Laker 6 22 15l

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June 22, 2015

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Your Guide to What’s Happening in NH’s Lakes Region

FREE

June 22 • Vol 32 • No 13

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PERMIT #130 Portsmouth, NH POSTAL CUSTOMER

PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE

Lots to Do... Welcome Summer!

In This Issue

Boating • pages 33-40 Boat Rentals • page 36

Golf • pages 30-31 What’s Up • pages 8-11

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June 22, 2015

on Lake Winnipesaukee

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June 22, 2015

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Saving … and Sharing Lakeport Story and Photos by Kathi Caldwell-Hopper

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The Lakeport Railroad Museum has a big story to tell and it is not just about the railroad. Although the railroad once made regular stops in Lakeport (a section of the city of Laconia), the museum encompasses much more than old train memorabilia. Indeed, the members of the Lakeport Community Association (LCA), the organization that oversees the museum, work hard to preserve Lakeport’s history for future generations. Three members of the Association have been involved in the museum for a long time and are eager to share the story and the collection the museum has amassed. Robert Fortier, Ginger Ryan and Brenda Moulton have lived in Lakeport most of their lives and are members of the Lakeport Community Association. “The Association started in about 1997 as a non profit,” said Robert. “Before that we met informally. The Association leases the railroad building from the City of Laconia and they in turn lease it from the State of NH.” (The Lakeport Community Association is dedicated to improving appreciation and to enlighten the public about the Lakeport community and its heritage, especially as a hub for the Boston & Maine Railroad. The LCA meets at the freight house the first and third Tuesdays of each month and is open to

the public, according to www.lakeportcommunityassociation.org). Historically, the freight building was constructed in 1899 and opened next to the busy railroad tracks near Lakeport Square in 1900. Lakeport was a thriving town because of the rail line from about 1850 to the 1960s. The Boston and Maine Railroad constructed the Freight House. It was well built (which is probably why it withstood the elements after it was no longer in use). The timbers were of spruce and they covered the roof and sidewalls. The roof was of top quality cedar shingles. Floor joists, girders, sills and platform joists were well made. The building was a freight house with an office and was once a bustling place with all sorts of freight coming

Grand OpeninG CelebratiOn FOr Our new tiltOn StOre!

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and going via the railroad. Across the tracks was the railroad station where travelers could rest between trains or purchase tickets. By 1972, the building was no longer used by the railroad, at which time it found new uses for civic groups. Later, it was used as a location for a glass shop until the late 1990s. By that time, it seemed the days of the building were numbered and it was slated for demolition. Luckily, the

Lakeport Community Association was aware of the demise of the freight station and moved forward to save the building. The passenger station was set for demolition as well and fortunately Association members were able to salvage some material from that building to use in the refurbishing of the freight building. In 2004, the Association got a lease from the City of Laconia and work began to save the freight station. The building sat empty for years after the trains ceased to run and the Association members knew that the structure was in rough shape. Robert recalls that there were trees growing through the roof. “We put a lot of work into the building,” added Ginger. That is certainly an understatement. Any old building that sits empty will fall into disrepair. Luckily for the former freight station, some Association members grew up in Lakeport and had fond

• Lakeport Continued on page 4

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Enjoy a buffet brunch and entertainment while cruising the lake. From Weirs 10 & 12:30, from Alton Bay 11:15.

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PRODUCTION MANAGER Gina Lessard This newspaper assumes no financial responsibility for typographical errors but will reprint that pressreleases@thelaker.com • lkr@thelaker.com • www.thelaker.com

part of an advertisement in which the typographical error affects the value of same. Advertisers will please notify the management immediately of any errors which may occur. All rights reserved. No reproduction in part or whole without expressed written consent.

PRODUCTION Yvette Bohn Kathi Caldwell-Hopper CIRCULATION Kathy Larson

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June 22, 2015 • Lakeport Continued from page 3

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memories of the days when the trains ran through the village. They were determined to see the freight station structure restored. Robert and Ginger went to the same elementary school and hold a lifetime of memories of living in Lakeport. The old railroad building was important and Robert, Ginger and other Association members saw the value in fixing up the spot to use for community events and as a place to house Lakeport memorabilia. The building is now a museum with a large collection of Lakeport historical items; it is also where the Association holds meetings. Although much work has been done to save the freight station, such as painting, fixing the interior and the roof, the work of keeping an old building in good condition is never ending. The Association runs yard sales from time to time to raise money – the next yard sale will be on June 27; a calendar with historical photos of Lakeport is printed and sold each year to also raise money. All the fundraising is worth it for members such as Ginger, Robert and Brenda. They have seen the old freight station take on a new life as a museum that holds many, many artifacts of Lakeport memorabilia donated from people all over the country with ties to Lakeport “We had a donation from a lady in California,” recalled Ginger. She sent the Association two coins that were

melted together due to the intense heat from the early 1900s Great Lakeport Fire. Unusual items with a strong Lakeport connection are welcomed for the collection. “If people run across old Lakeport things, we are always interested,” said Robert. The collection in the museum (which is open every Wednesday from 10 am to 2 pm in June, July and August and the first and third Wednesdays from 10 am to 2 pm from September through November) is incredibly varied and quite fascinating. A statue that once sat on the lawn of the village’s Goss Reading Room now has a permanent home in the Railroad Museum. Other items include old signs, the ornate lights from the original Lakeport Catholic church, knitting machines once used in a local factory, theatre seats from the Lakeport Opera House and even an old beauty salon machine once used to give women permanents in days gone by. A fascinating item in the museum is a huge old wooden plow that was once used to clear snow from the streets in Lakeport. Placed near the plow, a large wooden item that looks like a barrel was actually part of a water intake system in Paugus Bay. Large glass cases protect railroad memorabilia, china, photos and clothing to name but a few of the hundreds of Lakeport related items on display. An old chandelier has become part of the collection, and Robert says they were told it once hung in O’Shea’s (de-

• Lakeport Continued on page 5

isit the Castle and you’ll see.

1914 Arts and Crafts Mansion 5,500 Acres of Trails and Waterfalls KALEIDOSCOPE - Showcasing the Quality and Scope of Student Art from NH University Campuses. Patio Cafe with Sumptuous View On view July 3 through August 22. Join us in the Art Gallery at the Carriage House as we celebrate local NH university students’ amazing works of art. Experience this exciting juried exhibit while getting a glimpse of the rising stars of the New Horseback Riding Hampshire art scene. All works of art in this exhibit will be for sale, with proceeds supporting the artist and Castle Preservation Gift Shop Society. Exhibition and Gallery Reception generously sponsored by Bank of New Hampshire and Leone, McDonnell & Roberts, PA.

603-476-5900 • www.castleintheclouds.org • Moultonborough, NH, Overlooking Lake Winnipesaukee

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The Carriage House Restaurant – Serving lunch daily – 11:30 – 3:30 Enjoy a delicious lunch while taking in the most magnificent views of Lake Winnipesaukee in all of New Hampshire! Executive Chef Gretchen Shortway and her team cook up a variety of delicious meals for any palate! From mouthwatering burgers to gourmet salads, overflowing lobster rolls and our signature Tom Foolery sandwich, you are sure to find something to love at the Carriage House Restaurant. Castle Admission not required for lunch service, enter off of Ossipee Park Road for a restaurant only visit!


June 22, 2015

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• Lakeport Continued from page 4 partment store) in Laconia. Along with the wonderful museum/ former freight station, the Association also has a boxcar that has been placed next to the station. It provides muchneeded additional space for those allimportant yard sale fundraisers. The boxcar is a 50 ft., 40-ton metal car that was moved to its new home in 2008 after the sidetrack at the freight building in Lakeport was repaired. The car was painted at considerable expense with durable paint to withstand rust and the varying NH weather conditions. Those who visit to see the fascinating objects from Lakeport’s rich past will be fortunate should Ginger or Robert be on duty. They have many memories of growing up in the Lakeport area and can tell visitors about the past, such as the Great Lakeport Fire (although it was before their time), how the fire started, what homes and businesses burned and those that were saved, and much more. Robert and his wife took a lot of time to create a huge wall map showing which Lakeport homes and businesses were razed by the Great Lakeport Fire and which were untouched. The map, which is part of the permanent exhibit in the museum, is an amazing look at how fire nearly destroyed an entire community. Get them talking about growing up in Lakeport and you might hear some fascinating tidbits such as Ginger’s recollection of picking bags of milk pods in a local field. The soft and fluffy pods were used during World War II as filling for flotation devices. (Both Robert and Ginger remember collecting scrap metal and other things for the war effort when they were kids.) They can talk about what life was like in a small community during times of trouble and times of celebration.

They speak fondly of Lakeport resident and LCA member, Wanda Tibbetts, who spearheaded much of the effort to save the freight station. Tibbetts passed away shortly before the museum opened and they credit her with the energy and vision to make the project a reality. Lest one assume the Association is focused solely on the Railroad Museum, it should be noted the group also offers a yearly scholarship to a worthy Lakeport student. They also decorate for autumn and Christmas and make things attractive with flower gardens in the local park. “We also have a Santa for kids every holiday season,” says Robert. The activities of the LCA are devoted to community involvement through annual clean up, plantings and decorations of Torrey Park; annual care of the historic chestnut tree in Torrey Park; community events commemorating anniversaries such as the Great Fire of Lakeport 1903 and the 100th Anniversary of the Goss Reading Room; Good Neighbor Day; donations and support of the Goss Reading Room; participating activities and events for local residents including those at Lake Village; restoration and care of Bond Beach; Adopt-A-Spot; ongoing collections of Lakeport and Boston & Maine Railroad memorabilia; programs of interest on local history open to the general public; providing forums for the campaigns of local officials; representing the community’s interest and many other community improvements. Those interested in visiting the Lakeport Railroad Museum can stop by on Wednesdays from 10 am to 2 pm through September; call ahead for group tours. Contact Robert Fortier at 524-3519; Ginger Ryan at 524-1593 or Brenda Moulton at 528-2879. The Lakeport Railroad Museum is located at 5 Railroad Avenue in Lakeport off Elm Street.

New Hampshire Boat Museum Launches Summer Lecture Series The New Hampshire Boat Museum’s first lecture of the summer, titled Governor Wentworth’s Plantation in Wolfeboro: A Window on the Frontier of Early America by Dr. David Starbuck, professor of anthropology at Plymouth State University, will be held on Thurs., June 25 at 7 pm and is free and open to the public. The lecture is supported by a grant from the New Hampshire Humanities Council, in partnership with the National Endowment for the Humanities. Dr. Starbuck’s lecture will look at the impact Governor Wentworth had on the lake named in his honor. The talk will focus on how New Hampshire’s dynamic Revolutionary War-era governor impacted Lake Wentworth and Wolfeboro socially and economically. Starbuck also will speak on the archaeological dig at the Wentworth home site that he conducted in the 1980s. The governor’s plans for intensive farming, land management, and settlement of the area had a huge impact on both Lake Wentworth and Wolfeboro. Modeling his home and plantation after the estates of Yorkshire,

England, the Governor’s property was the grandest in New England. To bring workers and goods to his estate, Governor Wentworth was instrumental in building the first roads to Wolfeboro. He also encouraged settlement of the town. Using archaeology and primary documents, Dr. Starbuck will show how Governor Wentworth’s dream was to make Wolfeboro the summer capital of New Hampshire. The Governor’s dreams were not realized due to his Tory sympathies. During the start of the Revolution, Wentworth and his family fled New Hampshire never to return. However, the work he accomplished greatly affected the development of Wolfeboro and Lake Wentworth. The New Hampshire Boat Museum is open daily for the 2015 season through Mon., October 12 from 10 am-4 pm, Monday through Saturday, and Sunday from noon-4 pm. The Museum is located at 399 Center Street, Wolfeboro Falls, two miles from downtown Wolfeboro in the former Allen “A” Resort dance hall. Contact the museum at 569-4554, museum@nhbm.org, www.nhbm.org or via Facebook.

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June 22, 2015

Welcome to

Wolfeboro

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Collectibles/Consignment Furniture/Home Decor Primitive

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8 South Main Street • Wolfeboro, NH

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Durgin Stables

A taste for style and a flair for elegance

A Flag and Gift Emporium

For Dogs & Cats and the People Who Love them

Gifts and Garden Decor

Natural Foods • Healthy Treats Safe Toys • Unique Gifts

Widest Choice of Sizes & Styles of US Flags

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State, International, Military & Historical Flags

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Custom-Made Flags & Banners Distinctive Gifts Celebrating Flag Culture Authorized Annin Dealer

Daily 10-5:30 •707-7111 25 North Main St., Wolfeboro, NH

15 N. Main St. Wolfeboro Open Daily 10-5 1-800-589-8801 www.FlagsOverWinniP.com Penny Candy Color Ad Final:Layout 1

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Penny Candy Shop FINEDurgin CHOCOLATES 15 North Main Street, Stables PARTY FAVORS Wolfeboro, NH 03894 CORPORATE GIFTS 603-569-9800

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FUN CANDY Fun Candy

FineCHOCOLATES FINE Chocolates PARTY FAVORS Fresh CORPORATE GIFTS Fudge 15 North Main Street, Durgin Stables Party Wolfeboro, NH 03894 Favors 603-569-9800 Corporate www.pennycandyshop.net Gifts

Open Daily All Summer 15 N. Main St. Downtown, Wolfeboro, NH

www.nordicskiersports.com

603-569-3806 • Open Daily

Helium Balloons Sporting Goods & More Unique Custom Gifts Fishing Boats & Tackle Rental Live Bait Rossiter Row Boats

Summer Store Hours: Sun-Wed 5am to 6 pm Thurs-Sat 5am to 9pm 45 N. Main St. | Wolfeboro 603.569.4653 nhholeinthewall.com

BRIDGES’ Cards and Gifts for All Occasions Yankee Candles • Willow Tree Jim Shore South Main St. • Wolfeboro 569-4953 • Open Everyday

New Arrivals Every Friday 25 N. Main St.,Wolfeboro, NH (In Durgin Stables Courtyard)

The little-town bookstore with the big-town selection Books for All Ages Black Bear Coffee Bar Delectable Baked Goods Gelato & Espresso

603-569-6373 Visit us on Facebook for New Styles & Sales Jackie’s Boutique Center Harbor

