Mattapoisett Road Race: I Don’t Run!

If you’re thinking to yourself, “I don’t run, so why go into the village on the 4th of July?” there are several reasons to be there. The Harpoon Harmonizers will be performing before the Race and singing the National Anthem at the start of the Race. The Inn at Shipyard Park (formerly the Mattapoisett Inn) will be serving a light breakfast from 8:30 – 11:00 am. Lunch service will start at 11:30 am. There will be a beer tasting sponsored by Buzzards Bay Brewery from 10:00 am – 12:00 noon, and Butch McCarthy will provide entertainment. The Town Wharf General Store will be open from 8:00 am – 2:00 pm. Body in Balance’s Jessica Cavaco will be doing a warm-up for runners. Spectators could probably do a little warming up if they wanted. The Barley Family Healthcare and Rehab will have their tent set up for post-race massages for runners.

If you live along the race route, you can decorate your yard, play music and compete for the coveted “Most Spirited Home” award. Winning this award will take some serious effort if you want to defeat past winners, the Kassabian family and the Dall family. But it might be fun to give it a shot.

When you come down to Shipyard Park or anywhere along the race route, you will see race officials in bright orange shirts. These individuals can provide whatever assistance you may need. You also can offer thanks to the Race’s Founding Father and Founding Mother (a.k.a. Bob and Doris Gardner). Long-time Race Director, Dan White, will be there in his new role as Race Mayor. And you will definitely want to give a special thanks to current Race Director, Bill Tilden. It will be easy to find him – he will be the one in the “hot pink” shirt.

But the main reason for coming out to support the Mattapoisett Road Race is simple. It is the quintessential “small town America” event. It represents what makes the 4th of July and our country so special.

Vendors Sought for Country Fair

The Rochester Country Fair is seeking interested vendors for participation in the upcoming Rochester Country Fair. The Fair, now in its 15th year, features a unique mix of old-fashioned events and contests, a parade, woodsman show, tractor pulls and so much more.

This year’s “Team Spirit” Theme Fair will be held on Thursday, August 14 thru Sunday, August 17 at 65 Pine Street in Rochester. Craft vendor booth spaces are available for a fee of $125, while food vendor spaces start at $350. Space is limited and is given on a first come, first serve basis, with preference given to vendors selling unique and home made items. Applications and registration information can be found on the Fair’s website at www.rochesterma.com or emailing rcfvendor@comcast.net.

For those interested in visiting the fair, it will offer many unique old-fashioned events for the entire family. You will need to come prepared if you wish to participate, though. You must bring your own frog to compete in the Frog Race and certainly don’t wear your favorite shirt if you wish to participate in the Pie Eating Contest! Other children’s events will include a Diaper Derby, Nerf Olympics and a Pedal Tractor Pull just to name a few. For the young at heart, the Fair will offer Truck and Tractor Pulling, a Horseshoe Contest, Live Wrestling featuring former WWE Hall of Famer Tito Santana and Live Music by the John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band!

Admission to the Fair is $4 on Thursday and $5 on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Children age 5 and under get in free. There is no fee for parking. Additional event information can be obtained on the Fair’s website, www.rochesterma.com.

210 Swim Buzzards Bay

Two hundred ten swimmers dove into outer New Bedford Harbor early Saturday morning to show their support for clean, healthy water by taking part in the Buzzards Bay Coalition’s 21st annual Buzzards Bay Swim.

As of the start of the event on Saturday, swimmers had raised nearly $100,000 to support the nonprofit Coalition’s work to protect clean water, conserve land and educate youth and adults in communities across the Buzzards Bay region, from Westport to Woods Hole. Members of the public who wish to support clean water can donate to the Swim until July 15 at www.savebuzzardsbay.org/swim.

Calm, clear waters and bright sunshinegreeted swimmers as they gathered at The Edge Seafood & Lounge (formerly Davy’s Locker) beach in New Bedford. The first swimmers started at 7:15 a.m., and by 8:45 a.m. the final swimmer had covered the 1.2 mile course and arrived at the finish line at Fort Phoenix Beach State Reservation in Fairhaven.

Measured at 72 degrees, water conditions “were perfect,” according to Morgan McCarthy of East Orleans, who finished as the fastest female swimmer for the second year in a row with a time of 21:46. McCarthy, along with eight other swimmers, received the elite “Six-Mile Award” for completing her fifth Buzzards Bay Swim — the equivalent of swimming the entire six-mile width of Buzzards Bay.

