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Spring 2023 Issue

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

ake Hopatcong News<br />

SPRING <strong>2023</strong> VOL. 15 NO. 1<br />

Striking A Chord<br />

Jeiris Cook and Vern Miller, both from Jefferson, have embarked<br />

on an unusual musical journey together<br />

RETIRING FROM PUBLIC LIFE<br />

LITTLE-KNOWN COMMITTEE<br />

GETS RESULTS<br />

DANCING THE NIGHT AWAY<br />

BUILDING DOCKS FOR FOUR<br />

GENERATIONS


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4<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

From the Editor<br />

In the <strong>Spring</strong> 2022 issue of the magazine, I announced that throughout the year we’d be<br />

highlighting the local music scene. Seven issues and nine months later, I was pleased that we<br />

had accomplished what we set out to do: shine a spotlight on all things music in our area.<br />

We wrote about (and photographed) local bands—a lot of them. We also featured people who<br />

teach music, who sing, who play instruments and who record others playing music. My goal was<br />

to offer a variety of stories from all different aspects of the industry.<br />

Just like music itself, I wanted there to be something for everyone.<br />

I will admit, it was quite an enjoyable summer for me, hanging out with musicians and attending<br />

all those concerts and gigs. Throughout the seven issues, we featured quite an assortment of<br />

musical talent.<br />

By late fall, when I was about halfway through the final production work for the Holiday issue,<br />

I received an email from a man over in Lake Shawnee. An avid reader of the magazine, he liked<br />

seeing all the stories about local musicians and thought maybe he fit into that category. (Not<br />

his own story, mind you, which could be a bestseller.) Instead, he was pitching the story of his<br />

friendship and musical collaboration with another local musician. The duo had just released a<br />

five-song EP on social media.<br />

Included in this initial email was a short version of how the two met and their bios. And yes,<br />

after reading through the email, I was calculating how I would manage to get this story into the<br />

last issue of 2022. I really wanted to get their story out there.<br />

But 24 hours later, I realized it would take a Herculean effort to research, interview, write and<br />

photograph the pair before the impending deadline. The story, I reluctantly decided, would have<br />

to wait.<br />

So, we begin <strong>2023</strong> where we left off in 2022, with a story about two local musicians—whose<br />

own story is just beginning—Vern Miller and Jeiris Cook. (See Ellen Wilkowe’s story on page 22.)<br />

Thanks, Vern, for reaching out.<br />

While music was a theme throughout last year, an emphasis on some of our local businesses<br />

and businesspeople will be the theme for this year. We will feature at least one business or<br />

businessperson in each issue.<br />

First up is AAA Dock & Marine, a family-run, fourth-generation dock construction business here<br />

at Lake Hopatcong. (See Ellen Wilkowe’s story on page 26.)<br />

Throughout the year we will also continue to spotlight some of the small, historic places of<br />

worship that can be found in the region, beginning with Bonnie-Lynn Nadzeika’s story about<br />

Byram Bay Christian Church in Hopatcong, which has roots dating back to the early 1900s. (See<br />

page 18.)<br />

Also in this issue is a comprehensive and detailed account of Princeton Hydro’s Water Quality<br />

Report for Lake Hopatcong. Mike Daigle breaks down the data<br />

and translates scientific terminology into layman’s terms. (See<br />

page 12.)<br />

Writer Melissa Summers has a profile on recently retired<br />

County Commissioner Kathy DeFillippo (see page 32), who has<br />

spent most of her adult life in the service of others.<br />

As I look past this issue to the rest of the year, I see a few holes<br />

that need filling, stories that need to be written and told. That’s<br />

your cue, readers, to reach out to me with your own story, or that<br />

of a loved one, a neighbor or a colleague.<br />

Everyone has stories to tell, not just the musicians. —Karen<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

RETIRING FROM PUBLIC LIFE<br />

LITTLE-KNOWN COMMITTEE<br />

GETS RESULTS<br />

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

SPRING <strong>2023</strong> VOL. 15 NO. 1<br />

Striking A Chord<br />

Jeiris Cook and Vern Miller, both from Je ferson, have embarked<br />

on an unusual musical journey together<br />

DANCING THE NIGHT AWAY<br />

BUILDING DOCKS FOR FOUR<br />

GENERATIONS<br />

ON THE COVER<br />

Jeiris Cook and Vern Miller, both<br />

Jefferson residents, are writing and<br />

recording original songs together.<br />

—photo by Karen Fucito<br />

KAREN FUCITO<br />

Editor<br />

editor@lakehopatcongnews.com<br />

973-663-2800<br />

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS<br />

Michael Stephen Daigle<br />

Bonnie-Lynn Nadzeika<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 />

ADVERTISING SALES<br />

Lynn Keenan<br />

advertising@lakehopatcongnews.com<br />

973-222-0382<br />

PRINTING<br />

Imperial Printing & Graphics, Inc.<br />

PUBLISHER<br />

Camp Six, Inc.<br />

10 Nolan’s Point Park Road<br />

Lake Hopatcong, NJ 07849<br />

LHN OFFICE LOCATED AT:<br />

37 Nolan’s Point Park Road<br />

Lake Hopatcong, NJ 07849<br />

To sign up for<br />

home delivery of<br />

Lake Hopatcong News<br />

call<br />

973-663-2800<br />

or email<br />

editor@lakehopatcongnews.com<br />

Lake Hopatcong News is published seven times a<br />

year between April and November and is offered<br />

free at more than 200 businesses throughout the<br />

lake region. It is available for home delivery for<br />

a nominal fee. The contents of Lake Hopatcong<br />

News may not be reprinted in any form without<br />

prior written permission from the editor. Lake<br />

Hopatcong News is a registered trademark of<br />

Lake Hopatcong News, LLC. All rights reserved.


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lakehopatcongnews.com 5


Lake Commission Committee<br />

Getting Positive Results<br />

6<br />

Story by MICHAEL DAIGLE<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

Roxbury homeowner Chris Blanton<br />

learned about the Lake Hopatcong<br />

Commission’s Land Use Committee the day it<br />

objected to his house building project.<br />

That’s probably not an uncommon<br />

experience, since the little-known committee<br />

works quietly in the background of the greater<br />

lake-wide effort to clean up the troubled lake.<br />

For Blanton, his experience with the<br />

committee eventually resulted in a lake-friendly<br />

solution that will allow him to move forward<br />

with building a 2,400-square-foot home on<br />

Kingsland Road on the peninsula located on<br />

the western shore of Landing Channel.<br />

The new plans show a dry well that will trap<br />

runoff from the driveway and “a rain garden to<br />

filter water running off the hill,” said Blanton.<br />

The encounter was cooperative, he added.<br />

“We support efforts to clean up the lake, and<br />

we are willing to do our part.”<br />

Committee member Robert Tessier said<br />

Blanton’s experience is common.<br />

“We try to offer site-specific solutions,” he<br />

said. “We try for recommendations that make<br />

common sense.”<br />

The committee has been in existence since<br />

2020 when Ron Smith, commission chairman,<br />

urged the members to create means by which<br />

the commission could better meet its state<br />

mandate to protect Lake Hopatcong.<br />

Lake commission minutes show that Smith<br />

urged commission members to be more active<br />

in their supervision of activities across the<br />

towns of Jefferson, Mount Arlington, Roxbury<br />

and Hopatcong.<br />

The timing was critical. For the previous<br />

three years the commission had struggled with<br />

funding and a loss of sense of direction and<br />

effectiveness. The call for renewed activism<br />

on the part of the commission members came<br />

just months before a harmful algal bloom<br />

effectively closed the lake for the summer of<br />

2019.<br />

Tessier, a project manager for the state<br />

Department of Community Affairs, was asked<br />

by the Community Affairs commissioner to fill<br />

the slot on the Lake Hopatcong Commission<br />

for a DCA representative. He has been a<br />

commission member for six years. Other<br />

members on the committee, who volunteer<br />

their time, are commissioners Ryan Gilfillan,<br />

Anne Seibert-Pravs, Neil Senatore and Fred<br />

Steinbaum.<br />

“Our function [the Lake Hopatcong<br />

Commission Land Use Committee] is to<br />

review development applications and make<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

recommendations,”<br />

Tessier said. “Our<br />

recommendations<br />

are advisory.” The<br />

committee is not an<br />

enforcement agency.<br />

The 2001 law that<br />

created the lake<br />

commission, The Lake<br />

Hopatcong Protection<br />

Act, is explicit in its<br />

definition of the<br />

commission’s duties: The<br />

commission is charged<br />

with conducting “water<br />

quality and water<br />

quantity monitoring of<br />

Lake Hopatcong to assess<br />

conditions and changes<br />

thereto over time and<br />

identify the causes and<br />

sources of environmental<br />

threats and impacts<br />

to Lake Hopatcong<br />

and its watershed.”<br />

And, it should assess<br />

“present and projected<br />

development, land use,<br />

and land management<br />

practices and patterns,<br />

and determine the<br />

effects of those practices and patterns upon<br />

the natural, scenic, and recreational resources<br />

of Lake Hopatcong and its watershed.”<br />

So charged, Tessier said, the committee<br />

generally examines applications from properties<br />

that are within 200 feet of the shoreline and<br />

most often focus on development choices<br />

that affect stormwater runoff, a major cause of<br />

lake pollution.<br />

After reviewing an application, Tessier said,<br />

the committee writes a letter of support<br />

or concern to the property owner and the<br />

municipal board reviewing the application.<br />

The process has gotten smoother, he said.<br />

At first there was some local objection to an<br />

outside agency moving in on local matters. As<br />

awareness has grown about the importance of<br />

the regional effort to better manage the lake,<br />

the committee’s recommendations have been<br />

better received.<br />

“The committee is having a positive effect,”<br />

Tessier said.<br />

Ken Nelson is a professional planner and was<br />

hired by the commission to review land use<br />

applications filed in the towns. After the review,<br />

Nelson writes a letter for each application and<br />

informs the municipal board and the applicant<br />

of the committee’s approval or disapproval of<br />

the application. In the letters, Nelson said, the<br />

From top, left to right: Chris and Ayla<br />

Blanton stand in what will be a rain garden<br />

on their property on Kingsland Road in<br />

Landing.<br />

A copy of the Blanton property site plan,<br />

including a rain garden at the shoreline<br />

(top).<br />

Robert Tessier gives a Land Use<br />

Committee update at the April Lake<br />

Hopatcong Commission meeting.<br />

committee outlines its objections and suggests<br />

remedies.<br />

Chief concerns, he said, are applications that<br />

seek certain variances related to the amount<br />

of impervious (hard) surfaces on the lot or the<br />

size of the building compared to the size of<br />

the lot.<br />

The increasing size of homes being built<br />

around the lake is a concern, he said.<br />

The committee often recommends the<br />

use of different materials for driveways—<br />

permeable surfaces rather than solid asphalt,<br />

for example. The committee also recommends<br />

adding dry wells, swales and rain gardens to<br />

control and filter runoff, Nelson said.<br />

The changes are generally low-cost solutions,<br />

he added.<br />

The committee reviews two to four<br />

applications a month.<br />

Smith said the Land Use Committee’s efforts<br />

are an important piece in the commission’s<br />

plans to improve and maintain the quality of<br />

the lake water.<br />

Its success in presenting project changes


that are well received is a testament to the<br />

recognition around the lake that it will take<br />

the cooperation of the region to make the lake<br />

healthy, Smith said.<br />

Some of the commission’s efforts, like weed<br />

harvesting and pilot projects developed with<br />

the towns and the Lake Hopatcong Foundation,<br />

are highly visible. The Land Use Committee not<br />

so much, but it is equally effective, he said.<br />

Blanton, a professional private pilot, and his<br />

wife, Ayla Blanton, a corporate flight attendant,<br />

wanted to build their new home on the<br />

property adjacent to their old home, which will<br />

require demolishing an old lake house that has<br />

fallen into disrepair.<br />

The project also required variances, he said,<br />

which triggered the Land Use Committee’s<br />

review.<br />

The lot, on a thin peninsula, technically has<br />

water frontage on both front and back, with<br />

only the narrow road buffering the property on<br />

the front side, he said.<br />

His professionals reviewed the suggested<br />

changes and incorporated them, he said.<br />

The additional cost was minimal.<br />

“We understand and support the goals of the<br />

committee,” he said, adding that maintaining<br />

the quality of the lake reflects on the quality<br />

of life in the region.<br />

“A lot of this is about education, explaining<br />

why these changes are important,” Blanton<br />

said. “It’s about making sure the effort is more<br />

widely understood.”<br />

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Roxbury Students Dance (and play) the Night Away<br />

