TheLaker_Aug_29_22

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August 29, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 1 Your Guide to What’s Happening in NH’s Lakes Region Old Barns| Page 3 Boat Museum | Page 8 What’s Up | Pages 14-18 ‘Cue The Grill | Page 24 Inside This Issue... August 8, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 1 Your Guide to What’s Happening in NH’s Lakes Region August 8 • Vol 39 • No 19 Six Shooters | Page 3 Granite Man | Page 11 What’s Up | Pages 14-18 ‘Cue The Grill | Page 20 FREE Inside This Issue... Sights & Sounds of Summer! Boat Show, Music, Events and More Like Us On Facebook Be Entered to Win $100 Woodstock Inn Gift www.facebook.com/The.LakerCard

Page 2 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022

By definition, an ‘old barn’ is fifty or more years old. However, barns must be 75 years or older to qualify for New Hampshire’s tax incentive program. These are agricultural buildings—including supplementary structures, such as carriage houses and out buildings like sugarhouses, smoke houses, and chicken coops—designed

to house animals, hay, and straw. Sadly, on average, there are 65 deadly barn fires each year in the United States, thus the need for preservation efforts.

More than two decades ago, the New Hampshire Preservation Alliance (NHPA) inaugurated its program designed to preserve barns that qualify to be on either the federal or state historic registry. The effort has been a labor of love on the part of both the organization and members of the public, who identify themselves as ‘barn-lovers’.Sixteenyears ago, Beverly Thomas joined NHPA and assumed the role of program director, specializing in old homes and barns. Clearly the system designed by Thomas and her colleagues—with considerable support from municipalities, other agencies, and the general public—has been successful. Results from a recent survey of barns conducted in twenty New Hampshire towns have been prorated to determine that there are 20,000 large iconic barns remaining within the state today.

Saving New Hampshire’s Iconic Old Barns: A Labor of Love

By MarkTheOkrantbarnis an American icon, one that Stacee Lynn wrote about in Our Barndominium Life, harkens back to a time of self-reliance and independence.” The barn, according to Lynn, “reminds us that we are a nation of growers, builders, and doers.”

structures throughout a minimum tenyear preservation easement. In return, the municipality provides property tax relief of 25 to 50 percent of the fullassessed value of the building(s) and the land immediately beneath them. The designers of the program wisely added the stipulation that there will be no increase in tax assessments resulting from work that is performed throughout a ten-year easement.

as a promotional voice. Ultimately, it becomes the decision of the individual towns to determine whether an application is accepted. To qualify, a structure must be visible from a right of way and must have national or state structural significance.

By visiting nhpreservation.org, information about numerous vital variables is made available. This includes a description of frame terminology, a definition of barn types (including identifying photographs), and tips for dating the age of a barn. The website also contains a document prepared by renowned dairy specialist, Professor John Porter. Porter supplies a series of recommendations for how barn owners can prolong the lives of their barns—mostly through simple maintenance over both the short and longToterm.date, 607 historic structures within 100 New Hampshire communities have participated in the Barn Tax Incentive Program. Close to home, more than fifteen structures have been protected in the Lakes Region communities of Sandwich and Freedom, while 10 to 14 structures are safeguarded in Alton and Moultonborough.Thisandother NHPA programs provide opportunities to use existing structures in creative ways, while retaining the scenic value they contribute to communities’ landscapes. Involvement in barn preservation is not a walk in the park. Owners and

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Presently, as the organization has been doing for decades, NHPA assists barn owners and enthusiasts to ensure that the Granite State’s barns are not damaged, destroyed, or removed from New Hampshire. Helping to facilitate this, the state government implemented RSA 79-D, the Barn Tax Incentive Program, in July of 2002. This RSA authorizes towns and cities to grant property tax relief to owners who can demonstrate that there is public benefit to be derived from barns as well as older farm buildings. Owners within the program agree to maintain their

A packet of information, available on the NHPA website, directs participants through the Incentive Program. The ten tips contained in the document require applicants to be very careful planners as well as advocates for the work they are proposing to do. Otherwise, NHPA’s role in this process is to serve strictly

• Barns continued on page 4

other inquirers are advised to do their homework, and gather as much information about their structures as possible before committing to it.

NHPA’s attitude toward barn usage, Thomas offered a conciliatory tone between those who favor maintaining structures’ agricultural status and others who support re-use. While the

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What follows are several references about barn preservation. For information about programs that are promoted or operated by the New Hampshire Preservation Alliance: telephone (603) 224-2281, visit www. nhpreservation.org, or email admin@ nhpreservation.org. Excellent written resources include John Porter’s “Preserving Old Barns,” Tom Visser’s “Field Guide to New England Farm Buildings,” and Tom Hubka’s “Big House, Little House, Back House, Barn.”

organization’s overwhelming emphasis is on preserving barns as working farm buildings, Thomas is well aware that some owners have other uses in mind when they purchase a property that holds an iconic barn. During the twenty-first century, numerous barns are being used to provide storage for the owners’ cars or boats. Others are rehabilitated for purposes that are very different from their intended function. Today, the New Hampshire landscape is dotted with restaurants, events buildings, and furniture stores within structures that originally housed animals and farm equipment. Asked to state her hope for the barn preservation program, Thomas did not hesitate: “My goal is to keep all of this state’s barns right here in New Hampshire.”

A program that Thomas and her colleagues monitor is Historic Barn Assessment Grants. These small matching grants cover the cost of an assessment by a professional contractor and, according to Thomas, “help barn owners by providing ‘road maps’ for repair and re-use.” Full grants are $400, with mini-grants of $250. Successful applicants must provide a small cash match. To participate, owners complete a Farm Reconnaissance Inventory Form and submit it to NHPA. Next, NHPA will recommend a barn consultant who assists the potential applicant to prioritize goals and expenses. The consultant will inspect the barn to determine its age and features, then note what future steps will be required. Since water damage is the greatest single enemy of barns, the program strongly emphasizes protection against water, whether from precipitation or soilAskedmoisture.about

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Final Summer Concert at Bandstand

the

Chuck Farrell is the band’s lead guitar player and brings a smooth guitar style to the band. He comes to the group with 20 years of experience in many diverse styles of music, with roots in rock, R and B and folk.

The band’s drummer is Mike Chatigny, who also comes to the band with a wide range of playing experi-

Mon-Sat 11am-7pm Sun 12-5pm

sound and she has also developed a vocal style all her own that blends well with her daughter’s higher voice.

with coupon Laker

The Carolyn Ramsay Band is a collaboration of musical talent brought to life by Carolyn Ramsay. After knowing one another for years, the group formally formed the band in 2012, which has its roots in rock and folk music running through the soulful stylings of the songs they cover with their own brush.

A local favorite will take to the Wolfeboro Community Bandstand on Saturday, Sept. 3, as the Carolyn Ramsay Band wraps up the Friends of the Wolfeboro Community Bandstand’s summer concert series.

ence and styles under his belt. He has played with many bands touring up and down the east coast and has recorded hundreds of hours in studios across the northeast.TheCarolyn Ramsay Band will take to the bandstand on Saturday, Sept. 3, for a 7 p.m. concert in Cate Park. The Friends of the Wolfeboro Community Bandstand concert series is presented free of charge each Saturday night in

The

Jessica Ramsay has been inspired since early childhood, with classic country, blues, folk, pop, R and B and rock music all having influence over her vocal style. She brings an energy that will inspire audience’s dancing boots and melt your rock and roll heart.

Carolyn Ramsay grew up in musical family and began playing guitar and singing in middle school and hasn’t stopped since. Her rhythm guitar and finger picking add to the band’s

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the bandstand in Cate Park, with each concert lasting two hours with a short intermission. At intermission, there will be a pass-the-bucket offering collected to help support the free concert series.In the event of bad weather, check the Friends of the Wolfeboro Community Bandstand Facebook page and signs will also be posted at the entrance to the park. Carolyn Ramsey Band performs on Saturday, Sept. 3, in Wolfeboro Community Bandstand.

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But at the New Hampshire Boat Museum in Wolfeboro, steam is the title of a fascinating exhibit focused on steam powered boats. The exhibit is focused on the history of steam powered boats that once were the major way of water travel in the Lakes Region and beyond.

Story and Photo by Kathi Caldwell-Hopper

the museum of interest. It just might change your mind about boating because it is truly fascinating to see the old boats and step back in time to the days when boats were becoming popular in the area.

I don’t own a boat and I probably never will. I also don’t know much about boats – old or new – and how to navigate the lakes, but I like to learn about how people lived and played long ago and to get up close to the things they once used and owned. To see a vintage boat and gaze at the old seating where genteel ladies in long dresses and big hats once relaxed and enjoyed a summer’s trip on the lake, or to see old photographs of boats on the

water, is enough to delight.

The Letting Off Steam exhibit is a gem, and the good news for the public is that it will be on display until the museum closes for the season in October. The Boat Museum is a place I love to go, and I stop in at least once during the summer to check out each year’s exhibit. Just to look at the vintage boats up close is enough of a reason to go to the museum, but the bonus is the special exhibits on the

Letting Off Steam at the NH Boat Museum

This year’s exhibit on steam and boating is very memorable. I started my visit in the gift shop of the museum, where items related to boating are offered. The friendly woman on duty at the front desk greeted me and informed Director of Development, Wendy Stocker, that I was waiting to tour the exhibit with her and to learn more.

Wendy explained, when talking about the current exhibit, “It was a romantic age when lots of steamboats were on Lake Winnipesaukee. Steamboats were a way for boaters to experience nature from the water and vacationers loved them.”Inoticed there are two charming steamboats on display, sitting in the middle of the room (other wooden boats are on display as well). The steamboats are the refurbished Pumpkinseed (circa 1890 to 1910) and the A-Way. Both steamboats are wonderful examples of this type of boat and they take you back

history of boating.

Everyone needs to let off steam from time to time. When we think of doing so, we usually want to get away from day-to-day stresses.

If you like history and the lakes and New Hampshire, you are all set for a visit. If history or boating isn’t really your thing, you will still find

Wendy is very enthusiastic about the steam exhibit and explained what I would be seeing as we entered the dome-shaped building’s exhibit area. (The museum was once a dance hall in a Quonset Hut design, and part of the Allen A Resort. It closed some years ago and the New Hampshire Boat Museum has since used the property and the building for exhibits and classes in boat building.)

• NH Boat Museum continued on page 9

The charming Pumpkinseed steamboat.

A-Way 1906 Steam Launch is 20 ft. in length with a decorative fringe around the rooftop and is quite an eyecatcher. It shows that little embellishments such as this made steamboats as individual as their owners. The A-Way was built in Melvin Village by Herbert M. Woodward with Cyprus planning on oak frames. The name of the boat honors Woodward’s wife, Ada Way.

Gilford area. Unfortunately, the boat had trouble and sank in just 30 feet of water.Atnearby Newfound Lake, travel was provided by the Stella-Marion It was built by Joseph Abrose in the Newfound area and was 49.5 ft. in length and was steam powered. The boat had a variety of jobs on the lake, from hauling logs to delivering the mail and providing transportation to passengers. Sadly, the boat burned in 1915. The exhibit shows us photos of the boat in various views and must have at one time been quite a wonderful site on the lake.

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to times gone by.

to the Lakes Region of New Hampshire and these people likely wanted to get out on the water via a boat. Thus, steam engines were born; if steam could power trains, why not use steam to move boats?

I found the information titled Wreck Locations to be fascinating A large map pinpoints where various steamboats went down over the years. Old photos bring home what happened to some of theTheresteamboats.isnoway you can visit the New Hampshire Boat Museum and not stop to take a long look at the other wooden boats in the main exhibit area. They include the Ganges II, built in

• NH Boat Museum continued from page 8 • NH Boat Museum continued on page 10

As tourism grew, five express trains a day departed from New York (and probably Boston) for the Weirs area. Steamboats and large hotels sprang up around the Lakes Region to meet the need.Alarge

The Pumpkinseed is a charming little steamboat and it has been refurbished with a steam engine, and even a circular flotation device that appears to be an original to the boat with the word Pumpkinseed embossed on its surface. The Pumpkinseed is heavy and was built as a work boat. The motor, for the steamboat’s size, is quite large, and the vessel may have been used to haulThelogs.

include the Mason Steam Engine circa 1896; the Shipman “Boston” Model; the Fizhenry Steam Engine; the Fore River Compound Steam Engine; and the International Harvester Co. Lumber Wagon circa 1920 modified for “Columbia” display.

In the 1930s Herbert sold the boat for just $1.00 to his neighbors, the Read family. It has stayed in the Read family and is carefully cared for my Roger Read. Power for the steamboat is supplied by a 2-cyclinder Reliable compound steam engine. David Thompson of Moultonborough made the boiler and the boat will run at 5 mph for an hour on a gallon bucket of softThiscoal.was truly the Golden Age of boating and steam power ruled the world in the years after the Civil War. Steam power sent trains across the country, opening the bigger world to travelers. Railroads brought passengers

wall-sized poster display gives the viewer a timeline of commercial Winnipesaukee Steamboats, from the early 1830 Belknap, a 96-foot passenger and freight steamboat at Lake Village, and on to the Lady of the Lake 126-ft. steamboat (1849 to 1893) that ran between the Weirs and Wolfeboro as a passenger and freight vessel. Other steamboats in the timeline were the James Bell, circa 1859 to 1885, an 85-ft. passenger and freight boat at Lake Village; the SS Mt. Washington, 1872 to 1939 that traveled between Alton and the Weirs and was 178-ft., all the way through the years until the SS Uncle Sam ran from 1907 to 1944. There are old photos of each steamboat, and they help the viewer get an understanding of the boats and theirMorecharm.exhibits in the museum relate information on the SS, MV and MS Mount Washington, fondly known as the Mount. We are shown the life cycles of the various Mounts and the timeline as well, and old photos.

A display – all in a row – of steam engines informs the viewer of what it took to power the steamboats. Engines

For many years, the story of the Lady of the Lake has fascinated and been the stuff of stories and legends. Possibly this is because the steamboat is submerged in Glendale Cove not far from the shores of the NH Marine Patrol headquarters in Glendale, New Hampshire. It was originally owned by the Concord and Montreal Railroad and was 125 ft. in length. It carried passengers (capacity of 40 people) to and from the railroad terminus at the Weirs to summer cottages and hotels and for scenic lake trips. Eventually the larger and faster SS Mount Washington came on the scene in 1872. The two ships competed with one another and fought commercial competitions; eventually the Lady was taken out of service in the 1890s. The boat was used then for housing of workers until it was decided to scuttle the Lady in deep water near Rattlesnake Island in the

If you want to see some great old boats in good condition and learn the story behind them, head to the New Hampshire Boat Museum for this year’s exhibit on steamboats. It is a thorough

On Sunday, September 4, Lori ningaward-win-ise.guest,withGreensiclage’sShakerCanterburyperformAbatelli&amondDi-FredwillatVil-Mu-ontheseriesspecialAnel-Ansong-

writer (finalist, Great American Songwriting Contest 2010, Best Female Vocalist, Pulse Magazine 2011 & 2012), Diamond combines soulful vocals and seasoned piano playing with Abatelli’s skills in both the guitar and bass. Special guest Anelise, known for her quarantine sessions on social media, will provide “musical nostalgia.”

take place at Canterbury $20.donationsuggestedfreemances11.Septemberdayeveryto4:00NHCanterbury,ShakerVillage,Shaker288Rd,fromp.m.5:00p.m.Sun-throughPerfor-arewithaofDesignat-

1926. Also, the Goodhue and Hawkins Regina was built in 1913, and it is a beautiful boat.

ed as a National Historic Landmark for its architectural integrity and significance, The Village features 25 restored original Shaker buildings, 4 reconstructed Shaker buildings, and 694 acres of forests, fields, gardens, and mill ponds under permanent conservation easement. The property also features walking trails. To learn more about the music series, the Village, or trail system, visit shakers.org.

(The New Hampshire Boat Museum is located at 399 Center Street in Wolfeboro and is open into October. For information on Boat Museum events and other news, call 603-5694554 or visit www.nhbm.org.)

look at a time in Lakes Region history when the little (and sometime larger) boats plied the lakes, letting off steam.

