A conversation with Jake Shimabukuro and how you can join NH’s ukulele scene
Ukulele together
Jake Shimabukuro’s new album is all about collaboration
In 2006, Jake Shimabukuro played the ukulele heard ’round the world. A clip he recorded for the New York City public access program Midnight Ukulele Disco, in which he played “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” was one of the first viral video successes on YouTube, amassing more than 15 million views. Since then he’s become a global ambassador for the four-stringed instrument. In addition to releasing several albums and touring the world, he’s performed a concerto for ukulele and orchestra, scored the Japanese remake of the indie film Sideways, given a TED talk, and spearheaded a ukuleles-in-the-classroom effort in his home of Hawaii.
Jake Shimabukuro and Friends, the ukulele maestro’s most recent album, couldn’t come at a better time. This duets album features a diverse array of musicians — among them Willie Nelson, Bette Midler, Michael McDonald and Jimmy Buffett — in a celebration of the ways a good song can bring different people together.
Ahead of an appearance at Tupelo Music Hall on Thursday, April 14, Shimabukuro discussed the tour and the record in an interview via Zoom in late March.
Your latest album is a series of duets and collaborations. How did that come together and how did you pick which songs to play with which artists?
Oh, wow. Wow. So, that was a project that started about four years ago. It was a conversation I had with my manager. And he was like, ‘You should do a duets record.’ And I was thinking, wow. He started naming some artists and I was like, oh man, that would be awesome. But in the back of my head, I was thinking, oh, this is never going to happen, right? How are we going to get all these people together?
We had mentioned the project to Roy Benson of Asleep at the Wheel and he got very excited and he agreed to help me co-produce the record. The first thing he said to me was, ‘Man, we got to get you and Willie Nelson together.’ And I said, ‘Really?’ He picked up the phone, called Willie and told him all about the project and Willie was down with it. And two months later we were in the studio recording ‘Stardust.’ I mean, it was unbelievable. And so after that, it just gave the project all this momentum.
A couple of the songs on here are standards, like Willie Nelson’s version of ‘Stardust.’ What is it like to play those songs? And how did playing those songs change the way you listen to them?
Man, I tell you, when Willie Nelson agreed to do … .Well, when he said he’ll do ‘Stardust,’ I mean, my jaw hit the floor because I was like, I am going to have the opportunity to not just play, but record ‘Stardust’ with Willie Nelson, right? And I got to tell you, it was a funny story because the night before we went into the studio, Ray took me to go see Willie. And it was my first time meeting him in person. I’d seen him, we played festivals together and I watched his show and kind of seen him from afar. But I remember we got to his house and I was so nervous and he came over. He came over and Ray introduced us and I got to shake his hand and I had my ukulele in my case, on my back. And he looked at me and said, ‘Hey, so we’re going to do ‘Stardust,’ right?’ And I said, ‘Oh yeah, thank you so much. I’m so honored that you’re doing this. I’m looking forward to it. Thank you. Thank you.’ And then he looked at me, he goes, ‘Oh, OK. Yeah. Well, maybe we should run through it.’
And I was like, ‘Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. No, we can definitely do that.’ And then there was this awkward pause and then I realized, oh, he means right now. … And I was like, OK. But see, I wasn’t prepared for that because I thought he was going to play guitar on it. I didn’t realize he was just going to sing. I immediately realized, oh, OK. I’m just playing and he’s singing. So I was so nervous, but we played through it and then he looked at me and he said, ‘All right. Yeah. Sounds good. Looking forward to tomorrow.’ And I was like, ‘Oh, thank you so much.’ And then I left with Ray and I was just like, I told Ray, ‘Oh my gosh, I almost passed out.’ Talk about being put on the spot. And man, he’s such a nice individual when you’re around him. He just has such a gentle presence and vibe so I loved it.
Did you go to your collaborators or did they come to you?
Well, Jimmy Buffett introduced me to probably half the people on the record, right? So, I was very fortunate to know most of them. There were a few people I hadn’t worked with before, like Willie Nelson and Lukas Nelson. Also, Vince Gill and Amy Grant. Most of the people on the record I had worked with before, so it was a little easier to ask and reach out. Jon Anderson, that was another dream come true because I was a huge Yes fan.
And Jon Anderson’s iconic voice. Oh man. And then when he agreed to sing ‘A Day In The Life,’ it just blew me out of my seat. I couldn’t believe he was going to sing that. And then he kind of tricked me. He said, ‘Oh yeah, I’ll sing you a demo of how I like to sing it.’ And he sent me this video and he is actually singing it. But he’s also strumming a ukulele.
And I was like, I’m sorry. I called him and I was like, ‘Jon, I didn’t know you played the ukulele.’ He goes, ‘Oh, I love the ukulele.’ And it was such a moment. So I told him, ‘You have to play ukulele on the record,’ but he didn’t want to play. ‘No, no, no, you play the ukulele. I’ll just sing.’ But man, he is just phenomenal. He did a lot of, some of that percussion work and stuff on there as well and added all his layers of vocals and, oh, it’s just phenomenal.
What is it like to tour behind a solo album that’s so rooted in collaboration?
I always make a joke when I talk about the record and I introduce some of the artists that are on it. And I always say, ‘Unfortunately they all couldn’t be here tonight.’ I say, ‘We’re going to do the songs anyway.’ So we have been playing a lot of the songs from the record, obviously the instrumentals. But songs like ‘Something’ and we were doing ‘A Place In The Sun.’
When I listened to this album, one of the things that struck me was that it’s a real celebration of community and the way music can be a common denominator for a lot of different people. How does it feel to be touring and promoting this as some of the Covid restrictions are lifting and people are coming out to see live music?
I’m so grateful to be performing in front of a live audience again. I mean, it just feels so good. I mean the first couple shows when we first went back out a couple months ago, I mean, after the first song, I cried. I unexpectedly just was so…. It was so overwhelming that I actually started tearing. And I’ve noticed that in a lot of these shows, you can see people they’re just [moved]. Because for a lot of the venues that we’ve been playing at recently, we’ve been kind of their first show back. Well, back in November and December when we were touring and we were their first show back. So, I mean, you could see people just in tears, just crying, sobbing. And you know everyone has had their own unique challenges during this time. It just shows how just the healing power of music and the power of people coming together, being in the moment and just letting the music touch you, and it’s so powerful.
What can New Hampshire audiences expect from your upcoming show at Tupelo?
So I’m bringing a dear friend with me. His name is Jackson Waldhoff. He’s been touring with me for the last couple years. He’s from Hawaii as well. And just a very, I mean, honest musician. I just love his playing. Everything he plays is so pure. He’s so melodic and it just really complements the ukulele and the parts I play. We’re going to be doing a lot of bass and ukulele duets and he’s just so much fun to watch and I just love playing with him. Every once in a while you come across musicians that you play with and you just almost feel like you know where they’re going to go, what note they’re going to, how they’re going to play, and you just can read them dynamically. And I think that’s what we’re able to provide for each other and it’s really awesome, so I’m excited.
Jake Shimabukuro When: Thursday, April 14, 8 p.m. Where: Tupelo Music Hall (10 A St. in Derry) Tickets: $30 to $50 More info: tupelomusichall.com
You can ukulele
Ukulele enthusiasts keep the music going
Talking about his previous appearance in the Granite State, Jake Shimabukuro shouted out the ukulele players of southern New Hampshire.
“The last time I was there, they came and they brought their ukuleles,” he recalled. “It’s so wonderful to see that. All these communities of ukulele players, just all over the world. It’s crazy.”
The feeling is mutual. “No one can shred a ukulele like Jake!” June Pinkham said in a recent email interview. As one of the co-organizers for the Southern New Hampshire Ukulele Group, she would know from ukulele shredding. Over the past decade, SNHUG has organized sing-and-strum get-togethers for ukulele enthusiasts in the Seacoast area, with bigger and more ambitious plans on the horizon.
Former Granite State resident Dan Mathis first organized SNHUG on Meetup in December 2011, appointing Pinkham as a co-organizer. Their earliest meetings were attended by five members.
“I had inherited a Martin ukulele from my father-in-law and wanted to learn to play it in his honor,” Pinkham wrote. “Little did I know where that would lead!”
The group has about 600 followers on their Meetup group, and avid members have met twice a month at the Seabrook Public.
“We have many talented members in our group!” Pinkham wrote. She describes their membership as “people from all walks of life. People like me, with no musical background, to people who are very well accustomed to playing on stage professionally and just want to have some fun.”
SNHUG’s mission includes a community service component, which involves performances and fundraising. The group frequently looks for “a way to ‘do a little good’ … bringing smiles to nursing homes, community events, farmers markets — wherever there was a need.” They have also raised money for the nonprofit Ukulele Kids Club, which brings musical instruments to children in hospitals as a form of music therapy.
“We organized the Battle of the Ukulele Bands, which took place in 2019 at The Music Hall in Portsmouth,” a “seriously complex event” that raised $23,000 for the UKC. “To date, we have raised almost $90,000 for charity — all the while having a blast!”
Check out a ukulele (literally) You can get a feel for a ukulele by checking one out of some area libraries. Ukuleles are available at the Hooksett Public Library (31 Mt. St. Mary’s Way in Hooksett; hooksettlibrary.org, 485-6092) and from the Merrimack Public Library (470 DW Highway in Merrimack; merrimacklibrary.org, 424-5021). Call for details.
Like many ukulele groups, SNHUG had to shift their in-person gatherings to Zoom when the Covid-19 pandemic first hit. As the temperatures rose, the organizers found ways for the group to get together. “Last year we met as soon as the weather warmed up in the spring all the way through November — outside at the park, frozen fingers and all.” They were warmly greeted by members of the community and grew their community through outdoor performances at nursing homes and farmers markets. Just as ukulele sales grew in 2020, so did SNHUG’s community: “We didn’t see a change in our membership during the lockdown. In fact, I think our membership went up!”
SNHUG can help ukulele novices learn the instrument. For more information on SNHUG’s gatherings and lessons, visit snhug.wordpress.com. And keep an eye out for their annual SNHUGfest in Dover on Sept. 24.
Learn to play Here are a few places where you can go to learn to play a ukulele.
• Let’s Play Music (2626 Brown Ave., Unit A2, Manchester, 218-3089; 145 Hampstead Road, 1st floor, Suite 26, Derry, 425-7575; letsplaymusic.com/ukulele-lessons.php) offers children’s and adults beginner to advanced ukulele lessons in person and on Zoom. • NH Tunes (250 Commercial St., Suite 201, Manchester; 660-2208, nhtunes.biz) offers ukulele lessons for beginners to advanced players in person and on Zoom. • North Main Music (28 Charron Ave., Suite 1, Nashua; 505-4282, northmainmusic.com/ukulele-lessons) offers in-person and online ukulele lessons for children and adults. • The Real School of Music (10 A St., Derry; 260-6801, therealschoolofmusic.com) offers beginner to advanced ukulele lessons for children and adults in person and on Zoom. • Steve’s House of Ukulele (123 Main St., Concord; stevesukes.com, 555-9876) Steve’s House offers Zoom and in-person lessons for beginners as well as more experienced players. Steve’s House also offers instrument rentals and sales. • Ted Herbert Music (880 Page St, Manchester; 669-7469, tedherbert.com) John Chouinard teaches ukulele lessons in person and over Zoom for beginners through advanced players. He also leads the ukulele ensemble Ukuladies.
Featured photo: Jake Shimabukuro. Photo by Sienna Morales.
This year’s Best of 2022 Readers’ Poll features, for the most part, five winners for each category — five favorites, the top five opinions about what makes a great place for a second date or a good spot to let the kids run wild.
All these “readers’ bests” mean lots of recommendations for places to go and things to do (and eat — as always we ask a lot of questions about eating). Along the way, we also got readers’ opinions on their feelings about Zoom meetings (the answer will not surprise you), their feelings about the best 5 o’clock drink and we even delve into one of the most heated debates of our time: is a hot dog a sandwich?
This year, we’re also offering up some quotes from readers. Because our poll asks open-ended questions — no multiple choice or drop-down menus — we get lots of funny, sweet, smart and smart-alecky answers and reading them is one of the true perks of tallying the results.
Looking for some opinions on a new place to grab a slice or a place to get that perfect cocktail? Hippo readers have some thoughts …
This survey is for entertainment purposes only and all results are final.
The results of Hippo’s readers’ poll are based on readers’ answers to a poll conducted online in February. Readers typed in the names of people and locations they voted for. In situations where the vote is tied or otherwise unclear, Hippo editorial staff makes an effort to determine the will of the greatest number of voters.
Hippo reserves the right to disqualify individual votes, ballots and/or entries when they are incomplete or unclear, do not meet the letter or the spirit of the question asked or otherwise do not meet the requirements to make them a usable vote. Hippo’s editorial staff makes the ultimate determination of the winners in the categories. Hippo’s advertising staff and its advertisers play no role in the determination of the winners. All results are final.
The Best of 2022 is a celebration of all things local and is meant to serve as a snapshot of the people and places in southern New Hampshire. Large national and international chains are, for the most part, not included in the count.
Information presented here is gathered from sources including the location’s website and social media pages. Double check with the spots before heading out to make sure times, locations and menu items haven’t changed.
Questions, comments, concerns? Did we get an address or phone number wrong? Do you have an idea for a new category? Let us know. Contact editor Amy Diaz at [email protected]. Corrections will appear on the first page of the news section in future issues. Is your favorite category missing? Categories change regularly, with some categories taking a sabbatical and new categories introduced, so please send your suggestions for a category for next year.
And, again, all results are final.
Arts
Best Performing Arts Venue
Best of the best: Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St., Manchester, 668-5588, palacetheatre.org
Tupelo Music Hall, 10 A St., Derry, 437-5100, tupelohall.com
Capitol Center for the Arts, 44 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com
Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion, 72 Meadowbrook Lane, Gilford, 293-4700, banknhpavilion.com
Bank of NH Stage, 16 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, banknhstage.com
Best Theatrical Production
Best of the Best: Mamma Mia!, mainstage production of the Palace Theatre (80 Hanover St., Manchester, 668-5588, palacetheatre.org) ran Oct. 15 through Nov. 14, 2021.
The Full Monty, mainstage production of the Palace Theatre ran Jan. 28 through Feb. 20, 2022.
A Christmas Carol, mainstage production of the Palace Theatre ran Nov. 26 through Dec. 22, 2021.
Recycled Percussion, drumming group performed at the Palace Theatre Dec. 27, 2021, through Jan. 8, 2022, recycledpercussion.com.