Event Raises $54K for Pediatric Cancer<br />

8<br />

Story by MELISSA SUMMERS<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

To say that they danced the night away is<br />

an understatement.<br />

More than 250 Roxbury High School students<br />

danced, played, sang and, of course, ate till they<br />

dropped as they raised money for pediatric<br />

cancer at this year’s Rox-THON.<br />

The annual event has taken on several forms<br />

in the last few years as organizers navigated<br />

the pandemic and its restrictions. This year,<br />

Rox-THON returned to its true form with an<br />

overnight dance marathon at the Succasunna<br />

school on March 10.<br />

Based on the Penn State IFC/Panhellenic<br />

Dance Marathon (THON), which began in 1972,<br />

Rox-THON is designed to keep participants<br />

awake and on their feet, according to Roxbury<br />

High School teacher and Rox-THON co-advisor<br />

Mike Gottfried.<br />

As a Penn State alumnus fresh from several<br />

years of dancing at the university, Gottfried<br />

was approached in October 2013 to help with<br />

Roxbury High School Key Club’s first Mini-THON<br />

in 2014.<br />

(Mini-THONs are modeled after the Penn<br />

State THON, which raises money for Four<br />

Diamonds, a Penn State-based charity. Proceeds<br />

go towards helping Pennsylvania families<br />

impacted by childhood cancer, raising awareness<br />

and funding research.)<br />

“Key Club put on the event until 2016 when<br />

Mini-THON became its own club,” Gottfried<br />

explained. After a few years, he said, it made<br />

sense for the school to establish a locally<br />

run, more independent event. In 2019, they<br />

transitioned from Mini-THON to Rox-THON.<br />

“The school district felt it would be a good<br />

opportunity to donate the majority of our<br />

money to a local cause, as opposed to having all<br />

of the money go to the Penn State organization,”<br />

said Eisenhower Middle School teacher and<br />

Rox-THON co-advisor Margery Richman. “Now<br />

we donate to [Morristown Medical Center’s]<br />

Goryeb Children’s Hospital and specifically the<br />

[Valerie Fund Center].”<br />

The Valerie Fund provides comprehensive care<br />

to children with cancer and blood disorders and<br />

their families. Valerie Fund Centers are located<br />

in eight pediatric hospitals in New Jersey, New<br />

York and metro Philadelphia, including the<br />

center in Morristown.<br />

“Proceeds are now split with 30 percent going<br />

to Penn State Children’s Hospital and 70 percent<br />

going to Goryeb. It has brought the cause closer<br />

to home,” said Gottfried. “Working with local<br />

patients and families has been very beneficial<br />

for us and for them.”<br />

The partnership also allows students to visit<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

the Morristown facilities and<br />

speak to the hospital staff. “They<br />

hear where the money is going so<br />

it becomes a little more tangible<br />

for them,” Gottfried said.<br />

Rox-THON has a leadership<br />

structure consisting of<br />

committees, captains and<br />

directors. Roxbury senior Diya<br />

Narayan, 18, of Ledgewood, began<br />

as a freshman on the hospitality<br />

committee. Sophomore year she was a captain<br />

and this year she is Rox-THON’s president.<br />

She was first introduced to THON in 2019<br />

when eighth graders from Eisenhower Middle<br />

School were invited to attend. “I thought high<br />

school would be scary,” she recalled. “But all<br />

these people were standing for the kids who<br />

can’t. They stay 12 hours on their feet and are<br />

donating their time and money. It’s something<br />

so worthy, and I needed to be part of this<br />

movement.”<br />

Diya said she is honored to be part of a<br />

dedicated group of students and proud of how<br />

much they have accomplished. “After a long<br />

school day, some people just go home and nap,<br />

but these people start right at 2:30 p.m. We<br />

make decorations, we make calls. It’s inspiring.”<br />

Gottfried said building leadership skills is a<br />

big part of the organization. “Our leaders have<br />

done more and more each year,” he said. “We’ve<br />

learned how to delegate that work to them over<br />

time. We say, ‘This is what you need to do, go do<br />

it.’ And then we provide the support needed to<br />

help them get there. It’s incredible to see how<br />

much more work is being done and how much<br />

less falls on us, which is fantastic.”<br />

“It gives a lot of autonomy to the students,<br />

allows them to make a lot of decisions and it’s<br />

an opportunity to have these life skills that high<br />

schoolers normally don’t,” Richman added.<br />

The students call businesses, ask for money<br />

and donations and write thank-you notes—<br />

experiences that some college students and<br />

adults are lacking. “Our alumni talk about the<br />

skills that they learn being a leader here. They<br />

are going to take those and apply them down<br />

the road,” said Gottfried.<br />

The pandemic put the brakes on the<br />

overnight event for a few years, but the<br />

students were determined to keep it going.<br />

Junior Tyler Benedetto, 17, of Succasunna, was<br />

in eighth grade in 2020 when he was asked to<br />

DJ the event. “It was right as COVID happened,<br />

everything shut down and the in-person event<br />

got canceled,” he recalled. “A month later, I was<br />

brought on as a captain and part of planning the<br />

2020 virtual event.”<br />

Rox-THON was streamed entirely via YouTube<br />

that year and, in 2021, it was held outdoors. “We<br />

were on the track and the back of Roxbury High<br />

School,” Diya said. “There were games, dancing.<br />

It was not as big as if it was held inside, but it<br />

shows how hardworking THON is to be able to<br />

keep it going.”<br />

In 2022, the students were back inside for a<br />

six-hour event, even though the mask mandate<br />

wasn’t lifted until the Monday before the event,<br />

according to Gottfried.<br />

This year, with a return to the 12-hour<br />

overnight model, those planning Rox-THON<br />

were prepared. “We had a few DJs, a bounce<br />

house and the entertainment committee<br />

planned both organized and ‘backyard’ games,”<br />

Tyler said. “It’s all to keep everyone moving and<br />

on their feet. Most activities were in the gym,<br />

and we had the food in the cafeteria.”<br />

Diya is grateful for the donation of food that<br />

kept the teens’ stomachs full. “We had pizza,<br />

Cliff’s ice cream, bagels and the hospitality<br />

committee made pancakes.”<br />

And cue the ABBA soundtrack, she added.<br />

“Our theme this year was disco. I was so<br />

excited.” The decorations and T-shirts, created<br />

by the morale team, also fit the theme.<br />

Senior Jenna Waldron, 18, of Kenvil, was the<br />

director of morale. She’d been involved in the<br />

event since she was a freshman, following two<br />

older siblings who were also part of Rox-THON.<br />

One of the committee’s most important roles<br />

was designing an original line dance.<br />

“We created a three-minute-long dance that<br />

we did every hour on the hour during the event,”<br />

she said. “Every year we pick songs and Tyler, our<br />

resident DJ, mixes the songs. We choreographed<br />

it over a few meetings and then learned it and<br />

then taught it to everyone at the event.”<br />

Another big part of the night was the Family<br />

Hour where guest speakers were welcomed to<br />

share their stories. “It was to remind everyone<br />

why we’re doing what we’re doing,” Jenna said.<br />

This year featured a representative from<br />

Surviving Hope, a Mount Arlington-based<br />

charity that provides financial support to<br />

families impacted by a sudden medical crisis<br />

and volunteers to help with household needs,<br />

according to Jenna.<br />

Ledgewood freshman Emily Rowe, 15, had<br />

personal reasons for being a part of Rox-THON.


“My little cousin has gone through pediatric<br />

cancer,” she said as she made a card for one<br />

of the patients at Goryeb Children’s Hospital.<br />

“Seeing her like that made me want to help<br />

other people who experienced the same thing<br />

that she did. Being here means a lot to me,<br />

knowing that I’m able to help other people like<br />

her.”<br />

Not only did Julia Gonzalez, 16, want to<br />

support a good cause, but the junior from<br />

Landing was happy to see friends outside of the<br />

regular school setting. “I’m a dancer so I love<br />

performing and dancing,” she said. “It’s a good<br />

tactic to use a lot of different types of dancing<br />

to allow people to come together. It’s a really<br />

fun night and a great message.”<br />

Rox-THON organizers hold an assembly early<br />

in the planning process to draw interest in<br />

volunteering and attending the event. Freshman<br />

Elymar Severino-Duran, 14, of Hopatcong, was<br />

sold on the enthusiasm. “I wanted to be a part<br />

of something special.”<br />

Gottfried said he is appreciative of an<br />

administration that supports the event and<br />

everything leading up to it. “It wouldn’t happen<br />

Facing page: Students learning this<br />

year’s line dance.<br />

This page, top, left to right: Dancing<br />

in the gym.<br />

After staying awake and on his feet<br />

for 11 hours, Daniel Ritacco takes<br />

a nap.<br />

Alysa Talmadge shows off her autographed T-shirt.<br />

At the 12th hour, the Rox-THON committee reveals the amount of<br />

money raised.<br />

Blake Salemi dresses for the disco theme.<br />

without the kids and the commitment of the<br />

staff,” added Richman.<br />

The amount raised at the Rox-THON totaled<br />

$52,902.34 and was revealed at the conclusion<br />

of the event. Other donations brought the total<br />

to $54,000.<br />

“As much as your feet hurt, as much as you’re<br />

tired and sore, you know that you’re not dancing<br />

for you, you’re dancing for someone else that<br />

can’t,” said Jenna Waldron, the senior leading the<br />

morale team.<br />

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LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


lakehopatcongnews.com 11


Water Quality Report<br />

Doesn’t Mince Words:<br />

Lake is Getting Hotter<br />

12<br />

Story by MICHAEL DAIGLE<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

The work needed to clean up Lake<br />

Hopatcong is being done in many ways,<br />

both in the lake and offshore.<br />

Lake weeds are being cut and harvested. Better<br />

filtration is being used to clean runoff before it<br />

gets to the lake. Chemical treatments are being<br />

used to combat outbreaks of heavy pollutants.<br />

Pollution-absorbing shoreside wetlands are<br />

being restored and floating in-lake wetlands are<br />

being planned and installed.<br />

Even bigger projects—sewers and channel<br />

dredging—are being planned, pending funding.<br />

There are even projects of a smaller scope:<br />

Efforts to discourage Canada geese from settling<br />

in and raising families are ongoing, and the<br />

measurement of the influx of microplastics and<br />

salt have begun.<br />

Progress, all.<br />

But none of these efforts directly address an<br />

underlying concern: New Jersey’s largest lake is a<br />

2,600-acre pot of slowly boiling water.<br />

“There has been a statistically significant<br />

increase in surface water temperatures at Lake<br />

Hopatcong over the past 33 years,” stated the<br />

2022 Lake Hopatcong Water Quality Report,<br />

issued in December by the consulting firm<br />

Princeton Hydro LLC.<br />

“It should be noted that each year from 2019 to<br />

2022 were in the top six of the highest recorded<br />

July surface water temperatures dating back to<br />

1988,” the report said. “The highest surface water<br />

July temperature at Station 2 [mid-lake between<br />

River Styx and Van Every Cove] was recorded in<br />

2005 and was 28.5 degrees Celsius [83.3 degrees<br />

Fahrenheit].”<br />

On it goes: “The July 2022 surface water<br />

temperature at Station 2 was the fourth highest<br />

recorded at 27.5 degrees Celsius [81.5 degrees<br />

Fahrenheit.] These data provide evidence that<br />

climatic change is impacting Lake Hopatcong.<br />

In turn, increasing water temperatures make the<br />

lake more favorable for larger and more frequent<br />

harmful algal blooms (HABs).”<br />

The 2022 report signified an important shift in<br />

the collection and analysis of the data.<br />

“This analysis was conducted to assess the<br />

potential impacts of climate change on Lake<br />

Hopatcong. The Station 2, mid-lake data were<br />

used because there was no chance of shading<br />

from near-shore trees or structures at this<br />

location.”<br />

Fred Lubnow, director of aquatic programs<br />

for Princeton Hydro, said the continually rising<br />

temperature of the lake’s water influences a<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

variety of results.<br />

Trout, for example,<br />

thrive in cooler water.<br />

A three-year study is<br />

being conducted jointly<br />

by the Lake Hopatcong<br />

Commission, Lake<br />

Hopatcong Foundation<br />

and Knee Deep Club<br />

to determine how<br />

many trout stocked in<br />

the spring each year survive the higher water<br />

temperatures of the summer.<br />

Last year, anglers reported they caught 16 of<br />

the 1,000 specially tagged brown trout that had<br />

been stocked in April, the club said.<br />

These trout are in addition to the roughly<br />

9,000 trout released in Lake Hopatcong<br />

annually by the New Jersey Division of Fish and<br />

Wildlife.<br />

Club member Tim Clancy attributed the low<br />

number of caught tagged fish reported last<br />

year to lack of information about the special<br />

program. He said the club is redoubling efforts<br />

this year to educate the fishing community<br />

about the project. For more information visit<br />

kneedeepclub.org.<br />

The 2022 water quality report indicates the<br />

rising temperature of the lake was a factor in the<br />

dynamic conditions affecting trout habitat.<br />

“Optimal habitat” for brown trout, the highest<br />

standard, is defined as waters with dissolved<br />

oxygen concentrations equal to or greater than<br />

5 mg/L and water temperatures less than 65<br />

degrees.<br />

“Acceptable or carry-over habitat,” a lesser<br />

standard, is defined as waters containing<br />

dissolved oxygen concentrations equal to or<br />

greater than 5 mg/L and water temperatures<br />

up to 79 degrees. Those are conditions in which<br />

trout may be able to “carry over” or survive the<br />

warmer summer water temperatures until the<br />

lake cools in the fall.<br />

The existence of trout habitat varied greatly<br />

from month-to-month last year, the report said.<br />

Examples: On July 11, there was carry-over<br />

habitat present in the upper 15.3 feet of Station<br />

2. On July 18, the available habitat had been<br />

squeezed to a width of 1.5 feet between depths<br />

of 12 and 13.2 feet. The report indicates that was<br />

a dramatic change.<br />

In May and June both optimal and carry-over<br />

habitats were measured between 20 feet and 68<br />

feet.<br />

But, the report said, “sampling conducted<br />

on July 5 as part of the trout study revealed<br />

extremely limited optimal brown trout habitat<br />

One of a thousand specially tagged trout released into Lake Hopatcong<br />

last year.<br />

throughout the lake as a result of increasing<br />

temperatures…as well as the anoxic (oxygen<br />

deficient) conditions creeping upwards in the<br />

water column.”<br />

On October 6, with cooler water, the optimal<br />

trout habitat was present in the upper 38.43 feet<br />

of the lake.<br />

In a video presentation to the Lake Hopatcong<br />

Foundation on the 2022 report, Lubnow said<br />

studies are suggesting another heat-related<br />

issue: As the lake warms, the chemical bond in<br />

the lake sediment between iron and phosphorus<br />

is breaking, releasing more phosphorus into the<br />

lake water.


