Laker 10 5 15l

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October 12, 2015

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

FREE October 12 • Vol 32 • No. 28

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Halloween Legends, Day Trip Adventures & Fall Events

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Boating • pages 21-23 Dining • pages 6 & 15

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October 12, 2015

Gilford This lovely and tasteful home has wonderful lake and mountain views. A flexible floor plan allows for up to six bedrooms, if desired. The oversized, sweeping deck overlooks a private yard and takes advantage of the picturesque, long views. Beautifully built, tastefully decorated and finished, this is a terrific home!

$1,745,000

Gilford

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

Gilford

This landmark Queen Ann Victorian home on Governor’s Island is truly one of a kind. The design, the attention to detail, the care with which it has been maintained; coffered ceilings, walls of cherry, raised panels, hardwood flooring. All are simply beautiful! $4,695,000

Gilford

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

Center Harbor - This remarkable 6-bedroom home is conveniently located in the heart of Center Harbor. Customized to perfection on a 2-acre lot with 352’ of waterfront, a sweeping deck overlooking a long expanse of lawn to a two-bay boathouse, large beach, additional docking and a lovely lake view. $3,250,000

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. $2,499,000

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

Laconia - STUNNING is the only way to describe this home that was totally re-built in 1996. On a beautifully landscaped, level lot with dock and sandy swim area, this sun-filled home has high ceilings and an open concept floor plan. This outstanding home is ready for summer fun! Quality! Quality! Quality! $1,495,000

Moultonborough - This wonderful open-concept home is just steps from the shoreline. It has picturesque lake and mountain views and includes a deep water, deeded boat slip, #3A. Crosswinds amenities include 3 sandy beaches, tennis courts and walking trails. This is an exceptional home for year round living. $749,000

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

Tuftonboro - A level Winnipesaukee waterfront lot in the Basin in Tuftonboro with 225’ waterfront. Location is convenient. $295,000

Gilford - This sunny two-bedroom plus loft condominium has lake views and has been nicely updated. Kitchen has Corian counters and newer appliances. There is Monitor heat, central air and a wood burning fireplace. Being sold fully furnished. Just move in and enjoy! $259,000

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


October 12, 2015

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The Origins of Halloween and its Customs By Sarah Wright A holiday beloved by children and those who enjoy a good scare, Halloween has been celebrated for centuries. However, not many people give a thought to the history behind this spooky day. Long ago, Halloween was a somber Celtic ritual, but over many years it changed shape, and different traditions were combined to become the fun event of today, with parties, costume parades and treats. The holiday originally evolved from the ancient Celtic ritual of “Samhain,” a day that marked the end of the harvest season and the beginning of winter. The Celts also believed that this transition between the seasons somehow opened a bridge to the world of the dead. Seems like a big leap, but it can be imagined that it could seem that way, with winter forcing nature into hibernation, like a “sleeping” death. Along with crops turning brown, the Celts thought that spirits came out to cause trouble. In response to this, sacrifices were burned in large bonfires to please the spirits. Winter was a harsh time for everyone, so on Samhain, the Celts looked to their priests to make predictions for the upcoming year, as it was believed that seeing the future was more likely with spirits walking about. Years later, in the eighth century, the Christian church appropriated the pagan holiday, declaring November 1 to be All Saints’ Day or All Hallows, a day when known and unknown

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saints among us were recognized. The night before became All Hallows Eve, eventually shortened to Halloween. You might be wondering how costumes figured into this. Disguises were always a part of Halloween. The Celts wore cloaks and animal hides to conceal themselves from roaming ghosts. In Medieval England, people were afraid to leave their homes at night, thinking they might encounter the walking dead. If they had to go out, they put on scary disguises to fool the spirits into thinking they were one of them. Consequently, another tradition of early Halloween was to put food and wine out in front of the home as a way to appease the spirits and hopefully keep them from coming

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inside. People were very paranoid back then, but it must’ve been creepy living by candlelight with all those shadows dancing on the walls! When did trick-or-treating come about? In medieval times people also celebrated All Souls’ Day on November 2. The poor and needy would go doorto-door, begging for food, and were often given small pastries called “soul cakes.” In exchange for the food, they would promise to pray for peoples’ dead relatives. In later years, young people began dressing up for fun. They would walk around telling jokes, reciting poetry, or singing, and would be given food, wine or money in return. Believe it or not, we were late to the party. Halloween didn’t make it across

the ocean to America until the early 19th century. When the first settlers arrived on our shores, they left most traditions behind, in order to create a new society. And with many of those settlers being Puritans, they weren’t keen on a celebration with pagan origins. It wasn’t until the potato famine hit Ireland in 1845, when millions of Irish arrived in America, that the celebration of Halloween came with them. The tradition was officially revived, although the holiday was more about tricks than treats in those days! It was the one night of the year when communities generally tolerated pranks, which ranged from the playful to the destructive. Mailboxes, fences and gravestones were popular targets. Many years later, in the 1940s, the holiday became family-friendly. Today, it’s the second most commercial holiday after Christmas, with people spending six billion dollars each year on costumes, decorations and candy. Roughly half of Americans carve pumpkins every year, but how did pumpkin carving become synonymous with Halloween? That originated in Ireland, too, although they didn’t have pumpkins, so they carved rutabagas and turnips. The Irish thought that if they lit them like lanterns and carried them around on Halloween, evil spirits would leave them alone. One of those

• Halloween Continued on page 4

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603-569-5257 in NH 1-800-339-5257 FAX 603-569-5258

PUBLISHER Dan Smiley ADVERTISING Jim Cande Mitch Hanson

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.

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October 12, 2015

• Halloween Continued from page 3 evil spirits was named “Stingy Jack” from Irish folklore. According to legend, the devil wanted Jack’s soul, but Jack successfully bet him for it three times, winning through trickery. When Jack later died, it’s said that God wouldn’t let the unsavory man into Heaven, and having tricked the devil, Jack wasn’t allowed into Hell, either. He was made to walk the earth, using a coal in a carved turnip to light his way. This is where the term “jack-o-lantern” comes from. When the Irish arrived in America, they discovered the pumpkin, and found that it was much easier to

carve than a turnip! I cannot write about Halloween without mentioning candy. A quarter of the candy sold in this country each year is sold around Halloween—and every child is hoping to score as much of that as possible! But plenty of adults look forward to those fun-sized candy bars, too. Here’s a great statistic: Ninety percent of parents admit to sneaking candy from their kids’ Halloween stash. Who can resist? It is no surprise that chocolate is the clear favorite at Halloween. Informal surveys have been taken, and Snickers and Reese’s take the top spots for most coveted candy. If you’re allergic to nuts, alternate favorites include M&Ms, Kit Kats, and Twix bars. When kids want something

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chewy and fruit-flavored, they opt for Skittles or Twizzlers. You might be interested to know that it took a while for candy to take center stage at Halloween. For instance, kids ringing a stranger’s doorbell in 1948 received all sorts of things: Coins, nuts, fruit, cookies, cakes, and toys were as likely as candy. It was during the late 1950s that candy began to dominate. Candy was easy to buy and hand out, making it a convenient choice for Halloween hosts. Small, inexpensive candies became popular, so major candy manufacturers began making smaller candy bars or bags of candy corn for the occasion. Love it or hate it, candy corn is an integral part of the holiday. Unfortunately, the true creator of candy

corn is unknown, but first reports of the multi-colored candy began in the 1880s, when it started appearing around the Halloween season. Soon after, the Wunderle Candy Company began mass-producing candy corn under the name “chicken feed.” In 1898, the recipe for the candy was adopted by the Goelitz Candy Company who quickly became the primary producer of the faux corn. Agricultural America in the late 19th century embraced the sweet little treats that reminded them of the season’s harvest time roots. Halloween falls on a Saturday this year, so why not celebrate all weekend? Throw a costume party, play some games, create some crafts with the kids, and join the candy free-forall in your town. Just watch out for

