Enjoy The Great Community Picnic

Join the Mattapoisett Historical Society and the Mattapoisett Land Trust for The Great Community Picnic at Munro Preserve west of Shipyard Park in Mattapoisett on Thursday evening, August 4 (6:00 to 9:00 pm).

Begin with a summer sunset by the harbor, friends and neighbors, and your own delicious picnic fare. Add great live music by Grace Morrison, Huxster and Glowbox. Throw in hors d’oeuvres and a cash bar by The Inn at Shipyard Park and fresh local oysters from Mattapoisett’s own Coot Cove. Result? The Great Community Picnic.

We will provide tables and chairs, tablecloths, and festive lighting. You rent a table and bring a picnic, utensils, napkins and table decorations. Tables for eight people are $160, six are $120 or four people are $80. Tickets are available at Town Wharf General Store (10 Water Street) and The Mattapoisett Historical Society (5 Church Street). You may also email mattapoisett.museum@verizon.net or call 508-758-2844. Space will be limited, so don’t delay.        Plan now to join us for this festive and memorable evening. More information: www.mattlandtrust.org or www.mattapoisetthistoricalsociety.org.

Mattapoisett Historical Society’s Summer Exhibit

The Mattapoisett Historical Society’s summer exhibit “Mattapoisett Fun: Celebrate Summer” opens on Friday, July 1. The exhibit explores recreation in Mattapoisett from Memorial Day to Labor Day. Summertime traditions in Mattapoisett endure largely due to the dedication and efforts of individuals and organizations with a spirit of volunteerism and a commitment to the community. Our small-town community doubles in population in summer. Year-round residents and summer folk take advantage of the town’s beautiful seaside location: boating, swimming, playing golf, running, biking, and dancing. This carpe diem approach to summer has been the collective attitude since at least the early 1900s.The exhibit will be open Wednesdays through Saturdays from 1:00 – 4:00 pm, July 1 to August 27. Don’t miss the fun.

Buzzards Bay Musicfest

Buzzards Bay Musicfest returns for its 20th year with concerts July 13 to17 at the Fireman Performing Arts Center at Tabor Academy, 235 Front Street in Marion. Nationally and internationally prominent musicians will perform orchestral and chamber music, with selections from Mozart, Hummel, Rossini, Ravel, Shostakovich, Tchaikovsky, Haydn and Beethoven, among others. Orchestral performances will be held on Wednesday, July 13 at 8:00 pm and Sunday, July 17 at 2:00 pm. Chamber music performances will be held on Thursday, July 14 and Friday, July 15 at 8:00 pm. Jazz performance by the Orrin Evans Quartet, with vocalist Joanna Pascale, will be held on Saturday, July 16 at 8:00 pm. An Open Rehearsal for Children (with accompanying adult) will be held on Wednesday, July 13 at 2:30 pm. The rehearsal is a unique occasion for young or aspiring musicians to experience watching and listening as artists perform orchestral pieces in preparation for the acclaimed concert series. After the rehearsal, children have the opportunity to chat with Maestro Antony Walker, Artistic Director Charles Stegeman and the musicians. All performances are free and open to the public. For more information, visit www.buzzardsbaymusicfest.com or email info@buzzardsbaymusicfest.com.

To Be Continued…

The age-old adages “everything takes longer than planned” and “nothing ever goes smoothly” could have been applied during the June 27 meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission as five of the eight planned hearings were continued until July 11.

Before getting underway, Chairman Bob Rogers acknowledged commission member Peter Newton for his six years of service on the commission, many of those as the chairman. Newton elected not to seek another term when his current term expires on July 1.

“You’ll be missed,” Rogers said. “It’s been a pleasure working with you.”

Then it was on to the hearings.

The commission was able to vote on three applications. Two applications – an RDA submitted by Gowing Family Trust for the installation of beach access signage on two stone/concrete jetties located at 1 Avenue A and an RDA submitted by Tanya Sjahfiedin, 44 Crystal Spring Road, for the construction of a second-story deck – both received Negative determinations. The third application was a partial Certificate of Compliance for property located on Fieldstone Drive, Lot 8, filed by The Preserve at Bay Club.

The next five filings all required continuances.

William and Jane Farran propose to build an elevated home on Angelica Avenue on a parcel fraught with technical difficulties given its proximity to saltmarshes.

Represented by Mark Manganello of LEC Environmental Consultants and David Davignon of N. Douglas Schneider & Associates, the team was faced with questions in this continuance from the June 13 hearing regarding the need to bring in fill.

