Kiddie Pool 25/07/03

Family fun for whenever

Bounce!

• The Big Bounce America is bring what it bills as “the world’s biggest bounce house” to Budweiser Brewery, 221 DW Highway in Merrimack, Friday, July 4, through Sunday, July 6, according to thebigbounceamerica.com/event/manchester. Sessions are offered for ages 3 and under, ages 7 and under, ages 15 and under and ages 16 and over. See the website for specific times, prices and guidance on which time to pick for your family. The attraction includes the large bounce house as well as other areas such as “Sports Slam” and an obstacle course called “The Giant.”

Park adventure

• The Kids in the Park programming at Belknap Mill (25 Beacon St. East in Laconia; belknapmill.org/kidinthepark) kicked off this week, with events for families scheduled most Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 10 to 11 a.m. Next up is “IMPACT Fairy Tale Theatre: Lost in Wonderland” on Monday, July 7 (most Mondays feature IMPACT Fairy Tale Theatre productions). Other events to keep on the schedule are “Hiking Safety with Lakes Region Search and Rescue” on Friday, July 18, and “Safety Vehicles with Laconia PD and Laconia Fire Department” on Wednesday, July 30, according to the website.

Also at Belknap, the first and third Saturday of every month is Family Craft Day from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.; explore the gallery exhibits and “take part in a family-friendly craft activity,” the website said.

Skate!

Roller skate at the Douglas N. Everett Arena (15 Loudon Road in Concord; concordnh.gov/496/Everett-Arena) on Sundays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, 6 to 9 p.m., through Sunday, July 27. Admission costs $6 and skate rentals are available for $6, according to the Concord City Manager’s Newsletter. See concordnh.gov/rollerskating.

Treasure Hunt 25/07/03

Dear Donna,

This bracelet belonged to my sister. I now have inherited it. My question is about cleaning it. I would like to pass it to my granddaughter. I wouldn’t want to ruin it in any way. Thank you for any help.

Ed

Dear Ed,

Passing on your sister’s charm bracelet is a sweet piece of family. Love it! Charm bracelets are a great way to show personal interest. Most reflect memories, likes, travel history, etc., so passing it on, Ed, will carry family history. For cleaning it, I recommend a liquid silver cleaner. Whether it’s sterling silver (if sterling each one will be marked sterling or 925) or silver-plated, liquid will work best. Using a cream will cause build-up in tiny hard to get to places. There are many good cleaners out there today. After cleaning it, store it wrapped in a cloth or paper towel. An airtight bag also will protect it from re-tarnishing.

Values on charm bracelets are all over the spectrum, depending on age, maker, being mechanical (moving parts) etc. They are also an older item that is more valuable clean. No one wants to wear a tarnished silver bracelet.

American made

Fourth of July weekend craft fair at Gunstock

From chainsaw art to high-tech birdhouses, along with pottery, jewelry and paintings, there’s a little bit of everything at an upcoming crafts fair at Gunstock Ski Resort in Gilford. For two days, more than 120 individual exhibitors will offer wares that are unaffected by tariffs — everything’s made in America, mostly in New England.

The event is one of several organized by Joyce’s Craft Shows. Joyce Endee is a former educator who turned to her quilting hobby when she grew frustrated with the job market more than 30 years ago. Promoting crafts shows came naturally, she said in a recent phone interview.

“I turned my passion into a business,” she said. “I was a business teacher, so I liked doing marketing and advertising. It’s been very good to me, and I’ve made a lot of good friends. I care about these people; I hope that sets me apart…. I work to help them be successful. They’re exhibitors, but by and large, these are all artists too.”

The fair is not just a marketplace; it’s an immersive experience that offers glimpses into the creative process. One of the best is a demonstration by an artist who takes a chainsaw to large chunks of reclaimed trees and sculpts intricate figures, all without sketching a design beforehand.

“She doesn’t even draw on the wood, she just does it from her brain, and it’s amazing,” Endee said of Sanbornton wood carver Elise Ford. “She carves beautiful bears and a whole different group of birds, like cardinals. And then she’ll stain them — the bears will typically be black, the cardinals, obviously, red.”

