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INFORMING, SERVING AND CELEBRATING THE LAKE REGION<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

MIDSUMMER <strong>2022</strong> VOL. 14 NO. 4<br />

Local car club keeps the classics on display<br />

SWEET HARMONIES<br />

INTO THE WOODS<br />

BASS MENTALITY<br />

STATE OF THE LAKE


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4<br />

From the Editor<br />

Music and cars. Cars and music.<br />

Growing up in the 1970s you couldn’t have one without the other. In my senior year of<br />

high school I had the car—a ‘69 Camaro SS 327—and it had a radio and an aftermarket 8-track<br />

player. It was so much cooler than I ever was.<br />

In 1977, I was 16 years old. The car was in my family but not yet mine. More on that later.<br />

Like most teenagers at the time, my main source of music was Top 40 on the radio and watching<br />

“American Bandstand” on TV. I remember I would listen to each band, each performance and weed<br />

out who I liked from who I didn’t. There weren’t many I didn’t like. Turns out, I really like the music<br />

from the 1970s.<br />

That’s not to say I’m not a fan of music produced in the late 1960s and 1980s as well. I am. But<br />

with the rock bands of the ‘70s, for me, there is no comparison. It’s the music of my youth and, like<br />

many of you, when I hear a song from that decade, it puts me right back to a specific place and time.<br />

In that year of 1977, Fleetwood Mac released the monster album “Rumours.” I remember hearing<br />

it for the first time while hanging out at a friend’s house. I’m pretty sure I bought my copy within<br />

hours of that visit, if not minutes. I, like the rest of the planet, was mesmerized.<br />

Around the time I wore out the grooves in the “Rumours” record, another monster album—Meat<br />

Loaf’s “Bat Out of Hell”—was released. Totally different, but just as mesmerizing. If you can’t sing<br />

every word—and I mean every word—to “Bat Out of Hell,” then you are not a fan.<br />

Now, back to that car. My dad bought the Camaro from a relative for $700. The color was<br />

Frost—army green to my eye—and it had about 70,000 miles on it and a hitch, used to tow a popup<br />

camper. Ouch.<br />

My brother had it first, using it to get back and forth to college. By the time I got it in the fall<br />

of ‘78, it was pretty beaten up, having been run off the road by a dump truck. But thanks to my<br />

brother and a friend, they transformed the car, spending hours repairing rust and dents and painting<br />

it a deep metallic blue. Coolest car in the high school parking lot.<br />

When I left for college, my sister used it during her senior year of high school. (She put a dent<br />

in it—I don’t want to talk about it.) I reclaimed the car as soon as I came home for the summer.<br />

So, picture it. Me and Stevie, Meat Loaf, Freddie, Barry (yep, Gibbs and Manilow—told you<br />

I wasn’t that cool!) in a metallic blue SS, windows down (you know, “air conditioning”), singing<br />

together.<br />

We had a good run until about 1982, when the car was becoming unreliable and a bit dangerous.<br />

My dad sold it, getting $700 despite its problems and 200,000-plus miles.<br />

And ever since, I’ve been driving sensible cars.<br />

Music and cars. Kind of a theme in this issue of the magazine. And getting the content for these<br />

stories brought me right back to that time in my life.<br />

This was especially true while shooting photos for Ellen Wilkowe’s story about local musician<br />

Randy Artiglere, a member of Tusk, a Fleetwood Mac tribute band. (See page 20) I loved this<br />

band the first time I saw them in Morristown several years ago. This time<br />

around it was at a more intimate venue in New Hope, Pennsylvania. What<br />

a concert!<br />

And if you haven’t heard the Hopatcong band Lost in Place (see Melissa<br />

Summer’s story, page 6), go—it’s the music you want to hear—done well!<br />

I also became nostalgic while shooting images for another story by Ellen<br />

(see page 22)—the cover story about a local classic car group. So many<br />

classics to swoon over, so many cool cars.<br />

Makes me want to trade in my Subaru.<br />

—Karen<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

INFORMING, SERVING AND CELEBRATING THE LAKE REGION<br />

Local car club keeps the classics on display<br />

SWEET HARMONIES<br />

BASS MENTALITY<br />

INTO THE WOODS STATE OF THE LAKE<br />

MIDSUMMER <strong>2022</strong> VOL. 14 NO. 4<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

ON THE COVER<br />

Anthony Vassallo, right, uses a control box<br />

to make the suspension on his 1960 Chevy<br />

Impala move up and down and side to side.<br />

-photo by Karen Fucito<br />

KAREN FUCITO<br />

Editor<br />

editor@lakehopatcongnews.com<br />

973-663-2800<br />

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS<br />

Michael Daigle<br />

Sandra Pledger<br />

Melissa Summers<br />

Ellen Wilkowe<br />

COLUMNISTS<br />

Marty Kane<br />

Heather Shirley<br />

Barbara Simmons<br />

EDITING AND LAYOUT<br />

Maria DaSilva-Gordon<br />

Randi Cirelli<br />

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Lake Hopatcong, NJ 07849<br />

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Lake Hopatcong, NJ 07849<br />

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Lost in Place Takes Audiences Back in Time with<br />

Smooth Harmonies and Classic Covers<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

Step into a venue where one Hopatcongbased<br />

band has taken the stage and you<br />

might think you’ve gone back to an era where<br />

rock ruled the airwaves—and you could still<br />

get that dollar pint of your favorite brew.<br />

The classic rock ensemble, Lost in Place, was<br />

founded as a five-piece band in 1998. With<br />

four vocalists, the group was able to replicate<br />

the sounds of classic harmonies like those of<br />

the Beatles, Pink Floyd and more.<br />

“The intent was to put together a band to<br />

not just do covers of great classic rock songs<br />

but to replicate the original recordings as close<br />

as humanly possible, both instrumentally and<br />

vocally,” said co-founder Paul Wheeler, 63, of<br />

Hopatcong.<br />

Original members included Wheeler on<br />

guitars and vocals; his brother Drew Wheeler<br />

on keyboards and vocals; Nic Luciano on lead<br />

guitar and vocals; Ron Scheurman on drums<br />

and vocals; and Mike Collins on bass. They<br />

were together for seven years until Dave Ward<br />

stepped in as the new drummer.<br />

The band has been through a lot of changes<br />

in their 24 years, but Paul Wheeler said they’ve<br />

always had each other’s backs. “In 2007, Dave<br />

was diagnosed with throat cancer and was<br />

sidelined for a year as he underwent chemo and<br />

radiation treatment,” he said. “Nelson Cantillo<br />

filled in for him. When Dave<br />

was able to return to the lineup,<br />

we decided to make the band<br />

a six-piece and kept Nelson on<br />

drums, vocals and percussion.”<br />

“I’ve lost several people to<br />

cancer in my family. Dave’s a<br />

fighter, and I respect him so<br />

much,” Cantillo, 67, of Roxbury<br />

said. “I was proud to come in<br />

and help out the band because<br />

these guys were like brothers.”<br />

Lost in Place now had two<br />

strong drummers, but as the<br />

years went on, the pace became<br />

6<br />

Story by MELISSA SUMMERS<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

difficult for Ward. “The last thing we wanted<br />

to do was ask him to leave the band,” Cantillo<br />

said. “It was important for us to retain the<br />

humanity of the band and put aside that maybe<br />

we were suffering in some other ways.”<br />

Ward gallantly retired from the band in<br />

2017. “So, we called on our original drummer,<br />

Ron, and he gladly rejoined Lost in Place after<br />

a 14-year vacation,” said Paul Wheeler with a<br />

chuckle.<br />

“I had been dabbling with the drums and<br />

got together with some musician neighbors<br />

every once in a while, but never joined another<br />

band,” said Scheurman, 58, of Garwood.<br />

Several metamorphoses later and the<br />

band now includes the Wheeler brothers,<br />

Scheurman, Cantillo and seasoned pros Russ<br />

LaBadie on lead guitar and vocals and Peter<br />

McCulloch on bass and vocals.<br />

Before joining the band, LaBadie had done<br />

a fair amount of writing and performing. After<br />

taking a break to help raise his family, he was<br />

ready to jump back in and play again. “I saw an<br />

advertisement for a band and these guys were<br />

the band. They needed a guitar player—so I<br />

auditioned.” Wheeler said they hired him on<br />

the spot.<br />

McCulloch was a songwriter and performer<br />

in a band in the ‘90s on an independent label<br />

that put out three records. “We had a pretty<br />

big following on Long Island<br />

and little by little, people lose<br />

Paul Wheeler and Russ LaBadie<br />

playing off each other at a show.<br />

Drew Wheeler on keyboard, Paul Wheeler on rhythm guitar, Ron Scheurman on drums,<br />

Peter McCulloch singing lead, Nelson Cantillo on percussion and Russ LaBadie on guitar.<br />

interest or grow up or whatever and you’re like,<br />

‘What am I going to do now?’ I always did<br />

music in some capacity, but this is the first time<br />

I got into cover bands,” he said.<br />

The band’s name is a play on words, based on<br />

the similarly sounding title of the 1960s show<br />

“Lost in Space,” said McCulloch, 57, of West<br />

Orange. “You kind of get lost in our genre of<br />

music,” he said. “Lost in Place specializes in<br />

‘60s and ‘70s stuff so the generations that grew<br />

up with that are getting older and older, but I<br />

feel like we’re preserving something that could<br />

get lost over time.”<br />

“One of the things that really helped the<br />

band have sustainability is that we’re catering<br />

to the baby boomers,” Cantillo added. “The<br />

beauty of this band is that we actually emulate<br />

the songs as close as possible to the original<br />

recordings. We focus on the harmonies—the<br />

details of the songs—and I think it shows.<br />

With multiple singers, we can tailor who<br />

might be best suited for that particular artist<br />

or genre and that’s helped the band continue to<br />

flourish. We listened to so many different types<br />

of music. We’ve really had an enormous palate<br />

to work with.”<br />

“Lost in Place draws a crowd of all ages and<br />

welcomes anyone who considers live music an<br />

important part of their lives,” even though they<br />

may not be able to get out as much as they’d<br />

Peter McCulloch on bass, right,<br />

with Drew and Paul Wheeler.


like, added LaBadie, 69, of West Caldwell.<br />

“Our generation at this point are mostly<br />

grandparents, they’ve got their free time, they<br />

can rekindle what they liked when they were<br />

more independent so many years back.”<br />

Their repertoire includes hits from Santana,<br />

the Rolling Stones, the Doors, David Bowie,<br />

Prince, Stevie Wonder, Genesis, Led Zeppelin,<br />

AC/DC, James Brown, the Doobie Brothers,<br />

Eric Clapton, Queen, Foreigner and the Eagles.<br />

“Every venue has its challenges, but if the<br />

crowd is enjoying themselves, you forget about<br />

all that stuff,” said LaBadie. “Having a good<br />

response…audience participation makes the<br />

band play better. And if we play better there<br />

is this constant feeding back and forth, this<br />

energy.”<br />

“We just have a bunch of great guys,” Paul<br />

Wheeler said. “We all like the same music. Our<br />

voices blend well together. That’s a big selling<br />

point of the band. We have six guys that can<br />

sing so we can really kill it on vocals.”<br />

The last few years were challenging for the<br />

band when the pandemic shuttered most bars<br />

and restaurants beginning March 16, 2020.<br />

“We were scheduled to play on the weekend<br />

[before],” Cantillo said. “We decided to cancel.<br />

Sunday night I came down with COVID. We<br />

lost a lot of work for months.”<br />

That summer they were able to keep a<br />

handful of outdoor gigs, held in parks or on<br />

fields. “People would put circles on the ground<br />

and keep their distance,” LaBadie said. “It was a<br />

way for everyone to keep their sanity, and we’re<br />

certainly grateful that those towns didn’t cancel<br />

those shows on us because that kept it alive.”<br />

They, like many musicians, found themselves<br />

seeking out other outlets for their music,<br />

including videos posted online. They saw what<br />

it meant to people who were stuck at home.<br />

“Try to imagine a world without music. It’s<br />

hard to even begin to think about it,” said<br />

LaBadie.<br />

Thankfully, this summer the requests are<br />

flying in, Lost in Place is back to stacking the<br />

calendar. The guys can often be found jamming<br />

with their fans late into the night. Not much<br />

has changed from their original vibe.<br />

“When we were a lot younger, it was a lot<br />

easier to get into some mischief,” LaBadie said.<br />

“Now you take a nap before you play the gig,<br />

and at the end of the gig if someone says, ‘Hey,<br />

you want to go to the diner?’ then, you really<br />

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“I am so thrilled that we have like-minded,<br />

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Although at times it’s been challenging,<br />

LaBadie still thinks it’s all worth it. “It’s about<br />

straddling loving what you do and getting just<br />

enough money to put up with it. It would be a<br />

lot easier if it were four of us but it just wouldn’t<br />

be the same band. I wouldn’t give this up.”<br />

Lost in Place can be seen regularly at Pavinci<br />

Italian Grill in Hopatcong, the Rockaway<br />

River Barn in Rockaway, 22 West Tap and Grill<br />

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Area Agencies Band Together<br />

