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Trail’s End Cafe opens its doors in Lincoln

October 3, 2016

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The Trails’ Enders (formerly the Whistle Stoppers), left to right: Barry Palu, birthday boy Bryan Ernst, Jim Nicholson, Judy Fox, John Ciraso and John Snelling. (Photos by Alice Waugh)

Trail’s End Café welcomed its first customers on Monday morning in the Lincoln space occupied by the former Whistle Stop—and just as he was for the Whistle Stop, Barry Palu was its very first customer.

Palu is one of a group of former Whistle Stop regulars who met to eat breakfast, solve the newspaper crossword puzzle and kid around over coffee. They were left without a meeting place after the Whistle Stop closed in July, but Palu eagerly anticipated its successor. He arrived half an hour after Trail’s End Café opened at 6:30 a.m. but was the only customer. But by 10:00, the place was busy, and he and his friends were ensconced at an outdoor table on the warm, early fall morning.

Trail’s End Café doesn’t look much different from the Whistle Stop except for the shiny new espresso machines, but customers were delighted with the experience. “It’s fantastic—there’s no comparison,” Palu said. His friend Judy Fox agreed as she sang the praises of the steel-cut oatmeal she had for breakfast.

“It’s a little higher [in price], but well worth it to me,” Palu added.

The café serves breakfast and lunch (primarily soups, salads and sandwiches), since it doesn’t have any cooking equipment aside from an oven. Those in search of dinner will have to wait until the debut of Trail’s End Kitchen, which will open in the former Aka Bistro space later this fall or early winter after completing renovations.

“It will be a very different feeling from what was there before,” said co-owner Elizabeth Akehurst-Moore. It will be homey, serving “carefully crafted comfort food” for lunch and dinner along with both a kids’ menu and cocktails, wine and draft beer.

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General manager Bree Showalter fills an order at the Trails’ End Café.

All three eateries are owned by Akehurst-Moore and her parents, Lincoln residents Jim and Carol Wright, who opened the Concord location in 2011 as a breakfast spot and began serving dinner in 2014. Although they weren’t actively looking to open another location, they were approached by some people who encouraged them to consider the old library in Weston Center, but residents subsequently decided to turn the site into the Weston Art and Innovation Center, Akehurst-Moore said. After Aka Bistro closed, others urged them to consider that site, “and we thought it had good potential,” she said. They signed leases for both locations on August 31.

tec-signAsked how she viewed the market for her Lincoln venture, Akehurst-Moore said, “I think personally what Lincoln needs is what we’re going to provide: good food but not an overly formal, white-tablecloth setting—a place you can go on a regular basis that’s affordable but high-quality. I think we’ll be a draw for the whole area.”

Although the Concord restaurant hosts music including jazz brunches, Akehurst-Moore said it would depend on the configuration of the space at Trail’s End Kitchen as to whether they could do something similar there, though she said they would certainly be open to renting out the entire facility for private parties.

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Robin Bogner (right) and her sons Mateo, 6, and Skylar, 8, enjoy breakfast.

The one thing Akehurst-Moore is sure about is that she’s going to get busier. She’s expecting a baby over the winter to go along with her five-year-old twins, and she’s also involved in developing the Concord Market, which has gotten approval to open in Millbrook Tarry, the same commercial plaza occupied by Trail’s End on Lowell Road in Concord, though not for about a year. The Lincoln venture is the latest stop in a career that began when she earned an art history degree and a master’s degree in architectural preservation and then became a lawyer.

“I have a great staff, obviously,” said Akehurst-Moore, who works closely with Bree Showalter, the general manager of the restaurants who also manned the counter in Lincoln on Monday. “A huge part is getting a team together that’s motivated and hard-working and talented and just as crazy as I am,” she added with a chuckle.
Trail’s End Café will be open Monday through Saturday from 6 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Category: businesses, food, news Leave a Comment

Letter to the editor: vote for Jill Stein

October 2, 2016

letter

To the editor:

Voters deserve and need to hear from a candidate for President who is honest about issues that concern all Americans and who provides concrete changes and solutions. They need to hear from a candidate who does not take any contributions from Wall Street bankers, corporations or billionaires. Voters are starving to hear from a candidate that believes a positive future is possible and that she is with the majority of American voters today who no longer identify with the Republican or Democratic parties. Voters also need to know that Jill Stein has been and is being stifled at every turn by the dying but very wealthy Republican and Democratic parties.

The Commission on Presidential debates provides stark evidence of just  how desperate and fraudulent the democratic and republican parties have become. The debates, controlled only by the Republican  and Democratic National Committees, do not include all the Presidential candidates on the ballot and do not welcome open discussion of a broad diversity of ideas.