Phosphorus is the prime pollutant in Lake<br />

Hopatcong. The targeted level is a daily measured<br />

concentration of 0.03 mg/L. The values fluctuate<br />

by season.<br />

Colleen Lyons, administrator for the Lake<br />

Hopatcong Commission, said the commission<br />

received a $206,000 grant to conduct a refined<br />

study to determine the lake’s current phosphorus<br />

load.<br />

Annual water quality reports indicate the<br />

annual total phosphorus in the lake since 2019<br />

has been decreasing.<br />

In 2019 and 2020, the average measurement<br />

of total phosphorus was .020 mg/L; in 2021 the<br />

average was .018 mg/L; and in 2022, the average<br />

was .014 mg/L.<br />

One of the ways the commission combats<br />

phosphorus is through its annual weed<br />

harvesting program.<br />

The weed program has operated since<br />

the 1980s with varying success, but remains<br />

an important program, Lubnow said. Lake<br />

Hopatcong Commission Chairman Ron Smith<br />

agreed.<br />

Following a fatal harvester accident in<br />

2020, the program was put on hold and did<br />

not operate again until 2022, when changes<br />

were made. In an important step to reduce<br />

the cost of the program, the commission<br />

arranged for the weeds to be dried before<br />

disposal, reducing the weight of the weeds<br />

by 75 percent, Smith said.<br />

Last year, 1,178 cubic yards (531 tons) of plant<br />

biomass were removed, the 2022 report said.<br />

This resulted in the removal of approximately<br />

86 kilograms (189 pounds) of total phosphorus,<br />

which has the potential to produce approximately<br />

208,200 pounds of wet algae biomass.<br />

Smith said the harvester damaged in the 2020<br />

accident has been returned from the state, is<br />

being repaired and will be available this season.<br />

In the past two years, a variety of pilot<br />

programs have been funded for the lake<br />

community, all aimed at reducing conditions<br />

that produce harmful algal blooms, such as the<br />

2019 event that effectively closed the lake that<br />

summer. Over 70 New Jersey lakes were affected<br />

by HABs that year.<br />

Lyons cited these programs: the installation<br />

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of floating wetland islands in Landing Channel<br />

in Roxbury; shoreline stabilization through<br />

plantings at Memorial Pond in Mount Arlington;<br />

replacement of filtration material in stormwater<br />

drains in Jefferson; and replanting of a wetland<br />

stormwater basin in Hopatcong.<br />

Another state grant funded a project<br />

encompassing all four lake towns to install<br />

and remove biochar (carbon) sleeves in two<br />

stormwater ponds and in a series of stormwater<br />

structures, manufactured treatment devices<br />

and inlets into Lake Hopatcong. The project<br />

also included the removal of sediment that has<br />

accumulated immediately in front of or adjacent<br />

to stormwater pipes or outfalls that discharge<br />

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Water Quality Report (cont’d)<br />

directly into the lake, she said.<br />

A federal grant funded the restoration of<br />

Witten Park in Hopatcong. Here, Sperry <strong>Spring</strong><br />

will be rehabilitated with new plantings to<br />

stabilize its banks to better filter runoff. In<br />

addition, a new stormwater system will be<br />

installed to direct runoff to a naturally occurring<br />

slope before it enters the lake.<br />

Also, on Glen Brook in Mount Arlington’s<br />

Memorial Park, about 75 linear feet of the brook<br />

will be regraded and new plantings added to<br />

increase the filtration of runoff.<br />

And, along the Musconetcong River<br />

below the Landing Dam at Hopatcong State<br />

Park, about four acres of streambank will be<br />

restored and stabilized with native plants<br />

used to replace invasive species.<br />

Three aeration projects to increase the<br />

level of oxygen in the water were installed<br />

at the beach in Mount Arlington, Lake Forest<br />

Yacht Club in Jefferson and Shore Hills Country<br />

Club in Roxbury.<br />

Lubnow, in a video discussion of the 2022<br />

water quality report, showed the improved<br />

water clarity at Shore Hills as a result of the<br />

project. While the water treated by the influx of<br />

bubbles was brown, the absence of a green tinge<br />

associated with algae growth was noted.<br />

Lyons said the commission is in discussions<br />

with the clubs and Mount Arlington to continue<br />

the programs.<br />

“The project installation went well,” said<br />

Carolyn Rinaldi, Mount Arlington borough<br />

administrator. “Working with the Lake Hopatcong<br />

Commission, we were able to find a suitable<br />

location that was also mindful of our borough<br />

beachgoers and does not impact the swimming<br />

area. It is certainly our hope that this and future<br />

efforts will all aid in the water quality of Lake<br />

Hopatcong.”<br />

The borough council on March 7 approved<br />

an agreement to take over the operation and<br />

“There has been a statistically significant<br />

increase in surface water temperatures at<br />

Lake Hopatcong over the past 33 years.”<br />

—from the 2022 Lake Hopatcong Water Quality Report,<br />

issued in December by the consulting firm Princeton Hydro LLC.<br />

maintenance of their system, she said.<br />

Small, focused projects also matter.<br />

Karen Porfido of Mount Arlington, an alternate<br />

on the Lake Hopatcong Commission, is heading<br />

up that group’s effort to reduce goose damage to<br />

the lake watershed. In its second year, volunteers<br />

are being trained by United States Department<br />

of Agriculture wildlife scientist April Simnor<br />

in goose management techniques, including<br />

egg addling and discussing the program with<br />

landowners where geese are nesting.<br />

Porfido said the impact of goose feces on Lake<br />

Hopatcong is profound.<br />

“Four adult geese can produce as much<br />

phosphorus as one septic system,” she said.<br />

“One goose produces one-half pound of<br />

phosphorus a year, which has the potential to<br />

generate 550 pounds of wet algae.”<br />

In 2021, there were 18 nests and 87 eggs addled<br />

in Jefferson Township.<br />

The future could also bring new funding and<br />

larger projects to bear.<br />

The state Senate Environment and Energy<br />

Committee has approved bipartisan legislation,<br />

sponsored by Sens. Joe Pennacchio, Anthony<br />

Bucco, Steven Oroho, and Vin Gopal, to<br />

fund $17 million for watershed programs<br />

at Lake Hopatcong, Greenwood Lake and<br />

other lakes in the Highlands and Pinelands<br />

regions.<br />

Priority would be given to projects<br />

improving water quality and increasing<br />

recreational access, including efforts to<br />

control nutrient levels in lakes to prevent future<br />

HABs.<br />

Two significant projects are seeking funding.<br />

A program to install sewers along Jefferson’s<br />

lakeside is awaiting potentially $90 million in<br />

federal funding.<br />

The funds were included in a federal watershed<br />

protection bill by Rep. Mikie Sherrill last year.<br />

That bill was folded into the <strong>2023</strong> defense<br />

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Jefferson Mayor Eric Wilsusen said the sewers<br />

would be an important step in reducing lake<br />

pollution.<br />

“Residents want sewers,” he said. “A septic<br />

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Wilsusen said the federal funds, if approved,<br />

could come later this year.<br />

An innovative approach to improve water<br />

quality is planned for Roxbury’s Landing Channel.<br />

The goal is to dredge the shallow channel and<br />

use the material to rebuild Floating Island in the<br />

middle of the channel into a larger floating garden<br />

structure designed to remove phosphorus from<br />

the water. This is a similar tactic seen in such<br />

structures installed in Jefferson’s Ashley Cove.<br />

The plan has been approved by the Roxbury<br />

Township Council. Funding is being sought from<br />

the New Jersey Highlands Council.<br />

At the northern end of the lake, the impact<br />

of an agreement between the State Department<br />

of Environmental Protection and Weldon Quarry<br />

in Hopatcong could lead to water quality-related<br />

projects.<br />

In 2018, the DEP filed three notices of violation<br />

related to a broken transfer pipe at the quarry.<br />

At the time, Woodport Cove residents reported<br />

increased silt in a local stream that fed into the<br />

lake. The quarry was cited for two violations<br />

of the Water Pollution Control Act and one<br />

violation of the Freshwater Wetlands Protection<br />

Act.<br />

A settlement on the violations was reached,<br />

Lake Hopatcong Foundation and Princeton Hydro staff ready new floating wetland islands for<br />

Ashley Cove in June of 2022.<br />

but is not public, lake commission officials said.<br />

The agreement is thought to include a fine for<br />

the quarry and site remediation plans.<br />

So, big problem, but big effort.<br />

In the back of the 2022 water quality report,<br />

three line charts suggest the progress being<br />

achieved in three areas between 1991 and 2022:<br />

reduction of total daily phosphorus; reduction<br />

of chlorophyll a, an important element in the<br />

food chain of algae; and an improvement in<br />

the clarity of the water, which is recorded as<br />

the depth that a black-and-white disc called a<br />

Secchi disk, dropped into the water, can be seen<br />

from the surface.<br />

Each chart shows the agreed-upon threshold<br />

used to measure progress of various lake<br />

treatments.<br />

The threshold for phosphorus is .03 mg/L; for<br />

chlorophyll a, 20 mg/L; and for Secchi depth,<br />

clarity at 3.2 feet below the surface.<br />

The charts indicate the long-term values of<br />

all three measurements over 30 years exceed<br />

the thresholds, meaning there is less measurable<br />

phosphorus, less chlorophyll a, and the water is<br />

clearer.<br />

Long term, average phosphorus was measured<br />

at .02 mg/L; chlorophyll a at 10.2 mg/L; and water<br />

clarity depth at roughly 6.5 feet.<br />

Lubnow, in his video presentation, cautioned<br />

about reading too much into the chart data<br />

because conditions in the lake year-to-year are<br />

influenced by many factors, including weather.<br />

Given the complexity of the lake issues, if it<br />

looks like progress, maybe it is.<br />

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LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


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LOCAL<br />

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Jimmy O’Brien said he is a strong believer in being able to laugh at yourself and said he doesn’t take himself too<br />

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has been married to his wife, Margaret, for 54 years. They have three children, 10 grandchildren and one greatgranddaughter.<br />

Their grandchildren range in age from 13 to 27. O’Brien said he spends as much time with them as he<br />

can. “They always have time for me,” he said.<br />

WHERE ARE YOU ORIGINALLY FROM?<br />

The Inwood section of New York City. It was a great place to grow up and there was<br />

never a problem getting enough guys together for a game of stickball. When we<br />

were teenagers, the police and firefighters would come during the summer on<br />

Mondays to challenge us to a game of baseball. It was always fun.<br />

HOW DO YOU EARN A LIVING?<br />

I have worked for Van Cleef Engineering for about the past 10 years. It is a large<br />

company with offices in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. I am a state-certified<br />

public works manager, and I find my work is always different and rewarding. It<br />

is a family-owned business, and they make you feel like family.<br />

WHAT’S THE CRAZIEST/MOST UNUSUAL JOB YOU’VE EVER HAD?<br />

I was a supervisor for Con Edison and was assigned to do work at<br />

the Russian Embassy. We were under constant watch by two “big<br />

estates” who never took their hands out of their pockets. When<br />

the job was finished, these two guys told my crew to leave but<br />

told me to stay. They then gave me a bottle of Russian vodka. I<br />

guess they liked me. I shared the vodka with my supervisors.<br />

WHO HAS BEEN YOUR BIGGEST INFLUENCE IN LIFE AND<br />

WHY?<br />

I would say my wife, family and friends. I have some wonderful<br />

people I have met over the years, and they are always there<br />

to help when needed. A friend of mine, years ago, told me:<br />

When you are down over something, ask yourself, how<br />

important is it?<br />

DESCRIBE THE TYPE OF PERSON YOU ARE.<br />

I like to do things that most people would not even<br />

think about. This is one of my strong points. I have been<br />

blessed with the ability to get things done. I have been<br />

knocked down many times, but I don’t give up. I get right<br />

up and start over.<br />

DO YOU VOLUNTEER?<br />

I am the fundraising chairman for St Jude’s Catholic<br />

Church. We will have five big fundraisers this year,<br />

including two concerts, a comedy night, a sock hop and a<br />

pig roast.<br />

IS THERE ANYTHING MOST PEOPLE WOULD BE<br />

SURPRISED TO LEARN ABOUT YOU?<br />

I am a history buff. I got interested in the two world wars,<br />

the Korean War and the Vietnam War. I like to follow<br />

the battles my dad was in during World War II. He was<br />

with the 20th Armored Division. He was at the Battle of<br />

the Bulge, and he was with one of three divisions that<br />

liberated Dachau. As a kid, I would hear stories from my<br />

father and uncles. I had a lot of questions. I would love<br />

to go back in time and witness what our country has<br />

been through.<br />

creative funny strong<br />

I AM I AM I AM<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 17


Music Moves This Congregation<br />

Story by BONNIE-LYNN NADZEIKA<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

On a brisk March Sunday, the unmistakable<br />

sounds of live music emanated from<br />

a small white building on Maxim Drive in<br />

Hopatcong that houses the Byram Bay Christian<br />

Church.<br />

Inside, band members, including a vocalist and<br />

three backup singers, practiced worship songs<br />

that had been prepared for the Sunday service,<br />

while the musicians fine-tuned the sound<br />

system and checked the microphones. Church<br />

members entered and greeted each other with<br />

hugs, well wishes, good mornings and “God bless<br />

you.” There were children of varying ages—lots<br />

of children—who chatted with each other and<br />

got settled in their seats.<br />

The Byram Bay Christian Church has a long<br />

history in Hopatcong; its first services were held<br />

at a local barn more than 100 years ago. Today’s<br />

current congregation of about 360 members—<br />

led by husband-and-wife team Pastors Ken and<br />

Karen Adams—was formed in 2007.<br />

The church was an outgrowth of the Women’s<br />

Community Club of Sperry <strong>Spring</strong>s, formed<br />

in 1898. Per the articles of incorporation, the<br />

women’s club was founded “to promote social<br />

enjoyment and to do religious and civic work<br />

at Sperry <strong>Spring</strong>s, Hopatcong, New Jersey.”<br />

Eventually, the religious purpose would lead to<br />

the forming of the Byram Bay Church, with the<br />

first services held in 1907.<br />

Over those first few decades, notices in the<br />

Lake Hopatcong Breeze detailed the efforts of<br />

the women’s group to serve the community,<br />

including the church. There were dances and<br />

bake sales. These funded the church building<br />

and furnishings. It is unknown when the club<br />

ceased to operate.<br />

When enough funds were secured to build<br />

an actual church, Lillian Maxim, wife of Hudson<br />

Maxim, offered the land where the current<br />

building sits, but with a caveat. Per the legal<br />

indenture, the property could never be used<br />

for anything but a church, which was always<br />

to be nondenominational. (Byram Bay is a<br />

nondenominational, elder-governed church.)<br />

The indenture was also very thorough in<br />

listing exactly what the land could not be used<br />

for, including any type of “slaughterhouse…<br />

pits or excavations for the purpose of mining,<br />

or any other noxious or dangerous trade or<br />

business… any hotel, or inn or any establishment,<br />

booth or saloon for the sale of malt, vinous or<br />

other spirituous liquors.”<br />

A small church was built in 1926 and designed<br />

for when services were seasonal, catering to the<br />

needs of summer residents. Typically, services<br />

began right around the Fourth of July and<br />

continued through August.<br />

Ken Adams, the pastor, refers to it as having<br />

been a “walk-up” church, where many members<br />

walked from their nearby summer homes or<br />

arrived by boat. According to reports from<br />

the Lake Hopatcong Breeze, there was no<br />

permanent pastor assigned to the church, so<br />

different members of the congregation, as well<br />

as guests from other churches, led services.<br />

Today, the outside of the church is clad in<br />

white vinyl siding with modern double-hung<br />

windows that are decorated on the inside only<br />

by venetian blinds and cream brocade valances.<br />

A large wooden screen separates a small kitchen<br />

area from the nave, where, beneath the rows of<br />

blue upholstered chairs, the oak floor is scarred<br />

from generations of feet.<br />

There is Tudor-style woodwork throughout<br />

and the dark-stained pine boards against the<br />

white-painted sheetrock provides decoration<br />

for the walls and ceiling. The church bell—which<br />

is rung weekly by a group of enthusiastic boys<br />

to signal the start of service—is housed in the<br />

building’s bell tower that peeks through the roof<br />

From left to right: Pastor Ken Adams during<br />

his Sunday sermon. Pastor Karen Adams,<br />

Serena Edoh and Mark Johnson singing hymns<br />

during service. Helen Sgambati reacts to the<br />

congregation singing to her.<br />

18<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


of the one-story structure.<br />

Byram Bay’s Sunday services are less formal<br />

than those at many churches. There are no<br />

candles, no vestments and no hymnals. There is,<br />

however, music—a lot of music.<br />

According to issues of the Lake Hopatcong<br />

Breeze from the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, music<br />

