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

ake Hopatcong News<br />

MEMORIAL DAY <strong>2023</strong> VOL. 15 NO. 2<br />

Th e Sky’s Th e Limit<br />

Roxbury High School’s Aviation Program Takes Flight<br />

WATER SAFETY INITIATIVE<br />

NEW TRAILS FOR JEFFERSON<br />

YOUTH GROUP STEPS UP<br />

ART ASSOCIATION INSPIRES


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4<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

From the Editor<br />

Ever read something that resonates with your own life experiences, makes you laugh or has<br />

you nodding in agreement? Barbara Simmons’ column in this issue does all of that and more.<br />

I found it funny and relatable, and I’m pretty sure it’s going to lead to many discussions—and<br />

maybe a small number of disagreements—among family and friends.<br />

After reading Barb’s first draft, I couldn’t help but laugh out loud at my own experiences—from<br />

childhood to the present day—on the topic she covers.<br />

It’s an issue that I imagine has been around for a long time, maybe even dating back to cave<br />

dwellers, which might give you a bit of a hint as to the subject matter.<br />

The cover story this month is about a relatively new program offered to Roxbury High School<br />

students that involves flight simulators, drones and one large aeronautical chart, which is<br />

essentially a map showing the air space for the tri-state region.<br />

Writer Melissa Summers introduces us to a group of students who are taking part in a course<br />

of study in aviation and aerospace. The program offers a diverse amount of instruction and has<br />

produced its first pilot, Tyler Benedetto, featured on the cover. (See page 22.)<br />

The aviation room at Roxbury was impressive. The day Melissa and I visited the school for<br />

interviews and photos, each student was at a simulator practicing landings, which are rated from<br />

zero (bad) to 100 (nailed it). I wanted to give it a try but after hearing one student proclaim, “Well,<br />

at least I didn’t crash” after receiving a score in the 70s, I thought it best to stick with the camera<br />

and leave the flying to the soon-to-be experts.<br />

Another story found within this issue is inspired by an idea I’ve had for quite some time now.<br />

As I’ve said in the past, I have a notebook (actually, two now) full of story ideas that I’ve collected<br />

over the years. Sometimes an idea is written down in the notebook, then followed up quickly<br />

with a published story. Other times, the idea remains untouched from year to year.<br />

Such was the case with this story about the Art Association in Roxbury. I don’t know what took<br />

me so long to get to the story—it’s been a good eight or 10 years that I’ve had the group on my<br />

list. But here it is. (See page 26.)<br />

What an impressive group of individuals. I am continually amazed at the amount of talent some<br />

people have—whether it be musical, athletic, intellectual or, in this case, artistic.<br />

To get to the finish line with this story I spent a bit more time with the group than I usually do<br />

with other stories. It was not a hardship—it was inspiring. And, if it weren’t for this little job I have,<br />

I know where I’d be spending the first Tuesday of every month.<br />

Also in this issue is a story by Mike Daigle about a somewhat unique trails project underway in<br />

Jefferson. (See page 12.)<br />

While many towns have upped their game when it comes to passive recreation access—<br />

building and blazing miles of trails in forests and such—Jefferson is taking it one step further by<br />

connecting local neighborhoods not with sidewalks but with trails,<br />

getting people off the roads and into the woods.<br />

Many of these short trails and paths are in my neighborhood<br />

(Nolan’s Point) and have become quite popular with the walking<br />

crowd, of which I am one of many. The project is in its infancy, but<br />

the plans are big—yes, there will be miles and miles of new trails in<br />

the forested areas in town as well as the connecting trails between<br />

neighborhoods.<br />

I plan on exploring them all.<br />

If I’m not in the woods, then I’ll be with the artists. Either way,<br />

you’ll know where to look for me.<br />

—Karen<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

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

Te Sky’s Te Limi<br />

WATER SAFETY INITIATIVE<br />

NEW TRAILS FOR JEFFERSON<br />

Roxbury High School’s Aviation Program Takes Flight<br />

YOUTH GROUP STEPS UP<br />

ART ASSOCIATION INSPIRES<br />

MEMORIAL DAY <strong>2023</strong> VOL. 15 NO. 2<br />

ON THE COVER<br />

Tyler Benedetto at the controls over<br />

Round Valley Reservoir on his first solo<br />

flight from Morristown Airport to Reading<br />

Regional Airport in September of 2022.<br />

(Photo courtesy of Tyler Benedetto)<br />

—Cover illustration by Randi Cirelli<br />

KAREN FUCITO<br />

Editor<br />

editor@lakehopatcongnews.com<br />

973-663-2800<br />

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS<br />

Michael Daigle<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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Chris sold all of these homes featured in this<br />