Main Street • Durgin Stables • Wolfeboro 569-6030 • Open 7 Days a Week


June 22, 2015

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School’s Out! It’s Time for Summer Fun! By Sarah Wright Summertime means lazy days at the beach, followed by ice cream at the docks, but sometimes it’s nice to spend a day without sand between your toes or ice cream on your shirt. There are plenty of fun ideas for the whole family all around the lake this summer. What child doesn’t enjoy Funspot in Weirs Beach? The largest arcade in the world has many classic games and pinball machines, and even bumper cars for the kids. Enjoy bingo, bowling, and a new 18-hole indoor mini-golf course. Challenge yourself at Monkey Trunks, an outside adventure course with zip lines. There’s something for everyone at www.funspotnh.com. Funspot is located at 579 Endicott St. North in Laconia. It’s open every day from 9:00 am until 11:00 pm. Call ahead for Monkey Trunks at 367-4427. More family entertainment is just down the road at the Daytona Fun Park, which has an outdoor climbing course as well as batting cages, bumper boats, and Go-Karts. The Logs of Fun Arcade next door has a 24-foot indoor climbing wall. Located in the Alpenrose Plaza at the Weirs in Laconia, they’re open from noon until dusk, weather permitting. If you haven’t been to Castle in the Clouds yet, put it on your to-do list this summer. Enjoy the breathtaking views of Lake Winnipesaukee from this beautiful, turn-of-the-century mansion. On your way up the mountain, pull over to

see a huge boulder and take the short walk to a beautiful waterfall. Once at the top, you can stroll through beautiful gardens and the kids can feed the giant trout in Shannon Pond. Visit, gift shop and peruse some art in the new gallery. If you get hungry, you can have a delicious lunch or snack at the Carriage House Café. There is also a riding stable on the property, if you’d like to take a horseback or pony ride. For more information, visit www. castleintheclouds.org. The Castle is open daily from 10:30 am to 5:30 pm. My boys love Squam Lakes Natural Science Center and I do, too! It’s an easy nature trail and zoo all in one. Take a walk through the woods and learn about the animals of New Hampshire along the way. There are plenty of

interactive exhibits for kids and adults alike. Pack a lunch or have a bite at the café in Kirkwood Gardens. Don’t miss the river otter feedings at 11:30 am on

PRICING

Drop Ins $10 10 Visits $75 Unlimited Cardio & Circuit $ 39/Mo. or $99/3 Mos. Unlimited Studio Classes Cardio & Circuit All Inclusive $ 59/Mo. or $159/3 Mos.

Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. In July and August, your admission includes Up Close to Animals presentations in the amphitheater, offered at various times throughout the day. See live animals and learn about them from a naturalist educator. Extend your day with a 90-minute cruise of Squam Lake on a canopied pontoon boat, offered through the Science Center for an additional charge. The trails are open from 9:30 am until 4:30 pm. For further information about the lake cruises, visit www.nhnature.org or call 968-7194. If you’re looking for adventure, bring the kids to explore the glacial caves at Polar Caves Park in Rumney. Tour the caves on your own or with a guide to take you through the boulder

• Summer Fun Continued on page 12

NOW OPEN NOW OPEN NOW OPEN NOW OPEN 603-569-YOGA or 603-569-9642

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Monday Wednesday Friday

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Tuesday Thursday Saturday

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June 22, 2015

Your Destination for the Finest Diamonds & Jewelry in the Lakes Region

Celebrating 45 Years of Fine Design & Crafting Cash For Gold & Gems

GIA-Graduate Gemologist

Open Wed. thru Sat. 10 to 5 or by appointment

In the Little Mauve Victorian Rt. 25 At the Lights • Center Harbor

603-253-4100

June 22, Jewelry With a Simple Visual Narrative, lecture by Paulette Werger, 7 pm, free, open to public, League of NH Craftsmen Fine Craft Gallery, 279 Daniel Webster Highway, Meredith, www.nhcrafts.org/localsites/meredith. June 23, A World War II Hero of Conscience: The Sousa Mendes Story – presented by Douglas Wheeler. Lecture about great WWII hero/rescuer Aristides de Sousa Mendes (1885-1954). 7 pm, Wright Museum, Center St., Wolfeboro, free and open to public. 569-1212. June 23, The Shaker Legacy, talk by Darryl Thompson about growing up among the Canterbury Shakers, 7:30 pm, Gilmanton Historical Society, Old Town Hall on Rt. 140, Gilmanton Iron Works. Free, open to public.

Greetings from... The Village of

June 23, Songs of Old NH, Jeff Warner performs repertoire of traditional singer Lena Bourne Fish (1873-1945) of NH. Ballads, love songs and comic pieces, funded by NH Humanities Council, free, open to public, 7 pm, Ashland Railroad Station Museum, 69 Depot St., Ashland, info: David Ruell, 968-7716. June 23-28, The Taffetas, 7:30 pm, Interlakes Summer Theatre, One Laker Lane, Meredith, 707-6035. www.interlakestheatre.com. June 23-July 28, Better Choices, Better Health workshops, 11 am-1 pm, Woodside Building, Taylor Community, Laconia. Lifestyle/health skills, info./ register: 527-7120.

New Hampshire

All Flavors RUSTY MOOSE

Hard and Soft Serve

RESTAURANT 603-855-2012

15 Homestead Place, Alton, NH

(Between Hannaford and McDonald’s, Alton Traffic Circle)

Call Ahead For Reservations

Shibley’s Drive-In Ice Cream

Light American Fare

Patio Dining

Great Selection of Craft Beers bottle and draft Music Every Fri and Sat Night Open: Tues-Thurs & Sat 11am-9pm • Fri ‘til 10pm

875-6611 for Takeout Seafood • Lobster Rolls

Fresh Ground Burgers Daily

Open 7 days 11 am to close

Next to Mini Golf • Alton Bay

875-6363

Deli & Take Out Let Us Put Together A Picnic For You!

Women’s Kayak Tours

Wednesday Nights during the Summer www.rrkayak.com

Old School and Proud of It! Eat A Piece of History - Only at Pop’s!

June 24, 10th Annual Winnipesaukee Wine Festival, benefit Veteran’s Count/ Easter Seals program. Festival at Church Landing, Mill Falls at the Lake, Meredith. www.thecman.com or www.millfalls.com. June 25, Governor Wentworth’s Plantation in Wolfeboro: A Window on the Frontier of Early America, presentation by archaeologist Dr. David Starbuck. NH Boat Museum, free, 7 pm, 399 Center St., Center Street, Wolfeboro Falls, 569-4554, www.nhbm.org. June 25, Laconia Historical and Museum Society hosts Lakes Region Disabled Sports (LRDS), an Adaptive Snow Sport School located at Gunstock Mountain Resort. Free, open to the public, 7 pm, Taylor Community’s Woodside Building, Union Ave., Laconia. RSVP: 524-5600. June 25-28, The Salon, two-act play by Jessica Hoffmann Davis. Meet the hard-working stylist and the whacky clients of Mona Lisa Salon who love and depend on him. 6/25-27: 7:30 pm; 6/28: 2 pm. Little Church Theatre, Rt. 113, Holderness, 968-2250, www.littlechurchtheatre.com. June 26, A Royal Tea Party, children’s tea party with Princess Ballerinas Snow White, Cinderella and Belle. Boys and girls age 4 and up, free, limited space, RSVP: 569-1035, with Wolfeboro Cultural Collaborative Group and Northeastern Ballet Theatre. 10-11:30 am, Libby Museum, 755 N. Main St., Wolfeboro, www.libbymuseum.org.

Rt. 11 • Alton Bay

The best clams, onion rings and burgers on the lake! Enjoy the view from our rooftop deck! Just down the street from the dock. Closed Wednesdays in August

June 24, Shaker Roots Dinner and Auction, In Celebration of Simple Living and the Shaker Legacy, Canterbury Shaker Village, Canterbury, tour, auction, RSVP by June 10, 783-9511, www.shakers.org.

Canoe & Kayak Rentals Just $25 pp per day! ~$10 for kids~

603-875-1000 • www.rrdeli.com Alton Circle • Route 28 South

June 26, Book Signing, Destiny by Carl Howe Hansen 10:30 am-12:30 pm, Bayswater Books, Center Harbor, 253-8858, www.bayswaterbooks.com. June 26, Meredith Rotary Scholarship Golf Tournament, registration 8 am; 9 am shotgun start. Waukewan Golf Club, Meredith. Register: 630-4949, www. meredithrotary.org. June 26, Music in the Pub with Doug Hazard, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, junction of Routes 109 and 113, Center Sandwich. www.cornerhouseinn.com. June 26, Red Molly concert, 7:30 pm, Anderson Hall, Wolfeboro. Folk/ bluegrass. Great Waters Music Festival, 569-7710, www.greatwaters.org. June 26, Small Farmer’s Club for ages 2-6, Get to Know Cows, farm fun for kids with hands-on activities, craft, game and story, 10-11 am. $5/child, parent must accompany child. Remick Country Doctor Museum, 58 Cleveland Hill Rd., Tamworth. 323-7591. www.remickmuseum.org.

Come by boat or car!

June 26, White Mt. Summer Kick Off, Whale’s Tale Waterpark, water fun, live music, roaming comedians, fun for all ages, portion of every admission benefits Life is good Playmakers, 745-8810, www.whalestalewaterpark.net, 481 DW Highway, Lincoln.

$

June 26, Wolfeboro Cultural Collaborative, day long celebration, downtown Wolfeboro, Shrek visits around town, art exhibits, etc. www.northeasternballet.org.

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Mon-Sat 10-10 Sunday 12-10

June 27, Bill Staines folk music concert, Wakefield Opera House, 7 pm, Sanbornville, ticket info: 522-0126, www.wakefieldoperahouse.org. June 27, Celebrate Dairy Month, Remick Country Doctor Museum, Tamworth, historic barn open, tour of farm/milk house, visit with cows, tour is included with $5 museum admission, 10 am-3 pm, 323-7591.


June 22, 2015

Page 9

Now Open! Bringing Joy One Cookie At A Time!

June 27, Hebron Gazebo Concert, Shana Stack Band, free, public welcome, 6 pm, 744-3335, hebrongazebo@gmail.com. June 27, Hooked Rugs in the Gardens, mapped, self-guided wine and cheese tour of gardens with hand hooked rug collection throughout. Benefits Gilmanton Food Pantry and Gilmanton Year-Round Library. Primitive rug silent auction, tickets: $25.00 each: 267-1905, Bittersweet Farm, Gilmanton, 4-8 pm. Rain date: June 28. June 27, Opening Day, Sandwich Historical Society, 10 am-4 pm, all four buildings open for tours, food, maps for auto tour 284-6269, www. sandwichhistorical.org. June 27, Tilton/Northfield Old Home Day, theme: A Historic Tribute to Bert Southwick, the Eggman, parade at 10 am, activities throughout the towns, crafts, food, games and more. 286-4482. June 27, Lakeport Community Association Yard Sale, Lakeport Railroad Museum, 5 Railroad Ave., (off Elm St.) Lakeport, info: 524-3519. June 27-28, Summer Fun Craft Fair, Sat. 10 am-5 pm, Sun. 10 am-4 pm, Tanger Outlets, 120 Laconia Rd. Tilton. www.joycescraftshows.com. June 27-July 1, Ossipee Old Home Week, activities throughout Ossipee. June 27-Oct. 3, Summer Exhibit - North and South: Look to the Mountains, Gaze to the Lake, exhibit of the north area of Sandwich: Weed’s Mills, Whiteface and Quaker neighborhood and south/Squam Lake. Sandwich Historical Society, 4 Maple St., Sandwich, hours/info: 284-6269.

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June 28, Annual Summer Luncheon & Benefit Auction, with guest speaker Willem Lange of NHPTVs Window to the Wild; Loon Preservation Committee, held at Church Landing, Meredith, 11 am-2 pm, reserve: 476-5666, www.loon. org. June 28, Nature Crafts, 1-2 pm, Paradise Point Nature Center, 79 N. Shore Rd., Hebron, 744-3516, www.nhaudbon.org.

Junction of Routes 16 and 25 (Next to McDonald’s) • West Ossipee • Open Seven Days • 539-5700

June 29, Rockin’ Daddios, music of 1950s and 60s, free, open to public, 6:30 pm, Taylor Community, Union Ave., Laconia, www.taylorcommunity.org, 5245600. June 29, Walks & Talks, Bird Watch presented by Bob Ridgely at Castle in the Clouds, Moultonboro. Explore Castle grounds, bird watch, departs from Carriage House at 8:30 am. 476-5414, www.castleintheclouds.org. June 30, The American Schindler, Varian Fry, lecture by Rev. Dr. Virginia Jones-Newton. Fry helped rescue 1,500 people; among those saved were some of the most revered intellectuals, artists, writers, and political dissidents of the 20th century. 6:30 pm, Wright Museum, Center St., Wolfeboro, admission charged, 569-1212. June 30 – July 12, West Side Story, 7:30 pm, Interlakes Summer Theatre, One Laker Lane, Meredith. 707-6035. www.interlakestheatre.com. July 1, Benedict Arnold: Patriot or Traitor? George Morrison traces story of the infamous American icon. NH Humanities Council program, free, open to public, 7 pm, Moultonboro Public Library, 4 Holland St., Moultonboro, 4768895. July 1, Canoe/Kayak Lake Ecology Lesson, kayak/canoe around Newfound Lake to view local flora and fauna, waterfowl, mammals, and reptiles and amphibians. Pre-registration required: 744-3516, Paradise Point Nature Center, Hebron, 2-3:30 pm, fee charged. July 1, Croquet Party Costume Picnic, village green, info TBA/date tentative, call Tamworth Historical Society for updates: www.tamworthistoricalsociety. org. July 1, Fly Fishing with Tom Belluscio and Tim Smith, Sumner Brook Fish Hatchery, Ossipee by Global Awareness Local Action, 539-6460. July 1, Got Butterflies and Hummingbirds? Program with Dana Duxbury-Fox, gardener, butterfly/hummingbird expert, free, open to public, 10 am, Spider Web Gardens, Tuftonboro. Pre-register: 569-5056 or spiderwebgardens@ne.twcbc. com. July 1, 39th Army Woodwind Band concert, 1 pm, performance of inspiring and entertaining music. Free to Wright Museum members; admission charge for nonmembers. Wright Museum, Center St., Wolfeboro, 569-1212. July 1-11, Red, Monday - Saturday at 7:30 pm, 2 pm. Matinees on 7/2, 7/4 and 7/6, Matinee only on 7/4, The Winnipesaukee Playhouse, 50 Reservoir Rd, Meredith. Winner of six Tony Awards, including best play. 279-0333. www. winnipesaukeeplayhouse.org.