was always a big part of church services.<br />

The Saturday, August 8, 1931 issue includes the<br />

following notice: “John A. Scott’s Happy Hour<br />

from Station WAAM will be at the Byram Bay<br />

Christian Church Sunday, August 16, at 4 p.m.<br />

and you see how the Happy Hour has been<br />

conducted at the studio for more than seven<br />

years. Mr. Scott expects to bring some of his<br />

singers with him. You have enjoyed listening in<br />

on the radio, come out on the 16th and tell him<br />

so.”<br />

At the recent March service, Heather and<br />

James Kohler—who are both elders serving<br />

as board secretary and board treasurer,<br />

respectively—led the musical worship. Heather,<br />

the lead singer, was backed by husband James on<br />

guitar, son Nathan on bass, Alex Edoh on drums<br />

and backup singers Karen Adams, Serena Edoh<br />

and Mark Johnson.<br />

The music was contemporary and propelled<br />

by Edoh’s driving bass drum. Instead of<br />

hymnals, there was a large flat-screen television<br />

displaying the words to each song—karaokestyle.<br />

The group performed a series of upbeat,<br />

contemporary tunes<br />

reminiscent of modern<br />

pop songs and got<br />

congregants out of<br />

their seats and onto<br />

their feet.<br />

A short intermission after the music led to Ken<br />

Adams’ sermon, which touched on the Biblical<br />

story of Paul’s conversion to Christianity on the<br />

road to Damascus. Adams referred to his own<br />

story of conversion and encouraged the group<br />

not to give up on even the most difficult person.<br />

Following the sermon, Adams shared news<br />

about one of the families missing from the<br />

service that day—the Colondrillo family. Usually<br />

in attendance on Sundays, the Colondrillos had<br />

just welcomed their eighth child.<br />

Adams thanked and recognized church<br />

members who had pitched in to feed and care<br />

for the family’s seven other children and their<br />

pets. Turning to another church member, Adams<br />

led a rousing rendition of “Happy Birthday to<br />

You” for member Helen Sgambati, who recently<br />

turned 96.<br />

Sgambati, a 50-year resident of Hopatcong,<br />

has been coming to the church for five years.<br />

When asked what brought her to this particular<br />

church, she replied, “God brought me here.”<br />

Her sentiments are echoed by Stacy Herles,<br />

a Stanhope resident and church member since<br />

2015. Herles said the pastors brought her to<br />

From left to right: The musical portion of<br />

a recent service as seen from the church<br />

balcony. Lucca Ginetto, Lincoln Edoh,<br />

Ben Kohler and Matthew Kohler ring<br />

the church bell to start the service. Mark<br />

Hallock during the service.<br />

the church. “I was looking to be saved and they<br />

saved me,” she said.<br />

Edoh, the band’s drummer, said he had been<br />

looking for a church for 12 years. “I came here,<br />

and I knew I had found what I was looking for,”<br />

he said. Edoh, his wife Serena and their two<br />

children, have been attending services for two<br />

and half years.<br />

Susan Priore, a three-year member, was<br />

previously a lifelong Catholic attending church<br />

near her Denville home. While searching for a<br />

new place to dock her boat at Lake Hopatcong,<br />

she said she saw a sign for a property auction<br />

and wound up purchasing a lakefront property in<br />

Hopatcong. Curiosity brought her to Byram Bay<br />

Christian Church. “I like the fact that people here<br />

know each other by name,” she said.<br />

After the service ended, there was more<br />

hugging and chatting. No one seemed in a hurry<br />

to leave.<br />

The music started again, this time played by<br />

a pint-sized version of the adult band, with<br />

the children of the congregation manning the<br />

instruments—even if the guitar was almost as<br />

tall as the guitarist and the drum set swallowed<br />

up the drummer.<br />

15th Annual<br />

<strong>Spring</strong> Charity Hike<br />

Hudson Farm Club • 270 Sparta-Stanhope Rd. • Andover<br />

Saturday, May 13, <strong>2023</strong> (Rain or Shine)<br />

7:30AM (Last hiker may enter at 11:00AM)<br />

This event is open to everyone!<br />

Benefits many local organizations<br />

Complete the hike—get $1 per year of age—donate to any participating organization<br />

Lunch and souvenir gift compliments of the Hudson Farm Club<br />

For details call Anthony Luciani at 201-874-1412 or Donna Luciani at 973-222-8398<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 19


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lakehopatcongnews.com 21


Music Duo Hitting All the Right Notes<br />

Story by ELLEN WILKOWE<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

Guitars in hand, Vern Miller and Jeiris Cook<br />

sat side by side in Miller’s home studio<br />

in Jefferson and belted out “Pride and Joy,”<br />

followed by “He’s Got a Lot of Attitude,” two<br />

of five original songs the pair collaborated on<br />

during the height of the pandemic.<br />

But this was no ordinary warm-up or rehearsal.<br />

This was the first time the Jefferson-area duo<br />

performed together in real time.<br />

“We never actually played together and never<br />

even jammed together in the same room,” Cook<br />

marveled, strumming and humming.<br />

“Right before the pandemic happened, we<br />

had plans to meet up and jam. The pandemic<br />

brought it to a halt.”<br />

Make that a brief halt.<br />

Thanks to modern technology—think<br />

Zoom, emails and smartphones—the five-song<br />

compilation was composed online from the<br />

comfort of their respective home studios.<br />

This first jam session on a Monday afternoon<br />

left no note untuned as guitarist and bassist<br />

found their rhythms and grooves as if they’d<br />

been touring for years. Cook’s rich velvety voice<br />

only enhanced the instrumental component.<br />

So, how did two men with almost four<br />

decades—Miller is 78 and Cook is 43—and<br />

about 10 miles between them come to cross<br />

paths, never mind produce a playlist during the<br />

days of social distancing?<br />

It started in 2019, when Cook’s oldest son<br />

Xavier Cook (now 13) began taking art lessons<br />

from Miller’s wife and artist, Susan Miller.<br />

During the lessons, the two men got to<br />

talking and discovered their mutual love of<br />

music, as well as an unexpected geographical<br />

common ground: South Orange-Maplewood,<br />

specifically Colombia High School. Turns out it’s<br />

Cook’s alma mater and home to one of Miller’s<br />

former careers as a music teacher.<br />

“Vern was a music teacher there, and we<br />

bonded over students that he had that were<br />

my friends,” Cook said. “He wasn’t my teacher,<br />

though.”<br />

While the pandemic closed down the world,<br />

it didn’t stop Miller and Cook from exploring<br />

their musical passions together.<br />

“When one door closes, a window opens and<br />

you climb through,” said Cook.<br />

Well, this window was wide open with<br />

uncharted opportunities and experiences<br />

waiting on the other side.<br />

Classically trained on trumpet and tuba,<br />

Miller honed his lifelong music career via a full<br />

music scholarship to Boston University. Born<br />

into a musically inclined family—his dad was a<br />

trumpet player, composer, arranger and teacher,<br />

and his mom a pianist/organist and teacher—<br />

Miller was exposed to a number of genres.<br />

“When I was around 12 or 13, my parents took<br />

my brother and I to a Baptist church in Newark<br />

or East Orange to play our trumpets during<br />

the service,” he said. “The church had a gospel<br />

choir, and that music and sound just blew me<br />

away. It was coming from a place so deep and<br />

heartfelt like I had never experienced in live<br />

music before.”<br />

The experience opened his eyes and ears<br />

to jazz, blues and soul, which was further<br />

cemented by Newark-based WBGO, a public<br />

radio jazz station.<br />

Miller said he was additionally influenced by<br />

a litany of greats including Bill Haley, Duane<br />

Eddy, The Ventures, The Coasters, The Everly<br />

Brothers, Elvis Presley and Chuck Berry.<br />

“It was around this time I started teaching<br />

myself how to play guitar,” he recalled.<br />

Miller further honed his chops in high school<br />

via the upright bass, forming a band and hitting<br />

up the country club circuit.<br />

“By the time I started college at Boston<br />

University, I was listening to Otis Redding, Bob<br />

Dylan and blues musicians like Muddy Waters,<br />

John Lee Hooker, Ray Charles,” he said.<br />

In addition to studying and playing classical<br />

music, he also picked<br />

up the bass guitar and<br />

eventually formed The<br />

Remains, a four-piece<br />

band that earned its<br />

name with the help of<br />

some nursing students attending the same party as<br />

the band members.<br />

The musical forces behind the band led to an<br />

Epic Records contract and The Remains recorded<br />

their first single in 1964. An appearance on “The<br />

ED Sullivan Show” took place the following year<br />

during Christmastime.<br />

“This is when you know your performance is<br />

going to be seen and heard by 14 million people<br />

and that’s kind of enough to make you shake in<br />

your boots a bit,” said Miller.<br />

The Remains were further propelled into the big<br />

time, landing as the opening act for the Beatles’<br />

U.S. tour in 1966.<br />

“An agent heard us play and said, ‘How would<br />

you like to open for the Beatles?’” Miller recalled.<br />

The group had just made a pact to never be an<br />

opening act but when the Beatles came calling,<br />

“that all went to pieces,” laughed Miller.<br />

Sharing a chartered jet with the Beatles was<br />

an experience Miller described as exhilarating,<br />

exciting, educational and humbling.<br />

“We look at our heroes from the outside, as larger<br />

than life and when you meet them for real, you<br />

get to see them as human beings,” said Miller, who<br />

developed a close bond with George Harrison to<br />

the point of listening to sitar player Ravi Shankar’s<br />

tapes in his room after performances.<br />

“We would just listen to this music and sit and<br />

talk,” he said of Harrison. “He was a wonderful,<br />

down-to-earth, humble human being and willingly<br />

shared his feelings about being a Beatle and having<br />

reached a point in his life where he was now ready<br />

to branch out as the individual and musician<br />

George Harrison.”<br />

While Miller has kept tabs on Harrison’s career,<br />

he never kept in touch with him after the tour.<br />

The Remains disbanded after the tour, with each<br />

member moving in different directions. In the late<br />

1990s the group reunited, playing sporadic live<br />

shows. Their last hurrah<br />

Scan the QR code to<br />

listen to “He’s Got a Lot<br />

of Attitude” by Vern<br />

Miller and Jeiris Cook.<br />

22<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


came in 2002 when the group cut a new album,<br />

“Movin’ On.”<br />

Post-college, the ever-evolving Miller expanded<br />

his A-list experience via Donna Summer, performing<br />

with her band as a bass player. He also played bass<br />

for Swallow, an 11-piece band that recorded two<br />

albums with Warner Brothers.<br />

While performing with Swallow at a venue in<br />

Bedford, Massachusetts, a “gorgeous girl with<br />

green eyes” approached Miller after the first set.<br />

“She innocently walked up to me and said, ‘I<br />

love your band and I want to wish you good luck<br />

with your album,’” recalled Miller of meeting his<br />

future wife. “Our eyes met for an instant then she<br />

disappeared into the crowd.”<br />

Fate intervened when, at a second performance<br />

at the same venue, that green-eyed girl sat front<br />

and center. “The rest is history,” said Miller.<br />

He remained in Boston for more than a decade<br />

and returned to New Jersey in 1976 to start the<br />

next phase of his life, teaching instrumental music<br />

in the South Orange-Maplewood School District.<br />

Given his background, Miller said he was often<br />

approached by students about his experiences or<br />

invited to speak to groups about his career.<br />

“I had a real good rapport with my students and<br />

have established lifelong friendships with many of<br />

them, which is very meaningful to me,” he said. “I<br />

think my experiences helped me have credibility<br />

with my students.”<br />

Meanwhile, Cook’s foray into the music world<br />

took a completely different route.<br />

A childhood transplant to Maplewood from<br />

Atlanta, Georgia, he experienced “culture shock” in<br />

New Jersey. “I had this deep Southern drawl,” he<br />

recalled.<br />

He found a constant in music and started singing<br />

along with the radio on long car rides.<br />

“In elementary, middle and high school, I joined<br />

whatever choir I could,” he said. “If there was<br />

singing, I was there.”<br />

Having never taken voice lessons, Cook said<br />

he tried to mimic the vocal tones he heard from<br />

his favorite artists on the radio.<br />

In terms of musical inspiration, Cook<br />

gravitated towards R&B male quartet groups<br />

from the ‘90s like Boyz II Men, Shai and Jodeci.<br />

Later, he explored the ‘60s and ‘70s, gravitating<br />

to the likes of Stevie Wonder, The Temptations,<br />

Smokey Robinson and Bill Withers, as well as<br />

soul and country bluegrass.<br />

When it comes to vocal inspiration, Cook said<br />

Otis Redding is his ultimate inspiration.<br />

“I love the way he delivers what he’s singing,”<br />

he said. “He tries to extract every bit of soul out<br />

of every note and every lyric that he sings and<br />

writes. I do try and emulate that.”<br />

Vocals aside, Cook started experimenting<br />

with writing music when he was just 14.<br />

“I got the idea that I could turn these poems<br />

into songs. In the early 2000s I sang with<br />

a quartet and was also one of the primary<br />

songwriters. I’ve been writing ever since.”<br />

A stint in 1998 on the amateur night segment<br />

of “Showtime at the Apollo” cemented his<br />

pursuit of music full time.<br />

“After that show aired, I remember going<br />

to school Monday or Tuesday,” Cook said. “I<br />

walked into history class and got a standing<br />

ovation. It was the best feeling. From that point<br />

on, this music, this is what I wanted. I wanted to<br />

put that feeling in a bottle.”<br />

The spotlight also served as a crash course<br />

in copyright infringement laws. His plan was<br />

to cover Stevie Wonder’s “Ribbon in the<br />

Sky,” not realizing he would<br />

need a copyright agreement<br />

to perform it on national<br />

television. “I didn’t realize that<br />

until the last minute, so I had<br />

to do an original song that I<br />

wrote.”<br />

A ruthless crowd and the stress of possibly<br />

being booted off the stage only heightened<br />

his performance. “I figured if I could make it<br />

on this stage and impress these people then<br />

I’m doing the right thing, and I’ve been doing<br />

it ever since.”<br />

While music conducts his heart, Cook<br />

has dabbled in other jobs, including<br />

telecommunications, retail, office work and<br />

sales, to name a few. “This was during the<br />

recession, and I had to do what I could do to<br />

bring some money in,” he said. “Music took a<br />

backseat then…music became secondary over<br />

the need to provide for my family.”<br />

Cue in 2016 and a renewed determination<br />

to learn the guitar and return to his passion.<br />

“I would go to work and sing at inappropriate<br />

times during meetings, and I was like, ‘Why<br />

am I fighting this? Why not try and do this full<br />

time?’”<br />

Positive reinforcement and support from his<br />

wife, Jennifer, made his dream that much more<br />

possible. “Ever since we met, she’s known me as<br />

musical,” he said. “Her answer [to him pursuing<br />

music full time] was never like, ‘What, are you<br />

crazy?’”<br />

While both men are married in the traditional<br />

sense, there is also their marriage to music and<br />

the frequent change of partners that comes<br />

along with it.<br />

But Miller and Cook are still in the honeymoon<br />

stage and see their musical relationship only<br />

...continued<br />

Facing page, from left to right: Jeiris Cook on a six-string, singing “Pride and Joy.” Cook and Vern Miller in Miller’s studio. Cook uses a tablet to write<br />

music (top) while Miller stays old school putting pen to paper.<br />

This page, left to right: Cook and Miller react to playing live together for the first time. Miller poses with framed album covers from his days as a<br />

member of The Remains (top). Cook poses in his home studio.<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 23


