Seacoast Scene 6-6-19

Page 1

JUNE 06 - JUNE 12, 2019

Happy

Camping

Pitch a tent, hook up an RV or rent a cabin at a Seacoast campground


A WORD FROM LARRY

Master McGrath’s

Record-setting sale What a great Boy Scout yard sale this past weekend. The weather was good and it was very busy all three days — a record setting yard sale! I want to take this time to thank all of the volLarry Marsolais unteers who helped with set-up, take-down, sales and especially those who donated items. This was the best organized group ever, and it showed. Also a big shout out to the Masonic Lodge for letting us take over there facially for a week, and to Lois and Bud Desrochers (my co-team) — I could not do it without them. Father’s Day is right around the corner and all dads need a day that they can

Rte. 107 Seabrook NH

Dining & Pub

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call their own, a day to do whatever they want to. Sometimes it is just a day of rest and relaxation or celebrating with the family. Now as I said about Mother’s Day, you need to do something. It can be as simple as giving a card or making your own card; some of my greatest Father’s Day gifts were homemade cards from my kids! If you can’t be with your dad be sure to give him a call, it will go along way. This is a great opportunity to make your dad feel special. As always, I would love to hear from our readers. Feel free to call me any time at 603-935-5096 to discuss local issues or to place an ad. Larry Marsolais is the general manager of the Seacoast Scene and the former president of the Hampton Rotary Club.

KARAOKE

Come sing...or just sing along!

THURSDAY & FRIDAY NIGHTS 8pm - Midnight

JUNE 6 - 12, 2019 VOL 44 NO 13

BREAKFAST SERVED

Advertising Staff

Sat & Sun 8am-2pm

Larry Marsolais Seacoast Scene General Manager 603-935-5096 larry@seacoastscene.net

Friday Special Fried Clam Plate Saturday Special (4pm on) Roast Prime Rib of Beef Au Jus

Kathie D’Orlando Advertising Representative 603-391-7482 kathie@seacoastscene.net

Editorial Staff

King Cut (16oz) • Queen Cut (10oz)

Editor Meghan Siegler editor@seacoastscene.net

ALL YOU CAN EAT HADDOCK FRY $10.99

Editorial Design Laura Young and Tristan Collins

Monday-Thursday 2pm-5pm

Contributors Rob Levey, Michael Witthaus, Matt Ingersoll, Jeff Mucciarone, Caleb Jagoda, Allison Willson Dudas

with fries and cole slaw

Sandwiches • Burgers • Pizza Steaks • Seafood • BBQ Fresh Salad Bar with Fresh Bread

Production Tristan Collins, Laura Young Nicole Reitano-Urquhart

Circulation Manager Doug Ladd, 625-1855, Ext. 135 dladd@hippopress.com

Takeout Available Visit our website for entertainment 603.474.3540

www.MasterMcGraths.com

SEACOAST SCENE | JUNE 6 - 12, 2019 | PAGE 2

Have an event or a story idea for the Seacoast Scene? Let us know at: editor@seacoastscene.net Unsolicited submissions are not accepted and will not be returned or acknowledged. Unsolicited submissions will be destroyed. 125804

COVER STORY 6 Happy camping

MAPPED OUT 16 Beaches, restrooms, where to walk your dog and more

PEOPLE & PLACES 17 The coolest Seacoast dwellers and scenes

FOOD 22 Eateries and foodie events

POP CULTURE 26 Books, art, theater and classical

NITE LIFE 30 Music, comedy and more

BEACH BUM FUN 32 Puzzles, horoscopes and crazy news Your weekly guide to the coast. Published every Thursday (1st copy free; 2nd $1). Seacoast Scene PO Box 961 Hampton NH 03843 603-935-5096 | www.seacoastscene.net


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4 SHORE THINGS

EVENTS TO CHECK OUT JUNE 6 - 12, 2019, AND BEYOND Active rock

The beach music scene is heating up, with big names coming all summer long. Hinder broke out in the mid-2000s on the strength of hits like “Lips of an Angel” and “Get Stoned,” though original lead singer Austin Winkler departed the band in 2013. Early this year, the band released a new single, “Halo.” Opening the show are Saving Abel, The Adarna and Another Day Dawns. Go Friday, June 7, 8 p.m., Wally’s Pub, 144 Ashworth Ave., Hampton. Tickets $25 at ticketweb.com.

Arts & entertainment

Market Square Day returns to downtown Portsmouth on Saturday, June 8, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., when the city will feature more than 150 vendors, several entertainers and more. Visit proportsmouth.org.

A prince’s tale Food-centric fun

Join The Falls Chamber of Commerce for its third annual Seacoast Food Truck & Craft Beer Festival on Saturday, June 8, from 1 to 7 p.m. in downtown Somersworth. There will be several food trucks, plus beer and live music. Admission is free. Visit thefallschamber.com. Then, eat local food and dance to live music at the Sippin’ for Seals event on Thursday, June 13, from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Seacoast Science Center in Odiorne Point State Park in Rye. Enjoy cocktails, food prepared from local restaurant’s chefs, live music courtesy the Crab Shack Band and several raffles throughout the night. Tickets are $50 each and you must be 21 years or older to attend. Visit seacoastsciencecenter.org.

Ferrill-Chylde Productions presents Pippin at Players’ Ring Theatre in Portsmouth now through June 16, with showtimes on Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. 7. The musical, based on the book by Roger O. Hirson, with music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz, is the story of a young prince searching for meaning in his life, as told by a traveling theater troupe led by the mysterious Leading Player. Tickets cost $18 for adults and $14 for seniors and students. Visit playersring.org or call 436-8123.

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Happy

Camping By Caleb Jagoda


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As the weather heats up, campgrounds across the Seacoast are gearing up for another busy season.

WHY CAMP?

The biggest reason that many people camp along the Seacoast every summer, according to several area campground owners and workers, is its expansive beaches. Wakeda Campground Manager of Operations Amanda Allen, for example, cited their Hampton Falls location as a big selling point. “[Campers] can go to the beach and deal with the big crowds and all that’s happening there and have the opportunity to come back and really have a truly woodsy kind of nature experience and hang out by a campfire at night and just relax,” Allen said. “I mean it’s just so beautiful here during that period of time and I think for us we have that unique advantage that we’re close to the beach but we’re also in the woods, [so] you kind of get the best of both worlds.” Katelyn Deyo, office employee at Rusnik Campground in Salisbury, said people come from all over to access the beaches. “For us, a lot of our campers come here from Canada and they stay here to go to the beach because we are very close to Salisbury and Hampton,” she said. With five state park beaches along the New Hampshire Seacoast — Hampton Beach State Park, North Beach, North Hampton State Beach, Jenness State Beach and Wallis Sands State Park — as well as Salisbury Beach on the northern Massachusetts coast, there are plenty of opportunities for people staying at campgrounds to balance that woodsier experience with sand and salt water.

But the Seacoast’s assets stretch far beyond its proximity to the oceanfront. “We offer a campground experience in the middle of an unlimited amount of things to do and places to visit,” Joe Roy, owner of Sea Coast Camping and RV Resort in North Hampton, said. “Camping has become more of a destination today, so what we offer is probably one of the best destinations in the area, with it being the Seacoast, the beaches and Portsmouth.” Roy noted attractions like Water Country, activities like surfing, and plenty of restaurants to eat at. “There’s some of the best biking down at the beach that you can do, there are hiking trails around here, there are restaurants, there are bars, there’s everything,” Roy said. “There’s a brew pub right across the street that people love, there’s one of the best seafood places right around the corner. It’s a destination.” With all these things to do on the Seacoast, why go to a campsite when you could just rent a hotel for the weekend? “You don’t have to pay $250 a night for a hotel and you can get a camping experience with your kids at the same time,” Roy said. “For a lot of folks, it’s a more costeffective way to be able to spend some time on the Seacoast during their vacations,” Allen said. Most campsites normally hover around $40 per night for a basic tent site with a handful of small additional charges.. Camping also has the benefit of drawing people out of the comfort of their homes — or hotel rooms — into the wilderness, where it’s a little harder to surround yourself with technology. “[A] huge piece is the ability to unplug,” Allen said. “It’s something that I think all of us are striving to do 8

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Wakeda Campground. Courtesy photo.

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Pines Camping Area. Courtesy photo.

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7 more of, and I think that’s a fantastic opportunity that kind of forces you to put the device down and slow down a little bit, just kind of take in your environment and nature and refocus on some of the things that I think a lot of us used to do when we were younger and have gotten away from.” Campgrounds also offer a different kind of environment, compared to a hotel or house rental. “There’s a really nice community within the campgrounds that I think is part of what makes it unique and fun for people because you get to meet people you wouldn’t have normally interacted with,” Allen said, “and we find a lot of people will actually meet friends that they come the same time year after year and establish relationships, which is pretty cool.”

