Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design
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November 25, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Pictured here are several trees from a previous years Community Night of Giving. (Leeanna Wilbur photo)
RANGELEY The Rangeley Rotary Club will be hosting its annual Community Night of Giving in a new way, bringing the Rangeley area community together in a safe and engaging way.
Since 2009, the Rotary Club has held a holiday fundraiser. First called the Festival of Trees, then dubbed the Community Night of Giving, this event raises funds for community members who may need a helping hand. This includes families who need help with school clothes or Christmas presents for their children, seniors who need heating assistance, cancer patients who could use some help with food and lodging when theyre receiving treatment, and others who need a hand.
This year the challenge was creating a safe, fun way to celebrate the holidays in the face of COVID-19.
Wednesday, Nov. 25, the Miracle Tree will be placed at the Gazebo at Haley Pond. This tree will represent hope for the community with the end of 2020 and the new light of 2021, according to Leeanna Wilbur.
Every day for 12 days, beginning Saturday, Nov. 28, a new tree will be placed outdoors in Rangeley. The trees are decorated by local businesses and represent the Twelve Days of Christmas. A clue will be posted on Facebook and shared with students at the Rangeley Lakes Regional School, encouraging families to get out walking or driving to search for the trees. The last tree will be revealed on Wednesday, Dec. 9.
Saturday, Dec. 12, a drawing will be held, raffling off the Twelve Days of Christmas trees. Tickets are $25 each, and 100% of the funds raised will be put into the Rotarys community fund. In addition, for $500, a class at RLRS may be sponsored; each child in the class will get an entry in the drawing for a tree of their choice.
In previous years, the trees were inside and businesses could add items to the trees such as gift cards, goodie baskets or products. However, to keep things COVID safe, the trees will all be outdoors. Businesses can attach laminated notes to their trees with any items that may be included, and the winner of each tree will take the tree, the stand and any items attached to the tree.
Classes may be sponsored multiple times, and folks can collaborate to sponsor a class.
Leeanna Wilbur reported Thursday, Nov. 18, that they had raised $7,400 and seven classes had been sponsored, before the event had even started.
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The Twelve Days of Christmas with Rangeley - The Original Irregular
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November 25, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
As part of the Trees Are Life initiative in conjunction with the Town of Warwick Shade Tree Commissioner and the Warwick Valley Gardeners, the Village of Warwick Department of Public Works along with the Shade Tree Commissioner, Robert Scheuermann is thrilled to announce that several trees have been planted in the Village of Warwick.
Although Arbor Day celebrations did not formally occur this year, the Village continues its important tree planting as part of its Tree City activities. The Village has been an active participant in the Tree City Program for 36 years.
The following trees have been planted recently in the Village of Warwick: four Hornbeam Trees in the Stanley-Deming Park Gazebo and five Gold Rush, Dawn Redwood Trees at the Roger Metzger Arboretum.
In the upcoming weeks the following trees will be planted: two Red Point Maple Trees on Park Ave., a Flowering Cherry Tree on 10-12 Main St. and a Yellowwood Tree at the Hallowed Ground located at the corner of Galloway Rd. and Forester Ave.
A crew from the Village of Warwick Dept. of Public Works plant one of several trees as part of the Trees Are Life initiative in conjunction with the Shade Tree Commissions in the Village and Town & the Warwick Valley Gardeners.
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'Trees Are Life': Trees Planted in Village of Warwick - wvdispatch.com
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November 25, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
POMPEY, N.Y. In 1978, Bob Manikheim and his wife, Joyce, were living in a development in Fayetteville.
It seemed like the houses were just two feet apart, he joked. We wanted more space.
He found it.
He bought two acres of property out on Cazenovia Road in Pompey and then, through what Manikheim calls happenstance, he acquired eight more contiguous lots around it for a grand total of 60 acres.
He called the land there rough and bad and likened it to a swamp with many dead trees.
But he was more than up to the task, joking that the work allowed to relieve stress on the weekends.
It took a long time to coral all the water and open it up, he said.
He dug several crystal-clear ponds, built a gazebo, and planted hundreds of new spruce trees.
His family gathered around him, occupying three homes on his property. He called it his family compound.
But things change.
In 2008, and some family moving on, he wanted to build a new home there. One that was quiet and private and took advantage of the beautiful countryside.
His new three-bedroom, three-bathroom house is at the end of a 2,000-foot driveway.