NEW YORK TIMES article, one of them twice!<br />

Hopatcong, N.J.: ‘We Call It Lake Life’<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 5


New Initiative Focuses on Water Safety through Education<br />

Story by MICHAEL DAIGLE<br />

Photos by Karen Fucito<br />

Lake Hopatcong can be a speedway, a<br />

traffic jam, a noisy neighbor—sometimes<br />

all at once.<br />

At 2,600 acres, New Jersey’s largest freshwater<br />

lake can also be a quiet place for fishing,<br />

canoeing, dining or a slow trip on smooth water<br />

into a vibrant setting sun.<br />

Finding the balance can be tricky.<br />

A new initiative launched this spring by the<br />

New Jersey State Police Marine Division at Lake<br />

Hopatcong—supported by the Hopatcong<br />

Borough Police Department and the Morris<br />

County Sheriff’s Office—is reaching out to<br />

the next generation of adult boaters through<br />

water safety assemblies in elementary schools<br />

and boater certification classes for age-eligible<br />

students.<br />

“I got my first boat when I was 13,” recalled<br />

Hopatcong Lt. Ryan Tracey. “I still own one.”<br />

Tracey said he was also 13 when he took his<br />

first boating safety course to receive his initial<br />

operator certificate.<br />

The goal of the initiative is to teach kids,<br />

beginning at age 7, about the safe operation of<br />

a watercraft, general water safety and how to be<br />

respectful to other boaters and homeowners<br />

along the lake, Tracey said.<br />

The goal also is to teach year-round water<br />

safety, said Trooper Anthony Buro, who is<br />

assigned to the Lake Hopatcong State Police<br />

Marine Division. In early May, Buro and Sgt.<br />

Peter Petelicki led a water safety assembly at<br />

Arthur Stanlick Elementary School in Jefferson.<br />

Buro said the safety assemblies for elementary<br />

school students ages 7 to 12 are broken down<br />

by seasons: winter for ice safety and spring for<br />

water safety. Running about 20 minutes, the<br />

assemblies feature a boat and rescue equipment.<br />

The assemblies have been presented in several<br />

lake area schools and as far away as Denville.<br />

The idea, he said, “is to present the training in<br />

any community that has a body of water.”<br />

Buro said winter lake safety is becoming an<br />

increasingly important topic as warmer winters<br />

are not creating the thick ice sheets that would<br />

be the safest. Instead, the ice cover has been<br />

spotty or nonexistent.<br />

“That’s why the first rule of winter operation<br />

is so important,” Buro said.<br />

That rule?<br />

“No ice is safe ice,” he said.<br />

The other winter rules are: Never go onto the<br />

ice alone, and always wear appropriate clothing<br />

for the weather. In other words, wear a winter<br />

coat and proper winter footwear.<br />

Tracey said students attending the winter<br />

safety assemblies are also given information<br />

on how to spot dock bubblers, which are used<br />

to prevent ice buildup around docks. The ice<br />

would be weaker near areas with bubblers.<br />

Buro said the spring safety assemblies focus on<br />

general water and boating safety as presented in<br />

the state police’s boating safety manual.<br />

Also offered is a state boating safety course<br />

to middle school and high school students<br />

ages 12 to 18. The course is presented in one<br />

8-hour session and is free to students. Upon<br />

completion of this course and passing a test,<br />

students are eligible for a state boating safety<br />

certificate (boating license).<br />

A recent class at Hopatcong Middle School<br />

attracted 54 students, said Buro.<br />

Supporting in-person certificate courses<br />

for students, said Tracey, is a series of videos<br />

created by the state police that target specific<br />

boating safety issues.<br />

Tracey said the videos will be made available<br />

to the public through a QR code on posters and<br />

signs distributed at key lake-entry points and<br />

restaurants. At Lee’s County Park Marina, the QR<br />

code will be printed on the receipt every time a<br />

boat is launched, Tracey said.<br />

“Our hope is that the marinas<br />

and businesses on the lake will also<br />

help us,” he added.<br />

The videos will become available<br />

Top to bottom: Trooper Anthony<br />

Buro, center, instructs students<br />

Devyn Parcelluzi and Frank Wilpert<br />