Voters need to know that Jill Stein is highly qualified to be president and will be on the ballot in November in enough states to win the presidency, if the electoral system works fairly and if it is open to all qualified voters. I will be voting for Jill Stein of the Green Party because I truly believe that the lives of all living things on earth depend on her winning. When people, especially young people, hear what she is saying, they eagerly support her ideas. Please check her out at www.jill2016.com.

Sincerely,

Jean Palmer
Tower Rd.


Letters to the editor must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Letters will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Letters containing personal attacks, errors of fact or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: letters to the editor, news Leave a Comment

Groups to hold town-wide forum on the generations

October 2, 2016

generationsA coalition of Lincoln groups will hold a town-wide forum on “Generation-Based Strengths and Differences” on Sunday, Oct.16 from 2-4 p.m. at Bemis Hall. The interactive event will explore the characteristics and strengths of each generation to give attendees a greater understanding of different age groups than their own.

Facilitators for the forum will be Carolyn Bottum, director of the Lincoln Council on Aging; Sharon Antia, convenor of the Lincoln Diversity Council; Rev. Manish Mishra-Marzetti, Senior Minister at the First Parish in Lincoln; and Jessica Packineau, board member of the Lincoln Family Association.

In preparation for the event, the sponsoring organizations are encouraging participants to read Haydn Shaw’s book Sticking Points: How to Get 4 Generations Working Together in the 12 Places They Come Apart. The Lincoln Public Library has reserve copies for Lincoln town residents.

The Lincoln Girl Scouts will be providing childcare for families during this forum; children can choose watching a movie together (Zootopia) or participating in games and activities. As this is a fundraiser for the troop, there is a suggested voluntary donation of $5 per child. If you are planning on bringing your child(ren), please RSVP with how many kids and their ages to Jessica Packineau at jessica.packineau@gmail.com.

Category: news Leave a Comment

News acorns

September 28, 2016

ballot

Election worker training offered

A training for those wishing to serve as election workers in the 2016 Presidential Election will be offered on Wednesday, Oct. 5 in the Donaldson Room at Town Hall from 7-9 p.m. Please call the Town Clerk’s Office at 781-259-2607 to pre-register; space is limited.

‘My Beautiful Laundrette’ screening

The Lincoln Library Film Society presents My Beautiful Laundrette (1985, rated R) on Thursday, Oct. 6 at 7 p.m. in the library’s Tarbell Room. Directed by Stephen Fears, My Beautiful Laundrette is an uncommon love story that takes place between a youth South London Pakistani man (Gordon Warnecke) who decides to open an upscale laundromat to make his family proud, and his childhood friend, a skinhead (Daniel Day-Lewis) who volunteers to help make his dream a reality. The culture-class comedy is also a subversive work of social realism that addresses racism, homophobia and sociopolitical marginalization in Margaret Thatcher’s England. Refreshments will be served.

Open house for nursery school

Lincoln Nursery School, a cooperative preschool at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum, will hold its annual Open House on Saturday, Oct. 15 from 9-11 a.m. This is a relaxed opportunity for interested families to tour the studios and play areas as well as meet some of the current parents, teachers and director Nancy Fincke.

Category: arts, charity/volunteer, government, schools Leave a Comment

Lincoln property sales in August

September 28, 2016

House-1

9 Lewis St. — Munroe Holdings LLC to 9 Lewis St. LLC for $800,000 (August 31)

3 Birchwood Lane — John Nagy to Kwaku Amoa and Adja M. Doukoure-Amoa for $600,000 (August 30)

30 Old Sudbury Rd. — Mark Goetemann to Paul Chapman and Katrin Roush for $1,425,000 (August 25)

8 Cedar Rd. — Mark Hopkins to James and Patricia Wallace for $920,000 (August 25)

15 Giles Rd. — Gerald Sheehan to Andrew and Pamela Clapp for $851,000 (August 18)

230 Concord Rd. — Thomas Gross to Christine Campo for $775,205 (August 16)

82 Virginia Rd. — William Nisbet to Mary and Michael Dirrane for $310,000 (August 9)

47 Birchwood Lane —  Jay Chaffin to Paul and Doreen Mangini for $660,000 (August 1)

Category: land use, news Leave a Comment

Presidential horse race (Lincoln Through the Lens)

September 27, 2016

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On the morning after the Clinton-Trump debate, the herd of “horsies” on Old Sudbury Road seemed to be running in a decidedly Democratic direction. (Photo by Stephanie Smart)

 


Readers may submit photos for consideration for Lincoln Through the Lens by emailing them to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. If your photo is published, you’ll receive credit in the Squirrel. Photos must be taken in Lincoln and include the date, location, and names of any people who are identifiable in the photo. Previously published photos can be viewed on the Lincoln Through the Lens page of the Lincoln Squirrel.

