423

West Spfld. moving, new appli. & furn. Total for all $4,000. Call 478-952-9536. 1960’S BOSTON CELTICS GAME PROGRAM $50 OR BEST OFFER. Call (860)990-9649

5 drawer dresser wood, great cond., $76.00 413-569-1830

Musical Instruments

Designer wedding gown by Mary’s. sleveless sz 10 (a-line) w/pearls, slip & train, $ 99. 413-594-7775

PIANO:Yamaha baby grand Tuned, fully regulated, exc. cond., $4,900 deliv. (413) 544-4477

Furniture, Etc.

West Spfld. moving, new appli. & furn. Total for all $4,000. Call 478-952-9536.

Auctions Auctions

Lawnmowers & Snowblowers

AARON POSNIK & CO. INC. Indust & Comm. Auctions 31 Capital Dr. W. Spfld. 733-5238 www.posnik.com

5HP Briggs & Stratton push mower, 20’’ cut, $72.00 Call 413-569-1830

ESTATES-ANTIQUES

DouglasAuctioneers.com 413-665-2877


THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM

HOME & GARDEN

SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020 | F11

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DETAILS OF OFFER: Offer expires 4/30/2020. Offer valid on initial visit only. Not valid with other offers or prior purchases. Buy one (1) window, get the next one (1) at 40% off and 12 months $0 money down, $0 monthly payments, $0 interest when you purchase four (4) or more windows or patio doors between 6/15/2019 and 4/30/2020. 40% off windows and patio doors are less than or equal to lowest cost window or patio door in the project. Subject to credit approval. Interest is billed during the promotional period but all interest is waived if the purchase amount is paid before the expiration of the promotional period. Financing for GreenSky® consumer loan programs is provided by federally insured, federal and state chartered financial institutions without regard to age, race, color, religion, national origin, gender or familial status. Available only at participating locations. See your local Renewal by Andersen location for details. Los Angeles License #992285. Orange County License #990416. MHIC #121441. VA License #2705155684. DC License #420215000125. License MN: BC130983/WI:266951. Excludes MN insurance work per MSA 325E.66. Other license numbers available on request. Some Renewal by Andersen locations are independently owned and operated. For J.D. Power 2018 award information, visit jdpower.com/awards. “ENERGY STAR” is a registered trademark of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 2 See the Renewal by Andersen Products and Installation Transferable Limited Warranty. 3 2018 U.S. Homeowner Brand Study of Andersen and Renewal by Andersen brands vs. competitive brands. “Renewal by Andersen” and all other marks where denoted are trademarks of Andersen *Using U.S. and imported parts. Corporation. © 2019 Andersen Corporation. All rights reserved. rba12091

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F12 | SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2020

THE REPUBLICAN | MASSLIVE.COM

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