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July 17, 2025

Chestertown Spy

Nonpartisan and Education-based News for Chestertown

  • Home
  • About
    • The Chestertown Spy
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising & Underwriting
      • Advertising Terms & Conditions
    • Editors & Writers
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    • Chestertown Spy Terms of Service
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  • The Arts and Design
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Archives Health Health Notes

Lifelong Learning: A Key Pillar of Active Aging

June 17, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

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The World Health Organization (WHO) considers lifelong learning as one of the critical pillars to achieve active aging, together with health, participation, and security. This recognition resonates with many in our community and emphasizes that learning is an ongoing journey that enriches the mind, body, and spirit.

Lifelong learning is about staying intellectually alive, socially connected, emotionally fulfilled, and growing at every stage of life. It includes both formal and informal opportunities to acquire new knowledge and skills. Whether it is taking a history course, learning a new language or musical instrument, or joining a book group, science shows that the benefits of continued intellectual engagement are profound (Narushima et al, 2018b; Clouston et al, 2020; Choi et al, 2021; Kalache et al, 2021; Noble et al, 2021; Klimova et al, 2024).

Challenging the brain through learning activities builds cognitive reserve, which is the brain’s ability to adapt and compensate for age-related changes or disease (Narushima et al, 2018a). Learning stimulates neural plasticity, the ability of the brain to continuously remodel itself, which could potentially prevent cognitive decline. Community-oriented learning initiatives offer cognitive engagement that has been proven to slow down cognitive decline and to delay the onset of dementia. Similarly to how physical exercise fortifies the body, mental training keeps the brain nimble and strong. Indeed, engaging the mind is one of the most powerful tools for maintaining quality of life as we age (Noble et al, 2021).

Learning a new language or a new musical instrument are known to improve memory and facilitate problem-solving, whereas engaging in group discussions or book clubs promotes critical thinking and verbal skills and enhances our mood through social interaction. These activities are not only mentally enriching; they also foster a sense of achievement and joy. Lifelong learning is a powerful tool to prevent loneliness and isolation, which have been linked to poorer health outcomes and to an increased mortality risk (U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory, 2023).

Exiting the workforce can leave a newly retired person yearning for purpose and structure, but the benefits of lifelong learning are not limited to the retirement years. Adults in mid-life achieve professional enrichment and personal growth through continuous learning. Lifelong learning also encourages intergenerational dialogue and strengthens community bonds among people with different ages and views. In this way, younger people develop the mindset that learning is not an activity confined to classrooms but rather a lifelong habit that keeps them curious, adaptable, and engaged citizens.

In Kent County and the surrounding region, lifelong learning programs are flourishing. Alongside the Talbot County-based Chesapeake Forum and the newer Institute of Lifelong Learning in Centreville, the Chestertown-based Washington College Academy of Lifelong Learning (WC-ALL) plays a vital role in offering opportunities for continued growth and discovery. Each program brings its own strengths and focus, enriching our community of learners on the Eastern Shore.

At WC-ALL, we experience firsthand how transformative lifelong learning can be. Our members report that participating in our programs reignite passions not explored since college and uncover new friendships and travel destinations, both local and beyond. We offer courses on many topics, from humanities to science and technology, art, health and wellness, social sciences, current events, and more! As we continue to build and expand our programs, we are guided by the belief that everyone, regardless of age, deserves the opportunity to explore and thrive. We invite you to join us, share our mission with others, and help make lifelong learning a cornerstone of active aging and of vibrant living at every age.

 References

A Case Study of Active Aging through Lifelong Learning: Psychosocial Interpretation of Older Adult Participation in Evening Schools in Korea.

Choi I, Cho SR. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Sep 1;18(17):9232.

Education and Cognitive Decline: An Integrative Analysis of Global Longitudinal Studies of Cognitive Aging.

Clouston SAP, Smith DM, Mukherjee S, Zhang Y, Hou W, Link BG, Richards M. J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2020 Aug 13;75(7): e151-e160.

Active Aging and the Longevity Revolution

Kalache A, Voelcher I, Louvison M. Handbook of Active Ageing and Quality of Life, 2021.

Enhancing Foreign Language Learning Approaches to Promote Healthy Aging: A Systematic Review.

Klimova B, de Paula Nascimento E Silva C. J Psycholinguist Res. 2024 May 17;53(4):48.

Lifelong learning in active aging discourse: its conserving effect on wellbeing, health, and vulnerability.

Narushima M, Liu J, Diestelkamp N. Ageing Soc. 2018a Apr;38(4):651-675.

I Learn, Therefore I am: A Phenomenological Analysis of Meanings of Lifelong Learning for Vulnerable Older Adults.