Among the Birches pottery by Cynthia Cummings-Birch Featured artist for July Join us Sat. July 11, from 11- 2:00 and meet the artist. Watch how she creates these exquisite pieces.

League of NH Craftsmen Meredith Fine Craft Gallery 279 DW Hwy. • Meredith • 603-279-7920 •www.nhcrafts.org/Meredith Like us on Facebook so you can see other beautiful things made by NH’s finest artists ~ www.facebook.com/nhcraft

Casual Clothing and aCCessories Vera Bradley, Lilly Pulitzer, Eliza B., Leatherman, Woolrich, Columbia, Hatley, Scout

Wolfeboro Casuals Main Street • Wolfeboro • nH (603) 569-5558


Page 10

June 22, 2015

Family Fun Center

July 2, Bird Survey, Ash Cottage, Newfound Audubon Center naturalist walk through habitats to conduct a survey of backyard birds. Pre-registration required: 744-3516, Paradise Point Nature Center, Hebron, 2-3:30 pm, fee charged.

Open Daily 10am - Weather Permitting

July 2, StoryWalk, family activities, refreshments, 10 am, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness, 968-7194, free, open to public, takes place at NH Fish & Game boat launch, Rt. 113, Holderness.

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July 3, A Visit with Abraham Lincoln, portrayed by Steve Wood, program recounts Lincoln’s early life and ends with a reading of the Gettysburg Address. NH Humanities Council program, free, open to public, 3 pm, Meredith Bay Colony Club, 21 Upper Mile Point Dr., Meredith, info: 279-1500. July 3, Ashland 4th of July Fireworks, 9:30 pm at Packard Ball Field on Main Street, Ashland, rain date July 5. July 3, Fireworks, Weirs Beach, 11:59 pm. July 3, John Gorka concert, Anderson Hall, Great Waters Music Festival, Wolfeboro, 7:30 pm, tickets: www.greatwaters.org, 569-7710.

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July 3, John Lorentz Soul Revival Band featuring Miss Sharon “Sugar” Jones, free outdoor concert, Belmont Village Bandstand, downtown Belmont, 7 pm, bring blanket or lawn chair for seating, www.historicbelmontbandstand. org.

Mon - Sat 9-5 Mid May - July 1 Everyday 9-5 July 1 - Columbus Day

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Prescott Farm Environmental Education Center, dawn-dusk, 928 White Oaks Rd., Laconia. Historic farm with 160 acres offers three miles of hiking trails, gardens, bird and wildlife viewing plus barn. Special events and programs throughout the year. Call 366-5695, www.prescottfarm.org. Trails open, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness, 9:30 am-4:30 pm, interactive trail with live animal exhibits. Admission charge; 968-7194, www.nhnature.org. Masonic Breakfast, First Sunday of each month, 7-11:30 am, 35 Trotting Track Road, Wolfeboro. Fresh fruit, omelets made to order, scrambled eggs, hash browns, cereal etc. Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, Monday-Friday 10 am-4 pm., year-round, 58 Cleveland Hill Rd., Tamworth Village. With displays, Capt. Enoch Remick House, workshops, education programs, special events and hearthside dinners. Call 323-7591 or 800-686-6117. Adventures in Watercolor, beginner watercolor class for all ages, groups and families welcome, $20/class, supplies included, ages 7 and up. Runs in July and Aug. Libby Museum, 755 N. Main St., Wolfeboro, 569-1035, www. libbymuseum.org. Forgotten Arts: Fiber Arts Group. Meets every other Tuesday starting May 19 onward, 9:30 am-noon. Fiber artists and/or interested onlookers are welcome to join our Happy Weavers & Friends group to learn the historic art of weaving, spinning, sewing, quilting, and more. Bring a project to work on, if desired. This group meets monthly on an every other Tuesday schedule at Remick Museum & Farm in Tamworth Village. Free. (Does not include access to the Museum.) 323-7591. Silver Lake Railroad, 55-minute, six mile round trip through gorgeous backwoods of Madison. Train rides by donation, depart Silver Lake Depot, Rt. 113 on Fridays at 5 and 6 pm; Saturdays and Sundays at 11 am, 1, 2 and 3 pm. Visit restored 1941 Stirling Diner, Depot Museum. Classic Car Cruise Friday Nights, 6-8 pm. Weather permitting. www.silverlakerailroad.com Belknap Mill, public programs and self-guided tours of the Power House, 1823 historic former textile mill. For hours/information call 524-8813. The Mill Plaza, Beacon Street East, Laconia. Country, Bluegrass, and Gospel Music Jam, Tuesdays, 6:30-9:30 pm, Old White Church, Route 109A, Tuftonboro, across from Tuftonboro General Store and Post Office. Musicians and listeners welcome. Free. Call 569-3861.

Every day is like a story you’ll remember forever! Write your own tale of adventure with a day at Story Land! Scream aboard our unforgettable new coaster, Roar-O-Saurus. Meet real-life storybook characters. Feel the exhilaration of our exciting rides. Take aim with a water cannon. Every moment is an unforgettable chapter in your book of fun family memories. B U Y T I C K E T S O N L I N E AT S T O RY L A N D N H .C O M | 6 0 3 - 3 8 3 - 4 1 8 6 | G L E N , N H

Arts Walk, last Friday of each month, 5-8 pm, self guided tour of galleries and arts locations in Wolfeboro, 569-2762, hosted by Governor Wentworth Arts Council, www.wolfeboroarts.org. Lake Winnipesaukee Museum, Rte. 3, Weirs Beach. Preserving and promoting history of Lake Winnipesaukee and vicinity with memorabilia, photos, maps, models of famous steamboats 1833-1939, posters and photos of grand hotels plus artifacts ranging from Indian arrowheads to Big Band posters. Also lectures and children’s corner. Call for hours: 366-5950, www.lwhs.us. Open for Art, Wednesdays, 6 pm, the Arts Collaborative Teaching Studio, 5 Winona Road, Meredith. Info: www.theartscollaborative.net.


June 22, 2015

Open Mic/Jam Night, Thursdays, 7-11 pm, Hawg’s Pen Cafe, Farmington. All levels, styles, and genres welcome. Info: shadowsoundmusic@yahoo.com. Live Jazz every Thursday at 8 pm, Pitman’s Freight Room, 94 New Salem St., Laconia. Call 494-3334, pitmansfreightroom.com. Creative Women’s Gathering, first Friday of the month, 7 pm, the Arts Collaborative Teaching Studio, 5 Winona Road, Meredith. Projects and themes change each month. Info: www.theartscollaborative.net.

Page 11

7 North Main Street Wolfeboro, NH 569-5331 Check Website for Hours artisanscornernh.com

Fiber Group, Fridays, 1:30-3:30 pm, Shepherd’s Hut Market, 637 Morrill Street, Gilford. Call 393-4696 or email jekeyser@shepherdshutmarket.com. Loon Cruises on Squam Lake, 3 pm, Mondays and Fridays, Squam Lake Project biologist and Squam Lake Natural Science Center captain for 90-min. Loon Cruise. Info: Loon Preservation Committee: 698-7194. Open Mic every Friday at 7:30 pm, The Back Room at the Mill Fudge Factory, 2 Central St., Bristol, 744-0405, themillfudgefactory.com. Loon Preservation Committee Summer Evening Nature Talks, Thursdays from July 9-Aug. 20, 7:30 pm, Loon Center, Moultonboro, free, 476-LOON, www.loon.org. Live Blues every Friday night at 8 pm, Pitman’s Freight Room, 94 New Salem St., Laconia. Call 494-3334, pitmansfreightroom.com. River Otter Feeding, every Mon., Wed., and Fri. at 11:30 am. Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness. See two playful resident river otters enjoy their lunch, hear about otter biology and ecology. Pre register: 968-7194, www. nhnature.org. Explore Squam Cruise, daily 1-2:30 pm beginning May 16, explore Squam Lake, see wildlife aboard canopied pontoon boat, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness. 968-7194, www.nhnature.org. Pre-registration required. Fiber Friends Drop In Group, learn the art of rug hooking or work on other fiber arts projects, meets every other Tues., Gilford Public Library, Potter Hill Rd., Gilford. 10:30 am-12:30 pm, free, info.: 524-6042. Kirkwood Gardens, stroll the garden with many colorful plants and shrubs that naturally attract birds. Free and open to public. Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, 23 Science Center Road, Holderness, 968-7194, www.nhnature.org. Summer/fall programs at Tamworth Historical Society; dates TBA; programs include: Bob Cottrell: Tamworth Barns Talk and Tour; Christine Hadsel Stage Theater Curtains of New England; England 250 Years Ago with Richard Posner; Annual Meeting with Recollections of Tamworth vets and their families. Visit www.tamworthhistoricalsociety.org for updates.

Check Out www.thelaker.com For “What’s Up” In The Weirs!

Meredith Sculpture Walk Guided Tours, meet tour guides at Mill Falls Marketplace Innisfree Bookshop, downtown Meredith on 1 pm on Saturdays in June; July at 11 am on Wednesdays and Saturdays and 1 pm on Sundays (except 7/4). Aug. tours at Saturdays at 11 am and Sundays at 1 pm. 279-9015, email GMP@metrocast.net or www.greatermeredithprogram.com. Trail Clubs, Connecting People With the Mountains, historical exhibit, Museum of the White Mountains, 34 Highland St., Plymouth. www.plymouth.edu/ museum-of-the-white-mountains, 535-3210. Tuesdays, Back Bay Skippers, join the Skippers as they sail radio-controlled Soling 1 Meter model yachts, 1-3 pm. Meets dependent on the weather on the Bridge Falls Path, Back Bay. Wolfeboro. New participants or visitors are always welcome. Info: www.nhbm.org. Wolfeboro Area Farmer’s Market, Thursdays, through Oct. 8, 12:30-4:30 pm, Clark Park, 233 S. Main St., Wolfeboro, variety of produce/craft/food vendors, live music. www.wolfeboroareafarmersmarket.com. Laconia Farmer’s Market, Saturdays, June 21-Sept. 27, 8 am-noon, Laconia City Hall parking lot, Beacon St. East, Laconia, 267-5326. Belmont Farmer’s Market Day, Sundays, June 28-Sept. 20, 18 Mill St., Belmont, fresh local products, children’s activities, live entertainment and demonstrations, 9:30 am-12:30 pm, 998-3525. Ossipee Knit/Crochet meets at the Ossipee Public Library on the second and fourth Friday of each month, 1:30-3 pm. West Ossipee Cruise Night, every Thurs., 6-8 pm, at Yankee Smokehouse, 2345 White Mr. Highway, W. Ossipee, no entry fee, prizes, raffle, food, music and more, www.yankeesmokehouse.com, 539-8125. Sailboat races Thursday evening, Lake Winnipesaukee Sailing Assoc., Gilford, www.lwsa.org, time/location: j80fleet1captain@lwsa.org.

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Page 12

June 22, 2015

maze. You’ll surely understand why New Hampshire is called, “The Granite State!” I would recommend stretching your legs before crouching through the caves, but you can choose to bypass them and wait for the kids at each exit. Children will also enjoy feeding the fallow deer, ducks and pheasants, or finding gems and minerals in the Polar Mining Sluice. An attraction since 1922, Polar Caves won’t disappoint. The caves are open daily from 9:00 am until 5:00 pm. Visit www.polarcaves. com for further information. Experience the open water on board the M/S Mount Washington at Weirs Beach daily, with stops in Wolfeboro,

Meredith, Alton Bay, and Center Harbor on alternating days. Learn some local history from the narrator while you take in the beautiful scenery. On summer evenings, the ship turns into a floating restaurant and nightclub, with a buffet dinner and live music on the dance floor. On Sundays, there are Champagne Brunch Cruises from Weirs Beach and Alton Bay. Kids might also like a ride on the smaller Sophie C., a U.S. Mail Boat. Sit back and enjoy the ride as the mail carrier makes deliveries to the many islands on Lake Winnipesaukee. For a detailed schedule as well as admission prices, visit www.cruisenh.com or call 3665531. I loved taking my kids for a cruise on the Winnipesaukee Belle, a 65-foot

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replica, turn-of-the-century paddle boat that docks in Wolfeboro. Morning, afternoon and evening cruises are available for an hour-and-a-half ride while the captain points out notable facts about the Wolfeboro inlet. For schedule information, visit www.winnipesaukeebelle.com or call 800-4512389. If you’d prefer a train ride along the shores of the lake, the whole family will love a one or two-hour round trip ride on the nostalgic Winnipesaukee Scenic Railroad, built in 1849. Board the train daily on Lakeside Avenue in Weirs Beach or on Main Street in Meredith. Purchase tickets online at www. hoborr.com or call 745-2135. Older kids will have a blast at Gunstock Mountain’s Adventure Park on Cherry Valley Road in Gilford. Open daily from 9 am until 6 pm, take a tour via zip line or Segway, relax on a scenic lift ride, or challenge yourself in the Aerial Treetop Adventure Course with log ladders, bridges, and see saws. There’s also a slack line park, bungee jumping, and a climbing wall. New this summer is a summer tubing attraction and the Stunt Jump where kids (ages 6 and up) and adults can jump from a 12or 20-foot platform into a Zero Shock Stunt Bag. For information about other

activities at the resort or admission rates, visit www.gunstock.com or call 293-4341. If you have young children, bring them to a show at The Interlakes Summer Children’s Theatre in Meredith. This summer, the theatre company will present Pinkalicious the Musical, based on the popular children’s book. Show times are at 11 am on July 3, 5, and 6. Then, on July 17 and 18, come see The Musical Adventures of Flat Stanley Jr., a show about that loveable flat boy from the storybooks. All tickets are just $10. The theatre is located at 1 Laker Lane. For more information, call 707-6035. Why not take the kids camping for a night or two? I like the campsites at White Lake State Park off Route 16 in Tamworth. There’s a great playground and walking trail around the lake, as well as the option to rent canoes, kayaks, paddle boards, row boats, and paddle boats. The lake is a great spot to fish for trout as well. The park is open daily from 8:30 am to 8:30 pm, and you can go for the day and skip the overnight if you like. Call 323-7350 for further information. Pets are not permitted in the park. Remember to pack the bug spray and sunscreen, and have a great summer!