Winter Farmer’s Market to Open in Wolfeboro The Wolfeboro Area Farmer’s Market will host a winter market in Wolfeboro, beginning Saturday, Nov. 14 and running on the second and fourth Saturday of each month through April 9. The market will be located in the First Congregational Church of Wolfeboro, 115 South Main Street and will be open from 10 am to 2 pm. At, this time, the Wolfeboro Area Farmers Market Board of Directors welcomes vendor applications for the 2015-2016 winter market season. The Wolfeboro Area Farmer’s Market, a non-profit organization, hosts a summer market in Wolfeboro at Clark Park, and expects many of that market’s most popular vendors to participate in the winter market. “We look for vendors who reflect our long-standing commitment to the local agricultural economy, and who we think are a good match for what the community needs,” said Fred Martin, board chair. “Our busy summer market, and last year’s winter market, has shown us that the community wants to support

these farms, and we’re proud to facilitate that connection almost year-round now.” The organization ran a winter market in Ossipee last year, and the board voted to bring the market to downtown Wolfeboro to better meet the needs of its customers. Interested farmers and food producers from within a 50-mile radius of Wolfeboro are welcome to apply to be vendors, and a vendor application can be found at www. WolfeboroAreaFarmersMarket.com. Interested vendors may also contact Board Secretary Kathy Wotton at 5398134 or by email at wottonfarm@ gmail.com. Selected craft vendors may be accepted on a space-available basis, but the board’s emphasis is on vendors selling agricultural products. The Wolfeboro Area Farmer’s Market is governed by an all-volunteer board of directors and was founded in 2002 through the vision of local farmers and citizens who wanted to provide a central venue to sell directly to their neighborhood customers.


Your point-and-click dining guide for the Lakes Region. DiningOutNH.co October 12, 2015

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Pumpkin Patch Time at the League The League of NH Craftsmen Meredith Fine Craft Gallery, located at 279 DW Highway in Meredith is pleased to announce its first Glass Pumpkin Patch. During the month of October hand-blown glass pumpkins made by League juried glass artists will be featured. Pumpkins in all shapes and sizes with twisted stems in all the colors of fall make great seasonal decorations. For every pumpkin sold in October, 10 percent of the proceeds will be donated to the Meredith Food Pantry, which supports families in need in Meredith,

Center Harbor and New Hampton. Please stop in to see the gorgeous glass creations, and add to your collection or start one. The pumpkins make beautiful decorations on any harvest table. The mission of the League of NH Craftsmen is to encourage, nurture and promote the creation, use and preservation of fine contemporary and traditional craft through the inspiration and education of artists and the broader community. Call 279-7920 or visit www.nhcrafts.org/meredith.

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Take in some of the most breathtaking views of the fall colors anywhere in New England! Enjoy lunch in the Carriage House Restaurant, stroll through the Gardens at Lucknow, or enjoy a hike through the changing and colorful forest. Art Gallery Exhibition: A Lady’s Day On view through October 25 Celebrate with us as we welcome our third and final gallery exhibit, A Lady’s Day, a collection of paintings featuring women as subjects from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This exhibit is on loan to Castle in the Clouds from a well-known private collection. Exhibition and Gallery Reception generously sponsored by Bank of New Hampshire and White Mountain Subways. The Carriage House Restaurant – Serving lunch daily – 11:30 am – 3:30 pm Enjoy a delicious lunch while taking in the most magnificent views of Lake Winnipesaukee in all of New Hampshire! Castle Admission not required for lunch service, enter off Ossipee Park Road for a restaurant only visit!

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Robin Cornwell Gallery Show at the Art Place life, completely filling the surface with lively forms and color. “As an artist I look mostly to the patterns in nature for my inspiration. As a fabric artist, I also depend largely on the repeated form and symmetry.” The Art Place will host Robin’s Amate’ bark paintings, but Robin Cornwell Embellishments includes printed fabric, wall hangings, and a variety of drawings and paintings. Robin is also an art teacher at Kingswood Regional Middle School, where she translates her bark painting techniques into projects for her students. The opening reception for Robin Cornwell is Friday, Oct. 30 from 5 to 8 pm, at The Art Place, located at 9 North Main Street, downtown Wolfeboro. The Art Place is open year round. The show will continue through November 13. For more information, please call 569-6159.

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Plan Now for Fall Craft Fair merchants and friends of the Auxiliary. A “Dines the Lakes Region” door prize valued at $100 will be awarded. All attendees can enter and you don’t have to be present to win. Refreshments will be offered by Annie’s Café and Catering. Money raised from this event will benefit the LRGHealthcare Breast Health Program and other Auxiliary charitable projects.

The Lakes Region General Hospital Auxiliary is hosting the 14th Annual Fall Craft Fair on Saturday, Oct. 17 from 9 am to 3 pm at Laconia High School, located at 345 Union Ave. in Laconia. Admission is free and there is plenty of parking. The event features over 65 crafters, a huge bake sale and a craft raffle of over 50 items donated by vendors, area

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Following the lecture, Lutts and Kaiser will have canned and dried food for participants to sample and they also will chat about period recipes and have handouts about garden preparation and a list of seed houses that deal with short-season crops. Kaiser is a University of New Hampshire Coop Extension Master Gardener and one of a handful of Americans trained and certified in Permaculture Design by David Holmgren, co-founder of the worldwide Permaculture movement. She also owns Wolfeboro’s Dunneden Edible Landscape and Designs. Lisa Simpson Lutts, a food historian and director of the New Hampshire Boat Museum, has researched cooking during World War II. Admission is $8 per person and free for Wright Museum members. Space is limited; RSVPs are strongly encouraged to ensure sufficient seating for all lecture attendees. Call 5691212 to reserve seating. The Wright Museum is located at 77 Center Street

The Wright Museum will host the final session of the Ron Goodgame and Donna Canney 2015 Educational Programming on Tuesday, Oct. 20, beginning at 7 pm; doors open at 6 pm. During World War II, building and maintaining a Victory Garden was everyone’s patriotic duty. Join Christin Kaiser and Lisa Simpson Lutts to learn all about Victory Gardens. Lisa Simpson Lutts will talk about the Victory Garden phenomenon that swept across the nation. World War II was a time when urban and rural families raised their own vegetables and fruit. The gardens were morale boosters, but also freed up canned vegetables and fruits to feed the troops and our Allies abroad. Lutts will recount how housewives preserved their food with canning, drying, and freezing. Using this history as a springboard, Christin Kaiser will explain how raising quality vegetables today can enable people to become more food independent. Kaiser also will talk about crops that can be raised in the Lakes Region, soil maintenance, and various types of food preservation.

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As part of Wolfeboro’s monthly Art Walk, The Art Place in downtown Wolfeboro will hold an opening reception for Robin Cornwell on Friday, Oct. 30 from 5 to 8 pm. The exhibit will highlight Cornwell’s Amate’ bark paintings, inspired by a Mexican art tradition as old as the Aztec empire. Robin Cornwell is a Wolfeboro artist, whose paintings are created with a variety of paints and drawing tools on a rich paper, ranging from deep browns to pale pastel colors. Robin says, “The area of art I love most is design, particularly pattern. The Mexican paintings are full of repeated shapes, colored in bold, bright, solid areas of color. So to work in the fashion of the Mexican artists, I too use repetition to fill in the paper with my images and rich colors.” Cornwell often turns to sea life as inspiration for her paintings. She adorns the pages with fish and plant

Victory Garden in World War II and Today

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$2.00 OFF any entree over $10.00* * Valid from 11:15am-5:15pm. Please validate with host/cashier upon arrival. Max 4 discounts per coupon. Takeout not included. Not valid Holidays or Friday night buffets. Cannot be combined with other offers. Expires 10/26/15. LKR

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October 12, 2015

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C elebrating Over 60 Years!