Narushima M, Liu J, Diestelkamp N. Gerontologist. 2018b Jul 13;58(4):696-705.

How Does Participation in Formal Education or Learning for Older People Affect Wellbeing and Cognition? A Systematic Literature Review and Meta-Analysis.

Noble C, Medin D, Quail Z, Young C, Carter M. Gerontol Geriatr Med. 2021 Jan 7;7:2333721420986027.

Our Epidemic of Loneliness and Isolation

 

Yolanda Sanchez, PhD
Curriculum Committee Chair, WC-ALL

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Filed Under: Archives, Health Notes

Black Countryside Communities With Darius Johnson June 21

June 16, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

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On Saturday, June 21 at 1 p.m., at the Harwood Nature Center at Lawrence Wetlands Preserve, Darius Johnson will present “We’re Still Here,” a talk on the history of Black countryside communities in Kent County.

Darius Johnson is a historian and preservation scholar with Chesapeake Heartland, as well as a committed community advocate. His original research brings long-overdue scholarly attention to the rural Black communities of Still Pond, Coleman, Big Woods, and Butlertown—histories that have long been marginalized in favor of a predominantly Chestertown-focused narrative.

The project became deeply personal for Johnson. Raised in Big Woods, with family roots in Still Pond and Butlertown, he began tracing his genealogy and made a startling discovery: he is a direct descendant of James Butler, a free Black man who owned land in 1820, during a time when many like him were still considered property.

“Facts and figures related to African American history in Kent County have been increasingly documented and celebrated in recent decades, yet a deep and often complicated gap remains in sharing many of the stories of success, empowerment, and lived experience that give meaning to the data. We’re Still Here aims to take a step toward bridging that gap, write Maria Wood, Executive Director of the Historical Society of Kent County.

What began as a personal journey has evolved into a county-wide archival effort. With the help of cousins and neighbors, Johnson is collecting and digitizing family records, rare photographs, manumission papers, and newspaper clippings—some dating back before 1900. The result is a growing digital archive of stories that document resilience, kinship, education, and land ownership in Kent County’s Black countryside.

In collaboration with the Historical Society of Kent County, Johnson’s presentation will guide attendees through generations of Black life rooted in land, freedom, and family—stories that have too often remained in the shadows.

Johnson also called attention to the upcoming Legacy Day , August 15-17, 2025. celebrates the rich cultural heritage of African Americans in Kent County. It is an opportunity for all residents to have a great time recognizing their shared history. Legacy Day is offered free of charge to the community – thanks to the generous support of individuals, organizations, and businesses. Catch up with the virtual celebration at: https://sumnerhall.org

We’re Still Here is free and open to the public. Reservations are encouraged.

Please note: there is no parking at the preserve. Visitors are asked to use the town lots on the 300 block of Cannon Street. Those with limited mobility may call (410) 778-3499 in advance.

For additional information, contact the Historical Society at (410) 778-3499 or [email protected].

 

 

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Filed Under: Archives, Spy Chats

Town Manager’s Update on Town Cameras

June 16, 2025 by James Dissette Leave a Comment

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From town manager’s office, June 14, 2025.:The town manager and security company representative met to discuss video cameras at the Visitors Center, Wilmer Park and the marina with a follow up on site scheduled for June 12th .

  • June 9, 2025 – Town manager emailed Delmarva Power liaison to discuss expedited power hook up to existing security cameras.
  • June 10, 2025 – Following concerns expressed about the town marina being dark after 11:30 pm, when the lights are turned off, the town manager and the marina manager met to discuss this and have set the lights timer to 5:00 am, current and future camera siting at the marina was also discussed ahead of the June 12th scheduled site visit.
  • June 10, 2025 – Mayor Foster conveys to the town manager the willingness of two downtown property owners to locate cameras on their property under a town-full cost or cost sharing plan. These properties will be included in the scheduled June 12th site visit.
  • June 10, 2025 – Camera location and Delmarva Power pole location overlap mapping begins.
  • June 12, 2025 – site visit rescheduled one day until June 13th .
  • June 13, 2025 – town manager and security company representative conduct scheduled site visit of town-owned locations for future camera installation.
  • June 13, 2025 – new cameras ordered for several locations around the downtown area and the waterfront able to provide electricity and internet, installation pending.
  • Ongoing from May 22, 2025 – town manager makes the following comment to the local media: “Moving forward in the next few weeks the town will work within the available funding to connect existing cameras to electric power and internet service. All locations will be assessed and those cameras readily able for connection will take precedent, while other camera locations are made ready as needed. The several years’ worth of delay is not acceptable, and all should hold me accountable for concluding this activity in a timely manner. Moving forward the simple lesson learned is when even responsible parties are playing out of position effective execution suffers as a result. Public safety measures belong in town hall in the town manager’s office and not outsourced to our destination marketing and economic development organization. This kind of mistake will not happen again.”