TENT OR TEEPEE, CABIN OR RV?

There are a number of camping options on the coast, ranging from tent camping to cabin rentals. Most campgrounds offer simple tent campsites and RV campsites. Sea Coast Camping and RV Resort offers 158 RV sites and 28 basic tent sites, with the tent sites being less expensive than the RV sites as they don’t offer the luxuries of electricity, water or sewage that are needed to hook up an RV. Many campsites have also expanded their range, providing options such as cabin camping (as Wakeda Campground does), teepee camping and even yurt camping (yurts are portable, round tents). While these last two options are harder to find, many campgrounds find weekend tent and RV camping and RV seasonal camping (which is when a person rents an RV site for an entire summer) to be

their most popular options. According to Deyo, Rusnik Campground sees mainly seasonal RV campers, which tend to heavily consist of retirees looking for a summer-long getaway. They also get many weekend campers, with their capacity especially filling up on summer holiday weekends such as the Fourth of July and Labor Day. Along with major summer holidays, Canada’s Construction Holiday and Hampton Beach’s Seafood Festival have become two increasingly popular dates for campers, with the former occurring the last two weeks of July and the latter happening in early September. The Seafood Festival has gained so much steam that it’s essentially “turned into an extra holiday weekend because it’s driving a lot of business,” according to Allen. At Wakeda Campground, Allen has noticed that campers of all ages and family sizes seem to occupy each of their camping options. Meanwhile, Roy noted that during his three-year tenure owning Sea Coast Camping and RV Resort, he’s found that younger people and families tend to gravitate more toward tent camping and smaller-sized RVs due to their lower costs. “The bigger motor homes, they could be a quarter of a million dollars,” Roy said. “They can go up to a million bucks — they can go up to two million bucks! These are usually people that, number one, had some money, and number two, are retired and their kids are gone. But tents — I mean, kids, families always want to get away for a weekend inexpensively and a tent is a way to do that, or a pop-up, so you’ll see more kids in that situation.” Despite Allen not noticing a dis-


F R E EY DA I L T S N EVE

JUNE 2 - 8

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cernible trend at Wakeda, she said that Wakeda’s camping options — RVs, tents and cabins — offer something different to every family and individual. “We kind of pride ourselves on our ability to offer something for everyone,” Allen said, “so we do get people who are really interested in just a rustic tent site that has nothing on it, and we can also offer services for the people who have 45-foot motor homes and everything in between. And the camping cabins are kind of a nice mix for the folks that want an authentic camping experience, but they don’t really want to be sleeping on the ground.” While some may prefer experiencing the wilderness through the window of an RV or cabin, and others may want to sleep under the stars within the canvas of their tent, camping provides a litany of options so that campers can customize their stay however they choose.

THINGS TO KNOW BEFORE CAMPING

As many newcomers gravitate to campsites this summer, campsite personnel agree that there are a few things people should be aware of before beginning their forest sojourn. As a rule of thumb, “Being familiar with the rules and regulations is always good,” according to Allen. Each campground has a set of rules and regulations that all campers must abide by, and while each campground’s

rules are different, they all seem to have a general set of principles: certain quiet hours, a maximum number of people per campsite (normally around six to eight people), check in and out times, a mandated time that all campfires must be put out by (usually around 11 p.m.), no firearms or fireworks, policies for campers’ pets and to respect the wilderness that each campground lies on. Along with each set of rules, campground staff agreed on some wilderness knowledge potential campers should be aware of. “If they don’t already know how to build a campfire, look up a YouTube video,” Allen said with a laugh. “Bug spray is always good; the mosquitoes in New Hampshire are certainly healthy in the summertime. Also, be a good neighbor. Be respectful and friendly to the people who are camping around you.” Roy seconded the neighborly advice. “The only bad reviews are the reviews I have from people that I’ve had to ask to leave because they were causing problems for other people, which can get out of control at campgrounds on occasion,” he said, noting that he “monitor[s] it very closely.” Rusnik Campground, like Wakeda, Sea Coast Camping and many other campgrounds, is a family environment that upholds the rules and regulations. “I feel like we just mainly tell people, ‘Oh, we’re a family campground,’ because that way it’s like, not a party campground,” said Deyo.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5 Cultural Heritage & Arts Day

MONDAY, JUNE 3 Governors’ Day

THURSDAY, JUNE 6 Legislative Homecoming Day

TUESDAY, JUNE 4 Supreme Court Day

FRIDAY, JUNE 7 NH Made Street Market Day

SATURDAY, JUNE 8 Open House

Please visit our website for more information on the week’s events!

L E A R N M O R E : N H S TAT E H O U S E 2 0 0 . C O M

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Sea Coast Camping Courtesy photo.

SUNDAY, JUNE 2 Opening Day

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ble ce H a rk rien n, N a e to m Re Exp amp A ng n H ni ere i i D R

t igh

Seacoast Campgrounds

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Sea Coast Camping. Courtesy photo.

Hampton Beach State R.V. Park in Hampton offers RV and walk-in camping at the mouth of the Hampton River south of Hampton Beach’s main area on Route 1A at the Seabrook-Hampton town line. The campground includes 28 sites and is open for reservations from Memorial Day weekend to Columbus Day weekend, as well as walk-in camping from April 29. Hampton Beach State Park’s rates cover two adults and up to four children under 18 years old, with extra adults paying $10 per night and extra children paying $5 per night. RV campsites are $50 per night and include 30-amp electric, water and sewer and a maximum of two vehicles. The campsite also includes picnic tables and grills/fire rings.

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without electric, $48 / $290 / $960 with electric and $51 / $310 / $1,070 with 30-amp electric, water and sewer. They charge $6 per adult day guest and $10 per adult overnight guest, as well as $4.50 per child day guest and child overnight guest. They also offer a seasonal campsite rate of $3,200 that does not include electric.

Hampton

Health without the High.

Sea Coast Camping and RV Resort in North Hampton at 115 Lafayette Road is an RV and tent campground that has 158 RV sites and 28 basic tent sites. They also have two bathhouses, a laundry room, a game room, a playground, a camp store, picnic tables and fire rings. Sea Coast Camping’s rates are based on two adults and three children under 18 years old, with an extra charge of $10 per overnight adult and $4 per overnight child (with a maximum of four adults per electric site and three adults per tent site). Their daily, weekly and monthly rates are $38 / $228 for a basic site (with a maximum stay of two weeks), $42 / $252 / $1,008 for a 20-amp electric site and $48 / $288 / $1,152 for a full hook-up, 50-amp electric site. Their seasonal rates are $3,100 for a 30-amp electric site and $3,300 for a 50-amp electric site.

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Tidewater Campground in Hampton, located at 160 Lafayette Road, is 2.5 miles from Hampton Beach and offers tent and RV camping. They also have full hook-ups, 20-, 30- and 50-amp electric for RVs, restrooms, a small store, picnic tables, fireplaces, a playground, horseshoes, a pool and Wi-Fi. Tidewater Campground’s rates include two adults and three children under 18 years old (with children 16 and 17 driving their own car paying $5 each). Their daily, weekly and monthly rates are $43 / $260 / $810

Wakeda Campground in Hampton Falls offers RV, tent and cabin camping at 294 Exeter Road eight miles from Hampton Beach. Their amenities include the trading post (which has ice cream, a small convenience store, camping supplies, a pool table and more) and the Mike Hambleton Memorial Dog Park for campers’ pets, as well as a game room, an 18-hole mini golf course, a playground, half-court basketball, horseshoes, a pavilion and a coffee shop. They also have a laundry room, bathrooms, showers, fireplaces, picnic tables and a dump station. Wakeda Campground’s rates are based on two adults and three children under 18 years old, with an extra charge of $10 for adults and $4 for children per night. There is a maximum of four adults on electric sites and cabins and three adults on tent sites. Their daily, weekly and monthly rates are $43 / $258 for a tent campsite, $52 / $312 / $1,092 for a water, sewer and 50-amp electric RV site and $92 / $644 for a cabin. Their “classic” seasonal rate is $3,500 and their “premium” seasonal rate is $3,700.


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Seacoast Campgrounds

Twin Brooks Campground. Courtesy photo.