ROCHESTER - FOSTERS DAILY DEMOCRAT

• Summer Fun Continued from page 7

Enjoy Doo-Wop With the Rockin’ Daddios The Rockin’ Daddios will bring you back to a simpler time with songs from the 1950s and 1960s when they perform at the Taylor Community in Laconia on Mon., June 29 at 6:30 pm. Tap your feet and sing along with the American sound of Doo-Wop as memories of sock hops, drive-in theatres and malt shops run through your mind. This free event is open to the public and will be held in Taylor Home’s Atrium in Laconia. Please RSVP by calling 524-5600, Monday through Friday

between 8 am and 4 pm. The Rockin’ Daddios are comprised of Angelo Gentile, Bo Guyer, Jim Rogato and Drew Seneca. The men formed the group after singing together in numerous musical reviews written by director and producer Irene Deschenes. Come and relive the good times of the 1950s and 60s with the Rockin’ Daddios. Visit www.taylorcommunity.org or call 366-1400 for information.

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June 22, 2015

Page 13

Whale’s Tale Waterpark Summer Kick Off Whale’s Tale Waterpark is starting its peak summer season on Fri., June 26, with the all-new White Mountain Summer Kick Off, featuring waterpark attractions, live music and entertainment, and family fun and games. The event benefits the Life is good Playmakers Foundation, with $10 from every $35 ticket sold donated to the organization. In addition to its usual full array of waterpark attractions for all ages, the nationally renowned Jimmy Buffet tribute band, Gary Roland and the Landsharks, will lend a tropical feel to the event, beginning at noon on the Waveside Stage. The band has played with Jimmy Buffet and the Beach Boys, has performed at many top events and venues, including the Super Bowl and Disney World, and was the “house band” at Jimmy Buffet’s Margaritaville at Universal Orlando for two years. For kids of all ages, the Airborne Comedians will be roaming throughout the park, often on their seven-foot unicycles, juggling a cornucopia of objects including lawn chairs, flaming torches, hats, clubs, balls, rings, electric guitars, fruits and random objects from the crowd. The Life is good Playmak-

ers booth will feature hourly kids’ competitions, lawn games and face painting. Life is good Playmakers Foundation’s vision is a world where all children grow up feeling safe, loved and joyful. It partners with frontline professionals such as teachers, social workers and child life specialists who dedicate their lives to helping children overcome poverty, violence and illness. These Playmakers use the power of play to build healing, life-changing relationships with children in their care. Admission includes all waterpark attractions and live entertainment; parking and tubes are always free. “Life is good and our non-profit The Playmakers are thrilled to be a part of Whale’s Tale Waterpark’s White Mountain Summer 6/23-8/30 Kick Off,” commented Life is good partner, Rich Cremin. “Rides, live music, games, prizes and plenty of family fun – sounds like our kind of good time!” “We are excited to welcome this summer’s peak season with some big-name entertainment to complement our full variety of waterpark attractions for every age and thrill level,” stated Jeb Boyd, CEO/general manager of Whale’s Tale Water-

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park and Alpine Adventures. “Obviously, we believe in the power of play, and are pleased to share ticket revenue from the White Mountain Summer Kick Off with an organization that shares that vision, the Life is good Playmakers Foundation.” To reserve tickets for the White Mountain Summer Kick Off, visit whalestalewaterpark.net. Recently voted “best in class” by Aquatics International Magazine, Whale’s

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Junction of routes 3 & 104, Meredith Smorgasbord Homemade Chocolate • Our Famous Make-Your-Own-Sundae (603) 279-6212 www.hartsturkeyfarm.com 10 UNIQUE Gift Shoppes Serving Belgian Waffle Breakfast Sat, Sun & Labor Day 8am - 12noon

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Located Above

Overlooking the Wolfeboro Town Docks GPS: 27 S. Main St. 03894

Wolfe’s Tavern Serving fine food and spirits since 1812

* Valid fromSaturday 11:15am-5:15pm. Please validate with-host/cashier arrival. Max 8am 4 discounts per coupon. & Sunday 8am 10pm • upon Labor Day - 6pm Takeout not included. Not valid Holidays or Friday night buffets. Cannot be combined with other offers. Route 3, Weirs Beach • 603-366-4466 • OPEN ALL YEAR Expires 9/20/15. LKR

www.kellerhaus.com

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Enjoy discounts on draft beers for life and special promotional parties as well!

Are you a General Club Member yet? Generals Club Members receive: • $50 to spend at the Tavern when you earn 500 points. • $10 for the month of your birthday • Several parties throughout the year and much more! Wolfe’s Tavern Serves Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner and an incredible Sunday Brunch! We look forward to serving you!

90 North Main Street, Wolfeboro, NH • Toll Free: 800.451.2389 • wolfestavern.com


Know Before You Go!

Page 14 Your point-and-click dining guide for the Lakes Region.

June 22, 2015

Wolfeboro Cultural Collaborative Celebration Know Before You Go!

DiningOutNH.com

In late 2014, nine local premier arts boro area.” let. Meet the princess ballerinas Snow White, Cinderella and Belle enjoy a tea and cultural organizations met at the The Wolfeboro Cultural Collaborative (WCC) will host a daylong culturparty and dance with the princesses. Wright Museum in Wolfeboro to discuss how they might collaborate on al celebration on Fri., June 26; events Boys and girls ages 4-13 are welcome cultural projects that would promote will take place in multiple Wolfeboro to attend the free event. Reservations .C their organizations and the town of locations including FREE admission to are required;OMcall 569-1035. There will be a free outdoor perforWolfeboro. The Wolfeboro Cultural the New Hampshire Boat Museum, the mance given by The Northeastern BalCollaborative (WCC) was formed and Libby Museum, and the Wright Museum of World War II. Each Museum let Theatre at 7 pm at the 26 Glendon members believe that the town offers a diverse array of cultural opportunities, is open 10 am - 4 pm. For further inStreet studio parking lot. For more information visit www.northeasternbalmaking Wolfeboro a destination for formation about current exhibits, visit tourists and NH residents alike. This nhbm.org, www.wolfeboronh.us (look let.org. for Libby Museum link) and www. The Governor Wentworth Arts Counbelief is reflected in WCC’s vision statement: “to share, encourage, and wrightmuseum.org. cil welcomes you to the monthly ART Yourthe point-and-click dining guide for the Lakes Region. promote rich resources for history, A Royal Tea Party will be held at the WALK, which includes the downtown DiningOutNH.com Libby Museum from 10-11:30 am in Wolfeboro galleries, and select arts loculture and the arts through commucations open until 8 pm. Patrons can nity engagement in the greater Wolfeconjunction with the Northeastern Balenjoy special exhibits, art sales, demonstrations, refreshments and live music. Pick up a free promotional rack card at all the downtown galleries. For more details visit www.wolfeboroarts. .COM org. Great Waters Music Festival will offer coupons good for 50 percent off adYour point-and-click dining guide for the Lakes Region. mission for the June 26, 7:30 pm Red

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Molly concert taking place at Brewster Academy’s Anderson Hall. The free coupons will be available from all nine of the WCC members. For more information visit www.greatwaters.org. Look for everyone’s favorite ogre, Shrek, and his wife, Fiona, as they make a debut appearance around Wolfeboro, shaking hands with the public. The Wolfeboro Cultural Collaborative has created a joint brochure that is available to town visitors and has also been placed in NH Welcome Centers. The brochure contains helpful information about the art, history, music, dance and literary offerings that distinguish Wolfeboro. Founding members of the WCC include: Governor Wentworth Arts Council; Great Waters Music Festival; Wolfeboro Friends of Music; NH Boat Museum; Wolfeboro Public Library; Libby Museum; Northeastern Ballet Theatre; Wright Museum of WWII; and Kalled Gallery.

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June 22, 2015

Page 15

A Freeing Approach To Life By Thomas P. Caldwell Negative experiences often produce a negative outlook on life that people have difficulty breaking away from. Mary Howe said it is not just abuse, trauma, problems with debt, or family commitments that can leave people feeling unhappy and helpless. Even those with good jobs, a supportive family, and a nice home can feel dissatisfied with life, and that dissatisfaction can lead to depression and self-doubt. Mary, who refers to herself as a “success strategist”, said that people need to develop a strategy that lets them choose where to go, rather than letting life’s problems carry them along. “It’s about not being afraid to go through that door,” she said. Mary helps people to set goals and make better decisions in order to create a fulfilling life and career. “I’ve got techniques I use,” Mary said, “but when it comes down to it, I try to make people understand that they deserve happiness and success, and they can let go of the things they drag around with them.” Mary became a life coach in 1997, after having raised a family of five. Trained to listen and advise, life coaches offer the hope of changing a negative outlook and a sense of helplessness into empowerment, teaching people to take charge of their lives, sometimes for the first time. “By listening, observing, and providing feedback,” she says on her website, maryrhowe.com, “Mary guides you, customizing an individualized strategy that will help you more fully realize your potential in virtually every area of your life, from the personal and professional to your health and finances.” Mary offers coaching over the phone, as well as maintaining office space at Riverview Place in Tilton where she can meet with people for

sit-down sessions. She also holds workshops there. But she seems happiest and most productive when leading “circles” at various locations away from her office. Mary tells of leading students at a school in New London on an “earth journey” in which she started by asking them to lie down and take off their shoes, so they could feel the earth and be close to nature. She asked each of them to give his or her name, and then she talked about being connected and disconnected. When she asked who felt connected, no one raised a hand; but everyone raised a hand when she asked about feeling disconnected. Mary led them on a discussion about the world around them, talking about animals and insects, and she said the students got quiet and listened intently. At the end of 40 minutes, the school’s guidance counselor, who was observing, said, “We need this as an extracurricular program, and we need to get the parents on board,” according to Mary. She asked the students to send their reactions, and they responded with descriptions of feeling a “surge of relief” and similar feelings. “And that’s all from one session,” Mary said, adding that the same thing happens with adults. In her work, Mary urges her clients to take responsibility for their lives, “tapping into your inherent resources and creativity to achieve the life that until now you’ve only thought about.” Mary said that, although she began formal training later in life, she has always been empathic. “Children and even adults would talk to me about situations and problems, and my life’s education at a younger age set me up to become a listener.” Mary had grown up on a working farm in Massachusetts where she rode horses and grew her own food, and

when she moved to New Hampshire, horses remained a part of her life. She said she started giving riding lessons in the 1970s, and she found that many of the children who took lessons had “a lot of dysfunctions”. “By being with the animals,” she said, “they could listen. Where they wouldn’t trust a human, being with the horses gradually drew them out. It’s something about the horse energy that helped.” The experience got her thinking about helping others to find emotional wellness. “It was just a time in my own life

where I didn’t know what I was doing,” Mary said. “I didn’t know how to raise a family, but I wanted one, and ended up with five children — real contributors to life, with that kid adventure spirit. I’m blessed with them.” She took a coaching course over the phone over a period of three years in the early 1990s, “with volumes of books” to go along with the classes, a precursor of today’s online classes. That set her on the path to life coaching. “Then I became a single mother and

• Life Continued on page 16


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June 22, 2015

• Life Continued from page 15 I had to feed my kids, so I started doing odd jobs,” Mary said. “I’ve always worked for myself, and I found that what paid the bills was working on the farm with organic farming. I loved being grounded in the earth,” she said. After her father died, she took up neurological linguistic programming, or NLP, a method that has clients visualize their goals, verbalize them, and turn them into behavioral habits. The training was in Sacramento CA and in Nevada. “I was doing circles out there, and planned them to last 45 minutes, but people felt so relaxed, it would be two hours later and I’d finally have to say it’s time to break the circle,” Mary recalled.

She first trained as a practitioner, then as a master, and finally did the trainer level. “I was still grieving for my Dad, and formal learning was always a challenge for me, so I retook the whole thing,” she said. Mary also learned to use hypnosis to help clients overcome pain, anxiety, and stress; and trained in emotional freedom techniques, or EFT, in which the client applies pressure on acupuncture points to relieve the triggers for emotional and physical discomfort, allowing a more balance frame of mind. Mary also has her clients look at the emotional timelines of their lives to understand the chain of events that has led to internal strife and bad behavior. By visualizing themselves standing apart and looking at those events from different perspectives, she said clients are able to adjust their patterns of

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behavior to achieve what they want. The overarching goal is to help people recognize what is wrong, including their own unrealistic expectations and excuses that lead to failure. By turning negative thinking patterns into goal-oriented habits, Mary says people can reawaken their passion for life and, in the process, build stronger relationships with others, while also realizing their goals. “People are overly medicated, and they’re in a hurry or in a knee-jerk mode. When given the easy route, people will take it,” Mary said. “I don’t believe in forcing anything. Sometimes it takes just a word,” she said. “I stress that an open hand holds more than a closed fist.” She also works at eliminating what she refers to as “limiting beliefs”: “The biggest thing holding people back is the fear of walking through a door into something they’re not familiar with.” Those limiting beliefs are often things parents inadvertently teach their children. Repeatedly stressing that something desired is too expensive, or that they should focus on a job they are not interested in, shuts a door in their lives. “Some people are not conscious that they’re in a mess,” Mary said. “They just take it for granted. For me, it’s a good thing to live a little uncomfortably, because it leads them

on. You have to get over yourself, and don’t let something stop you.” Mary has found that giving someone a small rock is a useful tool in making a decision. “Pick up the rock, and flip it over, and examine every decision,” she said. “Flip it over again, and think of another consequence of the decision. It helps to make the right one.” Mary is putting together a group of attorneys, financial planners, and others to form a team that can offer help to families going through a divorce. “I want to see people and children happy,” she said. “Rather than hold onto grudges, we would emphasize a shift so they can make choices for the future and the present moment. Everything is a choice, and my vision is to break that old link that divorce has to be bitter and continuous.” She is especially interested in freeing the children of divorce. “Children will emulate the anger,” she said. “I truly believe that if the parents understand about letting go and learning to cope well without asking the kid to become a spy, it will carry through.” She sums up her lesson this way: “If you’re not aware of what’s out there, how do you know what’s right for you?” (Those who are interested in learning more about Mary Howe’s success strategies may contact her at 735-7714 or mary@maryhowe.com.)

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June 22, 2015

“We Sell the Best of the Lakes Region”

Country Estate TUFTONBORO Outstanding estate majestically set amid 10+ acres of expansive lawns, gardens, fruit trees, surrounded by stone walls and forest! Pristine condition, masterfully restored interior and exterior, finest quality throughout, wide plank floors, fireplaces, in-ground pool, and barn. $1,395,000 (4427885)

Embassy Estates

WOLFEBORO Walk to Carry Beach! Beautiful 4BR home on 4.5 peaceful acres, beautiful gardens, 1st floor master suite, sunroom, large deck with full awning for outdoor enjoyment. $625,000 (4406740)

Let Our Success

Winnipesaukee Views

WOLFEBORO Desirable location, views of Wolfeboro Bay, short walk to town, marina and Sewall Woods! Gracious 3700sf custombuilt home, expanded kitchen, in-law apt, finished lower level. $595,000 (4405933)

Be Your Success!