For the Sake of the Lake<br />

Photo by KAREN FUCITO<br />

Concerted efforts by locals, organizations and<br />

government officials to tackle water safety,<br />

lake pollution and a historical restoration are all<br />

aimed at improving life at Lake Hopatcong.<br />

On June 24, a bright sunny day—a perfect<br />

lake day—officials gathered at Lee’s County<br />

Park Marina to address water safety, a yearround<br />

concern but one that takes on even more<br />

importance during the lake’s busiest time of year:<br />

summer.<br />

It marked a solemn day, the seventh anniversary<br />

of the boating death of Christopher D’Amico Jr.,<br />

10, of Mount Arlington.<br />

“It was a beautiful June day just like today. That<br />

day, there was not a cloud in the sky and in an<br />

instant, my family’s life was changed forever,” said<br />

Christopher D’Amico Sr., the boy’s father.<br />

The boy fell off the front of a pontoon boat and<br />

was hit by the propellers.<br />

“It’s called the tunnel of death. They fall off,<br />

the boat goes over them and there is no way to<br />

escape,” said Mount Arlington Mayor Michael<br />

Stanzilis, who hosted the event.<br />

Stanzilis said Christopher was one of two young<br />

people killed in recent years at the lake after falling<br />

off the front of pontoon boats.<br />

D’Amico said he was at the marina with his wife,<br />

Laura, and their two other children to remind<br />

boaters and parents to use common sense while<br />

on the water. He said his son’s death sparked the<br />

passage of Christopher’s Law, sponsored by state<br />

Sen. Anthony R. Bucco and signed into law in<br />

2016. The law requires people who rent pontoons<br />

or “party boats” to undergo a safety tutorial.<br />

But boating safety is just one aspect of summer<br />

safety, officials at the event said, drawing attention<br />

to the drownings the week before of two Kenvil<br />

brothers in a Mine Hill lake that brought to 14<br />

the number of pre-summer drowning deaths<br />

statewide.<br />

10<br />

Story by MICHAEL DAIGLE<br />

Christopher D’Amico Sr. speaks at a June press<br />

conference at Lee’s County Park Marina.<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

“About half of those [14] victims were under<br />

25 years old,” said Morris County Commissioner<br />

Director Tayfun Selen.<br />

“Saddest yet is that many of the deaths were<br />

preventable. Some did not know the waters or<br />

hazards where they had waded in, and others<br />

could not swim,” Selen said. “Most were just<br />

having fun and not paying attention. That also is<br />

the overwhelming cause of boating accidents.”<br />

To ensure those using the lake are doing so<br />

safely, the Morris County Sheriff’s Office has<br />

added additional officers on the lake this year. The<br />

bolstered presence is the result of the January 1<br />

merger of the county park police into the sheriff’s<br />

department, said Detective Denise Thornton.<br />

The move allows twice as many sheriff’s officers<br />

to be on the lake, operating two boats and a<br />

personal watercraft. The department has had<br />

officers on Lake Hopatcong since 2008, she said.<br />

Morris County Sheriff James Gannon said<br />

in a statement, “We work cooperatively and<br />

in partnership with police in Jefferson, Mt.<br />

Arlington, Roxbury, and Hopatcong, along<br />

with US Coast Guard Auxiliary to ensure a safe<br />

environment on and around Lake Hopatcong.<br />

We are there when people need help, but we are<br />

not a replacement for common sense, and that is<br />

what water safety is all about. It’s about common<br />

sense.”<br />

A Cleaner Lake<br />

Along with making the lake safer, efforts to<br />

make the lake cleaner have also been ongoing.<br />

Two main ingredients for a harmful algal bloom<br />

are high levels of phosphorus, which is plant food,<br />

and high temperatures. Both were present in<br />

2019. The result was a HAB-induced green lake<br />

that was unusable for months.<br />

A series of heavy rains were followed by days<br />

when the temperatures topped 90 degrees. Water<br />

temperature measured at mid-lake—between<br />

River Styx and Great Cove—hit 80.6 degrees in<br />

July of that year.<br />

The rain washed additional<br />

pollutants into the lake<br />

and the high temperatures<br />

fostered the rapid growth<br />

of cyanobacteria, which<br />

produced the HAB.<br />

The four lake towns are<br />

working under a 20-yearold<br />

agreement with the<br />

state Department of<br />

Environmental Protection to<br />

reduce the amount of total<br />

phosphorus by 7,253 pounds<br />

over time.<br />

Following the 2019 HAB—Lake Hopatcong<br />

was one of 70 New Jersey lakes affected—the<br />

search was on for new in-lake and off-lake<br />

programs that would more aggressively remove<br />

phosphorus from the lake and prevent it from<br />

being washed into the lake.<br />

In 2019, the Lake Hopatcong Commission was<br />

awarded a $500,000 grant as part of the DEP’s<br />

$13.5 million initiative to reduce and prevent<br />

future HABs. In addition to the state grant, the<br />

four lake towns and Morris and Sussex counties<br />

provided $330,000 in matching funds to support<br />

the pilot programs.<br />

A separate program in Hopatcong installed an<br />

aeration system in Crescent Cove, designed to<br />

stir up the torpid water of that closed-end cove<br />

and introduce more oxygen into the water. Along<br />

that same shoreline, 35 homes in Hopatcong were<br />

connected to public sewers.<br />

Also, Hopatcong State Park in Landing was<br />

connected to the Musconetcong Sewerage<br />

Authority system, the last of properties in Roxbury<br />

to be sewered.<br />

In subsequent state funding, the Lake<br />

Hopatcong Commission received $206,000<br />

to conduct a refined quantification of Lake<br />

Hopatcong’s internal phosphorus load, using<br />

a combination of existing water quality data,<br />

additional water quality sampling and modeling.<br />

The report will be completed by early 2023.<br />

The commission will also implement nonpoint<br />

source pollution reduction projects in the Lake<br />

Hopatcong watershed including the installation<br />

of floating wetland islands, shoreline stabilization<br />

with native plants, the replanting of stormwater<br />

basins and maintenance of existing filtering boxes<br />

to optimize stormwater filtration.<br />

Separately, the Morris County Park Commission<br />

received $495,000 to install several major green<br />

infrastructure features at Lee’s County Park<br />

Marina.<br />

A $54,000 grant will be used to improve<br />

stormwater management in Witten Park in<br />

Hopatcong.<br />

In June, nine floating wetland islands were<br />

installed in Ashley Cove and Landing Channel<br />

with help from staff and volunteers from the<br />

Lake Hopatcong Foundation, Lake Hopatcong<br />

Commission and Princeton Hydro, an<br />

environmental consultant for Lake Hopatcong,<br />

said Holly Odgers, a spokeswoman for the<br />

foundation, in a release.<br />

“These floating wetland islands are woven rafts<br />

of recycled polymer that float on the water’s surface<br />

and house a host of native wetland vegetation,”<br />

she said. “Since a pound of phosphorus can<br />

produce 1,100 lbs. of algae each year, that means<br />

each 250-square-feet of floating wetland islands<br />

can mitigate up to 11,000 pounds of algae.”<br />

New funding is being sought for projects in<br />

Roxbury, Mount Arlington and Jefferson, said<br />

Kyle Richter, the foundation’s executive director.


The first project would see Roxbury and Mount<br />

Arlington upgrade a detention basin and a “wet<br />

pond” at the intersection of Mount Arlington<br />

Boulevard and Singac Drive to control and clean<br />

runoff entering King Cove, Richter said.<br />

The second project would develop a rain garden<br />

at Jefferson’s Lakeside Recreation area on Swan<br />

Lane.<br />

In June, it was announced that Jefferson was in<br />

line to get $90 million in federal funds to build a<br />

sewer system along its lakefront. The funds passed<br />

the U.S. House of Representatives, but as of mid-<br />

July it still needed to pass the U.S. Senate and be<br />

signed into law by the president.<br />

On July 22, Rep. Tom Malinowski from the<br />

7th District led a roundtable hearing at the Lake<br />

Hopatcong Yacht Club on combating HABs and<br />

the economic impact the 2019 HAB had at lakearea<br />

businesses. Among those invited to testify<br />

were representatives from the commission and the<br />

foundation.<br />

“We’ve done some good work to bring the lake<br />

back from the crisis of 2019,” Malinowski said.<br />

“But given the growing threat of climate change,<br />

we will need a lot more federal support. I’m<br />

focused on delivering the funding to make that<br />

happen,” he said, referring to the recently passed<br />

bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.<br />

Large-scale programs and efforts to help<br />

combat HABs are being augmented by smaller,<br />

mostly volunteer-led efforts funded through the<br />

foundation and commission.<br />

Volunteers conduct water chestnut sweeps to<br />

remove the invasive plant, while others are trained<br />

to sample lake water for HAB-related conditions.<br />

The lake is also being monitored for microplastics.<br />

This past winter, water around the lake and feeder<br />

streams were tested for levels of salt, primarily<br />

from road runoff.<br />

Mechanical weed harvesting is the most longterm<br />

water quality program on the lake.<br />

The lake commission took over the harvesting<br />

program from the DEP this January.<br />

Colleen Lyons, administrator for the<br />

commission, said the crews have removed 460<br />

yards of wet weeds since entering the lake in May.<br />

She said the lake has been generally clear this<br />

season.<br />

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Sake of the Lake (cont’d)<br />

on the lake (the department had four but two<br />

were damaged and removed from service), had<br />

recorded six HAB incidents by the end of June, all<br />

at the lower end of the reporting scale.<br />

“We’d like to think that our efforts are having an<br />

impact,” Lyons said. “But it could be the weather.”<br />

So far this summer, the average daily high<br />

temperature has been 84 degrees and the water<br />

temperature has averaged 72 to 74 degrees, well<br />

below the July 2019 peak of 80.6 degrees.<br />

Fixing the Fountain<br />

Instead of removing something from the lake’s<br />

waters, one ongoing project is focused on keeping<br />

something in there. Efforts are underway to<br />

restore the 100-year-old fountain at Hopatcong<br />

State Park that has been neglected over time.<br />

While operating, the fountain was a cog in the<br />

machinery that controlled the lake level, while<br />

providing a visually delightful and cooling spray.<br />

To bring the fountain back to its original use<br />

required the dedication of many to perform<br />

research, both historic and on-site, and secure<br />

funds. With the fountain on a Morris County list<br />

of projects favored for new funding, completion<br />

could be imminent.<br />

Here’s a breakdown.<br />

The scientists studied it, probed it with cameras,<br />

wondered at the rusted metal grate that stopped<br />

debris from entering the narrow underground<br />

tunnel and even removed a car tire that managed<br />

to block the passage.<br />

The next step for the historic Hopatcong State<br />

Park fountain is restoration.<br />

In July, the Morris County Commissioners<br />

approved a grant of $204,800 through the Morris<br />

County Preservation Trust, 80 percent of the<br />

money needed to complete the restoration of<br />

the fountain. Marty Kane, president of the Lake<br />

Hopatcong Historical Museum, said the museum<br />

is in the process of raising $50,000 in matching<br />

funds. Work could begin in 2023, he said, with<br />

the goal of getting the fountain repaired and<br />

operational by June 2025, the 100th anniversary<br />

of its first day of operation.<br />

The project is being overseen by Connolly &<br />

Hickey Historical Architects of Cranford.<br />

The Lake Hopatcong Historical Museum<br />

kicked off this project in 2014 with a $45,381<br />

grant from Morris County to assess the fountain’s<br />

functionality.<br />

The second phase, done by Stevens Institute<br />

of Technology students (including Hopatcong’s<br />

Justin McCarthy) and their instructors, was<br />

undertaken to determine the physical condition<br />

of the gate, the tunnel and the fountain. The work<br />

was funded by a second Morris County grant of<br />

$36,800.<br />

Kane said while it was feared the concrete<br />

tunnel was in poor condition, the students found<br />

it to be well preserved. Two small holes created in<br />

1925 to allow the insertion of gauges will need<br />

to be filled, he said. Most importantly, the tunnel<br />

will not have to be relined, reducing the cost of<br />

repairs, he said.<br />

The grate at the entry of the tunnel that captures<br />

debris will be replaced, and the concrete fountain<br />

area refurbished and fenced.<br />

The fountainhead will need extensive repairs,<br />

Kane said.<br />

In writing about the fountain’s history, Kane<br />

said it was not erected just for aesthetics, but to<br />

solve a long-standing lake issue: the management<br />

of the lake’s depth.<br />

The fountain was designed by Cornelius C.<br />

Vermeule, the engineer charged in 1922 with<br />

dismantling the Morris Canal. He called for a 24-<br />

inch pipe from the lake and a 40-foot basin to<br />

contain the fountain. Estimating a drawdown of<br />

6 inches, the system was designed to control the<br />

depth of the lake at the new Landing dam and to<br />

generate a 12-foot spray from the fountain, Kane<br />

wrote.<br />

The Stevens students found a potential problem<br />

with the water gauge that measures the outflow<br />

of the lake to the Musconetcong River, Kane<br />

said. They determined the gauge was allowing 10<br />

percent too much water to drain from the lake.<br />

He said the issue was reported to the U.S.<br />

Geological Survey that controls the gauge and<br />

the outflow, but the agency disputed the students’<br />

finding, Kane said.<br />

The USGS did not reply by mid-July to a<br />

question about the issue.<br />

Moving Forward<br />

There is still plenty of work to be done on<br />

and around the lake and a lot of projects haven’t<br />

started yet, said Lyons. The lake groups and<br />

municipalities continue to advocate, seeking<br />

funding for large-scale projects like sewers,<br />

stormwater infrastructure upgrades, dredging and<br />

aeration, she said.<br />

There are also opportunities for property<br />

owners to influence water quality by considering<br />

their impervious surface coverage and managing<br />

resulting stormwater runoff, said Lyons.<br />

Adding shoreline buffers and rain gardens,<br />

reducing the use of fertilizers, picking up after<br />

pets, avoiding the feeding of waterfowl and<br />

properly managing one’s septic are ways each<br />

property owner in the watershed can make an<br />

impact, she said.<br />

“Good water quality is a team effort that can<br />

be achieved incrementally over time. We’ve made<br />

some progress, but we all have to keep pulling<br />

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A Mountain Bike Revolution Just for Kids<br />

