Quality of Life 25/08/21

Where are all the loons?

An Aug. 18 online article by the Laconia Daily Sun and New Hampshire Public Radio reported that there are fewer loons in the state than expected. “According to the preliminary results of the 2025 New Hampshire Loon Census, numbers are down statewide,” the article read. “There were 541 adult loons — that comes out to 270 pairs — and that’s far under what we expect our population to be,” the Sun quoted Caroline Hughes, outreach biologist for the Loon Preservation Committee. “The results from the 2024 census yielded 359 loon pairs and 100 or so unpaired loons, showing a preliminary decrease of 89 pairs.”

QOL score: -1

Comment: The Loon Preservation Committee surveys New Hampshire’s lakes each year. According to its website, “lead poisoning resulting from the ingestion of lead fishing tackle is the leading cause of documented Common Loon mortality in New Hampshire, accounting for 159 (42%) of documented adult loon deaths since 1989.”

Girls and Crocs

As reported by Nashua Ink Link in an Aug. 12 online article, 160 girls from Girls Inc. in Nashua and Manchester slipped into new school shoes “thanks to a generous gift of new Crocs from Brady Sullivan Properties. The girls — 75 from the Girls Inc. Manchester Center and 85 from its Nashua Center — traveled by coach bus to the Crocs store at Merrimack Premium Outlets to select their new shoes.”

QOL score: +1

Comment: According to the Crocs website, a Classic Clog can accommodate up to 13 charms per shoe.

Keep your copy of Sunrise on the Reaping

The Manchester City Library announced on Aug. 5 that it is no longer seeking book donations for its upcoming quarterly book sale.“Due to overwhelming public generosity, we are unable to accept any additional donations at this time,” according to the library’s website. “…[P]lease visit us on Saturday, Aug. 23, from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. for our next book sale.”

QOL score: +1

Comment: The Library’s quarterly book sales fund its collection of passes that patrons can check out for reduced or free admission to museums and other institutions.

QOL score: 62

Net change: +1

QOL this week: 63

What’s affecting your Quality of Life here in New Hampshire?

Let us know at news@hippopress.com.

The week that was

The Big Story – Pennant Race Grips The Hub: It was an up-and-down week for the Sox that saw them drop two games to AL East-leading Toronto. They held onto second place, but only by a game ahead of the Yanks. They also dropped to second in the Wild Card race, a game up on the Yanks and four ahead of Cleveland for the final slot. So with five weeks left the race is intensifying and the first thing people are doing in the morning is check the scores to see if anything changed overnight. That could be this week as they’ve already faced Baltimore twice (Monday and Tuesday) at Fenway Park, where they’re 41-23 in 2025. Then it’s four vs. the Yankees on the road, where they’re a less than stellar 27-34. So they’ll need to be better at the stadium to maintain their place in the standings. Otherwise they’ll be on the outside looking up at the wild card standings by week’s end.

Sports 101: Just 10 Heisman trophies have also made it to the NFL Hall of Fame. How many can you name?

News Item – Roman Anthony Update: The kid continues to give indications he’s for real. And while he’s likely better batting later in the order for his RBI ability, it’s hard to argue that an on base percentage hovering around .400 (.398) isn’t a great fit at lead-off too. It’s led him to score 37 times in 56 games. The game illustrating that most was his two-at-bat, one-hit (a homer), four-walk game vs. Houston last week where he had one RBI and those four walks led to four runs scored for a rare 2-4-1-1-4 line. With the homer he joined Ted Williams, Tony C and the exiled Raffy Devers as just the fourth Sox player 21 or under to hit homers in back-to-back games.

News Item – Trade Deadline Update: The first Red Sox start for Dustin May had the fellowship of the miserable yacking about what a bad deal it was. But the six-inning, five-hit, 8-k, no-run second start in a 14-1 win over Houston was more like it.

News Item – Milwaukee Brewers: The Brew Crew is the hottest team in baseball. They’d won 14 straight until losing on Sunday, which propelled them to the best record in baseball at 78-45. At the heart of it all was their monstrous MLB-leading run differential vs. opponents. It’s a +161, which is 44 runs over the second-best Chicago Cubs at +117. The Red Sox are fourth best at +93.

The Numbers:

1.15 – ERA of Sox closer Aroldis Chapman after giving up one run in his last 19.3 innings when he has 28 struck out.

2 – times the Red Sox have won a game while only having three hits according to the Boston Globe’s Pete Abraham. The first was in June vs. Seattle and the second was Friday’s 2-1 win over Miami.

253 – career homers for Pete Alonso to finally push someone past Darryl Strawberry to become the Mets all-time homer king, which Strawberry has been since 1988.