Barefoot in the Park, performed by the Community Players of Concord at the Concord City Auditorium (2 Prince St., Concord) Oct. 15 through Oct. 17, 2021, communityplayersofconcord.org.
Best Local Place to Buy Art
Best of the best: Craftsmen’s Fair, nhcrafts.org. The annual nine-day craft fair hosted by the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen is held outdoors at Mount Sunapee Resort starting the first week of August. It features hundreds of craftspeople with vendor booths, plus special craft exhibitions, demonstrations, hands-on workshops and more.
Manchester Craft Market, Mall of New Hampshire, 1500 S. Willow St., Manchester, manchestercraftmarket.com. Year-round gift shop features handmade items by more than 125 local artisans.
League of New Hampshire Craftsmen Concord Fine Craft Gallery, 36 N. Main St., Concord, 228-8171, concord.nhcrafts.org. The craft organization’s flagship retail shop and gallery features a variety of traditional and contemporary crafts created by juried New Hampshire craftspeople.
The Museum Shop at the Currier, Currier Museum of Art, 150 Ash St., Manchester, 669-6144, currier.org. The gift shop offers art supplies and gifts for artists and art-lovers, including novelty items inspired by the museum’s special exhibitions.
Concord Arts Market, Rollins Park, Concord, concordartsmarket.net. The juried outdoor artisan and fine art market runs one Saturday a month, June through October, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. The first market will be held on Saturday, June 11.
Art Gallery with the Most Surprising Art
Best of the best: Currier Museum of Art, 150 Ash St., Manchester, 669-6144, currier.org. The internationally renowned art museum, founded in 1929, has permanent and rotating exhibits featuring American and European paintings, sculptures, photographs and more by notable artists such as Picasso, Monet and O’Keeffe, as well as local and regional artists. Its next special exhibition, “Warhol Screen Tests,” opens on March 31 and will feature projections of film shot by Andy Warhol in the 1960s.
Diane Crespo Fine Art Gallery, 32 Hanover St., Manchester, 493-1677, dianecrespoart.weebly.com. The gallery, owned and operated by local artist Diane Crespo, features Crespo’s oil and pastel realism landscapes and offers art classes and workshops for all ages and abilities.
Art 3 Gallery, 44 W. Brook St., Manchester, 668-6650, art3gallery.com. The fine art retail gallery features art in a variety of media and styles by local, regional, national and international artists, and offers custom framing and corporate and residential art consulting.
Art Up Front Street Studios & Gallery, 120 Front St., Exeter, 418-6286, artupfrontstreet.com. The artists’ collective features seven working artist studios, open to the public Tuesday through Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and hosts art events, workshops and demonstrations. Its Spring Open Studios will be held on Saturday, May 7, and Sunday, May 8, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day.
League of New Hampshire Craftsmen Concord Fine Craft Gallery, 36 N. Main St., Concord, 228-8171, concord.nhcrafts.org. The craft organization’s flagship retail shop and gallery features a variety of traditional and contemporary crafts created by juried New Hampshire craftspeople.
Chris’s Comics, 341 S. Broadway, Salem, 898-4151, chriscardscomics.com
Best Mini Golf
Best of the best: Chuckster’s Family Fun Park, 9 Bailey Road, Chichester, 798-3555, chuckstersnh.com. Opening for the season in Chichester on April 9.
Mel’s Funway Park, 454 Charles Bancroft Hwy., Litchfield, 424-2292, melsfunwaypark.com. Open seasonally from April to October, weather permitting.
Chuckster’s, 53 Hackett Hill Road, Hooksett, 210-1415, chucksters-hooksett.com. Opening for the season in Hooksett on April 9.
Legends Golf & Family Recreation, 18 Legends Drive, Hooksett, 627-0099, legendsgolfnh.com. Open seasonally; 2022 operating dates TBA.
Mammoth Green Driving Range & Mini Golf, 135 Nashua Road, Londonderry, 432-4653, mammothgreendrivingrange.business.site. Open seasonally; 2022 operating dates TBA.
Best Spot for Some Friendly Competition
Best of the best: The Rugged Axe, 377 S. Willow St., Manchester, 232-7846, theruggedaxe.com
Game Changer Sports Bar & Grill, 4 Orchard View Drive, Londonderry, 216-1396, gamechangersportsbar.com. The sports bar is known for its indoor cornhole facility.
Best of the best: Strange Brew Tavern, 88 Market St., Manchester, 666-4292, strangebrewtavern.net. Live local music is usually featured six nights a week, from Tuesday through Sunday, with an emphasis on blues artists. See Frankie Boy & the Blues Express on Friday, April 1, and 2120 S. Michigan Ave. on Saturday, April 2, at 9 p.m. respectively.
The Shaskeen Pub and Restaurant, 909 Elm St., Manchester, 625-0246, shaskeenirishpub.com. Live entertainment is featured multiple nights a week — a typical week will usually include Open Mic nights on Mondays, solo performances on Tuesdays, live music on Friday and Saturdays and a thBest emed “Rap Night” on Sundays.
The Derryfield Restaurant, 625 Mammoth Road, Manchester, 623-2880, thederryfield.com. Live local performances are held at The Derryfield every Friday and Saturday evening, from 8 to 11 p.m. Next up is Blue Matter on Friday, April 1, and the Chad LaMarsh Band on Saturday, April 2.
The Goat Bar and Grill, 50 Old Granite St., Manchester, 222-1677, goatnh.com. Live entertainment is usually featured seven nights a week at 9 p.m. (21+ only starting then), with a focus on country and pop artists. Catch Rob Pagnano on Friday, April 1, and The Pop Disaster on Saturday, April 2.
The Stumble Inn Bar and Grill, 20 Rockingham Road, Londonderry, 432-3210, stumbleinnnh.com. Live music is usually featured Thursdays through Mondays at The Stumble Inn. See Jonny Friday there on Friday, April 1, and the Casual Gravity Band on Saturday, April 2, from 8 to 11 p.m. each evening.
Best Bar with an Outdoor Deck
Best of the best: The Derryfield Restaurant, 625 Mammoth Road, Manchester, 623-2880, thederryfield.com
The Peddler’s Daughter, 48 Main St., Nashua, 821-7535, thepeddlersdaughter.com
The Barley House Restaurant & Tavern, 132 N. Main St., Concord, 228-6363, thebarleyhouse.com
The Wild Rover Pub, 21 Kosciuszko St., Manchester, 669-7722, wildroverpub.com
Best Weekly Bar Event
Best of the best: Ruby Room Comedy, Wednesday nights at 9 p.m. at The Shaskeen Pub and Restaurant, 909 Elm St., Manchester, 625-0246, shaskeenirishpub.com
Open Mic Nights with Nate Comp and Paul Costley, Tuesday nights at 8 p.m. at KC’s Rib Shack, 837 Second St., Manchester, 627-7427, ribshack.net
Heather Abernathy: Trivia Bee, Wednesday nights at 8 p.m. at The Farm Bar and Grille, 1181 Elm St., Manchester, 641-3276, farmbargrille.com, and Thursday nights at 7:30 p.m. at Chunky’s Cinema Pub, 707 Huse Road, Manchester, 206-3888, chunkys.com. Find her on Facebook @manchestersbesttrivia
Trivia with Steve, Wednesday nights at 6 p.m. at The Alamo Texas Barbecue & Tequila Bar, 99 Route 13, Brookline, 721-5500, alamobarbecue.com, and Thursday nights at 6:30 p.m. at The Pasta Loft Restaurant & Brewing Co., 241 Union Sq., Milford, 672-2270, pastaloft.com. Find him on Facebook @triviawithsteve
Trivia Nights with Bill Seney, Thursday nights at 7 p.m. at The Hop Knot, 1000 Elm St., Manchester, 232-3731, hopknotnh.com
Best Spot for a Second Date
Best of the best: The Rugged Axe, 377 S. Willow St., Manchester, 232-7846, theruggedaxe.com
Classes with 603 Charcuterie (various breweries, wineries and other locations; see 603charcuterie.com/classes or find them on Facebook and Instagram for the full schedule)
Copper Door Restaurant, 41 S. Broadway, Salem, 458-2033, copperdoor.com
Hampton Beach, Route 1A, Hampton, hamptonbeach.org
Best of the best: Copper Door Restaurant, 15 Leavy Drive, Bedford, 488-2677, copperdoor.com
Col’s Kitchen, 55 S. Main St., Concord, 227-6778, colsplantbased.com
Revival Kitchen & Bar, 11 Depot St., Concord, 715-5723, revivalkitchennh.com
The Puritan Backroom, 245 Hooksett Road, Manchester, 669-6890, puritanbackroom.com
Troy’s Fresh Kitchen & Juice Bar, 4 Orchard View Drive, No. 6, Londonderry, 965-3411, troysfreshkitchen.com
Best New Eatery
Best of the best: Tucker’s, 95 S. River Road, Bedford, 413-6503, tuckersnh.com. Arriving in the former Outback Steakhouse on South River Road in Bedford in October 2021, this is the sixth Tucker’s restaurant overall and also the largest — the local diner chain has five other locations, in Hooksett, Dover, New London, Concord and Merrimack. Tucker’s features a menu of breakfast items like omelets and scramblers, and lunch items like sandwiches and bowls, plus a rotating selection of specials, while the new Bedford spot introduced new menu concepts for the brand, like fresh juices, smoothie bowls and brunch-based cocktails.
New Hampshire Pizza Co., 76 N. Main St., Concord, 333-2125, newhampshirepizzaco.com. The latest venture of longtime Concord restaurateur Joel Harris, who opened the first Dos Amigos Burritos location in Portsmouth before coming to the Capital City four years later, the New Hampshire Pizza Co. opened in the former Crazy Goat space in January 2022. This full-service dine-in restaurant features brick-oven artisan pizzas as its centerpiece, along with salads, brunch items, cocktails, homemade ice cream and more, with the overall focus of highlighting locally produced ingredients.
Hare of the Dawg Bar & Grill, 3 E. Broadway, Derry, 552-3883, find them on Facebook @hareofthedawg. Longtime Derry couple Kevin and Lesley Decker opened this family-friendly downtown bar and grill in early January 2022, taking over the space that had long been occupied by the C & K Restaurant on East Broadway. The eatery features a wide variety of comfort foods, craft beers and cocktails, with a 24-seat custom bar built from the ground up by local woodworker Matt Daily.
The Lucky Moose Casino & Tavern, 16 Gusabel Ave., Nashua, 864-0175, luckymoosecasino.com. A sister establishment of The River Casino & Sports Bar just off Main Street in the Gate City, The Lucky Moose opened in July 2021 as New Hampshire’s newest casino, complete with daily games of blackjack, roulette and Texas hold ’em, as well as a full bar and an elevated tavern menu out of a scratch kitchen. You’ll find it in the former Bugaboo Creek Steak House in the Nashua Mall plaza — it has even kept the moose structure that adorns the roof with a brand new set of antlers.
Elm House of Pizza, 102 Elm St., Manchester, 232-5522, elmhop.com. This neighborhood restaurant and bar opened in the old Theo’s space in March 2021, channeling the nostalgic vibe of the 1970s downtown favorite of the same name among Manchester locals. You’ll find what co-founder and business partner Tim Baines calls a modern twist on the traditional house of pizza, featuring everything from house pies and appetizers to fresh seafood dinners, pastas, burgers and more.
Best Fine Dining Restaurant
Best of the best: Hanover Street Chophouse, 149 Hanover St., Manchester, 644-2467, hanoverstreetchophouse.com
Copper Door Restaurant, 15 Leavy Drive, Bedford, 488-2677, copperdoor.com
Buckley’s Great Steaks, 438 Daniel Webster Hwy., Merrimack, 424-0995, buckleysgreatsteaks.com
Bedford Village Inn & Restaurant, 2 Olde Bedford Way, Bedford, 472-2001, bedfordvillageinn.com
Revival Kitchen & Bar, 11 Depot St., Concord, 715-5723, revivalkitchennh.com
Best Restaurant From Which to Get Takeout
Best of the best: The Puritan Backroom, 245 Hooksett Road, Manchester, 669-6890, puritanbackroom.com
Troy’s Fresh Kitchen & Juice Bar, 4 Orchard View Drive, No. 6, Londonderry, 965-3411, troysfreshkitchen.com
Col’s Kitchen, 55 S. Main St., Concord, 227-6778, colsplantbased.com
Dos Amigos Burritos, 26 N. Main St., Concord, 410-4161, dosamigosburritos.com
Georgia’s Northside, 394 N. State St., Concord, 715-9189, georgiasnorthside.com. Currently only open for catering and pop-up events. Regular operations are due to resume this May.
Best Food Truck
Best of the best: B’s Tacos & More, nhtacotruck.com. Find them seasonally outside the BP Gas Station (2 Mohawk Drive, Londonderry), usually from May to December. A brick-and-mortar location is also open year-round at 372 Kelley St. in Manchester.
Messy Mike’s Barbecue & Catering Co., messymikesbbq.com. Find them seasonally in the parking lot of Rockingham Acres Greenhouse (161 Rockingham Road, Derry) most Thursdays through Sundays.
Up in Your Grill, upinyourgrill.com. Find them parked in and around various areas of Merrimack, most commonly in the parking lot of Vault Motor Storage (526 Daniel Webster Hwy.).
Smoke N’ Butts BBQ, smokenbuttsbbq.com. Opening for the season on April 8 at The Farmer’s Wife (20 Main St., Candia); hours are Friday and Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Sunday, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Pressed For Time Mobile Cafe, pressedfortimecoffee.com. Find them at Seacoast Sport Cycle (129 Rockingham Road, Derry) most Tuesdays through Sundays.
Restaurant with best outdoor seating
Best of the best: Downtown Cheers Grille & Bar, 17 Depot St., Concord, 228-0180, cheersnh.com
The Crown Tavern, 99 Hanover St., Manchester, 218-3132, thecrownonhanover.com
Best of the best: Blood orange Cosmo martini at Copper Door Restaurant, 15 Leavy Drive, Bedford, 488-2677; 41 S. Broadway, Salem, 458-2033; copperdoor.com. The blood orange Cosmo features Tito’s Handmade Vodka, Solerno blood orange liqueur, cranberry juice and freshly squeezed lime.
“Goon Glizzy” loaded hot dog at Industry East Bar, 28 Hanover St., Manchester, 232-6940, industryeastbar.com. Industry East is known not only for its specialty craft cocktails, but also for its loaded hot dogs. The “Goon Glizzy” is loaded with a crab rangoon spread, crispy wontons and scallions.