on how to use a rescue throw bag.<br />

Buro and Sgt. Peter Petelicki<br />

presenting to students at Arthur<br />

Stanlick Elementary School.<br />

(Photos courtesy of Stanlick School)<br />

by <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong>, Buro said.<br />

“We’re using technology to our advantage,”<br />

he added.<br />

Buro said the six videos for <strong>2023</strong> offer<br />

instruction on required equipment; anchoring<br />

techniques; showing respect for others while<br />

on the water and noise etiquette; operation of<br />

a boat; operation of personal watercraft and<br />

water sport safety.<br />

But it’s not only about reaching the children,<br />

Buro said. The initiative will zero in on educating<br />

the public and marina operators about state<br />

laws regarding boat rentals.<br />

The key will be oversight on businesses that<br />

rent boats, he said. State law allows the state<br />

police to oversee boating-related business<br />

operations.<br />

Buro said boat rental businesses must apply<br />

and register with the state to rent boats. The<br />

marine division is authorized to conduct<br />

periodic checks of such businesses, he said.<br />

The initiative was spurred by the increasing<br />

number of rental boat accidents, Buro said.<br />

In 2019, a Mount Arlington man drowned<br />

on Lake Hopatcong when he fell off a rented<br />

pontoon boat. The driver of the boat was<br />

sentenced to a year in jail for driving under the<br />

influence.<br />

Last year, a couple was on a pontoon boat just<br />

after sunset when it was rammed by a speeding<br />

boat.<br />

And in 2015, 10-year-old Christopher D’Amico<br />

died after he fell off the bow of a pontoon<br />

boat and became trapped between the<br />

pontoons. His death resulted in the passage of<br />

Christopher’s Law. Signed by Gov. Chris Christie,<br />

the law added new restrictions to pontoon<br />

boat rentals, including an extended safety class<br />

before the rental is completed.<br />

Tracey said another key part of the initiative<br />

is to educate the boating public about respect<br />

and consideration of other boaters on the lake<br />

and the lakeside homeowners.<br />

Hopatcong’s Byram Cove has long been a hot<br />

spot for noise complaints and assorted conflicts<br />

6<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


etween boaters and homeowners. In recent<br />

years, 90 percent of noise complaints were filed<br />

in Hopatcong.<br />

Tracey said the outreach effort is designed to<br />

be “educational.”<br />

The new drive follows an effort fostered by<br />

the Lake Hopatcong Foundation to promote<br />

consideration for all lake users, called “Lake<br />

Hopatcong For All.”<br />

For general lake users, the plan recommended<br />

ideas such as taking measures to prevent<br />

the spread of invasive species; not littering;<br />

practicing proper fuel handling; and putting<br />

into practice some respect and consideration<br />

recommendations.<br />

The plan had a separate set of ideas for Byram<br />

Cove, including entering the cove with little or<br />

no wake; respecting your neighbors; maintaining<br />

a 100-foot navigation corridor when anchoring;<br />

and a suggestion that rafts, tubes and other<br />

floating objects be tied to a rope no longer<br />

than 20 feet to keep them clear of navigation<br />

channels.<br />

The foundation’s efforts have made a<br />

noticeable difference around the lake, said Kyle<br />

Richter, the organization’s executive director,<br />

who welcomes the addition of the police<br />

initiative.<br />

“It’s great to see local, county and state<br />

agencies working together to make Lake<br />

Hopatcong a safer place for everyone to enjoy,”<br />

said Richter.<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 7


Knit One, Purl Two, Laugh Out Loud<br />

8<br />

Story by ELLEN WILKOWE<br />

Photos by Karen Fucito<br />

It’s the type of lunch where the dress code is<br />

often as homemade as the meal.<br />

Servers with entrees weave their way to the<br />

tables, drinks are refreshed and a group of closeknit<br />

women in the back room break out into<br />

stitches. It’s a typical Thursday meetup in April.<br />

Everyone is simply, well, having a ball, as in a<br />

good time, as well as the ones they brought.<br />

Welcome to the Knitwits.<br />

Yes, they knit, among other textile crafts.<br />