• NH Boat Museum continued from page 9

Music on the Green

“Their music is family-friendly and a wonderful complement to our outdoor music series,” said Executive Director Leslie Nolan, who said their musical styles range from jazz and acoustic to folk, pop, gospel, and blues. “Like all our concerts, this concert will appeal to just about anyone who enjoys music.” Music on the Green performances

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Canterbury Shaker Village is a member of the NH Heritage Museum Trail, which connects the public with culturally rich heritage institutions in New Hampshire. For more information, visit nhmuseumtrail.org.

Musical Masterpiece on Playhouse Stage

winning actress Ashley Meeken gives a stunning performance as Nancy, delivering the heart wrenching song As Long as He Needs Me

Students should bring an apron to class. Tuition is $150.00 per person with no additional materials fee.

The production is generously sponsored by Dead River Company and ReMax Bayside. For more information or tickets, visit www.winnipesaukeeplayhouse.org.

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Fused Glass Workshop at Meredith Gallery

The production is helmed by Samantha Tella whose production of The Graduate won the NH Theatre Award for Best Play in 2017. Two-time Emmy Award winner Melissa Shakun has designed the multi-level set.

Explore the world of melted glass in a fast-paced workshop at The League of NH Craftsmen Meredith Fine Craft Gallery on Saturday, September 17, 2022, from 12 pm – 4 pm that will introduce the glass student to the techniques, materials, and equipment used to create a beautiful glass landscape. Create an original work using a full range of glass colors in sheet, various sizes of frit, stringers, and a variety of kiln techniques to create depth in your image. Many fused glass landscape examples will be on display. Safety, kiln firing, glass cutting, and cold working techniques will be covered. We will be using Bullseye glass COE 90 and other equipment to cut, grind, and shape your glass. Come prepared to work hard and have fun!

Lionel Bart’s adaptation of Dickens classic Oliver Twist runs at the Winnipesaukee Playhouse until September 3rd. With favorite songs like Consider Yourself, Oom Pah-Pah, and Food, Glorious Food, Lionel Bart’s Oliver! is considered a musical masterpiece and is one of the few movie musicals to win an Academy Award for Best Picture. The setting is Victorian England and orphan Oliver Twist (played by Bria Tremblay) sets out on adventures which see him getting involved with the more unsavory characters of London’s underground like the pickpocket The Artful Dodger (played by Nellie Hedquist) and a band of robbers lead by Fagin (played by Producing Artistic Director Neil Pankhurst). NH-award

Remaining performances are Tuesdays through Saturdays at 7:30pm and with matinees at 2pm on August 25th, 30th, and September 1st.

Space is limited to and pre-registration is required. Those who wish to take the class MUST sign up by Saturday, September 10th. To register or inquire about the class, call us at (603) 279-7920 or stop into the gallery at 279 Daniel Webster Highway, Meredith, NH. For more details, visit our website at http://meredith.nhcrafts.org and our Facebook page at http://www. facebook.com/nhcraft/TheLeagueofNHCraftsmen is a non-profit organization that encourages and promotes the creation, use and preservation of fine contemporary and traditional hand craft. The League represents the signature of excellence in fine craft, through the work of its juried members, and its rigorous standards for self-expression, vision, and quality craftsmanship.

and others, were installed in theaters throughout the US and other parts of the world prior to the mid-1930s. Also, numerous civic auditoriums and sports arenas were fitted with them. Of the thousands of theater organs that ex isted, fewer than forty remain in their original venues today, with some of the best examples being New York City’s Radio City Music Hall, the Chica go Theater, and Joliet Illinois’ Rialto Square Theater.

Rapsis incorporates both a bass tuba and trombone, as well as bells, whis tles, and everything but the kitchen sink, for sound effects during a film’s showing. At this juncture, I received a lesson about the attitude behind Rap sis’ craft. As he told me:

“Silent movies were designed to be shown to large audiences. It’s my job to use music and sounds to create an atmosphere or rhythm in order to get those old movies across to modern au diences.”Clearly, Jeff Rapsis is a study in con trasts. He uses modern technology—

There are thirty-four scheduled per formances by Jeff Rapsis between the beginning of August and the end of October, in venues throughout New England, including: the Leavitt The atre in Ogunquit ME, the Rex Theatre in Manchester NH, Brandon Town Hall in Brandon VT, Wilton Town Hall in Wilton NH, Alton Town Gazebo in Alton Bay NH, Ludlow Auditorium in Ludlow VT, Center of the Arts in Natick MA, and the Flying Monkey Movie House in Plymouth NH.

To view a full schedule of movies and locations where Rapsis will be per forming during the next twelve weeks, visit silentfilmlivemusic.blogspot.com Meanwhile, if you’d like to book a tru ly exceptional experience within your community, Jeff Rapsis can be reached at 603.236.9237, or jeffrapsis@gmail. com. Don’t be concerned if you have no Wurlitzer or sound system at your site; Rapsis travels with his synthesiz er, projector, and speakers.

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A native of Nashua, Jeff Rapsis got his start in the world of entertainment while he was an English major at Ford ham University. At the same time he was acquiring the tools that would pre pare him for a thirty-five year career in the newspaper business, he became a fan of old movies, especially comedies.

Directed by Dziga Vertov, the film is part documentary and part cinematic art. It depicts scenes of ordinary daily life in that region of the Soviet Union during the late 1920s. Its depiction of city life is exceptional, even without the aid of titles or narration. Under cur rent circumstances, it behooves all of us to see this gem.

Chaney, Sr. Rather than attempt to use sheet music containing popular tunes,

tal synthesizer. The effort proved to be a big success; so he looked for other opportunities.BetweenMarch and July 2020, COVID-19 brought live performanc es to a screeching halt. Interview ing Rapsis, it is apparent that he still loves performing in front of audienc es. Fortunately for Jeff and audiences throughout New England and within the Midwest, early Fall 2020 saw him back to his schedule of between 100 and 120 silent film screenings per year. Asked if the pace tires him, he laughed, “I only do two shows during the aver age week.” Still, this seems like quite a pace for an artist who always impro vises without the aid of sheet music. In fact, Rapsis has been so busy that he’s “worn out two big ass touch-sensitive keyboards” on his digital synthesizer.

NH

Windham ● Warner Tilton,

A theater organ was designed to re place an entire orchestra and, with proper use of the numerous switches and pedals, a skilled organist could provide a limitless range of sound ef fects. Many were equipped with a mo torized platform that allowed the or ganist to be raised, lowered, and spun around in order to be fully aware of a movie’s scenes and the audience’s re

By Mark FollowingOkrantatwo-year hiatus, I re cently had the privilege of re-inter viewing Jeff Rapsis, a silent movie or ganist, specializing in an art form that was essential during the years before sound became a standard element of moving pictures.

The vast majority of movies released during the first three decades of the twentieth century were strictly visual. Audiences were left to imagine their favorite actors’ voices, and what gun fire or a speeding train sounded like. Those early films also were lacking the beautiful musical scores that current audiences take for granted. Original ly, pit orchestras and pianists provided accompaniment for films. The group size and skill level of those performers varied depending upon the regional lo cation and population density of their communities.Beginningin the 1920s, the Rudolph Wurlitzer Company started building special pipe organs that provided both music and sound effects to accompa ny silent films. Unlike church organs, these had a horseshoe shape arrange ment of stop tabs, or switches, above and around the keyboard. Designed to stand out, rather than hidden in corners, theater organs had gaudy decorations, often including lots of gold trim.

his “big ass” keyboard—to provide needed atmosphere for a century-old medium. But, there is so much more to his performances. While Rapsis uses his improvisational skills to create a rich environment that focuses audienc es’ attention on silent films, his effort does not stop here. The beauty of the experience comes in knitting together a group of strangers into a single com munity. Thus, during a performance, Jeff Rapsis serves as entertainer, audi ence member, and social director.

Jeff Rapsis and Silent Movies: A Formula for Pure Entertainment

Asked to name his favorite films to work with, Rapsis demurred, much like a man questioned about the iden tity of his favorite child. After being pressed, he admitted a special affection for a Ukrainian film released in 1929, titled “Man With a Movie Camera.”

A talented musician, Rapsis thought it would be fun to try accompanying a movie. His first effort was in 2007, when he volunteered to provide mu sic for the 1925 silent movie classic, Phantom of the Opera, starring Lon

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Through the month of Aug., Exhibit by Dennis Morton, painter, Belknap Mill gallery, 25 Beacon St. East, Laconia, 524-8813.

Aug. 30, Outdoor Storytime for Young Children, 10:30-11:30 am, Cook Memorial Library, 93 Main St., Tamworth, www.tamworthlibrary.org.

What’s UP

100% Colombian Co eefreshly ground from whole beans Farm fresh eggs | Specialty Omelets Eggs Benedict - topped with homemade hollandaise, made fresh to order Buttermilk Pancakes | French Toastserved on thick Texas toast Sandwiches & Burgers | Don't forget to check out our daily breakfast & lunch specials!

Grab breakfast or lunch at e Farmer’s Kitchen. We use only the freshest ingredients for our homemade creations. Come by today to try our: NH Route 11 | 603-755-9900

Farmington

Through Sept. 3, Quilt Display, Clark Museum Complex, 233 S. Main St., Wolfeboro, info: 569-4997, wolfeborohistoricalsociety@gmail.com.

Your

& LUNCH - MADE FRESH

Please call ahead for event listings updates. Information and schedules subject to change. Call 603.406.4353 to Reserve Continuous Shuttle Daily in the Weirs Area 4pm-2am Safe and Less Expensive Than a DWI Bus Rentals and Local Pick Ups and Drops Offs Cash, Credit and Venmo accepted inSummerProfessionalTheatreTamworth,NH Last show of the season! Lucky Stiff August 25- September 3 Lynn Ahrens | Stephen Flaherty Sponsored by The Woodshed 2022 Season Sponsor: The Haynes FoundationFamily 603-323-8500 barnstormerstheatre.org Sign up for our newsletter for updates on events and special promotions Fridays are Family Nights Tuesdays and Wednesdays are Locals Nights Call for discounts!

Through Sept. 4, Music on the Meetinghouse Green, 4-5 pm, Sundays, outdoor concert, bring a picnic, chair, and enjoy all types of music, Shaker Rd., Canterbury, info: 783-9511, www.shakers.org.

Aug. 29, Summer Music Nights, 5:30-8:30 pm, Castle in the Clouds, Moultonborough, www.castleintheclouds.org., info: 476-5900.

Aug. 29, Solar Gazing noon-4 pm, free, Castle in the Clouds, Rt. 171, Moultonborough, 476-5900, www.castleintheclouds.org.

BREAKFAST DAILY

Aug. 30, Summer Music Nights, 5:30-8:30 pm, Castle in the Clouds, Moultonborough, www.castleintheclouds.org., info: 476-5900.

Through Sept. 12, Exhibit Wilderness: Light Sizzles Around Me, hand painted, sewn textile sculptures and banners, Canterbury Shaker Village, 288 Shaker Rd., Canterbury, 783-9511, www.shakers.org.

Aug. 31, Watercolor Workshop, 1-3 pm, Lakes Region Art Association & Gallery, 120 Laconia Rd., Suite 132, Tilton, pre-registration a must: 472-3733, patedsalldesigns@gmail.com.

Start Day Off Over Easy

Rating: G. www.Farmerskitchen-NH.com

Aug. 30, Fiber Arts Gathering, 10-11 am, come knit, stitch, crochet, spin and chat, Sanbornton Public Library, 27 Meetinghouse Hill Rd., Sanbornton, 2868222.

is set to inherit six

Through Sept. 25, Squam Ridge Race Registration opens, (race is Sept. 25), Squam Lakes Assoc., Holderness, info/registration: www.squamlakes.org, 968-7336.

Aug. 30, Fused Glass Jewelry Workshop with Ann Lambert in her studio. Pre-register at ArtWorks Gallery, www.ChocoruaArtworks.com, 132 Rt. 16, Chocorua, 323-8041.

Page 14 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022 your guide to what’s happening in NH’s Lakes Region...

Through month of Aug., Exhibit by Jessica Kelly, photography, NH Boat Museum, Tues.-Sat. 10 am-4 pm, Sun. noon-4 pm, 399 Center St., Wolfeboro, 569-4554, info: www.nhbm.org.

Aug. 28-29, Auditions for Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, children: (4th grade and older at noon; Aug. 29 for children 4th grade and older 5:30 pm, adults 7 pm, The Village Players Theatre, 51 Glendon St., Wolfeboro, 9869854.

Aug. 30, Land, People & Property, 10 am, tour grounds & learn history of Castle in the Clouds, Rt. 171, Moultonborough, register: volunteers@ castleintheclouds.org, 476-5419, www.castleintheclouds.org.

Aug. 30, Zentangle Art Lessons, 6-8 pm, Galleries at 30 Main, 30 Main St., Meredith, 279-0557.

Through Sept. 17, Watching the Seasons Change, exhibit at Museum of the White Mountains, 34 Highland St., Plymouth, 535-3210.

Aug. 27-Oct. 2, “Outside In” a StoryWalk, at Grey Rocks Conservation Area, Hebron, enjoy trails, info: www.newfoundlake.org, Newfound Lake Region Assoc., 262-3890.

Aug. 28-29, Dichroic Glass Pendants, noon-3 pm, with Lynn Haust, League of NH Craftsmen Meredith Fine Craft Gallery, 279 Daniel Webster Highway, Meredith, pre-register: 279-7920. www.meredith.nhcrafts.org.

Aug. 30, Bingo at the Lions Club, Moultonborough Function Hall, 139 Old Rt. 109, Moultonborough, doors open 5 pm, bingo starts at 6:30 pm.

444

Aug. 30, Code Talker: The First and Only Memoir by One of the Original Navajo Code Talkers of WWII, 7-8 pm, lecture at Wright Museum, 77 Center St., Wolfeboro, 569-1212, www.wrightmuseum.org.

Aug. 31, Paul Luff and Tim Gurshin perform, 4-6:30 pm, Canterbury Farmers Market, 9 Center Rd., Canterbury, info: canterburyfarmersmarket@ gmail.com.

dollars

Aug. 29, Insects Alive Guided Tour, 9-10:30 am, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness, pre-register/info: www.nhnature.org, 968-7194.

British shoe salesman, Harry Witherspoon million from an uncle he’s never met, but only if he takes his uncle’s body on a whirlwind tour of Monte Carlo. A riotous musical comedy romp complete with mystery, mayhem, and a lot of dogs, sure to keep you laughing while it keeps you guessing.

Sept. 4, Music on the Garden Barn Green, 4-5 pm, music by Lori Diamond and Fred Abatelli with special guest Anelise, bring your own picnic and a chair, donations welcome, Canterbury Shaker Village, Shaker Rd., Canterbury, 7839511, www.shakers.org.

Sept. 5, Glen David Andrews, jazz, gospel, funk, soul concert,Feel the Barn Concert Series, 118 Page Hill Rd., Chocorua, 323-6169, www.thefarmstand. net.

Sept. 6, Fiber Arts Gathering, 10-11 am, come knit, stitch, crochet, spin and chat, Sanbornton Public Library, 27 Meetinghouse Hill Rd., Sanbornton, 286-8222.

Sept. 3, Migratory Birds at Garland Pond with UNH Cooperative Extension, 10 am-noon, with Matt Tarr of Cooperative Extension nature walk and talk about migratory birds, held at 239 Chickville Rd., Garland Pond, preregister: www.mmrgnh.org.

Sept. 1, Doug Hazard, concert, 7 pm, Club Sandwich, 12 Main St., Center Sandwich, tickets/info: www.johndavidson.com.

August 29, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 15 your guide to what’s happening in NH’s Lakes Region... What’s UP 603 745 9911 www.WhalesTaleWaterpark.net6037458810 NewWaterparkFAVORITEEngland’sBetterAttractionsEasyDriveFreeParkingFreeTubesCoolersAllowedBetterValue VOTED TRAVELERSFAVORITEDESITINATION VOTED TOP 10 WATERPARKS IN USA TRIPADVISOR 2021 CLARKSBEARS.COM 110 U.S. ROUTE 3, LINCOLN, NH 603-745-8913 CLARKSBEARS.COM 110 U.S. ROUTE 3, LINCOLN, NH 603-745-8913 SINCE 1928 BEAR TRAINSHOWSRIDES with WOLFMAN YANDONG’S CHINESE ACROBATS ANACONDA ESCAPE WATER RIDE Plus ANDMUCHSOMORE! 235 Union Ave., Laconia • 603-528-4003 • Served daily till they’re gone. Closed Mondays (Open at 3am for hardworking early risers!) So Good.. ey’re Goody Good! Best LakesDonutDarnintheRegion!Availableat: 235 Union Ave., Laconia Alton Bay Corner Store Alton Village Store Alton Circle Store Wolfeboro Corner Store Three Sisters in Wolfeboro & Pier 19 in Tuftonboro

Sept. 2-4, Henry V, Advice To The Players, 5:30 pm, Quimby Park, Sandwich, www.advicetotheplayers.org.