Chicken tenders at The Puritan Backroom, 245 Hooksett Road, Manchester, 669-6890, puritanbackroom.com. The chicken tenders, deep-fried with homemade dipping sauces, have long been a staple at The Puritan Backroom. Buffalo, spicy and coconut tenders are also available.
Espresso martini at Giorgio’s Ristorante & Bar, 270 Granite St., Manchester, 232-3323; 707 Milford Road, Merrimack, 883-7333; 524 Nashua St., Milford, 673-3939; giorgios.com
Pad Thai at Col’s Kitchen, 55 S. Main St., Concord, 227-6778, colsplantbased.com. Col’s Kitchen’s vegan Pad Thai features seared tofu, rice noodles, carrots, cabbage, spinach, basil and peanuts.
Best Barbecue
Best of the best: KC’s Rib Shack, 837 Second St., Manchester, 627-7427, ribshack.net
Smokeshow Barbeque, 231 S. Main St., Concord, 227-6399, smokeshowbbq.com. In March 2022, Smokeshow Barbeque moved into a new space in Concord’s South End, sharing a building with Feathered Friend Brewing Co.
Georgia’s Northside, 394 N. State St., Concord, 715-9189, georgiasnorthside.com. Currently only open for catering and pop-up events. Regular operations are due to resume this May.
Best of the best: RT’s Italian spuckie at Rig A Tony’s Italian Takeout & Catering, 254 Wallace Road, Bedford, 488-2877; 13 Rockingham Road, Windham, 685-8122; 38 W. Broadway, Derry, 425-6116 (the Derry location is due to reopen soon); rigatonysitalian.com. This made-to-order classic features Italian cured meats, tomatoes, hots, pickles, red onion, provolone cheese and seasoned oil on a house-baked roll.
The Garden at the Nashua Garden, 121 Main St., Nashua, 886-7363, find them on Facebook @thenashuagarden603. This vegetarian sandwich features tomato, cucumber, olives, bell peppers, pickles, onion, lettuce and sprouts.
Steak and cheese sub at Nadeau’s Subs, 776 Mast Road, Manchester, 623-9315; 100 Cahill Ave., Manchester, 669-7827; 673 Hooksett Road, Manchester, 644-8888; 1095 Hanover St., Manchester, 606-4411 (the Hanover Street location is inside of the Kwik Stop Mobil; 48 Portsmouth Ave., Exeter, 580-4445; 11 Eastman St., Concord, 715-1474 (the Concord location is inside of McLaughlin’s Country Market); nadeaussubs.com. The steak and cheese sub at Nadeau’s is available with either steak tips or Philly shaved steak in several sizes. You can order it plain with American cheese on a sub roll, or customize your bread or cheese type, grilled vegetables or other add-ons like bacon or grilled salami.
Super Regular at Beefside, 106 Manchester St., Concord, 228-0208, beefsidenh.com. The Regular features four ounces of tender roast beef on a bulk roll, with the option to “super” it with American cheese, lettuce, tomato and mayonnaise.
Banh mi at The Local Moose Cafe, 124 Queen City Ave., Manchester, 232-2669, thelocalmoosecafe.com. The pork banh mi features local pork patties, pickled carrots and daikon, cilantro, cucumbers, Sriracha mayonnaise and honey ginger mayonnaise on a house-made baguette. You can also order a vegan tofu banh mi, or a breakfast banh mi with free-range egg.
Best Subs
Best of the best: Nadeau’s Subs, 776 Mast Road, Manchester, 623-9315; 100 Cahill Ave., Manchester, 669-7827; 673 Hooksett Road, Manchester, 644-8888; 1095 Hanover St., Manchester, 606-4411 (the Hanover Street location is inside the Kwik Stop Mobil); 48 Portsmouth Ave., Exeter, 580-4445; 11 Eastman St., Concord, 715-1474 (the Concord location is inside McLaughlin’s Country Market); nadeaussubs.com
USA Subs, 66 Crystal Ave., Derry, 437-1550, usasubs.com
Bill Cahill’s Super Subs, 8 Kimball Hill Road, Hudson, 882-7710, find them on Facebook @billcahills
El Rincon Zacatecano Taqueria, 10 Lake Ave., Manchester, 232-4530, elrinconnh.com
B’s Tacos & More, nhtacotruck.com. Find them seasonally outside the BP Gas Station (2 Mohawk Drive, Londonderry), usually from May to December. A brick-and-mortar location is also open year-round at 372 Kelley St. in Manchester.
Restaurant That Can Make You Love Vegetables
Best of the best: Troy’s Fresh Kitchen & Juice Bar, 4 Orchard View Drive, No. 6, Londonderry, 965-3411, troysfreshkitchen.com
Col’s Kitchen, 55 S. Main St., Concord, 227-6778, colsplantbased.com
The Republic of Campo, 969 Elm St., Manchester, 625-0256, republiccafe.com and campoenoteca.com
Green Elephant Vegetarian Bistro & Bar, 35 Portwalk Place, Portsmouth, 427-8344, greenelephantnh.com
Klemm’s Bakery, 29 Indian Rock Road, Windham, 437-8810, klemmsbakery.com
Best Candy or Chocolate Shop
Best of the best: Granite State Candy Shoppe, 13 Warren St., Concord, 225-2591, granitestatecandyshoppe.com
Van Otis Chocolates, 341 Elm St., Manchester, 627-1611, vanotis.com
Nelson’s Candy and Music, 65 Main St., Wilton, 654-5030, nelsonscandymusic.com
Loon Chocolate, 252 Willow St., Manchester, loonchocolate.com. This small-batch bean-to-bar company opened its first retail storefront in February 2022 inside the The Factory on Willow complex, sharing a space with 603 Charcuterie.
Dancing Lion Chocolate, 917 Elm St., Manchester, 625-4043, dancinglion.us
Most Decadent Desserts
Best of the best: Buckley’s Bakery & Cafe, 436 Daniel Webster Hwy., Merri vvk, 262-5929, and Buckley’s Market & Cafe, 9 Market Place, Hollis, 465-5522; buckleysbakerycafe.com
The Red Blazer Restaurant & Pub, 72 Manchester St., Concord, 224-4101, theredblazer.com
Best of the best: Concord Farmers Market, concordfarmersmarket.com, held on Saturdays, from 8:30 a.m. to noon on Capitol Street in Concord (near the Statehouse), from May through October. The 2022 market is set to begin on May 7.
Derry Homegrown Farm & Artisan Market, derryhomegrown.org, held on Wednesdays from 3 to 7 p.m. at 1 W. Broadway in Derry, from June through September. The 2022 market is set to begin on June 1.
Bedford Farmers Market, bedfordfarmersmarketnh.org, held on Tuesdays from 3 to 6 p.m. at 393 Route 101 in Bedford, from mid-June through mid-October. The 2022 market is set to begin June 14.
Salem Farmers Market, salemnhfarmersmarket.org, held on Sundays year-round, indoors at LaBelle Winery (14 Route 111, Derry) during the winter and early spring, and outdoors at Tuscan Market (12 Via Toscana, Salem) from late spring through fall. The market is currently indoors and runs from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The opening date and hours for the outdoor market are TBA.
Milford Farmers Market, milfordnhfarmersmarket.com. Indoor market runs every other Saturday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., from November to June at the Milford Town Hall Auditorium (1 Union Square, Milford), and the outdoor market runs every Saturday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 300 Elm St. in Milford, across the street from the New Hampshire Antique Co-op, from June through mid-October.
Best Farm for Pick Your Own
Best of the best: Sunnycrest Farm, 59 High Range Road, Londonderry, 432-7753, sunnycrestfarmnh.com. Pick-your-own opportunities, depending on availability, include apples, strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, peaches, grapes, cherries and flowers.
Mack’s Apples, 230 Mammoth Road, Londonderry, 434-7619, macksapples.com. Pick-your-own opportunities, depending on availability, include apples, pumpkins, peaches and pears.
Lull Farm, 65 Broad St., Hollis, 465-7079, livefreeandfarm.com. Pick-your-own opportunities, depending on availability, include strawberries and apples. Lull has a seasonal farm stand in Milford and, as of last year, now also operates a satellite farm stand at Sullivan Farm in Nashua.
Carter Hill Orchard, 73 Carter Hill Road, Concord, 225-2625, carterhillapples.com. Pick-your-own opportunities, depending on availability, include blueberries, apples and peaches.
Brookdale Fruit Farm, 41 Broad St., Hollis, 465-2240, brookdalefruitfarm.com. Pick-your-own opportunities, depending on availability, include strawberries, cherries, blueberries, raspberries, black raspberries, blackberries, apples and pumpkins.
Best City Park
Best of the best: White Park, 1 White St., Concord, 225-8690, concordnh.gov. Amenities include a basketball court, a seasonal pool, walking trails and an ice skating rink.
Greeley Park, 100 Concord St., Nashua, 589-3370, nashuanh.gov. Amenities include baseball and softball fields, a playground, picnic areas, walking trails and a tennis court.
Livingston Park, 156 Hooksett Road, Manchester, 624-6444, manchesternh.gov. Amenities include walking trails around Dorrs Pond, as well as a baseball diamond, a running track and two playgrounds.
Stark Park, 650 River Road, Manchester, starkpark.com. The 30-acre park dedicated to New Hampshire’s Gen. John Stark, who penned the state motto, “Live Free or Die” in 1809, includes a large equestrian statue of Stark, several models of cannons and cannonballs, a memorial bench honoring New Hampshire’s Officer Michael Briggs, and a gazebo bandstand where live music is occasionally held.
Benson Park, 19 Kimball Road, Hudson, 886-6000, hudsonnh.gov. Originally a private zoo and amusement park, Benson Park reopened in 2010 as a town park for recreational use and is now a popular spot for hiking, dog walking, fishing and picnicking.
Best State Park
Best of the best: Bear Brook State Park, 61 Deerfield Road, Allenstown, 485-9874, nhstatesparks.org/visit/state-parks/bear-brook-state-park. The largest developed state park in New Hampshire, Bear Brook State Park is 10,000 acres and features more than 40 miles of trails. Activities include biking, hiking, swimming, camping and fishing.
Pawtuckaway State Park, 128 Mountain Road, Nottingham, 895-3031, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/pawtuckaway-state-park. The park offers campers a family beach on the lake and hiking trails across a diverse landscape, where they can see wildlife and natural points of interest.
Odiorne Point State Park, 570 Ocean Blvd., Rye, 436-7406, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/odiorne-point-state-park. The park features an extensive network of trails through 135 acres of rocky shoreline, sandy beaches, salt marsh, freshwater and salt ponds, dense forest and military and historical sites, and is home to the Seacoast Science Center.
Mount Sunapee State Park, 86 Beach Access Road, Newbury, 763-5561, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/mt-sunapee-state-park. The park is home to the alpine ski area and resort Mount Sunapee Resort, and to Mount Sunapee State Park Beach, which contains a 4,085-acre lake. Amenities include a boat launch and boat rentals, hiking trails, a playground, a picnic area, a campground and more.
Wellington State Park, 614 W. Shore Road, Bristol, 744-2197, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/wellington-state-park. Wellington State Park offers hiking trails, picnic areas and volleyball and horseshoe courts, and is also known for having the largest freshwater swimming beach in the New Hampshire state park system.
Best Campground
Best of the best: Pawtuckaway State Park, 7 Pawtuckaway Road, Nottingham, 895-3031, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/pawtuckaway-state-park
Branch Brook Campground, Exit 28 off I-93 to Route 49 West, Campton, 726-7001, branchbrooknh.com
White Lake State Park, 94 State Park Road, Tamworth, 323-7350, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/white-lake-state-park
Greenfield State Park, 133 Beach Road, Greenfield, 547-3497, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/greenfield-state-park
Best of the best: Franconia Notch, at Franconia Notch State Park, Exits 34A to 34C off I-93, Franconia/Lincoln, 745-8391, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/franconia-notch-state-park. The mountain pass, crossed by a parkway extending from Echo Lake to the Flume Gorge, once held the iconic Old Man of the Mountain.
Kancamagus Highway, kancamagushighway.com. A 34.5-mile scenic ride from Lincoln to Conway along New Hampshire’s Route 112.
Rye Coastline. Public beaches in Rye include Jenness State Beach (2280 Ocean Blvd., metered parking from 8 a.m. to midnight, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/jenness-state-beach) and Wallis Sands State Beach (1050 Ocean Blvd., parking fee between 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. is $15 per vehicle and free for New Hampshire-resident seniors age 65 and over, and parking reservations can be made online in advance, nhstateparks.org/visit/seacoast-beaches/wallis-sands-state-park).
Artist’s Bluff Trail, located at Franconia Notch State Park, Exit 34C off I-93, Franconia, 745-8391, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/franconia-notch-state-park. The 1.5-mile loop leads hikers to a peak with scenic views of Echo Lake, Cannon Mountain and Franconia Notch.
Cathedral Ledge, located at Cathedral Ledge State Park, 579 Cathedral Ledge Road, Bartlett, 356-2672, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/cathedral-ledge-state-park. The 700-foot peak offers views across the Saco River Valley to the White Mountains.
Best of the best: Nashua River Rail Trail, Nashua. This paved trail is 12.5 miles and runs along the Nashua River, connecting Nashua to Ayer, Mass.
Londonderry Rail Trail, Londonderry, londonderrytrails.org. About 6 miles of this trail runs through North Londonderry.
Windham Rail Trail, Windham, windhamrailtrail.org. The Windham Rail Trail is 4.1 miles and is a core part of the longest paved abandoned rail bed in the Granite State, as the Windham, Derry and Salem rail trails collectively run about 11 miles.
Goffstown Rail Trail, Goffstown, goffstownrailtrail.org. The 7.5-mile trail runs between Goffstown and Manchester, connecting Pinardville, Grasmere and Goffstown Village.
Derry Rail Trail, Derry, derryrailtrail.org. Running several miles through Windham and into Derry’s town center, the Derry Rail Trail is part of the larger proposed Granite State Rail Trail.
Best Hike in Southern New Hampshire
Best of the best: Mount Monadnock (with particular shoutouts to the White Dot Trail), Jaffrey/Dublin, 532-8862, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/monadnock-state-park. The 3,165-foot mountain features more than 35 hiking trails of various levels of difficulty leading to the summit.