Music Duo (cont’d.)<br />

getting stronger, balancing each other out in<br />

terms of their very different approaches to<br />

writing music and lyrics.<br />

Cook, for example, takes the music first, lyrics<br />

last approach.<br />

“When I sit down to write a song, I pick up<br />

my guitar and mess with chord progressions<br />

and see what resonates,” Cook said. “Based<br />

on whatever progression I come up with, that<br />

group of chords and riff lays a blueprint.”<br />

On the other end of the octave, Miller said<br />

his mind is awash in both music and lyrics.<br />

“I have music running through my head most<br />

of the time so that will often get me started on<br />

a new song,” he said. “But I’m also an avid reader<br />

and listener, which also often inspires ideas for<br />

lyrics.”<br />

In terms of collaborating with Cook, Miller<br />

said he usually starts with the music, and, in<br />

keeping Cook’s voice in mind, will further flesh<br />

out the idea.<br />

A pen-to-paper kind of guy—evidenced by<br />

the files of manila folders filled with lyrics—he<br />

often jots down his thoughts for a first verse<br />

and chorus.<br />

Next, he will record a rough scratch of lead<br />

vocals and harmonies over part of the music<br />

track and send it off to Cook.<br />

“He takes it from there, does his magic on<br />

it, lays some vocal track ideas with lyrics he’s<br />

worked on and then we go back and forth<br />

working and tweaking it until we’re happy with<br />

the lyrics and melody,” Miller said.<br />

Then a back and forth of file sharing ensues,<br />

with Miller tightening and “sweetening” the<br />

music track and Cook singing the final lead<br />

vocals and harmonies.<br />

“I will sometimes add more harmonies, put all<br />

the tracks together and mix it,” Miller added. “I<br />

then send it along to Jeiris. If we both agree it’s<br />

finished, then we move on and start working on<br />

the next new song.”<br />

So, with five songs behind them and the<br />

ability to collaborate in person, what’s next for<br />

this duo?<br />

“Our hope is that people will like what we do,<br />

download and listen,” Miller said.<br />

Their music is available on streaming services<br />

Left to right: Cook in his home studio. Miller<br />

in his home studio.<br />

that include CD Baby, Spotify and Apple Music.<br />

In the meantime, Miller and Cook will be<br />

creating more songs with the long-term goal<br />

of having them placed in movies, on TV and<br />

in commercials—and maybe even a local live<br />

performance.<br />

As Miller enjoys being more behind the<br />

scenes, Cook is continuing to live his dream of<br />

“doing something I enjoy and being able to pay<br />

bills” by playing local gigs at venues in the tristate<br />

area.<br />

“I redefined what success looks like for me<br />

with music,” he said. “I never went into this with<br />

the goal of selling out MSG and charging $500<br />

a ticket.”<br />

As for taking the Miller-Cook duo on the<br />

road?<br />

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Four Generations of Dock Builders<br />

Story by ELLEN WILKOWE<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

All hands on “dock” best describes the<br />

business and work ethic of Walter<br />

Weglinski, third-generation owner of AAA Dock<br />

& Marine in Lake Hopatcong.<br />

From designing docks, building bridges and<br />

managing a marina, the Weglinski family has<br />

been making their mark around Lake Hopatcong<br />

and the neighboring lake communities for 70<br />

years.<br />

In 1953, Weglinski’s now-86-year-old<br />

grandfather, also Walter Weglinski, founded<br />

AAA Contracting, which was located on Howard<br />

Boulevard in Mount Arlington, where Cracker<br />

Barrel stands today.<br />

Years later, the sale of that property led<br />

to the purchase of a marina on Budd Lake in<br />

Mount Olive, which was used until 2000, when<br />

the Cooper Drum building on Prospect Point<br />

Road in Jefferson was purchased. The Budd Lake<br />

property is still owned by the family but is leased<br />

to another outfit. Along the way, the company’s<br />

name has been reworked from the original AAA<br />

Contracting to AAA Dock & Dredge to today’s<br />

AAA Dock & Marine.<br />

The senior Weglinski said he worked side<br />

by side with his son, Walter, and his grandson<br />

before retiring in 1996.<br />

“It was fun working with my son and grandson,”<br />

he said from his home in Emerald Isle, North<br />

Carolina. “We accomplished a lot together.”<br />

Like being one of the first to bring a barge<br />

onto Lake Hopatcong, which, he said, helped<br />

increase the dock building aspect of the<br />

business. The company was also asked to help<br />

drive pilings for the construction of the River<br />

Styx Bridge. And, he said, the business built two<br />

ferries for Raccoon Island, including the ferry<br />

that is used today.<br />

“Anything that deals with a lake, we do,” said<br />

the younger Weglinski, who was named after his<br />

grandfather. “There’s not a piece of shoreline [on<br />

Lake Hopatcong] that we have not touched.”<br />

This includes the lake’s islands, accessible only<br />

by boat or barge.<br />

“If you leave a tool behind, it means an hour<br />

ride back to shore to get it,” he quipped.<br />

Weglinski, a graduate of Jefferson Township<br />

High School, learned the business hands on as<br />

a teenager from his father and grandfather and<br />

never entertained another career.<br />

“I never considered doing anything else,” said<br />

the 47-year-old. “Watching my dad and grandpa<br />

definitely had a big impact in picking up what<br />

work was about—their work ethic and trying to<br />

get stuff done or working when it’s 20 degrees<br />

outside.”<br />

Following high school, Weglinski attended<br />

Morris County Vocational School where he<br />

learned how to weld. He furthered his skills<br />

by attending a commercial diving school<br />

where, in addition to diving and swimming, he<br />

learned marine construction and<br />

underwater welding.<br />

“Everything came together,” he<br />

said. “Working and learning on<br />

the job and going to school.”<br />

When his father passed away in<br />

a boating accident 21 years ago,<br />

Weglinski took over the business<br />

and “it’s been going strong ever<br />

since.<br />

“When my dad died, I could<br />

not let the business fall apart,”<br />

he said.<br />

In addition to teaching him the<br />

ropes, Weglinski credits his father<br />

and grandfather for imparting<br />

onto him a strong work ethic as<br />

a return on investment.<br />

“Whatever I put into<br />

it, I get out of it,” he said. “It’s rewarding. To<br />

design and engineer something and then build<br />

it from start to finish. That’s rewarding.”<br />

Just as rewarding is recognizing a project that<br />

was constructed by the prior generation.<br />

“When I get onto a new project, I can say,<br />

‘Hey, this is my grandfather’s work,’” he said.<br />

In expanding the family business, Weglinski<br />

has taken his oldest son, Brandon, 22, under his<br />

wing. Like father, like son, Brandon was equally<br />

influenced by his dad, learning and working by<br />

his side.<br />

“I remember in school I would always<br />

participate in the [Take Our Daughters and Sons<br />

to Work Day] and go with my dad, either in the<br />

shop or marina,” he said. “During the weekends,<br />

I would help my dad at work and in the summer,<br />

I was working full time with him.”<br />

After graduating high school, Brandon knew<br />

he was in it for the long haul. “My dad always<br />

told me the opportunity was always open for<br />

me,” he said. “Being fourth generation makes me<br />

feel proud and happy.”<br />

He is equally as proud of a cantilever<br />

boathouse he helped construct several years<br />

ago. “I learned a lot from that job,” he said.<br />

With the arrival of spring comes the burden<br />

of a heavy workload and the demands will keep<br />

father and son on their toes until well into the<br />

fall.<br />

“From Saint Patrick’s Day to fall is the busy<br />

time of year,” said Walter Weglinski. “From fall<br />

until Saint Patrick’s Day it’s more fun and relaxing<br />

because I don’t have that rush.”<br />

The business operates year-round, and<br />

Weglinski plans accordingly.<br />

“It’s a very challenging job,” he said. “You<br />

gotta adapt…and determine the scheduling—<br />

like when you do a certain type of work—in the<br />

winter or in the summer. It also might depend<br />

on the [conditions of the] lake.”<br />

In addition to his son, Weglinski typically<br />

relies on a crew of several men, including<br />

From left, top to bottom: Walter Weglinski<br />

operates a backhoe while installing docks at<br />

Lake Forest Yacht Club.<br />

Brandon Weglinski and Sean Cranmer adjust<br />

the position of a finger dock while Walter<br />

Weglinski works the backhoe.<br />

The crew builds a bridge at Lake Mohawk in<br />

Sparta in 2019. (Photo courtesy of Walter Weglinski)<br />

26<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


engineers, contractors and laborers, though he<br />

is experiencing a shortage of skilled laborers.<br />

“I love to train people and would love to<br />

have a kid come in and be willing to learn basic<br />

carpentry—understand a square. Someone not<br />

afraid of getting their hands dirty.”<br />

As he and his crew continue to meet the<br />

structural demands for lake living, Weglinski<br />

occasionally tests the waters outside his<br />

wheelhouse.<br />

“The projects are all about the same,” he said,<br />

referring to building docks, boathouses and<br />

sea walls. “But, about five years ago, I built a<br />

bridge in Lake Mohawk. That was a really cool<br />

project—totally different from the norm.”<br />

Having been born into and then having taken<br />

on the family business, Weglinski has witnessed<br />

firsthand the inevitable changes and challenges<br />

that time and technology have brought to the<br />

area—like the advent of what he dubs the<br />

Amazon world: instant gratification of goods<br />

and services.<br />

“Homeowners sometimes don’t realize what<br />

goes into the job,” he said. “Most work is done<br />

in the shop. You plan and have to get a permit,<br />

navigate through all the red tape and that’s what<br />

the customer does not see.”<br />

For now, he has found a kindred spirit in his<br />

son, who inherited the hands-on gene that has<br />

transcended four generations. “Certain things<br />

come to us,” he said. “It’s in our blood.”<br />

Meanwhile, Brandon expresses the same<br />

gratitude toward his dad for the opportunity to<br />

work alongside him.<br />

“He has taught me guidance, direction and<br />

valuable aspects of the business,” he said.<br />

In imparting advice to future small business<br />

owners, Walter Weglinski again turns to the<br />

wisdom passed down from his father: Invest<br />

money back into the business, part of his “what<br />

you put in, you get out” philosophy.<br />

“If I make $100, I can take that and go to<br />

Atlantic City. But if I put at least $50 back into<br />

the business, the next job is easier.”<br />

Reinvesting is essential for a business like<br />

Weglinski’s, which acquires and depends on a<br />

rotating inventory of equipment. “After three<br />

generations, I have a slew of equipment,” he<br />

said. “You’re constantly feeding it. There’s always<br />

something to repair or you’re constantly buying<br />

new stuff.”<br />

Equipment aside, he emphasizes the<br />

importance of additional training. “It’s best to<br />

know the job inside and out,” he said.<br />

Weglinski, who is divorced, is an example of<br />

work hard, play hard.<br />

“I learned from my dad to enjoy life—and<br />

go on vacation,” said the father of three. “The<br />

work’s going to be there when you get back.”<br />

When he is not working on water, Weglinski<br />

and his children—Brandon, Autumn, 19, and<br />

Jaden, 15—can be found boating, hiking and,<br />

weather-permitting, snowmobiling.<br />

“I have a different hobby for every season,”<br />

he said.<br />

Lic#: HP0168700<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 27


Arts Group Celebrates 25 Years<br />

Story and photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

The Roxbury Arts Alliance celebrated its 25th anniversary in March with a dessert<br />

reception and musical performance at the Citizens Bank Theater (formerly the Investors<br />

Bank Theater) at Horseshoe Lake Complex.<br />

More than 75 invited guests sipped wine and indulged in a variety of desserts before settling<br />

in to hear singing impressionist Rich Genoval Aveo.<br />

The RAA began when several Roxbury High School parents found themselves feeling like<br />

empty nesters and missing the performances they used to watch when their kids attended<br />

the high school.<br />

“We needed to keep the music going,” recalled Linda McMahon, founding member and<br />

past president. “At first, it was anyone who wanted to play or perform; we gave them the<br />

opportunity.”<br />

Performances took place at various locations throughout the township.<br />

Since then, the organization has transformed, securing dedicated space at the Horseshoe<br />

Lake Complex, hosting 10-15 musical performances or shows a year and offering two to three<br />

scholarships annually. Scholarships are awarded to Roxbury students who are pursuing a career<br />

in music or the arts.<br />

“We have presented programs in many genres of music as well as dance concerts, plays,<br />

musicals and other types of events that have delighted thousands of Roxbury residents and<br />

have drawn audience members from near and far,” said Jean Potter, president.<br />

“And we look forward to continuing this partnership with the town of Roxbury in the future.”<br />

From top, left to right: Nick Palmieri and Lisa Church.<br />

Jean Potter, Cindy Donaldson, Genevieve Schmidt and Joanne May.<br />

Linda McMahon and Ann Mauro.<br />

Michele O’Holloran, Ray and Fran Plodkowski, Christine and Rick Blood.<br />

Jason Marchitto, Lois Manzello-Marchitto, Danielle and George Mikolay.<br />

Steve and Tammy Snoke, Owen Borrero and Corine Borrero.<br />

Jim Ritchey and Rich Vetter.<br />

Noreen Vetter, Kathy Ritchey and Jacki Albrecht.<br />

Rich Genoval Aveo on stage at Citizens Bank Theater.<br />

28<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


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32<br />

Story by MELISSA SUMMERS<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

trailblazer in both Roxbury and Morris<br />

A County, Kathy DeFillippo has laid the<br />

path for local politicians and future public<br />

servants—especially the busy moms.<br />

Born in the Bronx and raised on Long Island,<br />

DeFillippo arrived in Roxbury 29 years ago as<br />

a mother of two children, about to have her<br />

third. Following a career in special education<br />

and vocational rehabilitation, she did what any<br />

good mom would do: she became involved<br />

in her kids’ schools and got to know her<br />

community.<br />

Little did she know, she would someday<br />

be mayor and go on to represent her new<br />

hometown in the county and state.<br />

DeFillippo, 67, is the oldest of five siblings.<br />

She married her husband, Bob, in 1976. She<br />

attended Nassau Community College for two<br />

years and then received a degree in psychology<br />

and a teaching certificate from the State<br />

University of New York at New Paltz in 1979.<br />

She began her career working with adults<br />

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with Occupations, Inc. in Newburgh, New York.<br />