The live artistry continues with a potter who’ll be working on a wheel, showcasing traditional ceramic techniques. Other craftspeople will be spinning yarn and creating handmade jewelry. Some artists offer customization of their works, Endee said. “I have a wonderful exhibitor that makes his own charcuterie boards and cutting boards, which he will personalize, so it makes them extra special.”

There are some options for those interested in what Endee calls “true art,” but it’s really a crafts show.

“I do have artists; I have one that does watercolors of mountains, and people love his work,” she said. “He does very well because I have a lot of shows in the mountains. I don’t have a lot of acrylic artists; I’m always looking.”

Endee emphasizes that her fair offers a way to support both the local economy and its arts.

“These people have amazing creativity, and I’m very proud of them,” she said.

4th of July Weekend Craft Fair
When: Saturday, July 5, and Sunday, July 6, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Where: Gunstock Mountain Resort, 719 Cherry Valley Road, Gilford
More: joycescraftshows.com

More Fourth of July events
Concord also celebrates on Friday, July 4; festivities start at 6 p.m. in Memorial Field with food vendors and music followed by fireworks at 9:20 p.m., according to the city’s parks and rec summer brochure. See concordnh.gov.

Manchester’s Independence Day celebration starts at 6 p.m. on Thursday, July 3, in Arms Park with vendors and DJ Adam Furious, according to the city’s Economic Development office’s Facebook page. Fireworks are at 9 p.m. The NH Fisher Cats game on Thursday is also slated to have fireworks; gametime is 6:35 p.m. versus the Portland Sea Dogs. See milb.com/new-hampshire.

Merrimack’s Fourth of July celebration include a patriotic concert on Thursday, July 3, at 6 p.m. in Abbie Griffin Park; a parade on Friday, July 4, at 1 p.m. and fireworks at Merrimack High School that evening at 9:15 p.m., according to merrimackparksandrec.org.

Amherst’s July 4th celebration starts at 9 a.m. on Friday with food vendors and activities on the Village Green, according to the Amherst NH July 4th Committee Facebook page. A children’s bike parade is at 9:45 p.m., before the main parade at 10 a.m. See amherstnh4th.org.

Nashua’s July 4 celebration starts at 11 a.m. with a Silver Knights game at Holman Stadium (first 500 adults and children under 12 get in free; reserve tickets in advance at nashuasilverknights.com). A free concert with The Slakas starts at 5:30 p.m. followed by other local acts at 7:30 p.m., the Spartans Drum & Bugle Corps at 8:30 p.m. and fireworks at dusk. See nashua.gov.

New Boston’s July 4 happenings are at the Hillsborough County Youth Center Fairgrounds, where the gates open at 4 p.m. and offerings include kids’ activities, food, live music and more before fireworks at approximately 9:30 p.m., according to newboston4thofjuly.org and the organization’s Facebook page.

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

Farm Fresh

Where to pick your own strawberries, blueberries, cherries and more throughout the growing season

This is an outstanding strawberry season. This spring’s heavier than usual rainfall has been great for the berries. Recent hot, sunny weather has ripened berries to a sweeter than usual, larger than usual, more abundant than usual degree. All indications point to this being true for blueberries, raspberries and blackberries as well. If you are the sort of cook who likes to can or freeze berries, this is your year to pick exactly what you want, and as much of it as you like. Alternatively, if you’ve always dreamed of taking your family berry-picking in large sun hats, this is also your year.

There are several good reasons to pick your own fruit and vegetables, but two stand out:

Variety Most of the varieties of produce in supermarkets are chosen for how well they travel and how long they will stay fresh. Flavor is much less important; after all, they won’t be able to sell bruised or overripe fruit. Local pick-your-own (PYO) farms don’t have to worry about shipping their crops across the country, so they can grow varieties that are especially delicious or delicate.

Freshness By picking your own fruit, you can have little doubt about how fresh it is.

Looking to pick your own strawberries (now) and apples (later)? These farms were Hippo readers top recommendations according to votes in this year’s Best Of survey.