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Filed Under: 5 News Notes, Archives

No Kings Day Nationwide Protest: The Spy Would Like Your Thoughts

June 16, 2025 by James Dissette 15 Comments

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No Kings Day rally in Fountain Park, Saturday, June 14. Photo by Kurt Kolaja

 

As protest rallies swept across the nation on Saturday, Chestertown turned out in strong numbers at Fountain Park to support No Kings Day’s global declaration of resistance to Donald Trump’s policies and actions.

More than 800 people gathered to hear speeches by Melvin Rapelyea, chairman of the Kent County Democratic Central Committee; Chestertown Mayor David Foster; Kent County High School senior and president of the Kent County Young Democrats, Eamon Lindsay; Katie Stevens; veteran Misty Colache; and Bill Flook, president of the Democratic Club of Kent County. Many participants lined Cross and High Streets, holding banners and signs for passing drivers, who responded with enthusiastic honks of support.

On this historic day, one that held different meaning for every participant and witness, The Spy invites you to share your reflections on No Kings Day, and your hopes for the future.

Cross Street, Saturday, June 14.

 

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Filed Under: 5 News Notes, Archives

Not Normal: Where Are We Going? By Aubrey Sarvis

June 14, 2025 by Opinion 5 Comments

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This has been a deeply troubling and dangerous week, complete with risky calls and delicate dances, some high wire acts in the streets of Los Angles without safety nets.  We see good and bad and ugly players, and, yet, somehow, cool and measured LA professionals on the scenes have contained most of the chaos in the streets without deadly violence.   Nearly everyone is rooting for the soldiers and Marines and policewomen and men who have been thrown together and expected to manage and control legal and illegal immigrants, aggressive ICE agents and frustrated demonstrators, most peaceful, a few violent.

This concocted political show of excessive force and power and danger is unfolding live on television in the city of make believe with thousands of extras straight out of a lavish Cecil B. DeMille production. The star, of course, even when he is not on camera, is none other than our President of the United States.  It’s his show, another Trump theatrical production conceived for MAGA believers and Fox News distribution but paid for by taxpayers of the United States. Trump, ever the cheap blowhard producer, never picks up the bills. (That’s for losers.)

Our president who moonlights as playwright, theater critic, and head of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts gives his frightening California show and inept contract players—Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, House Speaker Mike Johnson, and Senate and House Republicans smashing reviews. Five stars, Trump’s highest rating, for his compliant confederacy of dunces.  And our president has no doubt America loves his phony strong man act, that it will play to sold out houses for years, breaking all records, including those for the Nazi satire “The Producers”.

Our president isn’t interested in lowering the volume as we approach the 250th birthday celebration of the U.S. Army.  No, he is reveling in his ugly and shocking show of force and itching for a bloody fight. The visuals and dangers become more disturbing and apparent with each passing day. Indeed, with each passing hour.

This is not normal, not in the United States of America.

Fascism arrived unannounced early Thursday afternoon inside a nondescript Los Angeles federal building when federal agents threw down and handcuffed a United States Senator who had identified himself to the Homeland Security Secretary holding a press conference there.  The first duly elected Latino United States Senator was attempting to ask the Secretary important questions on behalf of his constituents. Millions saw the stunning and bold takedown and heard the Senator identify himself, and we should be very afraid.  This happened in the very building in which the senator works when he is in LA.

This is not normal, not in the United States of America.

The president isn’t ready to call off his menacing henchmen.  The creator, artistic director, producer, and bully-in-chief of this mean mess is threatening to take his alarming strong man act on the road.  Another opening, another show.  He said maybe Atlanta, Dallas, D. C., and New York City.  Foley Square!  His Marines on Broadway!  George M. Cohen was there with “Over There” and, after all, if George Clooney can play Broadway and be nominated for a Tony, why not POTUS who can order up his Marines as extras and props.

The LA Trump show opened just as the president envisioned.  Television networks fell in line immediately.  They stopped or curtailed their coverage of his big, beautiful tax bill stalled in the Senate, and pretty much forgot about the promised tariff deals that never materialized, and the Musk Trump breakup quickly became page 10 gossip.  Little and big screens and niche podcasters and young influencers began running Trump’s free content 24/7 – all showing how he and his ICE team were rounding up illegal and legal immigrants, be they at work or home or in schoolhouses or in the streets.