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

WOLFEBORO- Hopewell Point Estate with magnificent views, 4.7 level acres, 320’ of waterfront, sandy beach, 5000+ sq. ft. home, oversized docks, 70’ breakwater and two-slip boathouse. $3,750,000 (4377866)

Call 569-3128

HOLDERNESS- Enjoy breathtaking views of Squam from this quality built Contemporary LakeStyle home. Open-concept kitchen/dining/living area, wide-pine floors, master bedroom suite with private balcony overlooking the lake. $1,450,000 (4391390) Call 253-9360

TUFTONBORO- Beautiful 3 acres, 160’ west facing waterfront, 4 seasonal cottages, dry land boat house, level lot, sandy walk-in beach. Great investment or build that dream lake home. $875,000 (4408590)

Call 569-3128

ALTON- Alton Bay Family Compound with rental income! 2,500 sq. ft. main house with contemporary features. Detached 800 sq. ft. year-round cottage. 60’ waterfront lot with docks & swim area. Western sunset views! $649,900 (4436902) Call 875-3128

WOLFEBORO- Lake Wentworth cottage with incredible views facing south, 135 feet of level, sandy shore frontage, dock, moorings, 2 bedrooms plus 2 sleeping lofts, charming vintage interior. $529,000 (4449215) Call 569-3128

MEREDITH- Astonishing Lake Winnisquam access Cul-de-sac home in prominent Waldron Bay Assoc. Relax on the wrap-around gazebostyled covered porch & enjoy peace & tranquility. $519,900 (4414062) Call 253-9360

WOLFEBORO- Enjoy spectacular views and sunsets from this wonderful lakeside 2-bed, 2-bath cottage with a beautiful screened porch, assigned dock and great rental history.

MOULTONBOROUGH- Immaculate home, 1.5 acre lot with oversized garage with finished heated room. Deeded waterfront access, mooring, dock wait list. Generator, AC, underground fence, spacious lawn. $259,900 (4442406) Call 253-9360

NEW DURHAM- Merrymeeting Lake: This year-round home is nestled in the woods on 1 acre just across the street from your shared 60 foot waterfront lot.

BARNSTEAD- Beautiful year-round, 3-bedroom waterfront home on Locke Lake! Great views of the lake and mountains! Peaceful screened in porch with a sandy beach.

TUFTONBORO- Steps to beach on pristine Lower Beech Pond from this charming yearround A-frame/chalet which has been updated. Level lot is landscaped and wooded.

$239,000 (4428268)

Call 875-3128 $199,000 (4441650)

$349,900 (4196938)

Call 569-3128 $169,000 (4370600)

Call 569-3128

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.

TAMWORTH- Gorgeous Beach Area with a Beautiful View of Chocorua Mountain in this Chocorua Ski and Beach Association, snowmobile and ATV trails right outside your door, direct access to corridor 19. $140,000 (4421575) Call 569-3128

ALTON- This charming cottage nestled in the woods is the getaway you have been looking for. Access to beaches and boat launch on Hills Pond and Sunset Lake. $124,000 (4430877)

Land and Acreage

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

BRISTOL- A 26 acre parcel offering privacy, amazing southern views, and western views with some clearing. Nine year growth. Close to I-93, ski areas and Newfound Lake. $429,000 (4418429) Call 253-9360

TUFTONBORO- Affordable 0.75 acre building lot with state approved 3-bedroom septic design and deeded water access where you can moor your boat and enjoy all that Mirror Lake has to offer. $37,500 (4427948) Call 569-3128

ALTON- Waterfront Tree Farm. 15.6 acres of managed forestland in Current Use with 189’ frontage on Bear Pond. Build on the cleared acre. Located on a paved town road close to Merrymeeting Lake. $99,900 (4332636) Call 875-3128

OSSIPEE- Welcome to year-round resort living! Build your dream home in the coveted Indian Mound Property Association. $30,000 (4435829)

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...

Call 569-3128

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


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October 12, 2015

The Appleseed Collective at The Barnstormers Theatre The Arts Council of Tamworth will present The Appleseed Collective from Ann Arbor, Michigan, in concert at The Barnstormers Theatre in Tamworth on Friday, Oct. 23 at 7:30 pm. Americana UK calls their music “dashed with Dixie ragtime, bluegrass, gypsy folk, and swing blues”—Americana rooted in traditions from all over the world and every decade. Make an evening of it with hot tunes and local food and drink in Tamworth Village. Enjoy a local foods supper at The Other Store in Tamworth before the show (call 323-8872 for menu and reservations) and sample the fine locally-produced spirits at Tamworth Distillery from 5 to 7:30 pm—they’ll donate 10 percent of sales during that time to the Arts Council of Tamworth. Each part of The Appleseed

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session musician for a father, guitarist Andrew Brown was exposed to preWorld War II jazz on a trip to New Orleans. Shortly afterwards a chance meeting introduced him to Brandon Smith, violinist, mandolinist and improvisatory magician who grew up playing old time fiddle music. Vince Russo, multi-percussionist and vanpacking savant, blends influences of funk, jazz and rock ’n roll on the washboard. Eric Dawe comes from a background of choral singing and studies in Indian classical music and provides the bottom end on the upright bass. The whole band sings in harmony. No Americana sound could ring so true without miles of highway to back it up—2014 saw Appleseed travel

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coast to coast in support of their two studio albums, Baby to Beast (2012) and Young Love (January 2014). “I figured out sort of a mathematical equation last night—it’s like Satch plus Django plus Joplin plus Bob Wills plus a little Bill Monroe, but the sum is actually greater than the parts,” said Jason Marck of WBEZ Chicago’s Morning Shift, introducing the band for a live segment in November 2014. The band’s latest release is Live At The Ark (December 2014), recorded in one night in their hometown. With a mix of new and old material, as well as a few special requested covers, Appleseed does just that. The album balances barnburners, old soul jazz, and sparse mood pieces, all suspended above a room hungry for more. Joshua Pickard at Beats Per Minute says, “music best served alongside a roaring campfire but that also has the ability to challenge the rafters of any grand arena.” You get to hear them beneath the lovely old rafters of The Barnstormers! Tickets are available at www. artstamworth.org and at the door. Ticket revenues help support free workshops and diverse school and community performances. Business sponsors include The Other Store and BEAM Construction Associates, Inc., media sponsors The Conway Daily Sun, 93.5 WMWV and Magic104FM, and The Barnstormers Theatre and Tamworth Distilling.

2015 Kid Cover Contest All of us have passions. Your Kids, Your Boat, Your Fill In The Blank ! This is your opportunity to share your favorite person, place or thing with the Lakes Region on the cover of The Laker. You can even choose yourself.

2014 Winner Emily of Connecticut

Since 1985, the award winning Laker has been heralded with having some of the best looking cover photos in New Hampshire and we’d like to give a lucky reader the opportunity to pick the image on one of our 2016 covers while helping a great cause. Since 1985, Cornerstone Christian Academy has been providing some of the best Pre-K through 8th grade education in central New Hampshire, with much of that being funded through scholarships to needy families. Chances start at only $5 and can be purchased online by following the QR Code or in person by contacting the school directly at 129 Route 28, Ossipee NH 03864 or calling (603) 539-8636. Or visit www.cornerstoneca.net.

To Benefit Cornerstone Christian Academy

Our passion is to share with you the joy of seeing someone or something you love on the cover of the Lakes Region’s premier tourism, lifestyle and arts and entertainment publication.