Sunnycrest Farm

59 High Range Road, Londonderry, 432-9652, sunnycrestfarmnh.com

Currently, strawberries and cherries are every day from 7a.m. to 1 p.m. There are also strawberries and cherries in the farm market. Ice cream is available daily, from noon to 9 p.m. Farm market hours are 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. every day. The market has fresh baked goods and local veggies, milk and honey, jams and syrup, and lots of New Hampshire-made products and locally crafted items. Call the hotline 603-432-9652 for any updated information. To speak to someone call the office number, 603-432-7753.

Daniel Hicks IV is a fourth-generation farmer and the owner of Sunnycrest Farm in Londonderry. He said that barring unforeseen circumstances there will be PYO fruit available from now through the fall.

“Farming is a guessing game at best,” he said, “but strawberries are coming in now. Usually for the first week of July we have our blueberries and cherries. And then probably around the middle of July we will have our summer raspberries. Then in August we have our peaches, plums and apricots.”

Apples can start in late August, with pumpkins in September, according to the website.

Hicks said that although it might be a surprise to some of his customers, stone fruits grow well in New Hampshire.

“We’ve always grown stone fruit here,” he said. “My farm has been around since 1943, and I think we’ve grown peaches since the 1980s. It’s on and off because the stone fruit is such a sensitive crop — all it takes is one cold night in May to wipe out a whole crop. We’ve been lucky this year, though. We only had one frosty night we had to handle. We have a beautiful crop and the weather stayed warm when we wanted it to.”

Hicks personally looks forward to cherry season.

“I am the biggest cherry fan,” he said. “I adore cherries. Over the last seven years I’ve planted a bunch of newer varieties of cherries. I would say 80 percent sweet, 20 percent sour is what I have. And yeah, that’s my favorite on a personal level.”

Mack’s Apples

230 Mammoth Road, Londonderry, 432-3456, macksapples.com

Open Tuesday through Sunday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Strawberries and raspberries are available for picking now. Peaches and sunflowers will be available in August. Apples, pears, and pumpkins will be available from late August through Nov. 1. Mack’s sells ice cream topped with the farm’s own strawberries. Call the Mack’s hotline anytime for the latest picking conditions and to find out what varieties are ready, or follow Mack’s on Facebook and Instagram.

Christine Dresser is the PYO manager at Mack’s Apples. She’s excited about the farm’s new crop of raspberries.

“We’re doing strawberries right now,” she said. “And when strawberries are finished, we’ll be picking raspberries this year. That’s new for us. It’s our very first year for raspberries. We have some earlier peaches this year, too. Usually we start picking the peaches sometime in the middle of August but hopefully if all goes well we’ll be picking a new variety that will come out [at] the end of July. So we’ll be picking those and then we’ll go to the variety that we have been picking in the past. We’ve always had six varieties of peaches, but now we have a bunch of new trees coming in, so there’ll be more. This one variety is a little bit earlier than our other varieties, so hopefully we’ll be able to go soon after raspberries into the early peaches, and then into the peaches that we had right along. And then, while we’re finishing up peaches, we start with some of the summer apples, the earlier apples.”

While many customers remember to dress for warm conditions, Dresser said chilly weather often takes them by surprise.

“It’s usually windy at an orchard,” she said. “If it’s windy at your house, it will be windier here, because orchards tend to be on the tops of hills. I’m not sure why.”

Brookdale Fruit Farm

41 Broad St. in Hollis, 465-2240, brookdalefruitfarm.com

Cherries are currently available to be picked.Through the rest of the growing season blueberries, raspberries, black raspberries, blackberries, apples, pumpkins and late raspberries will be available. Visit brookdalefruitfarm.com/pickyourown or call the Brookdale Farm Hotline at 465-2240 for daily picking conditions. A farm stand is open daily, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Zoey Stapp is a manager at Brookdale Fruit Farm. Her staff is preparing for a busy summer.

“It depends on the season, obviously,” she said, “and the weather and sports schedules and stuff, but on a good day we’ll have a couple hundred cars a day, at least, if not more. There will probably be at least 600 cars a day for apples. We’re quite a popular pick-your-own destination.”

Stapp confirmed that this is an unusually good year for strawberries.

“The strawberries are excellent,” she said. “They have great size on them, and really nice flavor. We’re just hoping we get some sun to kind of help ripen the berries.”