It is not really a driveway, he joked. It is a street!
Manikheim modestly says the home was meant to be functional and to look pretty good.
The home was built to be open and easy to move around in. He says he and his wife can live easily on just the ground floor.
The floor plan is open, and the home has high ceilings and many windows.
We went overboard with windows, he said, adding that there was no sense to do all this work outdoors and not enjoy it.
The kitchen is a special favorite for him.
He enjoys having breakfast in the dining area and looking out at the wildlife, like deer, raccoon, foxes and every bird you can think of.
Everyday someone new walks by, he said.
The kitchen, great room, with its many windows and beautiful gas fireplace, and master bedroom all have access to the deck which runs the entire length of the front of the house.
The property is an outdoors lovers paradise.
It feels like you are in the country there, Manikheim said. You think you are someplace else when you visit.
Hiking, snowshoeing, skiing, and ATV riding are all possible there.
The swimmers pond has been stocked with bass, has its own private beach, and is grated for both young and more experienced swimmers. A pond house with a bathroom, sink and refrigerator is where his children had parties while growing up.
A wildlife pond is stocked with minnows, which attract birds like blue heron and are used to feed the bass in the other pond.
After all these years there, he feels the property is too much for someone his age.
Manikheim says it is bittersweet to leave the property after all the work he has done there.
Anyone moving in will have the knowledge of knowing we did things right.
He and his wife plan to remain in the area and help their children with the new breweries they are opening, Seneca Street Brewery and Erie Canal Brewing Company.
(NOTE: Manikheim is selling the home and the entire 39 acres for one price but is willing to sell the house and just 13 acres for a lower price.)
For more information about this property, please contact realtors Sophia Sorrentino Benjamin, of Weichert Realtors of the Bollinger Group, or Allen Olmsted, of Canaan Realty. Their information is below.
THE DETAILS
Address: 8417 Cazenovia Road, Manlius, N.Y. 13104
Price: $1,100,000 (This price is for the house and all 39 acres. The owners will sell the house and 13 acres the home is on for $965,000. The mortgage figure is for 39-acre option.)
Size: 4,723 square feet
Acreage: 39 acres
Monthly Mortgage: $3,714 (based on this weeks national average rate of 3.01 percent, according to Freddie Mac, for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage with a 20 percent down payment. Fees and points not included.)
Taxes: $21,447 (Based on assessed value of $529,400)
Built: 2008
School District: Fayetteville-Manlius
Kitchen: The kitchen is really big and really open. It features plenty natural all hickory cabinets, oak flooring and granite counter and splashboard. It has a large island, two ovens, a six-burner stove with griddle and a large refrigerator. Bob and Joyce Manikheim enjoy breakfast in the dining area surrounded by windows which looks out onto the gazebo and gardens. They watch the wildlife from there.
Living areas: The home was built to be open and functional. Visitors arrive in the large front foyer which has built-in display shelves, recessed and decorative lighting and two large closets. The living room has high cathedral ceilings and a large stone fireplace with gas logs. The large floor-to-ceiling windows let in tons of natural light and has views of the Mickey Mouse pond and waterfall. There is a den/office which could be made into a fourth bedroom. A downstairs living area has a second stone gas fireplace and built-in bookshelves. It is mainly used as a Television room. It has radiant heated floors. There is a convenient laundry room.
Master bedroom: The master bedroom has all oak flooring and recessed lighting. It has a huge walk-in closet with built-in shelves and center island dresser. It has many windows and access to the deck. There three bedrooms in the house.
Master bathroom: The master bath has two sinks and granite counters. There is a small hair and makeup studio for Joyce. The tile floor has radiant heat in it. The very large shower unit has extra jets. The two other full bathrooms have bathtubs.
Outdoors: The home is located on 39 acres of property set well off the road. Visitors arrive at a 2,000-foot driveway. Manikheim has done over 38 years of landscaping there, including grooming trails, opening fields, planting spruce trees, and digging several ponds. There are hiking and cross-country ski trails. The Swimming Pond is stocked with bass and has its own beach. It was grated for young and old swimmers. It is about 13 feet deep at its deepest point. The children would have parties there with a cute pond house there with air-conditioning, refrigerator, microwave, and bathroom. The area is private and has security lighting. The property also includes two metal pole barns and a three-bay attached garage. A breezeway to the garage is heated and has air-conditioning.
