Lights on, let’s play
Installation has begun on lights at the athletic field at Keach Park in Concord, according to a Dec. 24 Concord Monitor article. The lights will cover a youth-sized field, the story said, and will be ready for nighttime use sometime in May or June 2026; this will make Keach the only lighted field in Concord other than Memorial Field.
QOL score: +1
Comment: Local advocacy group Change for Concord lobbied for years for the lights and had wanted a larger area to be lighted, according to the article, which quoted city Parks & Rec Director David Gill as saying that the current plan will not illuminate abutting houses much.
Thousands of crows
In a Dec. 22 article, Manchester InkLink reported that a recent survey “counted 7,800 crows passing over the Amoskeag Fishways [in Manchester] on their way to their night roost.” Using a thermal imaging drone, New Hampshire naturalist Mark Timmerman and photographer Craig Gibson, who has conducted similar studies on the crow population in Lawrence, Mass., hope to document the Millyard’s crow population.
QOL score: +1
Comment: While Manchester’s crow population is smaller than Lawrence’s, the birds’ environments are extremely similar. Both have large, brick, mill buildings on the Merrimack River. Gibson expects both populations to be made up of the same species, American Crows, with a smaller number of Fish Crows, according to the article.
Parading down Main Street 100 years ago
On Dec. 22, the Concord Public Library posted a press release on the City of Concord’s website (concordnh.gov) reminding the public that one of the Library’s many resources is a digital collection of historic Concord photographs, including of President Theodore Roosevelt’s visit to Concord on Aug. 28, 1902; the Concord High School Girls Basketball Team in 1920, and dozens of parade photos. Visit concordnhlibrary.omeka.net, where you can also find a wealth of other Concord historical resources.
QOL score: +1
Comment: This is another reminder that local libraries do much more than lend books. See the Oct. 2 issue of The Hippo, “29 Reasons to love your library,” which is available online. Visit hippopress.com.
QOL score to start 2026: 50
Net change: +3
QOL this week: 53
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