Stapp said one of the best times for PYO is in the middle of the week.

“Tuesday and Wednesday tend to be the quietest days,” she said. “So if you’re looking for a quiet excursion with easy-to-pick fruit, usually the fruit has had a chance to ripen from the weekend by Tuesday. Wednesday’s usually peak picking, I feel like you haven’t quite gotten the weekend crowds yet. But that being said, we have plenty of room. So even if it is a busy weekend day, the parking lot may look busy, but once you get out there you feel like you’re out by yourself. There’s not too many crowds, which is excellent. And there’s plenty of space for everyone to spread out and enjoy themselves.”

Lull Farm

93 Spaulding St., Milford, 465-7079, livefreeandfarm.com

See Lull Farm’s social media for updates.

Carter Hill Orchard

73 Carter Hill Road, Concord, 225-2625, carterhillapples.com

Blueberries will be available for PYO after July 4. Peaches will be available in August, and apples throughout the fall. Call for daily picking conditions.

Todd Larocque from Carter Hill Orchard and his staff are gearing up for blueberry picking, which, for Carter Hill, begins this weekend.

“We start [our season] with blueberries after the Fourth of July,” he said, “and then peaches in August and apples in the fall. The blueberries are looking really good. They’ve got some nice size to them, as well as the peaches and apples right now. It’s been a really wet spring.”

McQuesten Farm

330 Charles Bancroft Hwy., Litchfield, 424-9268, find them on Facebook

Strawberries are in season now. Later in the season, tomatoes, peppers, beets, carrots, summer squash, zucchini, cucumbers, pickling cucumbers, green beans, yellow beans, shell beans, romano flat beans, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, eggplant, spinach, radishes and winter squash will be available. Call for daily conditions.

Like many PYO farms, McQuesten Farm has started its season with strawberries, said managing partner Christie McQuesten.

“Then in the summertime, we will open our fields and it’s never the same time every year because the growing season is always different. But we open our fields and people can pick their own just about everything we grow. They can pick tomatoes, peppers, sweet, bell, hot, doesn’t matter, beets, carrots, summer squash, zucchini, cucumbers, pickling cuke, green beans, yellow beans, shell beans, romano flat beans, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, eggplant, spinach, radishes, winter squash, and then in the fall we have hay rides to the pumpkin field and they can pick their own pumpkins. We have all kinds of pumpkins too.”

Unlike most area PYO farms, other than strawberries, which are in season now, McQuesten Farm will not open for customers to pick fruit and vegetables until later in the summer, when most of its plants will be ready for picking at the same time.

“When our field’s open — usually it’s about the third week in August, but … the weather will determine that — it will be open for just about everything that you’re allowed to pick, with very few exceptions,” McQuesten said,

McQuesten said one of the most popular aspects of the farm with PYO customers is the farm animals.

“So we have animals that people can feed,” she said. “You cannot go inside with them, but we sell ice cream cones filled with grain that people can feed. We have lots of goats. We have a horse; they cannot feed him but they can see him. We have a Scottish Highland cow. We have guinea hens, we have ducks, we have geese, we have turkeys, and we have rabbits. The only farm animals we don’t have that a farm would typically have is a donkey and a pig, well, because they’re very loud.”

Apple Hill Farm

580 Mountain Road, Concord, 224-8862, applehillfarmnh.com

Strawberries are currently available for PYO at 89 Hoit Road, Monday through Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to noon. Check back later in the season for blueberries, raspberries, black currants and apples.

Diane Souther of Apple Hill Farm said this year’s blueberries look amazing.

close up of strawberries on vine seen from above
Photo courtesy of Apple Hill Farm.

“They’re looking phenomenal this year,” she said. “It’s unbelievable how big they are for this time of year. I’ve been hearing that that’s a good year for the berries, especially the blueberries.” Also looking good are the grapes. “We have seedless table grapes,” she added. “They’ll start in the middle of August at some point. And then apples start early September.”

“There was some worry with all the rain, that the pollinators, you know, might not get the job done,” Souther said. “But it’s funny — I was mowing grass last night and I left one whole section that had white pollen on it and it was just loaded with bees. I mean even though it’s wet they have to eat too, so as soon as they come out, they come out.”