Location: The owner likes to say that the property is like a trip to the country but centrally located. It is two miles from the village of Manlius, four miles to Fayetteville and 13 to Syracuse. Owner says he is a half-mile away from bank, shopping, food, and Urgent Care.
Agent: Sophia Sorrentino Benjamin
Weichert Realtors, The Bollinger Group
Address: 7137 East Genesee Street, Fayetteville, N.Y. 13066
Phone: (315) 657-4466
Email: sophia@thebollingergroup.net
Agent: Allen Olmsted
Canaan Realty
Address: 8645 East Seneca Turnpike, Manlius, N.Y. 13104
Phone: (315) 682-4500
Email: Allen@nyland.forsale
House of the Week: Pristine Skaneateles mansion is great place for large families
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If you know of a beautiful or interesting house currently up for sale, please consider sending a nomination for it to be featured as a future House of the Week. Send an email with the listing to home@syracuse.com.
Do you know of any older homes in Central New York which have fallen on hard times but have a lot of potential should they be restored to their original grandeur? A fixer-upper with a lot of potential? Consider nominating them to our new feature, Save this Home, in which we will spotlight grand houses of the past around Central New York that need to be saved. Send nominations to home@syracuse.com.
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House of the Week: Set on 39 acres, custom-built Pompey home is like a visit to the country - syracuse.com
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November 25, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
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A new holiday experience is coming to Redding.
The Garden of Lights opens the day after Thanksgiving at Turtle Bay's McConnell Botanical Gardens with the promise of a million colorful lights strung from shrubs and trees, glimmering in the night.
"It's a walking experience where you go through each section. You look at the lights and enjoy them, and slowly move as a group," said Seth McGaha, spokesman for Turtle Bay Exploration Park.
Where to get takeout: These Redding restaurants are open on Thanksgiving Day
"It's thrilling for kids and adults alike to walk through and see all the animations and the music. It's a really great experience," McGaha said.
An employee night Thursday offered a peek of what the public will be able to see from Nov. 27 to Dec. 27.
Redding news roundup: Shasta College's annual tree, holiday plant sale opens online
Visitors will entera holiday village where food and campfires are situatedbefore they take aone-way path that meanders through 10 acres of festive lights.
The highlights are a Candy Cane Causeway with a scent of peppermint in the air and nearly 200 feet of light tunnels. There's also an illuminated gazebo with a bench where people were taking holiday photos duringThursday's rehearsal.
The Garden of Lights at Turtle Bays McConnell Arboretum debuts Nov. 27, the Friday after Thanksgiving. For tickets, go to Reddinggardenoflights.org. Redding Record Searchlight
McGaha said masks are required when people enter but are optional the rest of the way in the garden for household groups, who are also asked to socially distance.
The Garden of Lights is locatedon the north side of the Sundial Bridge at 844 Sundial Bridge Drive.
For out-of-towners, the nearby Sheraton Redding Hotel is offering overnight packages.
McGaha recommends guests buy tickets online at Redding Garden of Lightsto receive a $5 discount. Children up to 5 years old are free and there's various prices for adults with discounts for Turtle Bay members.
Two people walk through an illuminated tunnel in the Garden of Lights at Turtle Bay's McConnell Botanical Gardens during employee night on Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020.(Photo: Mike Chapman/Record Searchlight)
More: #ReddingTurkeyTrot 2020 goes virtual: What you need to know
Mike Chapman is a reporter and photographerfor the Record Searchlight in Redding, Calif. His newspaper career spans Yreka andEureka in Northern California and Bellingham, Wash. Follow him onTwitter@mikechapman_RS.Subscribe today!
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Redding Garden of Lights a sparkling show of holiday colors, sounds: What you need to know - Record Searchlight
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November 23, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) The holiday season is here and as if things werent hectic enough, they are about to go up a notch.
Cities already tend to see an uptick in package thefts during the holiday season, but with the coronavirus pandemic causing online shopping and food ordering to skyrocket, it may be even worse this year.
People say theyre not just worried about porch pirates stealing their packages, but also their meals. Richmond native, Marquis Whitted, said he ordered food from a restaurant through Grub Hub on Wednesday. When he went to get his food from his front door it wasnt there.
I received the notification that my food arrived, Whitted said. And to my surprise when I walked outside to get it, nothing was there.