Story by ELLEN WIKLOWE<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

It’s the type of team where high spirits are<br />

of equal or greater importance than high<br />

gears and the kickstand serves as a metaphor for<br />

a kick-start.<br />

“It’s about getting kids to ride bikes,” said<br />

Jesse Epstein, founder of the Revolutions<br />

Mountain Bike Club.<br />

The brainchild of Epstein, Revolutions<br />

immerses Morris County area students in<br />

grades six through 12 in the mountain biking<br />

experience “regardless of skill,” Epstein said.<br />

“It’s getting them away from the TV and video<br />

games and internet.”<br />

The team’s name is a play on Morristown’s<br />

Revolutionary War history as well as the<br />

revolutions made by bike wheels in motion.<br />

The club is affiliated with the National<br />

Interscholastic Cycling Association, a nonprofit<br />

that develops interscholastic mountain biking<br />

programs for student-athletes across the U.S.<br />

Founded in 2009, NICA currently boasts 31<br />

leagues in 30 different states including New<br />

Jersey, where it is known as the New Jersey<br />

Interscholastic Cycling League or NJICL.<br />

As the owner and operator of his late father’s<br />

business, Marty’s Reliable Cycle, with locations<br />

in Morris County and Hackettstown, Epstein<br />

credits his dad (Marty) for helping bring NICA<br />

to New Jersey. “He really got the ball rolling,”<br />

he said.<br />

NJICL currently has 26 leagues across the<br />

state.<br />

Upon its inception in 2016, Revolutions had<br />

a membership of 50 that was split into two<br />

teams. The club’s current membership holds<br />

steady at 39 and is comprised of one co-ed<br />

team, but it needs more female cyclists.<br />

“There’s a 20 percent girl-to-boy ratio,”<br />

Epstein said. “We want to make every effort to<br />

recruit girls.”<br />

Enter Girls Riding Together, a.k.a. G.Ri.T.,<br />

NICA’s effort to recruit and retain more girls<br />

and female coaches. No stranger to biking—<br />

or the Olympics—new Morristown resident<br />

Emma White recently became a coach with<br />

Revolutions to help inspire and recruit girls.<br />

An elite Women’s National team member,<br />

White and her team brought home the bronze<br />

in track cycling during the Tokyo 2020<br />

Olympics.<br />

“After going to a couple of meetings I knew<br />

that I wanted to get involved,” she said. “I feel<br />

very strongly about giving back to the sport that<br />

gave me so much as a kid and want to provide<br />

opportunity for other kids growing up in the<br />

sport of cycling.”<br />

Revolutions’ season runs from October<br />

through June and involves one weekend ride<br />

during the winter before ramping up to two<br />

weekday-evening practices and a weekend<br />

practice during the spring. Racing begins in<br />

April and concludes by June.<br />

The club practices primarily at Lewis Morris<br />

Park in Morris Township and Dickerson Mine<br />

Preserve in Mine Hill. It also frequents other<br />

Morris County area parks such as Mahlon<br />

Dickerson Reservation in Jefferson; the<br />

Randolph trail system; and Tourne County<br />

Park in Boonton.<br />

The season consists of five races that take<br />

place throughout New Jersey, including Chester<br />

and Morristown in Morris County, Franklin<br />

Township in Somerset County, Gloucester<br />

Township in Camden County and Alloway<br />

Township in Salem County.<br />

Come race day, the team is divided into sixth<br />

through ninth graders and qualifying junior<br />

and senior varsity categories for 10th through<br />

12th graders, Epstein said.<br />

All age groups race the same 2 ½ - 3 milecourse,<br />

except the sixth through ninth graders<br />

complete two laps while the high schoolers may<br />

complete three to five laps.<br />

“It’s an organized production,” Epstein said,<br />

referring to race weekends. “Volunteers set up<br />

the course and each team sets up its own tent.<br />

There’s a lot of camaraderie.”<br />

During the race, volunteers serve as roving<br />

course marshals keeping a watchful eye out for<br />

issues and overall safety.<br />

“Some kids race, and others see it as just a<br />

bike ride,” Epstein said. “There are both sides.”<br />

For the non-competitive biker, the season<br />

incorporates team-building activities such<br />

as adventure days, fun rides, training rides,<br />

scavenger hunts and a bike clinic.<br />

So, how does one get a feel for the wheels?<br />

The mountain bike curious can take a test<br />

drive or “try your ride” with the team and is<br />

welcome to register as a member thereafter.<br />

Membership costs $300 annually and covers<br />

the entire season, including races and activities.<br />

“It is important to know that as part of<br />

our commitment to remove barriers to<br />

participation, scholarships are available to cover<br />

the cost of registration,” said Revolutions head<br />

coach Jeremy Klopper.<br />

According to Epstein, the club attracts two<br />

types of kids: “either their parents are riders or<br />

kids who are looking for an alternative type of<br />

sport. That is one of the reasons this club exists.”<br />

The other reason the club exists is the spirited<br />

volunteers who dedicate their time to coaching,<br />

activities and races. There are currently 19<br />

registered coaches in Revolutions.<br />

Klopper, of Randolph, is one of them.<br />

A patron of Marty’s Reliable Cycle, Klopper<br />

only met Epstein when he and his son, Liam,<br />

joined the club during its inaugural year in<br />

2016.<br />

Klopper witnessed a transformation in Liam’s<br />

self-esteem that was indicative of one of the<br />

club’s purposes.<br />

Devon Bello<br />

weaves through<br />

the woods<br />

during a June<br />

race.<br />

The start of a girls middle<br />

school race at Six Mile Run<br />

State Park in Somerset.<br />

14<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong>


“He gained much more confidence<br />

in his overall athletic ability,” he said.<br />

“I also think that the exposure to other<br />

student-athletes in the club also made<br />

him more comfortable and gave him<br />

more confidence in social settings.” That<br />

confidence led to his son joining the<br />

cross-country team in his junior year,<br />

and he is also working at Marty’s like<br />

other riders on the team.<br />

Devon Bello, 13, of Roxbury also<br />

gained confidence after joining the club.<br />

“He did track at school and tried all<br />

the other sports but wasn’t into any of<br />

them,” said his father, Nate Bello, who<br />

also participates as a volunteer parent coach.<br />

“But biking? He seems to like it a lot.”<br />

The father and son joined last year after the<br />

club resumed in 2021 following the height of<br />

the pandemic.<br />

To date, Devon has competed in three of the<br />

five races, placed “neither first nor last, and was<br />

in it more for the fun,” Bello said.<br />

“Of course, in his mind he wants to be<br />

number one,” he said.<br />

Competitive edge aside and perhaps most<br />

importantly, Bello noticed a positive social<br />

change in his son.<br />

“He’s also become more open and friendly<br />

with everyone.”<br />

As a volunteer parent and level 1 coach, Bello<br />

rides with the group in the back and plays<br />

mostly a safekeeping role. Level 1 coaches are<br />

required to submit to background checks, watch<br />

a webinar and undergo concussion training,<br />

“It’s a different kind of coaching because you<br />

are always there with them,” he said.<br />

Meanwhile, 13-year-old Cadence Phelan of<br />

Landing represents the female counterpart<br />

to the team. She and her father, Doug<br />

Pelan, came on board this year by way of<br />

Phelan’s friendship with Epstein.<br />

Jeremy Klopper, right, instructs members of the Revolutions<br />

during an early spring ride at Dickerson Mine Preserve.<br />

“When my daughter was first interested she<br />

was too young, and as soon as she was of<br />

age, she loved it ever since,” said Pelan.<br />

Cadence has taken to the constant change of<br />

scenery that comes from practicing in different<br />

locations.<br />

“One of the best things about this that<br />

separates mountain biking from other sports<br />

is constantly exploring different trails and<br />

locations, which is something pretty unique,”<br />

she said. “Even with other sports, when they<br />

travel it’s usually for games and<br />

tournaments but with Revolutions it’s<br />

different for pretty much every practice.”<br />

She also appreciates the individualized<br />

attention she receives when she finds herself<br />

struggling with skills and bike handling.<br />

According to Pelan, mountain biking has<br />

actually taken precedence over Cadence’s other<br />

activities, including swimming and theatre.<br />

A lifelong avid mountain biker himself, he is<br />

enjoying watching his daughter develop a twowheeled<br />

passion of her own.<br />

“There’s been this spark in her,” Pelan said.<br />

“On race day she does very well. She gets faster<br />

and faster and to see her develop that sense of<br />

urgency is neat to watch.”<br />

Cadence Pelan makes the last turn before<br />

the finish line at a race in June.<br />

On race day, Klopper, right,<br />

helps fine-tune a bike.<br />

Like her teammates, Cadence has benefited<br />

from the social aspects of the club and<br />

recruited one of her friends to join, Pelan said.<br />

“The two of them have come leaps and bounds<br />

together.”<br />

He also applauds Emma White for<br />

having had a positive impact. “She is so<br />

down-to-earth,” he said. “She’s just part of the<br />

team and has been a really good influence.”<br />

Ready to roll? To learn more about<br />

Revolutions go to: https://revolutionsmtb.com.<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 15


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16<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong>


“MR. JOE” BIGLIN<br />

LOCAL<br />

VOICES<br />

Joe Biglin, 66, was playing in a rock band in the early 1980s when his agent called and asked if he knew any Irish music. He<br />

didn’t, but seeing as the gig paid $400, he said he would learn 20 songs from listening to his mother’s Irish records. His agent<br />

then mentioned the gig paid $800 if the performer was from Ireland. “In my grandfather’s best Irish brogue, I said, ‘Well, tell<br />

them I’m from Ireland, then.’” He got the $800. In 1983, Biglin founded The Irish Harpers, a six-member band that now includes<br />

his son, Joe, and several other local musicians.<br />

WHERE DO YOU LIVE AND WHO MAKES UP YOUR FAMILY?<br />

I live on Lake Hopatcong in Jefferson. My family includes my son Joe, my daughter Erin, her<br />

husband Jeff, and a wonderful granddaughter Riley.<br />

WHAT WAS YOUR FULL-TIME PROFESSION?<br />

I was a consultant for the financial industry and designed trading systems.<br />

DESCRIBE THE TYPE OF MUSIC YOU TYPICALLY PLAY IN PUBLIC AND WITH WHOM?<br />

Our music style has been described as a “Celtic jam band.” We play fun time Irish tunes,<br />

classic rock, old school country and all varieties of dance music. I also play solo gigs where I<br />

am known as The Mr. Joe Show, and I’m in various other band configurations like The Biglin<br />

Gang. I am the lead singer and rhythm guitarist in The Irish Harpers.<br />

HOW OFTEN ARE YOU PERFORMING?<br />

The band plays once or twice a month during the summers with an extremely busy<br />

schedule in March. We mainly play bars and clubs in Northern New Jersey, and many civic<br />

organizations, bagpipe clubs and Irish associations hire us for fundraisers, dances and parties.<br />

WHAT OR WHO MADE YOU WANT TO BECOME A MUSICIAN? WHO HAS BEEN<br />

YOUR BIGGEST MUSICAL INFLUENCE IN LIFE AND WHY?<br />

In the early 1960s, the Beatles were coming on the scene just as I, and every other<br />

kid in America, was being introduced to rock and roll. Their unique harmonies and<br />

electric guitars drew me in. Soon after that, bands like the Grateful Dead and Pink<br />

Floyd brought a completely new feel to the music scene. Perhaps my greatest<br />

musical influence was The Doors. Jim Morrison was a magical frontman, backed by<br />

some of the finest musicians of the time. Their style and sound are probably the<br />

biggest influence on my original recordings.<br />

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT PLAYING MUSIC?<br />

For me, it’s all about the audience. As a frontman, I love to get the party started<br />

and get our followers fired up. I love the camaraderie of the band. After 40 years,<br />

we’ve had some great times and have some strange stories.<br />

BESIDES MUSIC, DO YOU HAVE ANY OTHER HOBBIES?<br />

I love to travel and have been to all 50 states and to over 20 foreign<br />

countries. I am on the board of directors of the Cedar Grove Elks, I play<br />

softball for the Sussex Blue Jays, I love camping and attend numerous<br />

music festivals up and down the East Coast. Closer to home, I am an<br />

active member of Our Lady Star of the Sea parish, and I volunteer on<br />

the Floating Classroom run by The Lake Hopatcong Foundation.<br />

WHAT’S THE BEST PIECE OF ADVICE ANYONE HAS EVER<br />

GIVEN YOU IN YOUR PURSUIT OF MUSIC?<br />

During the late ‘80s and ‘90s, I worked backstage security<br />

at the Capital Theatre in Passaic, Giants Stadium in East<br />

Rutherford and The Ritz in Elizabeth when many of my<br />

favorite bands performed. One evening I was talking with<br />

Roy Clark in his dressing room. He said: “There is no such<br />

thing as being in the right place at the right time. You need to<br />

be in the right place always and eventually, your right time will<br />

come.”<br />

IS THERE SOMETHING MOST PEOPLE WOULD BE<br />

SURPRISED TO LEARN ABOUT YOU?<br />

In the 1990s I won a variety of radio contests. I wrote the winning<br />

jingle for WPLJ’s “The Big Show with Scott & Todd” morning program.<br />

I was selected to be WDHA’s on-location reporter and broadcast<br />

live from Woodstock ’94. The Irish band The Corrs selected my 3-D art<br />

project for the Green Thing contest, which saw me have dinner in Ireland in<br />

a castle with George Killian of Killian’s Irish Red beer.<br />

local involved unique<br />

I AM I AM I AM<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 17


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LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong>