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Rusnik Campground in Salisbury, three miles from Salisbury Beach and four miles from Hampton Beach at 115 Lafayette Road, offers tent, motor home and trailer camping with a variety of amenities, including a recreation hall with billiards, air hockey, ping pong and video games, a swimming pool, miniature golf, a playground, bocce ball, shuffleboard, horseshoes, a basketball court, a volleyball court, a softball field, a camp store and Wi-Fi hotspot. They have approximately 100 seasonal sites and 60 in-and-out sites and can accommodate trailers up to 40 feet. Their daily rate for a tent, motor home and trailer campsite including water and 30-amp electric with no sewer is $45 for two people, with a $5 charge for each additional adult over 18 years old and $1 for each child under 18, up to six people per campsite. Rusnik Campground also offers monthly and seasonal packages, with a monthly rate of $950 for a family of four for 28 days and $2,700 for a family of four for the entire season. Black Bear Campground in Salisbury, located at 54 Main St. in Salisbury, is three miles from the ocean and offers 200 tent and RV campsites as well as volleyball, basketball, horseshoes, two swimming pools, a playground and free Wi-Fi. Their daily rates are based on two people with a $10 charge for each extra person over 16 years old and a $5 charge for each visitor under 16 and a maximum of eight people per campsite. Their daily rate is $45 for a tent with no utilities and $50-$60 for various RV campsites. Their seasonal trailer rate for four people is $3,000 for a 30-amp electric site and $3,100 for a 50-amp electric site. Their monthly trailer rates for four people are $900 for four weeks at a 30-amp electric site and $1,000 for four weeks at a 50-amp electric site. Beach Rose RV Park in Salisbury at 147 Beach Road includes 50 RV camping sites all with 50-, 30- and 20-amp electric, water, sewer, cable, Wi-Fi and cement pads. They also have a swimming pool for registered campers/guests, are adjacent a dog park and are one mile from Salisbury Beach. Daily rates are listed for a family of two, with a $6 charge for overnight guests older than 16 years old and a $2 charge for those younger than 16 and pets, along with a maximum of eight people per campsite. Daily rates fluctuate throughout the season, starting at $55 April 1 through May 2, rising to $60 May 27 through July 2, rising again to $70 July 8 through Aug. 28 and Sept. 2 through Oct. 9 and then lowering down to $65 Oct. 14 through Nov. 30, with separate daily rates of $75 for each holiday stretch in between the above listed dates.

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Seacoast Campgrounds

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Pines Camping Area in Salisbury has over 150 RV and tent camping sites at 28 CCC Road under two miles west of Salisbury Beach and 10 minutes from Hampton Beach. Along with their camping sites, they offer a swimming pool, basketball court, playground, horseshoe pit, game room, laundry facilities, three bath houses, campsite store and free Wi-Fi hotspot at the campsite office. Pines Camping Area rates are based on two people, one camper and one vehicle with an unclear extra charge between $5 and $10 for a guest over 16 years old and $2 and $4 for a guest under 16. Daily rates for a basic tent site with no hook-up, water or electricity is $35, and is $41 or $46 for either water/electric or a full hook-up. Weekly rates range from $245 to $287 to $322 for the basic tent site to the water and electric site to the full hook-up site. Monthly rates are $1,148 for water and electric sites and $1,288 for sewer sites with water and electric. Salisbury Beach State Park Camping is an RV and tent camping facility with 484 campsites adjacent the beach at 1 Beach Road. Each campsite has either a 20-, 30- or 50-amp electric hook-up as well as water, a picnic table, a barbecue grill and a small ground-grill/fire-box. There are also showers in two (of the three) bathroom facilities and a small campground store that sells basic food items. Daily rates include water and electric hook-ups and are for a maximum of four people or a family, as well as two tents or one trailer. Campsites are $34 per night for Massachusetts residents and $39 per night for non-residents, with a minimum stay of two nights being required (with a maximum of 14 days).

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Pine Camping Area. Courtesy photo.

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Beach Grove Cottages and Motel in Salisbury is located at 104 Beach Road and offers cabin rentals that include beds, stoves, fridges, microwaves, coffee makers, dishes, pots, pans, cable, air conditioning and showers. Call for rates and prices. Twin Brooks Campground in Seabrook at 211 Lower Collins St. is an RV campground that takes only full-season campers who will stay from May through October. They have laundry available to campers. Their seasonal fee for a campsite is $2,600 and pays for two adults, water and sewer with an extra $100 charge for those over 8 years old and a $50 charge for those under 8. Two vehicles are allowed per site. Guests are $5 per day.

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Exeter Elms Campground in Exeter sits on the Exeter River, offering fishing, canoeing and kayaking. At 190 Court St., it’s 15 minutes from Hampton Beach. Exeter Elms offers cabins, teepees and yurts (portable, spacious round tents) to campers as well as a pool, picnic tables, a convenience store, fire pits, a laundry room, a pavilion, a dump station, a playground and free Wi-Fi. Exeter Elms rates include two adults and the first two children, with an additional charge of $15 per adult (18 years old and over) and $8 per child under 18, per night. Each cabin rental has a two-night minimum. They offer a variety of cabins, including the ash tent cabin sites, full cabin sites and their riverfront rustic cabin. The ash tent cabin sites, which sleep up to seven people, are $35 per night on the riverfront and $30 per night non-riverfront, while the full cabin sites, which also sleep up to seven people, are $150 per night riverfront and $130 per night non-riverfront. The riverfront rustic cabin is $90 per night. They also offer teepees and yurts, with the riverfront teepees going at $99 per night and the yurts going for $125 per night on the riverfront and $115 per night non-riverfront.

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PEOPLE AND PLACES

CHRIS MCPHERRON OWNER OF YOUR CBD STORE IN HAMPTON When did you open? We started in mid-December and opened on Feb. 1.

North Hampton. I enjoy seeing that it’s a healthy salt marsh that had been choked off from sea water flow, which allowed invaTell me about what you offer. sive freshwater plant species to We offer products with CBD creep into it. Channels had been that many people report help dug to allow sea water to penethem with pain, anxiety, insomtrate further inland but ultimately nia, etc. We carry CBD oil in the work resulted in the 48-inch tinctures, water-soluble liquid, Chris McPherron. culvert being replaced by two Courtesy photo. soft gel caps, topical cream, 6-foot by 12-inch box culverts. lotions, bath bombs, lip balms, Residents were more concerned about floodhoney sticks, gummies and hard candy. We offer a comfortable, spa-like atmosphere that ing as rainwater had no good path to drain off you are welcome to come in, sit down and after a heavy storm. Replacing and relocating the culverts, though, allowed for better water ask any questions you may have. flow, which improved the marsh’s quality What don’t folks know about CBD? Any and has greatly reduced flooding. misconceptions to dispel? And how did you get into this line of work CBD is short for “cannabidiol,” which is one of some 113 identified cannabinoids in based on your education? industrial hemp. Our products contain cannaI worked in the telecommunications field binoids harvested from industrial hemp. The for the last 20 years. You don’t always end Agricultural Improvement Act of 2018 clas- up where you’d have thought when you are sified “hemp” as the plant, not the flower, and in school. My graduating class was the first made CBD legal. You do not a prescription or that had Environmental Conservation as a referral from your doctor and we are not the major choice and it may have been a little “pot” shop. early as there were not a lot of opportunities upon graduating. As far as alternative mediHow has business been so far? cine, I’ve been a licensed massage therapist, So far so good. I think all business in downnon-practicing, for 12 years. The mind-body town Hampton struggle with foot traffic. There is much focus being paid to improv- relationship and healthy alternatives have ing the downtown area and making it more always been of interest to me. accessible. We have all succumbed to the convenience of shopping online, but shopping locally directly supports our community.