Souther said freshness is the main appeal for PYO customers.

“I think they’re looking for freshness,” she said. “They’re looking for an experience, some of them, and some just value the fresh berries because they’re much better than store-bought ones. There’s not going to be any middleman. They pick it now and they eat it tonight.”

J&F Farms

108 Chester Road, Derry, 437-0535, jandffarmsnh.com

In addition to PYO, there is a farm store that sells local products as well as produce from the farm. There is also a petting farm.

Melissa Dolloff from J&F Farms said J&F’s PYO business is split between two crops: “We’re hoping to have pick-your-own strawberries in the next week or so, but we’re just waiting for some sunshine so we can get them to ripen a little bit more. And then in the fall we will have pick-your-own pumpkins. And that’s pretty much it.”

But in the meantime, there are animals.

“We have a petting farm that’s open every day, seven days a week with our farm stand,” Dolloff said. “We have sheep, goats, cows, we have a donkey, a pig and it’s open every day that the farm stand is open. So seven days a week.” She said that the animals are super-popular with kids, especially the farm’s horse or goats.

“It kind of depends on the kids,” she said. “Some kids also really like the cows, too. But … we have a horse that’s very friendly; she’s always sticking her head out for attention, so she kind of captures everybody’s attention too. They all have their own little personalities.”

Berry Good Farm

234 Parker Road, Goffstown, 497-1327, berrygoodfarmnh.com

Open Wednesday through Sunday, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Berry Good Farm specializes in one thing: blueberries.

“We are strictly right now a You-Pick blueberry farm,” said farm owner Jeff Daniels. “[The farm] is about 6 acres. We have about 4,500 bushes. So it’s pretty busy over here. Generally we are open from about Fourth of July until the second week of August.”

He said this year’s heavy rain has been great for the berries.

“It closed down our ability to get out in the field, but the berry crops look fantastic. We have four different varieties here — Blue Ray, Blue Crop, Northland and Patriot — and they all look like they’re coming through terrific. They’re all basically good to eat, right off the bush, ready to go. The Northlands are more of a baking berry and the other three varieties are kind of the larger crop, big, larger berries.”

“This is one of the few businesses that I’ve been in where generally everyone that comes here is just in a fantastic mood. Not a lot of people are out here grumpy when they’re picking blueberries. It’s just a beautiful way to spend the day.”

Applecrest Farm

133 Exeter Road, Hampton Falls, 926-3721, applecrest.com

Strawberries are currently available for PYO. Later in the season blueberries, peaches, raspberries, flowers, herbs, apples and pumpkins will be available. Call the farm’s PYO hotline at 926-3721 for daily picking conditions, or visit applecrest.com/pick-your-own.php.

Todd Wagner from Applecrest Farm is also excited about this year’s blueberry season, which he hopes will last longer than usual.

“Blueberries are the next fruit crop that we offer pick-your-own on,” he said, “and those begin typically in the first week of July and can run right into like the first or second week of September, sometimes. The next crop that we would have for pick-your-own would be peaches and those typically start up in … basically the first week of August, and those run right into mid-September. Our raspberries would be the next thing, which typically start in the first or second week of August and carry right through until the first frost in October.”

In addition to PYO, the farm keeps busy throughout the summer with different activities.

“If you just go to our website, we have our festival schedule,” Wagner said. “We just had a two-day strawberry festival, with live music and tractor rides and yard games and sampling. And obviously pick-your-own, our barnyard, all of that kind of stuff. We do that for strawberries, for blueberries, for peaches, and then obviously all fall for apples. So there’s something pretty much every weekend, but a couple of times a month anyway through the summer and then every single Saturday and Sunday through the fall.”

Devriendt Farm

178 S. Mast St., Goffstown, 497-2793, devriendtfarm.com

Strawberries are available now for PYO daily, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m at the farm’s location at 47 Story Road, Goffstown. Pumpkins will be available for PYO in the fall. Call 497-2793 for daily picking conditions.

According to Lori Beauchemin from Devriendt Farm, this year’s strawberries are exceptional. “They are really beautiful,” she said. “We’re picking now. We started a couple of weeks ago, and we just haven’t stopped. We’ve been very busy up at pick-your-own and we’re selling out here at the stand every day. So it’s been a really good season for strawberries.”