Your Search for Lakes Region Property Starts with Us! Randy Parker (603)455-6913

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Jane Mooney 15 Railroad Avenue • Wolfeboro, NH 03894 • 800-726-0480 (603)986-2594


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June 22, 2015

Randy Parker (603)455-6913

We Sell the BEST of the Lakes Region Waterfront • Water Access Residential • Land • Commercial

Jane Mooney (603)986-2594

VIEWS

LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE

OSSIPEE LAKE

LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE

WOLFEBORO Post and Beam 3-bedroom Contemporary, open concept, large two story workshop, barn, vast view of mountains and lakes $1,200,000 (4429565)

TUFTONBORO Four-bedroom Contemporary, walk-in beach, grandfathered multiple slip dock, expansive deck with beautiful western exposure. $1,075,000 (4408583)

OSSIPEE Magnificent year round home on peninsula, 505’ shoreline, boat dock, completely surrounded by sand and beautiful sunsets! $799,000 (4358513)

MOULTONBORO Gorgeous 3.4 acres waterfront lot, 135’ shoreline, septic design and dock permit, gravel driveway to clearing. Ready to go! $649,000 (4409520)

COUNTRY LIVING

IN TOWN

WOLFEBORO Stately Victorian with gorgeous wrap-around porch on 1.5 acres, Detail and quality of this home must be seen to be appreciated! $624,900 (4368515)

BALCH LAKE

SANDWICH Custom Victorian, outstanding detail throughout, gourmet kitchen, fireplace, hardwood, stained glass fixtures, porch, guest suite. $595,000 (4398876)

WAKEFIELD Beautiful 4-season home, water and mountain views, boat house with bunk house, 375’ waterfront, great swimming and fishing. $424,000 (4165414)

NEW LISTING

OSSIPEE Wonderful 1900’s New Englander. Great Condition and Great Value! 1.7 acres, over 300’ on Dan Hole River (stream), large deck and in law suite. $149,900 (4428455)

www.LakesRegionLuxury.com 15 Railroad Avenue • Wolfeboro, NH 03894 • 800-726-0480

Fabulous Waterfront Home

If you have always wanted to live on the water, now is the time. This tastefully restored 6-bedroom, 4-bath graciously-appointed Colonial has been totally updated to today’s standards, while retaining the charm of yesteryear. With three-floors of living space on 150 feet of waterfront, private dock and sandy beach, this property boasts restored hardwood floors, several built-ins, crown moldings, gorgeous 3-season porch, and much more. The home also offers aa exterior living space with several decks & tree house. This home is just a short distance to the Falls Path bike/walking trail & Downtown Wolfeboro. All of this is located on Wolfeboro’s Back Bay with direct access to Lake Winnipesaukee. The property is priced well below the assessed value. MLS 4430202 | $549,000

Susan S. Vail, Realtor ®

(781) 307-2996 - direct • (781) 479-4312 - voice mail/fax 15 North Main Street • Wolfeboro 603-569-2533 • (NH) 1-800-621-2533

View this and all Lakes Region Listings at www.newenglandmoves.com


June 22, 2015

Page 19

Gilford Gilford Gilford Gilford

On a sweeping lot with over an acre of land with 215’ prime waterfront, this tasteful, 5-bedroom Governor’s Island home is appealing. Waterside improvements are significant, and the sandy beach makes water access easy. It has a desirable southwest exposure for ever changing and dramatic sunsets. It is a prize! $1,995,000

Gilford

Gilford

One of the most tasteful and quality homes on Lake Winnipesaukee. Sweeping views with a 270’ waterfront, a sandy beach, a double u-shaped dock with a canopy and spacious waterside decking add to outdoor fun. Architecturally designed and constructed to perfection. Spectacular views. $6,888,000

Gilford

- An impressive, architecturally-designed, custom 4-bedroom Governor’s Island home sited to take advantage of picturesque mountain views and beautiful sunsets. There is a sandy beach, large dock and a beautifully landscaped lot. Club amenities include beach, clubhouse, tennis courts, cross country trails and woodlands for hiking. $2,295,000

Meredith

- This tasteful and spacious single level 3-bedroom home shall be built on an outstanding 8 acre lot with dramatic lake and mountain views. Views from the lower level are fantastic. Amenities at Waldron Bay include beach, tennis and clubhouse. What a wonderful spot! $695,000

Sophisticated design, incomparable quality and functionality embraced by timeless architecture this extraordinary home was designed and constructed with perfection. Sited on a sweeping 300’ waterfront lot with ever changing sunsets, the home takes advantage of picturesque lake views. $4,395,000

Gilford

On a phenomenal 1.2 acre, level waterfront lot with glorious views this Governor’s Island home is special. There are two first-level bedrooms, private office, dining area, eat-in kitchen and spacious Gathering Room. Second level has three bedrooms and a large and sun-filled family room. $2,795,000

Moultonborough

Gilford - On a wonderful, private Moultonborough-

Sanbornton

Gilford - This lovely and tastefully Laconia - This delightful 2-bed-

This impressive estate property has 5.3 acres and 200’ waterfront. It has a charming main home, a guest house, a 2-bedroom Carriage House, waterside patios, new U-shaped dock, and a new 28’x50’ two story storage garage which has heat and central air. This property is ideal for an extended family, friends and guests. $2,149,000

- An historic 4-bedroom country home that is sunfilled and loaded with charm. Beautifully restored and maintained to perfection this home is surrounded by perennial gardens, patios, rolling lawns and glorious lake and mountain views. $639,000

lot with a picturesque southeasterly exposure, this comfortable, single level 4-bedroom home is truly charming. The dock is U-shaped with canopy. There’s sandy and safe swimming. This is a fantastic property in a prime location! $1,795,000

decorated 2-bedroom plus loft end unit at Samoset has been beautifully maintained and is exceedingly private. The oversized deck and screened porch are surrounded by mature landscaping. It is being sold furnished. $249,000

Susan Bradley Realtor®, CRS, ABR, GRI

Direct: 603-493-2873 email: susanbradley@metrocast.net | www.SueBradley.com 348 Court Street, Laconia, NH 03246 | 603-524-2255 ext. 2810

You will be impressed with the design and flexible floor plan at this lovely, Winnipesaukee Lake Home. Surrounded by impressive perennial gardens, meandering walkways, stunning stone patios, a sugar-sand beach and dramatic lake and mountain views this stylish home will appeal to the discerning buyer. $1,495,000

room condo has a wonderful, private setting. Step out to a patio overlooking a large expanse of lawn. It has 2 secondlevel bedrooms and 2 baths. Main level has a living room with fireplace and a spacious sun filled kitchen. One bay garage for car or storage. $149,900


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June 22, 2015

C elebrating Over 60 Years!

A tradition of trust-over 60 years of Maxfield Real Estate in the Lakes Region Luxury Real Estate

MOULTONBOROUGH- Impeccable contemporary overlooks Lake Winnipesaukee, open interior, huge master, indoor swim spa, wrap around deck, plus complete guest cottage. Amenities include beach rights and boat slip. $1,295,000 (4215914) Call 569-3128

EAST ALTON- Amazing Winnipesaukee views from this attractive lake house at the tip of Black Point, numerous custom features, breakwater dock, includes abutting waterfront building lot.

WOLFEBORO- Magnificent Lake Wentworth waterfront custom built home on over 3 acres. Enjoy privacy and beautiful views from your deck; dock for your boat and guest house with screen porch.

$1,125,000 (4399704)

$899,000 (4414965)

Call 569-3128

WOLFEBORO- Fantastic views from this private water access home on Lower Beech Pond with shared dock + beach. Large quality built cape with fireplace, patio, porch, generator and much more. $599,000 (4411893) Call 569-3128

NEW DURHAM- Spectacular year-round 3-Bedroom Merrymeeting Lake waterfront contemporary home. Two fireplaces, nice decks, patios and dock with 140’ of waterfront.

MOULTONBOROUGH- Perfect Family Home! Very private location with spectacular views and your own pond. Home is in impeccable condition with a very flexible floor plan.

$575,000 (4378376)

$469,900 (4421062)

WAKEFIELD- Pine River Pond 3-level seasonal home with 110’ of sandy beach, boat dock and 225’ on the road. Varied terrain. Views from Deck!

MOULTONBOROUGH- Beautiful 3-bedroom Lake Winnipesaukee water-access home, open concept, gourmet kitchen. hardwood floors, cathedral ceilings, master suite, new addition, 800’ sandy beach and boat ramp. Come enjoy! $279,900 (4395011) Call 569-3128

$359,000 (4411110)

Call 875-3128

Call 875-3128

TUFTONBOROStunning post and beam Cape with views and nearby deeded access to Mirror Lake, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, custom details throughout, moor your boat and enjoy this beautiful lake. Call 253-9360 $469,000 (4406824) Call 569-3128

OSSIPEE- It’s all about the BEACH AND THE VIEWS at the Bluffs/Ossipee lake access. Year ‘round family home for endless fun. Updates, roomy and comfortable. $239,000 (4388150)

Call 569-3128

OSSIPEE- Beautiful waterfront lot with dock on Broad Bay of Ossipee Lake. Cozy 3-season cottage for use right now or remove and build your 2-bedroom waterfront home.

Call 569-3128 $229,000 (4176839)

Community involvment. We understand that the fabric of our communities and the well being of our residents are important to our well being as a company. On our 45th anniversary we established a charitable program called “We Care” to help support the communities that support us. Through “We Care” we donate 1%-2% of each commission to a local charitable or not-for-profit organization. Yearly donations exceed $40,000. Some beneficiaries of “We Care” are: Habitat for Humanity, Wolfeboro Area Children’s Center, The Nick Recreation Park, Squam Lakes Association, Loon Preservation Society, Appalachian Mountain Teen Project, Lakes Region Humane Society, Great Waters Music Festival, Meals on Wheels, Options for Women, etc...

Call 569-3128

MaxfieldRealEstate.com

• We Care Program: 1%-2% of all commissions are donated to local charities and not-for-profits. Program established in 1999 on our 45th Anniversary.

MADISON- Totally renovated and brand new this 2-Bedroom, 2-Bath log-sided home is on .49-acres. Walkout basement, laundry room, and woodstove on lower level. Private beach rights. $179,000 (4425150) Call 253-9360

ALTON BAY- This is a great little camp, everything is newly renovated, it comes completely furnished! Beach rights on Sunset Lake and Hill’s Pond.

WOLFEBORO- WATERFRONT LOT– Build your dream home on this peaceful and tranquil 1+ acre parcel with 160’ of waterfront on Sargents Pond. $118,500 (4048863) Call 569-3128

EFFINGHAM- Pine River Rd: Generous 5.78 acre lot convenient to Rt 16 North/South corridor for commuting & shopping. Lot abuts 48 acre common woodlands along the Pine River. $29,900 (4419718) Call 569-3128

MOULTONBOROUGH- Build your dream home on this partially cleared and secluded lot with private Winnipesaukee water access. Enjoy the mountain views, the association amenities and its prime location. $85,000 (4426236) Call 253-9360

WAKEFIELD- Wooded .93-Acre lot with access to beach on Pine River Pond. Location close to Route 16. $20,000 (4228971) Call 875-3128

$113,000 (4407254)

Land and Acreage

Maxfield Real Estate has been bringing people and homes together for over 60 years. Explore the thousands of properties now being offered in the Lakes Region and beyond from the comfort of your own home.

• Service on local committees and Boards of Directors: Habitat for Humanity, Great Waters Music Festival, The Humane Society, The Kingswood Youth Center, The Wolfeboro Area Children’s Center, American Red Cross, etc...

MaxfieldRealEstate.com is the go-to site for buyers and sellers, with a wealth of information and resources to meet all your needs. Just one Free Marketmore Analysis Offer reason why Maxfield is Let Maxfield Real Estate’s knowledge and experience work for you without any cost or obligation. For a FREE estimate of the Market Value of your Lakes Region property, simply complete and return theOffice best. this information to Maxfield simply Real Estate, Post Box 738, Wolfeboro, NH 03894

• Sponsorship of youth athletic teams such as Little League and girls basketball.

Name Address City Zip Code

State Telephone Number

Interested in renting your property check here.

Call 875-3128

15 Railroad Avenue, Wolfeboro (603) 569-3128 Junction Routes 25 & 25B, Center Harbor (603) 253-9360 108 Main Street, Alton (603) 875-3128 V I S I T U S A T M A X FV I EV I SLIID STIRTU EA U S LSAET A S TM AM A TA E X.X FCIFE OI LEMD LD RR ELA EUA LXELUSER TS A Y TR T AE T .A EC.LC O EO M ST MA TL EU LN U XH X U.U RCY ROR YMR EA EA L EL SETS A TT AE TN EN HH . C. CO OMM

15 Railroad Ave., Wolfeboro 603-569-3128 Junction Routes 25 & 25B, Center Harbor 603-253-9360 108 Main St., Alton 603-875-3128


June 22, 2015

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d

Promoting The Lakes Region Worldwide . . . FourSeasonsSIR.com

Your search starts here . . . FourSeasonsLakesRegion.com

D’VINE FARM

Quintessential country estate - no expense spared to create this unique property.The main residence offers 3 levels of space with a warm and inviting feeling for entertaining family and friends plus heated in-ground pool just steps away. Comfortable and private nanny suite over the garage.The 3 level entertainment barn offers a dining area which will comfortably seat 100 on the main level, a sizeable familyroom, den and office, huge wine cellar/tasting room on the lower level, gigantic stone patio with fieldstone wood burning fireplace and pizza oven. Steve Patriquin - 603.387.2532 | WOLFEBORO, NH | $3,250,000

STUNNING CAPE

Built in 2006 with 152’ of sandy beach on Lake Winnipesaukee sits this home on 1.3 acres with 4 bedrooms. Ruth Neidhardt - 603.455.0176 Brian Neidhardt - 603.738.3798 TUFTONBORO, NH | $1,550,000

WINDSONG

You’ll never tire of the panoramic views from this stunning high quality Frank Lloyd Wright inspired home. Roy Sanborn - 603.455.0335 Ashley Davis - 603.455.7110 ALTON, NH | $1,295,000

Meredith

3 Main Street 603.677.7012

1800’S FEDERAL

Beautifully landscaped grounds, cozy eat-in kitchen, library with a fireplace, and 3 season porch all on 2.74+/- acres. Mary Anne Baron - 603.491.4624 MOULTONBOROUGH, NH | $625,000

SQUAM RIVER LANDING

Be part of this exciting new sustainable living community overlooking the Squam Watershed and the marina close by. Paula Hinckley - 603.566.6608 Carl Sack - 603.566.2386 ASHLAND, NH | $411,000 to $800,000

MOOSE MOUNTAIN ROAD

Cedar shingled Contemporary on 85 wooded acres, low maintenance natural landscaping, 4 bedrooms, and chef’s kitchen. Steve Patriquin - 603. 387.2532 BROOKFIELD, NH | $659,000

Local Expertise, G lobal Exposure FourSeasonsLakesRegion.com Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated.