The event drew swimmers from nearly 100 communities including participants from as far as away as Australia, Florida and South Dakota. Swimmers ranged in age from 12 to 74.

“This event is a great statement of the importance of a clean, healthy Buzzards Bay,” said Coalition President Mark Rasmussen. “I’m thrilled that so many people are coming to New Bedford Harbor to celebrate our local waters this weekend.”

Four swimmers this year – Anthony Garro of Dartmouth, Bill Muldoon of Mattapoisett, Matt Shenker of Pocasset and Dan Vasconcellos of Pembroke – have been working toward an exciting challenge: If they each raise $5,000, longtime swimmer Larry Fish of West Falmouth will donate an additional $10,000. As of the morning of the Swim, Vasconcellos and Shenker had raised $5,700 and $5,640 respectively, the top two individual fundraisers.

“A lot of people stepped up to donate – even people I’d never met!” said 18-time Buzzards Bay Swim participant Vasconcellos, a freelance illustrator. As a thank you, Vasconcellos offered donors a one-of-a-kind envelope cartoon drawing.

In addition to the top individual fundraisers, “Mimi’s Swimmers” (Bryan, Laura and Sarah Robertson of South Dartmouth) were the top fundraising team with a total of $2,025.

After the Swim, participants, volunteers and fans celebrated at a finish line beach party, complete with food and drinks, massage therapists, live music from El-Caribe and a live radio broadcast with Michael Rock of FUN 107. The event concluded with an awards ceremony.

For the second year in a row, the fastest swimmer was 17-year-old Alex Gallant of Lakeville, who covered the course in 21:12. Right behind him was 18-year-old Nathan Garner of Nashua, N.H., with a time of 21:27 and first-time Buzzards Bay Swim participant Frank Wuest of Boston with a time of 21:32. The Wheeler Watershed Challenge Cup for the fastest team went to the Team Westport(Elizabeth Geiger, William Krause and David Lippin)with an average team time of 27:17.

The Quicks Awards for the fastest boys and girls high school teams both went to Apponequet High School in Lakeville. The Apponequet boys team (Josh Beck, Alex Gallant and Nicholas McKenna, all 17) had a combined total time of 23:29 andthe Apponequet Lady Lakers (Kaitlyn Barrack, 17, Kaye D’Andrea, 17 and Brienna Harrison, 16) had a combined total time of 26:50. The two teams will each bring a $1,000 prize back to their school.

For a full list of results and photos, visit http://www.savebuzzardsbay.org/2014buzzardsbayswim.

The Buzzards Bay Swim is a Waterkeeper Alliance SPLASH Series Event, presented nationally by Toyota. For more information, please visit www.splashseries.org. The Buzzards Bay Swim is also sponsored by RBS Citizens and the b Positive Project.

The Buzzards Bay Swim is one of two signature outdoor events hosted by the Coalition. The other is the Buzzards Bay Watershed Ride, a one-day bicycle ride covering 76 miles from Westport to Woods Hole, with a shorter 35-mile route beginning in Rochester. The eighth annual Watershed Ride will take place Sunday, October 5. Details and registration are available at www.savebuzzardsbay.org/watershedride.

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Mattapoisett ZBA Reorganizes

Due to the recent retirement of Jeff Chase as Chairman and regular member of the Mattapoisett Zoning Board of Appeals, the board needed to fill several openings. Their goal during the June 19 meeting was solely for this purpose. They needed to select an alternate member to move up to a regular member position, choose a chairman, and select a clerk.

With the full board in attendance, they did just that.

The board is comprised of regular members: Paul Millott, Jr., (Dec. 1999 – April 2018); Susan Akin (Feb 2000 – April 2016); Mary Ann Brogan (March 2002 – April 2017); and Norman Lyonnais (October 2008 – April 2015). From this list, they voted Susan Akin to be Chairman and Mary Ann Brogan to be clerk.