To interject immediate drama and ensure attention grabbing headlines and millions of cool hits, the president ordered National Guard troops to Los Angeles over the objections of the mayor and governor, both of whom insisted that local and state police trained in law enforcement were managing a tough situation on the ground well and federal troops were not needed.

Some of the most disturbing images in recent days were those of physically fit young combat airborne soldiers at Fort Bragg wearing red berets seated directly behind President Trump as he delivered a blistering political speech.  It doesn’t matter that those young soldiers volunteered and were screened to be in the prop.  That backdrop was straight out of the president’s campaign playbook.  It was implicit that those patriotic soldiers supported him and his tirade in a political speech.

That is not normal in the United States of America.

In fact, service members are explicitly prohibited from attending or participating in political rallies in uniform. Even the stumbling, bumbling Secretary of Defense knows that.  I believe Hegseth orchestrated the Bragg event.  After all, he is the president’s military cultural warrior.

Perhaps the most troubling aspect of what we witnessed at Fort Bragg was the unabashed and defiant racism on full display by the president and the secretary.  Everyone should understand those two bullies chose Fort Bragg to gloat and kick off the Army’s 250th birthday celebration because of its naming history and acts of bigotry and white supremacy.

We Americans do not celebrate bigotry and white supremacy and racist generals in our military today.

That is not normal today, and it is not who we in these United States of America are today.  Yes, we are striving to become better and embrace equality for all. Yes, we are a work in progress, and we are determined to forge ahead, not fall back.

A final thought as we old soldiers celebrate the 250th anniversary of our United States Army.  Some of my friends in the sixties sweated out being called for Vietnam.  They took advantage of the college deferments as long as they could and prayed hard for a lucky number in the draft lottery.  None of us faulted them for doing so.  Only a few of them ended up being called, but the ones who were called went.  However, one of my college classmates fled to Canada where he remained for decades. He apologized for doing so before he died.

That apology was authentic and acceptable.  The shameful way the President of the United States is using the army and military during this celebration is not acceptable.

His behavior is not normal.

The very least our president can do is salute the Army, and try very, very hard not to hog the celebration.  This important celebration is not about the young Donald Trump or bone-spurs or his 79th birthday.  The President of the United States had repeated opportunities in the mid and late sixties to be a part of the United States Army.  He used his father’s wealth, privileged position, and medical doctors to ensure that didn’t happen.

The decent thing for this president to do now is stop using the United States Army for props and political gain and stay out of the way during the army’s big birthday.  Saturday belongs to the United States Army and the men and women who wore the army uniform and their families, not to Donald Trump who avoided the call to duty when his draft board and Selective Service called in 1968.

You cannot have it both ways, Mr. President.

Aubrey Sarvis

United States Army veteran

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Archives, Opinion

Town of Millington Proclaims June as Pride Month

June 11, 2025 by The Chestertown Spy Leave a Comment

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The Kent County Chapter of the Delmarva Pride Center is proud to announce that the Town of Millington has officially proclaimed June as Pride Month, affirming its support for the LGBTQ+ community and its commitment to fostering an inclusive, welcoming environment for all.

At the June 10th council meeting, the Mayor and Council of Millington unanimously signed the proclamation, recognizing the importance of celebrating diversity, promoting equality, and acknowledging the contributions of LGBTQ+ residents to the town’s culture, economy, and civic life.

“This proclamation is a meaningful step forward in affirming that LGBTQ+ individuals belong and are valued in every part of Kent County,” said Francoise Sullivan, chair for the Kent County Chapter of the Delmarva Pride Center. “We are grateful to the Town of Millington for its leadership and allyship.”

The proclamation comes as communities across the country celebrate Pride Month with events and actions that uplift LGBTQ+ voices, reflect on the ongoing fight for equal rights, and honor the history of the movement. Locally, Pride Month in Kent County includes a New Orleans themed fundraising event and photo exhibit at the Garfield Center in Chestertown.

The Delmarva Pride Center and its Kent County Chapter work to provide advocacy, support, and programming for LGBTQIA+ individuals and their families throughout the region. The recognition of Pride Month underscores the importance of this work and the continued need for visibility and dialogue.

To learn more about upcoming events or to get involved, visit www.dpckentcounty.org.

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Filed Under: 2 News Homepage, Archives

It’s All Food and Sex: Pollinators By Nancy Taylor Robson

June 10, 2025 by Spy Desk Leave a Comment

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Tradescantia honeybee

Pollination, as most of us know, is about reproduction – of fruits, vegetables other plants. But from our self-interested point of view – and that of most of the animals on terra firma – it’s about food. Apples and pears and squash and watermelon (and so much delicious more!). Pollination is responsible for one of every three bites of food.