Are you excited for the summer? Are you expecting a lot of tourist traffic? I am always excited for the summer. Living in New England, how can you not be? We hope that visitors to Hampton Beach stop in and visit while they are here. There is free one-hour parking right in front of our store as well as a free Town of Hampton municipal parking lot just around the corner by Zesto’s. When you’re not working, what do you do for fun? Any hobbies or favorite activities? I enjoy the ocean, beach and the salt marshes. My schooling is in Environmental Conservation and many years ago I worked a semester with the USDA developing a citizen’s guide to monitor the health of the Little River Marsh and I still visit regularly. What attracts you to the Little River Marsh and where is it? It is framed by Route 1A and Sea Road in

Are you from the Seacoast originally? If not, where from? I am from upstate New York and then western New Hampshire until I attended UNH and I stayed in the area. Where in upstate New York and do you miss it at all? Just outside of Syracuse — the snowiest place in the United States. So no, I don’t miss it. What do you love the most about the Seacoast? The beach, the environment and seafood. What’s your favorite seafood? Sea scallops. Any big plans this summer either personally or professionally? I will be focused on the Hampton store as well as expanding to another area. — Rob Levey

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PEOPLE AND PLACES

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Just over two months ago, the Greyhound Casino & Tavern opened at Seabrook Park, with live table casino games, simulcast off-track race betting (where they have the only pari-mutuel wagering license in the state), 75-inch flat-screen TVs and a new menu and chef at the tavern. The space, formerly home to the Seabrook Greyhound Park — which offered live dog racing until it became illegal in New Hampshire in 2010 — was recently purchased by Eureka Casinos. Andre Carrier, chief executive officer of Eureka Casinos, said that since opening up their doors in late March, the Greyhound Casino & Tavern is just beginning to come into focus. He explained that although he’s confident in what they’ve built over the prior two months, they will continue their remodeling, calling their next set of renovations that will be complete this upcoming fall “phase two.” “It’s been great fun, a challenging and rewarding endeavor — and the business is growing,” Carrier said. “The grand opening of phase two will bring with it a completely new brand for what will become an entertainment destination for the next 50 years.” Greyhound Casino & Tavern is a 100-percent employee-owned company, and, Carrier said, many of Greyhound’s employees have worked there for over 20 years, “so it’s been a fruitful meshing of old and new, an exchange of ideas and culture and technology that will propel the business into the next decade.” Greyhound also offers a charity struc-

Greyhound Casino & Tavern. Courtesy photos.

ture where 35 percent of gambling proceeds go to charity. With this model in place, Greyhound dedicates usually around five to 10 days at a time to different charities, where for that stretch of time 35 percent of their gambling proceeds will go directly to said charity. Wentworth Senior Living is the current charity until June 10, followed by SCORE from June 11 to June 20, Amy’s Treats from June 21 to June 30 and Belknap Mill from July 1 to July 10. This model is what Carrier and the rest of Eureka are calling “playing it forward.” “Recently, we have been using the term ‘play it forward’ when promoting local charities whom we partner with,” Carrier said. “If you have an affinity for Seacoast Youth Services, whose mission is to engage youths and build strong families and communities, then it’s a great night out to come to the casino, play some blackjack or roulette and support the organization. It’s a win-win proposition.” Some of the available casino games Greyhound is offering include roulette, blackjack, Mississippi stud and various poker tournaments and cash games. They also hold the only pari-mutuel wagering license in the state at Seabrook Park, meaning that guests can bet on simulcast versions of racing that occur throughout the country as they watch the races on television at Greyhound. Essentially, as different races occur throughout the country, patrons of Greyhound can bet on them and watch along. And as they watch along, Carrier encourages guests to try their menu, spearheaded

by executive chef Jon Moore, formerly of Sea Level Oyster Bar. The new menu includes seafood and bar food options, such as baked haddock, skillet-roasted mussels, fried calamari, baked Buffalo macaroni and cheese, a variety of burgers and more. Carrier expects Greyhound’s new renovations and remodeling to be a big hit come summertime, as he hopes that tourists and locals filtering through will notice the new establishment and give it a try. “A completely renovated casino, a vibrant nighttime atmosphere and a foodie destination,” Carrier said. “After the beach, the Greyhound will be where the action is.” Carrier and his company also own and operate three properties in Nevada: Eureka Casino Resort, Rising Star Sports Ranch (both in Mesquite, Nevada) and another Eureka in Las Vegas. Carrier was more than happy to expand the company’s reach into the Northeast, as he was raised in the Mt. Washington valley and has family history in New Hampshire. As the Greyhound Casino & Tavern settles in after its re-opening, Carrier believes the new Seabrook Park is just getting started. “What excites me most about the Greyhound is that it is just a first step,” Carrier said. “Over the months and years to come an entirely re-imagined regional entertainment destination will arise from what was once Seabrook Park. … This is going to be a place to have a lot of fun and do a lot of good. Stay tuned; the best is yet to come.” Visit thenewseabrookpark.com. — Caleb Jagoda


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CAR TALK

Toyota Camry seems to swallow driver’s credit card Dear Car Talk: I own a 2016 Toyota Camry. Yesterday, on my way to the gas station, I pulled out my credit card and set it on the center console. When I pulled up By Ray Magliozzi to the pump, I reached for my card, and it dropped down between the seat and the console. I squeezed my hand into the space and was able to push the card forward enough to grab it. Ever the klutz, when I went to grab it, I pushed it back instead. When I tried to grab it again, I couldn’t locate it. I got out and looked everywhere around the seat. I was on my hands and knees looking from the front and the back of the seat. I searched from every angle. The card was gone. It was like the car opened up and swallowed it! How is that possible? My car is uncluttered; it is easy to see something out of place. Where is it? — Donna I don’t know. But when you find it, I bet you’ll also find a bunch of single socks. I think we’ve all done what you did, Donna. A credit card, a key, a phone drops

between the seat and center console. And as you reach your two fingers in there to feel for it, you push it further into the abyss. My guess is that your credit card slipped under the carpet. There are cuts in the carpet at the four points where the seat is bolted to the floor. Try moving the seat all the way back. Then, from the floor of the front seat, feel around for where the seat is bolted in. You should be able to find an opening in the carpet there. If there’s no sign of the card, move the seat all the way forward and try from the back seat. If that fails, and you’re really attached to this particular card (maybe you spent months memorizing the three digit security code), your mechanic can definitely find it. The first thing we’d do at our shop is we’d blow compressed air under the seat. We have a nozzle on our air hose that can blow about 150 psi of wind under there. That’s a category 4 hurricane. If something is there, it’ll usually come out. If it doesn’t, your mechanic can always unbolt the seat. That’s not a big deal. It’s a halfhour job. On the other hand, calling your credit card company and asking them to send

you a replacement card is a five-minute job. Dear Car Talk: I have a 2001 Ford Expedition 5.4-liter V8. I’m having an odd problem: This week marks the third time that a spark plug has been ejected from my engine. The first time this happened, my mechanic said he “tapped” it. The second time, he assured me that it would never happen again. I’m not sure if it’s the same cylinder, but it just happened for the third time. Do you know what is causing this? Thanks. — Frank This is a well-known problem in this engine, Frank. Apparently, the aluminum cylinder head doesn’t have sufficient threads to keep the spark plugs in place. Those spark plugs are under tremendous pressure from the explosions inside the cylinders. Once they start to get loose, it’s just a matter of time before they take off like a North Korean rocket. The solution is what your mechanic did. You “tap” a new spark plug hole. There’s a kit we buy that comes with an

insert. It’s a sleeve that’s slightly bigger than the existing spark plug hole and has threads on the outside and the inside. We drill out the new hole, which is a little bigger than the old one. Then, we screw this sleeve in there and epoxy it in place. The spark plug threads inside that new sleeve. They work. Your mechanic is right that the insert should not fail again. So, I’m guessing you’ve had three different plugs blow out. The good news is you only have five more inserts to pay for! The bad news is that because each spark plug in this engine has a coil built on top of it, and that coil gets ruined when the spark plug blows out, each insert is going to cost you about $400 a pop. You can do them prophylactically and replace them all now, so you won’t have a problem again. But since this truck is going on 20 years old, you might want to take it a plug at a time. Who knows what else might go in the truck before you get through five more inserts. You might even be able to delay future problems by checking and tightening your plugs on a regular basis. Like once a week. Or twice an hour. Good luck, Frank. Visit Cartalk.com.

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FOOD

AT EMMELYNN’S FAMILY FARM MARKET & MORE As a gourmet market featuring New England made products for sale, plus a rotating menu of homemade prepared foods, Emmelynn’s Family Farm Market & More (920 Lafayette Road, Seabrook, 814-1659, emmelynns.com) is proving that fresh, local ingredients can bring a lot to the table. Emmelynn’s features a rotating menu of items like fresh soups and salads, made-to-order breakfast and lunch sandwiches, lobster rolls, and all-natural smoothies, ice cream, acai bowls and batidas (think a frothy smoothie, with condensed milk), all of which are free of any artificial ingredients or preservatives. There is also a bakery that serves homemade breads, pies and desserts, plus a butchery with grass-fed meats sourced from local farms. The market even features New England-made paintings, photographs, jewelry and other artisan items for sale. Co-owner Matthew Castonguay, whose 5-year-old daughter, Emmelynn, is the namesake of the shop, said that farm-fresh produce will be available throughout the summer as it is in season. The Scene recently caught up with Castonguay to talk about the market’s unique concept, his inspiration for launching it, and what you can expect when you visit. How long has Emmelynn’s Family Farm Market & More been around? We opened at the end of March, so we are brand new. Our goal is to bring healthy and clean foods to the local communities that are also local. I would say that around 90 percent of our products are from New England. We’re a specialty gourmet market that also offers fresh, homemade prepared foods and bakery items. I was actually a fifth-grade teacher before this, and I also ran the retail side of a farm down in Massachusetts, which I really enjoyed. I grew up on the North Shore of Mass., but I came up to this area a lot growing up.