Rogers sought to determine if the fill was necessary to the stability of the structure, if there was a need for large stones to secure the fill in place, and whether or not those elements met FEMA regulations for construction in a flood zone.

Manganello said the fill was not related to the construction of the home but was for drainage under the structure. He confirmed that the house would be a free-standing building raised on pile-driven supports unassociated with the fill, and that a planned slab would meet FEMA requirements for ‘break-away’ during a storm surge.

Manganello said Farran still needed to go before the Zoning Board of Appeals due to issues with setbacks, but could not do so without first getting a green light from the commission.

Rogers said, referring to FEMA’s regulations, “The revised plan still does not conform to the rules.”

Manganello and Davignon continued to try and achieve at least an agreement from the commission that the conceptual project would eventually meet conservation karma. Rogers was unable to agree.

“I don’t think it’s appropriate for us to write a letter to the ZBA,” said Rogers. “You’d be a lot better off with an Order of Conditions.”

But an Order of Conditions would not be forthcoming at this hearing, given the unanswered questions of whether of not the project met FEMA rules.

“You need to come into compliance with the FEMA regulations,” Rogers insisted.

Davignon said that the town’s procedure required that the project receive a blessing from the Conservation Commission before it could go before the ZBA and, yet, Rogers was telling them to go back to the Building Department for confirmation of the FEMA compliance.

“Take it up with the building department,” Rogers said. He also said that if the engineering team could get a report stating the fill and associated rocky buttress was acceptable to FEMA, the commission would request an independent peer review “to ensure the report was correct.”

Manganello said he felt the project currently fell more under the directives of the building department and that the commission didn’t have grounds to request a peer review. Rogers retorted that was why he wanted a response from the building inspector, Andy Bobola.

“We can’t approve this plan. There are more impacts than what you have on this plan,” Rogers said. The hearing was continued until July 11.

An after-the-fact Notice of Intent filing that had also been continued from June 13 still didn’t make it out of the starting blocks when, once again, David Davignon, this time representing William Macropoulos, 12 Howard Beach, came before the commission.

Macropoulos’ concrete jetty project had gone beyond the permitted after-the-fact filing by 10 cubic yards for an area of 10-by 12-feet, causing the commission to seek reparations.

Yet, it was difficult for the commissioners or Davignon to determine what the dollar amount should be. All agreed that the town versus the state should benefit from any reparations from Macropoulos. All agreed that money given to the town could be used to purchase additional shellfish seeds, a direct benefit to the community. But none could agree on how to calculate that amount.

After minutes of haggling over how to go about reaching a figure, Newton asked Davignon, “Have you been authorized to negotiate on his behalf?”

“Well, if it’s a low number,” Davignon replied.

That moment of levity gave way to Davignon sharing his belief that the commission had no jurisdiction over the violation in the first place, while also taking umbrage to a letter from the Marine Fisheries who concurred that the jetties were a violation requiring reparations; but to whom and how much remained unanswered.

In the end, it was decided that Conservation Agent Liz Leidhold would contact Marine Fisheries to secure a reliable calculation for reparations, and that Macroploulos would send a letter to the commission with a solid offer. The case was continued until July 11.

Other continuances until July 11 were: Forrest Neal, 16 Brandt Island Road, RDA for shed construction; John Schmid, 4 Justin Avenue, RDA for shed construction; Dennis Arsenault, Snow Fields Road, wetland delineations; and William Fredericks, 30 Holly Woods Road, for a NOI for the construction of a driveway and land clearing for future agricultural activities.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission is scheduled for July 11 at 6:30 pm in the Town Hall conference room.

 

By Marilou Newell

Rochester Republican Town Committee

The Town of Rochester Republican Town Committee will hold a meeting on July 9 at 9:30 am at the Rochester Town Hall. We will be discussing final plans for the upcoming social featuring Congressional candidate Mark Allegro on July 23 and our booth at the Rochester Country Fair where we will be handing out child gun safety coloring books. We are always looking for new members, so feel free to stop in. For information on us and events, call 508-763-5245.

Solar Farm On-Track for Approval

The Meadowatt, LLC solar farm slated for 188-190 Marion Road (Route 105) is closing in on approval after the Rochester Planning Board on June 28 suggested the town planner devise a draft decision to review at the next meeting.

