Enjoy a Memorable ‘Night in New Orleans’ at High Hopes Tonight

HH_BannerAd_300x250Join High Hopes this coming Saturday, June 8, for “A Night in New Orleans,” which promises to be a memorable evening featuring the toe-tapping, dancing in the aisles sound of Grammy award winner Terrance Simien & the Zydeco Experience.

High Hopes pastoral riding facility will be transformed into a New Orleans style garden, the setting for elegant dining and an auction fundraiser with a selection of unique offerings such as a week in Paris or box seat tickets for four people at Fenway Park to see the Red Sox vs. the Yankees.  Proceeds will benefit the programs and participants of the year-round equine assisted therapy programs.

This event is sponsored by Essex Savings Bank and Essex Financial Services along with other leading corporate sponsors including Bertera Subaru of Hartford, the Herb Chambers Companies, Ironwood Capital, USA Hauling and Recycling, Inc. and radio station WNLC. For more information, including a complete list of sponsors, visit www.highhopestr.org. or call 860 434-1974.

Historic Barns of Connecticut Trail Launched at Old Saybrook Gala

Celebration Continues with Conference, Hoedown, Bike and Bus Tours, June 8.

Hillstead Barn is on the soon-to-be-launched Historic Connecticut Barns Trail.

Hillstead Barn is on the soon-to-be-launched Connecticut Barn Trail.

The Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation, located in Hamden, Conn., will launch a trail of historic barns in the state at its Celebration of Barns event on June 7 and 8, at the historic Bushnell Farm in Old Saybrook.

This evening at 7 p.m., there will be a glittering gala hosted by honorary chair and WTNH news anchor Ann Nyberg with contra dance caller Bill Fischer.  Tickets are $75 per person.

A conference will be held Saturday morning and early afternoon, followed by a Hoedown.  The conference will include demonstrations, food, seminars, tours, entertainment and more.

WTNH news anchor Ann Nyberg is the Honorary Chair of the gala.

WTNH news anchor Ann Nyberg is the Honorary Chair of the gala.

The Hoedown will be a  family event that can be enjoyed by people of all ages.  There are also bike and bus tour options on Friday afternoon.  A variety of ticket options, including multiple combinations of all the events, is available.

The Barns Trail will consist of seven drivable/bikable trails across the state.  Each trail will feature barns that are open to the public; routes from one of these barns to the next are designed to bring the traveler along scenic roads filled with privately owned barns, not open to the public but visible from the road.  Starting points can occur at any point on a tour.

Barns that are open to the public include those with local produce farm stands, cider mills, tree farms, wineries, and also blacksmith shops, tool collections and dairy farms.  The barns along the route from one agri-business or historic site to the next are private.  Some of these are active farms, others are examples of the iconic barns structure that defines the rural Connecticut landscape.

The seven trails are:

  • The Northwest Hills
  • Fairfield County
  • New Haven and the Central Valley north and east of it
  • the Connecticut River Valley South to Glastonbury
  • the Connecticut River Valley North to Enfield
  • Southeast Connecticut

The scenic drives will be available using a map from a print brochure or downloading a free iPhone app.  From each, one can learn not only that perhaps a particular site sells pumpkins, but that it has been a part of the community for 200 years.  Either through the use of the iPhone app or reading the colorful brochure, travelers learn that maybe the original farmer was once also the town sheriff and had his prisoners build the stone walls by which you are now driving.

On the Southeast trail is B.F. Clydes Cider Mill in North Stonington (www.bfclydescidermill.com).  This is reportedly the oldest steam-powered cider mill in the country, (1881).  It operates out of a decorative Victorian-era barn that features a shingled cupola and cross gables typical of its period.

Along the Connecticut River Valley South trail, one can visit the Deep River Historical Society’s Stone house and barn (www.deepriverhistoricalsociety.org).  The c. 1899 cross-gable carriage barn was erected by descendants of Ezra Southworth, builder of the elegant 1840 stone house on the same site.  Antique vehicles, including a mule-drawn school bus, are on display.  Another barn on the property was once used for bleaching ivory.

The Trust’s Historic Barns of Connecticut is a nationally respected project that puts recognition of endangered historic barns front and center.  It is a complete compilation of barns, providing a significant basis to make the case for protection for these historic resources.

The Connecticut Trust, along with the efforts of hundreds of volunteers, has identified more than 8,400 historic barns throughout the state.  These barns are available for viewing at www.connecticutbarns.org.

At least 2,000 of the barns in the database have detailed information on their type, building techniques, agricultural use and current use.  The Trust is currently nominating 200 of these historic barns to the State Register of Historic Places giving them an added layer of historic significance.