Category: Lincoln through the lens Leave a Comment

‘Live in Lincoln Center’ starts season with Blue Heron

September 27, 2016

First Parish music director Ian Watson plays the church organ in 2012.

First Parish music director Ian Watson plays the church organ in 2012.

“Live in Lincoln Center,” the musical series sponsored by the First Parish in Lincoln, is kicking off its fourth season Friday, Oct. 14 in a new temporary location with vocal ensemble Blue Heron. Because of space constraints due to the construction at the First Parish, the Blue Heron concert will take place at St. Anne’s in-the-Fields Church at 7:30 p.m.

The thrice-yearly series started shortly after Watson was hired as music director at the First Parish (see the Lincoln Squirrel, Nov. 4, 2012). He and a congregant committee organized performances by Boston’s Handel and Haydn Society as well as an annual Christmas singing of Handel’s “Messiah” and pieces by Vivaldi, Mozart and Brahms.

Blue Heron performs mainly Renaissance music, and several of its members are also members of the Boston Music Festival Opera Company. “They’re one of the few groups of this type on the East Coast, so we were really lucky to get them,” Watson said.

The tongue-in-cheek name of the concert series (closely modeled on New York’s “Live at Lincoln Center” only adds to the appeal. “It’s a very cool name… and we haven’t been sued yet,” Watson joked.

The other two performances for 2016-17 are “Messiah” on December 17, in which Watson will direct the Handel and Haydn Society chorus and orchestra, and Beethoven fortepiano and violin sonatas on March 11, 2017. The suggested donation for the events is $30. The series has also gotten a grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council.

Category: arts Leave a Comment

Correction

September 27, 2016

correction-smIn today’s article about the series of speakers about the drought, Daniela Caride was incorrectly quoted as saying “camellias” rather than “chameleon” are thirsty plants. The article has been updated to reflect this correction.

Category: news Leave a Comment

Upcoming public hearings in Lincoln

September 26, 2016

meetingPlanning Board

Public hearing at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 27 to review an application for site plan review. The applicants, Lynette Jones and Ian Hunter, propose to construct an addition to their home at 6 Oakdale Lane.

Public hearing at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 11 to review an application for site plan review. The applicant, Dr. Benjamin Warf, 15 Old Sudbury Road, proposes a renovation and addition to an existing home.

Public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 11 to review an application for site plan review. The applicant, Jon Drew, 135 Weston Road, proposes to construct a new home.

Historic District Commission

Public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 4 to consider the application of Codman Community Farms to renovate and install a new food handling room in Barn D at 58 Codman Road.

Public hearing at 7:40 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 4 to consider the application of Catherine Rogers to replace wood gutters with another material at 16 Weston Road.

Board of Selectmen

The Board of Selectmen will conduct a public hearing on Monday, Oct. 3 at 7:30 p.m. in response to a petition by National Grid to install and maintain approximately 545 feet more or less of 2 inch gas main in Old Lexington Road. This new gas main will run from an existing two-inch main in Lexington Road, northerly approximately 545 feet where it will service 17 Old Lexington Road. Plans are available for review in the Selectmen’s Office.

Lincoln Historical Commission

The Lincoln Historical Commission will hold a public hearing at 7:50 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 4 to consider the application of Theo Kindermans to demolish more than 25 percent of the roof structure at 5 Hawk Hill Road.

Zoning Board of Appeals

The Zoning Board of the Appeals will hold a public hearing on Thursday, Oct. 6 at 7:30 p.m. to hear and to act on the following petitions under the Zoning Bylaws:

  • Sandy Bureau and Hannah and Jeff Sias, 109 Old Sudbury Road, for a special permit for an accessory apartment.
  • Benjamin and Cindy Warf, 15 Old Sudbury Road, to transfer and renew an existing special permit for an accessory apartment.
  • Jason and Jessica Packineau, 148 Lincoln Road, for a special permit to extend the existing front porch and create a screened in porch.

Category: government, land use Leave a Comment

Drought playing havoc with plants and wildlife, speakers say

September 26, 2016

Lincoln resident Ron Rosenbaum photographed these turkeys helping themselves to some much-needed water.

Lincoln resident Ron Rosenbaum photographed these turkeys helping themselves to some much-needed water.

The drought we’re experiencing is causing brown lawns and dry land where water used to be—but it’s no picnic for the area’s plants and animals either, as three local experts explained at a presentation titled “Brown is the New Green.”

Residents at the well-attended September 21 event in Bemis Hall learned that this isn’t the worst drought in recent history—yet. The worst droughts in Lincoln in the last few decades were in 1949-51 and 1964-67, said Greg Woods, Superintendent of the Lincoln Water Department.