ONE winner of Cover Kids Raffle receives chance for their chosen subject (person or object) to appear on the cover of 1 issue of The Laker in 2016. No Cash Value. Panoramic Publishing will be the final authority on photography, theme and issue of any image running on the cover or within the pages of its publications. We will make every reasonable effort to work with the winner’s schedule to ensure quality photography and a suitable location in the Lakes Region of NH, with the winner understanding that multiple factors must be considered including weather, production schedules and circumstances beyond people’s control including, but not limited to, the ability of the child or subject matter to pose, cooperate and/or other factors not foreseen to best ensure production during the 2016 publishing season. Questions may be directed to Dan Smiley, Publisher at 603-569-5257 or dan@ thelaker.com. Every effort will be made to contact winner through means provided on raffle ticket. If contact cannot be made within 1 week of drawing, an alternate winner will be drawn. Cover Kids Raffle benefits Cornerstone Christian Academy, a 501(c)3, offering education for children 6 weeks through 8th grade. Drawing to be held at the school January, 16 2016. Cornerstone Christian Academy, 129 Route 28, Ossipee, NH 03864.


October 12, 2015

Page 9

Get Tickets Now for Cook Christmas at Pitman’s Freight Room! Meadowbrook’s Off the Farm Series presents A Cook Christmas on Saturday, Dec. 19 at Pitman’s Freight Room in Laconia. Although the event is a few months away, get your tickets now - tickets go on sale Friday, Oct. 9 at 10 am. To get tickets, call the Box Office at 293-4700 or visit www. meadowbrook.net. Talented songwriter, producer, multiinstrumentalist and member of the Grammy Award-winning Zac Brown Band, Clay Cook returns to New Hampshire for an intimate evening of hits and holiday music, carving out a spot during his busy touring schedule. Cook began his music career at an early age, writing songs, collaborating and performing with Berklee Collegemate, John Mayer. The duo formed Lo-Fi Masters, co-writing several songs and performing to a variety of

audiences. Clay returned to Georgia, continuing his successful music career; producing, engineering and touring with acts including Sugarland, Shawn Mullins and The Marshal Tucker Band. In 2008, Clay became a full-time member of the Zac Brown Band. Carrying the load of a full-time band member’s crazy touring schedule, Clay has found time and energy to release multiple solo albums including, his latest release North Star, which he coproduced with fellow ZBB member Matt Mangano. Don’t let the hustle and bustle of the holiday season take over. Treat yourself to a night of pure holiday magic and start a new tradition with the gift of live music. Get your tickets by contacting the Box Office at 293-4700 or visit www.Meadowbrook.net.

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Page 10

October 12, 2015

Yesteryear

Spiritual Encounters in the Lakes Region By Kathi Caldwell-Hopper New England is the perfect place for ghosts. It is here that early settlers built homes and created small towns. Tales of witch hunts and ghosts are particularly popular in the New England states, and New Hampshire has its shares of such stories. The Lakes Region has it share of ghostly stories, with tales of oldenday witches and other creatures that go bump in the night. Many of the tales are not well known and are repeated more often as Halloween approaches. Readers would be surprised to learn that the gentle Shakers of Canterbury Shaker Village believed in spiritual encounters. The village was the home of the believers in Mother Ann Lee’s

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religion, with members commonly called Shakers. Many men, women and children lived and worked at Canterbury Shaker Village in the 1800s and into the 1900s. The peaceful religious group was good neighbors, known to show compassion to all. What is less well known is the fact that the Shakers believed in ghosts or “spirits” as they called them. While many Christian beliefs find the idea of ghosts or a spirit world to be off limits or downright absurd, to the Shakers it all made sense. There are many written accounts of Shakers being visited by spirits of departed fellow members and others. A Shaker member wrote, “We have frequently been visited by a tribe of Indians (spirits of Indians), who used to live in this country, and whose spirits

still come back here occasionally.” Séances, along with ghostly sightings, were common among the Shakers. In the 1800s and early 1900s, if the neighbors of the Canterbury Shakers had known about the practice of calling forth the spirits of the dead, they would likely have been quite surprised. Séances were looked upon as akin to witchcraft. For the Shakers, however, ghost sightings and calling upon spirits were simply ways to communicate with those who had passed to heaven. If one believed in an after life, it stood to reason those in the after world might wish to communicate with loved ones on earth. If thought of in this way, ghosts make perfect sense and it is much less frightening to think of a departed loved one as stopping by for a visit than to imagine ghosts as evil spirits! Of all the Halloween creatures, none can frighten people as much as a witch. Tales of the powerful creatures, said to be in collusion with the devil, strike fear, especially at Halloween. During the 1700s and 1800s, any woman who was a bit odd or eccentric could be labeled a witch. At the height of the witch hunting hysteria, a woman had only to anger a neighbor for the cry of “witch” to spread in a community. New Hampshire had its own witchhunts and folk tales of evil women and men who frightened and did terrible deeds to locals in the 1700 and 1800s. One woman labeled a witch was said to live in Meredith Center and was

• Yesteryear Continued on page 11

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Page 11

• Yesteryear Continued from page 10 known only as Mrs. T. Her main crime in the 1800s seemed to be her habit of borrowing things from her neighbors and never returning the favor. One day, she asked to borrow butter from a neighboring woman who had none to lend. Mrs. T did not like to be refused in her borrowing and went away muttering threats. Perhaps to oblige Mrs. T, and because she had no butter herself, the neighbor set about her usual butter churning. She worked at the butter churn for hours but was unable to achieve results. Finally, the butter churner, suspecting witchcraft, said, “If Mrs. T is in that churn, I will get her out.” She took a red-hot hook from the fireplace and dropped it into the butter churn, and soon butter was produced. Mrs. T’s children ran to the neighbor woman and related that their mother was very ill. Mrs. T died soon after, with a terrible burn on her neck in the

shape of a hook, just like the one the butter-churning neighbor took from the fireplace. According to Eva A. Speare, author of NH Folk Tales, a witch once lived in Plymouth, New Hampshire in the form of a hermit nicknamed “Old Dr. Dearborn.” He lived in a small, remote cottage. Local girls had the task of carrying food and supplies to Dr. Dearborn. One day, as the children were visiting the hermit, he told them of his encounter with a witch. He said that when he was a teenager living in Campton, his father owned a fine horse, which the hermit often rode. When riding the horse, the hermit passed the home of a woman named Dolly who was said to be a witch. Suddenly, a black cat ran from Dolly’s porch and leaped to the horse’s neck. The horse stopped in its tracks, and refused to move, even when the rider used a whip. Also feeling the whip was the black cat, which clung to the

horse’s neck. Eventually the cat ran off and the boy went home. The next day when the boy went to check on the horse, it hadn’t a mark on it and seemed its usual healthy self. But as for Dolly, a neighbor soon arrived and related that she was nearly dead, “covered with welts and bruises and scarcely breathing from fatigue.” The hermit finished his tale, much to the fright of the girls, by saying, “You see, I almost killed the old witch when she turned into a black cat and bewitched my horse.” This writer has a relative who had his own ghostly tale. On an autumn’s day, as a teenager, he took a walk in the woods; his destination was Inspiration Point in Bristol. Hiking up a trail, he knew the path by heart, having taken it many times over the years. It was a

blustery fall day, with leaves blowing from the trees and a bright blue sky and brilliant sunshine, the perfect time for a fall hike. Once he reached the top of the mountain, he sat quietly and gazed over the town of Bristol far below. Inspiration Point is an open air, mountain top area with wooden benches and a large wooden cross for outdoor ceremonies and services. He had the place to himself and became lost in meditation. After a time, he felt he was not alone and glanced to one side to see a woman sitting quietly on a bench. He said her clothing looked odd, as if from another time and she too, appeared lost in thought. They did not speak or make

• Yesteryear Continued on page 12

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October 12, 2015

• Yesteryear Continued from page 11 eye contact, but he felt uncomfortable and decided it was time to leave. Walking towards the footpath, he glanced back and realized the woman was gone. A chill ran through him because he knew she would have had no time to walk away and there was but the one path down the mountain; she had not passed him but seemed to disappear into thin air. Needless to say, his hike down the mountain was taken at a very brisk pace! If ghosts strike fear into our hearts, a walk through a cemetery on a dark night can set the stage for a haunted visitation. A New England cemetery, with lichen-covered stones leaning this

way and that in the ground causes even the most brave to become fearful. Fear of cemeteries was not always as strong, because in the early days of central New Hampshire settlement, people buried their loved ones on their own land. Towns were few and far between, and people made family graveyards near their homesteads. There was probably less fear of a graveyard where well-known loved ones were buried, since those loved ones were a mother, father, grandparents or a sibling. Between the early 1800s and 1920s three types of stones were most common: marble, used mostly around the mid-1800s; and soapstone and slate, used before marble became popular.