Sept. 4, Labor Day Dinner Cruise, M/S Mount Washington, Weirs Beach, 6-8:30 pm, 366-BOAT, www.cruisenh.com.

Sept. 1, Concerts in Marceau Park, 5-6 pm, with Bow Junction,Central St., Franklin, 934-2118.

Sept. 3, Carolyn Ramsay Band, free concert, bring a lawn chair for seating, Cate Park, downtown Wolfeboro, 7-9 pm, www.wolfeboroband.org.

Sept. 5, Solar Gazing noon-4 pm, free, Castle in the Clouds, Rt. 171, Moultonborough, 476-5900, www.castleintheclouds.org.

Sept. 3, Riverside Serenade, 4-5 pm, Cook Memorial Library, 93 Main St., Tamworth, www.tamworthlibrary.org.

Sept. 3, Saturday Afternoon Music Series, Island Mark & Jammin’ Jake, 3-6 pm, Gunstock, 719 Cherry Valley Rd., Gilford, 293-8915, www.gunstock. com.

Sept. 1-Oct. 31, Display Your Best Scarecrow, display at your (Ossipee) home or business, send a photo of the scarecrow to recdept@ossipee.org and compete to be the winner, Ossipee Parks & Recreation, info: 539-1307.

Sept. 5, Summer Music Nights, 5:30-8:30 pm, Castle in the Clouds, Moultonborough, www.castleintheclouds.org., info: 476-5900.

Sept. 3, Hebron Yard Sale Day, 9 am-3 pm, Hebron Common and other locations, info: www.hebronchurchfair.org.

Sept. 6, Bingo at the Lions Club, Moultonborough Function Hall, 139 Old Rt. 109, Moultonborough, doors open 5 pm, bingo starts at 6:30 pm.

Sept. 6, Main St. Museum Open House & Tours, 5-7 pm, by Meredith Historical Society, 45 Main St., Meredith, 279-1190, www. meredithareachamber.com.

Sept. 2, Victor Wooten: Bass Extremes, 7:30 pm, Flying Monkey Movie and Performance Center, 39 S. Main St., Plymouth, info./tickets: 536-2551, www.flyingmonkeynh.com

Sept. 3, Craig Ferguson – The Fancy Rascal Tour, 8 pm, Colonial Theatre of Laconia, 609 Main St., Laconia, www.coloniallaconia.com, 1-800-6578774.

Sept. 3, Tamworth Farmer’s Market, 9 am-noon, 30 Tamworth Road, Tamworth, info: www.tamworthfarmersmarket.org.

Sept. 2, Billy Wylder concert, 8 pm, Bank of NH Stage, 16 S. Main St., Concord, tickets/info: www.ccanh.com, 225-1111.

Sept. 6, Land, People & Property, 10 am, tour grounds & learn history of Castle in the Clouds, Rt. 171, Moultonborough, register: volunteers@ castleintheclouds.org, 476-5419, www.castleintheclouds.org.

Sept. 3-5, 32nd Annual Labor Day Weekend Craft Fair at the Bay, 10 am, Alton Bay Community House & Grounds, Rt. 11, 24 Mount Major Highway, Alton Bay, Castleberry Fairs, www.castleberryfairs.com.

Sept. 1, Guided Explorations with Watershed Fish Habitat, 10 am-noon, Newfound watershed info/exploration, Newfound Lake Assoc., Bristol, info: 744-8689.

211 Lakeside Ave., Weirs Beach, NH

Enjoy old fashioned train rides along The western shore of beautiful Lake Winnipesaukee and Paugus Bay Meredith Station: (2-hour train rides) 154 Main Street, Meredith, NH Weir Beach: (1-hour train rides)

Advance Reservations Required

TOURS!

www.HoboRR.comRAILBIKETOURS!

Guided rail bike tours at 10am, 12pm & 2pm Tuesday through Sunday: (Closed Mondays)

Explore the rails on our custom-made 4-passenger rail bikes! Guided rail bike tours at 10am, 12pm & 2pm Tuesday through Sunday: (Closed Mondays) Advance Reservations Required

10am, 12pm & 2pm Tues thru Sun: (Closed Mondays) Advance Reservations Required Rail Bike Adventures Laconia Railroad Station • 15 Veterans Square, Laconia

Enjoy old fashioned train rides along the western shores of beautiful Lake Winnipesaukee and Paugus Bay Meredith Station: (2-hour train rides) 154 Main Street, Meredith, NH Weir Beach: (1-hour train rides) 211 Lakeside Ave., Weirs Beach, NH

Sept. 6, Outdoor Storytime for Young Children, 10:30-11:30 am, Cook Memorial Library, 93 Main St., Tamworth, www.tamworthlibrary.org.

Sept. 6, Summer Music Nights, 5:30-8:30 pm, Castle in the Clouds, Moultonborough, www.castleintheclouds.org., info: 476-5900.

Sept. 8, Guided Hike, Brook Walk, 10-11:30 am, free, pre-registration required, Castle in the Clouds, Moultonborough, www.castleintheclouds.org, 476-5900.

Sept. 9, Red Hot Chilli Pipers, 7:30 pm, Flying Monkey Movie and Performance Center, 39 S. Main St., Plymouth, info./tickets: 536-2551, www.flyingmonkeynh.com

Sept. 10, Dueling Pianos Best of Boston, 8 pm, pm, Bank of NH Stage, 16 S. Main St., Concord, tickets/info: www.ccanh.com, 225-1111.

Guided

Sept. 6, Zentangle Art Lessons, 6-8 pm, Galleries at 30 Main, 30 Main St., Meredith, 279-0557.

Laconia Railroad Station •15 Veterans Square, Laconia, NH TRAIN RIDES!

Rail Bike Adventures

Sept. 7, Senie Hunt performs, 4-6:30 pm, Canterbury Farmers Market, 9 Center Rd., Canterbury, info: canterburyfarmersmarket@gmail.com.

Guided rail bike tours at 10am, 12pm & 2pm Tuesday through Sunday: (Closed Mondays)

Sept. 8-9, Jason Aldean, at Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion, Gilford NH. Info: banknhpavilion.com

EVERYDAY!

Rail

Sept. 10, Live Animal Presentation with a Naturalist – NH Wildlife, 10:30 am, Forest Treehouse, Lost River Gorge, N. Woodstock, and Squam Lakes Natural Science Center naturalist, meet wild animals of NH forests, book in advance necessary, 745-8031, www.lostrivergorge.com.

Enjoy old fashioned train rides along The western shore of beautiful Lake Winnipesaukee and Paugus Bay Meredith Station: (2-hour train rides) 154 Main Street, Meredith, NH Weir Beach: (1-hour train rides)

Sept. 10, Vintage Fair, 11 am-4 pm, Clark House Museum Grounds, 233 S. Main St., Wolfeboro, info: pmhodder@gmail.com. Rain date Sept. 11.

Advance Reservations Required

Sept. 10, Never Say Never, concert, The Purple Pit Coffee Lounge, 28 Central St., Bristol, www.thepurplepit.com, 744-7800.

279 DW Hwy. • Meredith • 603-279-7920 • Meredith.NHCrafts.org • Mon - Sat: 10-5 • Sun: 1-5 Like us on Facebook so you can see other beautiful things made by NH’s finest artists ~www.facebook.com/nhcraft

211 Lakeside Ave., Weirs Beach, NH

Sept. 10, Daniel Tosh, 7 & 9:30 pm, pm, Capitol Center for the Arts Chubb Theatre, 44 S. Main St., Concord, tickets/info: www.ccanh.com, 225-1111.

Sept. 7, Watercolor Workshop, 1-3 pm, Lakes Region Art Association & Gallery, 120 Laconia Rd., Suite 132, Tilton, pre-registration a must: 4723733, patedsalldesigns@gmail.com.

•15 Veterans Square, Laconia, NH TRAIN RIDES! EVERYDAY! Enjoy old fashioned train rides along The western shore

Sept. 10, Laconia Multicultural Festival, music, arts, crafts, cuisine, Laconia city Hall parking lot, Belknap Mill, Rotary Park, downtown Laconia, www. laconiamulticulturalfestival.org.

Explore the rails on our custom-made 4-passenger rail bikes! rail bike tours at

Laconia Railroad Station of beautiful Lake Winnipesaukee and Paugus Bay

Sept. 8, An Evening with America’s Master Mentalist Jon Stetson, concert, 7 pm, Club Sandwich, 12 Main St., Center Sandwich, tickets/info: www.johndavidson.com.

Put Your Hair Up forGREATGIFTSspecialpeople

Rail Bike Adventures

Sept. 10-11, Henry V, Advice To The Players, 5:30 pm, Quimby Park, Sandwich, www.advicetotheplayers.org.

Sept. 9, Sock Hop, concert, 6 pm, Arts in the Park Concert Series, free, Belknap Mill, Beacon St. East, Laconia, info: 524-8813, www.belknapmill. org

Sept. 10, Riverside Serenade, 4-5 pm, Cook Memorial Library, 93 Main St., Tamworth, www.tamworthlibrary.org.

GallerySHOPintheorONLINE FORAGING THROUGH THE FOREST gatheringmushrooms,gnomes,bagsandmore...

Explore the rails on our custom-made 4-passenger rail bikes!

Advance Reservations Required

Meredith Station: (2-hour train rides)

Page 16 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022 your guide to what’s happening in NH’s Lakes Region... What’s UP JustINDEPENDENT...likeNewHampshire!YetavailablethroughouttheentireNortheast&Florida crossinsurance.com603-669-3218 O cial Insurance Broker Of... What Makes e Di erence? Cross Insurance represents over 100 di erent individual insurance companies, allowing us to ne tune the best, most a ordable options to protect what’s important to you. From a small cottage on the lake, to your home, to your business. RAIL BIKE TOURS! Rail Bike Adventures Laconia Railroad Station •15 Veterans Square, Laconia, NH TRAIN RIDES! EVERYDAY! Enjoy old fashioned train rides along The western shore of beautiful Lake Winnipesaukee and Paugus Bay Meredith Station: (2-hour train rides) 154 Main Street, Meredith, NH Weir Beach: (1-hour train rides) 211 Lakeside Ave., Weirs Beach, NH Advance Reservations Required www.HoboRR.comRAILBIKE

Bike Adventures

Sept. 8, Newfound Lake Region Association Volunteer Day, 10 am-noon, all ages volunteer event to maintain trails and shoreline of Newfound Lake watershed, 178 N. Shore Rd., Hebron, free, info/pre-register: 744-8689, www.newfoundlake.org.

Sept. 10, Tamworth Farmer’s Market, 9 am-noon, 30 Tamworth Road, Tamworth, info: www.tamworthfarmersmarket.org.

Sept. 11, Bachelors of Broadway – Gentlemen of the Theatre, free admission, 7 pm, melodies of stage and screen, program of the Putnam Fund, tickets available on Aug. 26 at 10 am, www.coloniallaconia.com, 1-800-6578774.

Sept. 10, Learn the Art of Soldering, 10:30 am-4:30 pm, with instructor Joy Raskin, League of NH Craftsmen - Meredith Fine Craft Gallery, 279 Daniel Webster Highway, Meredith, pre-registration a must: 279-7920, http:// meredith.nhcrafts.org/classes/. Participants must sign up before Sept. 3.

211 Lakeside Ave., Weirs Beach, NH

Laconia Railroad Station •15 Veterans Square, Laconia, NH

TRAIN RIDES! EVERYDAY!

Explore the rails on our custom-made 4-passenger rail bikes!

Canterbury Shaker Village, walk the grounds, Shaker Rd., Canterbury, 7839511, free, dawn to dusk, tours/info: www.shakers.org.

Cruise Night, Friday evenings at Village Pizza of Bristol hosted by Newfound Cruzers. Raffles, Door Prizes, parade, 825 Lake St., Bristol, 744-6886.

Garden Tour, 9:30 am, Fridays, Castle in the Clouds, Rt. 171, Moultonborough, 476-5900, www.castleintheclouds.org.

Canterbury Farmers Market, 4-6:30 pm, Wednesdays, live music, vegetables, crafts and more, 9 Center Rd., Canterbury, www.canterburyfarmersmarket. com.

ArtWorks Gallery& Fine Crafts, works by 35 artists, classes & events. Open 10-5 pm daily, closed Tuesdays, First Fridays from noon-7 pm. 323-8041, 132 Rt. 16, Chocorua,www.chocoruaartworks.com.

Franklin Farmers Market, 3-6 pm, Thursdays until Sept. 29, Marceau Park, Central St., Franklin, 934-2118.

Lake Winnipesaukee Sailing Association, youth, and adult sailing lessons, sailing competitions, Gilford, info: www.lwsa.org, 589-1177.

Land, People & Property, Tuesdays through Sept. 27, 10 am, walk around Castle in the Clouds grounds, learn about history of the property with guide, Rt. 171, Moultonborough, register: 476-5900, www.castleintheclouds.org.

Sept. 11, Beginner Stained Glass Class, 9 am-4 pm, with instructor Susanna Ries, League of NH Craftsmen - Meredith Fine Craft Gallery, 279 Daniel Webster Highway, Meredith, pre-registration a must: 279-7920 meredith. nhcrafts.org/classes/. Participants must sign up before Sept. 4.

Gilmanton Community Farmers Market, at Gilmanton Year Round Library, 11 am-2 pm, Sundays through Oct. 9, 1385 NH Rt. 140, Gilmanton Iron Works, 491-1687.

Belknap Mill, 25 Beacon St. East, Laconia, gallery and textile museum, events and programs, info/call for hours: 524-8813, www.belknapmill.org.

Country Village Quilt Guild, meets the first and third Wednesday of each month from 1:30-3:30 pm, Public Safety Building (back entrance to Police and Fire Dept.), Rt. 25,1035 Whittier Highway, Moultonboro. For schedule or more information, email:countryvillagequilters@yahoo.com.

Giant Insects, 9:30 am-5 pm, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness, exhibit included in regular admission, Holderness, www. nhnature.org.

In the Round, Sundays at 8:45 am, thought-provoking topics related to tolerance, Benz Center, Sandwich, 284-7532.

Book & Puzzle Sale, 8 am-1 pm at Union Congregational Church Chapel, 80 Main St., Union, held every Sat. from August – October, corn chowder, coffee, snacks available, info: Betty at 473-2727.

ONGOING

August 29, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 17 your guide to what’s happening in NH’s Lakes Region... What’s UP Vintage Boats • Lake Memorabilia • Family Activities • And More! 399 Center Street, Wolfeboro, NH 603.569.4554 nhbm.org On Lake Winnipesaukee Vintage Boat Rides Departs from the Wolfeboro Town Docks Full Line Ship Store with Complete Boating Accessories “OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE EXPERIENCE IN THE LAKES REGION” DAVE’S MOTORBOAT SHOPPE 603-293-8847 • ROUTE 11B, 229 INTERVALE RD., GILFORD, NH www.davesmotorboatshoppe.com Motors by CLEAN, QUIET OPERATION AND HIGHER FUEL ECONOMY

Chapman Sanctuary and Visny Woods, nature trails open for hiking, 740 Mt. Israel Rd., Center Sandwich, 284-6428, www.chapmansanctuaryvisnywoods. com.

Curbside Pickup of Farm Fresh Foods, Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, 58 Cleveland Hill Rd., Tamworth, 323-7591, remickmuseum.org.

Laverack Nature Trail at Hawkins Brook, nature trail on boardwalk, free, trail starts to the left of Meredith Village Savings Bank, Meredith, info: 2799015.

Guided Exploration with Watershed Stewards, 10 am-noon, Thursdays through October,guided explorations of Newfound Lake watershed, 178 N. Shore Rd., Hebron, free, open to all, 744-8689, www.newfoundlake.org.

Chocorua Lake Basin View Lot, mountain views, benches for seating, sketch, paint, meditate, free,directions/info:www.chocorualake.org.