DeFillippo ran a porter maintenance program<br />

where she evaluated, then trained, young<br />

adults with disabilities to work as housekeepers<br />

or janitors. She worked with a convent that<br />

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“In the mid to late ‘70s, there were mentally<br />

and physically disabled persons who had lived<br />

in institutions, and they were being moved<br />

back out into the community,” DeFillippo<br />

recalled. “Many of these people probably<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

Kathy DeFillippo Looks Back on Years<br />

of Service, Ahead to New Projects<br />

never should have been in institutions,<br />

but that’s what we did years ago.”<br />

She moved with her family to<br />

Alexandria, Virginia, in 1985 where she<br />

continued working in vocational rehab,<br />

this time with an insurance company<br />

that provided services to injured<br />

workers. “It was satisfying work,” she<br />

said. “I met some wonderful people,<br />

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She and her family relocated to<br />

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decided that I would not go back to<br />

work.”<br />

DeFillippo quickly got to know the<br />

community. “I admired Marilyn Davis,<br />

who became the first female mayor of<br />

Roxbury in 1996, and I thought that was<br />

cool.” She also looked up to Christine<br />

Todd Whitman, who served as the first female<br />

governor of New Jersey from 1994 to 2001.<br />

But still, DeFillippo was focused on her<br />

children. “I always did something with each of<br />

the kids, helped at CCD, volunteered at school,”<br />

she said. “I tried to do something based on the<br />

time that I could devote, and I wanted to teach<br />

my kids how important it was to be part of a<br />

community.”<br />

After a few years, she represented the<br />

Republican Committee in Roxbury and was<br />

appointed to the zoning board. She got to<br />

know the town council and then-Mayor Jim<br />

Rilee, who was elected in 1998. “At some point,<br />

you realize, ‘Maybe I could do this in a bigger<br />

way and help more people.’”<br />

DeFillippo was elected to the Roxbury Town<br />

Council in 2005 and re-elected in 2009. During<br />

that time, she served as deputy mayor three<br />

times (2011, 2012 and 2013) and as mayor in 2009.<br />

One of the first things DeFillippo advocated<br />

for while serving on the town council was its<br />

involvement with the Roxbury Chamber of<br />

Commerce. “Business and governments should<br />

work together,” she said. “As council members,<br />

we should know our business community as<br />

From top, left to right: Kathy DeFillippo in her home office.<br />

DeFillippo, left, at the 2017 Walk For MS in Roxbury.<br />

(Photo courtesy of the DeFillippo family.)<br />

DeFillippo with husband, Bob, reading to their youngest<br />

granddaughter, Emmeline Rose DeFillippo.<br />

well as we know our constituents. And I think<br />

that paid off.”<br />

When asked what she is proudest of about<br />

her time on the town council, her answer<br />

is clear. “After I got elected that first time, I<br />

realized my favorite thing was knocking on<br />

doors and meeting people.” So shortly after<br />

she was sworn in, she suggested bringing back<br />

regular neighborhood meetings.<br />

“The first one was on a January night, and<br />

it was cold and horrible,” she recalled. “I<br />

walked into the senior center with the council<br />

members, and we stood there shocked. The<br />

room was full.”<br />

The meetings, now held two to three times a<br />

year in different sections of town, continue to<br />

be well received. “They address things going on<br />

in that area of town, they get the conversation<br />

going, and we try to answer questions.<br />

Government can be scary for people, but this<br />

gives people a chance to see it in action in an<br />

informal way,” she said.<br />

In 2013, DeFillippo decided not to seek reelection<br />

as councilwoman and instead ran<br />

for Morris County freeholder, an office now<br />

referred to as county commissioner. “Having


that experience for eight years on the local<br />

level and the impact you have on people’s lives,<br />

it was intriguing to go in at the county level.”<br />

She served for three three-year terms, serving<br />

twice as director.<br />

As commissioner, DeFillippo became<br />

involved in the areas of human services and<br />

transportation. She went on to represent Morris<br />

County in the North Jersey Transportation<br />

Planning Authority. The agency dispenses state<br />

and federal dollars in a region that includes 13<br />

counties plus the cities of Newark and Jersey<br />

City.<br />

“I was elected chair of the NJTPA board<br />

in January 2020,” said DeFillippo. “Our next<br />

meeting was scheduled for March, and the<br />

state was locked down. For the two years<br />

I served, we had to convert everything to<br />

virtual. The whole board and staff were able to<br />

transition and not miss a beat.”<br />

As the liaison for human services, DeFillippo<br />

spent time getting to know the county facilities<br />

and partners. While touring the JBWS (formerly<br />

known as the Jersey Battered Women’s<br />

Service), she learned about a concept that<br />

brings together services for domestic violence<br />

and sexual assault victims under one roof. The<br />

idea was brought to the board and in 2016, the<br />

Morris Family Justice Center opened on the<br />

fourth floor of the County Administration and<br />

Records Building in Morristown. Those in need<br />

of assistance are guided to the facility, which<br />

has a residential feel.<br />

“There’s a living room and a kitchen filled<br />

with snacks. People come to fill out paperwork<br />

and you have to keep the kids busy. It’s a safe<br />

environment, and we can provide services,<br />

register people and that was something where<br />

I knew there was a need.”<br />

According to DeFillippo, women were a<br />

majority for the first time in county history<br />

while she was serving on the County Board of<br />

Commissioners.<br />

She said one of the proudest personal<br />

accomplishments includes her work with the<br />

National Multiple Sclerosis Society. Two of her<br />

sisters were diagnosed with multiple sclerosis,<br />

and both eventually died from the disease.<br />

“We would organize fundraisers, do what<br />

we could to make people aware of what MS<br />

was,” she said. “I knew I could represent people<br />

who didn’t have a voice. So, we brought the MS<br />

Walk to Roxbury.”<br />

The event grew from a few hundred people in<br />

April 2006 to approximately 2,000 participants<br />

in recent years. DeFillippo served on the board<br />

of the Woodbridge chapter of the National<br />

Multiple Sclerosis Society.<br />

“They handle 11 walks over one weekend.<br />

Roxbury is one of the most independent walks<br />

because our volunteers are consistent every<br />

year. At some of the other sites, it’s more staff<br />

than volunteers.”<br />

The National Multiple Sclerosis Society<br />

helps patients and their caregivers with<br />

independence and counseling. DeFillippo said<br />

she was instrumental in helping to open some<br />

of the first housing for people with multiple<br />

sclerosis in Freehold, New Jersey.<br />

“I had to advocate for my sisters,” DeFillippo<br />

said of the experience. “I realized that as an<br />

elected person I could advocate on a bigger<br />

scale. It wasn’t just the research. The money<br />

comes back into the community, and that<br />

meant a lot to me.” This year’s event is Sunday,<br />

April 23 at Roxbury High School.<br />

At the end of 2021, DeFillippo announced<br />

she would not run for commissioner again. But<br />

she and her husband Bob aren’t finished yet.<br />

They’re part of the Foundation for the Roxbury<br />

Public Library and are working to build an<br />

expansion and fund technology upgrades.<br />

DeFillippo is thrilled to be spending more<br />

time with her six grandkids but still believes in<br />

public service and finding your place in your<br />

community.<br />

“When I started to consider running for<br />

office, I went to meetings and learned as much<br />

as I could before I made a decision,” she said.<br />

“If there’s something that intrigues you, find<br />

the time for it, and I promise it will grow from<br />

there. Find what it is you love.”<br />

DeFillippo said she reminds her family and<br />

friends never to compromise. She said she<br />

stands up for what she loves about Roxbury<br />

and Morris County. “Don’t assume you have<br />

to change something. Sometimes you have to<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 33


HISTORY<br />

Lake Hopatcong’s Music Man<br />

34<br />

by MARTY KANE<br />

Photos courtesy<br />

of the<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG<br />

HISTORICAL<br />

MUSEUM<br />

December 11, 1957, Lake Hopatcong, NJ –<br />

Arthur N. Green, 69, song writer [sic] and pianist<br />

known as the ‘Man of a Million Melodies,’ died<br />

at his home yesterday. Before World War I,<br />

Green was a composer for Irene and Vernon<br />

Castle. He was a vaudeville headliner for 20<br />

years.<br />

With these words, the New York Daily<br />

News summed up the lengthy career<br />

of Arthur Green, one of the most interesting<br />

individuals ever to call Lake Hopatcong home.<br />

Born in London, England, in 1888, Green came<br />

to New York City as a teen to seek work as a<br />

pianist and songwriter. It was there that he<br />

crossed paths with Irene and Vernon Castle, a<br />

dance couple who captured the heart of the<br />

American public even before Fred Astaire and<br />

Ginger Rogers.<br />

Exploding upon the scene in New York City<br />

in 1912, the husband-and-wife team mesmerized<br />

the country with their dance routines, greatly<br />

influencing the popularity of social dancing. The<br />

duo was soon in demand for vaudeville, motion<br />

pictures and Broadway. By 1914, they opened a<br />

dance school called Castle House, as well as a<br />

nightclub and restaurant.<br />

The Castles taught New York society the<br />

latest dance steps at Castle House by day and<br />

greeted guests and performed at the club and<br />

cafe by night. They were also in demand for<br />

private lessons and appearances at fashionable<br />

parties.<br />

As David A. Jasen explained in his book “Tin<br />

Pan Alley,” the popularity of the tango and other<br />

steps popularized by the Castles led to the<br />

opening of dance schools across the country.<br />

The man at the piano for the Castles was<br />

Green, who also wrote the music to several of<br />

their popular dances. The sheet music for his<br />

1913 composition, “Tango Argentino,” featured a<br />

photo of Irene and Vernon Castle dancing the<br />

tango.<br />

In his book “The Tango in the United<br />

States,” Carlos G. Groppa credited this song—<br />

supposedly the first tango composed in<br />

America—with originating the nation’s tango<br />

craze in the 1910s. Over the next few years, Green<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

penned several other hits, including “Innovation<br />

Tango,” “Sans Souci,” “Half and Half,” “Buenos<br />

Ayres” and “The Royal Arab.”<br />

During this period, any time Green performed<br />

without the Castles, advertisements and the<br />

event program featured his affiliation with<br />

the dance team. At times, Green’s name was<br />

billed larger than that of the singer he was<br />

accompanying.<br />

In a 1948 interview, Green recalled one of<br />

his proudest moments was receiving partial<br />

composing credit for George M. Cohan’s<br />

famous World War I song “Over There,” which<br />

was published in 1917.<br />

World War I would completely upended<br />

Green’s career. During the war, Vernon Castle<br />

returned to his native England to serve as a<br />

combat pilot. After coming back to the U.S. to<br />

train American pilots, Castle died in an accident.<br />

Devastated, Green did not write another song<br />

for some 20 years.<br />

After Castle’s death, Green created a<br />

vaudeville act with his wife, Anna, a singing<br />

comedienne who performed first as Doris LaFell<br />

and later as Anna LaFell. Their act, known as<br />

Green and LaFell, was billed as “lyric and melody<br />

specialists” and a “pianologue.”<br />

The act remained popular on the vaudeville<br />

circuit from 1919 to 1928. It was during this time<br />

that Arthur and Anna Green learned about Lake<br />

Hopatcong.<br />

From the 1910s through the 1930s, the lake<br />

was a popular destination for vaudeville and<br />

burlesque stars, who generally had time off<br />

in the summer when many theaters closed.<br />

Within two hours of New York City by train,<br />

yet completely removed from the world of<br />

trouping, the lake provided a welcome respite<br />

for these performers who were on the road for<br />

most of the year.<br />

Bigger<br />

stars stayed<br />

at hotels or bought<br />

cottages, while those<br />

earning a more modest<br />

living on the circuit<br />

found low-cost rentals.<br />

The most popular<br />

spot on the lake for<br />

performers was the<br />

Northwood section of<br />

Hopatcong, which the<br />

Lake Hopatcong Breeze dubbed the “actor’s<br />

colony.”<br />

As Bob Thomas explained in his book “Bud<br />

and Lou,” for vaudevillians and burlesque<br />

entertainers, Lake Hopatcong “had become the<br />

oasis at the end of the long winter’s travels, the<br />

place where comics and straight men rested<br />

beyond the reach of dunning hotel managers<br />

and mean-hearted theater owners, where<br />

strippers could eat their fill and not worry about<br />

diets until the last two weeks of summer.<br />

“For the children it was heaven. During the<br />

year they had been entrusted to grandparents<br />

and aunts while the parents traveled. Now the<br />

family was reunited and the kids could boat and<br />

swim and bask in the New Jersey sun.”<br />

The Lake Hopatcong Breeze first mentioned<br />

the Greens in 1925, noting that “Green and<br />

LaFell are still here. They will put over several<br />

new numbers next season that are sure to go<br />

over big.” The couple, along with daughter Aline<br />

(known as Billie), returned the next summer


and soon bought their own place in<br />

Northwood.<br />

In July 1926 the Breeze noted they<br />

were spending the summer at “Billie<br />

Hut” and in August complimented<br />

Green for “playing the piano all<br />

through that sweltering evening”<br />

at a charity event. Typical of the<br />

vaudevillians who gathered in<br />

Northwood each summer, the Greens<br />

left the lake at the end of August. The<br />

Greens set off to open a new season<br />

in Pittsburgh, while Billie headed back<br />

to an aunt’s home in Allentown for<br />

high school.<br />

Green and LaFell retired from the<br />

circuit in 1928 as vaudeville faded.<br />

Deciding to permanently call Lake<br />

Hopatcong home, they converted<br />

their modest Northwood cottage into<br />

a year-round house. (Their cottage<br />

is located about 10 houses north of<br />

where Lola’s Restaurant is today).<br />

Facing page, top to bottom: Image of Arthur<br />

The June 29, 1929 Breeze noted that “Billie<br />

Green, 1914.<br />

Hut cottage is opened for the summer and Anna and Arthur Green from The Record,<br />

everyone who comes to visit its owners say January 10, 1931.<br />

they no longer have a ‘hut,’ but a lovely finished This page, top, left to right: Sheet music of “At<br />

house.”<br />

the Tango Ball” by Arthur Green, 1914.<br />

From their first summer at Lake Hopatcong Label for the 1917 record “Over There,” giving<br />

and into their retirement, the Greens were<br />

Arthur Green composition credit.<br />

An advertisement from the June 14, 1914 edition<br />

always ready to help with charity benefits for<br />

of the Richmond Times-Dispatch.<br />

the Northwood Improvement Association, Sheet music of “Tango Argentino” by Arthur<br />