Of the Week Awards

Who’s Hot – Trevor Story: Knocked in the winning run in Friday’s 2-1 win over Miami and his three-run bomb was the decisive blow in the next day’s 7-5 win. Overall he was 4-8 with a homer and four RBI. That gave him 18 RBI in his previous 18 games

Random Thoughts:

If you’re counting, after doing it again Sunday vs. Miami, that was the seventh blown save for Greg Weissert.

Sports 101 Answer:The 10 Heisman/NFL Hall of Famers are Doak Walker (SMU), Paul Hornung (ND), Roger Staubach (Navy), OJ Simpson (USC), Tony Dorsett (Pitt), Earl Campbell (Texas), Marcus Allen (USC), Barry Sanders (Oak St), Tim Brown (ND) and Charles Woodson (UM).

Final Thought – Five Observations After Pats’ 20-12 win over Minnesota:

1 – Don’t want to kick Jerod Mayo when he’s down, but things seem much tighter under Coach Vrabel.

2 – Drake Maye: I know why they’re doing it. But given he won just one game last year, he needs more work against real defenses.

3 – Have the Pats Finally Found a Slot Receiver? If you watched the first two games it was hard not to notice All-Name Teamer Efton Chism III and not just because he looks like he’s 12 years old. But with 12 catches for 121 yards and two TD’s he grabbed attention. Most impressive is his Wes Welker-like quickness in tight space, and fight for extra yards after the catch, like on the TD vs. Minnesota when he should have been tackled on the 8. Not a lock, but he’s getting close.

4 – The Defense: Hard to tell anything about the D because the full first team has not played one down together.

5 – Kyle Dugger: A good player coming off a bad year. Hope they don’t give up on him, but it appears Vrabel has.

Email Dave Long at dlong@hippopress.com.

News & Notes 25/08/21

Cost of living

The New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute will host the full-day conference “Working Hard and Falling Behind: The High Cost of Living in New Hampshire” on Friday, Oct. 24, at the Grappone Conference Center in Concord, according to a press release. The event will “examine why the cost of living in New Hampshire keeps climbing and what it will take to make the state more affordable and equitable,” the release said. Attendance costs $60 and includes breakfast, lunch and all conference sessions (with a discount for those who register by Sept. 5), the release said. See nhfpi.org/conference.

Mural ideas

The SEE Science Center, 200 Bedford St. in Manchester, is hosting a community meeting on Thursday, Aug. 21, from 1 to 3 p.m. to discuss ideas for a new mural at the Canal Street retaining wall and stairway to Pleasant Street, according to an email from SEE.

Voting stickers

New Hampshire Secretary of State David M. Scanlan and Deputy Secretary of State Erin T. Hennessey announced the 2025 “I Voted” Sticker Contest in a press release. Any fourth or fifth grade New Hampshire student in public or private school or home schooled can enter the contest, which ends Oct. 14, the release said. Four winning sticker designs will be printed to be handed out to voters during the 2026 statewide elections, the release said. See sos.nh.gov for the rules and to print out a template for the sticker and the parent permission slip.

Star volunteers

Volunteer NH is accepting nominations through Monday, Aug. 25, for the 22nd Annual Spirit of NH Awards recognizing volunteers and volunteer organizations in the state, according to a press release. Awards are given in seven categories: youth/young adult (for ages 22 and younger); adult (ages 23 through 64); senior (ages 65+); AmeriCorps; group; business and Volunteer Champion (for businesses and nonprofit/public service organizations), the release said. Eligible nominees will be awarded at a ceremony on Monday, Oct. 22, at the Capitol Center for the Arts in Concord, the release said. See volunteernh.smapply.io/prog/spirit_of_nh_awards_2025/ to make a submission.

Holy Trinity Orthodox Church in Concord will hold a flea market and gyro lunch on Saturday, Aug. 23, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., according to holytrinitynh.org. Entrance to the market is free; the gyro lunch costs $8, the website said.

Manchester Proud will hold its CelebratED event to get ready for the new school year on Thursday, Aug. 21, from 4 to 7 p.m. at Victory Park and French Hall in downtown Manchester, according to a press release. The event will offer backpack and school supply distribution, haircuts and clothing support, a family resource fair and school registration assistance, the release said. See facebook.com/mhtproud for more on this event and manchesterproud.org for more on upcoming events.

Nashua’s Department of Economic Development will celebrate the grand opening of the newly transformed Library Walk on Saturday, Aug. 23, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., according to a post on the city’s Enjoy Nashua Facebook page. The Library Walk is located near 100 Main St. to connect Main Street to Court Street and now features overhead lighting, art including a mural by local artist Quest Nine, seating and more, the post said. The celebration will feature food, music, games and interactive stations, the post said.

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