The alternates to this board are: Stephen Vaitses (July 2002 – April 2010, term has expired and is scheduled to be renewed); Kenneth Pacheco (Feb 2006 – April 2019); Eugene DesLanders (June 2009 – April 2015); Colby Rottler (July 2009 – April 2015); and Tony Tranfaglia (April 2003 – April 2016). This group was asked by Akin to share their level of interest in moving up to a regular slot on the board. Declining the opportunity were Vaitses, citing other commitments, and DesLanders due to seasonal migration to warmer climates. Expressing an interest in moving up were Pacheco, Rottler and Tranfaglia. In the end, this group selected the member for the regular slot based on seniority – Kenneth Pacheco.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett ZBA is scheduled for July.

By Marilou Newell

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Decorate Your Bike for the 4th

We will meet in front of the Elizabeth Taber Library at the gazebo on Wednesday, July 2 at 2:00 pm. Just bring your bike, scooter, or stroller and we’ll provide all of the decorations!

Cow Chip Bingo at RCF!

Watch cows do their magic as they meander over 600 virtual squares of prime real estate at the Rochester Country Fair. This country-style fundraising event will take place on Thursday, August 14 at 65 Pine Street in Rochester. Gates open at 4:00 pm and cows will make their appearances around 8:00 pm. Come watch these well-fed cows take care of business and enjoy all the fun events, crafts and food that the fair offers.

How it works: 600 squares will be sold in this random game of chance. Each parcel of real estate costs only $5, so get your tickets before they’re gone! Tickets will be sold in advance only and will not be sold at the Fair. Participants are randomly assigned a horizontal and vertical coordinate on the Cow-Chip Bingo game board.

The first place winning square will be the first cow plop made, followed by the second cow plop, then the third cow plop. Prizes of $500, $300 and $200 will be awarded in that order for the first, second and third cow plop. A complete list of rules and other event information can be found on the Fair’s website at www.rochesterma.com.

Take your chance on the gastronomical actions of a cow while supporting the Rochester Country Fair! Tickets are on sale now by visiting Bev at Matt’s Blackboard Café or by contacting any of the Fair Committee Members.

Academic Achievements

The following Tri-Town residents made the Dean’s List for spring 2013-2014 semester at Rochester Institute of Technology:

– Anya Cummings of Mattapoisett, who is in the mechanical engineering program in RIT’s Kate Gleason College of Engineering; and

– Callum Mclaughlin of Mattapoisett, who is in the mechanical engineering program in RIT’s Kate Gleason College of Engineering.

Degree-seeking undergraduate students are eligible for Dean’s List if their quarterly GPA is greater than or equal to 3.400; they do not have any grades of “Incomplete”, “D” or “F”; and they have registered for, and completed, at least 12 credit hours.

Matthew Easterbrooks of Rochester was among a record number of graduates – 3,478 – presented with diplomas at UMass Lowell’s 2014 Commencement exercises on Saturday, May 17 at the Tsongas Center at UMass Lowell. Easterbrooks received a master’s degree in chemistry from the College of Sciences.

Breannon Meuse of Rochester was recently named to the Castleton College Dean’s List for the spring semester of the 2013-14 academic year. To qualify for this academic honor, the student must maintain full-time status and a semester grade point average of 3.5.

MHS to Open for the Season

The Mattapoisett Historical Society will open for the season on July 2 at 1:00 pm. This summer, the Mattapoisett Historical Society will commend the work of Mattapoisett’s Finest: Fire and Police in a special summer exhibit featuring the history and community contributions of these two departments. Join us for a fascinating look into our town’s vital Fire and Police departments, celebrating all that these men and women have done for us over the past 157 years.        The permanent exhibits feature artifacts from Mattapoisett’s whaling days, fine furniture, antique toys, and artifacts from Mattapoisett’s agricultural past. The museum is open Wednesday through Saturday from 1:00 – 4:00 pm, closed July 4. Admission is free for members, $5 for adults, $2 for children 6-12, and free for children under 6.

The Historical Society will also be bringing back our Walking Tour of the Waterfront every first and third Saturday of the month. The tour will leave at 2:00 pm from the Mattapoisett Historical Society and will explore our town and its role in building the whalers for Nantucket and New Bedford. Explore the waterfront streets and wharves where the action took place. The tour is free with Museum Admission.

The Mattapoisett Historical Society will offer a wide variety of programs for both children and adults this summer. Please visit our website at www.mattapoisetthistoricalsociety.org to view our Calendar of Events, or call 508-758-2844 for more information.