Dover Hospital and other local groups.<br />

Green, 1913.<br />

In addition, Arthur Green played piano on<br />

a New York City radio program in the 1930s,<br />

performed at local venues and, in 1938, organized<br />

an orchestra to play summer weekends at<br />

Brady’s Mansion, a restaurant located near Lake<br />

Shawnee where Gatwyns II now sits. Finally<br />

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by almost 25 years.<br />

Together they had helped bring music and<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 35


COOKING<br />

WITH SCRATCH ©<br />

Joys of<br />

Being Oma<br />

by BARBARA SIMMONS<br />

Photo by KAREN FUCITO<br />

In October of 2021,<br />

at my birthday<br />

dinner with my entire<br />

family, my son Francis<br />

and daughter-in-law<br />

Brittney had an announcement: someone was<br />

coming next summer who would be calling me<br />

“Oma.”<br />

I was so stunned and overjoyed I could barely<br />

speak.<br />

The big day was scheduled for June 10—and<br />

boy was that baby punctual! Must be the German<br />

genes.<br />

We were ecstatic to be able to visit the new<br />

family in the hospital. Little Julien was born with<br />

quite a set of lungs and greeted us with a wail.<br />

That face. So funny—he seemed annoyed<br />

about being “out in the world”—things were so<br />

much easier on the “inside.”<br />

We were all cautious about meeting the<br />

baby. My husband and I got our “grandparent’s<br />

vaccine”—the Tdap (diphtheria, tetanus, acellular<br />

pertussis) shot that is recommended because<br />

whooping cough has come back. You probably<br />

had one as a kid but evidently the efficacy wears<br />

off.<br />

When I was finally able to hold Julien, I just<br />

wept. I was overwhelmed by so much emotion,<br />

so much love. In his little face I saw my son as an<br />

infant, my daughter, me, my mother, my father,<br />

my brothers, my daughter-in-law, my husband.<br />

It was like looking through a kaleidoscope that<br />

changed with every passing expression.<br />

Yes, I absolutely fell in love.<br />

Call Jim to buy or list today!<br />

And a torrent of the German baby vocabulary I<br />

had heard my mother use with my children, that<br />

I had used with mine (and my grandmother used<br />

with my brother and me), suddenly came back.<br />

Yes, this is the language I was meant to speak<br />

to my grandchild. My little Schatzefisch, my<br />

Futzenutz, my Herzeknüppel, my Goldschatz.<br />

Francis and Brittney begged me to teach Julien<br />

German.<br />

My mother (Gertrude Kertscher) and I spoke<br />

German to my kids, Francis and Erika, when they<br />

were small.<br />

They also had lots of exposure to my German<br />

family throughout their lives. My mother and I<br />

took Erika to the “old country” when she was 18<br />

months old. We visited family, travelling through<br />

East and West Germany. (It was 1989, just before<br />

the Berlin Wall fell).<br />

Thanks to my parents’ relocation to Lake<br />

Hopatcong, their house was a vacation hotspot for<br />

all of the Germans. The sunshine, the swimming,<br />

the boating, the proximity to New York City and<br />

Gertrude’s great cooking were a big draw.<br />

We had German company all the time.<br />

We saw cousin Jürgen every year for<br />

Thanksgiving. His brother Helmut, Onkel Walter,<br />

Tante Ilse and cousin Siegmar all came through at<br />

one time or another. We heard and spoke a lot<br />

of German.<br />

My mother and I spoke German to Francis and<br />

Erika exclusively when we were together and they<br />

were little. Gertrude taught German at Dover<br />

High School and had lots of materials. We taught<br />

them songs, little conversations, nursery rhymes.<br />

The language definitely got in there.<br />

Now that it has fallen to me to teach German<br />

to my grandson, I feel a great need to teach him<br />

properly.<br />

I have always felt a bit self-conscious about<br />

my level of German expertise, having learned my<br />

parents’ dialect (sort of like learning to play an<br />

instrument by ear) and never having any grammar<br />

or spelling lessons until high school.<br />

Evidently, I sound like a 95-year-old from<br />

Wiesbaden, speaking with a rather heavy Hessian<br />

dialect. Now, don’t get me wrong, I love speaking<br />

and hearing the dialect—it is so colorful, funny<br />

and familiar. My mother used to compare the<br />

comfort of having a conversation in Hessisch to<br />

Julien Simmons at<br />

two days old and<br />

with the author in<br />

February. (Photos<br />

courtesy of the author)<br />

being in a warm, cozy, bathtub (wie n’ warme<br />

badewanne).<br />

I’ve resisted learning German grammar pretty<br />

much all my life, because I could kind of get away<br />

with it. When you speak in dialect, the word<br />

endings are kind of fuzzy and most of the definite<br />

articles (the word “the”) sound sort of the same.<br />

There are eight words for “the” by the way.<br />

I can communicate, and my pronunciation is<br />

perfect, but when speaking to someone not from<br />

Wiesbaden or Frankfurt, things get tricky for me.<br />

I’m not very precise with my grammar.<br />

I’ve bought an online intensive German<br />

grammar course and have flung myself at it over<br />

and over trying to learn the finer points. Things are<br />

finally starting to get clear, and I have made some<br />

progress. It’s been a slog, though. But, luckily for<br />

my grandson, Julien, he will not be sounding like<br />

a little old German lady when he speaks. He can<br />

leave that up to Oma!<br />

36<br />

House Values<br />

James J. Leffler<br />

Realtor<br />

RE/MAX House Values<br />

131 Landing Road<br />

Landing, NJ 07850<br />

201-919-5414 Cell<br />

973-770-7777 Office<br />

jimleff.rmx@gmail.com<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

James J. Leffler<br />

Realtor<br />

AQUATIC VEGETATION CONTROL<br />

Providing lake and pond management<br />

solutions with SCIENCE for over 33 years.<br />

973-948-0107<br />

www.lakemgtsciences.com<br />

Branchville, NJ


Ruffle Apple Strudel<br />

We recently had friends over for a “grill<br />

party” (that’s what Germans call a barbecue).<br />

In addition to the sauerkraut and potato<br />

salad, I thought it would be nice to have<br />

an authentic tasting dessert. Apple strudel<br />

instantly came to mind but making it from<br />

scratch is a ton of work. I didn’t have time<br />

to throw the pastry dough on the table 150<br />

times and stretch it over the table, thin enough to read a newspaper through it!<br />

I happened to have some packages of phyllo dough in the freezer, some apples in the fridge<br />

and golden raisins in the pantry. Voilà!<br />

My first attempts with the dough were miserable—it kept tearing. Thankfully, I remembered<br />

a streamlined technique for making spanakopita (the Greek feta-spinach casserole in phyllo<br />

dough). Yes, I saw it online. Thank you, Deb Perelman at Smittenkitchen.com.<br />

So, instead of a rolled strudel, it became a deep-dish strudel with ruffled bits of buttered<br />

phyllo dough all over the top. You’ll need a pastry brush for this recipe.<br />

Phyllo dough comes in a double pack. You only need one for the recipe. Leave the other one<br />

frozen. You’ll want to make this again.<br />

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CREATE A<br />

Dramatic Effect<br />

Ingredients:<br />

1 roll of phyllo dough<br />

3 tablespoons water 2 tablespoons lemon juice<br />

THAT MAKES YOUR LANDSCAPING COME ALIVE AT NIGHT!<br />

3 large McIntosh apples 1/3 cup brown sugar Grated rind of ½ a lemon<br />

2 large Granny Smith apples 1 teaspoon cinnamon A pinch of salt<br />

¼ cup golden or regular raisins 2 tablespoons cornstarch 1 stick of butter<br />

We can CREATE illuminate A<br />

CREATE A<br />

Dramatic just about Effect anything,<br />

THAT increasing MAKES YOUR hours LANDSCAPING of use of COME your ALIVE outdoors AT NIGHT!<br />

THAT MAKES YOUR LANDSCAPING COME ALIVE AT NIGHT!<br />

Procedure:<br />

5580 5580 Berkshire Berkshire for Valley Valley you Road and your Oak Ridge, family. New New Jersey Jersey 07438 07438<br />

1. Thaw the phyllo dough in the refrigerator overnight or on the counter for a couple of<br />

5580 5580 Berkshire 973-208-0967<br />

Berkshire Valley Valley Road www.HomesteadLawnSprinkler.com<br />

Oak Ridge, New New Jersey Jersey 07438 07438<br />

hours. Preheat oven to 350 F. Spray an 8x8 baking dish with nonstick cooking spray. 973-208-0967 Proud Sponsors of Rebecca’s www.HomesteadLawnSprinkler.com<br />

Homestead, Inc. a 501 © (3)<br />

www.facebook.com/rebeccashomestead www.rebeccashomestead.com<br />

2. Peel, core and cut up the apples. The McIntosh apples can be cut into big chunks. The<br />

Proud Sponsors of Rebecca’s Homestead, Inc. a 501<br />

Granny Smith apples should be thinly sliced. (They’re kind of hard and this will help them<br />

© (3)<br />

bake down better.) Put the apples in a medium-sized bowl.<br />

3. Put the raisins and water into a bowl, cover with a plate and microwave for about<br />

a minute. Set aside. If you are a microwave-free household, you can heat the raisins in a<br />

Hearth and Home<br />

saucepan with the water.<br />

Fireplace And Chimney Specialists<br />

4. Add the sugar, cinnamon, cornstarch, salt, lemon juice and lemon rind to the apples in the<br />

PELLET, WOOD & GAS STOVES<br />

SALES, SERVICE & INSTALLATION<br />

bowl and toss to combine. Drain off the water from the raisins and toss those in, too.<br />

•Custom Mantels<br />

5. Microwave the butter in a covered bowl until melted (about 1 minute). Alternatively, you •Gas Logs<br />

can melt the butter on the stovetop in a small saucepan. Set aside.<br />

•Glass Doors<br />

6. Set up your work area for dealing with the phyllo dough.<br />

•Fireplace Refacing<br />

7. Unwrap the dough. It comes in a slim-fitting bag you can discard. Then there will be a long •Chimney Cleaning &<br />

piece of plastic wrapped around the dough; keep that. Place the roll of phyllo dough on a<br />

Repair<br />

large cutting board and put that plastic sheet on the counter to the side—that’s where<br />

you’ll be doing the buttering.<br />

Accessories<br />

Gifts<br />

8. Dampen a cotton dishtowel and wring it out well. This will be used to cover the dough<br />

while you are working so it doesn’t dry out.<br />

Charcoal Grills<br />

9. Unroll the phyllo dough and lay the first sheet on the plastic. Cover up the remaining dough<br />

with the damp dishtowel. Using a pastry brush, generously spread the dough sheet with butter.<br />

1215 Route 46 West<br />

10. Lay the first sheet into the baking dish. Let the excess hang over the sides. Repeat with 4 Ledgewood, NJ<br />

or 5 more sheets of dough.<br />

11. Turn the baking dish 90 degrees and repeat with 4 or 5 more sheets of dough, letting the<br />

HOURS<br />

Monday-Friday 10-6<br />

excess hang over the other sides.<br />

Saturday 9-4<br />

12. Add the apple filling on top of the buttered phyllo dough sheets inside the baking dish.<br />

Fold the phyllo flaps over the apples.<br />

Check our Facebook<br />

page for seasonal or<br />

13. Now for the fun part. Butter the remaining phyllo dough sheets and lightly crumple them,<br />

summer hours<br />

placing them on the top layer. I used 15 or 16 sheets for this crumpled topping. Go ahead @ Hearth & Home<br />

and let a few poke up in the air—they look so festive when they are baked!<br />

of New Jersey<br />

14. Bake for 15 minutes on the lowest rack of the oven. Move to the middle rack for 35-40<br />

more minutes and let cool before serving.<br />

973-252-0190<br />

15. Sprinkle with confectioners’ sugar and serve with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream. Or both. www.hearthandhome.net<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 37