Whitted says he feels blessed to have a job and a roof over his head in the middle of a pandemic. But he wants to know what happens when someone is expecting to feed their family with that order.
I ordered another meal from somewhere else but can everyone do that?, he said. People work hard every day to provide for their families. Its not right for someone to take that away from them, especially around right around the holidays.
Ashley Garlick, a part-owner of The Lily Pad off Brook Road in Henrico County, deals with all the food delivery businesses like GrubHub, Door Dash and UberEats everyday.
She said the pandemic has turned life upside down for so many people across central Virginia but she says that doesnt make it okay to steal.
So much is going on in the world right now, Garlick said. But someone is expecting that food, someone has paid for that food.
She said if a situation like Whitteds happened to a customer at her business, she would ensure the customer that they would help fix the issue.
Ive had to call corporate for other reasons and Im not oppose to doing it again if I had to, said Garlick.
Richmond Police told 8News that package theft has increased from the same period last year.
Theyre concerned thefts will likely continue to rise at a rate higher than in previous years due to the pandemic.
However, RPD is hoping the public can help them in stopping the criminals.
What were hoping is that neighbors talk to their neighbors and community groups and get out the word to people, Richmond Police Department Lt. David Naoroz said. If you can have your packages delivered to a lockbox some of the delivery services offer lockbox services.
Lt. Naoroz said doorbell cameras are also an option in keeping an eye on your package and the porch pirates.
That will certainly notify you if somebodys up on the porch, but then it doesnt necessarily secure your package, Lt. Naoroz said. If any of that stuff is kind of witnessed or people see any of those suspicious activities, we really ask them to give us a call.
And as for Whitted, he said although getting his food stolen wasnt anything life or death, he wants the community to be aware that its happening.
Look, there are more important things going on in the world right now, he said. But I just want people to pay attention and stay vigilant when they are ordering anything to their homes.
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Porch pirates are snatching more than your Christmas gifts this year - 8News
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November 23, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
As far as odd and strangely entertaining crashes go, this one is completely unhinged (sorry not sorry for going there). An Audi crashed into a porch and drove off with the front door.
As the tweet below, from the WYP Roads Policing Unit, reveals, the Audi first crashed into another vehicle and then into somebodys porch. The impact was severe enough to unhinge the front door and ram it into the windshield of the Audi, but the driver still drove like this for a while longer before stopping. Even though hed clearly been hit not to mention that he was no longer able to see anything through the windshield.
Driver collided with a vehicle, then the front porch of a house - before then continuing to drive for several meters with front door attached to car. Driver arrested suspected unfit through drink/drugs, the tweet says. Its been tagged #Fatal4, a nationwide campaign meant to raise awareness on the most common motoring offenses, including speeding and DUI.
The 18-year-old male driver of an Audi suffered head injuries and was taken to hospital for treatment for the injuries which are not thought to be serious, a West Yorkshire Police spokesman revealed some time later. Inquiries remain ongoing.
Apparently, the driver of the Audi was the only one to be injured in the incident, and even his injuries are minor. All things considered, this could have ended so much worse than it did.
This means its ok to laugh at the mishap, which is exactly what Twitter is doing. Completely innocent. Looks like hes been framed, one user says. All those doors but still struggled to get out, adds another, while more ask the police if they knocked on the door when they arrived at the scene to arrest the irresponsible driver. Was a two door, now a 3 door car, says one user, while another declares this to be an open and shut case.
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An Unhinged Tale: Audi Crashes Into Porch, Drives Off With the Front Door - autoevolution
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November 23, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Tests of wastewater from across Maine have shown a steady increase in COVID-19 cases in recent months, offering additional, localized insight into the spread of the coronavirus.
Some Maine colleges, meanwhile, have successfully used the stuff flushed down the toilet to detect and isolate cases before they lead to larger outbreaks. St. Josephs College, for instance, has found infected-but-asymptomatic individuals on campus after following the virus trail to specific buildings.
The wastewater has given us the tip off, said Oliver Griswold, a spokesman for the small, private college in Standish. In both of the two outbreaks weve had, we heard from the wastewater first.
Still, it would take more frequent and robust screening to turn the states massive network of toilets into an early warning system for infection spikes.
Individuals infected with the virus that causes COVID-19 shed fragments or genetic markers of the virus in waste. While research suggests the amount of active or live virus in feces is low, laboratories can detect and then amplify active or inactive markers as another way to detect trends before they begin showing up in the daily case counts.