MANSION ROAD

$500,000 price reduction for summer sale! 5,000 square foot home on 16 acres with a pool, 2 barns, and indoor ring. Ashley Davis - 603.455.7110 Roy Sanborn - 603.455.0335 DUNBARTON, NH | $1,995,000

New London 259 Main Street 603.526.4050


June 22, 2015

s n i a a t r n u e Cal o M l in e h

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Historic Cleveland Hill Road 62 acres, Fields and Woods Incredible Mountain Views 3-bedroom, 3-bath, Classic Summer House Original features throughout Tamworth - $360,000 Listing Agent – Lisa Wardlaw

1800’s Antique Colonial & Barn Original details throughout 3-bedrooms, 4-bath, Country Kitchen Formal living and dining room 3-Season porch, lovely gardens Grand views of Squam Lake 1 Bedroom Guesthouse Center Harbor - $850,000 Lisa Wardlaw – Listing Agent

Multi-Level Custom Contemporary 5-bedroom, 3 -bath, 7721 Sq. Ft. Finished basement, storage galore 5 Acres with stunning views 5 Car garage, Entertainment patio Close to PSU and Holderness School Holderness - $760,000 Cynthia Melo – 603-393-9060

2015 Marks our 70th year of serving the Lakes Region 249 Whittier Highway - Route 25 Center Harbor, New Hampshire Office (603)253.8131 • Toll Free (800)834.5759

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LAKE WINONA. Inviting 3-bedroom getaway w/ warm wood throughout, 1.10+- acres, 100’ sandy beach, gorgeous views, babbling brook and privacy. Sun all day, swim dock, large deck and a special setting on this glacial lake. Brick hearth w/stove, family room and a great investment! $444,900 Debbie Tarlentino 491-5404

ELEGANTLY RESTORED 1900s craftsman style property with every convenience. 5+ bedrooms, main house, in-law quarters, original woodwork, fieldstone fireplace, expansive screened porch, 2-car garage and another barn/garage for storage. 2.56 acres with 3+- acres also available. Gorgeous. $289,900 Kristin White 520-4352

OSSIPEE LAKE. Enjoy all the seasons! Beautifully built red cedar log home w/lake access and a culde-sac setting, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, sun room, master suite, wood stove, gas fireplace and 4.96 acres with nothing behind you. Site is VA approved PUD. $234,900 Steve Banks 387-6607

TASTEFULLY DESIGNED and created 4-Bedroom, 4-bath Moultonborough home with privacy, easy access and spectacular views. Wonderful great room, expansive deck, screen porch, 1st fl master, craft room and in-law apt or home office. Garages for 4 cars and 9+- acres. $499,900 Scott Knowles 455-7751

COMMERCIAL PARCEL is the largest of its kind in Meredith. Views of Winnipesaukee, Lake Waukewan and the mountains beyond. countless uses permitted. Extensive amount of preliminary engineering available. $695,000 Kristi Johnson 387-6903

WINNIPESAUKEE BOAT SLIP near the finest beach on the lake! Central location for traveling thru-out the lake! Protected slip in a marina with all the conveniences, ships store, fuel dock and rentals allowed! $45,000 Steve Banks 387-6607

OVERLOOKING LITTLE SQUAM LAKE. 1+ acre lot w/western exposure, incredible views and awesome sunsets. Deeded access to 450+- ft. association beach and recreation area. Surrounded by lovely homes. $220,000 Chris Kelly 677-2182

LAKE and MT. VIEWS from this lot located on a private cul-de-sac in a very special Winnipesaukee access community. Private beach club with pool, beach, cabanas, hot tub, fire pit and more! Boat slips are available. $192,500 Scott Knowles 455-7751

208 Daniel Webster Hwy, Meredith, NH | 603-279-0079 • 423 Main Street , Laconia, NH | 603-527-8200

32 Whittier Highway • 603-253-4345 (NH) 1-800-639-4022 centerharbor.nh@nemoves.com

CENTER HARBOR WOLFEBORO MOULTONBOROUGH Situated on Dog Cove with 473’ of Lake Winnipesaukee classic! Remark- An exceptional value on Lake Winnipesaushoreline and 12.28 acres, Squam Lake. able views, oversized covered dock. kee. Three-fingered dock and sandy beach. $ 3,475,000 #4413684 $3,425,000 #4397768 $499,000 #4326919 WoLfeboro 15 North Main Street • 603-569-2533 (NH) 1-800-621-2533 wolfeboro.nh@nemoves.com

OSSIPEE TUFTONBORO Three bedroom Gambrel home in pictur- Restored 1810 cape on 3-acres. Period esque Melvin Village. With attached 2-car features include bee hive oven in fireplace, garage, landscaped lot and “all new every- lovely restored wood floors. All major systems updated. New garage. thing” this is a turn-key property! $194,900 (#4428356) $229,000 (#4384219)

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Gilford Wonderful, private location for this fantastic waterfront property. $1,795,0000 #4430100

BRISTOL 800 ft. of frontage on Pemigewasset River, 3.3 acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. $299,000 #4413982

Gilford Two Bedroom Samoset condo on Lake Winnipesaukee. $259,000 #4430130

Laconia Meredith Newly remodeled 3-bedroom Boathouse Ten room Contemporary Cape with dock with gorgeous views. and beach access. $399,000 #4412550 $349,900 #4386299

View these and all Lakes Region Listings on our Web site! www.newenglandmoves.com


June 22, 2015

Page 23

The Ultimate Winnipesaukee Experience

34 North Main St., P.O. Box 2180 Wolfeboro, NH 03894 • 603-569-4488 www.melansonrealestate.com

Excellent location for this summer camp!! Nestled on the shore of Whortleberry Island, tucked back from boat traffic and wind. Level lot, grassed front yard. Large 36’ deck with hot tub. Spacious living area, eat at bar in kitchen, two bedrooms, plus sleeping nook. 125’ waterfront with two docks. Plenty of sun and fantastic views of surrounding islands and Ossipee Mountains. Just $299,500 WOW!

FREEDOM: Amazing, TUFTONBORO: It’s open concept Con- all here with this temporary, first-floor one! Wonderful spamaster-suite, radiant cious, year round heat, wood floors, Winnipesaukee wamodern kitchen, terfront home with stone fireplace, deck, full, finished, walk heated garage, shared Ossipee Lake waterfront in Pine out lower level, sun room, 2 fireplaces, charming waterLanding just a walk away and includes: deeded mooring, side guest cottage, natural sandy beach, dock, and all in desirable Winter Harbor. $1,800,000 MLS # 4403908 day dock, clubhouse, sandy beach and more. $479,000 MLS # 4424712 W O L F E B O R O : WOLFEBORO: PotenLocated on Winni- tial is here! Live, pesaukee in Winter have income and Harbor, this terrific enjoy the lake, all waterfront home in one property! has an open concept 3-bedroom Main main floor, fireplac- house, 2-unit apartes inInc. family room and room, a kitchen delight mentAnbuilding, two 2-bedroom cottages, 2-lots Photo @2014, Michael Travis ©2014 Prudential Spencer-Hughes Real Estate is an independently owned and operated member of BRER Affiliates Not affiliated with living Prudential. Prudential markstoused under license. Equal Opportunity Employer.seasonal Equal Housing Opportunity. any chef, 3-season room, deck, terraced patios, sandy of record, 240’ on Goodwin’s Basin, 65’ on Crescent Lake 35 Bay Street Wolfeboro swim area, crib dock with awnings, amazing sunsets too. with sandy beach & dock, direct access to walking trails 603.651.7040 | 603.569.3972 $1,495,000 MLS #4423802 to town too. $695,000 MLS # 4386975

September 22, 2014

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45 Suncrest Dr., Wolfeboro $1,129,000 Roberta Takis • (603) 986-1855 MLS 4420899

280 Cleveland Hill, Tamworth $3,800,000 Aimes Oickle • (603) 520-7014 MLS 4430629

4 Prospect Hill, Tuftonboro $377,000 Fae Moore • (603) 833-0644

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59 Furber Lane, Wolfeboro $599,800 Jodi Hughes-Emerson • (603) 455-9533 MLS 4420239

82 Lakewood Drive, Alton $425,000 Roberta Takis • (603) 986-1855

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85 Square Hill, Wolfeboro $796,000 Fae Moore • (603) 833-0644 MLS 4368026

304 Red Hill, Moultonborough $2,498,000 Jodi Hughes-Emerson • (603) 455-9533

22 South Main St., Wolfeboro, New Hampshire • 603-569-6060

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We will become a Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Office, Summer 2015 ©2015 Prudential Spencer-Hughes Real Estate is an independently owned and operated member of BRER Affiliates Inc. Not affiliated with Prudential. Prudential marks used under license. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Equal Housing Opportunity.


Page 24

June 22, 2015

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Celebrate the Fourth on the M/S Mount The official 2015 daily cruising season Celebrate Independence Day and enjoy for the M/S Mount Washington, and her fireworks displays over the lake during sister vessels, runs until October 18, the M/S Mount Washington July 4th offering daily cruises from its summer Fireworks Party Cruise. Every year, Lake port of Weirs Beach and servicing the Winnipesaukee community members ports of Alton Bay, Center Harbor, create their own fireworks displays and Meredith and Wolfeboro. Cruising times M/S Mount Washington guests have the and options vary depending on the season best vantage point to enjoy the show. with July and August having the most The Fireworks Party Cruise on Sat., cruises available. Options include daily July 4, features a dinner buffet, live scenic, evening dinner dance and island entertainment by local favorite band Annie mail delivery cruises. and the Orphans, and a scenic three-hour To learn more about the various vessels cruise. The ship departs from Weirs Beach (Mount Washington, Doris E. & Sophie at 7 pm and returns around 10 pm after C.) and to view a complete schedule with the Meredith fireworks. Advance tickets cruise times and ticket prices, visit www. are recommended as the cruise typically www.thelaker.com cruisenh.com orWhat-To-Do call 366-5531. Guide sells out. Your Where-To-Go, for the Lakes Region

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Meredith Rotary Scholarship Golf Tournament Set for June 26 The eighth annual Meredith Rotary Scholarship Golf Tournament will take place at Waukewan Golf Club in Meredith on Fri., June 26. All proceeds will benefit the Meredith Rotary Scholarship Fund. The tournament will start with registration at 8 am, followed by a 9 am shotgun start. Fees are $100 per person and include greens fees, cart, continental breakfast, lunch, prizes and special contests. There will be a special $500 Closest to the Pin event at the end

of the tournament. Meredith Village Savings Bank, which has been a supporter of the golf tournament from its inception, will be the major sponsor again this year. Additionally, Dixon Golf will provide two free airline tickets to the winner of the Hole in One contest. “We are starting a new tradition in 2015 with the introduction of the Company Championship Award,” according to Bob Kennelly, chairman of the Golf Committee. “The name

of the winner will be inscribed on the Rotary Plaque that will be on permanent display at Waukewan Golf Club.” Pre-registration for the golf tournament is recommended. For

information and registration, call Bob Kennelly at 630-4949 or Justin Barkley at 279-6661. Additional information can be found at www.meredithrotary. org.

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June 22, 2015

Colleen Eliason as Coco, one of the loyal customers of The Salon.

The Salon The Salon, by Jessica Hoffmann Davis, will take place at the Little Church Theater in Holderness from June 25-27 at 7:30 pm and on Sun., June 28 at 2 pm. The play introduces stylist Mario at Mona Lisa Salon and his wacky clients who love and depend on him. Why is it that the minute the hairdresser puts his hands on their heads, his clients start talking…often about their most intimate secrets? The Salon features a talented cast of local actors including Dan Mitchell, Ursula Boutwell, Lisa Lovett, Colleen

Eliason, Lisa Travis, Elizabeth Kendall and Ken Chapman. From makeover to upkeep, The Salon offers two acts of color and cut, laughter and tears. Writer and director of The Salon, Dr. Jessica Hoffmann Davis, lives in Holderness. This is the 12th season of summer performances at The Little Church Theater on the shores of Squam Lake in Holderness. Tickets can be purchased online at www.littlechurchtheater.com or by calling 968-2250 or via email at info@littlechurchtheater.com.


June 22, 2015

Page 27

Local Author Book Signings Carl Howe Hansen has lived in many places, but when asked, he answers that he “grew up” in New Hampshire. He is a musician, technician, sailor, and cabinetmaker, but always a writer. His first novel, Destiny, got off to a rough start. In 1978, while he wandered the bazaar of Tangier, Morocco, a knife-wielding thief stole his bag containing the first handwritten manuscript. Eventually he settled in New England, returning to Sandwich, NH, to live and work, and to the coast of Maine to sail his boat. Along the way, he managed to find the lost works of Destiny and make them appropriate for today. Bayswater Books of Center Harbor is pleased to host Carl Howe Hansen for a book signing on Fri., June 26 from 10:30 am-12:30 pm. On Sat., June 27, author Andy Opel will sign copies of his newest book, The Mansion, A Winnipesaukee Mystery, from 11 am-1 pm. (Opel’s other books, The Witches and The Weirs will also be available.) From the author/illustrator team that produced the award-winning children’s book, The Witches: A Winnipesaukee Adventure, comes the third book in the Winnipesaukee Adventures series and this time it’s a mystery. Join Jack, Franny and J.J. as they learn about how the lake used to be and Grammy tells them a spooky story about when she was a little girl. Drawing on actual Winnipesaukee

history, The Mansion reminds readers of a simpler time on the lake when extended families shared small vacation cottages for family fun. Back then, large houses were rare and one that stood out was the old Hutchins Mansion on Governor’s Island. (Stilson Hutchins was born in Whitefield, NH, and gained fame as the founder of The Washington Post. In 1885, he built a mansion on Governor’s Island. After years of hosting many dignitaries, including German Ambassador Baron Von Sternburg, the Hutchins family sold the house in 1920. The house fell into disrepair during the Depression, and many people believed the place was haunted. The mansion burned to the ground in 1935.) Andy Opel and his family have been coming to Lake Winnipesaukee for five generations and family stories and traditions are his inspiration for his books. Andy worked closely with his mother, Jane Opel, to develop the newest addition to the Winnipesaukee Adventures series. Jane passed away in April of 2013 and this story is based on an adventure she had with her cousins when she was a little girl. Jane’s grandmother brought her to the lake as an infant, establishing a long tradition of grandmothers making special things happen at the lake. For illustrator Karel Hayes, The Mansion is her 27th children’s book and the third project where she has

Come Discover Terrific School System • Quiet Country Feel 45 minute commute to Seacoast or Mountains 10 Minutes to Wolfeboro, Ossipee and Wakefield Shopping, Restaurants & Numerous Activities Reasonable Tax Structure • Lovely State Parks

collaborated with her son, John Gorey. Karel is well known for her Summer Visitors series published by Down East Press. Can’t make it to the book signings?