SEACOAST SCENE | JUNE 6 - 12, 2019 | PAGE 22

What makes Emmelynn’s Family Farm Market & More unique? We’re independent and family-owned. I think the area that we’re in just has a lot of chain stores and restaurants. That’s why I thought that this location would be a good pick, because I felt like there wasn’t really anything else like this around, that carries as many local products as we do. What is your personal favorite dish? Probably either our lemon and garlic chicken that we make in house, or our Farmhouse sandwich. It’s made with McKenzie [of] Vermont all-natural turkey, North Country Smokehouse applewood smoked ham and bacon, lettuce, tomato,

Emmelynn’s Family Farm Market & More. Courtesy photo.

red onion and avocado mayonnaise

So we were kind of inspired by that.

What is a dish everyone should try? Our homemade meatballs. We’ve [received] terrific positive feedback from them. This past week we started doing lobster rolls that we’ll have throughout the summer. Those are really popular as well. We also have our batidas that are a musttry. It’s similar to a smoothie, but it’s a little frothier and includes either condensed milk, almond milk or banana milk [as the base], and then you add fruit to it. They are really popular down in the Caribbean. We actually visited the Dominican Republic last year and where we were, there were batida stands on every local street corner.

What is an essential skill to running a business? I think it’s just listening to your customers. We want to make connections with the community, so we want to hear from them as far as what they are looking for. As a former educator, I also want to support the local schools when I can as well. What is your favorite part of being on the Seacoast? I like meeting the people. There is a great mix of locals and visitors or tourists that will hopefully become regulars. — Matt Ingersoll


FOOD

BAKING 101 Leilani Bread The best thing happened to me a few weeks ago: Someone sent me a bread machine! Tom, if you’re reading this, you’re my favorite reader ever! With this bread machine, I’ve been able to do some awesome things! Baking bread is labor intensive. And while it’s good and wonderful labor, it’s not labor I have time for in my life at this point. The option to dump all the ingredients in a machine and walk away is so enticing. This week, I made Sweet Leilani Bread from Bread Machine Magic. Unlike any bread I have baked before, this one had loads of fruit and even some nuts in it. I wondered if it would taste like dessert, hold up in a sandwich or have too many chunks in it for my picky kid eaters. Well, let me tell, you it’s amazing! Only slightly sweet, it reminds me of Hawaiian rolls but in loaf form. The recipe calls for ½ cup of “extremely ripe” banana and the one I had on hand was only “ripe.” So, I am sure this bread could be even sweeter. The Leilani bread a Hawaiian style bread that uses ingredients you can find on the islands. Pineapples, macadamia nuts and Sweet Leilani Bread Courtesy of Bread Machine Magic ½ cup canned pineapple chunks, well drained (keep the juice!) ¼ cup buttermilk ¼ cup reserved pineapple juice 1 egg ½ cup sliced banana, very ripe 1 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons butter 1½ tablespoons sugar 3 cups bread flour

Photo courtesy of Allison Willson Dudas.

bananas make this bread interesting and different, particularly for this New Englander. I could see myself making this in the dead of winter to bring a little bit of warmth into my home. Even just picturing the beaches of Hawaii helps me on the coldest days of January. — Allison Willson Dudas Allison loves to bake and cook, and with three small (always hungry) children, she’s always trying something new. She considers herself a perpetual student in the kitchen.

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¼ cup whole wheat flour ½ flaked sweetened coconut ⅓ cup chopped macadamia nuts 2 teaspoons active dry yeast Throw it all in your machine, selecting Light Crust in the Basic or Standard Bake Cycle. Let cool an hour before eating. While I went the easy way with a bread machine, this loaf can be baked at 375 degrees for 45 to 55 minutes.

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& , e v o L , Peace

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DRINK

Summer brewing Light, refreshing and flavorful With the rise of craft beer, we’ve all seen beer seasonality rise accordingly. Given small batch brews and limited releases (which I think are kind of the same thing) have become more and more prevalent, it makes sense brewers are nimbly developing and introducing seasonally appropriate brews at all times. Years ago, it would be reasonably common place for a brewery to release, say, a summer seasonal brew. Think Samuel Adams Summer Ale or Brooklyn Brewery’s Summer Ale. (Incidentally, I want some Brooklyn Summer in my face right now.) These are lighter brews featuring light citrus notes, light hop character and an easy-drinking style. Obviously, that still works quite well in warm weather. Still, craft brewers now are perhaps less likely to put out a generic “summer ale,” and more likely to release one or a series of seasonal brews aimed at capturing the summer season in a glass. That might mean a summer IPA with tropical hop flavor or a crisp pilsner brewed with lime or maybe a tart sour brewed with cherry. The explosion of craft beer has bred a relentless appetite for new, unique and exciting experimentation. Here are five New Hampshire brews that would be perfect companions for a summer day:

Allagash White is perfect in summer. Courtesy photo.

might just be your perfect choice in those moments. As the brewery puts it, “This could be considered the gateway drug for entry level craft beer enthusiasts.”

Caravela Kolsch Style Ale by Kelsen Brewing (Derry) Light, crisp and smooth — about as easy drinking as it gets. Perfect when the sun is Sour Flower by Henniker Brewing Co. relentless. (Henniker) I’m still not sure how I feel about sours Jeff Mucciarone is an account manager overall, but I am sure I like this one. This with Montagne Communications, where he dry-hopped sour ale is refreshingly tart with provides communications support to the New a pleasing lemony zip. I think this would be Hampshire wine and spirits industry. quite good paired with spicy food. Ginger Pepper Pale Ale by Portsmouth Brewery (Portsmouth) I’ve never tried this particular brew but how could you not be intrigued? The combination of fresh ginger and hot peppers should make this a particularly unique warm weather option.

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Sun Day by Deciduous Brewing Co. (Dover) I checked the tap list at Deciduous recently and I’m not sure you could go wrong. Sun Day is a hoppy ale brewed with milk sugar and fruited with blueberries. That just screams summer. The brewery also makes Fun Day, which is fruited with mangos, and Rainbow Dreams, which features mixed fruits. I don’t think these brews are around long. Alley Sack by Kettlehead Brewing (Tilton) Sometimes, especially in the summer, you just want something fresh, simple and easy to drink. Alley Sack, an American light lager,

Must Try Hog Wilde by Beara Brewing Co. (Portsmouth) This is a stout that is infused with “bacon chipotle BBQ.” OK. Let that sink in for a minute. There are some people who might be scared of this. Not me. I’m imagining rich smoke, a salty kick from the bacon and just a little smoky heat from the peppers. On a hot summer day, you might opt for something else. But on a cool summer evening as you polish off an entire rack of ribs, well, this might just be the definition of perfection. What’s in My Fridge Allagash White by Allagash Brewing Company (Portland, ME): This is sort of the quintessential “wheat” beer, with a smooth, almost silky texture, extremely hazy pour and complex layers of bready, citrus flavor. I hadn’t had one in quite some time and I appreciated the chance to reintroduce myself to this classic brew. Cheers!


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POP CULTURE

Blooming art

Flowers and paintings collide at art show The Hampton Art in Bloom show blossoms for its seventh year on Wednesday, June 12, and Thursday, June 13, at the Cornerstone at Hampton Assisted Living Facility. The show is a collaboration between the Hampton Arts Network and the Hampton Garden Club to create flower arrangements that are inspired by the paintings. “Art in Bloom allows artists to showcase their artwork, and Hampton Garden Club members to express their own creativity with flowers to capture the essence of the artwork,” said Linda Gebhart of the Hampton Arts Network. “Interpretation is as unlimited as the designers imagination … and the viewers appreciation,” Pat Navin from the Hampton Garden Club said. The show is for all ages and is open to the public, though Gebhart noted that Cornerstone residents in particular “may see an image which holds a fond memory or smell a flower from their childhood [and benefit from] the interaction of all the people who attend this fun event.” Navin also said that the event is meant to encourage the whole community to see the

work of the two organizations. “Art in Bloom is for absolutely anyone,” Nevin said. “It is an opportunity for members of the community, no matter what their artistic talent or experience may be, to come together and enjoy the joyful spirit of the event [and] mingle with community members. It is just a fun outing.” Influenced by similar Art in Bloom events held by art museums across the country, the Hampton show brings focus onto local artists and gardeners in the Hampton area — HAN members such as Carol Kuzminski, Sarah Morrison, Carol Dostie, Marie Mahoney and Bev Tabet, alongside HGC members such Navin and Linda Tyler, Dawn Walker, Lisa Cote, and Laurie Woods. “People enjoy seeing the artwork by local artists and the creative interpretations by the HGC members,” Gebhart said. “A new work of art is created through the creative combination of both. It’s a feast for the senses of sight and smell.” June 12 is the main event; starting at 6:30 p.m. there will be refreshments, music and a raffle for a chance to win handmade items. Attendees will also have the oppor-