Ladies of the Lake Quilt Guild, meets second and fourth Wednesdays of each month, 10 am-2 pm at First Congregational Church, 115 Main St., Wolfeboro. A second group meet first and third Tuesday of each month at Community Center, 22 Lehner St., Wolfeboro, www.llqg.net.

League of NH Craftsmen Meredith Fine Craft Gallery, fine handmade crafts and art for sale, workshops, 279 Daniel Webster Highway, Meredith, hours/info: 279-7920.

Prescott Farm Environmental Education Center, Prescott Farm Environmental Education Center, 928 White Oaks Road, Laconia, www. prescottfarm.org. Call ahead for all event information and to inquire if preregistration is necessary: 366-5695.

Squam Lake Cruises, family/educational cruises to look for loons, & wildlife, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness, tickets: www.nhnature.org, 968-7194.

Loon Center, walking trails, loon displays/info., 183 Lees Mill Rd., Moultonborough, 476-5666, www.loon.org.

NH Farm Museum, old-time farm, programs, events for families, 1305 White Mt. Highway, Milton, 652-7840, www.nhfarmmuseum.org.

Wright Museum of WWII, exhibits and lectures of life on the home front during WWII, 77 Center St., Wolfeboro, 569-1212, www.wrightmuseum.org

Millie B., cruise on the replica of a 1928 Hacker-Craft, 45-minute tour, info/ tours: NH Boat Museum, Wolfeboro, www.nhbm.org, 569-4554.

Sanbornton Community Arts Festival, second Saturday of every month. Old Town Hall, 19 Meeting House Hill Road, Sanbornton.

Sap House Meadery Monthly Concert Series, doors open at 5 pm, concert 7-8 pm, range of performers on Thursday evening once a month, tickets include fixed dinner menu, info: 539-1672, www.saphousemeadery.com.

Quilting Group, 1-4 pm, meets every 2 weeks, Ossipee Public Library, 74 Main St., Ossipee, schedule/info: 539-6390.

Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, 58 Cleveland Hill Rd., Tamworth, 323-7591.

Sculpture Walk, tours of outdoor sculptures around downtown/lakeside areas of Meredith, free, Greater Meredith Program, maps/info: 279-9015.

Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, exhibits, nature trails, events, cruises, 23 Science Center Rd., Holderness, 968-7194, www.nhnature.org.

Treasure Shop, open on Wednesdays and Saturdays from 9 am-2 pm during the summer at Old Town Hall, Wakefield, info: 522-3189.

Wolfeboro Farmer’s Market, 12:30-4:30 pm, vendors, food, every Thurs., The Nick, 10 Trotting Track Rd., Rt. 28, Wolfeboro, www. wolfeborofarmersmarket.org.

Tuftonboro Country Bluegrass and Gospel Jam, every Tues., through Dec., 6:30-9:30 pm, $2 donation requested, Old White Church, Rt. 109A, across from Tuftonboro General Store, 569-0247 or 569-3861.

Solar Gazing, noon-4 pm on Mondays through Sept. 6, free, Castle in the Clouds, Rt. 171, Moultonborough, 476-5900, www.castleintheclouds.org.

Molly the Trolley, 569-1080, take tours of Wolfeboro area aboard the fun trolley, info/schedules: www.wolfeborotrolley.com.

Newfound Lake Eco-Tours, informative/scientific tours of Newfound Lake, Newfound Lake Association, www.newfoundlake.org, 744-8689.

Tamworth History Center, exhibits & events, 25 Great Hill Rd., Tamworth, contact for open hours: www.tamworthhistorycenter.org.

Live Entertainment, Patrick’s Pub & Eatery, Gilford, 293-0841, www. patrickspub.com.

Open Air Farmers Market, 10 am-1 pm, New Hampton Historical Townhouse, 86 Town House Rd., New Hampton, local goods, Saturdays until Oct. 8, 254-5858, www.openairmarketnh.com.

Libby Museum of Natural History, animal/nature exhibits & programs, 755 N. Main St., Wolfeboro, 569-1035, open seasonally.

Page 18 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022 your guide to what’s happening in NH’s Lakes Region...

What’s

Model Yachting - Back Bay Skippers, meets every Tues. & Thurs., 1-4 pm, model yacht group, spectators welcome, Cotton Valley Rail Trail, Glendon St., Wolfeboro, until Oct., info: NH Boat Museum, 569-4554.

UP Experience the past, and be inspired by a nation united. The Wright Museum is a non-profit educational institution dedicated to recognizing and honoring the contributions and enduring legacy of WWII-era Americans. 77 Center Street, Wolfeboro, NH | 603-569-1212 | www.WrightMuseum.org Open daily May 1 through October 31 Monday—Saturday: 10AM–4PM Sunday: Noon–4PM 2022 Featured Exhibit July 1 Octoberto 31: Let Me Be Myself: The Life Story of Anne Frank 259 Endicott Street North, Laconia, NH 603-366-4466 • www.kellerhaus.com The oldest Candy and Ice Cream maker in New Hampshire! G an t Ins ec ts July through Get Nearer to Nature www.nhnature.org | 603-968-7194 | Holderness, NH

NH Boat Museum, boating exhibits, programs, boat building workshops, 399 Center St., Wolfeboro, 569-4554, www.nhbm.org.

M/S Mount Washington Cruises, narrated cruises of Lake Winnipesaukee, day & evening cruises,M/S Mount Washington, 211 Lakeside Ave., Weirs Beach, 366-BOAT, www.cruisenh.com.

As the only brokerage in the nation to o er full-service marketing support, in-house lead generation, industry leading technology, and healthcare, dental, and retirement benefits, we work hard to ensure that our agents have more time to focus on their clients and communities.

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August 29, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 19 William Raveis Lamprey Real Estate 249 Whittier Hwy • Center Harbor, NH 03226 • 603.253.8131

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At the time, most children walked miles to school, braving rain and snow. School buses were unheard of and if there was a family horse or mule, it was likely busy in the fields and not available to transport young ones to school.

By Kathi Caldwell-Hopper

Yesteryear

Conditions in many village schools were par with the rest of society’s housing at the time: a woodstove warmed the space and students were often expected to split and carry wood to feed the heat source; a bucket of water served as refreshment and another was for washing hands. Outside, usually hidden behind bushes, sat the outhouse.InSandwich, NH, the Lower Corner • Yesteryear continued on page 22

Long, long ago, getting an education in New Hampshire wasn’t the convenient thing it is in our current time. As today’s children head back to school soon, or already may have done so, they bring backpacks, lunchboxes and pens and paper. Of course, the latest in cell phones and computer systems are alsoButavailable.inthetimes of their great-great grandparents, schooling was quite different. In New Hampshire, as in other states, if a child reached the eighth grade and was still a pupil, he/she was very fortunate. Many left earlier to help the family by going to work. And some left school to help their fathers farm their land.

kins start a private high school in the Vestry of the town’s Baptist church. The school was in session from 1836 to 1847, according to Ashland, New Hampshire Centennial 1868 to 1968. She was said to be a wonderful teacher and parents and students alike sang her praises. Indeed, she must have been a good teacher with a love for passing on knowledge because she eventually married Oren Cheney and together, they helped found Bates College.

One community that valued educaiton was that of the Canterbury Shakers. The schoolhouse they built, and the schooling children received there was good. The Shakers took in many children who had lost their parents or had been left with the Shakers due to lifeThecircumstances.childrenhad to be housed and educated and the Canterbury Shakers did both quite willingly. By the 1820s, the Shakers had a schoolhouse for children living among them. However, one could not call it a schoohouse as we think of a small, rather crude structure. Although it had been a one-room school

Page 20 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022

The Village School in Moultonborough was the place the town’s students attended for many years. During the early part of the 1900s, the school was located opposite the Moultonboro Town House and was a one-room school. By 1913, the town improved the school as the population grew. An assistant teacher was hired in the 1920s and the school was divided, and two regular teachers were hired. A jacketed stove was secured for the school and a note in town reports for 1923 stated, “The new stove makes it possible to have the rooms comfortable as far as the heat is concerned.”

Boys and girls at one time, attended school at different months of the year, following the Shaker belief of separation of males and females. Whatever the belief system, the Shakers taught their children well and they had, for the time period, wonderful surroudings in which to learn.

In the 1880s in Ashland, grammar school students were required to take an exam written by the school board each term. Pupils had to answer 60 percent of the test questions correctly in order to advance to the next grade. Old schoolhouses – usually of the one room variety — were a part of the American landscape for decades. Ask any older person and they once may have attended a one-room schoolhouse. These charming little buildings were every town’s answer to education and local children from age 5 to 15 or more all sat in one room, taught by a single adult woman or man.

Back to School in Days Gone By

1920s. “As I remember, when this school was first built there was a big stove with a jacket around it in the back corner of the room. In the winter when it was real cold she (the teacher) would have us gather around the stove for our classes. It wasn’t long before they put in a furnace with steam radiators.”

in its early days, by 1863, the Shakers moved the buiding and revamped it, adding on until it was two stories. For its time, it was quite a good place to get an educaiton, with a playground, well lit and ventilated rooms, and even an arboretum for the study of nature. It was known as the best equipped school in the town of Canterbury, and may have been among the best in the central New Hampshire area.

Children in the Cook settlement in Moultonborough had a schoolhouse near a spring. The school building was modest in size; one child who attended the school was said to be the envy of all the other students because he could coast down from his home to the schoolhouse door in snowy winter weather, according to Moultonborough to the 20th Century, a publication of the Moultonborough Historical Society Bicentennial Issue 1963. Many children had quite a walk to get to school – down a steep hill, through fields and over stonewalls and fences. Even with the arduous walk each day, some students were said to have good or perfect attendance.InGilford, the District 9 Schoolhouse was built in 1815, and later altered to fit more children and changing designs for buildings. There were other schoolhouses in Gilford long ago, due to the fact that the children were spread out all over the area and it would have been impossible to travel for miles to reach school each day. Thus, a schoolhouse in each district of the town was theInanswer.the1830s, Ashland, New Hampshire, like many New England communities, was remote. The town was very lucky to have resident Miss Nancy Per-

In 1925 a new school had been built and housed elementary school aged children. In her book, I Remember Moultonboro New Hampshire by Frances A. Stevens, the author recalled being a student at the school in the late

Statistics obtained from NEREN for the past 24 years since 1997 for all real estate firms reporting sales in the entire state of NH during that time period.

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Gilford: 3BR/ 4BA set on 11.95, quiet country acres. 3,000 sq . of living space. 3 Car attached direct entry garage. 3 stall barn w/ tack room and hay storage. Open fenced-in pasture. Lovely vegetable garden and huge deck for entertaining. Close to all of the Lake Regions local amenities. $949,900 MLS# 4925188

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Laconia: 3BR/ 2BA Lakeside at Paugus Bay, luxury waterfront condo on 400 of Lake Winnipesaukee. 2,141 sq . High-end nishes throughout, private direct entry from the elevator. Western exposure to enjoy sunsets on the big lake. Property boasts private docks, day-docks, 2-car garage $999,000 MLS# 4922633 available throughout the Lakes Region

Belmont: Proudly announcing Windsor Corner, the standard of quality in new construction in the Lakes Region. Set at the crossroads of the 4-season amenities of the Lakes & Mountains. Windsor Corner o ers legacy homes on wooded & landscaped 3-acre lots. Homes starting at $599,900 MLS# 4925439

Laconia: Beautiful 3BR/ 2.5BA home w/ a bright, open concept living space, stunning kitchen, 1st- oor master ensuite, & nished basement. Everything you need for entertaining & comfort at the lake! Amenities incl. 2 beaches, a pool, tennis, miles of walking trails & more! $749,900 MLS# 4914140

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For 45 years, the name Roche has been a recognized leader in the sale of Lakes Region real estate. Our team of professional Realtors® and in-house support sta set a standard of excellence for service in all segments of real estate. New Hampshire's Lakes Region is our specialty and has been since the beginning. Family-owned and locally operated since 1992, Roche Realty Group has consistently been recognized as a top independent real estatecompany in New Hampshire for all-time sales. Our team of over 40 Realtors® strives to provide clients with the greatest insight and richest possible perspective on this truly unique marketplace. We provide you with the market expertise, tools, and resources to make your real estate experience as e ortless and satisfying as possible. Our ultimate goal is to help you reach yours. - GOLD - Voted “BEST REAL ESTATE COMPANY” 2019 2020, 2021 and 2022 O UR M EREDITHOFFICE 97 Daniel Webster Hwy (603) 279-7046 O URLACONIAOFFICE 1921 Parade Road (603) 528-0088 Roche Realty Group has had $2.63 Billion in sales volume, and 8,634 transaction sides since 1997.* www.rocherealty.com LACONIA OFFICE • 1921 Parade Rd. (603) 528-0088MEREDITH OFFICE • 97 Daniel Webster Hwy. (603) 279-7046 Laconia: NEW PRICE

August 29, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 21

FACSIMLE

Let us elevate your real estate experience. Pier III: 2BR/ 1BA updated Weirs Beach waterfront condo w/ boat slip available to the new owner. is end unit boasts open concept living with a large deck overlooking the water, showcasing beautiful western exposure. e condo sold fully furnished. $575,000 MLS# 4921876

Gilford: 3BR/ 2.5BA, sprawling ranch w/ beautiful views. Set on .74 acres. Come w/ ideas & update as you please. e home features a 1stoor master. Huge deck overlooking the views. Beautiful stone hearth in the great room. Access to the Gilford town beach & minutes from town docks. $489,900 MLS# 4925941

Lucky Stiff on The Barnstormers Stage

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• Yesteryear continued from page 20

The Barnstormers Theatre presents its last production of the season, madcap musical comedy Lucky Stiff, on stage August 25th through September 3rd.British shoe salesman Harry Witherspoon is set to inherit six million dollars from an uncle he’s never met, but only if he takes his uncle’s body on a whirlwind tour of Monte Carlo. A riotous musical comedy romp complete with mystery, mayhem, and a lot of dogs, sure to keep you laughing while it keeps you guessing. Rated G. Sponsored by The Woodshed Restaurant in Moultonborough.ReturningtoThe Barnstormers are Jordan Ahnquist, Mary McNulty, Cheryl Mullings, Greg Pike, Doug Shapiro, Frank T. Wells, Robert St. Laurence, Lisa Joyce and Becca Gottlieb. Kurt Perry makes their Barnstormers debut.

Book and lyrics by Lynn Ahrens, music by Stephen Flaherty. Directed by SarahLocatedRozene.in New Hampshire’s scenic Tamworth Village, the 275-seat, professional, Equity, Barnstormers Theatre boasts a hearing assist system and is wheelchair accessible. Ticket prices are $20 - $39.50, with group rates and package discounts available. Beer and wine from Tuckerman Brewing Co. and Whippletree Winery, soft drinks and cookies will be available before the show and during intermission. Tuesday and Wednesday is Locals night, Friday night is Family Night with special prices. Check our website for other specials, where to dine and stay, and other Tamworth happenings. For more information and tickets, visit barnstormerstheatre.org or call 603323-8500.

By the 1800s schools were built in New Durham. In the late 1800s, im-

School was a place of learning in the mid and late 1800s. The school began in 1825 as the John Quincy Adams School. At that time, citizens in Sandwich voted a tax to build a schoolhouse. The school was small with a plank door, tiny windows placed high and underpinnings of stone. A big fireplace heated the building. Four-foot wood fed the fire that kept teacher and students warm during the cold winters. Fireplaces are notorious for providing uneven heat and this one, as the former student recalled, provided heat that “burned the face while the back was freezing.” Students who sat at the back of the room took turns moving to the front to get warm during the day.

provements were made with the installation of blackboards, iron stoves and desks.Further north in the Plymouth, NH area, the village of Dorchester had a small schoolhouse that was built in 1808 and originally called the North District School. It was used as a oneroom school for area children until 1926.At excellent preserved one room schoolhouse is part of the Wolfeboro Historical Society on South Main Street. The Clark House Museum Complex of structures is at the site, including the Pleasant Valley School.

In 1959 the old schoolhouse was moved to its present location at the Clark Museum Complex. (To tour the schoolhouse museum during seasonal hours, call the Wolfeboro Historical Society at 603-569-4997.)