“So many of our fruits and vegetable species require pollination before they set fruit,” says Christy Wilhelmi, author of High Yield, Small Space Organic Gardening. “So, we need these guys to survive. If the pollinators die, we die. It’s that simple.”

According to a 2016 study by the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, pollinators have declined by approximately 75% in the past 27 years. Staggering, but potentially reversible.

As the name suggests, pollination is the transfer of pollen (male) to the female part of a plant. (This is the sex part for those not paying attention). Many plants need more than one visit to a blossom for good pollination. For example, a female zucchini blossom needs about five visits for a single good fruit to develop. Many plants will not produce fruit without pollination from other plants, but even self-pollinated plants benefit from pollinators. A recent University of Vermont study showed that when birds and bees protect coffee plants (and in the course, pollinate them), the result is bigger and more plentiful beans. Bigger, better crop; bigger, better income for growers; more for us grateful caffeinators.

Goldfinches in Ilex verticilata

According to the National Park Service, three-quarters of all the flowering plants on earth are pollinated by insects and animals. Of course, we could possibly do it ourselves as China has been forced to do. In Sichuan Province, pesticides and pollution have so decimated the pollinator population there that orchardists must hand-pollinate fruit trees. It’s a painstaking process that needs to be repeated as many as five times per blossom to ensure marketable fruit.

We might do it all ourselves, but why? It’s designed to work efficiently without our intervention. So, if we restore what the pollinators need, it can run on autopilot while we eat caprese salad and grilled chicken with mango salsa.

Pollination is one of the key ecological services provided gratis in an intricately orchestrated regenerative system that also helps stabilize our soils, clean our air, supply oxygen, and support wildlife. Virtually everything in life multitasks.

“The pollinators might be catching prey to provision their nests or feed their larvae, and as adults they are going to flowers to feed themselves, so in that they are transferring pollen around from plant to plant,” says naturalist Nancy Lawson, author of Wildscapes. “And many are decomposers, who are helping to break down wood and other organic matter. Dead animals and other insects who have died would be piling up all around us without these decomposers.”

So, who is a pollinator? We often think primarily of honeybees, who get lots of press – especially since there have been two overturned tractor trailers of them recently.

“Honeybees are not native, but they are such fascinating, self-directed creatures,” says Wilmelmi, who is also a beekeeper. “They run a democracy within their colony, and they are so hardworking.”

Honeybees are interesting to non-beekeepers, too, because in addition to the amazing intricacy of their lives, we realize that the pollination of almonds and other food trees is currently dependent on professional beekeepers hauling thousands of hives around the country in semis. It’s not hand-pollinating, but it is a necessary pollination industry run by human beings. Yet the original arrangement is more complex – and yet so much simpler, less work for us. And cheaper.

A pollinator is anything that helps carry pollen from the male part of the flower to the female part of the same or another flower. Bees of all kinds, (yes, even annoying carpenter bees), butterflies, moths, flies, bugs, beetles, thrips, and wasps. Also, birds and mammals – for example, opossums, who also eat ticks.

Spangled fritillary in garlic chive bloom

“Pollinators come in many forms,” explains Lawson “They’re beetles and flies and wasps, especially. There are so many solitary wasps that people don’t realize are not threatening to us, and they’re all out there pollinating flowers and being natural insect control.”

While we can see the various flying pollinators during the day, the process continues mostly unseen at night.

“Bats not only hoover a thousand mosquitoes out of the sky every night,

but they are nighttime pollinators of cactus, succulents, and tropical fruits like mangos and bananas,” Wilhelmi says.

“Ethiopian wolves pollinate Red Hot Pokers (Kniphofia),” notes Lawson. “They lick the flower, and the pictures of them with pollen all over their faces makes me wonder what other pollinators we just don’t know about [yet].”

So, how can each of us help? Restore habitat for one thing. Just as we need fueling stations and places to sleep on a cross-country road trip, pollinators of all kinds need well-supplied way stations in addition to established communities.

“People already know they should be planting native flowers that native bees and other animals have evolved with,” says Lawson. “They also need to think about massing the same plants, so pollinators pick up on these visual and olfactory signals and cues. If you only have one or two, it won’t have much for many creatures, but start with five near each other and let them spread. And plant really fragrant flowers like native Clematis (Clematis virginiana) and the trees and shrubs – Black Cherry (Prunus serotina), Mountain Mint (Pycnanthemum), Woodland Phlox (Phlox divericota), native roses, Carolina Rose (Rosa carolina) – because scent is really important to bees and other pollinators to help them locate what they need.”