Girl’s Night Out Photo Shoots Bridal Gifts An Exceptional Boutique Private Parties & Events Dance Classes Open Mon-Thurs 11:30-7 Fri & Sat 11:30-8 Two Floors of Fun! Some Sundays (603) 379-2247 135 Lafayette Rd. Rye, NH SEACOAST SCENE | JUNE 6 - 12, 2019 | PAGE 26

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Hampton Art in Bloom show. Photos courtesy of Pat Nevin and Linda Gebhart.

tunity to vote for the People’s Choice, award to one artist/gardener team. June 13 offers visitors to the show a more casual observation of the displays. The exhibit will be open from 1 to 5 p.m. for those looking for a more reserved visit, to appreciate the works at their own pace. The show serves as a chance to support the local art scene while promoting the Cornerstone’s belief system that our elderly benefit from a humanistic approach,

according to Cornerstone Director of Community Relations Sarah Kearny. “Cornerstone at Hampton is the only community on the Seacoast using a nonpharmacological approach to treating the symptoms of dementia,” she said. For more information, please call Linda Gebhart of the Hampton Arts Network at 603-929-3850. — Mike Costello

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SEACOAST SCENE | JUNE 6 - 12, 2019 | PAGE 28

How to Raise Successful People, by Esther Wojcicki (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 279 pages) If you haven’t heard of Esther Wojcicki, perhaps you’ve heard of her daughter, the Wojcicki who runs YouTube. Or maybe the Wojcicki who co-founded the genetic testing company 23andMe. How about the Wojcicki who is an epidemiologist and anthropologist who teaches at the University of California, San Francisco. There’s not a slacker among the women in the Wojcicki family, which makes the opening of the matriarch’s new book both heartbreaking and poignant. In How to Raise Successful People, Esther Wojcicki writes about her own childhood, growing up female in a house where the preference was for males. Wojcicki turned 5 the day her parents brought her new brother home from the hospital, and she ran up to him, thinking that he was a special gift, only to be pushed away; her father said something that she said still shocks her today: “Your brother Lee is a boy, and in our family boys are more important.” “He delivered this news as if he had no understanding of how it might affect me. Even now, it’s hard for me to imagine someone saying that to a young child,” Wojcicki writes. This was seven decades ago, and Wojcicki’s parents have passed, but it’s hard to imagine anyone telling Esther Wojcicki and her daughters that men are more important than women today. In fact, Susan (YouTube, net worth $480 million) and Anne (23andMe, $440 million) both made Forbes magazine’s annual ranking of “richest self-made women” list last year. Their late grandfather, meanwhile, was always on the verge of financial ruin, Esther Wojcicki writes. She shared the story, however, not as a means of revenge, but to illustrate the soul-searching that she believes new parents need to do when they have children. Instead of parenting by instinct, she says, it’s important that new parents thoughtfully examine their own childhoods, especially if they were unhappy in some way. “It sounds simple, but we often fail to do it,” she writes. This exercise can also help us forgive our parents for their failings and move on to five strategies that Wojcicki exhorts parents to employ using the acronym she devised: TRICK. TRICK stands for trust, respect, independence, collaboration and kindness, and while this may sound exactly like something you’d expect from someone who has spent a half-century working for public schools, How to Raise Successful People is neither staid nor predictable. Wojcicki charges out of the gate with a litany of her own parents’ sins, but is equally

forthcoming with her own, including the time she told two of her daughters that she was giving each of them the same car; they weren’t too happy when they found out, nor was a grown-up Susan happy when she learned her mother had left her 8-year-old daughters shopping alone at Target. (“It’s Target,” I said. “It’s a wellrun store.”) Wojcicki was raising free-range kids decades before anyone had used the term free-range kids. She believes that parents wrongly baby their children, and that children should receive the same trust and respect that we accord other adults. Babies, for example, should be trusted to fall asleep on their own, rather than parents rushing in to comfort them when they cry. Children who don’t walk or talk “on schedule” should be trusted to develop at the speed appropriate for them. As evidence, she offers her own grandchildren, one of whom didn’t talk until he was nearly 3 but then suddenly started speaking in complete sentences, and another who was thought not to be able to walk, until one day he broke out into a perfect run. As for independence, Wojcicki says parents shouldn’t do anything for their children that they can do themselves, to include coming up with their own boundaries for tech use. Children will often come up with even stricter rules than their parents would, if given the opportunity, she says. And if you need an excuse not to help your child with his or her homework, Wojcicki offers an anecdote from her friend Maye Musk, the mother of Elon Musk. “She never checked her kids’ homework. She couldn’t. She was working five jobs to make ends meet. When their assignments required a parent’s approval, she had them practice her signature

so they could sign for her. ‘I didn’t have time,’ she told me, ‘and it was their work.’” Wojcicki’s belief in giving children autonomy over their lives extends from bedroom décor (she let Susan, at age 6, pick out hot pink shag carpeting for her bedroom) to their religious faith (their father was Catholic, their mother Jewish, so the girls got to choose their own path at age 12). She’s also taken this philosophy into the classroom at Palo Alto High School in Silicon Valley, where she heads up the media arts program that counts among its alumni the actor James Franco. All decisions are made by the student editors; her role is advisor. Her ultimate goal, she writes, as both parent and teacher is “to make myself obsolete.” The Wojcicki children were not perfect; Wojcicki spills the tea on the time she and her physicist husband Stanley left them alone for the weekend at ages 16, 15 and 13 … too early, as it turns out, as the parents later were horrified to learn that that their home had been the site of a party attended by about 100 teens. (Wojcicki found out because one of the guests showed up at school on Monday wearing one of Wojcicki’s outfits taken from her closet.) The girls were grounded for a month, and from then on, they had sitters when their parents were out of town. “By the way, we weren’t the only parents who had this experience,” Wojcicki writes. “If you have teenage kids, expect that they will throw a party when you leave.” As some critics have noted, it’s unclear whether Wojcicki’s parenting techniques produced successful people because they work, or because Esther Wojcicki and her husband provided a stable, loving home in which the mind was championed in a city synonymous with brainy people and technological innovation. When the eventual founders of Google set up shop in your garage, as Larry Page and Sergey Brin did in Susan Wojcicki’s house, that seems a more an omen of coming professional success than having a mother who allows hot-pink shag carpeting in your room. But they say you can’t argue with success, which makes Wojcicki’s book a worthy investment for parents looking for non-traditional advice so they can raise non-traditional people. B+ — Jennifer Graham Know about something fun going on? If you have an upcoming event in the Seacoast area that you want people to know about, send the details to editor@seacoastscene. net and we may publish the information in an upcoming edition!


Expires 6/30/19 (SS)

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NITE

Blood brothers

Collective Soul brings new album and Gin Blossoms to Casino Before Collective Soul hit the road with 3 Doors Down and Soul Asylum last summer, they’d hoped to have a new album ready. However, a creative burst from band leader E Roland stretched the project to two discs and a delayed release. Then management nixed plans for a double album. So Blood — named for the strong connection between band members Will Turpin, Jesse Triplett, Johnny Rabb and E’s brother Dean Roland — became a single CD, reflecting the cream of Roland’s output. “Now we have to come up with a name for the second record,” Roland said with a laugh during a recent phone interview. Tom Petty inspired the first two singles from the new effort, which arrives June 21 on Fuzze-Flex Records/ADA. “Right as Rain” echoes Petty’s “Jammin’ Me” – Roland told Billboard, “I have no problem saying that I borrowed the riff” – and “A Good Place to Start” employs a narrated verse a la “Here Comes My Girl.” Petty’s death in 2017 hit him hard. “Other than Elton or Elvis Costello, I probably saw him more in concert than anyone else,” Roland said. “He was so consistent … and his band was one of the greatest in the world. It became that you expected it, like nice wine with dinner.” The new record has a “fun” vibe, reflective of the energy that newest members Johnny Rabb and Jesse Triplett bring to the band. Collective Soul & Gin Blossoms When: Saturday, June 8, 8 p.m. Where: Casino Ballroom, 169 Ocean Blvd., Hampton Beach Tickets: $52 at casinoballroom.com (18+)