WORDS OF<br />

A FEATHER<br />

Story and photos by<br />

HEATHER SHIRLEY<br />

As regular readers<br />

of this column<br />

know, I continually<br />

encourage you to spend<br />

time outdoors and<br />

explore. It’s great to go to new areas and explore<br />

magnificent forests and enjoy majestic views.<br />

But sometimes that may seem like too much<br />

effort. The weather is iffy. You’re tired. You<br />

don’t have time, don’t want to get in the car<br />

and drive anywhere. Never fear! Mother Nature<br />

is so generous that she will find her way to you<br />

wherever you are!<br />

On a recent walk around my neighborhood in<br />

south Florida, I enjoyed seeing a crawfish crossing<br />

the road. I had just returned from a road trip<br />

through Louisiana, where I enjoyed eating several<br />

hundred of its relatives (slurp!).<br />

Instead of eating this crawfish, I picked the little<br />

lady up and carried her across the road, both to<br />

make sure she didn’t get smushed by a car and<br />

to get her closer to water, where she belongs.<br />

Crawfish breathe through gills and live in a<br />

variety of waterways, from swamps to freshwater<br />

streams, ponds, even drainage ditches.<br />

When I picked up the crawfish, I saw she was<br />

“in berry,” which means she was carrying eggs<br />

that resemble blackberries. A crawfish glues these<br />

eggs to tiny appendages on her abdomen and<br />

Right in Your Own<br />

Backyard<br />

carries them for two to 10 months. She cares for<br />

the eggs by tucking and fanning her tail to aerate<br />

them. When the eggs hatch, the baby crawfish<br />

stay close to their mama for up to four months.<br />

In North America, there are 400 species<br />

of crawfish—also called crayfish, crawdads,<br />

mudbugs and a host of other terms. They are<br />

a keystone species, meaning they profoundly<br />

impact their environment. According to the<br />

Natural Resources Defense Council, a keystone<br />

species is “the glue that holds a habitat together.”<br />

If such a species<br />

is removed from<br />

its ecosystem, the<br />

environment radically<br />

changes. Crawfish impact<br />

their areas because they<br />

break down algae and<br />

other plant material and invertebrates they eat,<br />

helping the decomposition process. In turn, they<br />

are a food source for 240 species of animals.<br />

That’s a lot of creatures relying on the humble<br />

crawfish…I hope this one’s eggs survive to<br />

adulthood!<br />

I also enjoyed watching tree squirrels on my<br />

morning walk. Tree squirrels are most commonly<br />

gray, but they can also be black (frequently<br />

seen across Canada) and white, such as the<br />

one photographed here, which I saw in North<br />

Carolina.<br />

Squirrels are often vilified for behaviors we find<br />

intolerable, such as poaching from bird feeders or<br />

nesting in attics, but really, they’re just doing what<br />

we all do—working to secure food and shelter.<br />

Squirrels are another animal important to<br />

the ecosystem, so it’s a good idea to cultivate<br />

a peaceful coexistence with them. (Incidentally,<br />

the Humane Society has great tips on how to<br />

kindly manage life with squirrels. Check out<br />

humanesociety.org/resources/what-do-aboutsquirrels.)<br />

Although squirrels are omnivorous, most of<br />

their diet consists of nuts, seeds and acorns. They<br />

frequently cache their food for winter storage<br />

and, in so doing, inadvertently plant new trees,<br />

thus renourishing the forest.<br />

At a recent dinner with friends of a friend, a<br />

guy was going on about how the neighborhood<br />

squirrels deliberately taunted his dog, luring the<br />

dog toward it, then happily running away, feinting<br />

in one direction and changing course.<br />

Ummm, no.<br />

Like most rodents, squirrels are prey to many<br />

birds, mammals and even snakes. Their behavior<br />

when threatened is indeed to first freeze, hoping<br />

the danger goes away. They are not luring their<br />

predator closer.<br />

If the predator continues to pursue, squirrels<br />

will expend precious energy by running in an<br />

erratic pattern to evade chase, head up the<br />

nearest tree and flatten<br />

their bodies against the<br />

Scan the QR code with<br />

trunk. I can assure you they<br />

your phone’s camera<br />

do not find the game of<br />

to hear the sounds of<br />

chase as fun as your dog<br />

a squirrel.<br />

does.<br />

Squirrels are territorial,<br />

but live in close proximity to each other. A group<br />

of them is called a scurry, which seems both<br />

fitting and cute.<br />

Squirrels frequently communicate with chirpy<br />

vocalizations and furious tail twitching to warn<br />

of predators or advise staying away from their<br />

food cache. They use scent as well to advertise<br />

to each other and to help them find their hidden<br />

food. You may see a squirrel rubbing its face over<br />

an acorn—it’s covering the acorn in scent so it’s<br />

easier to find on some future snowy day.<br />

Although many people scoff and call them<br />

tree rats, there are no records of diseases such<br />

as rabies or salmonella transferring from squirrels<br />

to people. In fact, squirrels are one of the<br />

most trusting wild animals, and many can grow<br />

accustomed to taking food from your hand—<br />

or from your birdfeeder. I think their acrobatic<br />

antics are worth the payment of some extra seed.<br />

Give squirrels—and crawfish and the other<br />

critters around your neighborhood—a chance. If<br />

you start noticing them more, you may appreciate<br />

them more. Hopefully, as our appreciation for<br />

nature grows, the more motivated we will be to<br />

protect and care for it.<br />

PROUDLY SERVING THE BOATING COMMUNITY SINCE 1987<br />

MORRIS COUNTY<br />

MARINE INC.<br />

Sales • Service • Storage<br />

Top: Female crawfish on its back showing eggs.<br />

Bottom: White tree squirrel.<br />

38<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

Wishing everyone a safe and healthy <strong>Spring</strong> launch.<br />

Text: 201-400-6031<br />

745 US 46 W • Kenvil, NJ<br />

God Bless America


SEPTIC SYSTEMS<br />

INSTALLED AND REPAIRED<br />

PUMPING AVAILABLE<br />

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RESIDENTIAL<br />

AND COMMERCIAL<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 39


DEP announces compromise<br />

Page 6<br />

Peter Salmon and his very unusual car<br />

Page 16<br />

Vol. 8, No. 5<br />

Vol. 1, No. 3<br />

Vol. 10, No. 2<br />

Vacationing close to home<br />

Page 20<br />

Labor Day 2016<br />

Hopatcong couple dedicated to rescue<br />

Page 30<br />

Memorial Day 2018<br />

Vol. 8, No. 7<br />

Page 6<br />

Page 14<br />

Page 2<br />

Pages 28<br />

Holiday 2016<br />

Looking skyward<br />

Local DAR honor soldiers<br />

Charity on wheels<br />

1<br />

Vol. 1, No. 6<br />

Fa l 2019<br />

LH refi ling after drawdown<br />

Page 4<br />

Princeton Hydro: Stewards of LH<br />

Page 16<br />

Page 20<br />

Ice boating on area lakes<br />

Page 24<br />

Vol. 10, No. 5<br />

Vol. 10, No. 6<br />

1<br />

Labor Day 2018<br />

Community garden turns 5<br />

Page 6<br />

Hiking the Appalachian Trail<br />

Page 16<br />

Not your average summer camp<br />

Page 24<br />

Family reunion<br />

Page 30<br />

Vol. 9, No. 5<br />

farmer<br />

Labor Day 2017<br />

Vol. 7, No. 4<br />

Page 6<br />

Page 10<br />

Baitfish fishing<br />

Page 16<br />

Page 26<br />

Aug. 1, 2015<br />

Vol. 1, No. 2<br />

Memorial Day 2019<br />

Page 12<br />

Vol. 8, No. 4<br />

Beauty queen<br />

Page 18<br />

Vol. 1, No. 1<br />

Page 26<br />

Aug. 1, 2016<br />

Vol. 1, No. 5<br />

Vol. 1, No. 4<br />

Labor Day 2019<br />

<strong>Spring</strong> 2019<br />

Page 10<br />

Page 14<br />

Page 28<br />

Page 2<br />

Vol. 10, No. 3<br />

Fourth of July 2018<br />

• American picker<br />

• Olympic spirit<br />

• Passion for golf<br />

• LHC budgets for weeds<br />

<strong>Spring</strong> 2017<br />

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 />

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 />

Music Under the Stars<br />

45 Nolan’s Pt. Park Rd., LH<br />

973-663-1403<br />

NJ Electric Boat Rental<br />

NJeBoats.com<br />

Roxbury Arts Alliance<br />

72 Eyland Ave., Succasunna<br />

973-945-0284<br />

roxburyartsalliance.org<br />

HOME SERVICES<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 />

Royalty Cleaning Services<br />

973-309-2858<br />

royaltycleaningserv.com<br />

Sunset Decks & Outdoor Lvg<br />

973-846-3088<br />

sunsetdecksnj.com<br />

Wilson Services<br />

973-383-2112<br />

WilsonServices.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 />

facebook.com/bthboatcovers<br />

Lake Management Sciences<br />

Branchville<br />

973-948-0107<br />

lakemgtsciences.com<br />

MARINAS, BOAT<br />

SALES & RENTALS<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 />

lakesendmarina.net<br />

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 Elks Lodge<br />

201 Howard Blvd., MA<br />

973-398-9835<br />

lakehopatcongelks.com<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 />

180 Howard Blvd., Ste. 18 MA<br />

973-770-1380<br />

Fox Architectural Design<br />

546 St. Rt. 10 W, Ledgewood<br />

973-970-9355<br />

foxarch.com<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

Kathleen Courter<br />

RE/MAX<br />

131 Landing Rd., Roxbury<br />

973-420-0022 Direct<br />

KathySellsNJHomes.com<br />

Christopher J. Edwards<br />

RE/MAX<br />

211 Rt. 10E, Succasunna<br />

973-598-1008<br />

MrLakeHopatcong.com<br />

Karen Foley<br />

Sotheby’s<br />

670 Main St., Towaco<br />

973-906-5021<br />

prominentproperties.com<br />

Jim Leffler<br />

RE/MAX<br />

131 Landing Rd., Roxbury<br />

201-919-5414<br />

Darla Quaranta<br />

Century 21<br />

23 Main St., Sparta<br />

973-229-0452<br />

livelovelakelife.com<br />

RESTAURANTS & BARS<br />

Alice’s Restaurant<br />

24 Nolan’s Pt. Park Rd., LH<br />

973-663-9600<br />

alicesrestaurantnj.com<br />

Big Fish Lounge At Alice’s<br />

24 Nolan’s Pt. Park Rd., LH<br />

973-663-9600<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 />

At The Lake Jewelry<br />

atthelakejewelry.com<br />

Four Sisters Winery<br />

783 Rt 519W, Belvidere<br />

908-475-3671<br />

foursisterswinery.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 />

Italy Tours with Maria<br />

ItalyTourswithMaria@yahoo.com<br />

JF Wood Products<br />

973-590-4319<br />

Main Lake Market<br />

234 S. NJ Ave., LH<br />

973-663-0544<br />

mainlakemarket.com<br />

Orange Carpet & Wood Gallery<br />

470 Rt. 10W, Ledgewood<br />

973-584-5300<br />

orange-carpet.com<br />

STORAGE<br />

Woodport Self Storage<br />

17 Rt. 181 & 20 Tierney Rd.<br />

Lake Hopatcong<br />

973-663-4000<br />

FOR A COMPLETE CALENDAR OF EVENTS AND FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT<br />

WWW.LAKEHOPATCONGNEWS.COM<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Police Unity Tour<br />

Members of Hopatcong’s Police Department ride<br />

to honor those who have fa len in the line of duty<br />

Lake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving & Celebrating The Lake Community<br />

A tale of two coves<br />

Is i the best of times or the worst of times in Byram Cove?<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Skiing Sole<br />

with<br />

Barefoot sk ing on Lake Hopatcong with the "Jersey Boys"<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

A<br />

Walk<br />

in the<br />

Woods<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

• Young miner<br />

• LHF Block Party<br />

• Benefit for wounded vets<br />

• The lure of a fish tale<br />

Bottoms Up<br />

Ninth Annual Jersey Wakeo f at Lake Hopatcong<br />

Inside this issue:<br />

Local couple ties the knot, fina ly<br />

Page 4<br />

Running club dedicated to helping others<br />

Page 18<br />

Lake Hopatcong Foundation’s Gal and Auction<br />

Page 12<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Aug. 1, 2014 Vol. 6, No. 4<br />

Christmas<br />

in the village<br />

Annual holiday celebration in Je ferson<br />

The tradition of telling the stories of the lake community<br />

continues thanks to all the advertisers.<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

• Algae Bloom Lingers<br />

• Northwood A sociation Turns 100<br />

• Mount Arlington Opens Community Garden<br />

• West Side Methodist Celebrates Milestone<br />

ICE JOB<br />

Volunteers, including two from Hopatcong, take part in a<br />

century-old tradition at Raque te Lake in the Adirondacks<br />

Vol. 9, No. 1<br />

Work begins on 40-plus mile trail<br />

around the Lake Hopatcong<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Windup toy co lection<br />

Hydro raking program begins<br />

‘Study Hull’<br />

makes maiden<br />

voyage<br />

Teen program turns 2<br />

WW I vet records history<br />

Local students schooled on fresh water aboard the Lake Hopatcong Foundation’s floating cla sroom<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

For the Birds<br />

Andrew Eppedio (and his mom’s) great avian adventure<br />

Fourth of July 2019<br />

Sign, sign, everywhere a sign<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

Mid Summer 2018<br />

Swimming Around<br />

Bridgete Hobart-Janeczko becomes the firs to swim the<br />

perimeter of Lake Hopatcong<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

NEW CAREER<br />

TAKES FLIGHT<br />

Mount Arlington’s P.J. Simonis<br />

is flying high with birds of prey<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

Chicken<br />

crazy<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

LOCALLY<br />

GROWN<br />

Je ferson farm comes alive<br />

thanks to third-generation<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

Bee-lieving<br />

in bees<br />

Local beekeepers<br />

passionate about honeybees<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

Answering<br />

The Call<br />

Firefighter honored for 70 years of service<br />

with Roxbury Engine Company No. 2<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

•We lne s center opens in Hopatcong<br />

•Children’s author penning third book<br />

•Bridge to Liffy Island taking shape<br />

•DEP says no to carp in Lake Hopatcong<br />

Paying Tribute<br />

Local vets honored during boat ride around Lake Hopatcong<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

Informing, Serving and Celebrating The Lake Region<br />

Happy Campers<br />

Sixteen years in and Camp Je ferson is sti l a l about good ole’ fashioned outdoor fun<br />

40<br />

• Markets are open, bounty is fresh<br />

• Smithsonian exhibi to open<br />

• King House expands offerings<br />

• 4H standout leading the way<br />

Vol. 10, No. 4<br />

• Road bowlers<br />

• Marching to the beat<br />

• Hopatcong honors two<br />

• Confusion at BRC meeting<br />

• State Aid Comparison<br />

• University Opens New Campus<br />

• What’s It Rea ly Worth?<br />

• Looking for Solutions to Lake’s I sues<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Spring</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

Inside this issue:<br />

Hundreds ‘leap’ into icy water for good cause<br />

Plus: Food, LHC Meeting, In Brief, Busine s Directory, and Much More!<br />

Winter, 2014 Vol. 6, No. 1<br />

• Drawdown coming<br />

• Artist in residence<br />

• Bertrand Island revisited<br />

• Old-timers’ game days<br />

Je ferson's selfless citizens<br />

Hopatcong's super seniors<br />

Tuesday night jam session<br />

•Qua ry Silt S eps into Lake Hopatcong: DEP Slow to React<br />

•Working Sma l Proves Big for Local Artist •Girl Scouts Tackle Trail Maintenance<br />

•New Fireboat for Lake Hopatcong<br />

973-663-2800 • editor@lakehopatcongnews.com<br />

Four-legged fire prevention ambassador<br />

Ten years of super summer concerts<br />

• Algae Invades Lake Hopatcong<br />

Volunteers Drive 1th Hour Rescue<br />

• Wiffle Ba l Game Helps Raise Funds<br />

• Sharing Books One Li tle Fr e Library at a Time


Delicious Dining. Incredible Views.<br />

Lakeside Dining<br />

Daily Chef Specials<br />

On & Off-site Catering<br />

SCAN THE QR<br />

CODE TO VIEW<br />

THE MENU<br />

MAKE YOUR RESERVATION<br />

TODAY WITH THE RESY APP<br />

ORDER TAKE-OUT THROUGH<br />

THE TOAST TAKEOUT APP<br />

45 Nolan’s Point Park Rd. Lake Hopatcong, NJ • 973-663-3190 • thewindlass<br />

ACCESSIBLE BY<br />

BOAT or CAR!<br />

WWW.LHGOLFCLUB.COM<br />

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SWING INTO THE <strong>2023</strong> SEASON WITH US!<br />

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OUR 18-HOLE MINI GOLF COURSE ALONG<br />

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FEATURES MINIATURE REPLICAS<br />

OF HISTORICAL LANDMARKS<br />

vWITHIN THE AREA.<br />

SNACK KIOSK • PARTY PACKAGES<br />

MINI GIFT SHOP • GROUP OUTINGS<br />

SPRING HOURS:<br />

THURSDAY 3PM - 8PM<br />

FRIDAY 3PM - 9PM<br />

SATURDAY 11AM - 9PM<br />

SUNDAY 11AM - 8PM<br />

LAST TEE TIME ON SCHOOL NIGHTS - 8PM<br />

37 NOLAN’S POINT PARK RD. LAKE HOPATCONG, NJ 973-663-0451<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 41


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