This is allowing us to get a finger on the pulse of whats going on in the community, said Yolanda Brooks, an assistant professor of biology at St. Josephs College whose team has been testing samples from the Portland Water District, Yarmouth and the campus community.
The Portland Water District has been collecting weekly samples from its East End treatment plant in Portland and its Westbrook/Gorham facility for COVID-19 testing since July. Test results show levels of virus materials increasing starting in September and spiking in late-October. That correlates with surging case numbers within surrounding communities in recent weeks as Maine has seen the highest rates of infections and deaths since the pandemic arrived in Maine in March.
Traces of the virus in samples from the Westbrook/Gorham treatment plant, for instance, increased by a magnitude of 10 between Sept. 1 and Nov. 3. While Brooks said federal officials caution against estimating the number of infections in an area based on wastewater results, she noted that Westbrook/Gorham had just a handful of cases on Sept. 1 and roughly 50 as of last week.
It does confirm a correlation, said Brooks, who has a doctorate in microbiology and a background in studying fecal pollution.
Other towns in Maine, including Yarmouth and Augusta, also have contracted with St. Josephs College or a national lab to conduct testing.
St. Josephs internal testing program, meanwhile, illustrates the enormous potential for wastewater monitoring.
Because St. Josephs has its own wastewater treatment system serving a relatively small population, staff have been able to use the testing results to zero in on clusters of cases in individual buildings.
The process begins by collecting a series of samples from each of the three wastewater lift stations that serve different sections of campus. By analyzing those results, Brooks and her colleagues can see whether levels of the viruss genetic markers have changed since the previous tests and, in the event of an increase, order building-level testing in that zone.
The college can then test individuals residing or working in buildings that have elevated levels of the virus markers. The vast majority of the students infected with COVID-19, to date, were asymptomatic but potentially contagious, so wastewater testing enabled college health officials to find and isolate them, said Griswold, the colleges spokesman.
The early warning piece of it has given the whole campus a sense of we are going to know early what is going on campus, Griswold said. Whereas if you are just doing individual testing, you are going to know only when you have a problem, not before you have a problem.
St. Josephs College has had 15 confirmed cases during the past two weeks, prompting administrators to transition all students to remote learning and send them home early this week before the Thanksgiving break.
Three campuses of the University of Maine System Orono, Fort Kent and the University of Southern Maine also have been testing wastewater for COVID-19 since September. More recently, the UMaine lab where the test is done recently started analyzing wastewater from the town of Orono and is working with the University of New England in Biddeford on testing.
Both the UMaine and St. Josephs labs use a testing system developed by IDEXX Laboratories in Westbrook. The veterinary services company has also partnered with the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention to provide the equipment and materials used to conduct thousands of COVID-19 tests daily on nasal swabs collected from individuals.
Robert Wheeler, associate professor of microbiology who leads the testing effort from his Orono lab, said virus levels in wastewater have been rising since September but the increase has not been steady. Wheeler noted that the various campuses have had lower numbers of infections among students and staff than their surrounding communities.
The combination of sensitive testing technology and low virus prevalence rates allows them to detect slight changes.
If we dont have any known cases but we are seeing the virus in the wastewater, that is a disconnect and triggers a discussion about where to direct additional testing, Wheeler said.
Like Portland, UMaines testing is only done weekly, which limits the ability to quickly detect trends. Wheeler said his lab hopes to expand capacity this spring.
Ideally we would be testing all of these places every day, he said. The University of Maine doesnt quite have all of the resources to do that and the State of Maine hasnt provided those resources as of yet.
Scott Firmin, director of wastewater services at the Portland Water District, said it would be up to the member communities about whether to increase testing frequency. Tests cost $120 per weekly sample during the first, three-month period of the pilot project, but the district has since extended the agreement with St. Josephs College lab at $380 per sample.
With all of the focus on fragments of the virus in wastewater, Firmin stressed that drinking water is safe.
We use dual water treatments, ozone and ultraviolet light, that effectively inactivate viruses and kill pathogens, Firmin wrote in an email. COVID-19 is mainly thought to spread between people who are in close contact with one another, not through water, according to the CDC. The EPA states that the presence of the COVID-19 virus has not been detected in drinking-water supplies and based on current evidence the risk to water supplies is low.