Mt. Uncanoonuc Trails, Mountain Road, Goffstown. The North Uncanoonuc Trail, about a 0.6-mile hike, is steep in some spots and is known for its wilderness and panoramic views of Goffstown. At about 0.8 miles, the South Uncanoonuc Trail is slightly longer, also serving as a snowmobiling and ATVing trail that features views of Mount Monadnock from a distance.
Mount Major, Alton, blog.nhstateparks.org/mt-major-family-friendly-hike. The mountain’s 1.5-mile Mount Major Trail and 1.6-mile Boulder Loop Trail form a loop at its 1,785-foot summit, which offers a panoramic view of Lake Winnipesaukee to the north.
Mount Kearsarge, Warner/Wilmot. At 2,397 feet, Mount Kearsarge features two state parks, Winslow State Park on the northwest slope in Wilmot and Rollins State Park on the south slope in Warner. The quickest way to the summit is a half-mile trail that starts in Rollins State Park. Other popular trails include the 1.1-mile Winslow Trail and the 1.6-mile Barlow Trail, both of which start at Winslow State Park.
Mine Falls Park, Whipple Street, Nashua, 589-3370, nashuanh.gov. The park has around 8 miles of trails across 325 acres of forest, open fields and wetlands, bordering the Nashua River, Millpond and canal system on the north side.
Best Spot for a Mini Hike
Best of the best: Mine Falls Park, Whipple Street, Nashua, 589-3370, nashuanh.gov. The park has around 8 miles of trails across 325 acres of forest, open fields and wetlands, bordering the Nashua River, Millpond and canal system on the north side.
Lake Massabesic, off the Londonderry Turnpike, Manchester, 642-6482, manchesternh.gov. Spanning 2,500 acres in Manchester and Auburn, the lake is the centerpoint for a network of dozens of trails, including a loop to the Massabesic Audubon Center, a wildlife sanctuary situated on a historic farm site in Auburn. The trails range in length from half a mile to more than 3 miles.
Mount Major, Alton, blog.nhstateparks.org/mt-major-family-friendly-hike. The mountain’s 1.5-mile Mount Major Trail and 1.6-mile Boulder Loop Trail form a loop at its 1,785-foot summit, which offers a panoramic view of Lake Winnipesaukee to the north.
Marjory Swope Park, Long Pond Road, Concord, 225-8515, concordnh.gov. This 77-acre park features three connecting trails, including a 1.45-mile loop trail that runs up Jerry Hill, leading to scenic views of the Penacook Lake; a 0.56-mile trail that cuts through the park; and a 0.18-mile trail that passes the large granite outcrop Gilfillan Rock.
Mount Kearsarge, Warner/Wilmot. At 2,397 feet, Mount Kearsarge features two state parks, Winslow State Park on the northwest slope in Wilmot and Rollins State Park on the south slope in Warner. The quickest way to the summit is a half-mile trail that starts in Rollins State Park. Other popular trails include the 1.1-mile Winslow Trail and the 1.6-mile Barlow Trail, both of which start at Winslow State Park.
Best Spot for a Long Run
Best of the best: Mine Falls Park, Whipple Street, Nashua, 589-3370, nashuanh.gov. The park has around 8 miles of trails across 325 acres of forest, open fields and wetlands, bordering the Nashua River, Millpond and canal system on the north side.
Nashua River Rail Trail, Nashua. This paved trail is 12.5 miles and runs along the Nashua River, connecting Nashua to Ayer, Mass.
Windham Rail Trail, Windham, windhamrailtrail.org. The Windham Rail Trail is 4.1 miles and is a core part of the longest paved abandoned rail bed in the Granite State, as the Windham, Derry and Salem rail trails collectively run about 11 miles.
Goffstown Rail Trail, Goffstown, goffstownrailtrail.org. The 7.5-mile trail runs between Goffstown and Manchester, connecting Pinardville, Grasmere and Goffstown Village.
Derry Rail Trail, Derry, derryrailtrail.org. Running several miles through Windham and into Derry’s town center, the Derry Rail Trail is part of the larger proposed Granite State Rail Trail.
Best Lake to Canoe or Kayak
Best of the best: Lake Massabesic, Manchester and Auburn, 624-6482, manchesternh.gov. The 2,560-acre lake has three public boat launches: one in Auburn Village; one off Route 121 near the Manchester-Auburn town line; and one at Deer Neck Bridge off the Londonderry Turnpike in Auburn. The latter is designed for kayaks and canoes.
Pawtuckaway Lake, Pawtuckaway State Park, 7 Pawtuckaway Road, Nottingham, 895-3031, nhstateparks.org. The park offers canoe and kayak rentals at its camp store as well as a public boat launch for the 784-acre lake.
Lake Winnipesaukee, Belknap and Carroll counties, lakewinnipesaukee.net. With 71 square miles of surface area, the Granite State’s largest lake has 18 boat launches spanning multiple towns (some charge a launch fee). Local businesses can provide everything you need to hit the water, including boat rentals, cleaning, accessories and storage.
Newfound Lake, Wellington State Park, 614 W. Shore Road, Bristol, 744-2197, nhstateparks.org. A boat launch is located just outside the park, providing free 24/7 access to the 4,106-acre lake.
Squam Lake, Grafton, Carroll and Belknap counties, lakesregion.org/squam-lake. Big and Little Squam lakes are naturally spring-fed and connected by a channel in Holderness. Big Squam is the second-largest lake located entirely in New Hampshire, at 6,791 acres long with 61 miles of shoreline. The lakes are also host to 67 islands.
Best Ski Hill
Best of the best: Pats Peak Ski Area, 686 Flanders Road, Henniker, 428-3245, patspeak.com
Best of the best: Aviation Museum of New Hampshire, 27 Navigator Road, Londonderry, 669-4820, nhahs.org. Museum dedicated to the science, technology, history and culture of aviation, with interactive exhibits and educational programs.
Fun City Trampoline Park, 553 Mast Road, Goffstown, 606-8807, funcitygoffstown.com. The 60,000-square-foot indoor playground features trampolines, foam pits, laser tag, a climbing wall and more.
Krazy Kids, 60 Sheep Davis Road, Pembroke, 228-7529, krazykids.com. The indoor playground and party venue features a trampoline, a ropes course, slides, tunnels and other structures for climbing, bouncing and jumping.
Nuthin’ but Good Times, 746 Daniel Webster Hwy., Merrimack, 429-2200, nuthinbutgoodtimes.com. The indoor playground and party venue has a soft two-story play structure for all ages, a separate play area for toddlers, a lounge, a cafe and more.
SEE Science Center, 200 Bedford St., Manchester, 669-0400, see-sciencecenter.org. Museum focused on technology, engineering, mathematics and more with interactive exhibits, demonstrations and educational programs.
Best Outdoor Spot to Let Kids Run Around and Be Crazy
Best of the best: Benson Park, 19 Kimball Road, Hudson, 886-6000, hudsonnh.gov. Originally a private zoo and amusement park, Benson Park reopened in 2010 as a town park for recreational use and is now a popular spot for hiking, dog walking, fishing and picnicking.
White Park, 1 White St., Concord, 225-8690, concordnh.gov. Amenities include a basketball court, a seasonal pool, walking trails and an ice skating rink.
Livingston Park, 156 Hooksett Road, Manchester, 624-6444, manchesternh.gov. Amenities include walking trails around Dorrs Pond, as well as a baseball diamond, a running track and two playgrounds.
Griffin Park, 101 Range Road, Windham, 965-1208, windhamnh.gov. Amenities include a playground, basketball and tennis courts, picnic tables, walking paths and more.
Hampton Beach State Park, 160 Ocean Blvd., Hampton, 926-8990, nhstateparks.org/visit/state-parks/hampton-beach-state-park. Activities include swimming, fishing, picnicking and RV camping.
Best Kids Summer Day Camp
Best of the best: Melody Pines Day Camp, 510 Corning Road, Manchester, 669-9414, melodypines.com
D’Tails Dog Grooming, 178 Route 101, Bedford, 703-6288, see “D’Tails Dog Grooming” on Facebook
A Paw Above the Rest Salon, located inside American K9 Country, 336 Route 101, Amherst, 472-7282, americank9country.com/grooming/a-paw-above-the-rest-salon
Best Place to Let Your Dog Off-Leash
Best of the best: Hooksett Dog Park, 101 Merrimack St., Hooksett, 485-8471, hooksett.org
Hudson Dog Park, located inside Benson Park, 19 Kimball Road, Hudson, 886-6000, hudsonnh.gov
Derry Dog Park, Fordway and Transfer Lane, Derry, 432-6100, derrynh.org
American K9 Country, 336 Route 101, Amherst, 672-8448, americank9country.com. The dog daycare and boarding facility offers a free dog park, which is temporarily closed for construction; a re-opening date is TBA.
Wagon Hill Farm, 156 Piscataqua Road, Durham, 868-5571, ci.durham.nh.us/boc_conservation/wagon-hill-farm. Off-leash dog walking permitted from dawn to 10 a.m.; dogs must be on a leash after 10 a.m.
Best On-Leash Dog Outing
Best of the best: Mine Falls Park, Whipple Street, Nashua, 589-3370, nashuanh.gov
Hudson Dog Park, located inside Benson Park, 19 Kimball Road, Hudson, 886-6000, hudsonnh.gov
Livingston Park, 156 Hooksett Road, Manchester, 624-6444, manchesternh.gov
Londonderry Rail Trail, access points are located in Londonderry at the Interstate 93 Exit 5 Park & Ride, 4 Symmes Drive; at the south end of the Manchester-Boston Regional Airport runway, 106 Harvey Road, Londonderry; at North Elementary School, 19 Sanborn Road; and at Independence Drive, londonderrytrails.org
Goffstown Rail Trail, access points are located in Goffstown at Goffstown Parks and Recreation Center, 155 S. Mast St.; Hillsborough County Offices complex on Mast Road; Danis Park Road; and Moose Club Park Road; and in Manchester at Sarette Recreation Complex, 2 Louis St., goffstownrailtrail.org
Scontsas Fine Jewelry & Home Decor, 169-173 Main St., Nashua, 882-3281, scontsas.com
Best Independent Eyeglass Store
Best of the best: Myoptic, 204 Main St., Nashua, 880-6700, myoptic.net
Taylor & Murphy Optical, 545 Hooksett Road, Suite 23, Manchester, 622-6333, tmoptical.com
Spindel Eye Associates, 6 Tsienneto Road, Suite 101, Derry, 434-4193, spindeleye.com. Additional locations in Windham, Londonderry and Raymond.
Concord Eye Center, 248 Pleasant St., Suite 1600, and 2 Pillsbury St., Suite 100, Concord, 224-2020, concordeyecenternh.com
MacKay Vision Center, 207 Meetinghouse Road, Bedford, 668-2771, visionsource-mackayvision.com
Best Secondhand Store
Best of the best: Kelly’s Kloset, sales are coordinated through the Facebook group “Kelly’s Kloset LLC,” with pick-up and drop-off based in Hooksett, [email protected]
M&C Clothing and Gifts, 135 Route 101A, Amherst, 886-6727, m-c-clothing-and-goods.myshopify.com
Lilise Designer Resale, 7 N. Main St., Concord, 715-2009, liliseresale.com
Amanda Novak, Topknot Salon + Spa, 1 Nashua St., Milford, 213-6863, topknotnh.com. Topknot is currently closed due to severe water damage, but some of the stylists are working out of Escape Salon at 800 Turnpike Road in New Ipswich. Email [email protected] to book an appointment.
Granite Stater I’d Like to Buy a Drink For
Most picked drink recipient: Chris Sununu, New Hampshire governor
Adam Sandler, Hollywood actor, comedian and a Manchester native
Fritz Wetherbee, host of “Fritz Wetherbee’s New Hampshire” on WMUR’s New Hampshire Chronicle
Charles Keith, co-owner of The Rugged Axe, 377 S. Willow St., Manchester, 232-7846, theruggedaxe.com
John Lynch, former New Hampshire governor
Seth Meyers, late night television host, comedian and a Bedford native
Friendliest Dentist
Best of the best: Dr. Elizabeth Spindel, Spindel General and Cosmetic Dentistry, 862 Union St., Manchester, 669-9049, elizabethspindel.com
Dr. Charles Pipilas, 280 Main St., Suite 311, Nashua, 881-8280
Dr. Ray Orzechowski, 280 Pleasant St., Suite 4, 228-4456, orzechowskiarndt.com
Dr. Shannon Arndt, 280 Pleasant St., Suite 4, 228-4456, orzechowskiarndt.com
Dr. Russell Mann, Mann Family Dental, 9 Roosevelt St., Manchester, 605-1734, mannfamilydental.com
Friendliest Mechanic
Best of the best: Ralph Brutus, Brutus Auto Repair & Service, 148 Merrimack St., Manchester, 624-8881, brutusauto.com
Bill Morin, Morin’s Service Station, 1091 Valley St., Manchester, 624-4427, morinsservicestation.com
Mike Alton, Pro-Image Automotive, 254 Sheffield Road, Manchester, 644-8480, proimageautomotive.com
Bret Russell, Under the Hood Auto Service, 1580 Hooksett Road, Hooksett, 485-9032
Doug Johnson, Doug Johnson Auto Repair, 131 High Range Road, Londonderry, 437-1714
Best Local Musical Act
Best of the best: Jennifer Mitchell, jennifermitchellmusic.com. In addition to being an award-winning singer-songwriter, Mitchell is the owner of Jennifer Mitchell Music, a full-service entertainment company that travels all over New England. This weekend, Jennifer will be at Backyard Burgers & Wings in Seabrook on Thursday, March 31, at 6 p.m. and at Hill Top Pizza in Epsom on Friday, April 1, at 7 p.m.
Justin Jordan, find him on Facebook @justinjordanmusic. Jordan performs a combination of covers and originals encompassing multiple genres such as acoustic rock, pop, R&B and country across New Hampshire and northern Massachusetts. See Justin on Saturday, April 2, at the Coach Stop in Londonderry.
April Cushman, aprilcushman.com. New Hampshire country artist April Cushman performs all over New England. She released her debut album, The Long Haul,in November 2021. April will play the Village Trestle in Goffstown on Thursday, March 31, at 6 p.m.
Matt the Sax, find him on Facebook @mattthesax. Matt Beaudin, a.k.a. “Matt the Sax,” specializes in saxophone and acoustic guitar and vocals.