Another key thing is to reduce or eliminate pesticides, (another cost-saving). Then let the good times roll. Once you’ve got a good mix of symbiotically living things, the whole system tends to take care of itself. The result is both productive and fascinating. Discovery channel in your own backyard.

RESOURCES:

https://www.pollinator.org/pollinators

https://www.humanegardener.com/humane-gardening-tenets/

https://www.uvm.edu/gund/news/secret-better-coffee-birds-and-bees

https://www.xerces.org/pollinator-conservation/whats-at-stake

https://extension.umd.edu/resources/#!/category/2/subcategory/68

High Yield, Small Space Organic Gardening  by Christy Wilhelmi (Creative Homeowner, 2025

Wildscape: Trilling Chipmunks, Beckoning Blooms, Salty Butterflies, and other Sensory Wonders of Nature by Nancy Lawson (Princeton Architectural Press)

Longtime journalist and essayist Nancy Taylor Robson is also the author of four books: Woman in The Wheelhouse; award-winning Course of the Waterman; A Love Like No Other: Abigail and John Adams, a Modern Love Story; and OK Now What? A Caregiver’s Guide to What Matters, which she wrote with Sue Collins, RN.

 

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Archives, Food and Garden, Food and Garden Notes

A Friend Recalls Professor Robert Day

June 9, 2025 by Spy Desk 2 Comments

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(For friends and students of longtime Washington College Professor Robert Day, this remembrance was submitted to the Spy by John Harris to remind us of Bob’s influence on our creative lives and enduring friendships.)

How we met

Many years ago I was an editor at the Smithsonian Institution Press, and Maureen Jacoby was my boss—the Managing Editor. She also became a good friend. When Maureen retired she moved to Chestertown, and there she became friends with Bob & Kathy Day (an ampersand somehow seems appropriate—they were a going concern).

Maureen asked if I would be interested in a trip to France to visit the Days in the Gironde, where they were living in a tiny, tumble-down stone house—a shepherd’s hut, so it was said. Ancient. Really ancient. I said: But of course! And off we flew to France. I still hadn’t met them.

Bob & Kathy had agreed to loan us a car for a few days—this way we could wander around a bit on our own.

And suddenly, there we were in France, and there was the car, an ancient Deux Chevaux; more importantly, there was Bob. He leaped out of the car, chuckling because the car had gotten him there and in fact worked at all. On the driver’s door, Kathy had painted a vase of flowers.  I remember his beat-up jeans and raggedy shirt; boots. Cowboy gear, I thought. WHAT HAVE WE GOTTEN INTO? He gave me a quick tour of the car. “How do you turn on the windshield wipers?” I asked innocently. “Oh, you just pull THIS,” he said, pulling something. Nothing happened. He tried again. Nothing. He got out and began to pound on the hood of the car. Nothing. Again. And then—the wipers slowly began to function. “SEE!” he said. “Works like a charm.”

And that was my first encounter with the remarkable Mr. Day, a cowboy-novelist-screenwriter-professor of English. Soon I would meet Kathy, his soft-spoken artist-wife. And Bob & Kathy and and Maureen and I remained friends for many years.

Much later, I visited the two of them in Kansas—Bob was sentimentally attached to Kansas. They lived in a tiny town named Ludell when they weren’t busy elsewhere (often in Paris). I once stayed with them in their charming house where Bob had a spacious library/office and had created a painting studio for Kathy that had been, at one time, a chicken coop.

While I was visiting I jotted down a few notes that turned into this poem—a souvenir of a few happy days spent with the Days.

 

 

A Day in Ludell

        for Bob and Kathy Day

10:00

We drive into town—

no gym,

no yoga studio.

But there is a one-room library

where two pleasant ladies bring Kathy

up to date about some neighbors

and their problems:  the dog that died

from a snakebite; the woman whose husband

is going in for ankle-replacement surgery.

A month of recovery at home.

“Just think of him!” cries one. “Just think

of her!” says Kathy, and all three laugh.

 

11:30

A bedraggled parade

is trying to form.

Shivering, short-skirted girls

lead a few awkward cheers,

glancing at one another,

not quite sure what to do;

then the boys on the team—shy

but enjoying themselves—

walk in a circle, high-fiving

the small, waving crowd

before boarding the bus

that will take them hours away

to tonight’s big game.

 

2:00

After lunch, a walk.

The horizon surrounds us,

chest high, a perfect circumference

of fields that grow wheat and corn.

The gravel crunches

underfoot, and startled pheasants

clatter up from the side of the road

as we maintain our companionable

distances, not talking.