It Is A Privilege

Most of us do it. We think nothing of it. If we’ve done it for any length of time, we consider doing it normal, necessary, and just part of living in this here U.S. of A. When we first started doing it, we were thrilled beyond our wildest dreams, experiencing each occasion as if it were the first time. Now that your imagination has riled up wondering what I might be referring to, I’ll tell you … I’m talking about driving a car.

During a recent road-trip with my husband and granddaughter – a seven-hour journey to Montreal – I came to realize just how much we take driving for granted. And yet, it isn’t at all natural like walking. It is a learned behavior, a skill really, requiring that one understand the rules of the road (hopefully) and have a respectful attitude towards other drivers (hopefully). Failing these, there is nothing but chaos on the roadways. At any given moment, it could all turn to disaster.

My husband, God love him, is a hater when it comes to other drivers. Being a passenger as he drives his much beloved car can be rather stressful. He spent his professional life behind the wheel of heavy emergency vehicles. For him, driving and operating a motor vehicle is second nature. He is a good driver. But if looks could kill, and if anyone could hear his assessments of nearly every other driver, well let’s just say ears would be burned off.

Since I retired and spend more time with him in the car, I take a book with me. Being distracted by reading mitigates my stress level, and it gives me a way to dampen his narrative concerning other drivers. This aside, he is correct in fearing other drivers. One small mistake, one careless maneuver, and as the saying goes, “that’s all she wrote.”

Once upon a time, I loved driving. I worked hard to earn my privilege to drive and have been a lawful driver for forty years. Back in the day, driver’s education was a fairly new concept. It was a right of passage from being a ‘kid’ to being a responsible young adult. But unlike today, it was a time when one didn’t automatically expect the family car to be made available simply because one had gotten a license. Most of the families I knew had one automobile, and whether it was a wreck or beauty, it was a valued possession.

My mother never learned to drive. Dad tried teaching her in an empty lot behind our home on Spring Street in Marion. Poor soul, she was a nervous wreck trying to pay attention to his instructions while little kids fidgeted in the backseat. The clutch pedal was her enemy, and the column shift never cooperated with her effort to put it into gear. As she ground the gears in gut retching agony, my parents would quarrel. Inevitably, Ma exited the running vehicle in the field stomping back to the house. Dad was left wondering what went wrong.

Years later, I sat in driver’s ed class a discouraged and depressed 15-year old kid. Lacking any type of confidence in myself, I believed I was not smart enough to pass the written portion of the exam. An absence of support from the home front didn’t help me either. I dropped out of class.

By the time I was 23 and a young mother, driving became an imperative. I needed to work. I obtained a copy of “The Rules of the Road.” I was determined to learn the information. I memorized the entire manual. To this day, some of those sentences come back like passages from the Bible, much to the chagrin of my husband. I occasionally find myself mixing a verse from Psalms with proper distances from other cars in the misguided hope that he’ll hear me. Amen.

Driving gave me freedom, a ticket to higher education, an ability to earn a leaving, and a sense of empowerment. Thanks to driving, I’ve travelled many thousands of miles for both work and pleasure, and I’ve taught several others how to master America’s favorite machine – the automobile.

From an early age, my son learned how to shift the yellow VW bug I owned. He’d place his tiny hand on top of mine and a-shifting we would go. There were many Sunday afternoons when I placed him on my lap and together we’d slowly drive along bog roads out in the boondocks. Those are precious moments I remember, although probably not a very safe thing to do in retrospect. This was before the advent of seatbelts, airbags, and the importance of children’s car seats.

Today, it’s common to find a driveway with at least two cars, but more likely up to four. There they rest in gleaming acknowledgement that the CAR is a necessity and as significant as the home it’s parked in front of.

But again, it wasn’t until recently that I truly appreciated just what an act of faith driving really is. Not only does one need to believe in oneself, you’ve got to believe in all the other people operating cars around you. Today, that leap of faith seems a very high vault.

Many young people seem to drive as if they are sitting on the living room floor playing a video game. How many times have you witnessed a driver weaving dangerously through lanes of traffic, mindless that at any second that hole in a ribbon of cars might close before they can ram their way into the slot. Yet, it isn’t just the young that make driving so much more dangerous. You have to factor in the speeds we accelerate to and the introduction of electronic devices.

Enter the cell phone. There you are innocently on your way to the grocery store when you notice another driver talking on a cell phone. The most flagrant violators seem to be young women and oftentimes, young women with small children in the backseat. That they don’t sense how horrifyingly dangerous this is defies logic. Suffice it to say that if I see anyone on a cell phone, I give them a very wide berth.