Call 253-8858 to special order copies and Bayswater will have them signed for you. Check out other author events at Bayswater on Facebook and at www. bayswaterbooks.com.

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Page 28

June 22, 2015

Kaleidoscope at Castle in the Clouds vation Society. The entrance to the Carriage House Art Gallery is via Ossipee Park Road. Castle in the Clouds is located off Route 171 (455 Old Mountain Road) in Moultonboro. Take Route 25 into Moultonboro, then south on Route 109 to Route 171 and follow the signs to the Castle entrance. Castle in the Clouds is a non-profit organization owned and managed by the Castle Preservation Society and dedicated to the interpretation and preservation of the historic Thomas G. Plant Estate. For information visit www.castleintheclouds.org or call 476-5900.

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Docents who have been trained about the background of the various sculptures placed in Meredith’s village and parks will lead tours of the Meredith Sculpture Walk this summer. There will be 27 new pieces displayed along with five returning pieces from last year. This is an opportunity to learn more about the public art that has been installed by the Greater Meredith Program. Docents will explain the thoughts of the artists while they were creating the different pieces and also the materials and construction that was used. Tours will leave from the Mill Falls Marketplace in front of Innisfree Bookstore on Saturdays at 11 am in June. In July, tours will be given on

y Goo d o o

D on t s u

Wednesdays at 11 am, Saturdays at 11 am (except July 4), and Sundays at 1 pm. In August they will be offered at 11 am on Saturdays and 1 pm on Sundays. Special group tours can be arranged by emailing gmp@metrocast.net or calling 279-9015. The Greater Meredith Program (GMP) is a non-profit community economic development organization seeking to enhance economic vitality, historical and cultural heritage, and town-wide beautification. For more information about GMP or volunteer opportunities, call 2799015, email GMP@metrocast.net or visit www.greatermeredithprogram. com.

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Castle in the Clouds opens it second art exhibit of the season, Kaleidoscope, on Thurs., July 3 with a gallery reception on Sun., July 5 at 5:30 pm at the Carriage House Art Gallery. The exhibit offers a glimpse of the rising stars of the New Hampshire art scene. Each work displayed in the exhibit was hand selected by the Castle’s exhibition committee. During the opening reception, enjoy complimentary wine and crudités as you speak with some of the artists whose work is displayed. Most works of art in the exhibit will be for sale, with proceeds supporting the artist and the Castle Preser-

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June 22, 2015

Page 29

Three Properties Added to NH State Register of Historic Places The New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources announces the State Historical Resources Council has added three more properties to the New Hampshire State Register of Historic Places. The State Register helps to promote the significance of many historic properties across New Hampshire. The most recent additions include the Reuben Whitten House, the Bristol Fire Station and the Samuel Haley Farm. The Reuben Whitten House in Ashland is a modest building with an unusual story. In 1816, known as The Year Without a Summer, there was snow in June and killing frosts every month. Despite these weather challenges, Whitten managed to raise 40 bales of wheat on a southfacing slope at his farm and dry it on the hearth of his house. He shared this bounty with his neighbors, many whose crops had failed, and he is still remembered for his generosity nearly 200 years later. The Bristol Fire Station served as the first purpose-built fire station in town from 1889 to 1974. It is a physical representation of Bristol’s growth and the need for and expansion of town services. Now home to the Bristol Historical Society, the building retains its 19th century hose-drying tower as well as the 1953 addition that was built to accommodate new equipment. The Samuel Haley Farm in Epping is

an excellent example of the evolution of a family farmstead from 1765 through the 1950’s. It includes many outbuildings as well as a farmhouse that still has its original 1760’s Georgian framing, Federal style details from the 1830’s and Greek Revival style updates from the 1850’s. Highly productive in the 19th century, the farm’s land and buildings encompass the history of agriculture in Epping. Anyone wishing to nominate a property to the New Hampshire State Register of Historic Places must research the history of the nominated property and document it fully on individual inventory forms from the New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Having a property listed in the Register does not impose restrictions on property owners. For more information, visit www.nh.gov/ nhdhr. New Hampshire’s Division of Historical Resources, the State Historic Preservation Office, was established in 1974. The historical, archeological, architectural, engineering and cultural resources of New Hampshire are among the most important environmental assets of the state. Historic preservation promotes the use, understanding and conservation of such resources for the education, inspiration, pleasure and enrichment of New Hampshire’s citizens. Visit www.nh.gov/nhdhr or call 271-3483.

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Hebron Gazebo Summer Concerts The Hebron Gazebo Committee announces a schedule of concerts for the summer. Performances take place on Saturdays at 6 pm. on the green in Hebron Village in the Newfound area. Starting off the season on June 27 is the Shana Stack Band playing country favorites with a barbecue by Newfound Pathways. Postage Due will play on July 4, with music from the 1960’s and 70’s. A barbecue will take place courtesy the Hebron Village Store. Club Soda, a popular Lakes Region band, will perform on July 11 with a barbecue offered by the Hebron Historical Society and desserts by Cabin Fever. On July 18, the Freese Brothers Big Band will perform. The Hebron Village Store offers the barbecue. Closing out the Gazebo Program series on August 22 is Family Fun Day with many events scheduled. Starting at 11 am, there will be a Hebron Conservation Commission Hike, followed by a popular Cribbage Contest at 2 pm; anyone wishing to enter a dessert for the dessert contest should have items to the Hebron

Church by 2 pm. From 2-4 pm there will be a Unique Vintage Vehicle Show. The first band of the day will be the Midweeklings, appearing at 3 pm and playing a variety of tunes with some originals as well. At 4 pm there will be kids’ games on the Hebron Common, followed by a barbecue at 5 pm at the Hebron Fire Department. Paul Connor and Friends will perform in a concert while guests have dinner. At 7 pm the Don Campbell Band will take the stage and play country music. The evening will end with a fireworks display starting at 8:30 pm by North Star Fireworks. The taxpayers of Hebron sponsor the Hebron Gazebo Programs, with donations from individuals and organizations. Special thanks goes to the Hebron Village Store for their support of the concert series/programs. Free Popcorn at each concert is provided courtesy Bill White Realty. For information on the Hebron concerts, call 744-3335 or email hebrongazebo@ gmail.com.

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Page 30

June 22, 2015

Yesteryear Old Lakes Region Hotels By Kathi Caldwell-Hopper

If you were lucky enough to take a vacation or trip in the 1800s or early 1900s, you enjoyed a much different holiday experience than we are used to today. From the hotel or inn where you stayed to the transportation used to reach the Lakes Region and White Mountains, to the activities you chose to do on your vacation, things were quite different long ago. According to The Early Days of Eaton by Nella and Keith Henney, the popularity of White Mountain vacations had reached even more rural areas such as tiny Eaton, NH. Remote farms opened parlors and bedrooms to vacationers who wanted to experience

rural NH in its truest form and the added income was a boost to rural residents. Eaton had a number of places where travelers could spend a week or longer. Berkshire Farm, Farm Cottage and Queen Ann Cottage were tranquil places where visitors could find room and board. These early lodging establishments charged just $1 a day or $5 for a week’s stay. It is not known how the farms fit in so many guests – each was advertised as offering rooms for up to eight guests – but visitors loved it so much they returned year after year. In Eaton Center, visitors could choose from the Hotel Robertson, which charged $1 a day; the hotel had lodgings for up to 25 guests. Also

in Eaton Center, the Palmer House offered 30 guest rooms. Crystal Lake was nearby and a treat for vacationers that want to fish or take out a canoe for an afternoon on the water. Not far from Eaton, an enterprising man named Harry Pascoe constructed a large inn called the Lake Ossipee House. The inn was quite large, with about 50 rooms. In Images of America Ossipee Riverlands by Carol C. Foord and Sheila T. Jones, it is mentioned that the inn had its own electric power plant. Pascoe must have been an astute innkeeper because the power from the Lake Ossipee House also powered Camp Ossipee, a year-round school. The school was prestigious and a U.S. Senator’s son attended. Pascoe’s children attended the school in a barter

agreement: the headmaster lodged at the inn in exchange for the Pascoe children attending the school.) The inn was destroyed by fire not many years after it was opened, but Pascoe rebuilt and offered 25 rooms to lodgers. The inn was a popular place to vacation, until it burned in 1913. (It was not uncommon for many of the large, wooden inns to be razed by fire in the days of woodstoves, fireplaces and lanterns.) In Effingham Falls, the stately Black Horse Inn was originally the home of the Bradbury family. With three stories and a large barn, it was said guests could see Mt. Washington from the

• Yesteryear Continued on page 31

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June 22, 2015

Page 31

• Yesteryear Continued from page 30 inn’s cupola on a clear day. The inn offered a wonderful ice cream stand and Texaco gas pumps for travelers. Across the street from the Black Horse Inn, the Riverside Inn also welcomed guests looking for a quiet, country vacation. By the 1860s, the home had been offering lodgings to guests, and according to Ossipee Riverlands, a nearby spring brought water from gravity-fed underground pipes. The Squam Lakes area has always been known as a quiet, clean lake. In the early days, some large hotels dotted the landscape and attracted city folk who wanted a quiet, but genteel vacation where they could enjoy nature as well as all the comforts they were used to in their servant-filled city homes. Vacationers certainly found it all at such lodging establishments as the Mt. Livermore Hotel in Holderness. A Little History of the Squam Lakes by Catherine Hartshorn Campbell

mentions The Willows hotel on Little Squam Lake, which opened in 1895 and was run by Benjamin Pease and his family until 1964. Although the 40 guests rooms were simple, the establishment was popular with travelers and vacationers who returned

every year for the good food and company at the hotel. At the height of the grand hotel summer era, the Bachelder House was opened in the 1890s. Guests were met at the railroad station in Ashland and endured travel over the bumpy roads to

reach the hotel for their long summer stay. The two most elegant Squam Lake hotels were the Asquam House atop Shephard’s Hill, which ran until it was razed in the 1940s and the Towers, also known as the Mount Livermore House, which burned in the 1920s. The proprietors of the lake’s big hotels looked to the entertainment offered at the mammoth White Mountain grand hotels where games, fireworks and other entertainments were on the schedule. Squam Lake events included the 1907 Asquam Lake Water Sports, which was said to include a carnival, a flotilla of about 200 boats and music. Notables of the day came from other towns to attend and mingle with wealthy hotel guests. Many hotels and summer camps joined in the day of fun, with Chinese lanterns lit, decorations adding a festive air to lakefront homes and hotels. The Mount Livermore Hotel was brilliantly lit

• Yesteryear Continued on page 32

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Page 32

June 22, 2015

• Yesteryear Continued from page 31 with over 1,000 colored lights and a fireworks display. Alton and Alton Bay have been popular with vacationers for many years. In the early days of Alton, the Fifield House served as an important lodging establishment, according to Alton A Town to Remember. It offered rooms and had a dining room, as well as a saloon and a blacksmith shop with horses for hire. Over time, it was enlarged and renamed the Munroe House, and still later, it was called the Village Inn. Located on Main Street, it was a beautiful, large structure and probably a centerpiece of the village at one time. Like many other old hotels, it burned. However, it survived longer than most, not burning until the 1970s. Also on Alton’s main street, the Savage House was run as an inn. Surely the large and stately inn must have attracted vacationers with the railroad line not far away. It was run off and on as an inn until the late 1930s. The building still stands today and has been used as a number of businesses as well

as the American Legion Hall. One island on Lake Winnipesaukee was the location of a large inn called the Bear Island House Hotel. It was a large wooden structure; it was quite unusual to find a hotel on a remote lake island when it was opened in the late 1870s. The hotel first served as a boarding house but not long after, its owner saw the worth of offering it as a hotel for vacationers. Up to 100 guests could be housed at the hotel when the owner, according to Bear Island Reflections by the Bear Island Conservation Association, added two three-story wings to the original building. Porches with rocking chairs ran around the hotel and provided a relaxing spot for visitors. It was no easy trip to reach the Bear Island House: guests took the train, and then boarded lake boat transportation to the hotel’s wharf. The trip continued as guests then traveled by horse and wagon to the hotel. Once ensconced at the Bear Island House, visitors could look forward to houseboat treks as well as hiking over the island, swimming on the shores of

Winnipesaukee and generally relaxing on the unique island escape. The hotel also had fine clay tennis courts and a large beach area. Although many had fond memories of their island vacation, the hotel burned in the 1930s. In the Newfound Lake area, farm families began renting rooms and offering meals to tourists when it became clear there was a little extra money to be made in this endeavor. In his book Newfound Lake, Charles E. Greenwood writes that Hebron residents George S. Smith and his wife began taking in boarders in the late 1870s, following the example of John Sanborn who owned the local Grove Hill Farm. These farms offered boarders riding, boating, fishing and swimming. In 1880, the first summer boarding house was built in Bridgewater on the eastern side of Newfound Lake. Originally called Lake View House, the structure must have caused quite a stir in the area. Three stories high, with a dining room, dance hall and 75 bedrooms all comfortably furnished, the Lake View House was reminiscent

of the big hotels being constructed in the White Mountains at the time. The view of Newfound Lake was superb, only adding to the attraction of the hotel. Soon other hotels sprang up in the area: Elm Lawn; Bayview House, and later, Pasquaney. Large farms continued to help meet the demand, and just a few were Ackerman House, the Silas Brown property known as Newfound Lake Farm, and the Norman Smith farm. Nearby Bristol offered the Hotel Bristol and the G. G. Brown Hotel in the mid-1800s. In the old days of summer vacations, guests around the Lakes Region experienced a much different vacation than the kind visitors experience in the area today. There were no powerboats, there was no takeout dining and there were no movies or other entertainments. But guests found the peace and quiet and perhaps a sedate canoe ride, a picnic or a day spent fishing much to their liking. They returned home relaxed and happy, just as vacationers do to this day.

