TOP STORY: Champion Lyme-Old Lyme Girls Track & Field Team is ‘A Moment in Time’

The Wildcats became two-time state Class S girls track and field champions on June 2 with the return of last year’s title. Clockwise from bottom left are Serena Mazzi, Vivian Boller, Maia Giusti, Tabitha Colwell, Zoe Eastman-Grossel, Margaret Thuma, Chase Gilbert and Isabella Presti. All photos and video courtesy of Lyme-Old Lyme High School Athletics, except where noted.

LYME-OLD LYME–Jan Merrill-Morin—Olympian, world record holder, and Lyme-Old Lyme track and field coach—knows there will never be another girls team like this one. 

Last Monday, a celebratory escort of police, fire and ambulance vehicles led the bus holding the returning CIAC (Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference) Class S state champions from the town limits to Lyme-Old Lyme High School (LOLHS).

On the bus were senior Zoe Eastman-Grossel with three first place medals, including a state record in the 300 hurdles; junior Chase Gilbert, who achieved triple crown status with wins in the 800 meter, 1600 meter and 3200 meter races; and prolific thrower junior Margaret Thuma, who took the gold in discus. 

Merrill-Morin on Wednesday recalled the procession as “glorious.” 

“You can’t critique that,” the longtime coach said. “It’s a moment in time.” 

Merrill-Morin is in her second outdoor track season at the high school, where she focuses on distance running for both the boys and girls teams. Her husband, Jeff Morin, covers sprinting. Both carry decades of experience at the high school and college level. 

Police cruisers, fire trucks and and ambulance escort the returning Lyme-Old Lyme High School girls track and field champs. Video courtesy of Lyme-Old Lyme High School Athletics.

“We will not probably ever enter this realm again like this,” Merrill-Morin said from the track fence on Wednesday. “So you take it – like I said, the moment in time – and you grab it. You grab right on.”

Eastman-Grossel, internalizing similar lessons learned from Morin, calls it “being where your feet are.” 

That means living, running and hurdling in the moment, Eastman-Grossel said. It’s being OK with losing or not achieving a personal record with every meet. It’s letting your teammates have your back. 

Despite a spine injury that relegated Eastman-Grossel to the YMCA elliptical machine and swimming pool for most of 2024, the sprinter returned to earn two medals at the Adidas Nationals in Virginia Beach this winter. She said the experience, combined with her new coaches, has changed her mindset when it comes to training. 

She credited Morin with helping her hone her athleticism this season.  

“He also helped me mentally with being where my feet are,” she said. “And not stressing so much about meets and times.”

For Merrill-Morin, that’s what life is: Moments measured not by a stopwatch but by grit and gratitude. 

“My mother never had a stopwatch,” the Olympian recalled. “And she would say, ‘honey, do the best you can. Work hard.’ And no one can critique that.”

Freshman Maia Giusti hands off the baton to senior Tabitha Colwell in the 4×100 relay (second lane from left in photo) that also included junior Serena Mazzi and freshman Vivian Boller at the Class S championship event. They came in fifth place.

Intrinsic Motivation

From a camping chair set up on the track surface near the gate, Merrill-Morin on Wednesday could see Eastman-Grossel practicing sprints on a red, rubberized straightaway. Gilbert appeared and disappeared in wide loops around the campus. Out past the fence, Thuma threw with Amy Gonsalves, who coaches champions in track and crew. 

Everyone’s sights were set on the state open event that would determine the best of the best from the CIAC’s five classes, which are determined by student size of schools (LOLHS is Class S.)

Like Eastman-Grossel, Gilbert is no stranger to injury. She had to take off eight weeks midway through her sophomore year when a weak glute muscle gave out. 

Gilbert said the experience made her realize how lucky she is to be able to go out every day and push herself. 

“I think it’s just, you know, appreciating the ability to train hard every day,” she said. “And just not taking things like that for granted, and putting the effort in on days where the effort’s required.”

Coach Alyssa Mercaldi, who has been at the school for five indoor track and three outdoor track seasons, said the girls’ intense focus sometimes requires coaches to remind them how much is too much. 