In the 1880s the school was renamed the Lower Corner School. By the 1930s an addition brought indoor toilet and storage facilities to the school and a playground.Ontheother side of Lake Winnipesaukee, schooling was important in New Durham. The town’s original land grand specified that a portion of the community’s money be set aside for a schoolhouse. In 1779 the town raised money to hire a town school and for some years after, money was voted for schooling. At this time there were no school houses in the town and school masters were hired. The teachers traveled from town to town, boarding with different families. They taught the children of the area the basics: reading, writing and spelling.

The one room school was built about 1805 on land in South Wolfeboro known as Pleasant Valley according to information at www.wolfeborohistoricalsociety.org. Known for some time as District #3 School, some residents called it the Townsend School, because it was close to the home of Reverend Isaac Townsend, Wolfeboro’s first minister.The school was adequate by standards of the time, as were most in New England. Local children learned to make do. All grades were taught in the one room. The enrollment of students ranged from 20 to 50.

Front Greeter’s Desk Reflects Mission of Makers Mill

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Kathy Tetreault, the LRTC Principal, agreed, “This was quite a project for our students and staff. LRTC will continue to support the efforts and the mission of community partnerships like this one.”

After the students’ scope of work was complete, Cody Fosbrook, a metalworker who used to volunteer for

G.A.L.A. many years ago, made the voyage from his current home in Vermont to weld the handrail: something that needed to be “graspable” per code regulations. Cody then passed the baton to master craftsman and volunteer, Jim Perkins. Jim took it over from here installing the balusters and building the front desk, which incorporated oak slabs as the countertop that were once the sides of bookshelves at Wolfeboro Public Library before renovations, adding to the upcycled theme of the entire project.

If you want to see this feature for yourself, open house tours will be occurring on a weekly basis, every Friday morning starting September 2 and the first Saturday each month starting September 3 from 10 to 11:30 am Registration is required and can be done at makersmill.org/events. Makers Mill is also seeking volunteers to help finish building out the workspaces and teach classes this fall. For more information call the office at 603-569-1500 or email info@makersmill.org.

dents to create what will be the first impression of anyone entering the makerspace for many years to come. We hope this is just the beginning of an ongoing partnership with LRTC around workforce and career pathway goals.”

The outcome is stunning. Anyone walking into Makers Mill will be met by this functional art, made out of reclaimed wood from a version of the building now barely recognizable, prepared and fine-tuned by so many different people along the way, oozing with character and creativity, saying “welcome, come on in”. This feature will be appreciated for many years to come and set the tone for what is possible within these walls.

Makers Mill volunteer, Jim Perkins built the front greeter’s desk using reclaimed wood salvaged from the construction project, which was ripped to size by students from Lakes Region Technology Center.

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When you walk in the front door at Makers Mill, the community makerspace and vocation hub opening soon at 23 Bay St. Wolfeboro, NH, you will be standing in front of a collaborative, functional piece of art that reflects the mission and values of this nonprofit organization.Thefront desk and main staircase are not only pleasing to the eye, but the story of their construction embodies so much of what Makers Mill stands for - creativity, collaboration, upcycling, economic development, and community.That story began with the decision to salvage the 2’x6’ boards from the upstairs floor that had to be replaced. The easy thing to do would have been to toss those boards in the dumpster. Instead, each board was de-nailed by volunteers with the intention of repurposing them for the front desk and stair balusters of the main entry.

Last winter and spring, the school bus dropped the students off on Bay Street late morning, a few days a week, where they would setup shop and chip away at the metal installation - fastening, bending, grinding, and welding for many weeks, finishing up just in time for summer “Partneringvacation.withLRTC was one of my favorite parts of this entire construction project,” reflects Josh Arnold, Makers Mill Executive Director. “It was especially fun watching the Construction Trades students collaborate with the Precision Manufacturing stu-

The reclaimed and de-nailed boards were then brought to Lakes Region Technology Center (LRTC) where students in the Construction Trades class taught by Tyler Reed proceeded to rip the boards into 1.5”x1.5” slats: the future balusters. Volunteers then continued the project by sanding and oiling these slats with a naturally derived Heritage Oil finish.

While the construction trades students were busy making the balusters, the Precision Manufacturing students, led by Scott Meserve, were fabricating the angle iron posts and cutting the sheet metal in their classroom.

By Kelly Ross

can be blamed on the popularity of the Super Bowl and how Super Bowl parties became a ginormous thing years ago, and with those parties, chicken wings were given their opportunity to truly shine. Since then, they are a restaurant staple and for a good reason. With the thigh a very close second, the wing is definitely my favorite part of our comical little barnyard friend. The restaurant world cooks their wings in the fryer, which gives them that nice crispy texture, which is always a popular factor, and when done on the grill, you can get a good crispy wing as well. Spicy is always a popular aspect of most wings, but usually combined with sweet, which is what we have here with a spicy apricot wing recipe, combined with using wood chips, ideally apple or apricot chips. I usually grill the wings whole by folding the tip under the wing forging a triangle of sorts. As they

2 tsp fresh grind black pepper

Hello Lakes Region. Before we get started, I want to thank all of you who send me e-mails about the recipes I share, some regularly. It’s appreciated. In the past couple of weeks, I have received a bunch regarding the Postmodern Jukebox article highlighting Gilford native Demi Remick. Many told me the article is what made you go to the show and said how awesome it was. It’s the little things in life as they say, so I thank you.

Spicy Apricot Wings

½ tsp cayenne pepper

2 tbsp light brown sugar

3 lbs chicken wings, ideally whole, but segments will work

¼ tsp ground ginger

½ cup apricot preserves

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‘Cue The Grill Labor Day Grilling

The next appetizer has more of a Polynesian theme, combining beef and pineapple with a scrumptious parsley and garlic sauce, done skewer style. Back in the day, I did these regularly with beef tenderloin, making for an amazingly tender appetizer. Nowadays, I don’t consider tenderloin quite as important if using a needling tenderizer. It’s amazing how a lesser expensive cut of meat can become so tender, especially with the right mar• ‘Cue the Grill

Since the best-selling appetizer nationwide for many years has been chicken wings, let’s start there. It cracks me up that way back when in my restaurant days 40+ years ago, wings were pretty much given away by our purveyors as nobody used them, not to mention at any supermarket. Butcher shops would literally give them away. They are now the most expensive part of the bird. Go figure! Much of that

cook, they will shrink some solidifying that shape. Once cooked, they rip apart easily, but if you prefer to do in segments, that’s your prerogative. The overall process will take 45-50 minutes and will feed 6 easily, maybe more depending on your crowd.

½ cup hickory, apple, or apricot wood chips

continued on page 25

1 tsp sweet paprika

1 tbsp kosher salt

1 tbsp soy sauce

1 tsp garlic powder

1 tbsp Dijon mustard

Start your grill. Wrap the wood chips in heavy-duty foil and pierce the foil packet with a skewer a few times. Add the packet to the grill. Close the lid and let the wood chips begin to smoke, 5-10 minutes. Meanwhile, in a large bowl, combine the apricot preserves with the Worcestershire sauce, light brown sugar, soy sauce, mustard, salt, black pepper, garlic powder, sweet paprika, cayenne and ginger. Scrape half of the mixture into a small bowl. Add the chicken wings to the large bowl and toss to coat well in the sauce. Let the chicken wings stand for 10-15 minutes. Grill the chicken wings, covered, over moderately high heat, turning them occasionally, until they are charred in spots and cooked through, 22-25 minutes. In the last 10 minutes, brush the wings on both sides with the remaining sauce. Transfer the chicken wings to a platter and serve with carrot and celery sticks if wanted, as well as blue cheese or ranch dressing. These are fun and yummy and deliciously messy, so have a roll of paper towels on hand.

2 tbsp Worcestershire sauce

Well, it’s official, most kids are back in school now. It’s very hard to believe it’s time for me to start my article to get ready for some fun Labor Day grilling when it feels like I just wrote the Memorial Day article a few weeks ago. Regardless, it is officially that time this coming weekend so I’m here to share some new and fun ideas to entertain your friends and family with when it comes to doing some grilling. I’ve got some with chicken, some beef, some seafood, some tacos, a sandwich, upscale dinners, and some classic vegetarian grilling. Of course, how could I leave you without adding a great dessert as well, so let’s eat, starting with a couple of appetizers.

3 tbsp red wine vinegar

Dave Cote, Lakeview Orchards/RoMac Orchards, Acton, Maine

3 tbsp olive oil

4 tsp chipotle in adobo sauce

1-1 ¼ lb of fresh tuna, ideally 1 inch thick8corn tortillas, 6 inch in diameter

Mushroom Tacos with Charred-Corn Salsa

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then cut into cubes. If you don’t own a needling tenderizer, first, get one, and second, use a fork for the time being. Place the beef in the medium bowl with the parsley sauce. Toss well until the beef is coated with the mixture. Cov er and refrigerate for 3 hours or more. Heat your well-oiled grill to medi um-high. Thread the skewers starting with a piece of pineapple, then a cube of beef. Repeat the process. Continue with the remaining skewers. Grill the skewers for 2 to 3 minutes each side or so for medium rare or until your de sired doneness. Season with salt and pepper and drizzle with remaining sauce. Devour!

3 cloves garlic, peeled

In a large skillet, heat 2 tbsp of the olive oil. Add the onions, season with salt, and cook over moderately high heat until softened and browned, about

1 serrano or jalapeno pepper, seeded and finely chopped

8 minutes. Add the chipotle powder and cook for 30 seconds. Add the oregano and the vinegar and cook for 1 minute. Transfer to a plate. Meanwhile, in a bowl, combine the mango, cucumber, serrano, lime juice and cilantro and season the salsa with salt.

1 tsp lime zest and 2 tbsp fresh squeezed lime juice

1 tbsp red wine vinegar

1 tsp dried oregano

1 medium cucumber, peeled, seeded, and cut into ¼ inch dice

“I can’t believe how many coupons I got. Really happy.” ank You, Carrie Gendreau, Emma & Company, Littleton, NH

• ‘Cue the Grill continued from page 24

1 ripe mango, peeled, pitted, and cut into ¼ inch dice

them and most carnivores do as well, which makes them a huge staple in most any chef’s repertoire of recipes. This mushroom taco recipe is not only highly original, the flavor blast in this one is just darn good. Besides grilling the portabella mushrooms, we also grill some corn to make an amazing salsa to go with these tacos. One similarity this one does have to the last one is that it makes 8 tacos for 4 people and does take about a half hour.

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inade. This recipe calls for 2 pounds of beef, give or take, cutting it into ¾ - 1-inch cubes. As for the skewers, you can make 20 smaller skewers with 2 pieces of beef on each with fresh pineapple chunks or make them with 4 pieces of each. I find much depends on how many people you are serving combined with the rest of the menu. If I was serving 6 people, I would likely make 12 skewers. If I was entertaining 10, I would make 20 smaller versions. The choice is yours, as always. Prep/ cook time is quick, but I do suggest let ting them marinate for 3 or more hours.

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1 ½ tsp kosher salt

Oil the grill and heat to medium-high. Rub the tuna with the remaining 1 tbsp of olive oil and season with salt. Grill over high heat until lightly charred and pink within, about 3 minutes per side. Transfer to a plate. Grill the tortillas until hot and soft, about 10 seconds. Stack the tortillas and wrap them in foil to keep warm. Thinly slice the tuna and transfer to a platter. Serve with the onions, salsa, and tortillas setting up a “Build your own Taco Bar.” Feel free to add any extras that sound good. Mushrooms Rule. Vegetarians love

3 cups fresh flat-leaf parsley

Forthe Beef Pops

Fresh Tuna Tacos

1Salttsp chipotle powder or hot paprika

2 tbsp fresh squeezed lime juice

Starting with the sauce, in the bowl of a food processor, blend all ingredi ents except the oil until smooth. With the machine running, gradually add the olive oil until incorporated. Place half of the mixture in a medium bowl. Place the remaining mixture in a small serv ing bowl and cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate until ready to serve. Put the beef on a cutting board and attack it with the needling tenderizer, although not necessary if using beef tenderloin,

6 tbsp vegetable oil

“Got two estimates in Moultonborough to do on Friday for installations. Saw our ad in the Laker. I’ll let you know how it goes.” anks! Rick Nantel, Anrik Irrigation, Milford & Laconia, NH

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Beef Pops with Pineapple and Parsley Sauce

1 ¼ tsp sugar

2 lbs beef, fillet, top round, skirt, etc, cut into ¾ - 1-inch cubes, about 40 cubes1pineapple, skinned and cored, about 2 lbs, cut into same size cubes as beef, about 40 pieces

½ tsp freshly ground black pepper

Up to 20 wooden or bamboo skew ers, 8 inches long, soaked in water for 30Saltminutesandfreshly ground black pepper

1 ½ tsp crushed chili flakes

1 tbsp chopped fresh cilantro

e

2 medium red onions, thinly sliced

“ e Laker is great Jim! Two Tu onboro condo jobs booked last week in two week old paper!” anks, Steve Beaulieu, Arborist, Hollis, NH

I want to share a couple of fun taco recipes now, and they really couldn’t be much different. Fresh tuna is the centerpiece of the first one and mush rooms play lead on the second. It’s not just the centerpiece that makes them different but also their accoutrements. The tuna recipe makes 8 tacos for 4 lucky eaters and the process shouldn’t take much longer than a half hour. Be tween the outstanding flavor that this one packs, it has an awesome super crunch to it.

• ‘Cue the Grill continued on page 26

2/3 cup olive oil

For the Parsley Sauce

2 cups finely shredded green or red cabbage, or a combo

1 lb portabella mushrooms

1 large carrot, peeled and julienned, ¾

pork loin chops, about 6 oz each, ideally 1 inch thick

1 ½cups ketchup

style. The mushrooms used for this are maitakes, which is chock full of vitamin C and has a very earthy peppery flavor that does mellow when cooked. When selecting maitake mushrooms, you want them tender, pliable, and damp, but not slimy. Skip any that are dry, tough, or brittle. This sandwich also comes with its own BBQ sauce and a crunchy, vinegar spiked slaw. This sandwich is outstanding. Plan on 45-60 minutes, although the slaw and sauce can be done earlier to make production quicker. This serves 4.