For information and tickets to the Celebration of Barns event, contact barns@cttrust.org.

Funding for Historic Barns of Connecticut and the Barns Trail comes from the Connecticut Department of Economic and Community Development.

Andrea Arrives with Heavy Rain, High Winds

Tropical Storm Andrea has arrived and is depositing significant amounts of rainfall on Lyme and Old Lyme.  A Coastal Flood Advisory and Flash Flood Warning have been issued through Saturday.  Tidal surges of one to two feet are expected.

Do not drive your vehicle into areas where the water covers the roadway – the water depth may be too great to allow your vehicle to cross safely.

The Old Lyme Emergency Operations center at 860.598.0120 is currently being monitored. Readers with storm-related concerns should leave a message and your call will be returned.

For emergencies, call 911.

For power-related issues, call 800.286.2000.

 

A Crash With a Cause

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Last Thursday morning, the entire student body of Lyme-Old Lyme High School left their classes to witness an accident.  Gathered in the school’s junior parking lot, they listened intently to a recording of four of their peers supposedly traveling home together from a party in one car.  It became apparent from the conversation that the designated driver had not been entirely faithful to his task and his friends chastised him for swerving as he drove.

Then came a chilling, ear-splitting crash and, in the ensuing silence, you could hear a pin drop.

Members of the Lymes’ Youth Services Bureau youth group pulled back the cover from a car to reveal a car smashed into a tree with the chilling sight of a body splayed across the hood of the wrecked car with a shattered windshield.

The driver emerged from the vehicle, stumbled around, checked for signs of life in his friends and then made a desperate call to 911.

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First the Old Lyme Police arrived and quickly determined that the youngster had gone through the windshield was ‘deceased’ and the the two girls in the back were both ‘seriously injured.’

The driver was taken away by the police.

Old Lyme fire-trucks and ambulances arrived to set about the grisly task of extricating the girls.

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Each girl was treated and then carefully placed on a stretcher …

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… and then wheeled to a waiting ambulance.

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Then came the heart-wrenching sight of a hearse drawing up to remove the ‘deceased’ young man …

hearse

… who was taken away in a body bag.

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Not a sound was uttered by any of the watching high school students and, after the shock of the accident, the program continued in the high school auditorium where a grieving mother gave a eulogy for her ‘deceased’ son and a representative from Mothers Against Drunk Driving, who had lost her own child to a drunk driver, spoke to the students.

The program was organized by LYSB in an effort to demonstrate the harsh and sometimes fatal realities of drinking and driving.  LYSB Executive Director Mary Seidner explained that they carry it out every four years at the high school so that each student sees it once.  She said passionately, “It’s an enormous undertaking and requires tremendous cooperation and support from the Old Lyme Emergency Services, which we greatly appreciate, but if it saves just one life, it’s all worth it.”

Seidner continued, “All the research shows that the program, which is employed nationwide, really does make an impact on kids.  My sincere thanks go to Missy Garvin (Youth Service Coordinator at LYSB) who pulled together the whole event for us and all the students who participated in so many different ways.”

Heavy Rain, High Winds Anticipated Locally From Tropical Storm Andrea

The National Weather Service has published this map showing the anticipated path of Tropical Storm Andrea, which is expected to bring heavy rain to Lyme and Old Lyme.

The National Weather Service has published this map showing the anticipated path of Tropical Storm Andrea, which is expected to bring heavy rain to Lyme and Old Lyme.

Tropical Storm Andrea, the first tropical storm of the 2013 season, has formed in the Gulf of Mexico.  As the storm is anticipated to track along the eastern coastline, heavy rain is expected in this area late this evening and into Saturday morning. It is anticipated that winds will gust close to 35 mph Friday night and into Saturday.

The strongest winds are anticipated to be offshore in the Atlantic. Due to the storm’s speed and track, it is anticipated to be a fast mover through Friday and Saturday.

The National Weather Service is placing strong confidence in this forecast and predicting hourly rainfall potential may be around two inches an hour in some locations within the state.

Overall in Lyme and Old Lyme, two to four inches of rainfall are expected, which would create minor flooding conditions such as roadway erosion and water-over-road conditions in low-lying areas.  Sharp rises in some small streams are expected Friday evening.

While this tropical storm is not anticipated to create large scale damage locally, residents can expect scattered downed tree limbs and isolated power outages. In addition it is anticipated that homes and businesses with poor or restricted drainage may experience water in basement or standing water conditions.

Old Lyme Emergency Management recommends that residents review their contingency plans with family and friends and share the links for Old Lyme Emergency Management on Facebook and @oldlymeeoc on Twitter for the latest information and updates.