Edgecomb
Jo Cameron
Our friendly Town Hall kitchen has an urgent need for a functioning
refrigerator! If anyone is "up-grading" from an old fridge
which is still in good working condition, and willing to donate it to
Edgecomb, please call the town offices, 882-7018, and many thanks!
The Route 27 Corridor study committee is conducting a "Community
Charette" (a.k.a. workshop), Tuesday, May 14, at 7 p.m. at the Town
Hall. Issues of safety, mobility and economic development of the Lincoln
County sections of this state highway need citizen input, ideas and
suggestions. Please join us! This elicits a linguistic squawk from your
correspondent. What's with this word "charette?" I can find no
dictionary definition other than in my French LaRousse dictionary: a
two-wheeled vehicle to be pulled by a draft animal; frequently fitted with
one or two seats. "Une charette anglais" is a fancy edition
of the same. [For Lincoln County News readers, there is a picture of
a Cuban charette on page 1-A of the May 2 edition.] So, are we all
going on a hayride along Route 27, noting its virtues and deficiencies?
Uh oh, here comes husband with an on-line definition in his teeth:
According to www.masterplanning.com, a charette is an intense effort to
solve any architectural problem within a limited time. It operates in a
highly collaborative atmosphere, allowing for the participation of
everyone involved with the project. The term first appeared in the late
19th century, when Parisian architecture students who needed to rush their
drawings to the Ecole des Beaux-Arts loaded them on a cart which was
called a charette [Aha!]. The site provides a picture of all the students
pushing and pulling it. Later the word broadened its meaning to describe
any intense, on-the-spot design project. Remember, you read it here!
Town elections coming up Friday, May 17, followed by the Town Meeting
on
Saturday. Our Town Clerk gives the following early warning: Thursday, May
23 is the last day to change political parties in order to vote in the
Primary Election June 11. Remember, in a primary, you can only vote for
the party you're enrolled in. There are currently three parties to choose
from: Republican, Democrat, or Green Independent. Come to the town
offices, open Mondays 7-9 p.m. and Tuesdays and Thursdays 1-5 p.m. if
you need to re-register.
Thursday, May 23, from 2-4 p.m., is also the next meeting of the
Edgecomb
Historical Society, gathering this time at Sophie Quinn's house, first one
in on the Cross Point Road, directly across from the Congregational
Church.
Just back from a pleasant Sunday afternoon at Lincoln Academy's Open
House, admiring the projected new building additions which will provide
badly needed classroom space. We enjoyed the band concert, and nibbling
at various appropriate featuresds in the Spanish and French classrooms. French
teacher Nathalie Gorey, a River Road neighbor, presided over un buffet
deluxe veritable des patisseries et autres comestibles.
We have had chipping sparrows at our feeder. During a brief visit to
Duncan Slade and Gail Fraas, we saw white-capped sparrows at theirs.
Duncan reports bluebirds nesting in his boxes, but warns that barn
swallows may pre-empt the sites. Indeed, I watched a pair of swallows
check out the birdhouse near our garden, which I'm sure my mother intended
for bluebirds, but it's much too close to human habitation for them.
Planting my peapatch at 234 River Road, bonesukl@midcoast.com and
633-2978. |  |
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