 

6:00

A neighbor couple

and their beautiful daughter, a girl

who lives in Denver and teaches ESL,

drive over for dinner. The wife

says, over wine,

“I had to whip that dog. I hated

to, but he wanted to eat

the chickens. Only had

to do it once.”

 

8:00

We climb in the ancient Oldsmobile

and drive into town for a concert.

Between sets sung by a lanky sixty-year-old

in a black Stetson hat, a man from Nebraska

—curly-haired and smelling of cigarettes,

a little drunk—strikes up a conversation

below the immense, \dark head

of a buffalo staring down from the wall.

The man laughs softly. “You’re staying in Ludell?

I used to go to Ludell when I was a kid—

better not tell you why.”

 

11:00

Back home,

the bounding, floppy puppy,

a Golden Lab, finally falls asleep.

A single light on a telephone pole

shines in the dark back yard.

Decades ago, Bob says, as he latches

the door on the porch,

lights like that one

dotted the prairie.

They were known as

“butane stars.”

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 9 Brevities, Archives

Wetlands 101: Sultana Education Foundation Presents an Evening of Interactive Science

June 9, 2025 by Sultana Education Foundation Leave a Comment

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The Sultana Education Foundation (SEF) will host its monthly Third Thursday Speaker Series on Thursday, June 19 from 6-7PM when John Mann and Jackie Doerr present Wetlands 101: An Evening of Interactive Science.  The pair of Sultana educators will team up to teach about the vital role that wetlands play in the health of the Chesapeake Bay.  There will be a brief discussion inside the Harwood Nature Center discussing wetlands in general as well as the steps that have been taken to both improve the health of the Lawrence Preserve as well as make it accessible to visitors.  Attendees will then be invited to participate in some of the hands-on science lessons (catching critters, sampling water quality, and walking the trails) that Sultana students enjoy on field trips.

The Lawrence Wetland Preserve is a walk-in facility (no onsite parking) located at 301 South Mill Street in Chestertown.  Visitors are encouraged to park in the public lots on the 300 block of Cannon Street or on the surrounding streets.

These events are free and open to the public.  For more information about the Third Thursday Speaker Series or the Sultana Education Foundation, please visit www.sultanaeducation.org.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Archives, Ed Homepage, Ed Portal Lead

KCHS Messages to Seniors

June 8, 2025 by Kent County Public Schools Leave a Comment

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Isabelle Anderson Class of 2025 President

Good morning students, families, community and staff,

I have grown a lot over the past three years serving as your class president, but that’s not what I’m here to talk about.

I am here to talk about how amazing it’s been to watch you all grow through your high school careers.

So many of you have come out of your shells, many of you have accomplished feats rarely surpassed. But at one point or another we have all come together to show that the Class of 2025 is the best class.

I’d like to remind you that we went through eighth grade separated, some of us learning virtually and some of us in-person, but that did not stop our comradery when we arrived here for our first day of high school. We spent that day on this very field, building friendships and creating connections, that for some, have lasted four years.

We entered high school in a very weird time. We thought life could go back to normal, but it wasn’t quite there yet, and I’m sure the staff in the crowd right now are remembering the vast number of times they had to tell us to pull up our masks those first few months.

We celebrated our normalcy when it finally arrived, and now we get to celebrate all of our achievements up to this point.

Some people like to tell us that our class is boring, or unmotivated, but I’d disagree. We are an outstanding class with amazing accomplishments that have changed this school, and our community, for the better.

I’d like to note that two members of our class were the first to be a part of the apprenticeship program of Maryland here, a program that has taken off and now provides valuable opportunities to many of our peers. This demonstrates the growth that we have gone through on our journey to this point, expanding our knowledge while also improving our futures.

We also have multiple record setters amongst us, all of whom broke their own record — on the court, the field, and in the pool — and who we are proud to cheer on. Their determination for success is a shared trait through our class, and most of us strive for the best daily.

But I want you to remember to continue to be great as we all move into our next chapter — as Natasha Bedingfield says, “today is where your book begins, the rest is still unwritten.”

All of us have accomplished something amazing in the past four years, and whether it was big or small, it shows that we can achieve anything we want, and today is a prime example of that.

I’m sure we have all struggled with ourselves to show up to school, but the important thing is that you did, and now you are about to walk across this stage and never have to come back here at 7 a.m. again.

Graduating today is a remarkable accomplishment for everyone here. We have officially proven that 2025 is the best year.

I would like to close with some wise words I was once told by a stranger: “peace, love, and don’t change,” a reminder I hope you carry with you through wherever your next chapter leads you.