With waiver requests all straightened out and the plan revised to replace a proposed vinyl faux stonewall with a cedar stockade fence, the board felt confident that a few revisions to the plan made by the next meeting, along with the draft decision, would lead to approval by the end of July.

The cedar fence, said engineer Bob Bersin, would be 7 feet high and raised 6 inches off the ground, giving it a height of 7 feet 6 inches. The vinyl wall previously proposed was 6.9 feet. On the rear side of the project, the plan for a black chain-link fence remains.

The board requires that the fence be installed before any work is done on the construction of the solar arrays; however, it has allowed the developer time to cut down trees and construct a road before the fence is built for logistical reasons.

“That will deter any inconvenience to the neighborhood,” said Planning Board member Gary Florindo. He later suggested tweaking the proposed hours of operation during construction from 7:00 am – 6:00 pm down to 7:00 am – 5:00 pm for heavy machinery and noisy equipment, which will also be excluded from the Saturday 9:00 am – 5:00 pm timeframe for work.

With decommissioning amounts settled, screening and landscaping and maintenance plans all submitted, and the existing house at the site planned for demolition, Chairman Arnold Johnson offered the developer reassurance that the board would move forward in the process with the draft decision, but a vote would first require updating of the plans to reflect the fencing changes.

One abutter made one last-ditch effort to sway the board to reject the solar farm plan to no avail, as Johnson explained to Morgan Cecil who suggested that since the Planning Board is tasked with developing and following the town’s Master Plan to keep Rochester rural, it should follow through with that.

“That doesn’t give us the right to deny a project,” said Johnson. If the developer chose litigation, a judge could remand the matter back to the board, Johnson said, if the judge found it unreasonable. “It’s kind of a fine line. Property owners’ rights are property owners’ rights.”

Johnson reassured Cecil that the board does its due diligence in solar farm matters, spending hours at onsite visits and ensuring that screening is effective and decommissioning escrows are appropriate.

Johnson later told the developer that, after approval, the board would revisit the site in the fall after the foliage has fallen to endure proper screening from an abutting property at the rear of the site.

The matter was continued until July 12.

Also continued was the Renewable Generation application for a solar farm proposed on New Bedford Road. That date was scheduled for September 13.

A preliminary subdivision application for Melink Corporation for a proposed creation of a two-lot subdivision at 0 Snipatuit Road was also continued without a specified date.

The next meeting of the Rochester Planning Board is scheduled for July 12 at 7:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

 

Wading Birds: The Egret

My most recent afternoon ritual for bird watching walk took me down Reservation Road to the point at the end of the Mattapoisett Peninsula. It leads past the Golf Course of the same name toward a residential landmark of the King estate, and now the YMCA where my daughter teaches pre-school. The golf course is a typical links lay out bordering many holes of an extensive marsh and wading bird paradise for Great Blue Herons, Egrets, and Bitterns. I just happened to bring my clubs along to make my afternoon entertaining as well as educational.

When the author Mark Twain was asked about his golf game, he said, “Most often, it is a good walk spoiled.” Today, however, many golf courses even in metropolitan areas are an oasis of open land for wildlife and a natural mecca for bird watchers. The Reservation Golf Course is no exception. After teeing off from the clubhouse on the first hole, my second shot of a fairway wood landed me close to the edge of the wetland with a wide expanse panorama with eye-catching solitary white images.

The Great Egret has a high-profile image, almost 4 feet high, with a 5-foot wing span, a curved neck with a long wispy white plume that trails from the back and neck as in my drawing (viewable online). They are spectacular nuptial feathers called aigrettes. This ethereal decoration for preening and breeding caused the Egret to be hunted almost to extinction for ladies’ fashions. One ounce of aigrette of an Egret sold for $32, which at the turn of the nineteenth century was double the price of gold.

The feather market trade ended with the passage of the Migratory Bird Act and later publication of Silent Spring by Rachel Carson prohibited pesticides and chemicals rendering egg shells too thin to hatch. Both parents together brood and feed the young as shown, usually five or six to start but dwindling down to three or four from nest robbing by Great Horned Owls and crows. The larger young are also known to eat the smaller ones.

They grow long black legs used as rudders for flying and wading to stand motionless in shallows to fiercely strike with a long bill for fish, shrimp, or worms. The species of Snowy Egret is smaller but tall as statuesque as an avian ballerina with yellow feet, called golden slippers, used to stir up prey in shallow waters. An hour before sunset, Egrets leave the marsh and head for higher ground to gather company in trees for comfort in the coming night. As I teed up for the last hole toward the club house, I could hear the happy voices of youngsters from my daughter’s school letting out to be taken home.