Recycled Percussion, recycledpercussion.com. Recycled Percussion originally formed in Goffstown, later going on to appear on Season 4 of America’s Got Talent. Today they’re a nationally touring act, known for their high-energy interactive shows blending music and comedy and incorporating all sorts of nontraditional items as instruments. Recycled Percussion is next slated to play their own CAKE Theatre in Laconia on Saturday, May 7, at 2 & 7 p.m.
Best Local (-ish) Comedian
Apologies to Adam Sandler, Seth Meyers and Sarah Silverman, who are Granite Staters in our hearts but not regulars of the local comedy scene.
Best of the best: Bob Marley, bmarley.com. Maine native Bob Marley is regularly featured on Sirius XM radio and has released more than 20 comedy CDs and DVDs. He is scheduled to perform at the Palace Theatre Thursday, April 7, through Saturday, April 9.
Juston McKinney, justonmckinney.com. A former deputy sheriff in York County, Maine, McKinney traded in his badge in the late 1990s for a microphone to pursue a career in stand-up comedy. He has gone on to appear in numerous televised shows, including his own one-hour special on Comedy Central. He will be at the Rochester Opera House on Saturday, April 2.
Jay Chanoine, find him on Facebook and Instagram @jaychanoine. Manchester-based comedian Jay Chanoine is also a contributing writer for The Hard Times. He released his most recent comedy album, The Texas Chanoinesaw Massacre,in 2019.
Matt Barry, mattbarrycomedy.com. Matt Barry has been a staple of the New England comedy scene for nearly a decade, performing in area clubs, theaters and bars and appearing on Sirius XM radio. He’s opened for national acts like Tom Green, Gilbert Gottfried and Harland Williams.
Doris Ballard, on Facebook as “Doris Ballard Comedy.” Former Concord Community TV executive director Doris Ballard is now a locally performing comedian. She’s also the creator of the Laughta in New Hampsha comedy school.
Drew Dunn, drewdunncomedy.com. Originally from New Hampshire, Drew Dunn now lives in New York and has performed stand-up comedy all over the United States and Canada. He’ll perform at the Rex Theatre in Manchester on May 20.
Granite Stater — Living, Dead or Fictional — I’d Like to Have a Drink With
Best of the best: Adam Sandler, Hollywood actor, comedian and a Manchester native
Robert Frost, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet
Fritz Wetherbee, host of “Fritz Wetherbee’s New Hampshire” on WMUR’s New Hampshire Chronicle
John Stark, general in the Continental Army during the American Revolution
Best of the best: The Old Man of the Mountain, Franconia Notch State Park, Exit 34B off I-93, Franconia, cannonmt.com/things-to-do/activities/old-man-of-the-mountain. The series of cliff ledges resembling the profile of a man’s face was a popular tourist attraction at Franconia Notch State Park until its collapse in May 2003. The site is now home to the Old Man of the Mountain Profile Plaza, which features seven steel “profilers” that recreate the Old Man’s visage, as well as museums with history, photos and stories of the Old Man and a gift shop. The museums and gift shop are open daily, May through mid-October, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Access to Profile Plaza will be closed Monday through Friday through late May for construction.
New Hampshire Statehouse, 107 N. Main St., Concord, 271-2154, gencourt.state.nh.us/nh_visitorcenter. The Statehouse is the oldest state capital in the country in which both houses of the legislature meet in their original chambers. Visitors can take a guided or self-guided tour of the building; view permanent and rotating exhibits about New Hampshire history, government, state agencies and tourism; and browse the gift shop, which sells a variety of New Hampshire gifts as well as state and federal flags. The Visitor Center is open Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Robert Frost Farm, 122 Rockingham Road, Derry, 432-3091, robertfrostfarm.org. The National Historic Landmark includes a two-story white clapboard farmhouse built in 1884 that was home to New England poet Robert Frost from 1900 to 1911. The grounds and trails around the house are open to the public daily, year-round, from dawn to dusk. Guided tours of the house are offered May through October and are free for all children age 5 and under, New Hampshire-resident children age 17 and under, New Hampshire-resident seniors age 65 and over, all active military, New Hampshire National Guard and New Hampshire-resident disabled veterans. The cost for paying visitors ranges from $3 to $5.
Fort Constitution, located off Route 1B at the U.S. Coast Guard Station, 25 Wentworth Road, New Castle, 271-3556, nhstateparks.org/visit/historic-sites/fort-constitution-historic-site. The site was once a military defense fortification built in 1631 and used by British colonialists until it was taken by the rebels during the American Revolution. It is also home to the Portsmouth Harbor Light lighthouse, which was built in 1878. The site is free to visit and open to the public daily from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Saint-Gaudens National Historical Park, 139 St. Gaudens Road, Cornish, 675-2175, nps.gov/saga. The 190-acre park features the preserved home, gardens, studios and works of American sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens and was the site of Saint-Gaudens’ summer residence from 1885 to 1897. The park grounds, outdoor monuments and sculptures, gardens and wooded trails are free to visit and open to the public year-round, from dusk to dawn. The visitors center and museum buildings are open seasonally, with guided tours available, from late May through October. Admission is free for children age 15 and under and for all visitors on Entrance Fee-Free Days (2022 dates TBA). Regular admission for adults costs $10 and secures a seven-day pass.
Weirdest NH Attraction or Historic Site
Best of the best: America’s Stonehenge, 105 Haverhill Road, Salem, 893-8300, stonehengeusa.com. The 4,000-year-old stone construction, likely the oldest man-made construction in the United States, was built by an ancient people as an astronomical calendar to determine solar and lunar events of the year. It’s open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (last entrance at 4 p.m.). Admission rates are $15 for adults, $13 for seniors age 65 and up, $8 for children ages 5 through 12 and free for children age 4 and under.
The Old Man of the Mountain, Franconia Notch State Park, Exit 34B off I-93, Franconia, cannonmt.com/things-to-do/activities/old-man-of-the-mountain. The series of cliff ledges resembling the profile of a man’s face was a popular tourist attraction at Franconia Notch State Park until its collapse in May 2003. The site is now home to the Old Man of the Mountain Profile Plaza, which features seven steel “profilers” that recreate the Old Man’s visage, as well as museums with history, photos and stories of the Old Man and a gift shop.
Site of the reported alien abduction of Portsmouth couple Barney and Betty Hill on September 19, 1961. The event is memorialized by a state marker outside the entrance to Indian Head Resort (664 Route 3, Lincoln), and by a mural and memorabilia at the nearby Irving gas station (off Exit 33 of Route 3). Alien-themed souvenirs are sold at the gas station and at the Indian Head Resort gift shop.
NH is #1 at ___
Live Free or Die!
Drinking, which you could interpret as “Drinking Beer, having a good time, working hard,” as one reader puts it, or “Drinking iced coffee during a snowstorm,” as another reader says.
Everything!
Everything to do with our outdoors: “Beautiful landscapes, mountains, ocean, lakes,” as one reader says.
Fall, its foliage and its foliage-related excursions.
Best NH Food Product: Laurel Hill Jams and Jellies (47 Birchwood Circle, Bedford, 472-5388, laurelhilljams.com) was established in 1960 by Sue Stretch, who first started making jams and jellies with her mother as a young girl. The product list includes gourmet fruit jams and jellies like strawberry rhubarb and raspberry lavender; red, white, rose and New Hampshire-made wine jellies; spirits-inspired jellies like margarita and pina colada; and tea jellies. Each batch is made by hand using as many local ingredients as possible and with no artificial colors or flavors. Visit the Laurel Hill website to order products online or see a list of local stores that carry Laurel Hill products.
Best Massage Therapist: Bethany J. Chabot is a licensed massage therapist and the founder and owner of 444 Hands Innately Integrative Massage & Energy Therapy (36 Baboosic Lake Road, Merrimack, 834-2758, 444hands.com). She received her certificate for Massage Therapy and Bodywork from MacIntosh College in Dover in 2004 and her national and state license in 2005. Her services include focused massage, body work and energy therapy; focused recovery sports massage for athletes; reiki, meditation and Tibetan sound bath; aroma touch technique; and prenatal and pregnancy massage and may incorporate chakra work and essential oils. There is normally a waitlist for new clients, and referrals are required.
Best Dog Training Company: New England Dog Training Co. (978-350-6274, newenglanddtc.com) consists of a network of seven professional dog trainers throughout New England, including Manchester-based husband-and-wife team Nikki and Nick Wolak. With over eight years of experience between the two of them, the Wolaks utilize a variety of training methods to work with dogs with all kinds of learning styles in both rural and urban environments. NEDTC uses a “board-and-train” system in which the dog being trained stays at the trainer’s personal home for two consecutive weeks. Trainers commit to providing daily updates and communication with dog owners during their dog’s training session.
Musicians who keep coming back to the scene that gave them their start
On every highway, from I-95 to Route 66, there’s a car towing a trailer full of dreams, a van packed with guitars, amps, an electric keyboard and a suitcase stuffed with notebooks. Every musician with a shred of ambition hears the call to Mecca.
Not all have the gumption to take flight. Those who do usually find a way to hold on to their hometown. More often than not, a round trip is a necessity. Landing in a new place means finding gigs, not always an easy task.
“This city ain’t your throne, like it was back home,” singer-songwriter Amanda McCarthy wrote about the challenge. She considers herself fortunate to quit a day job after less than a year in Nashville to play music full time, but her calendar still includes several months in New Hampshire, working at her old haunts.
Tom Dixon’s country music dream eventually wore him down to just a handful of hometown shows a year, but he’s proof that though the grind may get old, the pull remains.
“The reason I come back? One answer is the fans, really,” he said. “As long as I can do it, and as long as they want me to do it, I will.”
In 2002, guitarist Brad Myrick left his home in Hopkinton on a whim to try his luck in Los Angeles. There, a chat with a fellow music school student launched him on a journey to Italy, where he met Italian musician Nicola Cipriani and began a collaboration that led him around the world.
A decade later, however, he’d returned to his foundation in the Granite State, even as he continued to travel to Europe to tour. Myrick currently runs Lakes Region recording studio The Greenhouse, and leads NH Music Collective, which fosters talent and books shows throughout the region.
“It’s beautiful when I can incorporate what I’ve learned in other music scenes into the great scene we have here,” Myrick said in 2014. Eight years later, he feels validated. The need to go through a crucible like L.A. isn’t hard to understand, but there’s no reason it can’t also be done here.
“We have the technology to make New Hampshire the next Seattle,” he said. “The people with something to say are going to find a way, and most take off for that reason. I just want that opportunity to be bigger here, and that’s a big part of why I stick around.”
Amanda McCarthy: The Long Haul
For Amanda McCarthy, leaving New Hampshire was always the dream. The singer-songwriter began looking at Nashville apartments when she was 20 years old, stopping only when she learned she was pregnant.
“That changed everything,” she said. “I won’t say that set me back; I mean, everything happens for a reason. I love my daughter, but it definitely made my approach very different.”
McCarthy has been a working musician since her high school days, playing throughout her home state. Her biggest local moment came when she performed at Salt Hill Shanty in Sunapee. Steven Tyler, a personal hero of hers, was there that day, so she boldly decided to cover an Aerosmith song. He reacted favorably, leading to a weeks-long media splash.
Soon after, she made the move to Music City with a singular goal in mind.
“I really wanted to explore the world of writing music for other people,” she said. “Writing songs that might not necessarily be my style, but knowing they still have a life somewhere else.” A good example of this is “The Long Haul,” a song McCarthy wrote in the early 2010s that became the title track of fellow New Hampshire singer April Cushman’s debut album.
There are only a few places left to follow such a dream, and Nashville tops the list. That said, it’s a crowded and often daunting place to stake a claim, but the young and hopeful artist managed to find her way.
“I was a little nervous that it would be hard to break in, that people might be mean, because it’s a big city, but people are genuinely nice, accepting and welcoming,” McCarthy said. “By the time Year 1 wrapped up, I’d pretty much found who I consider to be my circle, my tribe of people who I collaborate and play shows with.”
Helping her crack the code was a realization that hosting song pulls — events where writers share their work with audiences and each other — was a great way to network.
“I got the opportunity to book some shows, and rather than billing it under Amanda McCarthy … I chose to bill it under a company that I started called Nashville Writers Collective,” she said. “I think that’s attracted a lot of people because it sounded more like an entity and an experience rather than just another songwriter.”
Currently, McCarthy has been readying a new album, Don’t Stop Me, due for release soon. All the while, she’s kept one foot in New England, traveling back to play gigs. Her next hometown appearance will be at Exeter’s Sawbelly Brewing on April 29. Initially she did it to survive; now it gives her a way to check in with home that’s not an economic necessity.
“When I got here … I didn’t have a professional network, and I didn’t really have a way to make money, whereas now I kind of figured that out,” she said. “It’s less of a crutch for me and more enjoyable… I can treat it more like a working vacation.”
Tom Dixon: Gone to the Dogs
For Tom Dixon, the road out of New England led to some great memories, but not enough to sustain a career in music.
Dixon hit Nashville in 2013 after establishing himself as a solid draw in his home state fronting an eponymous band, but had no illusions about taking the town by storm.
“My expectations were low, but my hopes were high,” he said. “If you go into something like this expecting to be a star, you’re a fool; you hope that you will, and get as far as you can.”
Undeterred, Dixon worked to break into the scene there, beginning with his aptly titled album, Kick Start This Party, made with producer Kent Wells.
“We got that out and hit the road with it as soon as possible,” Dixon said. “Of course, my first trip was back to New England — I knew I could play there.”
Soon, he was booking tours that led from Nashville to New England, playing bars, barbecue joints, and anywhere else he could. It was lucrative, and when he arrived in New Hampshire he’d play for a large chunk of the summer. All the while, he was checking off items from his professional bucket list.
“I played all over the country,” Dixon said. “I didn’t play in all 50 states, but I played in a lot. I was able to do some big things, play some big stages, play on national television, get on radio … I wanted to do everything.” His biggest moment came after he was inspired to write a song for a veterans organization called Coalition For The American Heroes.
Eventually, though, it got old.
“I began to feel like a truck driver who stops in different towns to play music,” Dixon said. “All I do is drive and then I stop, put on a show and drive again. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve driven 10 hours, played a show, slept in a hotel for four hours, got up and drove 10 hours back. I ended up having some issues. My career kind of slowed down, it’s not on fire like it used to be. I’m in pain literally and I’m tired of not being home and it just wasn’t fun anymore.”
Despite that, Dixon travels home each summer to play a handful of shows for his still dedicated local fan base. He’ll be back in April at Manchester’s Bonfire and Stumble Inn in Londonderry, a New England run he’s dubbed The Good Times and Bad Decisions Tour.