For The BBQ Sauce….Makes 1 quart, takes 2-3 minutes

1 ¼ tsp salt, divided 8 slices crispy-cooked bacon, crumbled4boneless

½ cup red wine vinegar

½ cup brown sugar

1 large sweet onion, thinly sliced 1 clove of garlic, minced ½ cup balsamic vinegar

8 corn Cilantrotortillassprigs for service

Speaking of mushrooms, it’s time to share a sandwich which is fairly new to my catalogue of recipes and it’s a great vegetarian twist on a classic. Instead of a pulled pork sandwich, this bad boy is a pulled mushroom sandwich, BBQ

• ‘Cue the Grill continued from page 25 • ‘Cue the Grill continued on page 27

BBQ sauce, recipe below 4 brioche buns

1 ¼ tsp fresh grind black pepper

2 ½ tbsp dry mustard

¼cupcup packed fresh cilantro leaves and thin stems, chopped 2 tbsp mayo

will likely have you starting your shopping list with the ingredients to put this dish together. How does a bacon onion marmalade sauce sound? I knew that would grab ya! Although the sauce is made in a skillet and the chops are grilled then finished in the skillet with the sauce, I generally do it all on the grill. This dish is for 4 and should be done in 30-35 minutes

2 tbsp apple cider vinegar

1 cup finely chopped sweet onion, about ½ large ½ cup sour cream

To make the sauce, in a blender or food processor, blend all ingredients until smooth. Preheat your very clean and oiled grill to medium-high. In a medium bowl, toss cabbage with carrot, cilantro, mayonnaise, and vinegar. Season with salt and pepper. In a large bowl, break the mushrooms into large pieces by hand and toss with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Grill, turning a few times, until mushrooms are browned and charred in spots, about 8 minutes. Transfer to a large heatproof bowl. Using two forks, shred into bitesize pieces. Toss mushrooms with as much or as little barbecue sauce that suits your taste. Butter and toast cut sides of buns on grill, about 1 minute. Spoon mushroom mixture and slaw on bottoms of buns, add tops, and serve immediately.Ifmostofyou are anything like me, when it comes to grilling, pork is more of an afterthought. I’m usually all about the beef, seafood, and chicken most of the time. This year however with the crazy high prices, pork has been making a comeback in my house as it is less expensive than the others, and when done right, pork is outstanding. When cooked right, a nice moist pork chop or roast is delicious. The sauce accompanying this pork recipe

2 tsp salt

2 ears corn, shucked

½ stick butter

For The Bulk of The Sandwich

1 ½ tsp black pepper

Pork Chops with MarmaladeBacon-Onion

Page 26 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022 MEREDITH, NH 279-7463 • WOLFEBORO 569-3560 NORTH CONWAY, NH 356-7818 • LACONIA, NH 524-1276 REGULAR PRICES20 ATHLETICOFF%SNEAKER SALE ** SPECIAL SELECTION 25% to 50% off SAVE EVEN MORE! MENS WOMENS KIDS In-store only. Brand exclusions may apply. Sale ends Sept. 5th CHILDREN’S COMFORT,FOREXPERTLYFOOTWEARFITTEDMAXIMUMFIT,ANDWEAR. OURSELECTIONLARGESTOFTHEYEAR! Home Of... $7.14 Grams Everyday Veterans Discount 20% Wacky Wednesday $6.43/gm Flower Fridays $6.43/gm 8am-8pm Mon-Sat Closed on the Lord’s Day All High Quality Indoor Flower Nature’s Gift Medical 1384 Carl Broggi Hgwy (Rt. 202) Lebanon, Maine • 207-339-3050 • www.naturesgiftmedical.com • 5 Miles from Exit 16 Out-of-state Medical Cards Welcome Medicinal Cannabis since 2009 FREE FAMILY FUN! 183 Lee’s Mill Road, Moultonborough, NH • 603-476-LOON (5666) • loon.org Exhibits • Videos Hiking Trails Save 10% in the gi shop with this ad. Excludes sale items and consignments. Open Mon-Sat 9am-5pm Hiking Trails: Everyday, Dawn to Dusk

Kosher salt and fresh grind black pepper1½ lbs maitake mushrooms, 10

2 tsp paprika

Heat your grill to medium high on one side and on low on the other. In a large skillet, ideally a cast iron skillet, over medium-high heated side, melt butter and sauté onion 6 to 8 minutes or until soft. Add garlic, balsamic vinegar, brown sugar, and ¼ tsp each of salt and pepper, heat 3 to 4 minutes or until slightly thickened. Stir in bacon and set aside to the low temp side. Season the chops with remaining salt and pepper on both sides and pop the chops on your greased grill on the medium high side and cook 6 to 8 minutes per side or until the pork is still slightly pink in the middle. Transfer the chops to the pan of sauce, move to the hot side and cook for another 2 minutes, flip them, and continue, spooning bacon and onion mixture over pork chops while you go. Once ready, serve and top them with the marmalade. This could easily fall into your frequent flyer recipe guide. We are going back to the ocean for the next one, this time a melt in your mouth swordfish dish. I would be willing to bet that 90% of grilled swordfish recipes are marinated prior to hitting the barbie, but not this one, mainly because of the amazing Mediterranean home made dressing that you will top it with. When shopping for your swordfish, look for steaks at least 1 inch thick, ideally even thicker. Considering no marinating time, this recipe is arguably the quickest to put together of the day, and quality does not suffer

½ cup water

Heat grill to medium-high. In a small bowl, whisk together 5 tbsp oil, 1 tbsp lime juice, and 2 tsp chipotle sauce and brush mixture onto both sides of mushrooms. Season generously with salt. In a large bowl, stir together lime zest, remaining 1 tbsp lime juice, and onion and season with salt and pepper. In another small bowl, combine remaining 2 tsp chipotle sauce, sour cream, and 1 tbsp water, season with salt. Grill corn, turning occasionally until well charred in most places, about 6-8 minutes. Grill mushrooms, flipping once, until charred in places, 3-4 minutes a side. Once done, cut mushrooms into ½ inch planks and transfer to a plate. Cut kernels off cobs, stir into onion mixture with remaining 1 tbsp oil. Season with salt and pepper. Grill tortillas, flipping once, 10-20 seconds. Top tortillas with sour cream mixture, mushrooms, corn salsa, and cilantro and serve.

Kosher salt and fresh grind black pepper

Barbecue Pulled SandwichesMushroom

1 ½cups brown sugar

2 dashes hot pepper sauce

cups, tough stems trimmed but cores left¼intactcupextra virgin olive oil

1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce

utes, rotate them with a ¼ turn to give good diamond markings, let go another 2-3 minutes then gently flip them over. Cook for another 3-4 minutes until the flesh is opaque and just barely cooked through, usually at about 130-135 de grees if using a thermometer. Plate the swordfish with your favorite sides and spoon some dressing over each sword fish hunk and serve with remaining dressing in a sauce dish or gravy boat. I feel confident the sauce will be gone when dinner is done. The dressing can be done the day before and kept refrig erated, but make sure it is at room temp at service, pulled maybe a couple of hours prior to dinner.

drizzle at service

51Kosherdividedsaltlargelemonsprigsoregano, thyme, or marjo ram, leaves picked, finely chopped

For The Brownie

Topping

Put the cheesecake pan into a larger pan and pour 1 inch of water into the larger pan and bake for 25 minutes or until done. Remove and allow to cool.

OK boys & girls, that’s another chap ter in the books. I’ll see you all again next week and make sure you continue to keep those taste buds of your smil ing.

• ‘Cue the Grill continued from page 26

2 large eggs

as a result. This recipe is dinner party worthy, trust me. This feeds 4 and will take less than 30 minutes.

1 tsp sugar

Freshly ground black pepper

½ cup flour

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Spray an 8x8 baking dish generously with cooking spray. In a large bowl, add all brownie dry ingredients and whisk to blend them together. In a smaller bowl, add in the wet ingredients and mix. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and mix well. Pour brownie batter into the pan and bake for 20 minutes. While the brownies are baking, add the 7 cheesecake ingredi ents into a mixing bowl for a standing mixer and mix on medium speed until creamy. Remove the brownies from the oven. Pour the cheesecake mixture on top. Sprinkle the Butterfinger piec es on top of the cheesecake mixture.

Grilled Swordfish Steaks with Whole-Lemon Dressing

1 tbsp capers, not drained

½ cup melted butter

¼ cup sour cream

Let’s bust out a killer ribeye recipe now before sharing a great Labor Day dessert. This is another upscale dinner done in record time that is as scrump tious as it gets, of course it doesn’t hurt using a grilled ribeye. Ribeye is my favorite cut of steak as the fat con tent makes for the best flavor, plus it’s tender as you know what. Win/Win! Let’s add another “win” in that this gets topped with an apple radish cham pagne vinegar sauce that works well with this, as well as any other hunk of beef you grill up. To go according to form, this feeds 4 and cooks up in shy of a half an hour.

¾ - 1 cup crushed Butterfinger bars, more if

3 large eggs

Cut and serve and drizzle with hot or cool fudge sauce if preferred.

1 can condensed milk

1 cup sugar

½ cup minced radish

½ tsp vanilla extract

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½ cup unsweetened cocoa

1 tsp vanilla extract

In a medium bowl, mix the 1/3 cup of olive oil with the vinegar, garlic, radish, and apple. Season the vinai grette with salt and pepper. Preheat your grill to medium high. Brush the steaks all over with olive oil and season generously with salt and pepper. Grill, turning once, until medium-rare, 6 to 8 minutes. Transfer to a carving board and let rest for 5 minutes. You can ei ther carve them, plate them, and sauce them or, put each steak on a plate and sauce them whole. Regardless, you will have a bunch of happy campers.

3 tbsp flour

4 boneless rib eyes, 12-14 oz each, ideally 1 inch thick

1 tsp baking powder

Patswordfish steaksdry with pa per towels, then coat with1 tbsp ex tra-virgin olive oil. Season both sides with kosher salt, set aside while you make the dressing. Using a sharp chef’s knife, trim ends from1 large lemon, slice into thick rounds and re move seeds. Very finely chop lemon rounds, peel, pith, and flesh and trans fer to a small bowl. If preferred, you can pulse in a food processor. Mix in 5 sprigs oregano, thyme, or marjoram, leaves picked, finely chopped,gar lic cloves, the capers and juice, coriander, sugar, and crushed red pepper flakes. Stir in6 tbsp plus 1½ tsp ex tra-virgin olive oil. Season with freshly ground black pepperand more salt if needed. Heat a well-oiled grill to me dium-high. Place swordfish steaks on grill, close the lid and grill for 2-3 min

1 clove garlic, minced fine

Butterfinger Cheesecake Brownie Bars

¼ cup milk

Sea salt and fresh grind black pepper

2 packages of cream cheese, 8 oz

2 garlic cloves, finely grated

½ cup minced, crisp, sweet apple, as in a honey crisp

½ tsp crushed red pepper flakes

1/3 cup champagne vinegar

2 tsp ground coriander

As for a yummy dessert that will have the kids and adults screaming for more, let me introduce you to But terfinger Cheesecake Brownie Bars. If that hasn’t hooked you yet, first I would be shocked, and second, feel free to email me and I’ll give a slew of other options for you. The name says it all, so not much description is needed. This will take about an hour to make and will give you a dozen bars.

Grilled Rib Eyes with Apple Radish Vinaigrette

4 swordfish steaks, 6 oz each, 1–1½ thick7tbsp plus 1½ tsp extra-virgin olive oil,

2/3 cup extra virgin olive oil plus more for brushing steaks

For The Cheesecake

each, room temp

Dash of salt

Dash of salt

Fudgepreferredsaucefor

For nature lovers, the Artisan Mar ket can serve as home base to miles of walking trails on the Village’s near

Here are some reasons why you should build your deck with Trex!

Canterbury Shaker Village to Host Artisan Market

open at 6 p.m., the program begins at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, August 23rd at the Wright Museum’s DuQuoin Education Center, 77 Center Street in Wolfeboro. Admission is $5 for mem

Nadeau will be joined by more than

er.Doors

According to Jill Lessard, program coordinator at the Village, the Artisan Market is also notable for its food and live music. “We will have Beans & Greens Farm’s Taco Food Truck, and The Mink Hills band will be here in the afternoon, so this is a festival in the tru est sense of the word,” she said.

“While here, one can learn of a dis tant and unique way of life practiced by a small but devoted group of indi viduals who preached, but more im portantly, practiced a lifestyle of true egalitarianism, simplicity, and indus triousness,” he said.

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During World War II, the Japanese had managed to crack every code the United States used. But when the Marines turned to its Navajo recruits to develop and implement a secret military language, they created the only unbroken code in modern war fare—and helped assure victory for the

On Saturday, September 10 from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Canterbury Shaker Village will host an Artisan Market with craft booths, guided tours, live music, farmers’ market, food, and more.Acelebration of artisanal, hand crafted work, the popular annual event provides visitors with the unique op portunity to “be inspired” in the words of participating artisan Philip Nadeau, who will sell his hand-crafted foot stools. “The Village is a time capsule, serving as a reminder for us, I believe, to hold onto those meaningful human attributes that are at the most risk for being neglected,” he said.

Established in 1792, Canterbury Shaker Village represents one of the oldest, most typical, and most com pletely preserved of the Shaker Villag es. To learn more about The Village, or purchase tickets online, visit shakers. org.Canterbury Shaker Village is a mem ber of the NH Heritage Museum Trail, which connects the public with cultur ally rich heritage institutions in New Hampshire. For more information, vis it nhmuseumtrail.org.

Page 28 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022 JAFFREY, 603.532.7716NH PEMBROKE, 603.224.7483NH SUNAPEE, ASHLAND,ANDOVER,603.763.9070NHNH603.735.5544NH603.968.7626 WINCHENDON,978.297.1162MANASHUA, PETERBOROUGH,603.880.7778NH NH 603.924.9436 MOULTONBOROUGH, NH 603.253.4404 ww w.belletetes.com

the homefront and battlefield. For more information about the 2022 Lecture Series, or museum, visit wrightmuse um.org.

bers and $10 for non-members. Res ervations are strongly encouraged and can be made online at lectionturesWorldeducators603-569-1212.seum.org/lecture-serieswww.wrightmu-orbycallingTheregion’sleadingresourceforandlearnersofallagesonWarII,theWrightMuseumfeamorethan14,000itemsinitscolthatarerepresentativeofboth

In addition to Nadeau and Chase, other juried artisans will display and

sell everything from hand-knit and woven items to jewelry, rugs, and pot tery. At the farmers’ market, visitors can shop for produce, prepared foods, soaps, candles, oils, and more.

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ly 700-acre campus. Visitors can also walk on the pathways that connect the Village’s 25 restored original Shaker buildings and 4 reconstructed Shaker buildings.“Onecan walk the same paths, un paved still, of either original granite block or solid ground, traveled by the brethren and sisters who, in many in stances, lived on this revered site near ly all of their lives,” added Nadeau. “Come to the Canterbury Shaker Vil lage and be Admissioninspired.”is$15for adults, $10 for Village members, and all youth and young adults under age 25 are free.

• Gorgeous colors to choose from - Choose the hue that says “you”

nish •

United States over Japan in the South Pacific. One of those “Code Talkers” was Chester Nez. That was the English name he was assigned in kindergarten. And in boarding school he was pun ished for speaking his native language, as the teachers sought to rid him of his culture and traditions. But discrimina tion didn’t stop Chester from defend ing his country after Pearl Harbor, for the Navajo have always been warriors, and his upbringing on a New Mexico reservation gave him the strength— both physical and mental—to excel as a marine.

Lecture and Book Signing at Wright Museum

After growing up in New York and New Hampshire, Avila has made New Mexico, with its wonderful diversity of cultures, her home. She worked as a social worker, an artist, an air traffic controller, and a computer consultant before finally discovering writing. As a storyteller, Avila hopes that her charac ters become fast friends with her read

On Tuesday, August 30th, the Wright Museum will welcome author Judy Avila along with Latham Nez, grand son of Code Talker Chester Nez. This is the fifteenth program of the Wright Museum’s 2022 Ron Goodgame and Donna Canney Education Series.

In addition to vendor, Nadeau fulfills several interrelated roles at the Village, including member, volunteer, and do nor. For him, time spent at the Village serves as refuge, a retreat from “our nation’s hurried lifestyle.”

two dozen other artisans at the Artisan Market, including Vicki Chase of Can terbury Soapworks. Citing this as her first Artisan Market, Chase said this is also her first summer selling products in person at farmers markets and other venues.“Ilove selling to people in person, seeing their reactions to my soaps, and helping them choose a soap they will like if they want guidance,” she said. “I absolutely love repeat customers—it’s a treat when people return to tell me they love my soap and then buy more.”

barn, foundations, sugar bush orchard and hardwood forest with trails. Along with the trails are remnants of antique farm implements and equipment. The land also has 1,000 feet of frontage on the 26-acre Meeting House Pond.

vation Area”. Tom Howe, Gilmanton resident, Senior Land Director for the Society for the Protection of NH Forests, conservationist, preservationist and friend and neighbor, died in an accident on January 26, 2021. Tom was well known and loved, locally, statewide and nationally. It was Tom who led the charge in conserving this property. After nearly a year of complex document preparation and review by Federal, State, and local agencies, the Gilmanton Land Trust and conservation partner, Five Rivers Conservation Trust finally secured this parcel along with 3 other parcels. The conservation easement is held by Five Rivers Conservation Trust in perpetuity, the Town of Gilmanton owns the property, and the Gilmanton Conservation Commission is charged with overseeing and monitoring the property. This property will forever be known as the “Tom Howe Barn & Conservation Area”.

First Annual Farm & Flax Day – July 23, 2022

tion, subsistence farming, and the cottage industry of shoemaking.

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The property is located at 245 Meeting House Road, Lower Gilmanton and has had numerous names in the past depending on the owners. However, the property on the New Hampshire State Register Certificate will be listed as “The Tom Howe Barn & Conser-

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The Gilmanton Conservation Commission is thrilled to be able to announce that the Tom Howe Barn & Conservation Area was listed on the New Hampshire State Register of Historic Places as of July 25, 2022

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The property is a cultural landscape that features historic elements and landscape features from the property’s various time periods and uses. It includes an expansive hayfield, a retting pond,

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“The New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources is pleased to announce that the State Historical Resources Council has added five properties to the New Hampshire State Register of Historic Places, each of which reflects the state’s rural history.”