“They’re so motivated and they want to do whatever it takes to get to their goals and their team goals,” she said. “And…sometimes you have to take it easy to achieve those goals. Going out there every day and running these crazy sprints and stuff does not always mean that you’re going to get faster.”

She said the Lyme-Old Lyme track and field approach differs from other similarly small schools in the Shoreline Athletic Conference, where fewer available students run more events to bring in the most points. 

She said small schools often have athletes competing in up to four events. 

“And that’s not our philosophy because that’s not what’s best for the athlete. It might look nice on paper for the team, but that’s a lot,” she said.

Merrill-Morin called it an “athlete before wins” approach.

The coaches said none of their athletes competed in four events at the conference championship last month. The team came in second place with 102 points to East Hampton’s 113. 

At the state competition earlier that week, Eastman-Grossel and Gilbert each raced three and won three. Gilbert took the distance triple crown. Eastman-Grossel won the 100 meter race, set a state record in the 300 hurdles and went on to win the 200 meter race in what sports writers hailed as a remarkable feat in news reports across Connecticut.

Lyme-Old Lyme High School senior Zoe Eastman-Grossel, left, and junior Chase Gilbert led the girls track and field team to its second consecutive Class S state championship on June 2.

Merrill-Morin attributed the two girls’ success to intrinsic motivation far, far beyond that of most high school athletes. 

“They are intrinsically motivated like I was as an Olympian,” she said. 

Morin, Eastman-Grossel’s coach, could not come up with another high school student in his coaching career who matched the sprinter’s physical and mental aptitude for running. 

“There aren’t that many athletes that you have a chance to come across that have talent and have the desire to excel,” he said. 

He said his wife is experiencing the same phenomenon on the distance side. 

“Jan’s lucky right now to have Chase, you know, but after Chase is gone, when’s the next Chase coming along? Who knows,” he said. “When’s the next Zoe coming along here in Lyme-Old Lyme? Don’t know.” 

Sprinting coach Jeff Morin worked with senior Zoe Eastman-Grossel this week to prepare for the state open championship. The sprinter, who holds the state record in the 300 hurdles, will attend the US Naval Academy in the fall. LymeLine photo.

A Cohesive Unit 

Eastman-Grossel will don her graduation robe this week as the doors to Lyme-Old Lyme High School close and the gates to the US Naval Academy in Annapolis open. She was selected to become a midshipman and a member of the Division I track and field team as part of a grueling college experience that will culminate in eight years of military service. 

She was hopeful her experience as an athlete will help her survive the notorious plebe experience designed to test the mental resolve of first year students.

“I feel like I’ll be prepared for that because, I don’t know, you just can’t quit,” she said. “I think any athlete is not a quitter.” 

The sprinter anticipated her biggest challenge will be all the long distance running that midshipmen have to do. 

Gilbert, who committed last week to the University of Virginia starting in the fall of 2026, offered her teammate advice on endurance. 

“Just focus on the lap that you’re on,” she said. 

Eastman-Grossel joked that Gilbert will be cheering for her from the academy’s gates.  

“Oh, yeah, I’m coming to the gates,” Gilbert agreed. She said she won’t be allowed into the military installation, so she’ll cheer from the outside. 

Coach Jan Merrill-Morin stands behind the Lyme-Old Lyme High School girls track and field team’s Class S championship title.

The back-and-forth between the girls represents the kind of team bonding that Merrill-Morin described as the overriding key to the team’s success. 

She said promoting cohesion has been a focus since Mercaldi returned as outdoor track coach after taking a break the previous season. 

“I think this year with Alyssa here, we’ve worked very hard to make it a fun, cohesive unit. We go out with the same type of talent, but do even better because during the season, we could practice together and get things done,” she said. 

Freshman Maia Giusti was at the track Wednesday running laps with Gilbert even though she did not qualify for the state open event. 

“My season’s technically done right now, but I want to come back, not just with Chase, but with the team for at least this last week,” she said. 