Before he decided to play music full-time, Dixon had seriously considered a profession centered on his love for dogs. He’d trained his own, helped friends with theirs, and claimed it was a coin flip that led him to music. He decided to contact the Animal Behavior College to learn his options and was stunned by what the person on the other end of the phone told him.
“He said, ‘Funny story, you’re in my system already, in New Hampshire… you and I talked 10 years ago,” Dixon said. “It was a real thing that long ago, when I hadn’t started playing music full-time. The weird thing is that I’m still following a dream, but now I can follow two dreams. My career’s gone to the dogs.”
MB Padfield: California Dreaming
When MB Padfield moved to Southern California, she didn’t receive a golden reception.
“I got broken into, and all of my songwriting notebooks were stolen,” the New Hampshire native recalled recently. “On impact, that was brutal; but since then things have been really great.”
Driven to perform from an early age — she enrolled at Berklee at 16 — Padfield traveled between coasts a lot before packing a U-Haul in early 2018. At home she gigged constantly, but playing covers wore on her.
Padfield’s songs were getting played on the radio when she was 16. Her first single, “Silly Boy,” featured Greg Hawkes of the Cars on ukulele. Her anti-bullying original “You Can’t Break Me Down” showed a maturity beyond her years. A next stop at the world’s entertainment hub was a natural choice.
“New England has really amazing players as far as musicians, and the talent there is top-notch, but there’s a mindset in Los Angeles that you want to push yourself to do more,” she said. “I don’t think moving away is for everybody, but I do think if you feel a call of an artistic vision that you don’t seem to be surrounded by currently, then it might be an option.”
For Padfield, the level of talent in L.A. is the opposite of intimidating.
“There are people that exude creativity; it’s so inspiring and motivating to be around. … That’s honestly my favorite part,” she said. “I’m not looking to be a big fish in a little pond. I want to be able to play shows and make music … representative of the person I am, [and not] a different mindset of, ‘Oh, I gotta be the best in the room.’ If you’re the best in the room, you aren’t in the right room.”
She’s currently at work on a new EP called Surface and has launched a Kickstarter campaign to cover distribution costs.
“It’s sonically very modern; I guess you would call it in the indie pop genre,” she said. “I wrote all the songs myself, and I’ve been working with an amazing team out here that’s kind of helping me bring those songs to life.”
Padfield heads back to New England in the summer and around the winter holidays to play shows but doesn’t plan on being bicoastal forever.
“Three or four months out of the year until I’m able to be full-time in Los Angeles,” she said, adding that returning to SoCal can be jarring. “There is a switch that has to be flipped, and it’s so hard sometimes.”
For Padfield’s long-term goals, her new home is an ideal fit.
“New England has such an amazing strong backbone, of cover gigs and working-class musicians,” she said, “but in Los Angeles there’s something to be said for creativity and innovation, and propelling culture. It just feels like you’re part of something bigger.”
Senie Hunt: Dividing the Time
Senie Hunt first left his New Hampshire home for another Tennessee music mecca, Memphis. After a few months there he returned, following a breakup with his girlfriend. Heading south was always part of his long-term plan, and Hunt made the move to Nashville in April of last year.
“I wanted to be in a place that was more diverse both in terms of music and in terms of culture and race,” Hunt, who is Black, said in a recent phone interview. His new home offered the bonus of being “the least furthest away, so I’m still able to visit with my family and friends, and also stay down here.”
Hunt is an acoustic guitarist with a unique percussive sound produced by tapping the body of his instrument as he plays it. The urge to move was spurred by a need for both “a change of scenery” and a change from what had become a limiting gig schedule.
“I didn’t want to end up playing the same places to the same people all the time; I wanted to branch off,” he said. Nashville had “hundreds of places either doing live shows or open mics, showcases, recording, all of that … built into one city block. At almost every show I played, I’d meet an entirely new audience.”
Another factor that helped was having a musical style that diverged from the sound the city was primarily known for.
“Despite Nashville being a very heavy country scene, it’s starting to evolve because a younger generation is coming in,” he said. “Right now is the perfect time if you stand out in a different style. … People just create music here.”
Along with success that finds him able to book shows months in advance in his new home, Hunt stays connected to his old digs, regularly returning for area gigs. Camaraderie with the local scene was vital when his car caught fire on a recent tour, resulting in a total loss of Hunt’s vehicle and much of his equipment.
Area musicians quickly organized a benefit for him at Area 23 in Concord, a place Hunt played frequently when he lived there.
“A lot of my friends decided they wanted to pitch in and help me kind of get back on my feet and get back on tour regularly,” he said. At the show, Hunt played a Zoom set for the crowd there. “It was nice, even just briefly, to share a few songs with the folks up north.”
Resupplied with assistance from his pals, Hunt is headed back at the end of the month to play some shows; he’ll be around until the end of May. Fans can see a new side of him on April 23 in Concord, with the debut of the plugged-in Senie Hunt Project at Bank of NH Stage.
“I have always loved blues and electric, and since it is very different from my normal stuff I decided to make a new band to not throw too many people off,” he said, noting he’d begun on electric guitar in grade school. “I really only switched back to acoustic when I transferred colleges and needed to find a solo alternative, which then brought me back to my percussive guitar playing, which filled the void of not having a band around.”
Gracie Curran: Point of Departure
In 2014, Gracie Curran moved to Memphis after experiencing the city during the International Blues Competition. She found it welcoming, both for the music and for its central location, which made touring a big chunk of the country easier.
“After the awards, we were starting to get calls to play in Omaha, in Chicago,” Curran said in February. “Mapping from Boston was a scary thought, but I realized we could reach 70 percent of our markets within an eight-hour drive from Memphis. … It was a good jumping-off point for us to put our feet in the waters and start touring.”
Soon after, Gracie Curran & the High Falutin’ Band scored a residency at a Beale Street nightclub called Rum Boogie. The singer shared cramped quarters in a city apartment, but it didn’t bother her.
“It was worth living with four other band leaders,” she said. “I was with such talented musicians that put so much work and effort into their craft.”
Another reason Curran settled in Memphis was that the band she’d formed in 2010 with bass player Geoff Murfitt was at a crossroads. Murfitt had a family, which didn’t fit well with spending time on the road, while guitarist Tommy Carroll had grown tired of touring.
“So I came down to Memphis initially to kind of start and grow the band,” Curran said, something she found easier said than done. “There are a lot of amazing musicians here in Memphis, but all the great ones are usually on the road.”
She recruited veteran Boston guitar player Chris Hersch and coaxed Murfitt back into the band with an offer to fly them from New England to wherever their dates are, while ending the Rum Boogie residency. The band is rounded out by keyboard player Scott Coulter, who’s also in Hersch’s band Say Darling, and drummer Terrell Reed.
“That’s what we’ve been doing ever since,” Curran said. “It’s been great to be able to play with them. Memphis was really everything I expected it to be; it’s truly a great musical family here, a really supportive, welcoming community … and not only that, musician supporters.”
Curran’s connection to her old home is unwavering; she returns whenever she can, and always on her birthday. She’ll be at The Bull Run in Shirley, Mass., on May 16 for an ensemble show that includes Toni Lynn Washington, Diane Blue, Gina Coleman and Erin Harpe.
“I really feel like I have the best of both worlds right now,” she said. “I have a great community here… but also in Boston. I was very spoiled in that when I first started testing the waters, we had Ronnie Earl, Mike Welch and Roomful of Blues, Toni Lynn Washington and all these amazing musicians. To have both those perspectives from musicians that played with all the greats, to be able to pass on stories and tips … these are valuable things that I am so grateful for.”
Brooks Hubbard: Back Home Again
From the moment he left New England, Brooks Hubbard knew he’d be back. In fact, that was his goal.
In early 2015 Hubbard set out for Los Angeles to grow his music career, but a stop to visit a friend in Nashville changed his mind.
“It offers the same opportunities and cuts out all the Hollywood stuff that I don’t need,” Hubbard said in early March. “Nashville welcomes you with open arms, whereas L.A. or New York seem to be closed off. … You have to work the networks to get on stage.”
Hubbard managed to leverage the West Coast connections he did have. A drummer he knew who had played with Robert Cray had introduced him to Jackson Browne’s guitarist Val McCallum during a visit there the previous year. In summer 2015, the two played together in White River Junction, Vermont, at a release party for Hubbard’s album Start of Me.
McCallum agreed to do the show via text, based on a misunderstanding that turned out well.
“He thought it was a bar gig, but it was actually a ticketed show, and I was playing all original music,” Hubbard said. “He didn’t know any of my songs, but he’s one of those players that can play anything — he has a great ear.”
After the show, McCallum was insistent that they should “do something together,” Hubbard said. “That was where the seed was planted to make a record, which we eventually got to do in 2017.”
As Hubbard had made the move right after earning his bachelor’s, he approached his new home as a learning experience.
“The first couple of years I was there was just an extension of school,” he said. “This is what I really want to do, and this is where I need to learn what people do in this industry do to make a living.”
He found that opportunity did not equate to success.
“I always say it’s the home of the greatest and the worst musicians in the world,” he said. “If you want to be one of those great artists or performers, you gotta put in the work. It’s really tough to make a buck in town there, because there’s just so many people that are doing the same thing.”
Hubbard uses the past tense because he recently re-settled in Etna, the New Hampshire town where he grew up and began playing music, inspired by his father, also a musician. He’s now married to the girlfriend he decamped with to Music City seven years ago; they’ll welcome their first child in April.
The move back came a bit sooner than expected, but the timing turned out for the best.
“It was something that my wife and I had always talked about eventually doing, but the pandemic for sure sped up that plan,” Hubbard said. “Doing livestreaming and even co-writing through Zoom made me realize that you don’t have to physically be in some of those places. If you go there and make the corrections and then keep those connections, it doesn’t really matter where you base yourself.”
See the musicians
Amanda McCarthy just released “Don’t Stop Me” co-written with fellow expat Ty Openshaw; the track will appeal to fans of Marren Morris and Kacey Musgraves. She’ll be home in late April for a round of New England shows, though her only Granite State gig is Friday, April 29, at Sawbelly Brewing (156 Epping Road, Exeter). Visit amandamccarthy.com.
Tom Dixon made his final single, “The Weekend,” in 2020, a raucous call to party that will please fans of Luke Bryan and Rascal Flatts. Though he officially retired from the music business, Dixon heads home occasionally to play for his hardcore fans. He’ll do a full band show at Bonfire (950 Elm St, Manchester) on Friday, April 23, at 8 p.m.
MB Padfield has a four-song EP called Surfaces due later in the year. Fans of Holly Humberstone will enjoy 2020’s brooding love song “Trxst” — it’s on her YouTube page. Padfield is currently booking New England dates for summer. She’ll be at Bernie’s Beach Bar (73 Ocean Blvd., Hampton) every Saturday afternoon from mid-June until Labor Day.
Senie Hunt continues to play acoustic music in his singular percussive guitar style, but will showcase an electric side during his Saturday, April 23, appearance at Bank of NH Stage ($18 at ccanh.com). For a taste of that sound check out “Lovers on the Run,” available on Tidal and other platforms. It’s a growling blues rocker reminiscent of Gary Clark Jr.
Gracie Curran & the High Falutin’ Band is a rip-roaring combo fronted by a namesake singer who channels Janis Joplin and Brittany Howard. Their next area date is a blues showcase Saturday, April 16, at Bull Run (215 Great Road, Shirley, Mass., $30 at bullrunrestaurant.com) with Curran, Toni Lynn Washington, Diane Blue, Gina Coleman and Erin Harpe.
Brooks Hubbard is a singer-songwriter in the vein of Jackson Browne, Jack Johnson and Jason Isbell. He’s putting the finishing touches on Father & Son, a collection of songs celebrating parenthood — his first child is due in April. See him Saturday mornings at 10 a.m. at The Goat (50 Old Granite St., Manchester).
Featured photo: Brooks Hubbard. Photo by Brett Berwager Photography.
New space and new equipment for Beaver Brook Maple
Curiosity — that’s essentially how Andrew Mattiace ended up with the brand new sugarhouse on his property in Bow. After his grandmother’s funeral in 2017, Mattiace and his family visited her favorite sugarhouse in Charlestown; at one point, Mattiace looked at the evaporator and thought, “This thing just boils water? I can do this.”
So, being a “curious engineer,” he built his own evaporator, tapped some maple trees in his backyard, and in 2018 produced maple syrup for the first time — a whopping 5 gallons.
“The first year was horrendous,” he laughed.
Mattiace learned mostly by scouring the internet, and then through trial and error — and there were a lot of errors, he said. But what he produced in the end was good stuff, worthy of bottling and selling.
“It was like, OK, I can make syrup now, but how do I sell it?” he said.
He decided to build a self-serve farmstand on his property and named his business Beaver Brook Maple. Once he started selling, the demand quickly outpaced how much he was producing, even after he started to get the hang of it.
Mattiace now has plenty of sap, tapping into some of his neighbors’ trees too. On a recent Friday 13-year-old Miles Miller and his dad Joe dropped off almost 130 gallons of sap from their own trees. It was their second run of the week; a few days earlier, they’d brought 80. Miles, who does the majority of the tree tapping and sap collecting, walked away Friday with $55 for that day’s delivery. He said they’ve lucked out with the maple trees on their property.
“They have a pretty high sugar content,” he said.
With neighbors selling him sap and plenty of people buying his syrup, the sugarhouse was the next logical step for Mattiace. He wanted to upsize his tank to produce more syrup in a shorter period of time.
Plus, he said, “I got tired of freezing my a** off. It’s very laborious and time consuming, and I wanted to get out of the outdoor process.”
His old evaporator processed eight gallons of sap in an hour, while the new one can process 35 gallons. His goal for this year is to produce 50 gallons of syrup, up from 23 last year, which will be much easier with the new equipment and warmer space, he said.
Mattiace isn’t in this for the money. In fact, if he sells those 50 gallons, he’ll just about break even.
“If I count my labor, I’m completely in the red,” he said.
Mattiace doesn’t want to grow Beaver Brook Maple into a big business. He has a full-time job that pays the bills, and this “hobby” already takes a lot of time.
“I want to make it worthwhile, but I never want to exceed 100 gallons a year,” he said.
Mattiace’s main goal has always been to create a sense of community, a place where friends and family come to hang out.
“That’s a real driving factor for me,” he said. “Everybody loves sweet, sugary things.”