“It was like changing the spark plugs; they got us fired up,” Roland said. “Not only in intensity, but just in having fun with it again. It brought excitement.” A few guests, like Sugarland’s Kristian Bush and guitarist Peter Stroud (Sheryl Crow, Sarah McLachlan) added to Blood’s house-party vibe. “They happened to be home when musicians are … before the summer tours,” Roland said. “These are friends ours that we’ve known a long time. We have the ability to just hang out with them, and talk them into playing.” They’re currently touring with Gin Blossoms, a band they’ve known since their ’90s heyday. “It’s a good connection we have,” Roland said. “Everybody enjoys each other’s company, which is very important when you’re on the road. There are no egos, with everybody wanting to compete with each other, and they’re a band with great songs. It’s sets the tone for a good night of music.” The decade is experiencing a resurgence and a level of respect reflecting an acknowledgement that there was more to it than Nirvana and Pearl Jam. “It’s well-deserved, with all those bands,” Roland said. “It’s funny… grunge, and now post-grunge, we never thought of ourselves as anything more than a rock ’n’ roll band. Whatever you want to put before and afterward, as long as ‘suck’ is not in there, we’re happy.” With another summer of shows ramping up, Roland is still glad to be playing music. “We always say it’s like going to camp; I see my buddies, and we’re very blessed,” he said, adding that it’s an enviable way to earn a living. “Think about it; if I go to a grocery store and get my change, I’m not clapping for the

Courtesy photo.

clerk. You get applause every night for doing a job. It’s a warm fuzzy feeling.” On the other hand, getting older isn’t Roland’s favorite thing, and it’s also the reason he changed his first name to a single vowel — with, it should be noted, mainly humorous intent. “We do a lot of private shows, and you have to have a nametag,” he said. “So I’m walking around as a middle-aged

man with Ed on my chest. I looked at my wife and was like, ‘This don’t feel good.’ We laughed, and she said, ‘Everybody calls you E anyway.’ My son’s middle name is E, my dad is known as Big E. So it’s not really a change. If you want to call me Ed, call me Ed. But it was more a bit silly — let’s let everybody in on the joke.” — Michael Witthaus

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40 Park Avenue Hampton, NH 603-929-0781 | hamptonhistoricalsociety.org Hours: Wed., Fri., Sun. - 1pm to 4pm

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BEACH BUM FUN JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS BY MATT JONES

“Your Choices Are” — out of four options Across 1 Hearty drink 6 Pen name? 9 Video game designer Sid who created the “Civilization” series 14 Three-time World Series of Poker winner Stu

image 20 Legendary producer of “Charlie’s Angels” and “7th Heaven” 23 Renaissance Faire org. 24 Fill in ___ blank 25 Unruly bunch 26 “Sit, ___, sit. Good dog” (‘80s TV vanity card) 29 Ouija board reply 30 Washington Post editor portrayed by Liev Schreiber in “Spotlight” 33 Info page on many sites 34 Gerund finish 35 Country with a red-and-white flag 36 “Par ___” (airmail stamp) 39 “The Raven” poet 40 Internet connection need 41 O’Rourke who’s running for president 42 Rule, briefly

15 “Deep Space Nine” security officer 16 Egyptian-born children’s singer 17 Ecuadoran province once famous for its gold 18 Wasabi-coated veggie 19 “Dark Side of the Moon” album

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43 “Epic ___ Battles of History” 44 Star of “An American in Paris” and “Gigi” 47 Tiny pellets 50 Period to remember 51 Spring setting 52 Outworn 53 Author Harper 54 Guitarist/songwriter for System of a Down and Scars on Broadway 58 Basketball game site 60 Rho preceders 61 Talks gibberish 62 Herpetologist’s study 63 1099-___ (annual tax form from the bank) 64 Arthouse film, probably 65 Designation at some meat markets 66 Pub. staffers 67 Aviary abodes Down 1 Somewhat seasick 2 Loosen your boots 3 Ancient Greek marketplaces 4 Card game that sounds like an ancient ruler 5 Jagger, to the Stones, e.g. 6 The Big ___ (“Chantilly Lace” singer) 7 Notion, in France 8 Site of a pit crew? 9 Dr Pepper rival renamed in 2001

10 Take home pay 11 “Saw that coming” 12 It makes up half the riffraff? 13 Goblet’s edge 21 1996 Dream Team nickname 22 “___ Shot” (2019 Seth Rogen movie) 27 Make a tunnel 28 E pluribus ___ 31 New York county near Pennsylvania (or Pennsylvania county near New York) 32 Each 33 Tarot character 36 Competent 37 Change course suddenly 38 “Let’s shake on that” 39 Dessert that may include molasses 40 Dialect spoken by nearly a billion people 42 Taken-back merchandise 43 Sushi form 45 Eurovision Song Contest 2019 host 46 Friars Club functions 47 Window coverings 48 Hit from “Thriller” 49 They account for taste 55 “Puppy Love” songwriter Paul 56 Pay attention to 57 Orson Welles’s “Citizen ___” 58 Campfire remains 59 “Messenger” material

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• Aries (March 21-April 19): You are the kind of person who will create a lasting impression for some reason I can’t quite remember right now. • Taurus (April 20-May 20): A new friend will help open doors. Unfortunately, the doors will be to the IRS audit center. • Gemini (May 21-June 20): You have a talent of making the most out of very little, though it’s not by choice. • Cancer (June 21-July 22): A change of plans will not be in your favor. A change of pants will be, though.

• Leo (July 23-Aug. 22): Remember that as bad as things are, someone has it worse than you. Also, remember that every rule has an exception. • Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Nothing you ever try will work out or result in any kind of success. On the plus side, though, you’re an incurable optimist. • Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Terrible things are about to happen in your love life. Oh, my mistake, this horoscope is for your wife. • Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Precision is the most important quality in your future. At least it might be, in a kinda sorta way, I think. • Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Today is the day for you to create a whole new you. This time try something more like George Clooney. • Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): It’s time to really start thinking big! In other words, follow the lead of your hips. • Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Overreacting will not help you. And I really mean it, or it’ll be the end of the world as we know it! • Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20): Be careful not to throw out the baby with the bathwater. Though you really should change that bathwater once in a while.

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SEACOAST SCENE | JUNE 6 - 12, 2019 | PAGE 34


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BEACH BUM FUN ROCKANDROLLCROSSWORDS.com BY TODD SANTOS

WHY DO WE NEVER GET AN ANSWER Across

1. Fiona Apple ‘Fast __ __ Can’ (2,3) 6. ‘00 Radiohead Grammy-winning album (3,1) 10. Smallest unit of matter that might split at heaviest show of your life? 14. ‘Summer Breeze’ __ & Crofts 15. Bob Dylan went to the ‘Gates Of’ it 16. ‘Cloudland’ __ Ubu 17. ‘91 Huey Lewis ‘Couple Days Off’

album (4,2,4) 19. “Making it” master agenda 20. Led Zep ‘What Is __ What Should Never Be’ 21. Moody Blues song about no-cal drink 22. No Doubt ‘__ Good’ 23. ‘Baby Got Back’ Sir __-A-Lot 24. Laser concert light comes in this form 25. Aretha Franklin song about NYC El Barrio section (7,6)

31. Johnny Cash ‘__ __ The Line’ (1,4) 32. Life Of Agony song about Showtime pot show? 33. Rick Springfield album about Lao Tzu principle, perhaps 35. Bette Midler’s ‘80 smash (w/”The”) 36. Purposely misspelled ‘80 Devo hit ‘__ __ Want’ (4,1) 37. Frank Zappa is ‘Tryin’ To Grow’ one under his mouth 38. Motley Crue ‘Same Ol’ Situation (__)’ 39. Moody Blues “Lovely __ __ you again my friend” (2,3) 40. Popes leader MacGowan 41. Moody Blues classic ‘__ Satin’ (6,2,5) 44. Neil-Young penned song about midwest university shootings 45. ‘True To You’ Ocasek 46. Songs 48. ‘Action Pact’ Canucks

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1. Cornershop ‘Brimful Of __’ 2. P. Diddy’s first name 3. When Paul Gilbert is mowing the lawn he’ll say ‘Get Out Of My __’ 4. Moody Blues “To learn as we grow __, the secrets of our souls” 5. ‘76 Sweet album ‘Give __’ (2,1,4) 6. Madonna ‘And The Money __ Rolling In (And Out)’ 7. Like studio time just sitting unused 8. James Blunt might write a letter starting with ‘__ Katie’ 9. ‘03 John Mayer live CD/DVD ‘__ Given Thursday’ 10. Some rockers’ image has sex this 11. Bob Dylan ‘___ Is Isn’t True’ (4,2,4) 12. Shakira has this kind of ‘Fixation’ 13. ‘You’re The Only One’ Maria 18. Joni Mitchell drove a ‘Big Yellow’ one 22. Rolling Stones ‘I’m Yours, I’m __’