“We’ve been at this level before,” said Woods, showing old photos of Flint’s Pond at low levels. However, the coming of winter snows doesn’t necessarily mean things will go back to normal right away. “We have to prepare for the worst and hope we have a very wet winter and spring,” he said.

deviation-from-50-year-average

Precipitation totals compared to the 50-year average since 2002 (click any image to enlarge).

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Water levels in Flint’s Pond, with different colored lines for 2010-16 and two earlier droughts, 1949-1951 and 1964-1967.

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Quarterly per-capita water usage in Lincoln, with a red line showing the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection standard.

Lincoln residents have used about 10 million more gallons of public water this summer than the average for previous summers, said Woods as he showed a series of charts on water consumption and precipitation. Usage has declined somewhat since the mandatory outdoor watering ban went into effect on August 21, but residents are still using far more than the state target of 65 gallons per person per day. The town meets the goal from October to March, but it goes up to about 130 gallons per person per day during growing season, Woods said.

The biggest culprits in outdoor watering are traditional sprinklers, which spread water in places where it isn’t needed and also result in water loss due to evaporation, Woods said. Soaker hoses minimize evaporation loss but still use about a gallon of water per minute, “so you’re still going to use hundreds or thousands of gallons,” he said. The gold standard today is a drip irrigation system, he added

Effects on flora and fauna

The current drought should be viewed in the context of a warming climate, according to Richard Primack, professor of biology at Boston University. “It’s very clear we’re in a warming trend associated with global warming and the urbanization of Boston,” he said, noting that last month was the warmest August on record here.

Swaths of brown grass may be something of an eyesore to those who prefer a lush green lawn, but it’s a matter of life and death for insects that live in grass, and the birds that eat those insects. Streams that have gone way down or dried up completely are also bad news for many species, said Primack, who was quoted in an August 27 Boston Globe article about the drought’s effects on wildlife.

“They’re going to die—there’s no place for the fish and aquatic insects to live,” he said. “A lot of aquatic animals are in trouble.” Making things worse is that nutrients in the remaining water become more concentrated, leading to algal blooms and lack of oxygen in the water.

Plant life has changed as well, said Primack as he showed photos of the banks of Walden Pond where the water has receded. Alders that used to be on the water’s edge have died, while shrubs, grasses and wildflowers such as purple gerardia and golden hyssop have grown in the soil that was formerly underwater. They, too, will perish when the water level rises again, said Primack, who has studied the effects of warming climate on New England plants, birds and butterflies for the last 14 years and is the author of .”

Farmers are certainly feeling the effects of the drought. Corn, pumpkins and other crops will die if they aren’t irrigated, and the yield from fruit trees will also be down this fall. Plants and trees that didn’t flower mean trouble for bees and butterflies as well. But not all plants are suffering, Primack said; succulents (relatives of desert plants) such as purslane, knotweed, spurges and sedum are “really common and really huge,” he said. By the same token, Southern magnolias and even fig trees may thrive in a climate that was once too harsh for them.

The biggest losers may be birds, who are usually eating juicy wild berries and crabapples but have little to eat this year. “There are very few birds in forests and fields; they’ve left to find food somewhere else, and migratory birds have left early. It will take many years for bird populations to recover,” Primack said.

Also scarcer due to the dry weather are insects such as mosquitoes, ticks and deer flies, and amphibians such as salamanders that live in vernal pools that dried up earlier than usual. People may have noticed fewer of the nuisance insects and more butterflies and bees congregating in their flower gardens, which (assuming they’ve been watered over the summer) are a target for the hungry insects. One insect that has thrived, however, is the antlion, which build sand traps resembling inverse anthills in sandy areas around dried-up lakebeds.

The rain will return, but New England will see these conditions more and more often, primack said. With temperatures predicted to get 4–6 degrees F. warmer over the next century, “this will be a typical year 80 years from now,” while low-lying coastal areas of South Boston, Somerville and Everett will be underwater, he said

Gardening with less water

In conditions like this, what’s a gardener to do? Lincoln Garden Club member Daniela Caride had some suggestions focusing on “sustainable gardening.” To minimize water usage, she recommended investing in rain barrels, avoiding sprinklers, and watering only at night or early in the morning rather than in the heat of the day.

Options for lawns include simply having a smaller lawn, planting other types of ground cover, or turning your lawn into a wildflower meadow. Mulch (especially leaf mulch, which is cheaper and easier to handle than bark mulch) is good for keeping moisture in the soil and providing shade and shelter for small animals and insects, Caride added.

When planning your garden, “think before you plant,” Caride said. Avoid “thirsty” plants like chameleon, roses and astilbe, which can suck up water even from surrounding plants, and go for more native plants, which are adapted to our climate (thus needing less watering) and offer food and shelter for small animals and insects.

Category: agriculture and flora, conservation, nature, news Leave a Comment

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