BBC Guided Mindfulness Walk

Enjoy the peace and beauty of nature with Jessica Webb, and the Buzzards Bay Coalition during a mindfulness walk at Goldavitz Bog (Parlowtown Rd., Marion) on Saturday, December 14 at 1:00 pm. Through guided mindfulness meditation, participants will experience the outdoors with their senses wide open.

            Goldavitz Bog is a retired cranberry bog that is transitioning to a more natural habitat, rich with wetlands, ponds, and fields. Tucked away at the end of a quiet unpaved road, these 75 town-owned acres next to Aucoot Woods are a fantastic spot for all ages to explore.

            All fitness levels are welcome on this free, one-hour walk. The walk will be conducted at a deliberately slow and mindful pace in social silence without digital devices. Please wear appropriate footwear for a walk through nature.

            Pre-registration is required. To RSVP, visit www.savebuzzardsbay.org/events/mindfulness-walk-goldavitz-bog-dec-14-2019/ or contact the Buzzards Bay Coalition at (508) 999-6363 ext. 219 or bayadventures@savebuzzardsbay.org.

            This event is part of Discover Buzzards Bay, an initiative to help people across the Buzzards Bay region find unique and exciting ways to explore the outdoors, get some exercise and connect with nature. Local residents can use Discover Buzzards Bay to get outside and discover woods, wetlands, and waterways from Fall River to Falmouth. To learn more, visit savebuzzardsbay.org/discover.

Project Wheel House

The marine imagery that surrounds Project Wheel House aptly captures its mission: a nonprofit dedicated to leading those who are suffering to safer shores. For those women who utilize the services of The Women’s Center, there are few storms more perilous than surviving domestic abuse. This is why Project Wheel House has been bringing yoga and meditation to The Women’s Center for over two years.

            The relationship between the Women’s Center and Project Wheel House makes a lot of sense; both nonprofits are dedicated to helping those who are struggling to find a path to empowerment, dignity, and self-worth. Project Wheel House has come to work with a variety of institutions over the years, ranging from LGBTQ youth to prison inmates, but the Women’s Center was the first organization that Project Wheel House partnered with, and it has been a relationship that has grown and flourished ever since.

            Earlier this year, The Women’s Center presented a Community Award to Project Wheel House at their Annual Meeting. Accepting the award on behalf of founder Jessica Webb, board secretary Nancy Webb noted that, “Project Wheel House is indebted to the Women’s Center for allowing us to reach out with our mission to provide proven mind and body programs, in an effort to reduce the harmful effects of stress, anxiety, and trauma in our community.”

            To learn more about how Project Wheel House’s mission and programs, visit their website at ProjectWheelHouse.org.

Rochester Council on Aging

The full monthly newsletter and calendar are available on our website www.rochestermaseniorcenter.com. Events and photographs are also posted on our Facebook page, www.facebook.com/Rochestercoa.  

            The Rochester Senior Center has a day trip to Wrentham Village for holiday shopping and lunch on Tuesday, December 10, and a trip to Jordon’s Furniture to view the Enchanted Village (formerly housed at Filene’s Department Store and then the Prudential Center in Boston) on Thursday, December 12. The van will leave the Senior Center for both trips at 8:30 am.  Advanced sign-up is necessary to reserve a seat on the van.  

            The Senior Book Club of Rochester is holding its monthly meeting on Tuesday, December 17 at 10:15 am at the Rochester Senior Center. This group is led by the Plumb Library Director, Gail Roberts. The book being discussed this month is Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, by Gail Honeymoon. This book is an uplifting story of an out-of-the-ordinary heroine, and won the 2017 Costa Debut Novel Award. All are welcome to join the discussion group.

            Flu Shots are still available at the Rochester Senior Center on Wednesdays from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm. There is a limited supply remaining. It is not too late for a flu shot. Flu vaccines remain effective in the body for around six months, on average.

            The Rochester Senior Center offers a full array of regular, weekly scheduled activities and services. Activities and services are listed on the Rochester Senior Center’s Facebook page, website, newsletter and bulletin board at the center. Some of the weekly activities are; Fitness Room, Art Group, Chair Yoga, Cribbage, Mahjong, Stepping and Stretching, Scrabble, Line Dancing, BINGO, Zumba, Blood Pressure Clinic, Ballroom Dancing, Busy Bees Craft Group, Conversational French, Friday afternoon movies, and rides to and from appointments and errands. Lunch is served on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays at noon. Breakfast is served Monday through Friday from 7:00 to 9:00 am. You do not have to be a Rochester resident to participate in most of the programs. The Rochester Senior Center is a warm and welcoming place for seniors to get together with peers, whether it is to participate in an activity, or just have a cup of coffee.  

            The bulletin board at the Rochester Senior Center lists activities and services offered to seniors in the community as well as at the center. Activities include various support groups, financial and legal resources, medical services, and much more. All are welcome to come to the Senior Center and see what is available there or in the community. 