Butternut Farm

195 Meaderboro Road, Farmington, 335-4705, butternutfarm.net

Strawberries are available to pick right now, followed by raspberries, cherries, blueberries, peaches, apples and pumpkins.24-hour PYO hotline at 335-4705.

For Peggy Dana, from Butternut Farm, the best piece of advice she has for PYO enthusiasts is to call the farm before visiting.

“It’s highly, highly recommended,” she said, “especially during strawberry season, because depending upon the weather — like yesterday was a really, really nice day — we could easily get picked out by noon, in which case the beds would be closed for the rest of the afternoon. You don’t want to drive here and be disappointed. So we strongly recommend calling our hotline ahead of time, even the night before. It gets updated throughout the day.”

“We have two peacocks and we have three goats,” Dana said. “No petting, but the goats are amusing in and of themselves. We also make our own hard cider here. We always have five varieties on tap and apple cider doughnuts. We have sweet cider in the fall when we have apples in season.”

Gould Hill Farm

656 Gould Hill Road, Contoocook, 746-3811, gouldhillfarm.com

According to Gould Hill Farm’s webpage, its PYO season for blueberries starts in mid-July. The farm grows more than 15 varieties of yellow- and white-fleshed peaches, including Saturn (flat or doughnut) peaches, which will be available from early August through early September. Other stone fruits, including nectarines, plums, cherries and apricots, will be available in late July, August and early September. Pears will be available throughout August. Apple season will start around Labor Day. All produce will be available for purchase at the farm’s store.

Strawberry Rhubarb Crisp
Recipe from Apple Hill Farm

Slice and hull 1 quart of fresh strawberries (approx. 3 cups)
Cut into slices 1 cup of fresh rhubarb
2/3 cup granulated sugar
1 cup flour
1 cup dark brown sugar
1 to 2 teaspoons cinnamon
butter (3/4-1 stick) softened

Preheat oven to 350°F. Slice up the strawberries and rhubarb and place in 9×9” casserole dish (or 9-inch deep dish pie plate). Sprinkle granulated sugar over top and lightly stir in. Mix flour, dark brown sugar, cinnamon and butter together and spread over the mixture. Bake uncovered at 350°F for approx. 45 mins to 1 hour or till bubbly. Serve warm topped with vanilla ice cream.
(Or you could do with 3 1/2 cups blueberries for a blueberry crisp but add 1/2 cup of flour
stirred in on top with the 2/3 cup granulated sugar before placing the crisp topping on.)
Even better warmed up the second day.

This Week 25/07/03

Thursday, July 3

The New Hampshire Fisher Cats (milb.com/new-hampshire) will wrap up a three-game series against the Portland Sea Dogs tonight, before traveling to Portland for another three-game series on Sea Dogs turf. Tonight’s game is an Independence Day celebration with free koozies and fireworks. The game starts at 6:35 p.m. at Delta Dental Stadium (1 Line Drive, Manchester, 641-2005, milb.com/new-hampshire). Find more Independence Day events on page 13.

Thursday, July 3

The Nashua Public Library (2 Court St., Nashua, 589-4600, nashualibrary.org) will host a meeting of the BYOB (Bring Your Own Book) Club tonight from 6 to 7 p.m. Share two or three of your favorite titles based on each month’s theme: “Red, White, and Blue.”

Friday, July 4

Terminus Underground (134 Haines St., Nashua, newhampshireunderground.org) and Liquid Therapy Brewery and Grill (14 Court St., Nashua, 402-9391, liquidtherapynh.com) will host a Fourth of July for Veterans celebration today from noon to 4 p.m at Liquid Therapy, with live music and a free meal for veterans.

Saturday, July 5

It might be the 41st anniversary but as we all know, 1984’s This Is Spinal Tap goes to 11. The movie begins a three-day stint in theaters via Fathom Entertainment today when you can see it at 4 p.m. at Cinemark Rockingham Park in Salem and 7 p.m. at Regal Fox Run. The movie also screens at those theaters on Sunday and Monday. See fathomentertainment.com.