She said she hopes to model the upperclassmen’s welcoming and supportive attitude next year when she’s no longer among the youngest athletes on the team. 

Giusti described the pride and surprise she felt when she finished seventh in the 800 meter race at states, when the pain and her burning throat served as good indicators of how far she had pushed herself.

“But it was being pushed by Chase especially. She’s my biggest inspiration,” she said. 

Freshman Maia Giusti, left, winds down with junior Chase Gilbert after a workout Wednesday. LymeLine photo.

‘Behind the Scoreboard’

The team, by all accounts, has evolved over several years thanks to athletes and coaches with unusual resolve and a commitment not to let sports become an obligation. 

“I feel like, a lot of times, we’re like, ‘just go out there and have fun,’” Mercaldi said. “’Do your best. Work as hard as you can. Show people how amazing you are on the track, and whatever happens, happens.’”

Eastman-Grossel and Gilbert know the success of the team isn’t just about their individual contributions to the overall score at each meet. It’s also about what everyone else lends to the team to create what Gilbert described as a “fun and exciting and hardworking” culture. 

“I think there’s a lot more behind the scoreboard,” she said. 

Morin on Wednesday said Eastman-Grossel would not be competing in the 300 hurdles at the state opens, despite being one of Connecticut’s best all-time hurdlers, because they want to make sure her back remains strong. 

“I hope she can stay healthy, and not just for track and field,” he said. “I’d like to see her stay healthy as she goes through the rigors of being a naval cadet, which is going to be a heck of a challenge.”

Merrill-Morin, a competitive athlete for over a decade and a coach for almost 40 years, kept falling back Wednesday on the importance of encouraging respect for each fleeting victory that defines the girls on the track and off.  

“This is a moment in time,” she reiterated before paraphrasing her overarching message to athletes: “You’re going to be out of high school in four years. So do the best you can. We’re going to hopefully give you the correct system and the work and the day-to-day tasks to do. But do the best you can.”

And sometimes, she said, a coach gets blessed by the kind of talent that comes around rarely, if ever. 

Mercaldi marveled over the likelihood of having two athletes like Eastman-Grossel and Gilbert on the team at the same time. 

“We’re lucky, the cards that we were dealt, and you just have to utilize them,” she said. “Because we’re not going to ever have a team like this ever again.”

Editor’s Note: At the State Open Girls Championship on June 7, Gilbert placed first in the 3200m race and second in the 1600m race. Eastman-Grossel placed second in the 100m and 200m dash. Both athletes qualified for the New England Championship meet on June 14. The girls led Lyme-Old Lyme High School to a fourth place finish in the meet.

TOP STORY: Ashlawn Farm Caps 12 Years as ‘Launching and Landing Pad’ for ‘Tour de Lyme’

About 580 riders came out for the ‘Tour de Lyme’ on Sunday, June 1. Photo by Warner Swain.

LYME—Roughly 600 riders per year, bringing in about $65,000 annually for the Lyme Land Trust, have started out from Ashlawn Farm on Bill Hill Road for more than a decade as part of the perennially bucolic Tour de Lyme

Now, the family farm is bringing its popular coffee roasting operations back home as the land trust seeks out a change of scenery for the bike riding tradition. 

Those at the 13th Tour de Lyme, held last weekend, were the last to cycle and celebrate on the farm. 

Land Trust Executive Director Kristina White in a phone interview this week said the farm has donated the space to the Tour de Lyme at no charge for a dozen years. 

White described the arrangement as a large undertaking for the landowners, who coordinated mowing and haying operations to make room for hundreds of cars in preparation for the event that would take over their property for a full weekend. 

“The land trust really appreciates what they’ve done for us, because the Tour de Lyme would not have been what it was if Ashlawn Farm wasn’t there,” she said. 

Carol Adams, co-owner of the farm with husband Bill Donovan, said in an email that the family will continue to enjoy their hobby animals and gardens while allowing another farm to use some of the fields and outbuildings. Meanwhile, they are turning the barn where Ashlawn Farm Coffee was born and brewed in 2002 into an updated roastery. 