Lessons & Carols at Tabor Academy

On December 15 at 7:30 pm, Tabor Academy will once again host their annual traditional Lessons and Carols Service. This traditional holiday concert of Christmas choral music, enjoyed by the Tabor community and the public for decades, will take place in Wickenden Chapel, 86 Spring Street, Marion, MA. The event is free and open to the public. The event will be live-streamed on the Tabor Academy Facebook page as well.

            The Festival of Lesson and Carols is a time-honored tradition of nine lessons and musical pieces that celebrate Christmas. Traditionally performed on Christmas Eve, this service was made popular by the King’s College in Cambridge, UK, with the long-standing tradition of beginning the program with the selection “Once in Royal David’s City.” Like many holiday celebrations, Lessons and Carols has many elements that pay homage to traditions of the past, such as the opening and other beloved carols. 

            Conductor Dr. Tianxu Zhou said, “I am continually impressed with the maturity and musicality our singers and instrumentalists exhibit during the many hours of rehearsal that you will undoubtedly hear throughout their performance. I hope you will decide to join us for this long-standing tradition at Tabor.”

Annual Tinkhamtown Chapel Christmas Carol Sing

            The Tinkhamtown Chapel on Acushnet Road in Mattapoisett will hold its annual Christmas Carol Sing on Saturday, December 21 at 5:00 pm. Join your friends and neighbors in singing the old favorites in a 19th-century chapel, lit by kerosene lamps. Children are encouraged to volunteer to perform a song or recitation, either as a solo or with members of the family, and to join in the children’s chorus. For more information, email peggsmom@gmail.com, or call 508-758-9559.  

The Non-Blasphemy of Book Art

            The library is to a book, like a museum is to a work of art. In the library, books are cataloged, placed upon shelves with care, gently opened, adored and essentially worshipped as the relics of the history of human storytelling they are. Which is why it seemed blasphemously counterintuitive to watch a handful of women in a room at the back of the Elizabeth Taber Library taking scissors to books and appearing to be torturing their pages with threaded needles, hole punchers, and globs of glue.

            Leading this small group of seeming book sadists on the evening of Tuesday, December 3, was Marion resident and artist Jessica Harris. The event was called “Book Crafts for Adults,” and it was part of the library’s diverse winter programming lineup. However, at the top of the agenda wasn’t the butchering of books with implements of destruction; these women were there to create.

            The spread of craft paper, ribbons, clips, lace, bags of fabric scraps, scissors, glue bottles, and piles of textured paper products across the table was the artistic equivalent of the Big Bang.

            The great artist Pablo Picasso once said: “Every act of creation begins with an act of destruction.” And when making unique book art out of recycling books, a book must die before a new one can be born.

            “The really great thing about book art is that it’s really accessible and anyone can do it,” said Harris.

            Step one to making a unique piece of individualized ‘biblioart’ is to select a hardcover book to act as the shell for an altogether brand-new book or journal. Using vintage images, aged paper, graph paper, and even aged ledger paper, sheets are folded and attached together to make a “signature,” essentially a chapter, so to speak, of pages that are fastened in between the two covers of the base book. Other old books – ones that no one ever checks out from the library anymore and have been “withdrawn” from the catalog and never resold during any of the ensuing book fairs – are used to cut out unique illustrations, maps, graphs, photos, or text to decorate the art book, which is either a themed art book, travel journal, personal memento, or just about anything the book artist desires.

            Many of the finished books Harris brought with her were holiday-themed, like elaborate Christmas cards of sorts. Others had a vintage feel to them, an air of whimsy, and the spirit of having been handmade simply for the sake of making art.

            “There’s no rules,” said Harris, guiding the participants as they selected bits and bobs for their creations unfolding before them. “That’s the beautiful thing about this; it can be anything you want it to be.”

            The art book concept isn’t something Harris suddenly one day thought up, she said.

            “It was kind of an evolution, I guess, of things,” said Harris.

            Harris volunteered her time to the library event and brought with her an abundance of supplies that she donated for the occasion. Much of what she had with her, one participant pointed out, people might think one would want to throw away – but like Harris says, anything can be used as materials in an art book. She sometimes even saves the envelopes she receives in her junk mail.

            “There’s a whole ‘junk journal’ community out there,” said Harris.

            Harris spent the rest of the evening demonstrating how to make a “pamphlet stitch,” a “floating spine,” and helped troubleshoot as questions came up.

            Next at the Taber Library is Harry Potter drop-in crafts on December 11-12, which is an all-day activity open to all.

            On December 19 from 5:30 pm to 7:00 pm, come to the library for a holiday cookie swap. Bring two-dozen cookies and a recipe to share to create a tasty grab bag of holiday cookies for the house or for a gift.

            On December 31, the library will host a special New Year’s Eve party for the younger kids who can’t stay up late enough for the official countdown. The party is from 11:30 am to 12:30 pm over in the children’s department.

            The Elizabeth Taber Library is located at 8 Spring Street in the center of Marion.

By Jean Perry

Cushing Cemetery

Running out of ideas for Christmas? Need stocking stuffers? Get a piece off Mattapoisett history from Cushing Cemetery. A section of fence that you can use anywhere for whatever reason and will last a lifetime. Contact Dana Tripp at 508-728-1403 for details. Call Dana to inquire about delivery.