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If you live in the Lakes Region for to be taken off the premises. The frightened hiker spent a long any amount of time, you may hear time in the hospital recovering. When about the supposed ghostly encounters at the Alton Town Hall in downtown he finally spoke about his experience, Your point-and-click dining guide forsaythe Alton. There have been reports of heavy it was to thatLakes after aRegion. long trek up footsteps, furniture moving on its own, the trail he was exhausted and hungry. He unlocked the hut doors and went doors opening and voices talking when into the dining hall. He rested at a no one is in the building! DiningO A ghost story that frightens many is table while checking his food supply. the tale of an Appalachian Mountain At that point he felt as if someone else was in the room. He sensed someone Club hiker who was the first to open up a hut on Mount Washington after approaching him from behind, and when he jumped up and turned around, the long winter. He was sent to assess any winter storm damage to the hut he saw a hideous face pressed to the and area. After arriving, he could not glass in the dining room window. The windows were boarded up from the be reached by two-way radio and his outside, however. As he backed away, concerned fellow workers hiked up the he saw that each windowpane had the next morning to make sure no harm had come to him. same frightening face staring at him. He remembered nothing after that and Upon reaching the hut, they found would never again return to the sight. the worker’s hiking gear, backpack and From ghostly visitations at two-way radio on the table, all in good condition. The hiker, however, was Canterbury Shaker Village to witches to mountaintop encounters with menacing unaccounted for. spirits, New Hampshire is indeed After searching the entire property, alive with spirits of the departed. As the hikers heard a whimpering sound and Your foundpoint-and-click the man huddleddining and guide Halloween, theLakes most haunted time of for the Region. frightened, hiding under the kitchen year, approaches, it is up to each us to sink. His only mutterings were to ask decide if we believe such chilling tales.

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October 12, 2015

Page 13

Lakes Region Luxury

Oct. 12, Sandwich Fair, Sandwich Fairgrounds, www.thesandwichfair.com. Oct. 13, Baked Beans and Fried Clams, How Food Defines a Region, program with Edie Clark, 7 pm, Gilmanton Year Round Library, Rt. 140, Gilmanton Iron Works, 364-2400. Oct. 13, Bear Happenings in New Hampshire by Al Maraynan of Wakefield, NH, 7 pm, Wakefield/Brookfield Historical Society, Little Red Schoolhouse, 2851 Wakefield Rd., pre-meeting live music at 6:30 pm, free, 340-2295. Oct. 13, Plants of Field & Forest Workshop: Boost Your Health Naturally, 1–3:30 pm class. Led by Carol Felice, Herbalist/Museum Educator at Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, Tamworth Village. Prepare for the cold and flu season by strengthening your immune system. Gather in the Hearth Room to discuss helpful herbs and simple lifestyle adjustments, while sharing teas from these herbs. Dress for the weather and garden terrain; bring a notebook. $25/person. Ages 16 (with parent) and above. 323-7591.

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Oct. 13, Sea Chantey Singers concert, 7 pm, Little Red Schoolhouse, Wakefield, free, public welcome, Wakefield/Brookfield Historical Society.

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Oct. 13, The Shaker Legacy, program with Daryl Thompson, Moultonboro Historical Society, 7 pm, info: 476-5630, www.moultonborohistory.org. Oct. 15, Criminal Homicide: Origins and Remedies, 6:30 pm, Meredith Public Library, Meredith, UNH criminal justice co-directors successful investigations. Free, open to public. Oct. 16, Music in the Pub with Julia Velie, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, junction of Routes 109 and 113, Center Sandwich. Info: www.cornerhouseinn.com Oct. 16-18, Annual Camping & RV Show, 10/16: 5-7 pm; 10/17: 9 am-5 pm; 10/18: 9 am-noon, free, public welcome, view the latest in RVs/campers, Danforth Bay Camping and RV Resort, 196 Shawtown Rd., Ossipee, www.danforthbay.com.

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Oct. 16-18, Shop Hop in Center Harbor, 279-6212, www.meredithareachamber.com. Oct. 17, Effingham Historic Town Hall Open House, tour historic building with murals, brief lecture on painting restoration, refreshments, door prizes, free admission, 9 am-3 pm, 30 Town House Rd., Center Effingham, 539-1537. Oct. 17, Halloween Hoot ’n Howl, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness, 6-8 pm, www.nhnature.org., 968-7194.

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Oct. 17, Vintage Car Show, 10 am-1 pm, Canterbury Shaker Village, Canterbury, admission/info.: 783-9511, www.shakers.org. Oct. 17, Lakes Region General Hospital Fall Craft Fair, 9 am-3 pm, Laconia High School, 345 Union Ave., Laconia, catered food, crafts, big raffle, free admission. Oct. 17, Frankenstein/Bride of Frankenstein, 7 pm, The Village Players, 51 Glendon Street, Wolfeboro. Movie on the big screen. Call 569-9656. www.village-players. com. Oct. 17, Twangtown Paramours, folk/country music concert, 7:30 pm, Franklin Opera House, Central St., Franklin, tickets: 934-1901.

Year-round!

Oct. 17, Scarecrow Buffet & Display, 10 am-2 pm, Cate Park, Wolfeboro, build a scarecrow, $20 to register before 10/12; $25 after that. Info: 569-0219. Oct. 17-18, Halloween at the Farm, Moulton Farm, 18 Quarry Rd., Meredith, fall kids activities, tractor rides, pumpkin carving, live music, corn maze, petting farm, and more. www.moultonfarm.com. Oct. 17-18, Leaf Peeper’s Craft Fair, North Conway Community Center, 2628 White Mountain Highway, North Conway. Sat. 10 am-5 pm, Sun. 10 am-4 pm. Rain or Shine. Call 528-4014. www.joycescraftshows.com.

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Oct. 18, Lily’s Angels 5K Walk/Run, benefits Greater Lakes Region Children’s Auction, Opechee Park, Laconia, info: 707-9941/393-0343.

Oct. 18, Nov. 7 & 14, The ABC’s of Letterpress Printing, 9:30 am-4:30 pm, Canterbury Shaker Village, Canterbury, admission/info.: 783-9511, www.shakers. org.

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Oct. 18, Tamworth’s 250th Celebration, 1-3 pm. Tamworth is having a year-long birthday party and the festivities begin at Remick Museum & Farm with kick off celebration. The event will open with remarks from one of the town’s founding families and also features live music, historic food samples. Free, 323-7591.

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Oct. 18, Fall Benefit Concert, Union Congregational Church, 80 Main St., Union, 4-6 pm, variety of musical styles and talent. 473-2727.

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Page 14

October 12, 2015

STOP in to pick from our Glass Pumpkin Patch glass pumpkins to decorate your fall table by League glass blowers 10% of the sales of glass pumpkins in the month of Oct. will be donated to the Meredith Food Pantry

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

Oct. 19, The Floorcloth and its History by Lisa Mair, Laconia Public Library, Main St., Laconia, 7 pm, 527-1278, www.laconiahistorical.org. Oct. 20, David Sedaris, comedian, 7 pm, Silver Center for the Arts, Plymouth State University, Plymouth, 535-2787. Oct. 20, Only in America: History and Health Care in the United States, program by Allen Koop traces history of medicine/health care in America, 7:30 pm, Remick Country Doctor Museum and Farm, 58 Cleveland Hill Rd., Tamworth, 323-7591. Oct. 20, Victory Garden lecture, Wright Museum, Center St., Wolfeboro, 7 pm, reserve seating: 569-1212. by Various Artists Now Thru August 31 Oct. 22, A House on the Bay: Life on 17th Century NH’s Coastal Frontier, 7 pm, School House Museum, 94 Dane Rd., Rt. 25B, Center Harbor, 968-3902. Oct. 22, Stark Decency-NH’s WWII German Prison of War Camp, program by Allen Koop, 7 pm, Laconia Public Library, 695 N. Main St., Laconia, 524-4775 ext. 11.