The coffee business since 2013 has operated out of a cafe near the Old Saybrook train station. That’s also where they roast beans sourced from farms all over the world. 

As the small business outgrew the space, Adams said it was natural to look back to their own rural roots. “We are so lucky to have the space, and we have reached the point where we need to use it,” she said. 

The cafe will continue to operate in Old Saybrook. 

Adams credited Lyme officials with their support throughout the approval process to renovate the roastery space. “And then we can spread out, scale up our supply purchases, enjoy a brewing/tasting/cupping lab, soak in the farm vibes and hopefully invite the public to our facility on occasion,” she said. 

A video posted on the business’s Facebook page shows the couple’s progress in adding septic capacity, running water, a coffee lab, storage and office space, and improved flow for shipping and receiving.

Participants gather on the grounds of Ashlawn Farm for a picnic following the Tour de Lyme on June 1, 2025. Photo by Warner Swain.

White, the land trust director, said she’s “not even close” to ironing out all the details or announcing a new site – but she has a plan. 

“We will stay in Lyme, obviously,” she said. 

With a new base will come altered routes for road offerings ranging from a challenging 59 miles to a family-friendly 8 miles.

“We’ve been in the same place for 12 years, so having a new location just means it will be exciting for the riders to come to a new place,” she said. “Some of the rides will be different, so we might be able to attract some of the riders who probably didn’t come because they had done it so many years in a row.”

Two mountain bike routes take riders on a trek through Hartman Park, Walbridge Woodlands and Young preserves as well as the Nehantic State Forest. 

White described cycling as a natural outlet to help support the land trust, which has been around since 1966. 

The event serves as the group’s only fundraiser. Proceeds go toward stewardship, preservation and operating costs, according to White. 

She recalled a rider who told her it was remarkable he’d passed through eight preserves on his ride. The land trust and its partners are responsible for preserving over 12,000 acres in a town where more than half its land mass is protected from development. 

White said riders wind past forests, farms and stone walls on roads with relatively little traffic. “When you’re on a bicycle, because you’re going so much slower than a car, you can see what we’re doing in a very clear way,” she said of the organization’s mission. 

Adams noted the event draws riders “from seemingly everywhere” to the small town that Ashlawn Farm is proud to support.

“We were thrilled to be able to offer up the farm as a launching and landing pad for all those years,” she said.

TOP STORY: Musical Masterworks Mourns Founding Artistic Director, Chamber Music Pioneer Charles Wadsworth

Chamber music pioneer Charles Wadsworth. Photos courtesy of Musical Masterworks.

OLD LYME–The Musical Masterworks community and beyond is mourning the loss of founding artistic director and pioneering chamber musician Charles Wadsworth. 

The pianist died on May 29 in Manhattan, NY, at the age of 96. 

A tribute from the Musical Masterworks board of directors recalled his arrival on the Old Lyme scene in 1990 when the group was still a fledgling concert series. Wadsworth brought with him a worldwide reputation as the founding director of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and the Spoleto Festival Midday Concerts in Italy and Charleston, S.C. 

Musical Masterworks President Alden Murphy, who was a founding director of the series with her husband Jamie Murphy, told LymeLine in an email that it was a “joyful surprise” when Wadsworth agreed to become the group’s first artistic director. 

Jamie and Alden Murphy, Musical Masterworks founding directors, stand either side of the late Charles Wadsworth.

“Thanks to Charles, three generations of musicians and audiences have found a home at Musical Masterworks,” she continued, adding, “We’re forever grateful for the magic he brought to our community.”

She said his quirky, napkin-scribbled program notes back when the couple first met him at the Spoleto Festival made chamber music feel alive and spontaneous. 

“He brought that same warmth and humor to Old Lyme, transforming our young concert series into something extraordinary,” she noted. 

The group counted Paula Robison, Richard Goode, Chee-Yun, Carter Brey among the many stars he introduced to the Masterworks stage. He passed on a welcoming spirit that still defines the concerts to artistic director Edward Arron in 2009 and Tessa Lark, who took the role in 2022.