A Reason to be Freezin’

Tabor Academy has once again signed up to plunge into the cold waters of Sippican Harbor on December 15 in order to raise funds for Special Olympics MA. The plunge will take place at 11:15 am at Silvershell Beach in Marion and the students invite everyone to jump in with them!

            The students are attempting to raise $4,000 for Special Olympics in this effort to help support the athletes they have enjoyed playing with over the last four years of their involvement with Special Olympics MA. From their morning of School Day Games to their Sunday morning Young Athletes Program and Basketball Tournament during the winter months, the students at Tabor have embraced this cause. They welcome you to join them in the fun of supporting Special Olympics.

            Registration opens at Silvershell Beach in Marion at 10:00 am and then we will take the chilly leap together into the harbor at 11:15 am. Marion’s first responders are on hand for safety, and there is a warming tent with snacks. Bring a towel and a change of clothes and join the fun… or just come for the spectacle!  

            Grab your thrill-seeking friends and family, create a plunge team, and start fundraising! Those who fundraise $100 or more will receive a limited-edition Tabor Academy Polar Plunge long-sleeve shirt. To contribute or to sign up in advance, please visit the webpage here: https://bit.ly/2KzlcLh

Dr. Heather Brodie Perry at the Mattapoisett Library

Have you or a loved one ever struggled to find reliable medical or health information online? Would you like to be better prepared to ask questions at appointments? Don’t miss Dr. Heather Brodie Perry speak about finding reliable health information and health information literacy at her Health Information Workshop on Tuesday, December 10 at 6:30 pm. Dr. Perry will provide you with the resources and strategies you need to find credible health information online with confidence. 

            All programs are free and open to the public. If special accommodations are needed, please contact the library at 508-758-4171 for assistance.   

Beach Stickers Restricted to Residents

            Rates for Marion’s beach privilege sticker have been officially set at $10, members of Marion’s Board of Selectmen decided on Tuesday, December 3.

            The stickers, which cover access to (and parking at) Silvershell Beach, have been separated this year from transfer station stickers, which will be issued separately. One beach sticker per vehicle will be permitted, and property owners will have the option to purchase a guest pass for long-term renters as well, explained Harbormaster Office Administrative Assistant Donna Hemphill. A $35 placard will be available for those who rent their properties short-term and for vacations, but will be limited to one per residence.

            Hemphill noted that short-term renters – defined as those renting a house for vacation purposes – would not be allowed to use a beach sticker. They will have the chance to purchase a $10 daily pass, although there will be a cap on the number of daily passes available.

            Marion residents above the age of 70 will also be allowed one free beach sticker, according to the town’s website.

            The stickers will go into effect on January 1, 2020. Hemphill said that she hoped to begin selling them on December 17. Further information, she added, will soon be available on the town website.

            Marion Town Administrator Jay McGrail added that he and Hemphill had looked into offering “non-resident stickers” for members of neighboring communities. Ultimately, McGrail advised against it.

            “When we did the research, the only towns offering non-resident beach stickers were towns that had more than one beach,” McGrail explained. “With one beach and limited parking, I think that would be more stress than Silvershell could handle.”

            “When I mentioned the idea of non-resident stickers, I wasn’t thinking of the beach, but of parking,” explained Selectman John Waterman. “There are a few non-residents working in town, and they can’t park at Old Landing or Island Wharf as far as I know.”

            “That’s something we can do,” said McGrail. “We can maybe add a non-resident parking sticker and get back to you with ideas on that.”

            “We have limited parking,” pointed out Selectmen Chairman Randy Parker. “We’d have to be careful on how we distribute those stickers.”

            “I don’t think there would be a ton of demand, except maybe for Tabor games,” Waterman reasoned. “We could ask for proof of town employment or something.”

            McGrail said he and Hemphill would do further research and return with ideas at a future Board of Selectmen meeting.

            Also during the meeting, the selectmen learned that long-time Marion police officer Anthony DiCarlo is resigning. Though the board members reacted with surprise, DiCarlo is leaving for an excellent opportunity; he will be joining the Massachusetts State Police.

            “Oh, excellent!” Parker said, upon hearing the news.

            DiCarlo’s resignation will leave a vacant position in the Marion Police Department for Chief John Garcia to fill.

            In other business, Kate’s Simple Eats owner Kate Ross came before the board seeking an alteration of premises. However, as she pointed out, the request was simply an amendment to the cafe’s liquor license, rather than an alteration to the actual premises.

            “When I got the liquor license three or four years ago,” owner Kate Ross explained, “I got the liquor license to cover the back area of the store and the patio. Now the cafe has expanded into more of the building, so I need to alter the liquor license to reflect that.”

            Ross’s request was granted unanimously by the selectmen.

            The next meeting of the Marion Board of Selectmen will be held on Tuesday, December 17, at 7:00 pm at the Marion Town House.

Marion Board of Selectmen

By Andrea Ray

Complete policies can be seen at:

https://www.marionma.gov/harbormaster/pages/sticker-policy-beachparking

https://www.marionma.gov/harbormaster/pages/sticker-policy-transfer-station