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Page 33

Summer Fun Programs at Spider Web Gardens Spider Web Gardens in Tuftonboro has some fun workshops for adults and kids coming up in July. Register now for these great garden/outdoor-related workshops. On Wed., July 1 at 10 am, Dana Duxbury-Fox, a lifelong summer resident of Tuftonboro at her family’s cabin on Lower Beech Pond, will present Got Butterflies and Hummingbirds? At her summer home, Dana learned to love the out-of-doors and developed a strong curiosity about birds, butterflies and many other animals and plants. She is a keen gardener both at her winter home in Massachusetts and at her NH cabin specializing in flowers and herbs on her summer cabin deck. She will share her knowledge of hummingbirds and butterflies, encouraging attendees to plant their gardens in a way that will attract birds and butterflies. Spider Web Gardens will have available for sale many of the special plants that hummingbirds and butterflies favor. The program is free and open to the public; pre-registration is requested. Green Team Kids Fairy Containers takes place on July 1 at 1 pm and is part of the Green Team Kids’ series of free events. Participants will craft a unique home for our fairy friends. Spider Web will provide all the materials for each child’s special creation.

Green Team Kids promote children learning about dirt, plants, and our green environment, teaching the youth of New Hampshire about the fun that can be found in, on and around the earth. Green Team workshops are free. Pre-registration is required. Florals: Up Close and Personal is an introductory class in oil pastels offered on Thurs., July 30 from 10 am-noon and repeated on Thurs., Aug. 27 from 10 am-noon. The cost for the class is $25 per person (includes supplies); class limit is 12 participants. Sign up for the introductory oil pastel class with a close-up look at flowers. Choose your own flower to study from Spider Web’s extensive cut flower garden. This will be a fun, relaxing class for all ages and abilities (children age 8 and up should have an adult partner). Participants will create their own oil pastel painting. All materials are included. Class will be held outdoors or in the event of rain, in one of the greenhouses. Oil pastel instructor Nancy Lane Piper is a local artist and retired art educator with 30 years teaching experience in and around the Lakes Region. Class size is limited; preregistration is required. To pre-register, call 569-5056 or email spiderwebgardens@ne.twcbc.com.

Yakking for Loons Dust off your kayak and join the Loon Preservation Committee (LPC) for the 4th Annual LPC Kayak-A-Thon or Yakking for Loons on Fri., July 10. Paddlers will meet at 8 am at Lee’s Mill Landing on Lake Winnipesaukee, just down the road from The Loon Center in Moultonboro. Kayakers will choose between the 2.5 mile Ganzy course or the 4.6 mile Green’s Basin course, or they can do both courses. An LPC biologist will be along for the ride to answer your questions and point out local loon habitat and behavior. Don’t have a kayak? You can rent one, along with a paddle and life jacket, at a discounted rate, courtesy of Wild Meadow Canoes and Kayaks in Center Harbor. Sponsoring this year’s event are Curt’s Caterers and Irving

Oil. Registration is $10/person and includes a light lunch prepared and donated by Curt’s Caterers. Yakkers are encouraged to solicit additional pledges to benefit the work of the Loon Preservation Committee, now in its 40th year of protecting loons and their habitats in New Hampshire! Collect $50 or more in pledges and receive a Yakking for Loons long-sleeve t-shirt. Exclusive 40 YEARS prizes will be awarded to top fund raisers. Registration and pledge forms can be downloaded at www.loon.org. Children under 18 years of age must be accompanied by an adult. For more information about Yakking for Loons, contact Lin O’Bara at lobara@loon.org or call 476-LOON. We look forward to seeing you on the water!

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Page 34

June 22, 2015

Historic Belmont Village Bandstand Offers Summer Concerts The Victorian-era bandstand in Belmont Village has been a community landmark since 1908. Recently, it was moved, stabilized, artfully restored, painted and illuminated by Central NH specialists. The historic structure and its flared, octagonal roof, replicated lattice work, original posts and ornate decorative trim now display the original colors of dark green black, with Cajun red accents, a deep brown floor and ceiling of robin’s egg blue. On May 1, restoration contractor JR Graton of Northfield topped the new cedar shake roof with a finial, gold-painted sphere, fastened to the original tin crown. The month of May

also brought accolades from the New Hampshire Preservation Alliance for the Belmont Heritage Commission and its project partners including Graton, John Thompson of Alexandria and JLT Painting and the Land and Community Heritage Investment Program (LCHIP) honoring its outstanding achievement in restoration and rehabilitation with the Elizabeth Durfee Hengen award. A Heritage Series of performances mark this milestone season, dedicated to “a caring community and citizens that made the next century of this special place possible”, according to local Heritage Commission Chairman Linda Frawley.

Programs were brates Grandpardesigned to show ents Day on Sunthe bandstand’s day, Sept. 13 at 1 versatility, inpm, opening with cluding full elecsongwriter-musitrical updating by cian Don Watson Michael Marsh of Gilford and of Norm Marsh hometown favorElectric, Gilford. ite Jackie Lee of The energy effiBelmont. Visitors cient lights softly are encouraged illuminate the to arrive early classic civic arand stroll through chitecture with the village to down lighting see the sidewalk and have received and lighting imcompliments provements, and from Main Street signage showing neighbors and vintage photos visitors alike. and information An All-Amer- The newly restored, historic Belmont from Belmont ican program will Village Bandstand was originally placed Historical Society launch the sum- on Mill-owned lands and first moved in collections. mer holiday week- 1927 to accommodate the building of Heritage Seend on Friday, the Belmont Public Library, a National ries programs are July 3 featuring Register of Historic Places property. free and offered Jon Lorentz’s Soul The bandstand’s new and permanent rain or shine. Revival Band, site still features those nearby structures The indoor locawith Miss Sharon and is visible from Main Street. Cour- tion in case of “Sugar” Jones. tesy Linda Frawley/Belmont Heritage rain is the Corner The concert starts Commission Meeting House at 7 pm; bring at Fuller and Sarlawn chairs or gent Streets. For blankets for seating. details and the bandstand preservation August brings the Newmont Milistory, visit www.historicbelmontbandtary Band for a Sat., August 15 concert stand.org. at 6:30 pm. The final program of the series cele-

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Page 35

Give Nesting Loons Some Space The Loon Preservation Committee (LPC) recorded its first pair of nesting loons this year on Bolster Pond in Sullivan, NH, on May 13. Since then more than 50 loon pairs have begun to incubate eggs, with many more expected to begin in the next week or two. If history is any guide, close to one of every two of these nests will fail, many due to human disturbance. The peak time for loons to start nesting is usually in early June, followed by a four-week incubation period. The peak of hatch of loon chicks generally occurs around the 4th of July holiday and loon pairs on nests or with chicks are vulnerable to disturbance as human activities on the lakes increase. A couple of simple precautions can help ensure a good year for loons in New Hampshire: - Stay back at least 150 feet from a nesting loon, or more, if the loon shows any signs of distress such as craning its neck low over a nest. Loons may even appear to be injured or dead while in this head-down position, but it is simply a response to the close approach of people. - If you do inadvertently cause a loon to flush from the nest, leave the area immediately to let the loon return to incubate its eggs. Time off the nest leaves the eggs vulnerable to cooling, overheating, or predation. In 2014, Loon Preservation Committee biologists recorded 208 pairs of nesting loons, an increase of 28

A loon sits on its nest on a raft. Photo courtesy of Kittie Wilson. pairs from the previous year. Forty of those pairs nested on rafts—artificial islands that LPC floats to help loons cope with water level fluctuations or being displaced from natural sites by shoreline development or recreational activity on the lakes. Of the 208 nesting pairs, signs and rope lines protected half, and over half of the chicks hatched came from these protected nest sites. Even with this level of management, LPC biologists recorded 100 failed nests, many of them due to human disturbance, predation and water-level fluctuations. Studies indicate that a

minimum breeding success rate of 0.48 surviving chicks per loon pair is needed to maintain the loon population over the long term, but New Hampshire’s loons have achieved that level of breeding success in only three out of the last nine years. Loons are a threatened species in New Hampshire and are protected by state and federal laws from hunting or harassment, including flushing loons from nests. If you observe harassment of loons, contact New Hampshire Fish & Game Department (271-3361) or Marine Patrol (293-2037) for

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June 22, 2015

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June 22, 2015

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Red Molly at Great Waters Music Festival On Friday, June 26 at 7:30 pm, Great Waters Music Festival in Wolfeboro will present Americana powerhouse vocal trio Red Molly, best known for their gorgeous harmonies, crisp musicianship, infectious songwriting, and warm, engaging stage presence. Laurie MacAllister (bass), Abbie Gardner (Dobro), and Molly Venter (guitar) weave together the threads of American music—from folk roots to bluegrass, from heartbreaking ballads to barn-burning honky tonk—as effortlessly as they blend their voices into their signature soaring, crystalline three-part harmonies. If one word describes Red Molly’s music, that word is joyous. From their signature harmonies to the rich, varied tones of their individual voices, Red Molly is simply a joy to listen to. Their brilliantly wrought a capella tunes are love letters to the art of the vocal blend, and their innovative instrumentation is perfectly suited for foot stomping bluegrass-tinged barnburners and perfectly crafted heart-full ballads alike. Though each of them shines alone,

the true majesty of Red Molly comes with the effortless blend of their voices. Together Red Molly’s vocals swell and swoon in a way that raises goose bumps. Laurie, Abbie, and Molly each have wonderfully distinct voices, both in their actual vocal timbre and in their individual songwriting styles and song choices. Abbie is the balladeer in the sawdust bar, singing in the blue lights, making us cry into our beers. Molly is the mirror, finding the truths of loss and history and the full joy of love and putting it to the perfect tune we somehow feel like we knew all along. Laurie is the storyteller; the songs she sings crack open the heart and run like trains through the landscape of our memories. One of the most moving things about Red Molly’s music is the honest sense that you’re watching three dear friends sharing songs in their living room, and this feeling goes all the way back to their origins. Red Molly got its start with the simple joy of singing at a campsite, when they first felt the elec-

tricity that comes when voices blend together like honey and whiskey. That synergy and harmony carries through to today, on their newest studio effort, aptly titled The Red Album. The performance will be held at the newly renovated Anderson Hall at 205 South Main St. in Wolfeboro and is sponsored by TD Bank, Bigelow & Ashton and Fidelity Investments. The Great Waters Music Festival is a non-profit organization dedicated to

bringing outstanding musical performances to people living in and visiting the Lakes Region of New Hampshire. Thanks to all who have contributed to this organization, it is able to provide high quality musical performances at reasonable prices. Tickets for all performances are available at the office at 15 Varney Road in Wolfeboro, by calling 603-569-7710, or online at www. greatwaters.org.

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Page 38

June 22, 2015

“ATTEN HUT” NHARNG Retiree Luncheon Date Set

LOSING VALUE? WE’LL TURN IT INTO CASH! Rte. 125 RV & Marine Inc. “Brokerage Specialists” Buy * Trade * Sell * Consign

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“The One-Stop Trailer Shop” Route 3 • Winnisquam (next to Pirate’s Cove)

The New Hampshire Army National Guard (NHARNG) 7th Annual Retiree Luncheon date has been set for Wed., September 18 by the luncheon planning committee, made up of current and retired Army National Guard members. The committee’s immediate goal is to notify all retired NHARNG members about the upcoming event. Retirees who have not attended prior luncheons or have relocated are urged to contact Command Sergeant Major (Ret) David Follansbee via e-mail: dave_follansbee@comcast.net or call 623-7757.

This year’s luncheon will feature a briefing on the current status of the NHARNG as well as exhibits and displays of interest to retirees. A group photo is also planned. Feedback from previous retiree luncheons indicates the most significant attraction for attendees is renewal of old acquaintances, retelling stories (often embellished beyond recognition!) and exchanging military memories. The planning committee asks those who know of someone who has retired from NHARNG to pass this information along.

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June 22, 2015

Page 39

DAVE’S MOTORBOAT SHOPPE “OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE EXPERIENCE IN THE LAKES REGION”

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Nickfest is Coming! The 9th Annual Nickfest will be held Sat., July 18 from 11 am to 4 pm on Memorial Field, Main St., Wolfeboro, next to Brewster Academy. The rain date will be Sun., July 19. The cost is $12 per person with children aged two and under free. Nickfest tickets are available for purchase at Black’s Paper Store, downtown Wolfeboro, for a discounted rate of $10 each. Included with the price of admission, attendees will enjoy a selection of inflatable games including the 4-Bungee Trampolines, Wrecking Ball, Moebius Combo, a Vertical Rush, a Climbing Wall, a Castle Bounce, a photo booth,

a petting zoo, face painting, live music and more. There also will be food and drinks available for purchase, including award winning homemade mac and cheese, Italian sausages, hamburgers, hot dogs, and more. 
 All proceeds from Nickfest go towards supporting the general operating expenses of The Nicholas J. Pernokas Recreation Park (The Nick) - a nonprofit organization that provides quality recreation facilities for the citizens of Wolfeboro and surrounding towns. For more information or to inquire about volunteering or sponsoring Nickfest, please contact Holly Williams at holly@thenick.org or 569-1909.

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Page 40

June 22, 2015

New Hampshire’s most respected name in boating since 1919

YOU’RE INVITED TO OUR

SIZZLING SUMMER SALE!

Featuring

At Johnson’s Dairy Bar - New Durham (Rte. 11) Friday, June 26 from 4pm - 7pm Saturday, June 27 from Noon - 7pm Sunday, June 28 from Noon - 5pm

Also Featuring Boats By

SEA-RAY | BERKSHIRE PONTOONS | STINGRAY | ALUMACRAFT FISHING BOATS SEA DOO WATERCRAFTS | YAMAHA BOATS | YAMAHA WAVERUNNERS

New Hampshire’s most respected name in boating since 1919 IRWIN MARINE - ALTON | RTE. 28A, 723 EAST SIDE DRIVE, ALTON BAY, 03810 | 603-875-5700 | www.irwinmarine.com


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