Halloween Hoot ‘N Howl Saturday, October 17 6:00 to 8:30 p.m.

Enjoy an eerily entertaining guided tour featuring live skits with a seasonal theme. Come in costume and dress suitably for outdoor weather. After your journey, warm up with Halloween games and tasty treats!

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Oct. 23, Annual Family Pumpkin Carving, free, Meredith Public Library, Meredith, 2-3 pm, library provides pumpkins to carve, snacks, cider. 279-4303. Oct. 23, Appleseed Collective concert, Barnstormers Theatre, Tamworth, 7:30 pm. Proceeds support workshops and diverse performances in the community. Enjoy a local foods supper at The Other Store in Tamworth before the show (call 323-8872 for reservations) and sample fine locally-produced spirits at Tamworth Distilling from 5-7:30 pm (they’ll donate 10% of sales during that time to Arts Council of Tamworth). Info/tickets: artstamworth.org. Oct. 23, Music in the Pub with Audrey Drake, 6:30 pm, Corner House Inn, junction of Routes 109 and 113, Center Sandwich. Info: www.cornerhouseinn.com. Oct. 23, Spooky Tot Time Halloween Party, 10 am, Meredith Public Library, Meredith, Halloween story, craft, sweet treat. 279-4303.

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A Lady’s Day, gallery exhibit, daily through Oct. 25, Carriage House, collection of paintings featuring women as subjects from the 19th and 20th centuries. Free, open to public, Castle in the Clouds, Moultonboro, info: 476-5900, www.castleintheclouds. org. 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. Belknap Mill, programs and self-guided tours of the Power House, 1823 historic former textile mill. Hours/information: 524-8813. The Mill Plaza, 25 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. Country Acoustic Picking Party, Wednesdays, 7-9 pm, Tilton Senior Center, Tilton.

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Explore Squam Cruise, daily 1-2:30 pm, explore Squam Lake, see wildlife aboard canopied pontoon boat, Squam Lakes Natural Science Center, Holderness. 9687194, 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 Thursday, Gilford Public Library, Potter Hill Rd., Gilford. 10:30 am-12:30 pm, free, info.: 524-6042. Fiber Group, Fridays, 1:30-3:30 pm, Shepherd’s Hut Market, 637 Morrill Street, Gilford. Call 393-4696 or email jekeyser@shepherdshutmarket.com. Forgotten Arts: Fiber Arts Group. Meets every other Tuesday, 9:30 am-noon. Fiber artists and/or interested onlookers welcome to join Happy Weavers & Friends group to learn the historic art of weaving, spinning, sewing, quilting, and more. Bring a project to work on, if desired. Group meets monthly on an every other Tuesday schedule at Remick Museum & Farm, Tamworth Village. Free. (Does not include access to the Museum.) 323-7591. 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. Lake Cruises through October aboard M/S Mount Washington, themed and day cruises, departures, date, etc., www.cruisenh.com.


October 12, 2015

Page 15

Magic Foods RestauRant gRoup 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. Libby Museum, hours through Columbus Day: Sat. 10 am-4 pm, Sunday 12-4 pm, Natural History museum with tools, arrowheads, dugout canoes, representations of New England wildlife and unique items from around the world. 755 N. Main St., Wolfeboro, 569-1035, www.libbymuseum.org.

Center Harbor 603.253.4762

Bedford 603.935.8070

Live Blues every Friday night at 8 pm, Pitman’s Freight Room, 94 New Salem St., Laconia. Call 494-3334, pitmansfreightroom.com. Live Jazz every Thursday at 8 pm, Pitman’s Freight Room, 94 New Salem St., Laconia. Call 494-3334, pitmansfreightroom.com. Loon Cruises on Squam Lake, 3 pm, join Tiffany Grade, Squam Lake Project biologist and Squam Lake Natural Science Center captain for 90-min. Loon Cruise. Info: Loon Preservation Committee: 476-5666. 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. Model Yacht Sailing on Back Bay, Bridge Falls Path, Wolfeboro. Weather permitting, Back Bay Skippers race Solings 1-3 pm Tuesday and US12’s 1-3 pm Thursday. New participants or visitors are always welcome. www.nhbm.org.

Wolfeboro 603.515.1003

Laconia 603-524-9373 Concord, NH 603-856-7925

New Horizons Band of the Lakes Region, meets Tuesdays at 7 pm at Music Clinic, Rt. 3, Belmont, all musicians welcome, info: 528-6672. Open Mic/Jam Night, Thursdays, 7-11 pm, Hawg’s Pen Cafe, Farmington. All levels, styles, and genres welcome. Info: shadowsoundmusic@yahoo.com. Open Mic every Friday at 7:30 pm, The Back Room at the Mill Fudge Factory, 2 Central St., Bristol, 744-0405, themillfudgefactory.com. Ossipee Knit/Crochet meets at the Ossipee Public Library on the second and fourth Friday of each month, 1:30-3 pm. 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. Purple Pit Crafter’s Club, meets first and third Wed. of each month, The Purple Pit, Bristol, info: 393-4914. Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, 58 Cleveland Hill Rd., Tamworth Village. Activities and tours, exhibits, workshops, Capt. Enoch Remick House and farm stand. Call for hours 323-7591 or 800-686-6117, www.remickmuseum.org. Silver Lake Railroad, 55-minute, six mile round trip through countryside of Madison. Train rides by donation, depart Silver Lake Depot, Rt. 113. Visit restored 1941 Stirling Diner, Depot Museum. Hours/info: www.silverlakerailroad.com. Striving for a Healthy Lifestyle, Thursdays in Oct., 12 pm, workshops on healthy lifestyle, Wesley Woods Community Center, 18 Wesley Way, Gilford, RSVP/info: Stace at 528-2555, sdhendricks@wesleywoodsnh.org. Tamworth Farmer’s Market, Saturdays 9 am-1 pm, through Oct. 24, Unitarian Church parking lot, Tamworth, 323-2392. Trail Clubs, Connecting People With the Mountains, through March 2016, historical exhibit, Museum of the White Mountains, 34 Highland St., Plymouth. www. plymouth.edu/museum-of-the-white-mountains, 535-3210. 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. Winnipesaukee Triathlon Club, free group, members training for various triathlons, meets for a run Tues. 6 pm at Gunstock Inn lower parking lot and swim training at 7:15 pm. info: www.meetup.com. Wolfeboro Indoor Farmer’s Market, starts Nov. 14 and takes place the second and fourth Saturday of each month through April 9. First Congregational Church, 115 S. Main St., Wolfeboro, 10 am-2 pm, info: www.wolfeboroareafarmersmarket.com. Woodside Carvers, informal group of Lakes Region men and women who enjoy carving, meet Thursday mornings, 9-11 am in the dry craft room, Woodside Building Conference Center, Taylor Community, 435 Union Ave., Laconia. Info: email gary@ garybrockdesign,com.

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October 12, 2015

Classical Concert Coming to Wolfeboro Classical pianist Charles Jones will perform an elegant and dynamic program of Beethoven, Scriabin, Ginastera, and Chopin Saturday, Oct.