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lakehopatcongnews.com 19


The theme to “Barney Miller” resonated<br />

with Randy Artiglere perhaps even more<br />

than the 1970s TV show itself. The 54-yearold<br />

Jefferson musician gives partial credit to the<br />

theme song for awakening his interest in the<br />

bass.<br />

The simplicity of mastering just four strings<br />

struck a chord as well.<br />

However, Artiglere never would have imagined<br />

his self-taught instrument of choice would wind<br />

up as his ticket to perform as a bass player across<br />

the country in Tusk, a Fleetwood Mac tribute<br />

band.<br />

But first there was the trumpet.<br />

“I actually started playing trumpet,” he<br />

recalled about the first instrument he learned to<br />

play. “I liked it because it looked easy with three<br />

buttons.”<br />

There might be a less-is-more pattern here<br />

with buttons and strings.<br />

Born and raised in Madison, Artiglere started<br />

with the trumpet in elementary school and<br />

stayed with it through high school. He remains<br />

true to the trumpet by participating in Taps<br />

Across America every Memorial Day.<br />

“I love music. I was drawn to it. Music<br />

programs excited me when I started,” he said. “It<br />

shaped my social life.”<br />

He gravitated toward the bass when he was 17,<br />

teaching himself one string and note at a time.<br />

After high school, Artiglere attended then<br />

Trenton State College and majored in math as it<br />

came as naturally to him as music.<br />

20<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

He’s All<br />

About<br />

That Bass<br />

Story by ELLEN WILKOWE<br />

Photos by Karen Fucito<br />

“I majored in math and<br />

knew there would be a<br />

job waiting for me,” said<br />

Artiglere, who currently<br />

works remotely in the<br />

statistics department<br />

of a pharmaceutical<br />

development company.<br />

“At age 31, I was in<br />

cubicle land as a statistic<br />

programmer,” he said. The<br />

bass, however, remained<br />

his constant, and he took<br />

it to the next level by<br />

enlisting professional bass<br />

educator, composer and<br />

author Patrick Pfeiffer for<br />

lessons.<br />

“There was a shift, and<br />

everything accelerated,”<br />

Artiglere said. “My ears<br />

opened up. My technique<br />

improved.”<br />

In developing his<br />

burgeoning bass career,<br />

he immersed himself in<br />

the independent music<br />

scene, leaving no genres<br />

untuned.<br />

Venturing into the gospel circuit, Artiglere<br />

auditioned for the Harlem Gospel Choir and<br />

made the cut. He was whisked overseas—electric<br />

bass in hand—to Italy in 2003, performing all<br />

over the country, including at the esteemed<br />

Vatican Christmas concert.<br />

“Perhaps today’s Pope was possibly in<br />

attendance at that time,” he said.<br />

He would return to Italy with the Harlem<br />

Gospel Choir in 2004, this time affording him<br />

a week in Japan.<br />

Back home, he continued to work and tour<br />

with the choir, performing two Sundays a month<br />

during the gospel brunch at B.B. King’s Blues<br />

Club.<br />

Artiglere, who lives in Lake Shawnee with his<br />

wife, Christy Johnston-Artiglere, also spent time<br />

playing in his long-running cover band, Scoot<br />

on Down, which plays a mix of “party favorites<br />

from the ‘70s and ‘80s,” he said.<br />

He refers to Scoot, which formed in 1999,<br />

as stablizing as he juggled his work with<br />

independent bands.<br />

“I was always involved in some sort of original<br />

band or artist with the hopes and dreams of<br />

‘making it’ since my early 20s,” he said, adding<br />

that Scoot is still a popular local band but “I had<br />

to bow out in 2017 as Tusk was getting busier.”<br />

In again switching genres—as well as basses—<br />

he joined the Jefferson Township Jazz Band to<br />

play upright bass about five years ago. Here, he<br />

learned how to read the notes charted in the bass<br />

clef as opposed to mastering the treble clef while<br />

Randy Artiglere hams it up onstage at a<br />

concert in New Hope, Pennsylvania.<br />

playing trumpet.<br />

In seizing other opportunities to play the<br />

upright bass and read charts, Artiglere also<br />

occasionally performs with the nine-piece swing<br />

band Groovin’ Easy and Byrdgrass, a bluegrassstyle<br />

original band fronted and named for local<br />

singer-songwriter Mary Hubley, who goes by<br />

Maribyrd.<br />

In toggling between basses—an electric and<br />

upright—Artiglere chooses to stand behind the<br />

music instead of writing it. “I just never really<br />

felt like I had something to say,” he said.<br />

Instead, he leaves the lyrical pursuits to the<br />

artists and bands that cover them, such as Tusk.<br />

His transition into Tusk happened when a<br />

friend who worked at The Stanhope House<br />

restaurant and music venue introduced Artiglere<br />

to three fellow independent musicians, who are<br />

now the front people for Tusk: vocalist Kathy<br />

Phillips, keyboardist/vocalist Kim Williams<br />

and guitarist/vocalist Scott McDonald. The<br />

personalities gelled and the foundation for Tusk<br />

was set. Drummer Tom Nelson rounds out the<br />

band.<br />

Despite being unfamiliar with Fleetwood Mac<br />

songs, never mind attending a concert, the idea<br />

of joining Tusk appealed to Artiglere.<br />

“I said it sounds fun,” he said. “There were not<br />

too many tributes in 2008.”<br />

That was 14 years ago, and the band now<br />

performs 100 shows annually in venues located<br />

“mostly east of the Mississippi,” he said. One<br />

such venue was The Note at New Hope Winery<br />

in New Hope, Pennsylvania, where Tusk recently<br />

performed.<br />

An intimate indoor venue in Bucks County,<br />

the site seats an audience of 250. Seating choices<br />

run the gamut from stadium and theater seats to<br />

cafe tables to wooden plank tables.<br />

On a recent Friday in mid-July, The Note<br />

was filled to capacity as fans took their seats for<br />

their Fleetwood Mac fix. Many women took<br />

the opportunity to sport summer dresses, or<br />

in several cases, impersonate Stevie Nicks by<br />

teasing their tresses while waxing nostalgic for<br />

the decade of high hair, a.k.a. the1980s.<br />

Shortly after 8 p.m. Tusk kicked off the concert<br />

with “The Chain,” complete with song-themed<br />

video compilations on two screens flanking the<br />

stage.<br />

Hit after hit followed, including the band’s<br />

eponymous “Tusk.”<br />

“There is no shortage of hits,” Artiglere said.<br />

“We actually can’t get to them all.”<br />

In a complete impersonation of Stevie Nicks,<br />

lead singer and Sparta resident Phillips not only<br />

hit all the notes but also nailed the fashion, which<br />

included flowing shawls and costume changes.<br />

There were murmurs among the audience that<br />

Phillips, with her long flowing, reddish blond<br />

hair, could pass as Nicks’ double.<br />

Coincidental looks aside, it is the music and


personality that distinguish a<br />

Tusk show from the handful<br />

of competition.<br />

“Our show is a big deal,”<br />

Artiglere said. “It’s not just<br />

playing songs. It’s developing<br />

things to make the show<br />

unique.”<br />

Unique is an understatement<br />

when it comes to Artiglere’s<br />

bass-driven rendition of<br />

“Rapper’s Delight,” which<br />

incorporates Stevie Nicks’<br />

solo hit with Tom Petty, “Stop Draggin’ My<br />

Heart Around,” and “Bella Donna,” off her<br />

same-named debut solo album in 1981.<br />

After closing with a charismatic “Don’t Stop,”<br />

the show, as in the after show, continued as fans<br />

lined up to purchase swag during the band’s cozy<br />

meet and greet outside.<br />

Leigh Tonelli of Newton, Pennsylvania, who<br />

had teased her hair like Nicks’ for the occasion,<br />

was one such fan.<br />

“This was the best birthday present ever,” she<br />

said. Her husband, Chris Tonelli, had surprised<br />

her with tickets and Tusk met her expectations<br />

and more.<br />

“They were great,” she said. “Much more than<br />

I expected.”<br />

While fans tend to trend toward the middleaged,<br />

Artiglere has taken note of a younger<br />

Tusk at The Note at New Hope Winery.<br />

generation in their 20s and 30s as<br />

well as teens who were introduced to<br />

the music by their, well, middle-aged<br />

parents.<br />

That was the case for sisters<br />

Rachel and Maggie Phillips of Hamilton who<br />

accompanied their mom, Nancy Phillips, to<br />

the show. The 16- and 14-year-old discovered<br />

Fleetwood Mac during the height of the<br />

pandemic on Spotify. Favorite song? Both agreed<br />

on “Rhiannon.”<br />

After another show at The Note, Tusk headed<br />

back on the road with stops at the Freeman<br />

Arts Pavilion in Delaware, the Sunset Concert<br />

Series in Connecticut and the Garrett County<br />

Agriculture Fair in Maryland.<br />

The band traverses the country in a van with<br />

tour manager Paul Palazzi of Lake Hopatcong and<br />

Artiglere and lead singer<br />

Kathy Phillips on stage.<br />

sound producer Ralph Grasso of Bridgewater.<br />

Life on the road has agreed with Artiglere, and<br />

he balances his desk job working in the van and<br />

dressing rooms with ease.<br />

The camaraderie among his bandmates and his<br />

van mates makes it all that much easier.<br />

“We’re like a family,” he said. “We’re quite the<br />

unit.”<br />

More like rock solid unit. While band<br />

members tend to come and go, Tusk boasts all of<br />

its original members since its inception.<br />

“I’ve been in so many bands and have been<br />

very fortunate,” Artiglere said.<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 21


22<br />

A 1940 Ford owned by Bob Sellitto gets a safety<br />

inspection at this year’s Father’s Day Rod Run.<br />

Classic Connections<br />

Story by ELLEN WILKOWE<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

The parking lot outside of the former<br />

Bowtie Cinema at the Roxbury Mall<br />

resembled a tailgate party in full swing, except<br />

there was no big game or concert to follow the<br />

hype.<br />

In this case, the tailgate was the show and the<br />

classic cars on hand with their proud owners<br />

were the performers.<br />

Anthony Vassallo of Mount Arlington could<br />

vouch for that.<br />

“The car is the show, not me,” he said,<br />

referring to his 1960 Chevy Impala. “I happen<br />

to be the owner and operator of the car. The car<br />

has its own personality.”<br />

There were plenty of personalities on wheels<br />

and on foot, courtesy of the North Jersey Street<br />

Rod Association, of which Vassallo is a member.<br />

June 7 was the club’s first cruise night of the<br />

season, which will run every Tuesday (weather<br />

permitting) through September 13. The music<br />

and camaraderie just come with the cruise night<br />

territory and on this recent Tuesday evening, a<br />

picturesque Jersey summer sky just added to the<br />

ambiance.<br />

Spirits and gears were high as long-time<br />

club members and passersby gathered to talk<br />

shop and bring each other up to speed on their<br />

personal lives.<br />

The club informally rolled onto the scene in<br />

the ‘60s, the result of a group of friends with<br />

a fervor for hot rods. The club established its<br />

name in 1969 and was formally incorporated as<br />

a nonprofit in 1975 “to promote the interests<br />

of the members as owners of street rods and to<br />

provide social occasions and events where the<br />

common interests of the members could be<br />

enjoyed together,” as per the group’s website.<br />

The club currently boasts 44 members, with<br />

membership ranging from 25 to 75 over the<br />

years.<br />

Club historian and member Roland Utter of<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

