Category Archives: Uncategorized

Plant Sale – 5/16/15

Good news!  With the annual plant sale coming up, can spring be far behind?  Thanks Jana Sellarole for giving me this news and thus giving me courage! – Lil

The Friends of the Walpole Town Library will holds its annual Plant Sale on Saturday, May 16 from 9 to 11 am (rain or shine) at the library on Main Street.

A wide assortment of locally grown plants will be available. Please plan on coming by to have a look, and support our local libraries!

We also welcome donations of annuals, perennials, vegetables, herbs, houseplants, small scrubs and ground cover. Please label all plants by type and color. You can also donate garden-related items, such as decorative pots, ornaments, hand tools, seeds and bulbs. Donations are accepted until Thursday, May 14.

All proceeds from the sale benefit both the Walpole and North Walpole libraries. Please call Carol Malnati at 756-9537 for more information. We appreciate your support!

Zoning Board of Adjustment Agenda – 4/15/15

Agenda for Zoning Board of Adjustment

Wednesday,  April 15, 2015

Walpole Town Hall – 7:30 p.m.

 

Roll Call

Appointment of alternates if needed

Minutes: Review minutes of March meeting

New Business:

Signage: Kathy Watson, a representative from Burdicks, will be adding more signs to the building and replacing existing ones. Also, Burdicks has purchased the Cashell or former Dr. Tatum building and plan to put in offices and a one bedroom apartment.

Signage: A principal, either Kathy Mazziott or Jesse Carr, will be in for a sign for the new cafe in the Pellegrino building.

List of who is what on the zoning board, their telephone numbers and email.

Discussion of by-laws. Should there be any changes?

Update Zoning Ordinance with Water Ordinance

Next meeting Wednesday, May 18, 2015

Planning Board Agenda – 4/14/15

PLANNING BOARD AGENDA

WALPOLE TOWN HALL

Tuesday, April 14, 10, 2015

                 7 p.m.                                

 

Roll Call – Appointment of alternates if needed

Minutes – Review minutes of the March meeting

New Business:

Requests for a Public Hearing:

            Lot Line Adjustment: Rite Simonds, who lives on Cheshire Turnpike in Drewsville, is      asking for a Lot Line Adjustment. Joe DiBernardo did the survey.

            Site Plan Review: Ken Burns wants to build a house on his property on North Road.

Bensonwood

Informational meeting:Terri Patterson of Connecticut is coming to find out what she has to do to build a group of upscale rental cabins, 400 to 800 square feet, which are all self-sustaining. She’s looking at a 110-acre piece of property in the southeastern part of Walpole. It will be called Off-The-Grid Escape. David Howard, the  prospective builder, may also be there.

Old Business: 

Next meeting May 12, 2015

Walpole Town Library Losing Director

Lyn Cooke asked me to share the news and ask for help from the community.  Mary Farrell is leaving and those “big shoes “need to be filled.  We would like to ask for your thoughts and suggestions. – Lil

Most everybody in Walpole knows Mary Farrell, the smiling woman who has been Library Director of our library for the last four years and was the assistant director prior to that.

Under Mary’s gentle guidance our the Walpole Town Library has thrived. She and her staff have made it a “warm and welcoming” place enjoyed by children and adults alike.  But on June 1st, Mary will be leaving Walpole, NH for Walpole, ME!

The challenge now for the Library Trustees is to find another great director. One who loves the job, her staff, and the public. One who has a keen and open mind. One who will continue the direction and expand the progress that has been made under Mary’s leadership.

Please help us find a new Director. Spread the word about the opportunity for the person with the right mix of qualifications and ability.

The Library Trustees have formed a Search Committee with the guidance of Lil DeCoste. Please feel free to share your thoughts as with any of them and send prospective candidates our way.

We want our Library to continue to thrive and we’re sure that you do as well!  Thanks, in advance, for your help.

Volunteer Help Needed

Michael Nerrie and the others at the Recycling Center are in need of more help.  Hope they get a positive and quick response. – Lil

 

THERE IS AN URGENT NEED FOR VOLUNTEERS AT THE WALPOLE RE-USE TRAILER ON SATURDAYS

Unless we can find volunteers to work Saturday’s this coming season, we will have to close the Re-Use Trailer on both Saturdays and Thursdays. We have enough volunteers to staff Thursdays, but it would be impossible for the recycling employees to monitor an unstaffed Reuse Trailer on Saturdays, and the sorting and organizing of items can’t be done in just one day.