The property was recommended eligible for the New Hampshire State Register for its historical contributions to the history of Gilmanton. It is significant as a rural historic district for its vernacular architecture, layered landscape, and for its contributions to multiple contexts within New Hampshire’s broader history, including flax produc-

Tom Howe Barn & Conservation Area

August 29, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 29 THEAdventureORIGINALGolf Test your skills! Known throughout the country for family fun! The Adventure Is Open Daily • Both Locations Route 3 • Winnisquam 528-6434 Route 3 • Meredith 366-5058 Adventure Bring the camera and the family! $100 OFF 10am - 5pmwith this coupon ©2020 Radio Systems Corporation® All Rights

The New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources states The Tom Howe Barn & Conservation Area is eligible for the NH State Register for its association with Gilmanton’s agricultural past, particularly the production of flax and linen. Its agricultural significance is reflected in the landscape, including the cleared fields, small barn, stone walls, foundations, retting pond, and other agricultural elements.

www.ellenmulligan.com ellen@ellenmulligan.com Ellen Mulligan, Broker Associate Coldwell Banker Realty 32 Whittier Highway, Center Harbor, NH 03226 Office: 603-253-4345 ext. 124 | Cell: 603-387-0369 FOR EXPERIENCE AND EXCELLENCE CHOOSE ELLEN Wolfeboro - $1,150,000Meredith - $8,500,000 Moultonborough - $5,400,000 Moultonborough - $7,800,000 SOLD! SOLD! SOLD! SOLD! A FEW EXAMPLES FROM THE PAST 12 MONTHS Gilford - $765,000Windham - $2,325,000 Moultonborough - $3,500,000 Meredith - $3,500,000 SOLD! SOLD! SOLD! SOLD! New Hampshire’s #1 Agent - 2021

Joyce Keyser brings Shepherd’s Hut Market to the Farmer’s Market with a variety of fresh vegetables, including, corn, squash, broccoli, onions, leeks, and more. She also has lamb and a variety of condiments including international flavors of Wozz Kitchen

Gilford Farmer’s Market, held Thursdays 3:00- 6:00 PM at the First United Methodist Church, 18 Wesley Way (Off Rt.11a, near 3/11 bypass), is excited to share some information with you about our terrific vendors.

We are also glad to have Arandano Farm (who has chicken, eggs, and gluten free baked goods), The Garlic Shed with many kinds of garlics, veggies and flowers,.

Andrea Ainsworth is here with her unique, insulated, quilted potholders. Prints cover many subject matters. They are machine washable, sturdy and highly heat-resistant. Andrea also has a selection of one-of-a-kind wall-hangings. Great time to replace your kitchen potholders or purchase early for SawyerChristmas.FarmNH

a nut allergy can feel safe having one of my treats! I have carefully chosen all of my ingredients to ensure that they are safe, I understand the seriousness of any allergy. I am looking forward to sharing all of these goodies, sweet and savory with you!”

Wood Products feature American Flags in 3 different sizes, 2 different looks, Antique glaze and a burnt look. Many different bird houses from size to color and design, many are one-of-a-kind. He also has 2 different size American flag tables also in the 2 different looks. He is always creating new items for the seasons. Fall and winter items to start soon

Page 30 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022 15 Long Island Rd. • Moultonboro, NH 603-253-7315 • Locatedwww.trexlers.comCelebrating50YearsFamilyOwned&OperatedbytheLongIslandBridge•Sales•Parts&Service•ShipStore•ValetService•WinterStorage•FuelDock•Registrations•FishingLicenses Call us at 603.569.3163 or visit us at BARTLETT.COM BARTLETT.COM FOR THE LIFE OF YOUR TREES. • Tree & Shrub Pruning • Fertilization & Soil Care • Cabling & Bracing • Insect & Disease Management

Solid Shampoo’s mission and passion is to reduce exposure to harmful toxins and synthetic

Creations, raw local honey, Two Sisters seasonings, and much more.

perfumes and to reduce the amount of single use plastics and glass. 550 million plastic shampoo bottles end up in landfills and the oceans annually. Simply by using shampoo bars, which can be used from head to toe, we can play a part in change both globally and personally!Art’s

Todd’s Sugar Works is here weekly with his maple syrup “I love making maple products and sharing them with others! My syrup is a natural sweetener, as are my maple cream and maple sugar. I also age maple syrup in bourbon barrels for a delicious twist. I tap trees in Gilford and Belmont, NH, so my maple products are locally sourced and made at my place in Belmont. Todd also has some stunning, unique handmade charcuterie and cutting boards.

Please stop by and support your local farmers!

Stir Crazy Bakery is specializing in treats made nut—free. Owner Doreen says “Twelve years ago I discovered I had an anaphylactic nut allergy and found that it was very difficult to go into bakeries and get a safe sweet treat of any kind! Now anyone with

Gilford Farmer’s Market

Along with the StoryWalk®, visitors can enjoy more trails with scenic views of the Cockermouth River and Hebron Marsh, unpack a picnic in the picnic area, throw in a line at the fishing alcoves, or even launch a kayak or canoe at the non-motorized boat launch. NLRA maintains Grey Rocks Conservation Area as a place for people and

Newfound Lake Region Association invites you to get outside and read! Join us at Grey Rocks Conservation Area from August 27 through October 2 as StoryWalk® returns with “Outside In” written by Deborah Underwood and illustrated by Cindy Derby. “Outside In” looks at the many ways that we can interact with nature, both inside buildings and outdoors. As visitors walk through the story, they will experience the ecosystems around them and be reminded that nature doesn’t always wait at the door- often it comes inside in new forms or finds ways to draw us back outside again.

www.clarksgrain.com

August 29, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 31 Black’s Paper Store Two oors to explore ere’s a world of fun behind these doors 8 South Main Street • Wolfeboro, NH 603.569.4444 The Lakes Region’s Destination for Discerning Antique Collectors’ Call for Hours • The Oldest Summer Resort in America 67 Mill Street | Wolfeboro, NH 603-569-0022 Come See Why “Our Difference Is Delicious” Premium Meats • Gourmet Cheese • Marinated Steak Tips & Chicken • Wine & Beer • Fresh Seafood Specialty Grocery NOWWEHAVELIVELOBSTER Mon-Sat 10am to 6pm, Sun 10am to 5pm Downtown Wolfeboro • www.bootleggersfootwear.com569-3560 “Brand Name Family Footwear for Less” One of the Lakes Region’s largest selections of sandals and footwear! Over 100 of the best brand names in footwear for the entire family! •Freshly Prepared Foods To Go •Fresh Local Produce •Gadgets Galore! Stop in and See What’s New! Cook Shop and FineFoodsSpecialty OPEN DAILY • 603-569-6869 12 Railroad Ave., www.butternutsgooddishes.combutternuts@metrocast.netWolfeboro SHOP| DINE| ENJOY Now Open danish + norwegian baked goods + really really good coffee! 21 Central Ave • Wolfeboro Mon - Sat 6am-4pm Closed Sunday 21 Central Ave • 603-569-4646Wolfeboro 22 Railroad Ave. • 569-3018Wolfeboro HARDWARE & RENTAL 108 Pine Hill Road, off Rt. 109A (after Hancock Lumber) Wolfeboro 603-515-1109 An eclectic blend of handmade crafts and local New Hampshire gifts Serenity Creations My Three Promises To You! 1) 30+ Years Local Experience. 2) I only serve the greater Wolfeboro area. 3) You’ll never see a stranger working on your property. 603-651-3122 or 603-569-0108

them.The

NOT JUST A GRAIN STORE... Whether farmer, pet owner, backyard gardener or wildlife enthusiast you will find almost everything you need in our stores. Your locally owned & operated grain store for over 60 years

“Outside In” StoryWalk®, along with other family programs and events, is part of NLRA’s initiative to encourage residents and visitors to enjoy the natural beauty around them, learn more about the environment and how to protect it, and fall in love with the Newfound Watershed. By connecting the people of Newfound to the wonders around them, NLRA works to inspire the next generation of stewards and fulfill the mission of protecting Newfound Lake and its watershed. Learn more about NLRA including other upcoming events at NewfoundLake.org.

Read as You Walk at Grey Rocks

1010 White Mountain Highway (Rte.16) Ossipee • 603-539-4006

wildlife alike. Wildlife is abundant, with bald eagles, tadpoles, turtles, and loons being a common sight. NLRA has carefully transformed the once barren landscape into an array of natural gardens, providing color from both the flowers and the butterflies that frequent

271 Suncook Valley Rd. (Rte. 28) Chichester • 603-435-8388

quality seedlings,” said Billy Kunelius, N.H. State Forest Nursery manager. “During the past few years, as peo ple have been reconnecting to nature and the environment, our seedlings and packages aren’t just selling well –many are selling out quickly.”

The trees will be on display the weekends of Dec. 3– 4, and Dec. 1011 and Wednesday, December 7th be tween 6-8 pm. Profits from all of these events will be donated to one or two localThecharities.Festival of Trees Committee is currently accepting applications from non-profit charitable organizations who would like to participate in and be the beneficiary of this year’s event. The deadline for beneficiary applications is September 29th. Over the past 21 years, the festival has distributed more than $350,000 to area non-profit or ganizations supporting the needs of

New Hampshire customers repre sented 70 percent of all orders. Addi tional New England states made up 25 percent of orders, with the Northeast region totaling nearly 95 percent of all customers.Eachyear, the State Forest Nursery grows three million seedlings on 16 acres of irrigated, outdoor seedbeds; it also has 20 acres dedicated to seed orchards and testing areas. The Nurs ery is located within the 880-acre state forest in Boscawen.

Seedlings Sales Growing at State Nursery

Perry Brothers Monuments

Page 32 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022 Heating & Cooling 603-524-2937 | laconiaresidential.com Servicing the Lakes Region and Beyond Service/ Installation of: • Central AC Systems • Furnaces • Minisplit Systems • and More Quality Granite & Craftsmanship since 1938 253 Sheep Davis Road • Concord • perrybrothersmonuments@gmail.comperrybrothersmonuments.com603-225-6721

ber of tree displays this year!! Past participants, we thank you for the beautifully decorated and creative trees in previous years and hope to see you again. New participants, you are most welcome! Reach out to friends, neighbors and partnerships! With the expanded new area at the Wright Mu seum, we are hoping to fill the space with holiday cheer. Please call Peg Mongiello, FOT chair, with any questions at 508-596-2850.

For more information about New Hampshire’s State Forest Nursery, vis itnh.gov/nhnursery.

The Festival of Trees has been a hol iday tradition in Wolfeboro since1999 when it started as a fundraiser for the Life Ministries Food Pantry. For the last 22 years, it has been a way to gather as a commu nity and raise money to support over 28+ area nonprofits while visitors are awe struck by creative and cute holiday trees.The 23rd Festival of Trees is be ing planned for December 1-11 at the Wright Museum with the Gala event being Thursday, Decem ber 1st featuring refreshments by local restaurants and caterers.

Sales income increased 52 percent from 2021’s record-breaking season and reflected a 146.7 percent increase since 2018. The total number of orders was up 37.6 percent from last year,

The percentage of orders totaling $100 held steady at 66 percent, indi cating that a majority of customers are working on smaller projects. The aver age order totaled $143.33.

Festival of Trees Welcomes Grant Applicants for 2022

More than four dozen species of co nifers, hardwoods, shrubs and combi nation packages are available from the Nursery. Seedlings are grown on site at the Nursery from seed and are not imported or transplanted from other sources. This ensures that they are well adapted to the climate in New Hamp

shire and surrounding states.

Wolfeboro and the surrounding com munities. The beneficiaries in 2021, celebrating the Festival’s 22nd year were Kingswood Youth Center and The Child Advocacy Center. The appli cation is available on the the Festival of Trees websitetrees31standoratingpartortrees.com/pages/application.wolfeborofestivalofIfanybusiness,organization,groupcheerfulcitizenwouldliketotakeinthisholidayhappeningbydecatree,pleasegoonthewebsitecompletethetreeregistrationformandsendthefeeof$30.00bytheofOctober.Lastyearwehad67andarehopingforarecordnum

“The2018.sustained growth of sales at the State Forest Nursery is a testament to the reputation that we have of growing

nearly doubling – 96.5 percent – com pared to five years ago. The number of seedlings lifted, sorted for quality, packaged and sold increased 50.8 per cent from 2021, a 135.2 percent jump from

For the fifth season running, seedling sales at the N.H. State Forest Nursery in Boscawen continue to outpace the previous year’s marks.

Gallant and Aborn have planned an evening that will bring the business community together with networking, inspiring stories, and thought leader ship, featuring a carefully curated pan el of five of Lakes Region’s own suc cessful women entrepreneurs who will participate in a roundtable discussion. Guests will be inspired by hearing their stories of entrepreneurship, communi ty-building, and more!

August 29, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 33 12 MAIN STREET, SENTERS MARKETPLACE, CENTER HARBOR, NH

Moderated by Liane Clairmont of JMG Marketing and Business Strate gy, the panel will include event hosts, Emily Aborn and Jodie Gallant, along with Karen Bassett (Wayfarer Coffee Roasters), Kelly Chapman (Meredith Whole Living Center), and Karen Kenney (Spiritual Mentor, Writer, and Speaker). The panelists will be sharing what they’ve experienced and learned throughout their entrepreneurial jour neys to help inspire those looking to

Dining Out in the Lakes Region Available Now at Hundreds of Locations around the Lakes Region!

Jodie Gallant, CEO of JMG Market ing & Business Strategy and Lakes Re gion Entrepreneur, and Emily Aborn, Founder of She Built This, LLC and Emily Aborn Consulting, are proud to announce a collaborative and trans formative event, “She Built This: Lakes Region”. The event will take place Thursday, September 29, 5:009:00pm at The Lakeport Opera House in Laconia, NH.

The event will be photographed and will feature several product-based and brick-and-mortar businesses selling their products at the event itself with exclusive pricing for attendees. Spon sorship opportunities are also avail able.Tickets are expected to sell out fast. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit Abornatjodie@jmg-marketing.comopportunities,this.org/lakesregionhttps://www.shebuilt-.ForsponsorshipcontactJodieGallantorEmilyatemily@emilyaborn.com.

Pick Up Your Copy of

Stop by the Hebron Common for

Stop by and preview our refined European Women’s collections from the mountain regions of Italy, France, Germany and Austria.

start, grow, and flourish in their own businesses and professions.

She Built This events are quite pop ular and positively received, attracting between 100-200 attendees who are primarily New England-based entre preneurs. At this year’s event, 170 at tendees are expected, with a special After-Hours reception for VIP ticket purchasers.SheBuilt This: Lakes Region attend ees can expect networking with fel low entrepreneurs and professionals, a roundtable and Q & A with panelists, refreshments, inspiring conversations, laughter, and a lot of fun. Upgrade op portunities are also available for those attendees who would like to be listed in the program directory and/or attend the post-event VIP reception.

3rd Annual Hebron Yard Sale Day

COMPLIMENTARY SUMMER 2022

She Built This: The Lakes Region

great bargains on used furniture, house hold items, books, games, puzzles, toys, sporting goods, equipment, tools, accessories, antiques, and much more. The church will also again be featur ing the popular $5-a-bag tent. And the books, puzzles, DVD’s, etc. are only $1 each unless otherwise marked. For more info, including a list of the ad ditional participating locations, please visit hebronchurchfair.org. The event is sponsored by the Union Congregation al Church of Hebron.

If you enjoy the white elephant, auc tion, and book tents at the Hebron Fair, you won’t want to miss the Hebron Yard Sale Day on Saturday, Sept. 3 from 9 to 3. Since this year’s fair did not include some of these usual features, many of the items that would have been sold at those tents will be for sale outside the Hebron Church at 16 Church Lane. As an additional benefit there will be other yard sales at various locations through out town that day.