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Charles Jones 205 South Main St., Wolfeboro. Points North Financial Consulting, Benefit Strategies, and Taylor Community sponsor the concert. Award-winning pianist Charles Jones’ esteemed reputation as a performing artist/teacher began its formation in his childhood home of Roanoke, Virginia. His talent and verve for the keyboard carried him to undergraduate studies at the North Carolina School of the

Arts (NCSA) and a Master of Music Degree at the Juilliard School in New York as a recipient of the Mary Duke Biddle Scholarship as well as a Juilliard Scholarship. Now based in New York City, Charles has extended tenures on the piano faculties in NYC at Henry Street

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• Classical Concert Continued from page 16 Settlement Music School and Harlem School of the Arts, and since 1999, at Lubec, Maine’s enormously successful SummerKeys, an immersion music program that serves people of all skill levels from across the world. Wolfeboro Friends of Music board member, Eric Taussig, has studied at SummerKeys many seasons with Charles and admires him immensely. Eric shared, “Charles is a most engaging pianist who enjoys playing and shows his emotions through the music he plays.” Charles’ love of playing has led to honors throughout his career, which include first-place winner in the National Music Teachers Association Competition and as a featured artist at the Rome Festival, Rome, Italy, from which he received an open invitation to return. He has performed throughout the eastern United States, including Lincoln Center, appeared on radio and public television in New York and Virginia and been a soloist with the Charleston Symphony Orchestra as well as the NCSA Orchestra as a result of winning competitions held by both. The enjoyment of his art, his energy and distinct interpretive approaches to the different composers will show full force in Charles’ Friends of Music program. The evening will open with Ludwig van Beethoven’s Sonata in D Major, Op. 10, and No. 3, generally acknowledged to be the maestro’s first masterpiece and described as “enigmatic” in its “cool clear brilliance and sumptuous variety of moods and

ideas.” The program will continue with two selections by the mercurial Alexander Scriabin: his exceptionally challenging “Etude in C Sharp Minor, Opus 42 No. 5” that has a melody reminiscent of Russian Gypsy music, and “Sonata No. 5, Op. 53” once described as the most difficult piece in the entire piano repertory along with Franz Liszt’s Mephisto Waltz No. 1. Argentinean composer Alberto Ginastera’s Sonata No. 1, Op. 22 will open the second half of the program. The composer’s “intention for the piece was to capture the spirit of Argentine folk music without relying on explicit quotations from existing folk songs.” Three Frederic Chopin works will bring the concert to a graceful and, at times, fiery conclusion. First, Chopin’s “Etude in A Flat Major, Op. 25, No. 1” dedicated to his friend Franz Liszt, followed by the delicate “Etude in E Major, Op. 10, No. 3” and concluding with Ballade in F Minor, Op. 52, No. 4, considered the greatest of his four ballads. This is the second of eight programs presented by Wolfeboro Friends of Music to people of the greater Lakes Region during its season, which runs from September through May. Tickets are available for $20 at the door; at Black’s Paper Store and Avery Insurance in Wolfeboro; or at Innisfree Bookshop in Meredith; by calling 569-2151 or by visiting www. wfriendsofmusic.org. Please note WFOM’s special policy: High school students with ID will be admitted free of charge. A child accompanied by an adult ticket purchaser will be admitted free of charge.

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October 12, 2015

Preparing Your Yard for Cold Weather By Cal Felicetti, Consulting Arborist for Chippers Inc. Colder weather extremes of snow, wind and lower temperatures can take their toll on your landscapes. Damage to trees and shrubs is common and even turf and groundcovers are vulnerable. What can be done to prevent severe damage to your yard as cold weather is upon us? As in many other aspects of life, follow the old adage, an once of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Proper pruning and cabling when necessary reduces damage caused by winter. Thoughtfully pruned shade trees develop strong branch attachments

supporting the weight of ice and heavy snow in winter. Hedges with correct taper will shed snow and support an aesthetically attractive but inherently weak leader even when loaded with snow or ice. Colder weather winds are very drying, especially for broad-leaf or coniferous evergreen trees and shrubs. Plant only hardy species for NH’s growing zones in the most exposed areas, watering new evergreen plantings in the fall and mulching annually to insulate the roots. When planting or replacing trees or shrubs, choose native and ice-resistant specials. (You can find more information at the

Consulting and More page of www. chippersinc.com.) Chippers advises good overall arboricultural practices to maintain the health of your trees and shrubs in the prevention of sun scald or frost cracking – covering the trunks of young trees with wrap can sometimes be helpful, but remember to remove the wrap after the trees leaf out fully in the spring. Keep in mind that a rapid change in temperature is a tree’s or shrub’s worst enemy and this generally occurs with westerly exposure. Our arborists recommend pruning your trees during the winter when they are dormant. This prevents the

spread of disease, helps the arborist with increased visibility for form development and disease/hazard detection and minimizes shock to the trees because of leaf loss. As an added bonus, when the ground is frozen there is minimal damage to lawns, gardens or the forest floor. Even after doing everything possible to prevent winter damage, it sometimes happens. Trees and shrubs that experience moderate storm damage can often make a full recovery over time. When damage occurs,

• Yard Continued on page 19

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put your mower away in October. The final mowing of the season can be anywhere from mid to late November depending upon weather Meredith, NH remove broken limbs immediately, and conditions. If the turf is left at a normal have a certified arborist perform crown height (three inches), this will promote restoration pruning within one growing snow mold disease and the grass will season. Arborists also offer pre-winter likely be matted and suffer damage that DiningOutNH.com assessments of your landscape to will become visible in the spring. identify potential problems, and they A winterized treatment of potassium are available to perform storm damage (potash) will harden the grass off in emergency work at any time. October to early November before the Winterize Your Turf ground freezes. Your grass should be By Theron Peck, aka Mr. Grass clean and not be covered with piles We recommend mowing your lawn of leaves or debris that will impair .COM into November if it continues to grow, the lawn’s ability to breathe under but lower the blade one notch each the snow. All leaves, sticks and debris week beginning in mid October, with a should be removed prior to the first final cut around one inch in November. snowfall and removed again in early The final cut should correspond to spring after winter storms have passed. a stretch of colder weather such as (For further information, visit daytime highs in the low 40s or 30s. Chippers at www.chippersinc.) point-and-click dining Don’tYour be deceived by frosty nights and guide for the Lakes Region.

• Yard Continued from page 18

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Handmade History at the Laconia Historical and Museum Society By Kathi Caldwell-Hopper I love handmade items and if they were made long ago and are still in good condition, so much the better. Old quilts and embroidered tablecloths and pillows and braided or hooked rugs are creative pieces of history that, for me, hold great appeal. Often, they echo the time period in which they were made, such as quilts made during World War II. During the war, supplies were limited and quilters showed great ingenuity in creating colorful bed coverings with fabric scraps that might have otherwise been tossed out. My admiration for antique fabrics led me to the current exhibit on the top floor of the Laconia Public Library in downtown Laconia, titled A History of Home Textile Arts. Organized and presented by the Laconia Historical and Museum Society, the exhibit features all sorts of textiles from the Society’s collection as well as items on loan from area residents. The exhibit is a must-see if you like old textiles. The day I visited, I was amazed to see how many items are featured in this thoughtfully-planned exhibit. Each textile form has its own area in the rotunda-shaped room. Plexiglas cases are full of old items that aided women in their sewing endeavors, from threads to rug hooks to buttons and other tools of the trade. I started my tour of the exhibit on the left-hand side of the rotunda and stopped to gaze at a charming little vignette with a teacup and saucer and an old book titled The Book of