Please help spread the word to you friends and family about our need for Saturday volunteers at the Walpole Re-Use Trailer. We are open from 8am to 4pm, with all donations going to the Fall Mountain Food Shelf. Volunteer once a month for a two hour shift or every week if you like.

If you, or anyone you know, is willing to volunteer at the Walpole Re-use Trailer

on Saturdays for a two hour shift between 8 am and 4 pm

please contact Michael Nerrie at (603)756-4179

or mnerrie@gmail.com

Y Day Camp Helps Area Youth Learn, Grow and Thrive Throughout the Summer

Over the past 50 summers, Meeting Waters YMCA has helped more than 12,500 area youth learn, grow and thrive in the summer months. Once again, Y Day Camp will help hundreds of young people “hop the gap” between the close of school and the start of the new school year. When children and teens are out of school, they can face challenges related to hunger, health, learning, water safety and accessing safe spaces. Y Day Camp is one of very few places in the region where all five needs are met each and every day throughout the summer.

Meeting Waters YMCA offers camps for 5-15 year olds from throughout southeastern Vermont and southwestern NH. All camps are based at the regional Y’s 52-acre Lewis Day Camp facility, located on Route 5 in Springfield, just off I-91. The camp property is bordered by the Springfield Town Forest and the Black River, creating a unique natural setting for the programs. Bus service is provided to and from camp each day from Brattleboro, Putney, Westminster, Bellows Falls, Chester, Springfield, Walpole, North Walpole and Charlestown.

Meeting Waters YMCA offers four different camp experiences. It’s Y Day Camp for 6-13 year-olds offers eight one-week and four two-week sessions between June 29th and August 21st. Y Day Camp features canoeing, archery, swim lessons, sports and adventure games, arts and crafts, and environmental education. The Y’s Leader-in-Training program provides a week of leadership development with youth leadership author and consultant Steve Fortier, followed by three weeks working alongside camp staff to practice the leadership, group management and facilitation skills they have honed during the week-long training. Family Camp, held on Saturday July 25th, provides an opportunity for parents to join their children in enjoying various camp activities. KinderCamp provides children entering kindergarten in the fall these same experiences as they transition from child care to school. It takes place from August 17th through 21st.

The regional Y’s camps participate in the federal Summer Food Program through a partnership with Springfield Family Center. All campers—regardless of town of residence or family income—qualify for a free healthy lunch each day.

“Meeting Waters YMCA’s camps provide a variety of opportunities to help ensure that youth are learning, eating healthy, and being physically active in the summer, a time that much research shows many children experience summer learning loss and summer weight gain,” says Susan Fortier, Meeting Waters Y’s Program Director and Y Day Camp Director. “Our campers also further develop key skills in leadership, followership, community-building, character development, and more -– all while having lots of fun and making new friends.”

Registration for the upcoming camp season has begun. Meeting Waters YMCA encourages parents to give their kids the gift of camp. And, to ensure that all youth have the chance to experience camp, the regional Y offers financial assistance from donations to its Reach Out to Youth fundraising campaign and it accepts state child care financial assistance from both NH and VT.

Camp Open Houses will be held on Saturday, May 16th from 1-3pm; Monday, June 15th from 5-7pm; and Thursday, June 25th from 5-7pm.

For more information or to enroll, visit http://www.meetingwatersymca.org or call the Y at their office nearest you—Brattleboro area: 246-1036; Springfield area: 885-8131; or BF and Fall Mountain area: 463-4769.

Meeting Waters YMCA is a charitable, social service organization founded in 1895. Its programs and services focus on youth development, healthy living, social responsibility and family strengthening throughout the Fall Mountain, Bellows Falls, Springfield and Brattleboro regions.