Featured photo: Andrew Mattiace and his new sugarhouse at Beaver Brook Maple. Photos by Meghan Siegler.
Celebrate the sweet stuff with sugar house visits and maple tastings
Season of syrup
New Hampshire Maple Weekend returns
New Hampshire Maple Weekend When: Saturday, March 19, and Sunday, March 20 Where: Several participating sugarhouses and farms statewide Visit: nhmapleproducers.com
On March 5 and March 6 Ben’s Sugar Shack in Temple kicked off the first two days of its maple touring season to a great turnout — and an overall “back to normal” type of feeling, operations manager Emily Sliviak said. Free tours are set to continue every weekend through April 3.
“This is the first year that we’re starting to do samples again,” Sliviak said. “Everyone wanted a sample, and it was great to see that nobody really seemed uncomfortable or scared or anything, especially in the evaporator room, just because it is kind of a tighter space.”
Ben’s is one of hundreds of sugarhouses across the Granite State gearing up for New Hampshire Maple Weekend, happening on Saturday, March 19, and Sunday, March 20. Maple producers large and small traditionally hold open houses throughout the weekend — or all month long in March — for families to visit, take a free tour, and sample syrup and other maple goodies.
It’s overseen by the New Hampshire Maple Producers Association, a nonprofit founded in 1943 that now represents roughly 350 maple purveyors statewide, president Andrew Chisholm said.
“Last year we decided to advertise it as Maple Month so that producers would have the option to spread everything out over the entire month and not have large groups come to sugarhouses, as is common on Maple Weekend,” said Chisholm, a maple producer himself who runs Chisholm Farm in Hampstead. “This year we’re doing kind of a hybrid, so we’re giving producers the option to advertise themselves as participating in Maple Month or Maple Weekend, and then my guess is that by 2023 we’ll hopefully be fully back to … calling it a Maple Weekend.”
Here’s a look at how this year’s maple sugaring season has gone so far in southern New Hampshire and what you can expect when you visit a local sugarhouse on Maple Weekend.
Maple warm pudding Courtesy of Ben’s Sugar Shack in Temple. Recipe by Mareh Bleecker
2½ cups whole milk ⅔ cup maple sugar ½ teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 3 Tablespoons cornstarch 2 Tablespoons unsalted butter, softened Strawberry jam Fresh whipped cream
In a small bowl, mix half a cup of cold milk with the cornstarch. Place the remaining two cups of milk, the maple sugar and the salt in a small saucepan over medium-low heat. Cook just until the mixture begins to steam. Add the cornstarch mixture and cook, stirring occasionally, until the mixture starts to thicken and barely reaches a boil, about 5 minutes. Immediately reduce the heat to very low and stir for five minutes until thick. Remove the pudding from the heat and stir in the butter and vanilla extract. Spoon the pudding into individual jars or ramekins and let cool slightly. Top with jam, compote, fresh fruit and whipped cream.
Tapping traditions
Tours are offered at Ben’s every 15 minutes between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. and will typically last about half an hour depending on questions, Sliviak said. Attendees learn all about the process of collecting sap and the importance of daily maintenance of the trees, especially against windy or rainy weather conditions and the intrusions of animals like squirrels, bears and moose.
“We walk them across the woods to where they can see the modern way of collecting, which is through the tubing system and the vacuum system,” she said. “Then we’ll walk groups back over to where the trucks will bring the sap. We have a 10,000-gallon holding tank, and all of the sap from there will run into the reverse osmosis room, which is a fancy system that separates the water from the sugar molecules … and that makes it much less work for the evaporator to boil.”
Depending on the sugar content levels and the time of the season, Sliviak said it takes roughly 40 gallons of sap to make one gallon of maple syrup. After the reverse osmosis process, the sap then runs into the evaporator room, where tour attendees learn about the boiling, filtering and bottling of the syrup, as well as the grades that are produced and how each is different in taste.
Samples are provided at the conclusion of the tour, and a gift shop will also have various maple products for sale. Last weekend Ben’s began offering maple ice cream — that’s expected to continue through the last two weekends of the month, Sliviak said, in addition to their maple roasted nuts, maple cotton candy and their popular maple doughnuts.
“We’re just kind of easing into everything and gradually getting back into all of the other stuff that we normally would do with the tours,” Sliviak said.
In May, following the end of this year’s production season, Ben’s is expected to break ground on a new 16,000-square-foot building on the corner of Route 101 and Webster Highway in Temple, which Sliviak said will accommodate tours that much better by this time next year.
Chisholm will similarly open his operation up for free tours, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day of Maple Weekend. He’ll have maple ice cream sourced from Shaw Farm just over the state line in Dracut, Mass., as well as maple doughnuts and a variety of his own products available for sale.
“What I like to do that’s a little unique are infused maples, so I do a vanilla-infused maple and a cinnamon-infused maple, and then also some barrel-aged stuff,” he said.
Weathering the storm
Despite a slow start to the 2022 maple season, the temperatures over the last couple of weeks and the forecast have set the stage for an ideal Maple Weekend, according to Sliviak.
“A lot of times we’re able to produce a decent amount in January and even in February, and that was not the case this year,” she said. “We’re looking for warmer days and colder nights, ideally 40 degrees or 45 at the most, but definitely a slight freeze at night, so around 25 to 30 degrees. … Overall it looks like it’s going to turn out really well, and one of the reasons is because of the amount of rain that we had in the past year, in the summer, fall and through the winter, even.”
It’s already shaping out to be a better season for sugarhouses compared to last year, which Chisholm said was widely classified as a disaster due to very warm and dry conditions.
“Most producers only made about 40 percent of what they would expect to make, myself included,” he said. “Last year was an early start and a very early finish. … It warmed up real quick at the end of March, and I think for us down here in southern New Hampshire it never went below freezing. As a whole the 2021 season was a short crop across the entire region.”
Sugarhouses haven’t been immune to rising costs and supply chain issues impacting all kinds of industries in the pandemic’s wake, from plastic containers and glass bottles and jars to everything in between. But with that, Sliviak said sales of and demand for syrup are still up from before.
“We literally had some farm stands double their average sales with us last year,” she said. “I don’t really know what it’s from, whether people are more out and about or their kids are home more and they needed maple syrup, but we’re still seeing that upward trend.”
Maple onion jam Courtesy of Ben’s Sugar Shack in Temple. Recipe by Mareh Bleecker
2 large onions, thinly sliced (about 2 cups) 2 Tablespoons neutral oil (grapeseed, avocado or ghee) 2 Tablespoons Ben’s organic maple syrup 1 teaspoon fresh thyme 1 Tablespoon Dijon mustard 1½ teaspoons salt 2 teaspoons lemon juice 1 teaspoon black pepper, freshly ground
Heat a saucepan over medium heat. Add the oil, onions and salt. Turn the heat to low and cook, stirring frequently until the onions begin to soften and turn translucent. Add maple syrup, black pepper and thyme. Add a little bit of water if the onions begin to stick to the bottom of the pan. Continue to cook the onions for 25 to 30 minutes or until the onions are caramelized and deep brown in color. Add the mustard and lemon juice and stir for one minute. Taste for seasoning and adjust as needed. Pour into a small jar and let it cool. Refrigerate for up to two weeks.
Visit a sugarhouse
Here are some local farms and sugarhouses participating in this year’s New Hampshire Maple Weekend, scheduled for Saturday, March 19, and Sunday, March 20. Some will be offering maple sugaring tours and demonstrations, while others will be selling and providing samples of a variety of maple-infused products. Be sure to contact each one directly for their most up-to-date plans for Maple Weekend. For a full list of sugarhouses, visit nhmapleproducers.com.
• 6 Saplings Sugarhouse (31 Kearsarge Valley Road, Wilmot, 526-2167, find them on Facebook) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., offering tours, samples and products for sale, from maple syrup to maple cream, sugar, candied nuts and more.
• Babel’s Sugar Shack (323 Hurricane Hill Road, Mason, 878-3929, find them on Facebook) Open on Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., for an open house, with samples and syrup for sale.
• Beaver Brook Maple (1 Beaver Brook Drive, Bow, 491-0500, find them on Facebook @bbmaple) Open on Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. for maple demonstrations.
• Beaver Meadowbrook Farm Sugar House (402 Route 103 East, Warner, 224-2452, find them on Facebook) Visitors welcome any time, but calling ahead is recommended. Face masks are required when inside the sugar house.
• Ben’s Sugar Shack (83 Webster Hwy., Temple; 693 Route 103, Newbury; 924-3111, bensmaplesyrup.com) Open on Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Free maple sugaring tours are offered every 15 minutes and last about a half hour, depending on questions. Samples and products for sale include maple syrup, soft serve, doughnuts, roasted nuts and more.
• Beyond the Horizon Farm (19 Gillis Hill Road, Bennington, 588-6210, beyondthehorizonfarm.com) Open on Saturday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring complimentary maple cinnamon swirl rolls and doughnuts as well as coffee, cocoa and tea while supplies last.
• Blueberry Hill Sugarworks (31 Blueberry Hill Road, Raymond, 300-6837, wickedsappy.com) Open weekends during maple season; hours vary. Check back on the website or call for details.
• Charmingfare Farm (774 High St., Candia, 483-5623, visitthefarm.com) Open Saturday and Sunday for its annual Maple Express event, to be held at various times between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. each day. Tickets start at $22 and include horse-drawn and tractor train rides, maple syrup demonstrations and tours, taste testing, visits with the animals and more.
• Chisholm Farm (641 Main St., Hampstead, 421-4727, chisholmfarm.com) Open on Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tours will be conducted on an on-demand basis and a variety of products will be available, from maple ice cream and doughnuts to all kinds of infused syrups.
• Chris-Mich 3 Farm (285 Elm Ave., Antrim, 588-2157, find them on Facebook @chrismich3farm) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with a variety of maple products available, from maple syrup to maple cream, sugar, candies, walnuts and more.
• Connolly’s Sugar House (140 Webster Hwy., Temple, 924-5002, find them on Facebook) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., for tours. Connolly’s, which is also a family-owned dairy farm, will have its own maple ice cream made fresh on site with its syrup.
• Dill Family Farm (61 Griffin Road, Deerfield, 475-3798, find them on Facebook) Open on Saturday and Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring maple syrup samples available, in addition to maple candy, cream and sugar for sale.
• Fletcher & Family Sugar House (2528 E. Washington Road, Washington, 340-4035, fletcher-farm.com) Open on Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring maple syrup, candy and sugar for purchase, in addition to some free samples. Coffee, hot chocolate and doughnuts will be served in the morning and hot dogs and chips will be served for lunch.
• Folsom’s Sugar House (130 Candia Road, Chester, 370-0908, folsomsugarhouse.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tours will be ongoing throughout each day, and there will be a variety of specialty products available, from maple syrup, candies and cream to maple barbecue sauce, mustard, pepper seasonings and pancake mixes.
• Gould Hill Farm (656 Gould Hill Road, Contoocook, 746-3811, gouldhillfarm.com) Open on Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring free maple syrup samples, as well as cider doughnuts and maple hard cider for sale. The Contoocook Cider Co.’s tasting room will also have live music by Colin Hart from 1 to 4 p.m. that day.
• Ice Mountain Maple (276 Queen St., Boscawen, 341-4297, icemountainmaple.com) Open on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and on Sunday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., offering maple syrup and candy for sale, as well as maple coffee.
• Jessie James Maple Farm (164 Allens Mill Road, Gilmanton, 267-6428, jessiejamesmaple.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., featuring its own maple syrup for sale, in addition to other specialty products like maple mustard, maple chipotle seasoning and cinnamon maple sugar.
• Journey’s End Maple Farm (295 Loudon Road, Pittsfield, 252-6669, journeysendmaplefarm.com) Open on Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., featuring live maple sugaring demonstrations, a local vendor pop-up event and a variety of maple products for sale, from maple syrup to iced maple lattes, maple shakes, sundaes, cotton candy and more.
• Kaison’s Sugar House (75 Forest Road, Weare, 660-6019, find them on Facebook @kaisonssugarhouse) Open on Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., featuring maple sugaring demonstrations and maple products for sale like syrup, lollipops and candy drops (cash only).
• Kearsarge Gore Farm (173 Gore Road, Warner, 456-2319, teamkgf.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., for maple sugaring demonstrations and syrup samples.
• Ledge Top Sugar House (25 Oak St., Boscawen, 753-4973, ledgetop.com) Open on Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., featuring maple syrup and other products for sale.
• Main Street Maple and Honey Farm (186 Main St., Belmont, 527-9071, mainstreetmapleandhoney.com) Open on Saturday and Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., featuring maple syrup making demonstrations and a variety of products for sale.
• Mapletree Farm (105 Oak Hill Road, Concord, 224-0820, mapletreefarmnh.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring self-guided maple sugaring tours and a variety of maple products available, like maple syrup, cream, candy and more.
• Matras Maple (821 Catamount Road, Pittsfield, 724-9427, find them on Facebook @matrasmaple) Open on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday from 12:30 to 5 p.m. There will be maple syrup making demonstrations and all kinds of maple products for sale, like maple cream, maple sugar and local ice cream topped with maple syrup and crunchy candies.
• Munson’s Maple (44 Blueberry Hill Road, Raymond, 303-8278, find them on Facebook) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., for maple tours, samples and products for sale.
• Old Pound Road Sugar House (37 Old Pound Road, Antrim, 588-3272, oldpoundroadsugarhouse.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring maple tours and a variety of free samples, like coffee, maple syrup and candy.
• Parker’s Maple Barn (1316 Brookline Road, Mason, 878-2308, parkersmaplebarn.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. for maple tours, and specialty products like gourmet maple coffee and maple glazed doughnuts will also be available for sale.
• Peterson Sugar House (28 Peabody Row, Londonderry, 383-8917, [email protected]) Open Saturday and Sunday, from noon to 5 p.m., featuring maple sugaring demonstrations, maple syrup samples and various maple products for sale.
• Pfeil Family Farm (311 Cram Hill Road, Lyndeborough, 801-3158, pfeilfamilymaple.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring maple syrup for sale as well as coffee, doughnuts and other various maple products.
• Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm (58 Cleveland Hill Road, Tamworth, 323-7591, remickmuseum.org) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., featuring outdoor maple sugaring demonstrations and maple syrup for sale while supplies last.
• Ridgeland Farm (736 Loudon Ridge Road, Loudon, 520-4337, ridgelandfarmnh.com) Open on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring tours of the sugarhouse and samples of maple syrup and maple peanut butter fudge.