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Wastewater testing sheds light on COVID-19 trends - Portland Press Herald - Press Herald
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November 23, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
A wave of wild weather crossing Victoria, in the form of a trough that brought thunderstorms and substantial rainfall, damaged roofs and brought down fences and trees across Ballarat and some other parts of western Victoria.
The regional city's State Emergency Service (SES) unit was the second-busiest in the state as units responded to 402 jobs in 24 hours.
Ballarat SES controller Gordon Hicks said a "very focused weather event" affected a few streets in Alfredton, a suburb of Ballarat.
"We had a house that lost a few tiles off the roof, we also had another house that lost a fair proportion of its metal roof," he said.
"There were some smaller sheds in backyards that were picked up and moved around and parts of air conditioners on roofs that came off the roof and ended up in backyards of other properties.
"So there were quite a few properties affected by this weather event."
He said Ballarat saw similar damage from localised storms six or seven times each year.
"Ballarat get these fairly regularly, we're no stranger to these weather events," Mr Hicks said.
"These are very focused weather cells."
Deputy controller Olivia Lorkin said the period stretching from mid-morning Sunday through to Monday had been one of the busiest, and wettest, for the year.
"We've seen some particular storm cells in the Alfredton area, we've also seen some jobs out in Miners Rest, Creswick and also out in Warrenheip as well," she said.
"We've been out in isolated areas that have been most impacted by the storm cells and the rain and some of the flash flooding that's happened."
A resident of Canopy Street in the Ballarat suburb of Alfredton, Angela, said her neighbours described seeing a lightning strike hit one house this morning.
"About 5.30 [we heard] a massive gust of wind we described it like a truck just revving and revving out the front of our house, something I've never heard before," she said.
"It was over probably in about 60 seconds, maybe 2 minutes, it was really quick and really short.
"People have lost roofs off their houses, other houses completely lost their fences."
Bureau of Meteorology data shows more than 40mm of rain fell in Ballarat in the 24-hour time period to 9am this morning.
The Ballarat data from the city's aerodrome recorded a wind gust of 57 kilometres per hour late Sunday afternoon and gusts up to 35kph this morning.
During that time 30mm was recorded at Warrnambool, 28.4mm was recorded at Mortlake and 11mm at Ararat.
A supermarket in Ballarat East had to be evacuated late Sunday afternoon after water started leaking through the roof.
Meanwhile the Bacchus Marsh SES unit assisted with a rescue of an injured hiker at Lerderderg Gorge on Sunday afternoon just before the rain hit.
The team helped winch the hiker to safety before hiking through the pouring rain to respond to six more calls for help in the town for building damage and flooding.
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Storm cell picks up sheds, tears off section of roofs in Alfredton, Ballarat - ABC News
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November 23, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Julia Jennings"BEYOND THE READING ROOM": Literary Scholar Susan Beegel and Special Collections and Archives Education and Outreach Librarian Marieke Van Der Steenhoven (left to right) discuss the effect of one of Harriet Beecher Stowe's most popular novels on summer tourism in Maine.
In the third installment of the Beyond the Reading Room virtual lecture series hosted by Bowdoin College Librarys George J. Mitchell Department of Special Collections and Archives (Special Collections), literary scholar Susan Beegel joined the Bowdoin community over Zoom on Monday to explore the role of Harriet Beecher Stowes novel in transforming Orrs Island from a fishing village to a summer tourist attraction. The event was open to Bowdoin students, faculty and alumni, as well as members of the Brunswick community and broader Midcoast Maine.
Within the short span of time that Harriet Beecher Stowe spent in Brunswick during the mid-19th century, she irrevocably shaped the future of some of Maines coastal communities. Through the publication of The Pearl of Orrs Island, Stowe painted an image of mid-coast Maine so vivid that readers flocked to the Maine islands to see it for themselves.
I think the impulse of tourism and the impulse to read are often very much the same. I mean, what are we looking for? Were looking for beautiful places, interesting experiences, to meet characters; thats what books are made of and thats what tourism is made of, Beegel said.
The lecture specifically explored how Stowes fictitious interpretation of the Orrs Island community became a reality as community members jumped to meet the demand of tourists seeking the world that Stowe created through her work.
Beegel, a writer whose work examines American literature and history, has utilized SC and A for her research on Stowe while also actively helping to grow the College Librarys collections of materials relating to the life and writings of Stowe.