Roxbury is a cruise<br />

night regular since<br />

joining the club<br />

in 1987. He had<br />

his 1923 T-bucket<br />

street rod in tow,<br />

which is in need of<br />

TLC.<br />

“That was a fiveyear<br />

project within<br />

the club to build<br />

it,” he said. “And we’ve used it for parades.”<br />

Utter’s interest in street rods, specifically the<br />

rebuilding of them, began in Roxbury High<br />

School and never really stopped.<br />

He went on to become a mechanic and found<br />

a labor of love by working on Oldsmobiles and<br />

Buicks, which he identifies as his dream cars.<br />

For now, he is restoring a 1985 Avanti. It<br />

is number 42 of 100 made that year. Utter<br />

distinguishes himself as more of a builder than<br />

a buyer.<br />

“There are a lot of people who are buyers and<br />

not that many builders,” he said. “People who<br />

don’t have the ability or knowledge to restore<br />

will buy them. But I like to build things and<br />

restore them. I’m one of a few of them left.”<br />

The club appeals to him for the fellowship<br />

among the members as well as the charitable<br />

aspects. The organization operates under two<br />

titles: the North Jersey Street Rod Association<br />

and the North Jersey Street Rod Charities<br />

Group, which is registered in New Jersey, Utter<br />

said. The charitable arm reports once a year<br />

to Trenton and is also licensed for raffles and<br />

50/50s.<br />

“We’ve always been supportive of a child<br />

or family that needs money [due to medical<br />

expenses] that insurance companies won’t<br />

cover,” he said. “We keep nothing.”<br />

After a two-year pandemic hiatus, the Father’s<br />

Day Rod Run—the club’s largest fundraiser—<br />

returned to Horseshoe Lake Park in Succasunna<br />

to record-breaking crowds and cash.<br />

Tom Harvey with his 1972 Chevy Nova.<br />

photo courtesy of Tom Harvey<br />

Hundreds of classic cars turned out for this year’s<br />

Father’s Day Rod Run at Horseshoe Lake Park.<br />

“It was one of the best shows we ever had,” said<br />

Tom Harvey, the club’s president. “We had 325<br />

show cars,1,500 spectators and raised $22,552.”<br />

The fundraiser’s recipient, 3-year-old Jonas<br />

Carvalho and his family were on hand and Jonas<br />

even took to the stage, Harvey said. Jonas was<br />

diagnosed with Wilms tumor, a type of childhood<br />

cancer.<br />

The Carvalhos were presented with a check in<br />

a separate ice cream social two weeks after the<br />

fundraiser.<br />

Having lost a child to cancer 40 years ago, Harvey<br />

keeps the club’s cause close to his heart.<br />

He became a club member 10 years ago, but his<br />

drive for muscle cars and street rods manifested in<br />

his youth. “I used to race a 1955 Chevy Nomad<br />

Wagon around a quarter mile track,” he said.<br />

He parked his passion temporarily when he<br />

started a family and a plumbing business. After<br />

seeing his four kids into adulthood, he reconnected<br />

with his love of cars through the club and has held<br />

the office of club president for the last eight years.<br />

“We’re like one big family,” he said of the club.<br />

Jill Dorr of Wharton can attest to that.<br />

Since joining the club three years ago, she has<br />

come to view the members as an extension of her<br />

father, who passed away in 2018.<br />

“It was like a room full of people with the same<br />

sense of humor as my father,” she said, referring<br />

to her first meeting. “There were jokes all around.”<br />

Born into classic car culture, Dorr recalls<br />

a childhood full of weekend car shows and<br />

motorcycle rides. She also remembers her father


Roland Utter works on the engine of his 1985 Avanti.<br />

Upper left: Jill Dorr strikes a pose<br />

next to her 1955 Chevy Handyman.<br />

This photo: Dorr carefully paints a<br />

pinstripe on a hot rod.<br />

photos courtesy of Jill Dorr<br />

Anthony Vassallo, center, gives a visitor a look under the hood<br />

of his 1960 Chevy Impala at a recent cruise night in Roxbury.<br />

owning a minimum of eight cars or trucks at<br />

a time, including a 1931 ambulance from the<br />

original Annie movie.<br />

Such childhood automotive adventures gave rise<br />

to an indelible father-daughter bond as well as an<br />

inevitable love of cars.<br />

“When I was able to read, he was restoring a<br />

1937 Chevy pickup for me,” she said. “I would use<br />

the steering wheel as a podium and read him my<br />

book as he was restoring my truck.”<br />

Their car bond continued into Dorr’s adulthood.<br />

“He became my best friend,” she said. “We still<br />

went to all the shows.”<br />

Dorr joined the club after purchasing a hard-tofind<br />

‘55 Chevy Handyman.<br />

“I felt right at home,” she said. “I’m the second<br />

woman member and these men were much older<br />

than me, but I knew this club would take me under<br />

their wing. This club is the right fit for me.”<br />

Since then, she has taken on the role of club<br />

secretary. She also became the club’s unofficial<br />

pinstriper—with the name Rogue—a hobby she<br />

picked up during the height of the pandemic.<br />

Dorr knows that owning a Chevy from 1955<br />

is somewhat of a coup. “Any Chevys from 1955<br />

are highly sought-after vehicles that when restored<br />

well are going for hundreds of thousands of dollars<br />

at big auctions,” she said. Her car had previously<br />

been restored and Dorr has lovingly maintained<br />

its appearance over the years—even keeping the<br />

color robin’s egg blue, though not her favorite.<br />

There have been a few mechanical improvements,<br />

including adding better brakes, making the car safe<br />

Utter in his garage working on<br />

a custom hydraulic shock.<br />

to drive, she said. She is also the proud owner<br />

of the 1937 Chevy pickup her father restored<br />

for her.<br />

Meanwhile, her husband owns a few classics<br />

of his own, including a1977 Cadillac hearse, a<br />

1932 Ford truck and a 1930 Ford rat rod.<br />

Like father, like daughter Dorr also takes her<br />

children to weekend car shows.<br />

“They love the car shows and get very excited<br />

about going,” she said. “I hope to continue that<br />

legacy.”<br />

Vassallo of Mount Arlington also came into<br />

the classic car scene through his father.<br />

“I was brought up into the car hobby,” he<br />

said. “My dad was very much into cars when<br />

he was younger, and it just became part of my<br />

being.”<br />

While he is not married to one make or<br />

model, he prefers cars from the 1950s through<br />

the 1970s mostly for their “unique style, unique<br />

finish, paint jobs, chrome and stainless steel.<br />

“Modern-day cars all look the same,” he said,<br />

admitting to driving a Nissan Murano SUV,<br />

which he uses for the day-to-day.<br />

This is definitely not the case with his headturning<br />

Chevy Impala.<br />

At nearly 18 feet long, the Impala attracts<br />

attention both on and off the road.<br />

“As you’re cruising down the road, I turn my<br />

head and people have their cameras out or are<br />

videotaping and we just laugh,” he said. “It’s just<br />

funny because you can’t help but<br />

be noticed in a car like that.”<br />

In staying loyal to American<br />

classics, he also owns three Ford<br />

Model As. He stores his cars in<br />

his four-car garage and services<br />

them regularly for general<br />

maintenance. “I do most of the<br />

work myself,” he said. “These cars are easy to get<br />

the parts for.”<br />

The availability of parts and ease of<br />

maintenance and repair are reasons he gravitates<br />

toward the classics. The historical aspect and<br />

aesthetics go without saying.<br />

“It’s nice to see a rolling piece of art down the<br />

highway,” he said. “It brings smiles to everyone.”<br />

A member of multiple car clubs, including a<br />

Model A club in Wayne, Vassallo is drawn to<br />

the general car community for its friendliness,<br />

charitable acts and the willingness to always<br />

lend a hand.<br />

“Some of the best people I ever met in my<br />

life were at car clubs,” he said. “It’s a wonderful<br />

thing.”<br />

Despite these connections, Vassallo worries<br />

the car community is losing more people than<br />

it is gaining.<br />

“The old-timers that I look up to are getting<br />

very old,” he said. “We see more people dying<br />

off. Families are selling off prized possessions,<br />

and the next generations don’t know how to fix<br />

and maintain some of these old cars.”<br />

That is exactly why he continues to carry on<br />

the legacy of the original owners. “After the<br />

original owners are long gone, the car lives on.<br />

We’re just curators who maintain and keep<br />

them.”<br />

To learn more or to join the club, visit https://<br />

njstreetrod.org/<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 23


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Music Under the Stars<br />

Returns to the Windlass with<br />

Eclectic Concert Series<br />

Nikki Briar at the<br />

Windlass in July.<br />

A couple enjoys a dance as the<br />

sun sets at a recent show.<br />

Marietta and Peter Domanico<br />

take a turn on the dance floor.<br />

Captain Eric and the Shipwrecks<br />

at their July performance.<br />

As the sun sets, the dancing begins.<br />

Story by MELISSA SUMMERS<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

Nothing says “Lake Life” more than an<br />

evening with great music mingling<br />

perfectly with waterfront breezes, tasty bites<br />

on your plate and a cold drink in hand.<br />

To Marietta and Peter Domanico of Mount<br />

Arlington, it’s about holding on to a part of<br />

their youth. As high school sweethearts, they<br />

were part of a swing band that played in the<br />

Catskills. And they appreciated a good tune.<br />

“A long time ago we used to go to hotels<br />

that had bands, and we used to dance,” said<br />

Peter, 88.<br />

Now, they’ve moved on to jazz and opera,<br />

but there’s something about that fresh air<br />

that inspired them to purchase season passes to<br />

a local concert series. “I love the lake, the view is<br />

gorgeous,” Marietta, 89, said. “You don’t think<br />

you’re in Lake Hopatcong, you feel like you’re in<br />

Maine or New Hampshire.”<br />

With its eclectic styles of music—mostly<br />

original tunes—and ticketed shows, this concert<br />

series also doesn’t feel like the entertainment<br />

experience typically found at restaurants and<br />

bars.<br />

For the fourth time since debuting in 2017,<br />

the Windlass is hosting Music Under the Stars,<br />

weekly concerts at the Lake Hopatcong restaurant<br />

featuring 13 area artists and bands.<br />

Normally closed on Wednesdays, the<br />

lakefront establishment transforms<br />

into a lively outdoor venue, with<br />

reserved seating and a simple menu,<br />

while still allowing most of the<br />

regular staff the night off.<br />

“It just seemed to be an excellent<br />

way for people to enjoy the lake and<br />

our patio area in a more relaxed, less<br />

pressurized kind of environment<br />

where they could just sit and listen to<br />

some music and take in the scenery<br />

and talk with their friends, rather<br />

than the more rushed environment<br />

of having food at a restaurant,” said<br />

Windlass owner Alice Szigethy, 56.<br />

Co-event planner Lynn Keenan, 60,<br />

said the atmosphere at the Windlass<br />

makes the event so attractive. “We’re<br />

on the lake… and there are great<br />

sunsets,” she said. “We start it at 7<br />

p.m. so halfway through you’re getting<br />

this phenomenal sunset.”<br />

After a two-year hiatus due to the<br />

pandemic, Szigethy said music lovers who may<br />

have been concerned about coming out to hear<br />

music in a typically cramped indoor location<br />

welcomed the idea to take in some great local<br />

talent in the open air.<br />

“This year I think people were very happy for<br />

an opportunity to get outside,” she said. “So, I<br />

think it was very well received. A lot of our shows<br />

are close to, if not completely, sold out from when<br />

we introduced the tickets late in the spring.”<br />

In April and May, Music Under the Stars<br />

opened up reservations for full-season passes (13<br />

shows), mini passes (seven shows) and individual<br />

shows. Patrons could also reserve special seating<br />

on one of several covered wooden dockside<br />

gliders.<br />

For $15 per show, ticket holders get a reserved<br />

seat, music and a selection of non-alcoholic<br />

beverages. They are also offered the opportunity<br />

to pre-order from a light menu of platters created<br />

specifically for the event. “It’s sharable finger<br />

food like a charcuterie board, dips, sandwiches…<br />

It’s part of the concert, they are sharing at their<br />

table with their party,” Keenan said.<br />

More than half of the event’s 125-seat capacity<br />

was sold as season and mini passes, according to<br />

Keenan. Groups of four or more are generally<br />

seated together. Singles and couples are grouped<br />

at tables.<br />

Co-event planner Donna Butler, 52, said the<br />

cozy setting creates new bonds among guests.<br />

“When you are sitting with other people you<br />

might not have met before, we notice friendships<br />

being formed,” she said.<br />

“We have four or five groups of people that<br />

have been doing this since the first year,” Keenan<br />

added. “This one family, the parents still live up<br />

here, the kids are somewhere else, but this brings<br />

them together one night a week.”<br />

There’s also a regular crowd of boaters who<br />

drop anchor just beyond the docks to take in the<br />

entertainment, according to Keenan.<br />

The Windlass aims to offer a range of music<br />

styles throughout the concert series, ensuring<br />

season subscribers hear something different each<br />

week, said Szigethy.<br />

“That wide array also appeals to people who<br />

just want to come in and hear one band that they<br />

particularly like,” she said. “It is a mix, so we try<br />

to cater to as many people as possible.”<br />

One of the bands that brought people<br />

specifically looking to see them was Lake<br />

Hopatcong favorites Captains of Leisure. They<br />

opened the series on June 22 with a blast of<br />

horns and percussion. The eight-piece ensemble<br />

26<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong>


performs a broad range of dance music from<br />

artists like Chicago, Jimmy Buffett and David<br />

Bowie. “The crowd was exceptional,” said lead<br />

vocalist Rich Ortiz, 64, of Long Valley. “There<br />

was a lot of dancing and people singing along<br />

with the band throughout the evening.”<br />

Ortiz said it was great to know that they could<br />

expect a sold-out crowd at the Windlass this year.<br />

“People are getting back out and supporting<br />

quality live entertainment.”<br />

Big band favorite Groovin’ Easy performed as<br />

part of the series on June 29. They were returning<br />

from a previous appearance back in 2018. The<br />

band features nine musicians playing saxophone,<br />

trumpet, trombone, piano and more. They also<br />

experienced an enthusiastic sold-out crowd.<br />

“There were lots of dancers, everyone was very<br />

happy,” said band manager John Koch, 70, of<br />

Jefferson Township. “Most customers know our<br />

music and came to hear us. It was a beautiful<br />

evening for live music.”<br />

Country rocker Nikki Briar, who has toured<br />

with major acts like the Marshall Tucker Band,<br />

has been with Music Under the Stars since the<br />

beginning. Now settled in Union Township with<br />

her husband and three boys, she said she loves<br />

coming back to the lakeside venue.<br />

“This is warm and welcoming,” she said<br />

following her two-hour set with guitarists<br />

Brian Michaels and John DiStase on July 6.<br />

“It’s intimate. I get to talk and interact with the<br />

crowd, and I get to play some original songs.”<br />

Jersey Shore-based cover band Captain Eric<br />

and the Shipwrecks has been involved with<br />

Music Under the Stars since 2018. They were<br />

scouted by employees of the Windlass who<br />

were on vacation, according to lead vocalist and<br />

guitarist Eric Clark, 39, of Point Pleasant. “We<br />

are extremely excited to return to the lake this<br />

summer,” he said, adding that Music Under the<br />

Stars provides a scenic setting to enjoy music and<br />

the arts.<br />

The Shipwrecks don’t normally play ticketed<br />

events, but Clark sees a real benefit to an event<br />

with set, guaranteed seating. “I feel like the<br />

limited ticket seating capacity creates a more<br />

intimate atmosphere for those in attendance and<br />

the band,” he said.<br />

Gatsby Now takes the stage in August. The<br />

New York City group features jazz standards<br />

of the 1920s, French and Italian classics and<br />

“vintage” versions of pop songs, according to<br />

vocalist Simona D.<br />

“Sharing music of different genres by many<br />

talented musicians creates a stimulating cultural<br />

community where artistic expression meets the<br />

beauty of the natural surroundings of the lake,”<br />

she wrote in an email.<br />

Jake’s Rockin’ Country Band was also in the<br />

mix this year, playing in late July. Known for<br />

classic and current country music, southern<br />

rock and even some ventures into classic rock<br />

done “country style,” the four-piece group draws<br />

audiences from across the state, according to<br />

Jack “Jake” Goodman of Manalapan. They were<br />

excited about bringing their act to the Windlass<br />

and welcomed the chance to headline at a prepaid<br />

event. “The audience is committed and<br />

looking for specifically what the band plays,” he<br />

said.<br />

Andrea Sussman, 53, of Roxbury was looking<br />

for something to do for date nights with her<br />

husband when she purchased mini-pass tickets to<br />

the concert series. “It’s the first year we’re doing<br />

it, and this appealed to me because it’s a fun thing<br />

to do on a weeknight,” she said. “It’s a beautiful<br />

setting, close to home, great music…I’m totally<br />

enjoying it.”<br />

“We’re committed to making Music Under<br />

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the Stars a program that people can enjoy every<br />

summer, and every year we’re going to work on<br />

making it a better experience,” Szigethy said.<br />

When asked what she’d like to improve about<br />

the series, Keenan chuckled and said, “We need<br />

a bigger venue because the interest is so great.”<br />

Shows run on Wednesday nights from 7-9 p.m.<br />

through September 14. For more information<br />

visit www.thewindlass.com/music-under-thestars,<br />

call 973-663-0566, or email music@<br />

thewindlass.com.<br />

Editor’s note: The Windlass and Lake Hopatcong<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 27