• SMD Maple Syrup (6 Falcon Drive, Merrimack, 978-815-6476, find them on Facebook @smdmaplesyrup) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., featuring maple syrup making demonstrations, samples, maple syrup for sale and more.
• Somero Maple Farm (21 Poor Farm Road, New Ipswich, 562-0822, someromaplefarm.com) Open on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., featuring free maple syrup making tours and a variety of products available for sampling and for sale.
• The Sugar House at Morning Star Farm (30 Crane Crossing Road, Plaistow, 479-0804, find them on Facebook @thesugarhouseatmorningstarfarm) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., offering its full line of maple products, which include syrups, cream, jelly, mustard, nuts, candy, confections, homemade doughnuts and more.
• Sunnyside Maples (1089 Route 106 N, Loudon, 848-7090, sunnysidemaples.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring maple sugaring demonstrations and several maple products for sale in its gift shop, like syrup, cream, mustard, candy, seasonings, coffee, pancake mixes and more.
• Trail Side Sugar House (246 Currier Road, Andover, 748-1307, trailsidesugarhouse.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., offering maple tours, samples and demonstrations. Available products all weekend will include maple syrup, candy, cream, barbecue sauce, mustard, doughnuts, cotton candy, nuts and whoopie pies.
• Turkey Street Maples (673 Turkey St., Chocorua, 323-9320, turkeystreetmaples.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., featuring maple sugaring demonstrations and various maple products available for purchase, including syrup and cotton candy.
• Two Sappy Guys Sugar Shack (324 Joppa Hill Road, Bedford, 860-7992, find them on Facebook @2sappyguys) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring fresh maple syrup for sale.
• Windswept Maples Farm (845 Loudon Ridge Road, Loudon, 491-9130, windsweptmaples.com) Open Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring maple demonstrations and maple syrup, maple sugar candy and other products for sale.
Featured photo: Maple sugaring tours at Ben’s Sugar Shack in Temple. Courtesy photo.
From an upcycled fashion show to a personal storytelling showcase, New Hampshire has all kinds of opportunities to learn and show off a new craft or skill.
Local makers talked about how they got into quilting, blacksmithing, 3D printing and more, and why they’ve stuck with it. If their stories have you feeling inspired to try out the craft for yourself, check out some of the upcoming programs and events listed here.
3D printing
As a home care provider, Pat Michaud of Concord is always looking for ways to help improve her clients’ quality of life. One of those ways, she found, was taking a class on 3D printing at Making Matters NH, a makerspace in Penacook.
“When I told my home care client I signed up for the class, he was excited,” Michaud said. “He is in a wheelchair, and he also owns a 3D printer … so he said I can ‘be his hands.’”
Michaud has worked with her client to 3D print a number of custom accessibility items, including a phone holder, a controller holder and a mug straw holder. For herself, she has printed household items and specialty accessories, such as votive and LED-votive chickens, ornamental chickens and Volvo key chains and other paraphernalia. Her next endeavor, she said, is providing 3D printing services for local businesses.
“I already have a person who is asking me to print things for her business,” Michaud said. “It’s exciting to me that I can use this [skill] to help other small businesses.”
Michaud said that, because she has a background in working with computers, 3D printing came easily to her; it may be more challenging for those who aren’t as tech-savvy, but the instructors at Making Matters are equipped to teach people of all levels of knowledge and experience.
“The class is amazing and so informative … and the teacher [has] so much enthusiasm about the subject,” she said. “If you want to learn a new skill, and you have the right mind to do it, it can be so fun.”
Making Matters NH (88 Village St., Penacook, 565-5443, makingmattersnh.org) is a makerspace that offers a variety of classes and workshops, including ones teaching 3D printing. “Hands-on 3D Printing for Beginners,” a one-day crash course covering the basics of 3D printing, will be offered on Saturdays, March 12 and April 9, from 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The cost is $15 for Making Matters members and $50 for nonmembers.
Port City Makerspace (68 Morning St., Portsmouth) is offering an “Intro to 3D Printing” class on Wednesdays, April 13 and June 8, from 6 to 9 p.m. The cost is $25 for members of the makerspace and $45 for nonmembers. Call 373-1002 or visit portcitymakerspace.com.
Blacksmithing
Jesse O’Brien of Danbury tried blacksmithing for the first time at a workshop offered at Sanborn Mills Farm in Loudon, which his friend encouraged him to sign up for.
“She is one of the best metalworkers I know, and she raved about taking this workshop for blacksmithing,” O’Brien said. “[After] seeing what she had made in the workshop … I had to give it a try myself.”
O’Brien found blacksmithing to be “surprisingly practical,” he said, and having the ability to craft his own artistic and functional metal pieces appealed to him. Plant hangers, coat hooks and custom gifts are just some of the items he has made; he also makes his own hardware for building and repair projects around his small farm property.
After his first workshop, O’Brien assembled his own small forge at home, which he uses on a regular basis, he said.
“A small forge is like a magical problem-solver which only needs some steel, coal or propane and a bit of time and ingenuity,” he said. “It’s more convenient to make things right from home instead of having to go to a store, and I can generally make something that I’m proud to own.”
O’Brien said he has plans to expand his home forge and his collection of blacksmithing tools.
“Every time I make something, I realize that it would be faster [to make] or [of] higher quality if I had one more … shape of tongs, or a hammer with a different face shape or a different shape of anvil to work against.”
Blacksmithing is a more accessible craft than it may appear, O’Brien said, and it doesn’t require a lot of strength or agility or any special physical capabilities.
“Anyone who can lift a hammer should try blacksmithing,” he said. “It’s a skillset that’s empowering and encourages anyone who tries it to learn and improve their skills.”
Sanborn Mills Farm(7097 Sanborn Road, Loudon) offers ongoing blacksmithing workshops for all ages and experience levels. The next beginner level workshop with space available is “Blacksmithing Basics,” running Friday, May 20, through Sunday, May 22, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day. The cost is $375. Other three-day workshops range from $225 to $400. Call 435-7314 or visit sanbornmills.org for the full schedule of workshops through November.
Fused glass
Aimee Whittemore of Henniker tried the art of fused glass for the first time a few years ago while visiting family in Arizona and “absolutely loved” it, she said. Prior to that, she had been doing stained glass.
“Now, I do both,” she said. “I love that [with fused glass] you can make things look 3D, and you can also make dishes.”
When she was starting out, she didn’t know of any glass studios in New Hampshire. Then, one afternoon, she and her husband were walking around downtown Manchester when they came across StudioVerne, the working studio and gallery of fused glass artist Verne Orlosk.
“I was so excited to see a glass studio,” Whittemore said. “We went in and talked to Verne about what she does for fused glass … [and] talked for a while about different projects that we had made. … We ended up doing three workshops at her studio.”
Over the past two years, Whittemore has created a number of fused glass pieces, including garden gnomes; a glass garden with fused flowers; ladybugs; butterflies; and a maple leaf, for which she used a fine powdered glass.
Fused glass pieces are typically put through at least two kiln processes, she explained. The first is called the “full fuse.”
“When I make a butterfly, for example, I trace my pattern onto the glass, then score the glass and … break the glass where I scored it,” she said. “Now, I have the body of my butterfly, and it needs to go in the kiln for a full fuse … which fuses the body all together and rounds the edges.”
The second process is the “tack fuse,” which fuses the design, formed with smaller glass pieces or powders, to the main piece of glass.
“There are so many different techniques you can do with fused glass,” she said. “Fusing glass is so fun, and once you get the hang of it, it comes easier.”
Studioverne Fine Art Fused Glass is a fused glass studio and gallery owned by artist Verne Orlosk in downtown Manchester. It is currently in the process of moving from Hanover Street to its new location at 412 Chestnut St. Orlosk said she will hold a grand reopening event in April. Upcoming classes and workshops are TBA. Call 490-4321 or visit studioverne.com.
Quilting
Laura Stevens of Goffstown was looking forward to taking her first quilting class at Night Owl Quilting Studio in Goffstown when the pandemic hit, putting her plans on hold.
“My mom is a quilter … [and] I sewed some as a young girl and made a little quilted pillow,” she said, “so I had been considering getting into quilting for some time.”
Not wanting to wait any longer to start her new hobby, Stevens decided to teach herself while stuck at home.
“I became antsy during the pandemic … and had the free time, so I began working on a project,” she said.
Since Night Owl Quilting Studio reopened, Stevens has become “a regular” there, she said, and has participated in five different quilting programs.
“At this point, most of what I know about quilting, fabric and sewing, I’ve learned from [the classes],” she said. “It’s very satisfying to go from a bunch of fabric to something you’ve created.”
Stevens now has several quilts completed, including the one she started on her own during the pandemic shutdown, which she is “very proud of,” she said, and a wedding quilt that she made for her cousin using techniques she learned at Night Owl.
“I can’t stress enough how much I love being at the studio,” she said. “The classes … keep me on track on a project … [and give] me confidence to mix patterns and include my own spin on things.”
These local quilting studios and shops offer quilting classes, workshops and social groups. Call or see their websites for program details and schedules.
• Angels Sewing and Quilting, 236 N. Broadway, Suite G, Salem, 898-0777, angelssewing.com
• Aunt Mary’s Quilting, 43 Stark Road, Derry, 845-9380, auntmarysquilting.com
• Pine Tree Quilt Shop, 224 N. Broadway, Salem Market Place, Salem, 870-8100, pinetreequiltshop.com
Storytelling
Tom Ostberg of Windham is a regular performer of True Tales Live, a monthly storytelling series based in Portsmouth and aired on Portsmouth Public Media TV.
An avid outdoorsman, Ostberg focuses much of his storytelling on his adventures in nature.
“I have hiked the Appalachian Trail, gone canoeing, and camp every chance I get, so I continue to collect … stories,” he said. “Through these experiences of mine, I have learned the lessons that have shaped my life.”
In one of his favorite stories, Ostberg said, he describes a memorable night he spent in a wooden shelter in the Smoky Mountains of Tennessee while hiking the Appalachian Trail.
“I … [found] out in the middle of the night that [the shelter] had nightly visits by a family of skunks,” he said. “I connected with a young man, who was also afraid, [which] taught me a powerful lesson about respect.”
Another story he’s especially proud of, Ostberg said, recounts his “great adventure” catching feral honey bees in the woods for his home apiary while his wife was out of town.
“I love the way people light up with excitement when they hear an adventure story,” he said. “It transports us to a different place — a place we may not have ever been to before.”
While it can be nerve-wracking sharing deeply personal stories with strangers, Ostberg said, the audience’s reaction often helps to put him at ease.
“They’re so welcoming, down to earth and so easy to connect with,” he said. “They’re always full of laughter and … are feeling the moment with you.
The skills involved in the craft of storytelling also have a valuable place outside of the arts, Ostberg said.
“It’s useful in many other settings, [such as] business meetings, sharing and connecting with your friends and even family gatherings,” he said. “It’s inspiring for the teller, entertaining for the audience and opens up people to experience others’ lives.”
True Tales Live is a Portsmouth-based storytelling showcase held on the last Tuesday of the month (no shows in July and August) from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Shows have been held over Zoom during the pandemic but will be held in person at the Portsmouth Public Media TV Studio (280 Marcy St.) starting in April. They will return to the Zoom format for the winter starting in November. Each month’s showcase is centered around a different theme. The series is free and open to all who want to watch or participate as a storyteller. Pre-registration for attendees is required for Zoom shows but not required for in-person shows. Additionally, True Tales Live hosts free storytelling workshops on the first Tuesday of every month (except November) from 7 to 8:30 p.m. over Zoom. Registration is required for workshops. Visit truetaleslivenh.org to register for a workshop or attend a show, and email [email protected] if you’re interested in being a storyteller.
The New Hampshire Storytelling Alliance is a nonprofit organization that promotes the tradition and art of storytelling throughout the state. For more storytelling resources, including upcoming storytelling events, storytelling groups and a directory of professional storytellers, visit the NHSA website, nhstorytelling.org.
Upcycled fashion
Sixteen-year-old Amelia Bickford of Wolfeboro said she has always enjoyed “making and inventing things” from found materials, including recyclables like cardboard and plastic, so when her dad told her he had heard about an all-ages upcycled fashion show happening in Wolfeboro this spring, she jumped at the opportunity.
“Before now, my costumes and art haven’t really been seen by anyone other than my friends and family,” Bickford said. “I thought it would be a good challenge and would also be a cool way to meet others like me.”
Bickford is participating in the Upcycled Fashion Show as a member of a group of designers that is creating fashion pieces inspired by the characters and aesthetic of Alice in Wonderland.
Her favorite pieces that she has made so far include a chainmail necklace made of soda can tabs and a pair of fingerless gloves made from disposable plastic grocery bags.
“Upcycled fashion is … a great way to experiment artistically and … experiment with style,” she said. “There is always a way to make something look or be the way you want it to be; you only have to find out how, then do it.”
Lynn Willscher of Wolfeboro, another designer in the show, said she learned to sew in her high school home economics class in the 1960s and has been sewing her own home goods and clothing ever since. Her pieces for the show include four shop aprons in different styles made from old pairs of jeans.
“I was interested in using something that just about everyone owns,” Willscher said.
Upcycling, as a craft, she said, is “about transforming the old into the new and, in the process, increasing its value,” but it also has a larger purpose.
“[It’s] a great opportunity to draw further attention to the tremendous need the world has for recycling and reducing waste,” she said.
The Upcycled Fashion Show, presented by Makers Mill and the Governor Wentworth Arts Council, will be held on Saturday, April 23, from 7 to 9 p.m. at Makers Mill (23 Bay St., Wolfeboro). The event invites designers of all ages to create wearable art with at least 75 percent of the materials being recycled, reused or repurposed. Registration for designers is free and open now through the end of March or until participation is full. Groups and individuals are welcome. Tickets for spectators cost $5 purchased in advance and $7 purchased at the door. Additionally, a workshop, “Attachments & Embellishments,” will be offered on Saturday, March 19, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Brewster Academy (80 Academy Drive, Wolfeboro) in Room 103 of the Rogers Building Student Center. Participants will learn skills such as ancient lashing techniques, traditional zippers, basic buttons and hand and machine techniques; and about how to embellish a garment with dye, paint, hand sewing, hot glue and machine techniques. The workshop is open to registered designers for free and to the general public for a cost of $15. Visit makersmill.org/blog or call 569-1500.
Featured photo: Fused glass pieces made by Aimee Whittemore. Courtesy photo.