Sunday, July 6

Jazz band Love Dogs will perform as part of the Friends of Stark Park Summer Concert Series today from 2 to 4 p.m. at Stark Park (550 River Road, Manchester). Bring a chair or a blanket and enjoy the music.

Tuesday, July 8

North Country Center for the Art’sIMPACT Program, a touring children’s theater troupe, performs a different fairy tale every week for six weeks, starting after Fourth of July weekend. This week the performance is Lost in Wonderland, an interpretation of Alice in Wonderland, at the BNH Stage (16 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com). The show begins at 10 a.m.; tickets are free and seating is mostly on the floor, the website said.

Wednesday, July 9

Enjoy a Paint by the Pavilion event at Tuscan Village (9 Via Toscana, Salem, 912-5467, tuscanbrands.com) this evening, a guided outdoor painting experience that is part of Tuscan’s new Summer Fun Series. Paint by the Pavilion will be offered every Wednesday through the summer. The Series also includes Movie Mondays with family-friendly films at dusk, Trivia Tuesdays (6 to 8 p.m.) and Dogs and Dancing on Thursdays .

Save the Date! Saturday, July 12
The Derry Public Library (64 E. Broadway, Derry, 432-6140, derrypl.org) will host the Derry premiere of local filmmaker Tim Smyth’s Tyrannocircus Rex, plus other short films by Smyth. Popcorn, drinks and other snacks will be served. Films are unrated and generally appropriate for all ages. This event is free and open to the public.

Featured photo: Courtesy photo.

Quality of Life 25/07/03

Don’t drink it either

On Tuesday, June 24, the City of Manchester Health Department closed the public beach at Crystal Lake to swimming due to elevated levels of E. coli bacteria identified in water samples taken the previous day. The following day, Wednesday, June 25, the beach was reopened for swimming, following new water samples showing E. coli levels within acceptable limits.

QOL score: -1 because just ew for all of it

Comment: Find out about the E. coli levels in your favorite Manchester watering hole, according to results from the most recent samples, at manchesternh.gov/Departments/Health/Services/Water-Quality.

The good news is less acid rain

As reported in a June 30 online article by New Hampshire Public Radio, a recently released report by the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services on the water quality of the state’s rivers and streams indicates the waterways have become less acidic. NHPR reported that the study, which examined data from 40 testing sites over the past 30 years, “found that pH levels — a measure of acidity that can be impacted by industrial processes — are improving at several sites. Of the 40 sites sampled for pH levels, 30 presented an improving trend compared to 10 years ago.”

QOL score: +1

Comment: The same report, however, included worrying data suggesting a rise in pollutants, particularly road salt, and an overall increase in the temperature of the water.

New bird!

In a June 24 blog post the New Hampshire Audubon Society announced a new “animal ambassador” at its McLane Center in Concord, “a juvenile Turkey Vulture with a curious personality and a fascinating backstory.” The vulture, which was found on the campus of the University of Connecticut at Storrs, apparently imprinted on humans as a young bird, making him unlikely to survive in the wild. His new duties with the Audubon Society will be to “help educate the public about vultures and their vital role in the ecosystem,” the blog post said.

QOL score: +1

Comment: The public is invited to visit him. See nhaudubon.org.

They can’t all be big and beautiful

New Hampshire’s 2025 legislative session wrapped up on Monday, June 30. A June 20 story by Seacoast Online (seacoastonline.com) looked at several bills this year’s lawmakers considered this session that didn’t receive much attention. “Both the proposal for a new state flag and state animated film were killed with little fanfare when they made it to the House floor,” Seacoast Online reported. “But a bid for a new state marsupial, sponsored by Sen. Donovan Fenton, D-Keene, made it almost all the way to Gov. Kelly Ayotte’s desk.” Other bills sought to repeal bans on brass knuckles and on pet squirrels. Daniel Webster did not get a dedicated state holiday, nor was a state commission established to study unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAPs), formerly known as UFOs, the story said.

QOL score: +1 for representative democracy

Comment: “New Hampshire lawmakers filed over 1,000 bills in the 2025 legislative session,” the Seacoast Online story read.

QOL score last week: 62

Net change: +2

QOL this week: 64

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