Two Seniors<br />

Honored in<br />

Hopatcong<br />

Story by SANDRA PLEDGER<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

Chilled winds on a Saturday in June<br />

didn’t stop more than 150 guests from<br />

attending this year’s Hopatcong Senior Picnic<br />

where Jule Girman was named Female Senior<br />

of the Year and Manny Fernandes was crowned<br />

Male Senior of the Year.<br />

“It is very important to recognize the seniors,”<br />

said Mike Francis, Hopatcong borough mayor.<br />

“They are important to our town. You see all of<br />

the hard work they do, and they don’t charge a<br />

thing. They are the fabric of our time. It warms<br />

your heart.”<br />

Both Girman and Fernandes are longtime<br />

residents of Hopatcong who share a love<br />

for the outdoors, which is reflected in their<br />

volunteerism and how they spend their spare<br />

time.<br />

“I am honored and flattered, it was so<br />

unexpected,” said Girman at the event on June<br />

18. “I had no idea I was even nominated.”<br />

Jule Girman<br />

Girman, 79, has lived in Hopatcong for over<br />

40 years and has been active in the community<br />

since her retirement in 2008 from Newsweek<br />

magazine following a 30-year career. She said<br />

she was shocked to have won such an award.<br />

Girman was nominated by her friend and<br />

neighbor of over 24 years, Georgia Schilling.<br />

“She has a heart of gold, is exceedingly kind<br />

and is generous to a fault. She is very willing to<br />

devote her time and money to many worthwhile<br />

causes,” said Schilling.<br />

Girman wears many volunteer hats. She<br />

is currently chairperson of the Hopatcong<br />

Manny Fernandes<br />

Environmental Commission, helping the<br />

organization achieve bronze certification and<br />

currently working toward a silver certification<br />

with the Sustainable Jersey Program. She<br />

was also a field trip instructor for the Lake<br />

Hopatcong Foundation’s Floating Classroom<br />

program until 2019.<br />

“She inspires collegial, civic-minded,<br />

enthusiastic involvement from all of the<br />

commission members,” said Schilling. “She<br />

goes all out for each and every project.”<br />

Other borough programs Girman has<br />

been involved with include the New Jersey<br />

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Tree Recovery program, the Municipal<br />

Beautification Committee, National Trails Day,<br />

the Fall for our Town event and completion of<br />

the Lake Hopatcong Trail.<br />

When Girman isn’t volunteering, she said<br />

she loves to hike in national parks and do<br />

anything outdoors. Her most recent hike was at<br />

Yellowstone National Park.<br />

She also loves spending time with her son<br />

Scane, who is also an avid hiker. Scane, his wife<br />

Cindy and their three children Eddie, Paul and<br />

Thomas, live in Honesdale, Pennsylvania. She<br />

also loves spending time with her pet poodle<br />

Louie and her four cats.<br />

Schilling said she doesn’t know of anyone<br />

who is more deserving than Girman.<br />

It took a few moments before Manny<br />

Fernandes realized it was his name announced<br />

as Male Senior of the Year.<br />

“I was very surprised and wasn’t expecting it,”<br />

Fernandes said, adding he felt honored to have<br />

won but said there are a lot of other seniors in<br />

town who do many wonderful things, too.<br />

Fernandes, 68, and his wife, Linda, have<br />

been residents of Hopatcong for over 40 years,<br />

raising three children: Christian who resides in<br />

Englewood with his partner Erik; Matthew who<br />

lives in Lebanon with his wife Amanda; and<br />

Sara who resides in Arlington, Massachusetts,<br />

with her husband Michael. The Fernandeses<br />

have five grandchildren.<br />

Fernandes retired in 2019 after a 50-year and playing volleyball in a pick-up league on<br />

career in information technology.<br />

Monday nights.<br />

Over the years, he has served as a Boy Scout This year marked the 39th annual senior<br />

leader, coached youth soccer and helped with picnic, which was held underneath the pavilion<br />

local fundraising events.<br />

at the senior center. Choosing a male and female<br />

Fernandes is a longtime member of St. Jude senior of the year is a tradition that began 14<br />

Roman Catholic Church and the affiliated years ago. The process begins in March when<br />

Knights of Columbus Council 9914 and serves nomination letters are sent to the mayor’s office.<br />

in many roles for both groups. He is also a Winners are then chosen by a committee that<br />

decades-long volunteer with Family Promise, considers civic involvement and volunteerism<br />

an organization that addresses homelessness as the foundation for choosing an honoree.<br />

within a community. He has also been active Councilman Brad Hoferkamp said<br />

on the board of trustees for the Growing Stage Hopatcong treasures its seniors and is “fortunate<br />

Children’s Theatre in Netcong since 2011. to have such an amazing group of people” in the<br />

Friends Rocco Passerini, Mike Job and borough.<br />

Stephen Fredericks nominated Fernandes. To commemorate the event, both winners<br />

Fredericks said Fernandes is one of the were given a glass plaque and a proclamation<br />

sincerest, most genuine and hardworking from the mayor naming them seniors of the<br />

individuals he has ever met and that his only year. A large roadside plaque will be displayed<br />

agenda is for the betterment of all and never at the entrance to borough hall on Hopatchung<br />

himself.<br />

Road until this time next year.<br />

“Manny is the gold standard as a volunteer. He “It was so wonderful to see so many seniors<br />

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growth and continued learning, and passionate Millian, recreation coordinator, about this year’s<br />

about the work we do for the sake of those we event. The senior center remains closed, with<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 29


Mark Sample, Marv Heiskanen, Joe Pilewski,<br />

Tom Preston and Mark Kearns<br />

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BBQ for a Cause<br />

Looking for a good meal at a fair price and for a good cause?<br />

Look no further than the Lake Hopatcong Elks Lodge in Mount Arlington.<br />

Every Wednesday evening until the end of September, the service organization hosts a barbecue<br />

at its Howard Boulevard location, with outdoor dining on the patio or, in the case of inclement<br />

weather, inside the lodge.<br />

The meal consists of typical barbecue fare: hot dogs, hamburgers, baked beans and a variety of<br />

salads. Each week a special is added: anything from chicken kabobs to London broil. The price to<br />

eat? Just $12. (Beverages are available at an additional cost.)<br />

The weekly barbecue serves as a fundraiser for various groups within the Elks organization, like<br />

the Veterans Committee or the Ritual team.<br />

A dinner held on July 6 raised money to benefit the Antlers, the organization’s youth group,<br />

which is attending a statewide peer leadership conference in Long Branch.<br />

“These gatherings help support groups and committees within our organization who then<br />

support a variety of local causes,” said Samantha Martin, leading knight and Antler chairperson.<br />

A typical Wednesday night draws between 80 and 100 people, said Martin, adding that each<br />

week a different group of volunteers hosts the dinner, choosing the menu and cooking the food.<br />

“It’s a great way to invite the community,” said Martin.<br />

Laura Lee Madonia, Regg and Phyllis<br />

Rowley, and Jacqueline Caputo<br />

Mary Butt, Whitney DuBose and Suzette Simard<br />

Pat LeStrange and Bob Sabino<br />

30<br />

Anthony and Rose Massari<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

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LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong>


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lakehopatcongnews.com 33


HISTORY<br />

There She Is…<br />

Myrtle Richardson, Miss America 1934 on a<br />

Chris Craft for Hockenjos Boat Yard.<br />

Contests to determine “the fairest of them<br />

all” have been around since ancient<br />

Greece. While the topic of women’s beauty has<br />

long been discussed, the first modern American<br />

beauty pageant was staged by P. T. Barnum in<br />

1854.<br />

Though he had previously held dog, baby and<br />

bird judging contests, it seems that Americans of<br />

that era were not quite ready to judge women in<br />

the same way. It is unclear whether the contest<br />

was ended by public protest or if Barnum was<br />

unable to convince respectable young ladies of<br />

the Victorian era to publicly display themselves,<br />

but live beauty pageants would have to wait for<br />

another day.<br />

However, Barnum developed a brilliant<br />

alternate plan wherein he accepted entries in<br />

the form of daguerreotypes (photographic<br />

likenesses), which were displayed in his museum<br />

where the public was invited to vote for their<br />

favorites.<br />

In the decades to follow, the photo contest<br />

format was widely imitated and became a<br />

respectable way for teens and women to have<br />

their beauty judged. Civic leaders across the<br />

country held newspaper contests to choose<br />

women who represented the spirit of their<br />

communities.<br />

One of the most popular of these occurred in<br />

1904, when promoters of the St. Louis World’s<br />

Fair asked newspapers across the country to<br />

select a young woman representative from their<br />

city to compete for a beauty title at the fair.<br />

There was intense competition and thousands<br />

of photographic entrants.<br />

By the early decades of the 20th century,<br />

attitudes had begun to change about beauty<br />

pageants. Prohibitions against the display of<br />

women in public began to fade, though not<br />

disappearing altogether.<br />

When one of the earliest known resort beauty<br />

pageants was held in 1880 at Rehoboth Beach,<br />

Delaware, it was dismissed as the activity of a<br />

“working class” beach resort. Beauty pageants<br />

only became widespread after the turn of the<br />

century.<br />

34<br />

by MARTY KANE<br />

Photos courtesy of the<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG<br />