“With every performance, we carry forward his joy, his generosity, and his belief in the transformative power of chamber music,” the tribute concluded.

Visit this link to read Mr. Wadsworth’s full obituary published May 28, 2025 by Dignity Memorial.

TOP STORY: River Valley Transit Offers New $5 Taxi Fares for Older Adults, People with Disabilities; Now Available in Lyme, Old Lyme

MIDDLETOWN–River Valley Transit is partnering with the state’s largest taxi company to offer $5 rides for older adults and people with disabilities in towns including Lyme and Old Lyme.  

The transit company in a press release recently announced the launch of Encompass, a new program designed to make it easier to travel within select towns in the Middlesex County area on any day, for any reason.  

The $5 cost covers up to eight miles. Trips beyond eight miles are charged at a rate of $2.90 per mile. 

The program is a partnership between the transit company and M7. 

The low-cost rides are currently available in Lyme and Old Lyme along with Old Saybrook, and Westbrook. The transit company said the program will soon expand to Durham, East Hampton, Middlefield, Chester, Deep River, Essex, East Haddam, Haddam, and Killingworth.

“We wanted to do everything we could to help our seniors and our passengers with disabilities get where they need to go—to the doctor, the pharmacy, the grocery store, or just to see family,” said Bill Scalzi, owner of M7. 

River Valley Transit Executive Director Joseph Comerford described the partnership as an innovative transportation solution. 

“We are always looking at ways to improve mobility in our region,” he said. 

Applications are accepted at Encompass.M7Ride.com by clicking the “Get Started in Middlesex” button.

Passengers must be 60 years of age or over or provide proof of a disability to apply. Trip payments are made online through a personal Encompass account created by the passenger. Passengers can load funds into the account via credit card payments or direct bank transfers. 

There is no limit to the number of trips a passenger can take. The passenger is given the exact trip cost at the time of booking and the fare is automatically deducted at the end of each ride.

All M7 drivers are fully trained and vetted, and all vehicles are fully licensed, inspected and insured, according to River Valley Transit.

Friends of Gillette Castle State Park Give New Life to Old Gillette Biography

The book, originally published in 1970, is now available at the Gillette Castle State Park visitor’s center.

LYME–To celebrate the republication of “Sherlock Holmes and Much More,” the Friends of Gillette Castle hosted a book launch in the Visitor Center of Gillette Castle State Park on June 8.

The Friends in a press release said the republished book, available in hardcover and softcover versions in the gift shop, is made possible through a partnership with Belanger Books and the Connecticut Museum of Culture and History. 

The book by historian Doris E. Cook was first published in 1970. It chronicles the life of the stage actor, playwright, and set designer best known for his portrayal of Sherlock Holmes. 

“Starting this month, readers interested in William Gillette will no longer need to scour eBay for out-of-print editions of his definitive biography,” the group said. 

The re-release party will include talks from resident and budding Gillette scholar Steven Gaudio and publishers Brian and Derrick Belanger. Gaudio will review some of the lesser-known aspects of William Gillette that comprise the “much more” in Doris Cook’s book. The Belangers will review the publication process for the book and discuss what makes it unique.

Friends’ President Lynn Wilkinson said Gillette’s “particular genius” is evident in the book. 

“Gillette was a pioneer in American theater, a creative inventor, and a motorcycle and railroad fanatic,” she said. “His life was filled with joy and periods of hardship. This book provides a complete picture of this highly creative man.”

The Friends of Gillette Castle State Park will also be offering a free, guided walk along the train trail at 1 p.m., departing from the Visitor Center.  

Gillette’s train system runs through scenic areas of the 122-acre state park, with numerous historic features along the way. The hike is approximately 1 hour and 15 minutes long. Registration is required.

The castle will be open throughout the day, with tours scheduled every 15 minutes from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tickets are $6 for adults and $2 for youth ages 6 to 12. Children 5 and under are free. Advance purchase is recommended.

Food concessions will not be open on June 8, so visitors are encouraged to pack a picnic or purchase sandwiches locally.