Samplers. The items sit on a little table covered with an embroidered cloth, circa 1929. Anna Chapman, great grandmother of Pam Clark, president of the Laconia Historical and Museum Society, embroidered the cloth. The fine stitching is amazing and shows that at a time before television and the Internet, women indeed filled their leisure time with creative endeavors such as embroidery. Large poster board copy at each exhibit area explains the history of the textiles and how each has evolved over the years. Next on the exhibit tour was a display case full of gorgeous old lacy items. I loved the drawn lace kerchief that looked so fragile but still retains its vibrant red and cream crewel and drawn lace handiwork. Today we might scoff

at the idea of a lacy and crewel work handkerchief – why spend so much time on such an item, we could ask, when we can purchase a box of tissues at the store? The answer is because at one time there weren’t tissues and every fabric that was used was important and worthy of the handiwork and creative stitchery of women of all ages. An 1890s bodice in the same case features tatted lace and crewelwork, again showing the care and intricacy of hand-sewn items. Charming little embroidery samples show us that even cotton hand towels were adorned with sewing featuring embroidered sailing ships and buttons for added embellishments. The exhibit comes alive with old photos of some of the women who sewed items that are in the exhibit, such

as lace and embroidered items by Elsie M. Corriveau. Elsie gazes at us from an old black-and-white family photo; one wonders how she found the time to do such beautiful handiwork with a family of three children! These days a lot of people have taken up the hobby/craft of knitting, but you don’t hear much about the art of tatting. Similar to crocheting, tatting is an old handiwork art that creates beautiful lacy objects. An exhibit area features tatted items and the tools and threads used to create tatting. Because lace once adorned many garments, tatting was something many women did to create lace collars and cuffs. The exhibit also features tatting shuttles and bobbin lace bobbins. In an antique baby carriage, an embroidered baby cover shows the care a family member put into preparing for the baby. The coverlet is circa 1929 and was stitched and embroidered by Anna Chapman for her granddaughter. The most amazing portion of the exhibit, to my way of thinking, is the crotched bedspread on display in all its 1920s glory. The patterned spread is a cream color and features the handiwork of Henrietta Fortin of Laconia. She made the bedspread in the 1920s and it is a breathtakingly beautiful piece of work. Knitting is very popular and enthusiasts will like the portion of

• Day Tripping Continued on page 22

Dracula Presented by Northeast Ballet “What manner of man is this, or what manner of creature is it in the semblance of a man?” asks Johnathan Harker, the narrator of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Come to Northeastern Ballet Theatre’s production of Dracula on Saturday, Oct. 24 at 7 pm at Oyster River High School in Durham, New Hampshire to find out! Edra Toth, Artistic Director and Founder of Northeastern Ballet Theatre, had this to say about her artistic interpretation of Dracula, “My vision of Dracula is a compilation of Bram Stoker’s original character from his novel and that of Francis Ford Coppola’s movie version, the latter of which portrayed Dracula with more human qualities. It is my hope that the audience will experience a wide range of emotions and identify with the human aspect of Dracula. I was very conscious not to create a ‘commercialized’ version of the character.” The lead role of Dracula will be played by Assaf Benchetrit, Assistant Professor of Theater and Dance (dance) at the University of New Hampshire. Mr. Benchetrit began his dance and music studies at the Rubin Academy for Music

and Dance in Jerusalem, Israel. Upon graduation, he danced with the Jerusalem Dance Theater, the Panov Ballet, and later with The Israeli National Ballet Company. During his military service, Assaf received the “Remarkable Dancer” prize from the Israeli government which allowed him to continue dancing while serving. After completing his military service, he arrived in the United States to dance with companies such as The Joffrey, Metropolitan Classical Ballet, Alabama Ballet, and Gelsey Kirkland Ballet. He performed lead roles in the majority of renowned ballet productions such as Swan Lake as Siegfried, Don Quixote as Basilio, La Corsaire as Ali, La Bayadere as Solar, Coppelia as Franz, Sleeping Beauty as the Prince, the title-role in Petrushka, and a number of George Balanchine works including Apollo in the title-role, Donizetti Variations and the Nutcracker as Cavalier. He also starred as Gaston in Northeastern Ballet Theatre’s original production of Beauty and the Beast in April 2015. All of the other dancers in this professional production study ballet at Northeastern Ballet Theatre; the

company has studios in Wolfeboro and Dover. Experience the passion and drama that is Dracula. This is not your ordinary ballet performance! Parental discretion is advised for children under age 10. Tickets are available at

northeasternballettheatre.ticketleap.com/ dracula-oyster-river/ or by calling 8348834. For more information, visit www. northeasternballet.org. “Listen to them, the children of the night. What music they make!”

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Page 22

October 12, 2015 history, information in the exhibit tells us that there was once a business in downtown Laconia called Baker’s Fabric Factory. The factory was in business from 1922 to 1969 and must have been quite a place for fabric lovers! A circa 1880s friendship quilt is also on display with signatures of women who worked on the piece. I particularly enjoyed viewing a group of hooked rugs from the Society’s collection as well as some on loan from individuals. I love hooked rugs in the primitive style and the antique rugs are among the best I have seen with floral patterns and one of a large old farmhouse. The colors are still somewhat vibrant, attesting to the good condition of the rugs. The exhibit is well worth stopping by the Laconia Public Library; it is on display through November and offers a look at how textiles were once made. Everything from lace collars to tablecloths, knitted coverlets and hooked rugs show the care people once had when making and preserving old items. The items truly are a look at our handmade history. For information on the exhibit, visit www.laconiahistorical.org or call 5271278.

• Day Tripping Continued from page 21 the exhibit on knit items. Featured are wooden knitting needs, examples of knitted lace and knitted lace trim bonnet and knit gloves, among other items. A salesman’s sample of a Samuel Thomas loom circa 1850 shows a miniature version of a loom once used for knitting. (Thomas held the patent for looms and at one time owned the Belknap Mills property in Laconia.) Next to the salesman’s sample sits a beautiful, full-sized Swedish made Four Harness Loom circa 1970, on loan from Eliza Leadbeater. Near the loom, a wonderful and huge old Columbus Silk Tapestry circa 1892 is a most unusual table covering with a blue silky background and ornate design. At one time, every little girl learned to sew, whether at a sewing machine or by hand. Examples of children’s sewing projects and dress patterns take the viewer back to a time when clothing was handmade unless a professional dressmaker was hired to make a garment for a special occasion. For those who love tidbits of local

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October 12, 2015

Garvin Gallery Five presents the art of Robert De Mario The Garvin Gallery Five finishes tion for a client using this technique. off its third season by After taking several hosting the artwork photos, he makes of Robert De Mario color copies of the through October 2015. image and cuts them A New Hampshire to fit a particular vanartist who is at home tage point. He may with natural materials add paint or pencil as well as man-made, and small details as DeMario creates surneeded to complete real and ideal art from the desired final outthe world around come of the renderhim. Inspired by the ing. Robert can be sculptural works of contacted by e-mail Robert DeMario Louise Nevelson and at: graphicsdem@ David Smith and colmetrocast.net. lage artists from the POP movement in The Garvin Gallery Five will hold a America, Robert’s artwork can only be Fall Open House on October 24, from described as diverse. 11 am to 4 pm. The public is invited Robert studied to be an illustrator to visit, meet Robert De Mario and and received his BFA at the College of all the artist members of the gallery. New Rochelle, NY in 1977. He worked The Garvin Gallery Five continues to in the commercial advertising field for showcase the art of Norman Royle, Pemany years where his designs were ter Abate, Betty Brown, Darlene Bean, placed on greeting cards, mugs and all Gabe Smith, Heather MacLeod, Josef forms of marketing products. Bob has Keller, Mabel Doyle, JP Goodwin, sold and exhibited his 3D artwork and Ken Eason, Madelyn Albee and Shacollage art in South Hampton, Long ron Theiling. The Gallery is located on Island, NY, Rockport MA, and Full the second floor of the historic Garvin Circle Gallery of Cornish Maine and is Building across from the Gafney Lipresently at the Blue Shutter Gallery in brary and Town Hall in Sanbornville. Wolfeboro. The Gallery can be contacted at: www. The artist currently specializes in cut facebook.com/GarvinGalleryFive. paper collage; he is typically commissioned to create a rendering of a loca-

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