HISTORICAL MUSEUM<br />

ARCHIVES<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

The 1925 swimsuit competition contestants at<br />

Nolan’s Point: Peggy O’Neal, Peggy Kimmeth (first<br />

prize winner), Marie Davis and Ruth Mutch.<br />

One of the issues that had to be overcome was<br />

that Victorian dress codes did not allow for the<br />

development of close-fitting, one-piece bathing<br />

attire for women before the early 20th century.<br />

In the early 1900s, women were expected to wear<br />

cumbersome dress and pantaloon combinations<br />

when swimming.<br />

In 1907, at the height of her popularity,<br />

Australian swimmer Annette Kellerman was<br />

arrested for indecency on Revere Beach,<br />

Massachusetts, while wearing one of her fitted<br />

one-piece costumes. However, the popularity of<br />

her suits won the day and resulted in her own<br />

line of women’s swimwear.<br />

Public opinion, clothing and timing all came<br />

together in 1921 when a beauty pageant, which<br />

would become the first Miss America contest,<br />

was staged in Atlantic City. Local businessmen,<br />

looking for an event to entice tourists to stay<br />

past Labor Day, happened upon the idea of a<br />

bathing beauty pageant.<br />

Nine young women competed: three from<br />

New Jersey and six from surrounding states.<br />

A carnival atmosphere surrounded the event.<br />

There were fireworks and a decorated float<br />

was towed in from the ocean carrying “King<br />

Neptune,” (portrayed by Hopatcong’s own<br />

Hudson Maxim) who would crown the winner.<br />

So as not to offend public morals, the contest<br />

was just one event in a weeklong, elaborate<br />

festival that included sports events, automobile<br />

races and orchestra and choir competitions.<br />

Stressing that the contestants were both youthful<br />

and wholesome, the Miss America competition<br />

developed a concept that would be followed in<br />

future years.<br />

Following the success of the Atlantic City<br />

competition, beauty pageants became popular<br />

summer events across the country during the<br />

1920s and 1930s. Lake Hopatcong was no<br />

exception, holding its first beauty pageant in<br />

1924.<br />

Charles Engelbrecht, a photographer with<br />

a studio at Nolan’s Point, was familiar with<br />

Above left: Miss Bertrand<br />

Island 1937, Bette Cooper,<br />

competing and winning the<br />

Miss America title in 1937.<br />

Above right: A 1927 flyer for a bathing beauty<br />

contest at Bertrand Island Park.<br />

Atlantic City’s pageant and thought a similar<br />

event could be successful at the lake. He<br />

combined a beauty pageant with a baby parade<br />

and swimming and diving contests. The crowd<br />

was so big that the bathing beauty pageant had<br />

to be moved into Allen’s Pavilion (located where<br />

the Windlass sits today).<br />

In 1925, Engelbrecht repeated the event and<br />

added boat races. In 1926, the Lake Hopatcong<br />

Association was founded “for the betterment<br />

of the lake.” Engelbrecht, one of the group’s<br />

founders, helped plan a fundraiser. The Monster<br />

Carnival, as it was billed, featured a wide array of<br />

events, including a two-part beauty pageant—a<br />

bathing beauty contest at Lee’s Park and an<br />

evening gown competition at Bertrand Island<br />

Park. The association planned another carnival<br />

in 1927 with the beauty pageant moving<br />

entirely to Bertrand Island.<br />

From 1927 until World War II, beauty<br />

pageants were a mainstay at Bertrand Island<br />

Park and became one of its most successful<br />

promotions. Young women representing<br />

various parts of the lake as well as some hotels<br />

would compete for local championships—Miss<br />

Northwood, Miss Castle Edward, etc.<br />

Bertrand Island Park conducted one of these<br />

local events. Miss Bertrand Island would then<br />

compete against winners of the other local<br />

pageants for a chance to become Miss Lake<br />

Hopatcong in a competition held at Bertrand<br />

Island Park.<br />

The biggest beauty pageant held at Lake<br />

Hopatcong took place in 1934. Though the<br />

Miss America competition had originated in<br />

Atlantic City, there were several years during<br />

the late 1920s and early ‘30s when the contest<br />

was not held by the Atlantic City organization


due to financial<br />

problems<br />

and scandals<br />

concerning the<br />

eligibility of<br />

contestants. This left the door open for other<br />

cities to hold the contest.<br />

For two days in late August, 36 young women<br />

from all over the United States descended on<br />

Bertrand Island for a contest billed as Miss<br />

America 1934. Held on August 28 and 29,<br />

the contest drew huge crowds and was widely<br />

covered by the newspapers and newsreels.<br />

Although this contest is not recognized today<br />

as an officially sanctioned event by the Miss<br />

America Organization, it was a great public<br />

relations success for Bertrand Island.<br />

In 1935, Atlantic City restarted Miss America<br />

and held the contest every year until 2005 when<br />

it moved to Las Vegas. It returned to Atlantic<br />

City in 2013 before moving to Mohegan Sun in<br />

Connecticut in 2019.<br />

There was no Miss America held in 2021<br />

because of the pandemic and the competition<br />

resumed this past December with the selection<br />

of Miss America <strong>2022</strong>.<br />

Much controversy has surrounded the<br />

management of the Miss America Organization<br />

and the competition in recent years. There is no<br />

longer a swimsuit competition, women are no<br />

longer judged on their physical appearance and<br />

the competition (once one of the most watched<br />

programs of the year) is now streamed.<br />

During the early years of the pageant,<br />

organizations throughout the country were<br />

sanctioned to hold contests and send their<br />

winners directly to Atlantic City. Bertrand<br />

Island Park was one such site. The Miss Lake<br />

Hopatcong winner went directly to compete<br />

in Miss America, with her travel costs paid by<br />

the park. For purposes of publicity, she would<br />

compete as Miss Bertrand Island.<br />

Following a third-place finish in 1936,<br />

17-year-old Bette Cooper of Hackettstown<br />

won the Miss Bertrand Island Pageant in July<br />

1937. In August, she was named Miss Lake<br />

Hopatcong and was sent to the competition<br />

in Atlantic City. On September 11, Bette was<br />

named Miss America 1937.<br />

Unprepared for the publicity appearances<br />

and demanding schedule that the Miss America<br />

Left: A publicity announcement for Janet Adams Day at Lake Hopatcong after<br />

being named Miss New Jersey 1963.<br />

Above: Contestants and organizers of the Miss Lake Hopatcong Beauty Contest in<br />

the June Rose Ballroom at Bertrand Island Park, circa 1930.<br />

Organization expected of the winner, Bette<br />

disappeared for some 24 hours. The news<br />

services had a field day reporting that she had<br />

run off with her chaperone. Newspapers ran<br />

photos showing the empty throne. When the<br />

dust settled, Bette and her family demanded<br />

and received a less rigorous schedule, which led<br />

to permanent changes in Miss America pageant<br />

rules.<br />

Pageants remained popular at Bertrand Island<br />

when it was selected to host the 1939, 1940<br />

and 1941 Miss New Jersey pageants, with the<br />

winner being the state’s sole representative in the<br />

Miss America competition. During these years,<br />

Bertrand Island held two contests each year, with<br />

the winner of the Miss Bertrand Island contest<br />

competing for the title of Miss New Jersey.<br />

The advent of World War II ended Bertrand<br />

Island’s close association with beauty pageants.<br />

However, pageants made a comeback at Lake<br />

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As the lake turned into a yearround<br />

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While the era of beauty pageants at<br />

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COOKING<br />

WITH SCRATCH ©<br />

Would<br />

you<br />

try a dessert<br />

named kalter hund<br />

(cold dog)? Or<br />

gestreifter hund (striped dog), kalte schnauze,<br />

(cold snout), karierter affe (plaid monkey),<br />

gestreifter affe (striped monkey), kalter igel<br />

(cold hedgehog) or keksmauer (biscuit wall)?<br />

These are just a few of the regional variations<br />

of names for an icebox cake we would enjoy<br />

once in a blue moon at Tante (aunt) Waltraud<br />

and Onkel (uncle) Horst Fahsel’s house back in<br />

the 1960s.<br />

Horst and Waltraud were some of my parents’<br />

first friends when they moved to America<br />

after the war. My father, Horst Kertscher, (yes,<br />

two Horsts—it’s a popular German name!)<br />

sponsored Horst Fahsel in the mid ‘50s when<br />

his visa was about to expire, and they worked<br />

together after he moved from Chicago to New<br />

Jersey.<br />

My parents were very fond of the handsome<br />

Horst and so was I. He came and visited us<br />

often when we lived in the duplex in Montclair,<br />

and my baby album features several photos of<br />

us together.<br />

Horst sent for his bride in the early ‘50s and<br />

got married in New Jersey. They lived in West<br />

Orange for quite some time, and I have vivid<br />

memories of going for kaffee und kuchen (coffee<br />

and cake) at their house when I was growing up.<br />

We had to dress up for kaffee. It was fancy.<br />

We were allowed to sit with the grownups<br />

if there was room at the table. If not, all the<br />

children were relegated to having mikchkaffee<br />

(coffee with lots of milk) and cake in the kitchen.<br />

Horst and Waltraud’s home was decorated in<br />

36<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

What’s In a Name?<br />

by BARBARA SIMMONS<br />

Photo by KAREN FUCITO<br />

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considered antiques now!)<br />

I can still recall their dining room. There was<br />

a beautiful, sleek Danish teak table in the dining<br />

room with matching chairs and credenza,<br />

lovingly dusted and polished.<br />

Waltraud would set the table with her best<br />

china. And, in the middle of the table, if we<br />

were lucky, there was her famous kalter hund on<br />

a pretty crystal dish.<br />

Waltraud was the only tante who made<br />

this cake. This is not your standard Nabisco<br />

chocolate wafer/whipped cream icebox cake you<br />

may be familiar with.<br />

My mother, Gertrude, didn’t have anything<br />

like it in her repertoire. She was the queen of<br />

fruit tarts and crumb cakes. I honestly don’t<br />

remember her making anything chocolatey.<br />

Thankfully one of my father’s sisters, Tante<br />

Lanni, knew the recipe and dictated her version<br />

of it to me while I scribbled frantically in my<br />

little notebook. I still have that copy today—<br />

half in German, half in English. My amusing<br />

little note at the bottom of the handwritten<br />

recipe makes me laugh: “I hope I can still read<br />

this when I am 40.”<br />

I was curious about the origins of the name<br />

and found this on Wikipedia, under hedgehog<br />

slice (its Austrian name): “Many German<br />

histories refer to a 1920s recipe from the baking<br />

firm Bahlsen that combined chocolate with<br />

packaged cookies. The name “Kalter Hund”<br />

might have been a reference to the rectangular<br />

pans resembling mining box cars (hund, or dog)<br />

in which the dessert is often made.”<br />

I feel lucky to have stayed in touch over the<br />

years with Martin Fahsel, Horst and Waltraud’s<br />

son. While his parents are deceased, his Aunt<br />

Inge—Horst’s sister—is still in New Jersey.<br />

Martin and his wife come up from North<br />

Carolina to visit at least once a year.<br />

We usually meet them for dinner<br />

before they head up to New York<br />

state to visit her relatives.<br />

Listening to Martin talk about<br />

coming up to the lake to swim with<br />

us and go fishing with my father<br />

brought back some happy memories<br />

that he shared with me. (That’s a<br />

picture of me with Waltraud in<br />

a lake in West Milford in 1955.)<br />

Martin recalled listening to the<br />

Beatles’ “Rubber Soul” album and<br />

Don McLean’s “American Pie” on<br />

my record player upstairs with me<br />

and my brother, Frank. And he<br />

recently thanked me for introducing him to<br />

rock and roll.<br />

A few notes about kalter hund: You may have<br />

to hunt around for Palmin brand coconut fat,<br />

one of the key ingredients. It is a very clean<br />

tasting fat that will help the kalter hund frosting<br />

set up hard when refrigerated.<br />

German specialty shops, which now are,<br />

unfortunately, few and far between, usually<br />

carry Palmin. It is also available on Amazon,<br />

where I’ve purchased it a few times.<br />

Use the best quality chocolate you can find.<br />

The better the chocolate, the better your kalter<br />

hund will turn out. I once used Dick Taylor<br />

Craft Chocolate 70% Belize semisweet dark<br />

baking chocolate that a dear friend gave me for<br />

my birthday that was exquisite! Ghirardelli dark<br />

and milk chocolate chips are also excellent and<br />

made in America (from San Francisco!). Just<br />

don’t use unsweetened baking chocolate.<br />

Leibnizkeks, butter biscuits by Bahlsen, are<br />

available in most supermarkets.<br />

Kalter hund is decadently sweet. The original<br />

recipe has you make it in a regular bread loaf<br />

pan, but I find making it in mini loaf pans<br />

makes for more realistic portions. This recipe<br />

yields four to six mini loaves. They freeze well<br />

and are great to have “in the vault.”


KALTER HUND (Cold Dog)<br />

Yield: 4-6 mini loaves, depending on how tall you make the layers.<br />

Ingredients<br />

(Using a kitchen scale is the most accurate way to bake, but I’ve included standard measurements.)<br />

1 cup heavy cream<br />

3 tablespoons sugar<br />

1 pinch salt<br />

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450 grams or 2 ½ cups milk chocolate (Ghirardelli milk chocolate chips)<br />

150 grams or ⅔ cup Palmin coconut fat<br />

200 grams (1 pkg.) Leibnizkeks<br />

1 can whipped cream (optional at serving)<br />

Procedure<br />

1 Set the mini loaf pans on a small tray lined with parchment paper.<br />

2 Mix the cream, sugar, salt and vanilla in a medium saucepan. Stir until smooth and sugar<br />

is dissolved.<br />

3 Over low heat, add the chocolates and coconut fat to the saucepan, stirring<br />

constantly until the chocolate and coconut fat is melted.<br />

4 Spread a thin layer of chocolate over the bottom of a pan (about ¼”).<br />

5 Layer Leibnizkeks across the chocolate, avoiding the sides of the pan.<br />

6 Spread chocolate across the biscuits.<br />

7 Layer more Leibnizkeks across the chocolate.<br />

8 Repeat until you fill up the loaf pan, ending with a chocolate layer.<br />

9 Decorate the top with Leibnizkeks, if desired.<br />

10 Repeat process with other pans.<br />

11 When done, cover them each with a sheet of plastic wrap.<br />

12 Refrigerate for at least three hours.<br />

Serve by cutting into 1-inch-thick slices, garnished with optional whipped cream.<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 37