Remember to be peaceful with every challenge you face, spread love everywhere you go, and never change your determination or hard working spirit.You will always have a home in the Trojan Arena, but I know that each of you will do amazing things wherever your road leads.

Congratulations Class of ’25, we made it!

 

Kate Cannon
Class of 2025 Valedictorian

 

Good morning graduates, faculty, families, community and friends,

First, I want to congratulate the Class of 2025. We did it!

When I started thinking about what to say today, I struggled. I wanted to relate my speech to something that was important and meaningful to me. I had many different thoughts and ideas but nothing felt right.

Then it hit me — talk about something I love. And naturally, softball came to mind.

Now, I just want to point out that this idea came to me while I was playing left field in my game this past Sunday. I was having so much fun and all my thoughts and ideas just started clicking.

Softball, just like life, is full of lessons. And today, I want to share a few that I hope will help you look at the world a little differently — and maybe help you become the best version of yourself.

 

Let’s start here: Softball is a game of failure. And so is life.

You’re going to make errors. You’re going to make mistakes. You’re going to struggle. Life will throw you curveballs.

But in softball, just like in life, it’s not about what happens to you — it’s about how you respond to the adversities that show the kind of person you are.

One of my coaches always says: “Visit, but don’t stay.”

It’s OK to feel sad, to feel angry, to have a bad day. But don’t unpack there. Tomorrow is a new day. So ask yourself — will you let one mistake define your mood, or will you learn from it and come back stronger?

Another big part of the game — and of life — is commitment.

You have to be committed to your team, to practice, to the game … and most importantly, to yourself. Why spend countless hours working toward something if you’re not all in?

There’s a quote written on the corner of a chalkboard in one of my classrooms. This quote really resonated with me throughout the year.

It said: “Commitment is staying true to what you said you would do, long after the mood you said it in has left.” – Inky Johnson.

I read that quote every day to remind myself of my goals and why I set them. If committing to something was easy, then everyone would do it. Don’t just aim to be good, when you have the power to be great.

Growing up, I was always told that practice makes perfect. But the truth is, no one is perfect. And no one ever will be. Because life is about constant growth — about learning, improving, evolving.

A few weeks ago, I heard something new: “Effort makes progress.” And that’s what truly matters. If you give your best effort, you will improve. And that effort—that’s where your character shines through.

In softball, who you are matters. But who your teammates are? That matters just as much.

Surround yourself with the right people. Choose friends who lift you up, who challenge you, who celebrate your wins and walk with you through your losses. Pick people who share your values and dreams — because they’ll shape your path just as much as your own choices do.

And never forget: important things happen at home.

Yes, the field matters — but the ball always has to cross the plate and you have to touch home to score.

 

Paige Miller Class of 2025 Salutatorian

 

Good Morning faculty, family, friends, community and my fellow graduates,

I am Paige Miller and it is an honor to stand before you today as the Salutatorian of the Class of 2025.

Today we stand on the edge of a new chapter — a milestone that seemed so far away, not long ago. Yet, here we are, ready to turn the page and begin new journeys.

Over the past four years we have filled this chapter with laughter, hallway hellos, hard work, late nights, and memories that will last a lifetime.

Right now, we’re in the in-between — between who we were and who we’re going to be. Walking the line between reckless and responsible, underestimated and overexpectated.

We’ve done enough to think we know it all, but we’re smart enough to know we don’t. We’re young enough to think we’ll live forever, but old enough to know we won’t.

Over the years we have learned that life doesn’t always go as planned. You win some, you lose some. It ain’t always home runs. And that’s just the way life plays.

But we kept showing up, dug a little deeper when we thought we couldn’t dig anymore, and didn’t quit until the job was done; that is what got us here today.

We’ve always dreamt of bigger things outside of this small town — but we never thought the day we’d leave would ever roll around. The time has come to say goodbye to the halls we’ve known so well and the classrooms that shaped us.

What they didn’t teach us in these classrooms or on those sidelines is moving on. Sometimes following your heart means leaving it all behind. Some of us will stay. Some will leave. But no matter where we go, a part of us will always be half of our hometown.

We’re undefined. We’re just beginning. The pen is in our hands — and the ending? Unplanned.

No one else can feel this moment for you. No one else can speak the words on your lips. Only you can let it in. Only you can write your story.

Life is a dance, you learn as you go; but remember to work hard, stay humble and make time for those that matter most!

This is where one chapter ends and the next begins. Don’t be afraid of the blank page in front of you.

Be excited. Be bold. Be real.

We made it — together.

And the rest is still unwritten.

Thank you!

 

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Archives, Ed Homepage, Ed Portal Lead

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