Robert Frost once said “The Earth is a good place to love,” and as I walked toward happy hour on the nineteenth hole, I knew I would share my love of this place with you but not talk about my game, thinking of Mark Twain.

By George B. Emmons

0630_New_1

Museum Passes Available At Elizabeth Taber Library

Looking for something fun to do with friends and family? Then go to the Elizabeth Taber Library to check out any of the museum passes with your SAILS library card. The library currently has passes to the New Bedford Whaling Museum, Museum of Fine Arts, Plimoth Plantation, Providence Children’s Museum, Roger Williams Zoo, and the MassParks Pass. To reserve a pass or for more information, call the library at 508-748-1252 or visit the website at www.elizabethtaberlibrary.org.

Marion Fourth of July Parade

Celebrate Independence Day with the Town of Marion and the Benjamin D. Cushing VFW Post 2425 of Marion.

The Annual Marion Fourth of July Parade is scheduled for Monday, July 4 at 9:00 am sharp.

There is still time to submit your application to participate. Applications are available at the Marion Town House or they can be submitted online at www.marionrecreation.com.

Beginning at 8:00 am on July 4, participants are asked to report to the ball field behind the Marion Town House and adjacent to the Sippican School. Parade organizers will be available to check participants in and to line up the parade.

Trophies will be awarded for First and Second place in each category listed on the application. Ribbons will be awarded to Third and Fourth place in each category. There is also a Best in Parade award.

For questions, please contact the Parade Committee at 774-217-8355 or parade@marionrecreation.com. Stay up to date with all information about the Parade on our Facebook page, “Marion Fourth of July Parade.”

Traveling Troubadours Visit Mattapoisett

In a perfect union among like-minded organizations – those being the Mattapoisett Public Library, South Coast Bike Way, Mattapoisett Land Trust and the Seventh Annual Massachusetts Walking Tour – the June 23 evening air in Mattapoisett Village was filled with harmony.

On this splendid summer’s evening about 50 people, young and old alike, gathered on the grounds of the Mattapoisett Congregational Church to enjoy the musical talents of local and visiting musicians.

Sponsored by the Massachusetts Cultural Council and GoFundMe campaigns, the troupe simply known as the Massachusetts Walking Tour visits towns along pedestrian and bike trails during the summer season. Front man Mark Mandeville said, “We’ll do eighteen concerts in eighteen days visiting towns along the routes.”

Since the inception of the musical happening in 2010, Mandeville along with members Mark Kilianski, Amy Alvey, Raianne Richards and Kristen Sykes have played in 80 towns. “Our goal is to play at towns along trails throughout the state, visiting each once,” he said. And in keeping with the traveling troubadour mode of transportation, it is a bipedal effort – they walk from town to town camping overnight carrying about fifty pounds of supplies and, of course, their instruments.

Most of the group members are music teachers in central Massachusetts cities and towns during the winter months. Joined by local musicians at each town they visit, most of their promotional activity centers around media releases and networking with libraries and organizers of biking and walking trails in the commonwealth.

Well-known local advocate of pedestrian and bicycling pathways, Bonne DeSousa said, “When Susan Pizzolato (Mattapoisett Public Library Director) asked me if my group wanted to get involved, I said “Yes!’” Beaming with joy she continued, “This is all about bringing people together across communities keeping interest alive in biking and walking.”

Local musicians Mary Beth Soares and Joan Akin sang, while the amazing Mighty Uketones, a group of ukulele players each of whom has been playing for less than a year, performed with gusto. There was also Isabella Bernardi of Mattapoisett playing her banjo. She said that she hadn’t played in the high school band because, “Well, they don’t have a banjo section.” Bernardi is a 2016 graduate of ORRHS headed to UMass Dartmouth in the fall to major in civil engineering – a natural transition from banjo playing not unlike Steve Martin.

Mandeville said that next year the traveling troupe will be moving along trails from Walden to Wachusett Mountain. They’ll finish out this season’s travels that started in Truro via Fairhaven, Dartmouth, New Bedford, Fall River and Swansea.

For more information on the Massachusetts Walking Tour, visit www.masswalkingtour.org.

By Marilou Newell

WalkingTour_0516 WalkingTour_0545 WalkingTour_0700 WalkingTour_1637 WalkingTour_1740 WalkingTour_2458