 

Spring Gala and Benefit Auction – right around the corner

Brattleboro Museum and Art Center’s Spring Gala & Benefit Auction at Alyson’s Orchard is Walpole, New Hampshire, is less than one week away!
This year, we’re honoring outgoing BMAC president and all-around great guy, Bruce Berg. Donald Saaf and The Bluebird Orchestra will provide live musical entertainment. Hardy Foard Catering has prepared a delicious menu of appetizers, dinner, and dessert. BMAC trustee David Howell has specially selected fine wines for the evening. And of course, there will be a silent and live auction of incredible art, crafts, wine, jewelry, and travel opportunities. As in the past, all the money we raise will support the work BMAC does year-round with thousands of kids in preschool through high school.
If you haven’t purchased tickets yet and would like to, you can do so here:
If you’d like to browse and possibly bid on selected auction items, you can do that here:

“Address Unknown” – 3/17/15

“ADDRESS UNKNOWN” by Kathrine Kressmann Taylor

DIRECTED BY: David Newman (brother of Mary McMahon)

HOWELL GALLERY

(250 Old Keene Rd., Walpole, New Hampshire)

DATE: Friday, April 17, 8:00 pm

ADMISSION: Suggestion donation of $15.

First published in 1938 in Story magazine, “Address Unknown” was a wake-up call for Americans revealing the true nature of the Nazi menace. This punchy epistolary tale enacts a stunning drama of friendship, betrayal and vengeance. In 1932, San Francisco art-gallery owner Max Eisenstein, a Jew who grew up in pre-Nazi Germany, bids farewell to his longtime friend and business partner, Martin Schulse, who returns with his family to Munich. Through their letters to one another, which quickly move from warmth to a chilling disregard, we watch as the once-liberal Martin, seduced by grandiose visions of German destiny and by the rantings of “our Glorious Leader,” vents an anti-semitism that he tortuously rationalizes. Max, alarmed by reports of anti-Jewish persecution in Germany, asks Martin to look after his sister, Griselle, who is an opera singer performing in Berlin. When she is murdered by Nazi storm troopers after being refused refuge at the Schulse house, Max takes revenge through a clever epistolary ploy that provides a satisfying surprise ending.

Spring Happenings at Alyson’s Orchard

Just the thought that Fran Imhoff and the rest of the orchard staff has spring events planned is encourageing, don’t you think? – Lil

 

Spring Gala & Benefit Auctionatat

Benefit for Brattleboro Museum & Art Center

Friday, April 10 at 6PM

Wine, Beer, and Appetizers

Buffet Dinner & Dessert

Silent & Live Auction

Live Music & Dancing by the Bluebird Orchestra

$75 pp or $500 for a table of 8

802-257-0124, ext. 101

www.brattleboromuseum.org

5th Annual Gardening Event

Better Herbs, Better Flavor, Better Health

Benefit for Parks Place Community Resource Center

Sunday, April 12 from 2:00 – 5:00

Silent Auction Preview at 1:30 PM

Refreshments & Cash Bar

Speaker:  Misha Johnson

Cooking Demonstration:  Chef Susie Crowther

Admission by Donation

802-463-9927

Admission by Donation

www.parksplacevt.org

Walpole Unitarian Church News for April

Antonia Andreoli wants everyone to know that they are back in the church! – Lil

After three months of energy-saving services up at our Hastings House, we return to the church on Main Street on Easter Sunday.

April 5’s Easter Service will be led by our minister Lisa Mobayed. She writes: “at Easter, some of us wonder whether to celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus, nature’s renewal happening all around us, or a gift-bearing bunny.  We will explore how these different understandings of Easter are mutually supporting and enhancing.”
April 12 we will welcome Rev. Bill Nelson, a visiting minister from Springfield, Vermont.
On April 19, Minister Mobayed will lead the service, Greening Power: “Nine hundred years ago the Christian mystic, Hildegard of Binger, developed ideas about life’s generative force, how it flows through us and through the world.  She called it viriditas, or the green truth, and expressed in word, music and art its healing and life-giving properties – accessible to each and everyone of us.”
On April 26:  The Better Angels of Our Nature:  Charles Butterfield, All Souls Church, West Brattleboro, will explore one psychologist’s interpretation of Abraham Lincoln’s famous reference to “the better angels of our nature.”  Stephen Pinker identifies those angels as empathy, self-control, the moral sense and reason. He argues that those four components of our collective psyche have made and are making our world less violent than we suppose.