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51. ‘All Sides’ Maryland band 54. Cobra Starship ‘The City __ __ War’ (2,2) 55. Jack Johnson “Where did all the __ __ go?” (4,6) 57. School sang of on 44 Across 58. Stage dive sound, when audience parts 59. Guns & Roses ‘__ __ A Million’ (3,2) 60. Gordon Lightfoot admits ‘__ __ It Again’ (2,2) 61. Classic ‘Hot’ cars STP will drive in Heaven 62. A musical group that consists of nine people

23. Majority gender in rock 24. My Morning Jacket covered this Erykah at Red Rocks 25. Silversun Pickups 2nd that will make you pass out? 26. Steve Vai album ‘___ __ Warfare’ (7,3) 27. Like Krokus 28. Whitesnake ‘__ __ Go Again’ (4,1) 29. 1976’s ‘I Can’t Hear You No More’ Reddy 30. This Arizona band is not from New England 31. Prominent 80s label that will provide Form 1040? 34. When The Moody Blues saw her, they knew she was ‘The __’ 36. Cake ‘Sheep __ __ Heaven’ (2,2) 37. Nile Rodgers ‘My Forbidden Lover’ band 39. ‘__ Ain’t A Love Song’ Bon Jovi 40. Brother Cane ‘And Fools __ __’ (5,2) 42. Elvis never lived there, but he sang ‘In The __’ 43. Fabulous Thunderbirds “__ it up, I’ll take it” 46. John Hiatt ‘The __ Bar Is Open’ 47. Like affordable guitar from someone else 48. Rancid “Ruby, ruby, ruby __!” 49. Meat Loaf ‘For Crying Out __’ 50. Saybia plays all ‘The __’ 51. Moody Blues “Just __ your eyes and realize the way it’s always been. 52. Simple Plan ‘Your Love Is __ __’ (1,3) 53. Pepper song about monthly landlord bill? 55. Steve Howe and Steve Hackett 80s band 56. Musician/artist Yoko

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SEACOAST SCENE | JUNE 6 - 12, 2019 | PAGE 37


NEWS OF THE WEIRD BY ANDREWS MCMEEL SYNDICATION

Holy action hero!

Bill Gibson of Burtonsville, Maryland, drives an iconic vehicle: a custom-built 1966 replica of the Batmobile, complete with rocket launchers, jet flames and a bat phone, worth $175,000. So he wasn’t about to stand by and let a criminal escape on May 15, when a hit-and-run driver smashed into his prized car on Route 28 in Silver Spring. “I don’t know what the guy was thinking,” Gibson told Fox5. “He must have been going about 60 ... and just slammed into the right rear corner.” When the driver failed to pull over, Gibson dialed 911 and gave chase, eventually pulling into a church parking lot, where the driver agreed to give Gibson his insurance information without getting the police involved. Gibson estimates repairs will cost around $7,000.

Lame

Manuel Muniz, 35, of Amsterdam, New York, didn’t fool officers of the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Department with his attempt to avoid the lines at the DMV. Muniz was charged on May 20 with driving an unregistered vehicle after officers quickly identified Muniz’s handwritten inspection sticker as a fake, made out of red construction paper and including a handmade bar code and January 2020 expiration date, WRGB reported. “We appreciate people who take some initiative,” the department posted on its Facebook page, “however this will not work as your vehicle inspection sticker, NICE TRY!”

The litigious society

Jim and Jen (who asked that their last names be withheld) of Ontario, Canada, decided in 2011 they would be done having children after their twins were born that year. Jen’s doctor was supposed to perform a tubal ligation after delivering the babies, but 10 months later, she found herself pregnant again. “I was floored,” she told CTV News. “I couldn’t imagine having a newborn again.” But in February 2013, their fourth child was born, and later that year, Jen and Jim sued their hospital and doctors for $800,000 for wrongful pregnancy. The case is expected to go to trial in spring 2020. It’s “not that we don’t love her. ... She is everything and more, but it still doesn’t mitigate the fact that there are pragmatic costs to raising a child,” Jen said. The hospital investigated and uncovered a chain of miscommunication regarding the tubal ligation — compounded by not letting Jen know the procedure had not been done. “If a man got a woman pregnant, he would have to pay child support, right?” said Jim. Lawyers for the doctors deny that Jen and Jim have suffered any damages.

SEACOAST SCENE | JUNE 6 - 12, 2019 | PAGE 38

Bright idea

Indianapolis Metropolitan Police officers were led on a chase late on May 26 after a reckless driver nearly hit a patrol car. Ignoring signs and warnings about a bridge out ahead, the driver tried to jump the bridge “Dukes of Hazzard” style, reported WXIN, but when he came to the end of the pavement, his car hit the exposed beams of the bridge and skidded to a stop. The driver got away, but police apprehended a passenger, who informed them the driver had one leg and had left his prosthetic leg behind in the car. Police said they were confident they’ll track him down soon.

Fashion statement

You either love ‘em or hate ‘em, but if you’re going to be mocked for your fashion sense, Crocs’ newest style doubles your chances. Developed as part of a collaboration with Japanese streetwear company Beams, the new Crocs sport tiny fanny packs attached to the ankle straps, reported CBS News. The $53 shoes come in teal and purple, and the miniature backpacks are big enough for keys, a credit card and a few dollars — along with what’s left of your dignity.

ple put urns on their mantel and to me, Florida my tattoos are more meaningful than an Natasha Ethel Bagley, 42, was arresturn on the mantel,” Sherwood said. ed on May 28 in connection with an April 2 incident at a Miami Burger King, according to WTVJ. The arrest report Crime report A 40th birthday outing ended on a sour stated that Bagley and 27-year-old Gennote for Neil Edwards-Cecil, the birth- esis Peguero demanded free french fries day boy, and Lee Gaudoin, 31. According in the restaurant’s drive-thru. When a resto Metro News, after a few drinks, the taurant employee refused their request, two stopped for a cheeseburger on April they parked the car and entered the store, 27 at McDonald’s in Chester, England, where Peguero hopped over the counter where they found a duck walking around and, with her hands in her pockets sugthe restaurant. Kindly, the men helped the gesting she had a gun, demanded all the bird find its way out of the building, but contents of the cash register. After the they somehow ended up arguing over it, manager tried to call police, Peguero which escalated into a brawl. When offi- punched her in the face, the report said, cers arrived, Gaudoin lunged at one of and Bagley piled on to further assault the them, shouting about how he had saved a woman. The two then drove away after duck. Edwards-Cecil tried to jump in and destroying two registers on their way out. help Gaudoin, only to be pepper-sprayed. Bagley was held without bond; Peguero Both men were arrested and later admitted remains at large. to being intoxicated and resisting a conVisit newsoftheweird.com. stable. “I am ashamed for the way I have acted,” Edwards-Cecil told the court.

Or you could just walk

Officials in the southern Spanish town of Estepona were forced to close a 125foot steel slide linking two streets to save folks from a 10-minute walk when people suffered injuries riding down it, Sky News reported on May 13. One woman posted photos of her bruised and scraped elbows, saying her rear end suffered worse. The town council argued that it provides instructions about how to safely use the slide, but closed the conveyance for fresh safety inspections. Local residents said the 28,000-euro slide was a “vanity project” for the mayor.

Wait, what?

Michael and Kyle Sherwood, fatherand-son funeral directors in Cleveland, Ohio, have opened a niche business: Save My Ink Forever, which preserves the tattoos of people who have died as a memorial for their loved ones. The idea for the 2-year-old company came about after a “semi-serious” discussion with a friend about preserving tattoos, according to BBC News. “So we started doing some research and blended a few techniques together,” Kyle Sherwood said, to develop a technique for long-term preservation of excised skin art. The company works with funeral homes in the United States, U.K. and Canada, where the tattoos are surgically removed, then sent to a lab for preservation before being mounted and framed behind UV-protected glass. “Peo-

PET OF THE WEEK Hershey’s Kisses are wonderful treats, and this lovely older cat is a treat as well! Hershey Kiss is a mature, sophisticated lady who is looking for a new home where she can be the queen of the castle. Hershey loves to play with wand toys, yarn, stuffed toys, balls, or anything else she can find. Hershey Kiss isn’t a lap cat, but she will keep you company and listen if you need to vent about your day. Hershey prefers to be the only pet at home. If you’re looking for an older cat who likes to play, be pet and listen to your troubles, Hershey may be the girl for you. Please stop in at the NHSPCA in Stratham today to meet this sweet girl. Visit nhspca.org.


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