Page 34 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022 Fantastic Views ~ Fantastic Apples Opening September 3rd FamilyTotalFunForAllAges 1149 H Road • Acton, Maine (Off Rte. 109) Wed-Fri 9-2 • Sat., Sun & Holidays 9-4 www.romacorchards.org Upcoming Events SUN. SEPTEMBER 11th 1pm-3pm -“B-Side” performs doing covers and some original material. SAT. SEPTEMBER 17th 1pm-3pm -”Mr. Drew and His Animals Too”https://www.mrdrewandhisanimalstoo.com SAT. SEPTEMBER 17th 11am-2pm -Kite flying by Three Rivers Land Trust. See amazing kites or fly your own! SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 24th 12pm-4pm -“Seven Lakes Snowmobile Club” www.sevenlakessnowmobileclub.com SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 24th 12:30pm-3:00pm -“Classic Memories Good Humor Ice Cream Truck” OWN!YOURPICK Peaches, Ginger Golds and some limited Crab Apples • Cider • Pumpkins • Corn Maze • Donuts & Hayrides on Weekends 9 Hole Disc Golf Course Let Our Many Years of Boat Hauling Experience Work for You! We Specialize in OversizedMoves! • Boat Consignment Services • 35 Years Experience • Fully Licensed & Insured • Local or Long Distance • Hydraulic & Lowboy Trailers • Free Hauling Quotes On DepartmentServiceSite 142 Lily Pond Rd, Rte. 11C | Gilford | (603) 527-1887 | www.milesmarine.com

To register for this workshop, please call the League of NH Craftsmen –Fine Craft Gallery at (603) 279-7920 or stop by the gallery located at 279 Daniel Webster Highway in Meredith, NH.For more details, visit our website at facebook.com/nhcraft/andhttp://meredith.nhcrafts.org/classes/ourFacebookpageathttp://www.

Learn the Art of Soldering

Join one of our favorite jewelers, Joy Raskin, at the Meredith Fine Craft Gallery on Saturday, September 10, 2022, from 10:30 am to 4:30 pm to learn the art of Havesoldering.youever wanted to learn soldering or improve your soldering skills? Not sure how to set up your own soldering torch and tank? This class will cover the basics of how to set up your work area including torch, tank, a place to solder, and a review of the safety issues. We will cover all the soldering basics from butt joints to stick soldering. We will also do hands on soldering and help you gain confidence in your skills. This class is great for those who have been taking jewelry classes but want to improve.

The Hannaford Bloomin’ 4 Good Program, which launched in August 2021, is an easy way for shoppers to give back. Every Bloomin’ 4 Good Bouquet with the red circle sticker sold supports a nonprofit organization local to the Hannaford in which it was purchased.Winnipesaukee Wellness Center was selected as the September beneficiary by local store leadership at the Hannaford located at Meredith, NH. WWC

Winnipesaukee Wellness Center Selected as a Hannaford Beneficiary

Tuition is $110 per student with an

additional materials fee of $10 to the instructor at the time of the class. Students are also encouraged to bring a bagged lunch and any metal that they have on hand or soldering projects to be finished. Space is limited and preregistration is required. Those who wish to take the class MUST sign up by Saturday, September 3rd.

will receive a $1 donation for every Bloomin’ 4 Good Bouquet with the red circle sticker purchased at this Hannaford location in September.

Moultonborough, NH – Winnipesaukee Wellness Center has been selected as a beneficiary of the Hannaford Bloomin’ 4 Good Program for the month of September 2022.

Winnipesaukee Wellness Center is a nonprofit based in Moultonborough, NH. WWC is a fitness center that caters to folks of all ages and abilities. We offer exercise options, including recumbent steppers, treadmills, ellipticals, rowing machines, and strength training classes for people of all fitness levels. We are always staffed for your convenience and safety. Learn more about Winnipesaukee Wellness Center by visiting www.winniwellness.org

Do you like to make, fix, or organize things and hang out with people who share these common interests? Are you curious to expand your knowledge and share what you’ve already learned? Do you enjoy the camaraderie of working with others toward a greater good? If you answered yes, you may be a match for volunteering at Makers Mill - Carroll County’s new makerspace and vocation hub set to open in October.

Name this Fish.

Makers Mill Recruiting Volunteers

Or perhaps you’re interested in being part of a planning circle that meets

August 29, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 35 MORE BOATS • MORE FUN! 96WinnipesaukeeChannelLn.Laconia(603)366-4801 Bowriders - SUPs CanoesPontoonKayaksBoatsFishingBoats winnisquammarine.com Boat Rentals Sales603-279-7921•Service•ShipsStore•Valet BOAT RENTALS Hurricane Deckboats Godfrey Pontoons www.meredithmarina.com Half-Day, Daily, Multi-Day or Weekly Rte.125RV&Marine,Inc. Our Best is the Least We Can Do! SELLING YOUR RV OR BOAT? WWW.THEROADISCALLING.COM1-800-CONSIGNBrokerageSpecialists Stand Up Paddleboards • Kayaks • Canoes Sales and Rentals SUP Yoga - ECO Tours Reserve on-line or call wildmeadowpaddlesports.com603-253-7536 6 Whittier Hwy., Moultonborough “At the Lights” in Center Harbor

regularly (but not too often!), investing your experience or enthusiasm into shaping Makers Mill’s programs, operations, or “Volunteersfuture?are the heart and engine of our work here at Makers Mill!”

said Josh Arnold, Executive Director of Makers Mill. “There is no way we could have come this far without the thousands of hours invested by community members. Our volunteers are everything and we strive to make the volunteer experience meaningful, productive, and fun!”

Anyone interested in being part of this dream team of volunteers creating a place in which it’s fun and fulfilling to tinker, fix, repair, problem-solve, and create can sign up online at makersmill.org/volunteer or contact info@ makersmill.org or 603-569-1500

While the building renovation is now complete, the work is never done! Volunteers are being recruited to sort and restore tools, build work benches, organize the various work spaces and inventory, plan or support upcoming classes, help with administrative tasks, prepare food for an event, pick up a paintbrush or swing a hammer.

Pick up the NEW Boating on the Lakes from the publishers of The Laker for the answer and much more information on Lakes Region boating!

Eli Roxby volunteers with Makers Mill . courtesy of Makers Mill

POP QUIZ Stumped? 2022 EDITION YOUR GUIDE TO BOATING IN THE LAKES REGION COMPLIMENTARY Courtesy

Page 36 | THE LAKER August 29, 2022 Gilpatric Metal Recycling, LLCGilpatric Metal Recycling, LLC Bring us your ferrous and non-ferrous metals to recycle! – Call for Pricing 201Abel Road • Bristol,NH • p:603.744.3453 • f:603.744.6034 • gilpatricmetalrecycling.com Fully Licensed Facility License Number: 21J-001A • Permit Number: DES-21J001B Hours: Mon-Fri 7am to 3pm • Closed Sat & Sun We buy Catalytic Converters, see Nick for pricing LakesRegionChimneyPro.com520-7217 BEFOREAFTERFULL SERVICE CHIMNEY REPAIR •chimney cleaning •fireplace installation •masonry •waterproofingrepair•customcaps& liners •video •waterproofinginspections $199 SWEEP Stern Drive and Outboard Dealer 7 Lanes End Rd, Melvin Village, NH Full Service Facility • Certified Technicians service@lemarineservice.com • www.lemarineservice.com 603-544-2000603-544-2000

The possibilities are endless – just start out with something small if you’re a beginner and work your way to creat ing your own closet!

If you must buy something new ly made, try shopping sustainably by using clothing companies and brands that prioritize the environment. For example, companies can use recycled materials or have recycled clothing programs to reduce waste in the man ufacturing process. A company with these services would be more environ mentally friendly than one that rapid ly releases new clothing items for fast fashion trends. Materials are also an important factor when considering en vironmental impact; polyester, for ex ample, could be even more damaging to the environment. Look for clothing companies that consider the environ mental impact of packaging, delivering and producing clothing. For a better idea of sustainable companies, check out the goodonyou directory, which describes the practices and policies of

Shopping in Style and Sustainability

Ever think about how much clothing you purchase? Many of us today are part of the “fast fashion” movement –the latest fashion trend that consists of rapidly produced, inexpensive cloth ing – which encourages consumers to purchase and discard clothing at a new fleeting pace. While it can be fun to switch up your style and add to your wardrobe during shopping trips, par taking in the fast fashion culture can be detrimental to the environment.

sides in-person thrifting stores, there are online stores for used clothing. If you want a more personal and local experience, try organizing a clothing swap with some of your friends or your community. Who knows, you might just find hidden treasures – something unique, vintage or stylish – from your neighbor’s unwanted clothing. Swap ping your style with used clothing is a great way to freshen up your closet while also helping out your wallet and theSometimesenvironment.your old clothing can be turned into a whole new look with a few modifications. “Upcycling” allows you to creatively reuse products by transforming them into something new. For example, you can change the fit of clothes with a little cutting and sewing or change the color with some dye. You can also repair a shirt that might be missing a button or ripping along the seam. Being crafty with upcycling can help you greatly reduce the amount of clothes you buy and then throw away.

Back-to-School

clothing companies, as well as their levels of transparency. With these con siderations, you can make informed decisions about where you purchase your clothing and analyze the ethical and environmental practices of com panies.Adding to your closet sustainably is great, but what should you do with your old, unwearable clothes? Fortu nately, there are lots of ways to discard your outgrown or worn-out clothing without producing more waste. If your clothing is in good condition, hand it down or donate it to contribute to the second-hand clothing cycle. Clothes that are no longer wearable can be re cycled at a facility that will repurpose it. There are organizations and busi nesses that take old clothing and tex tiles and restore them to fiber, which is then used to manufacture all new prod ucts. That means that even your old, raggy T-shirt can have a new life with recycling. To find textile recycling fa cilities near you, check out Earth911’s recycling locator. By discarding your clothing sustainably, you can help to limit the amount of waste generated in the fast fashion culture.

Constantly buying new clothes for your growing child puts strains on your wallet and the environment. This back-to-school shopping season, re think how you look at shopping and try some of these second-hand techniques. By the end of your second-hand cloth ing experience, you will be wondering how saving the environment could look so good!

One way you can break this cycle of environmental impacts is to try out some second-hand, or “slow fashion,” trends this shopping season; your kids can go back to school sustainably, af fordably and in style.

According to the EPA, it’s estimat ed that17 million tons of textiles were generated in the United States in 2018 alone, with 11.3 million tons of those clothes being discarded in the landfill. Some articles of clothing can take over 200 years to degrade, depending on the material, and clothing production con sumes massive amounts of the world’s precious water supply. Aside from the impact on our waste streams, the fash ion industry also contributes to carbon emissions, being responsible for 10% of global emissions.

One easy way to swap up your style is through thrifting. Thrifting allows you to purchase second-hand clothes that would otherwise be wasted. This “slow fashion” trend can help you swap up your style affordably while also reducing clothing waste. If you are a little hesitant to begin sifting through your local Goodwill or Saver’s, there are plenty of other ways to thrift! Be

By Mark AirplaneOkranttravel is among the safest forms of travel, trailing only the intercity bus. Unfortunately, when an airplane falls from the sky, the impact is seldom minor, and the results can be disastrous. According to the research team of Panish, Shea, Boyle and Ravipudi, “aviation accident rates have gone down in recent years, but the growing popularity of travel by private jet and helicopter threatens that trend.”

nor injuries by 56 percent.

Peter Noddin, the region’s leading aviation archaeologist, began searching for lost aircraft in Maine during his high school years, in the early 1980s. Noddin became serious about this endeavor during the mid-1990s, several years after graduating from the University of Maine. First, he researched old maps in an effort to locate lost historic military equipment. Subsequent-

According to National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) data, at a time when there are millions of flight hours, the percentage of trips that produce fatal crashes is a fraction of one percent. For example, during a recent calendar year, airplanes produced 0.01 deaths per million miles traveled, while train travel produced 0.04 deaths. Panish, Shea, Boyle and Ravipudi tell us that 80 percent of all aviation accidents are the product of some type of human error, with nearly one-half occurring during times when planes are taking off or landing. Pilot error is thought to account for a majority (53%) of aircraft accidents, followed by mechanical failure (21%), and weather conditions (11%).During 2022, there have been two fatal airplane crashes involving large commercial aircraft. In three other incidents this year, no loss of life occurred. A table depicting air crashes between 1982 and 2018 indicates that the numbers of crashes, fatal injuries, serious injuries, and minor injuries have diminished significantly over that 37-year period—crashes were down by 56 percent, fatal injuries by 47 percent, serious injuries by 53 percent, and mi-

During the early years of his searching, Noddin relied upon an excellent resource—people who had actually witnessed airplane crashes within the • Airplanes continued on page 38

Peter Noddin, taken at a crash site.

A History of Airplane Crashes in New Hampshire

Most of us would be surprised to learn that there have been nearly one thousand military aircraft crashes here in northern New England. In Maine alone, there were 741 military aircraft involved in accidents between 1919 and 1989. Many of those crashes involved planes being delivered to the warfront during World War II.

ly, Noddin’s research repertoire continued to evolve. To increase his success rate, he began collecting and studying old newspaper clippings . . . anything with a story about an airplane that never reached its destination. This led him to seek out sources that provided military records. Owing to his growing range of resources, Noddin once located two F86 Saber crash sites in one day. During the last several decades, as Noddin became more successful at finding lost aircraft, he discovered that there are people throughout the United States with similar motivations; thus, a network was born.

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When was asked to describe the aviation archaeology situation in New Hampshire, Noddin replied, “a quick scan of records and our data base shows that there were 238 military aircraft crashes in the state. Many of New Hampshire’s crashes were at or near Grenier Field/AFB in Manchester.”

Join us at the League of NH Craftsmen – Meredith Fine Craft Gallery on Sunday, September 11, 2022, from 9 am - 4 pm for a Beginner Stained Glass Class with juried artist Susanna Ries.

You will need to bring: cork board at least 16 x 20 inches, masking tape, apron, scissors, thick latex gloves (such as dishwashing gloves, NOT disposable), safety glasses (if you wear

Thewomen.AMNH is housed in a beautiful 1937 art deco building that once served as the Manchester Airport terminal. The museum’s collection includes a large photography exhibit; the Doodle Bug—a biplane manufactured in New Hampshire; and the Around the World flight simulator. AMNH offers group tours and hosts a number of educational opportunities. Hours are Friday and Saturday from 10am-4pm, and Sunday from 1-4pm. Admission is $10, or $5 for seniors and children between the ages of 6-12. For more information, visit www.nhahs.org.

glasses you do not need safety glasses), very casual clothes and covered shoes (NO SANDALS), and a gallon-size zip lock bag (additional zip lock bags may also come in handy for storing solder orTuitionfoil).

Learn to Make Stained Glass with Susanna Ries

is $55.00 per student with a $35 materials fee paid to the instructor on the day of class. Space is limited and pre-registration is required. Those who wish to take the class MUST sign up by Sunday, September 4th. To register for this workshop call the League of NH Craftsmen – Meredith Fine Craft Gallery at (603) 279-7920 or visit the Gallery at 279 Daniel Webster Highway in ForMeredith.moredetails, visit our website at facebook.com/nhcraft/andhttp://meredith.nhcrafts.org/classes/ourFacebookpageathttp://www.

• Airplanes continued from page 37

This high-paced class will have you cutting, copper foiling, soldering, and framing a stained glass panel in one day. Choose your own design from patterns supplied by the instructor, or you can use one from another source, so long as it is constructed of twelve glass pieces or less. Basic stained glass construction will be taught, and you will go home with a finished piece that is ready to hang!

Grenier Field was located at the site of the present Manchester-Boston Regional Airport. Noddin indicated that numerous crashes of the Army Air Corps’ B24 and B17 aircraft occurred at Grenier Field, and in surrounding areas, during World War II. Grenier had served as a staging base for aircraft headed to the European theater. There also were occasional fighter plane crashes in the region following the war. Other New Hampshire military airplane crash sites include a T33 plane crash in Spofford, and a B52 crash in

region. However, with the passage of time, many of these people are no longer alive. Aiding Noddin’s current searches is a modern piece of technology— the GPS. For Noddin and his fellow aviation archaeologists, the availability of this navigation tool has proven to be a mixed blessing. At a time when modern logging practices have opened up formerly remote areas, accessibility in conjunction with the GPS have made crash sites reachable by souvenir hunters. The latter have had a detrimental impact on those wishing to document crash histories, and their efforts to help surviving family members get answers about loved ones.

Freemont.Forthose who are interested in learning more about the aircraft industry, there is a resource in New Hampshire that will not require you to strap on waterproof boots and hiking gear, or to venture into the wild. Situated at 27 Navigator Road in Londonderry, the Aviation Museum of New Hampshire (AMNH) is operated by the New Hampshire Aviation Historical Society. Aside from providing an important educational function to the next generation of aviation enthusiasts, the AMNH contains exhibits about key persons, places, events, and artifacts related to the state’s aviation history. Visitors learn about the early contributions to the aviation history of this country and the world by key New Hampshire men and

August 29, 2022 | THE LAKER | Page 39

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