WORDS OF<br />

A FEATHER<br />

Scan the QR code<br />

with your phone’s<br />

camera to hear a<br />

muskrat.<br />

Muskrat Love<br />

Summer is in<br />

full swing on<br />

Lake Hopatcong.<br />

And nothing feels<br />

better than the<br />

long, languid, sunny days.<br />

Boats of every type jauntily cruise along,<br />

and the water has warmed up enough to make<br />

swimming a delicious pleasure. Slipping into<br />

the lake, particularly after a long day trapped<br />

indoors at work, feels like bliss.<br />

On days like this, you seem to gain sustenance<br />

from the water and never want to stray from<br />

the lake.<br />

If you can relate to any of that, you may not<br />

know it but you have quite a bit in common<br />

with some of the lake’s furrier swimmers:<br />

muskrats.<br />

When I lived at Lake Hopatcong in Mount<br />

Arlington, I’d often see them swimming around<br />

docks, either in the early mornings or evenings.<br />

They’d glide along with most of the top half<br />

of their bodies visible above the waterline,<br />

always silent but giving the impression of being<br />

constantly busy. They plied the water, it seemed<br />

to me, with purpose.<br />

I got curious about them, so I decided to<br />

focus this month’s column on these small<br />

mammals. Turns out they’re pretty fascinating.<br />

Who knew?<br />

Native to North America and found across<br />

most of the continent—from the Arctic to the<br />

south (but not in Florida where I reside!)—<br />

muskrats are large rodents. Surprisingly, they<br />

are more closely related to voles, lemmings and<br />

mice than to that other semi-aquatic mammal,<br />

the beaver.<br />

Muskrats have quite a round shape, with tiny<br />

ears, short Tyrannosaurus rex-like forelimbs<br />

and a continually active, quivering nose.<br />

Their dark brown fur is dense and luxurious.<br />

Consequently and unfortunately, they are still<br />

killed for their pelts—usually in cruel traps that<br />

drown them.<br />

Fur is not a fabric, and compassion is in<br />

fashion, folks. Remember, fur only looks good<br />

on animals, not on people.<br />

38<br />

by HEATHER SHIRLEY<br />

Photo by KAREN FUCITO<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

A muskrat scampers along the dock<br />

at Lee’s County Park Marina.<br />

Muskrat fur traps air, which both warms<br />

them through frigid winters and helps them<br />

float.<br />

Muskrats range in size from 16 to 25 inches<br />

long, including their odd tails. Used like a<br />

rudder when swimming, their 7- to 11-inchlong<br />

tail is vertically flattened and is covered in<br />

scales.<br />

Their hind legs are also unique. Their feet<br />

are not webbed, as I would have expected since<br />

otter and beaver feet are webbed. Instead, a<br />

muskrat foot looks a bit like a tiny hand, with<br />

each toe edged with a fringe of stiff hair that<br />

helps the foot function like a paddle.<br />

Muskrats swim with their feet much like<br />

we do, alternating kicks from their left and<br />

right legs. They can swim both forward and<br />

backward, as fast as 3 mph, and can hold their<br />

breath for up to 17 minutes.<br />

Not impressed yet? Keep reading—muskrats<br />

and their marvelous adaptations may still<br />

surprise you.<br />

Muskrats are quite social, living in large,<br />

territorial family groups. They communicate by<br />

marking entrances to lodges with a strong scent<br />

secreted from specialized glands. It is for this<br />

scent, or musk, that they are named.<br />

They must live near water of at least 4 to 6<br />

feet in depth and either excavate burrows along<br />

the banks or construct lodges, also called “pushups,”<br />

in the water. Made from mud and aquatic<br />

vegetation like cattails, these constructions are<br />

used by other animals and birds as spots to rest<br />

and/or nest.<br />

Because bits of their watery homes can float<br />

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away or be eaten by the muskrats themselves,<br />

they are constantly rebuilding, thus consuming<br />

more lake-clogging vegetation. They are<br />

voracious feeders, eating one-third of their<br />

body weight in vegetation each day. In this way,<br />

muskrats help keep waterways clear, providing<br />

ducks and other birds with open space to float<br />

and feed. All that foraging results in underwater<br />

trails that the muskrats travel daily, searching<br />

for food and rarely straying more than 150 feet<br />

from their home.<br />

They know their territory so well that they’re<br />

able to find food every day, year-round, even<br />

under ice and snow, and even in the dark.<br />

Yet another adaptation of muskrats is a<br />

mechanism known as regional heterothermia.<br />

This system regulates blood flow to the<br />

muskrat’s feet and tail so that those areas are<br />

cooler than their core, thus helping the animals<br />

maintain body heat in cold water.<br />

Muskrats have even evolved to be able to bite<br />

and chew underwater; their incisor teeth stick<br />

out from the rest of their mouths, and their<br />

lips and cheeks can close behind the teeth. In<br />

this way, they don’t take in water as they nibble<br />

roots and stems.<br />

In addition to plants, muskrats eat just about<br />

anything, including fish, snails, crustaceans,<br />

salamanders and mollusks. In turn, they<br />

are heavily preyed by a vast range of species,<br />

including coyotes, bears, snapping turtles and<br />

even pike.<br />

But, like most rodents, they reproduce<br />

frequently, producing up to three litters per<br />

year of three to eight kits each. That means your<br />

chances of seeing a muskrat are pretty good.<br />

I hope the next time you see one near your<br />

dock, you have a newfound respect for them<br />

and that you show that muskrat some love.<br />

James J. Leffler<br />

Realtor


CLEAN. DRAIN. DRY.<br />

Help Protect Lake Hopatcong<br />

Stop the Transport of Invasive Species:<br />

• CLEAN off visible aquatic plants, animals,<br />

mud, and algae from ALL equipment before<br />

leaving water access.<br />

• DRAIN motor, bilge, livewell, and other<br />

water containing devices before leaving<br />

water access.<br />

• DRY everything for at least five days<br />

OR wipe with a towel before reuse.<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 39


directory<br />

CONSTRUCTION/<br />

EXCAVATION<br />

Al Hutchins Excavating<br />

973-663-2142<br />

973-713-8020<br />

Lakeside Construction<br />

151 Sparta-Stanhope Rd.<br />

Hopatcong<br />

973-398-4517<br />

Northwest Explosives<br />

PO Box 806, Hopatcong<br />

973-398-6900<br />

info@northwestexplosives.com<br />

ENTERTAINMENT/<br />

RECREATION<br />

Hopatcong Marketplace<br />

47 Hopatchung Rd.<br />

Investors Bank Theater<br />

72 Eyland Ave., Succasunna<br />

973-945-0284<br />

roxburyartsalliance.org<br />

Lake Hopatcong Adventure<br />

973-663-1944<br />

lhadventureco.com<br />

Lake Hopatcong Cruises<br />

Miss Lotta (Dinner Boat)<br />

37 Nolan’s Pt. Park Rd., LH<br />

973-663-5000<br />

lhcruises.com<br />

Lake Hopatcong Mini Golf Club<br />

37 Nolan's Pt. Park Rd., LH<br />

973-663-0451<br />

lhgolfclub.com<br />

Northeast Health & Fitness<br />

50 Hopatchung Rd., Hopatcong<br />

@northeasthealthandfitness<br />

HOME SERVICES<br />

Accurate Pest Control<br />

Landing<br />

973-398-8798<br />

accuratepestmanagement.com<br />

Central Comfort<br />

100 Nolan’s Point Rd., LH<br />

973-361-2146<br />

Homestead Lawn Sprinkler<br />

5580 Berkshire Valley Rd., OR<br />

973-208-0967<br />

homesteadlawnsprinkler.com<br />

Happs Kitchen & Bath<br />

Sparta<br />

973-729-4787<br />

happskitchen.com<br />

Jefferson Recycling<br />

710 Route 15 N Jefferson<br />

973-361-1589<br />

www.jefferson-recycling.com<br />

Martin Design Group<br />

973-584-5111<br />

martinnurserynj.com<br />

The Polite Plumber<br />

973-398-0875<br />

thepoliteplumber.com<br />

Portasoft of Morris County<br />

578 US 46, Kenvil<br />

973-584-1549<br />

portasoftnj.com<br />

Wilson Services<br />

973-383-2112<br />

WilsonServices.com<br />

Window Genie<br />

973-726-6555<br />

windowgenie.com<br />

LAKE SERVICES<br />

AAA Dock & Marine<br />

27 Prospect Point Rd., LH<br />

973-663-4998<br />

docksmarina@hotmail.com<br />

Batten The Hatches<br />

70 Rt. 181, LH<br />

973-663-1910<br />

The North facebook.com/bthboatcovers East “s 180 Howard Largest Blvd., Ste. 18<br />

973-663-9600<br />

orange-carpet.com<br />

Wakeboarding Event<br />

Lake Management Sciences<br />

Branchville<br />

973-948-0107<br />

lakemgtsciences.com<br />

MARINAS, BOAT<br />

SALES & RENTALS<br />

Beebe Marina<br />

123 Brady Rd., LH<br />

973-663-1192<br />

Katz’s Marinas<br />

22 Stonehenge Rd., LH<br />

973-663-0224<br />

katzmarinaatthecove.com<br />

342 Lakeside Ave., Hopatcong<br />

973-663-3214<br />

antiqueboatsales.com<br />

Lake’s End Marina<br />

91 Mt. Arlington Blvd., Landing<br />

973-398-5707<br />

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Morris County Marine<br />

745 US 46W, Kenvil<br />

201-400-6031<br />

South Shore Marine<br />

862-254-2514<br />

southshoremarine180@gmail.com<br />

NONPROFIT<br />

ORGANIZATIONS<br />

Lake Hopatcong Commission<br />

260 Lakeside Blvd.,Landing<br />

973-601-7801<br />

commissioner@<br />

lakehopatcongcommission.org<br />

Lake Hopatcong Foundation<br />

125 Landing Rd., Landing<br />

973-663-2500<br />

lakehopatcongfoundation.org<br />

Lake Hopatcong Historical<br />

Museum at Hopatcong SP<br />

260 Lakeside Blvd., Landing<br />

973-398-2616<br />

lakehopatconghistory.com<br />

PROFESSIONAL<br />

SERVICES<br />

Barbara Anne Dillon,,O.D.,P.A.<br />

Mount Arlington<br />

973-770-1380<br />

Fox Architectural Design<br />

546 St. Rt. 10 W, Ledgewood<br />

973-970-9355<br />

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Morris County Dental Assoc.<br />

15 Commerce Blvd., Ste. 201<br />

Succasunna<br />

973-328-1225<br />

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REAL ESTATE<br />

Kathleen Courter<br />

RE/MAX<br />

131 Landing Rd., Roxbury<br />

973-420-0022 Direct<br />

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Robin Dora<br />

Sotheby’s<br />

670 Main St., Towaco<br />

973-570-6633<br />

prominentproperties.com<br />

Christopher J. Edwards<br />

RE/MAX<br />

211 Rt. 10E, Succasunna<br />

973-598-1008<br />

MrLakeHopatcong.com<br />

Jim Leffler<br />

RE/MAX<br />

131 Landing Rd., Roxbury<br />

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RESTAURANTS & BARS<br />

Alice’s Restaurant<br />

24 Nolan’s Pt. Park Rd, LH<br />

973-663-9600<br />

alicesrestaurantnj.com<br />

Andre’s Lakeside Dining<br />

112 Tomahawk Tr., Sparta<br />

973-726-6000<br />

andreslakeside.com<br />

Bagels On The Hill<br />

175 Lakeside Blvd., Landing<br />

973-770-4800<br />

bagelsonthehill.com<br />

Big Fish Lounge At Alice’s<br />

24 Nolan’s Pt. Park Rd, LH<br />

alicesrestaurantnj.com<br />

The Windlass Restaurant<br />

45 Nolan’s Point Park Rd., LH<br />

973-663-3190<br />

thewindlass.com<br />

SENIOR CARE<br />

Preferred Care at Home<br />

George & Jill Malanga/Owners<br />

973-512-5131<br />

PreferHome.com/nwjersey<br />

SPECIALTY STORES<br />

AlphaZelle<br />

Toxin-free products<br />

973-288-1971<br />

alphazelle.com<br />

At The Lake Jewelry<br />

atthelakejewelry.com<br />

Best Cellars Wine & Spirits<br />

1001 Rt. 46, Ledgewood<br />

973-252-0559<br />

bestcellars.com<br />

Hawk Ridge Farm<br />

283 Espanong Rd, LH<br />

hawkridgefarmnj.com<br />

Hearth & Home<br />

1215 Rt. 46, Ledgewood<br />

973-252-0190<br />

hearthandhome.net<br />

Helrick’s Custom Framing<br />

158 W Clinton St., Dover<br />

973-361-1559<br />

helricks.com<br />

Main Lake Market<br />

234 S. NJ Ave., LH<br />

973-663-0544<br />

mainlakemarket.com<br />

Nature’s Golden Miracle<br />

CBD Products<br />

973-288-1971<br />

NGM-oil.com<br />

Olympia Pools<br />

41 Ridge Rd., Oak Ridge<br />

973-697-1200<br />

Orange Carpet & Wood Gallery<br />

470 Rt. 10W, Ledgewood<br />

973-584-5300<br />

Sacks Paint & Hardware<br />

52 N Sussex St., Dover<br />

973-366-0119<br />

sackspaint.net<br />

STORAGE<br />

Woodport Self Storage<br />

17 Rt. 181 & 20 Tierney Rd.<br />

Lake Hopatcong<br />

973-663-4000<br />

The North East “s Largest Wakeboarding Event<br />

LAKE FOREST YACHT CLUB<br />

35 Yacht Club Drive Lake Hopatcong AUGUST<br />

40<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Midsummer</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />

LAKE FOREST YACHT CLUB<br />

35 Yacht Club Drive Lake Hopatcong AUGUST<br />

WWW.WAKEOFF.COM<br />

13, <strong>2022</strong><br />

WWW.WAKEOFF.COM


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Repair<br />

Accessories<br />

Gifts<br />

Charcoal Grills<br />

1215 Route 46 West<br />

Ledgewood, NJ<br />

HOURS<br />

Monday-Friday 10-6<br />

Saturday 9-4<br />

Check our Facebook<br />

page for seasonal or<br />

summer hours<br />

@ Hearth & Home<br />

of New Jersey<br />

973-252-0190<br />

www.hearthandhome.net<br />

@MainLakeMarket<br />

Everything You Need For A Day On The Lake<br />

Easily order your food<br />

online with Toast TakeOut<br />

Scan the QR code to order and<br />

pickup at our deli counter.<br />

Boating Supplies<br />

Toys & Games<br />

Dockside Gas<br />

Ice Cream<br />

Deli & Snacks<br />

Gifts<br />

Sunglasses<br />

Apparel<br />

234 South New Jersey Ave. Lake Hopatcong, NJ 973-663-0544 www.mainlakemarket.com<br />

Accessible By Car Or Boat<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 41


Lake Hopatcong...<br />

A fine food and family destination<br />

Nolan’s Point Park Rd., Lake Hopatcong •


973-663-2490 • Connect with us! @livethelakenj Live the Lake NJ

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