I grew up on an island off the coast of Maine where the population tripled in the summer, and
so it was really fun for me to kind of make those personal connections as a viewer of her talk, Marieke Van Der Steenhoven, Special Collections and Archives education and outreach librarian and an organizer of the event, said in a Zoom interview with the Orient. I also think that the thread throughout it, which resonates with the work that we do in Special Collections, is thinking about how history is constructedand reconstructed.
For this virtual series, Special Collections has welcomed a variety of scholars and artists, all of whom have some connection to the work of the Bowdoin Librarys collections. Previous lectures have featured Maureen Cummins, creator of artists books based on historical research, and Pamela Zabala 17, now a PhD student at Duke University, who has used archival research to contextualize racial bias incidents at Bowdoin. The final installment of the series will occur on December 3 with a lecture from Don Westfall 72 regarding his research on Bowdoins history of land acquisition in Maine.
Through the virtual lectures, the Special Collections staff hopes to maintain engagement and build a virtual community, as well as to explore the lived impacts of materials and the dynamic nature of the archive.
We started the series this semester [in] an attempt to try to connect Special Collections and Archives with people in the world, Van Der Steenhoven said. Normally we do programming that brings people into the reading room for hands-on or close encounters with materials, and so it seemed like a natural thing to doto move beyond the reading room and to think about how the materials and the collection have been used.
While the lecture series has served as the main source of outreach for Special Collections and Archives this semester, Van Der Steenhoven and her colleagues have also been working with the archives behind the scenes. They have partnered with classes and worked to build the librarys digitized collection, which already contains over 300,000 materials.
[Our work] this semester and moving forward to next semester has been a way for us to sort of leverage the existing digital collections and then also grow those collections as necessary, Van Der Steenhoven said.
Special Collections hopes to continue offering online programming into the Spring semester, including the virtual revival of the monthly Audubon page turning. Van Der Steenhoven hopes that both the lecture series and the continued engagement with the SC and A will inspire the Bowdoin community to further consider the role of the archive and the evolution of primary sources.
Its one example of all the exciting things that people are doing for a wide variety of different reasons, Van Der Steenhoven said. Like how people become attracted to and what they end up doing with Special Collections. Its a way to think about the active life of these materials.
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Special Collections speaker sheds light on the living work of the archive - The Bowdoin Orient
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November 23, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
A letter from the principal at Estrella Foothills High School said in early November a student threatened to harm themselves with a gun after band practice.
Quick action helped end a scary situation at a West Valley high school.
A letter from the principal at Estrella Foothills High School said in early November a student threatened to harm themselves with a gun after band practice.
Goodyear Police said another student tackled the teen and gave the gun to a teacher. All students are physically OK.
The gun was later found by police to be unloaded and the student was taken to the hospital to be evaluated.
It was kind of an out of left field, Andrew Glenn, director of music at Estrella Foothills High School, said.
Glenn said the incident brought to focus a different toll of the COVID-19 pandemic.
I think theres going to be this hidden cost that were not going to see probably for even years down the road, Glenn said.
Arizona Department of Health Services Director Dr. Cara Christ recently said 43 teens ages 17 and under have died by suicide this year, up already from 38 in 2019.
Calls into Teen Lifeline are also up 14% from last year.
Glenn said as a teacher, its been harder to keep tabs on students not seeing them in person every day.
Mentally getting over the barrier of Ive typed it and Im acknowledging that somethings wrong is definitely the barrier that we are at with the students, Glenn said.
Paula McCall Ph.D, a child psychologist, said the pandemic is playing a big role in mental health. Not only for students who are distanced learning but those that are on campus as well.
In-person is not what it used to be, and we have to be social distanced and masked and dont get to interact with other people the way that we had before, McCall said.
McCall said theres no profile of suicide but the pandemic has brought more risk factors.
A lot of our resiliency factors arent there like they were before and our coping strategies are impaired, McCall said.
She adds its good for parents to have open, honest communication with their teens.
We see marked sudden changes in behavior, if we see concerning extreme emotions, if we hear talk about suicide or suicidal thoughts, we need to respond to those and we need to talk about what that is, McCall said.
If you or a loved one are experiencing suicidal thoughts, the National Suicide Prevention line is available toll-free at 1-800-273-TALK.
Other resources available include:
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Incident at West Valley high school sheds light on mental health toll in the pandemic - 12news.com KPNX
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