And then there are us, the senior citizens. Not all of us are good drivers. Not all of us should still be driving. My friend lives in the Palm Springs, California area. She says that every winter when the snowbirds return from northern states she prepares her mind for Ninja-style defensive driving saying, “…it’s like doing battle every time I leave my house.”

She recently was in a small accident with an older senior citizen who was apparently on the way to a doctor’s appointment. The ole gal suddenly changed lanes without noticing my friend was lawfully in the lane already. The lady was so shaken by her lapse in motor vehicle safety she could barely speak. My friend ended up driving her to the doctor’s office. She told my friend she was distracted thinking about the doctor and accepted responsibility. My friend suggested that she might want to stop driving soon, noting the advanced age of the lady and the numerous dents in her car. Clearly this hadn’t been her first mistake. The lady responded emphatically and with anger, “No way!”

My aunt (the last one standing) just gave up driving. She did so voluntarily. Out of necessity, she had earned her driver’s license late in life. Her husband had become too sick to drive. Since his passing, she has more or less relied on her daughter to take her places, so driving is less relevant. Good thing too, as reports are that her driving often inspired fear.

My non-driving mother and aunt used to pal around together from time to time. One thing I’ll give my mother credit for was being a good passenger. She knew when her life was in danger. Of her sister-in-law’s driving, she said and I quote, “She is a horrible driver!” My aunt tried her best and left no carnage in her wake. That her children didn’t need to intervene on behalf of society at large is a good thing.

Such was not the case with my Father. Even after suffering a very traumatic head injury, he immediately (within hours) went about getting himself a set of wheels. Towards the end of his driving career, he wasn’t going very far and for me it was convenient that he could drive and do the shopping.

One day, while slowly cruising down Route 6 heading home, his vehicle was struck by a car entering from a side street. A very young, very pregnant woman in an SUV smacked into his rear passenger door. That he was cited at the scene for causing the accident speaks volumes to him being victimized for being an elderly driver. We fought that and were able to get the citation overturned after much effort. My husband was his champion. He wasn’t going to let Dad’s nearly eight decades of accident-free driving be blemished if he could help it.

When I talked to my parents about how the accident happened, my mother said (this is precious), “Well if I had had my eyes open it wouldn’t have happened.” Flummoxed, I asked her what she meant. Clearly Dad hadn’t caused the accident or been at fault in any way. Ma responded that she helped him drive by telling him what was doing on around the car as they tooled along. That’s when I knew the time had come for Dad to surrender his license.

To get this man who had spent so many years driving whenever, wherever he pleased to stop driving wasn’t going to be easy. The conversation with him didn’t go well. He simply said, “NO!” and variations of “You can’t make me.” He planned on driving until he croaked. We engaged his doctor. When we finally got him into the exam room, the doctor announced with little fanfare that she’d be contacting the registry to have his license terminated, that it was her professional duty to do so, and she was sure he didn’t want to be responsible for hurting anyone. He smiled at her and said, “OK, whatever you say, sweetheart.” He went in like a lion and out like a lamb.

Driving is a privilege. I wish they taught that with greater fervor in driving classes, especially given the power of modern day vehicles and seemingly, everyone’s need for speed.

I hope that when the time comes for me to stop driving, I do so with as much dignity as my Aunt demonstrated. I hold no illusions that I’ll be driving until the bitter end. Maybe like my Mother, I’ll be a really good passenger and help other people drive from where I’m sitting in the passenger seat, like I do now with my husband. But I can vouch for how he’ll react to becoming a permanent passenger. Note to family: Best to gird your loins now.

By Marilou Newell

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Marion Concert Band

The 2014 concert season of the Marion Concert Band will begin with an evening of patriotic music on Saturday, July 5, in celebration of Independence Day. The concert will be held at the Robert Broomhead Bandstand on Island Wharf on Front Street. This concert, as well as the rest of the concerts in the series, will begin earlier than in years past. Starting with the 2014 series, all Marion Concert Band concerts will begin at 7:00 pm and end at 8:30 pm.

Following the opening concert on July 5, the series will continue with concerts every Friday evening beginning on July 11 and ending on August 29. All concerts will begin at 7:00 pm, weather permitting, and are free and open to the public.