And, yes, they are very witty, not to mention<br />

extremely charitable.<br />

They have provided felt nests for injured<br />

animals at a wildlife refuge; blankets and booties<br />

for babies (donated to baskets for tricky trays);<br />

blankets for veterans; and prayer shawls for<br />

those who are hospitalized, to name a few<br />

examples.<br />

Then there’s the just-for-me items, such as the<br />

light pink sweater worn by Christine Smith, chief<br />

knitter and mentor of the Knitwits, and also<br />

the woman responsible for stitching the group<br />

together during one of the most isolating times<br />

in recent history.<br />

“It started with four friends sitting 6 feet apart<br />

at my house during December 2020,” said the<br />

Hopatcong resident.<br />

Word-of-mouth through the lake grapevine<br />

quadrupled the group to 18, which was a bit<br />

Call Jim to buy or list today!<br />

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973-770-7777 Office<br />

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LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

too close for comfort in a house. In abiding<br />

by the philosophy of have needles will travel,<br />

the women—all of them members of the Lake<br />

Hopatcong Yacht Club—went semi-public,<br />

perching themselves on the porch of the<br />

historic club building. Word kept spreading,<br />

nonmembers were added and now the group<br />

meets regularly at Patrick’s Pub.<br />

“During the [lake’s] slow season, it’s nice to<br />

support a local business,” Smith said, referring to<br />

the Hopatcong watering hole.<br />

To date, and depending on the season, the<br />

Knitwits boast between 30 to 40 members who<br />

range in experience from newbies to advanced.<br />

Some are women who wear many handmade<br />

hats—and not just knitted ones. There’s avid<br />

crocheters, spinners and needlepointers, too,<br />

among this crowd.<br />

Meet Karen Alonge of Hopatcong, one of the<br />

newest Knitwits members, except she doesn’t<br />

knit.<br />

“My thing is quilting,” she said. “I tried<br />

crocheting, but I wasn’t so into it.”<br />

She is, however, into sewing.<br />

A member of Hopatcong Seniors, Alonge<br />

found out about the Knitwits through Smith,<br />

who is also a member.<br />

“It’s a nice experience to connect with people<br />

who like doing hobbies and crafts,” Alonge said.<br />

As a widow of a Vietnam veteran and a member<br />

of the Lake Hopatcong Elks Lodge Veteran’s<br />

Committee, Alonge jumped at the opportunity<br />

James J. Leffler<br />

Realtor<br />

From left to right: Genie Wiss, Toby Nelson<br />

and Sharon Hill discuss a needlepoint project.<br />

Christine Smith working on a project. Carolyn<br />

Adams and Karen Alonge share a laugh.<br />

Dawn Roberts and Toby Nelson hold up a quilt<br />

donated to a patient at the Lyons VA Medical<br />

Center.<br />

to contribute a handmade quilt—complete<br />

with a center-panel eagle—to a recent donation<br />

for the Lyons VA Medical Center. Her blanket,<br />

and about a dozen more, were presented to<br />

Hopatcong Councilwoman Dawn Roberts, a<br />

Gold Star mom and avid veterans’ advocate who<br />

delivered them to Lyons.<br />

“These places can be clinical and cold and<br />

some of these vets are there for an extended<br />

period of time. When they receive handmade<br />

items, they know it’s made from love. They tell<br />

me it feels like a hug from a greatful nation,” said<br />

Roberts.<br />

Alonge said the blanket took her a “good<br />

couple of months,” and disclaims that she made<br />

the eagle. “It’s what we call cheater panels,” she<br />

said.<br />

Alonge is of a core group of 12 to 15 women<br />

who convene at Patrick’s Pub on Thursdays<br />

where, well, knit happens.<br />

The staff at Patrick’s arranges the tables<br />

horseshoe-style to accommodate the unusual<br />

actions of eating while knitting, or maybe<br />

knitting while eating, not to mention some light<br />

sipping.<br />

Smith is quick to crack open her phone to<br />

exhibit an impressive display of handcrafted<br />

creations that were made with love by the<br />

group.<br />

She points to a shawl expertly knitted using<br />

blue glitter yarn as a border between each<br />

triangular pattern. “I think she made this in two<br />

weeks,” Smith said, gesturing across the table to<br />

Sharon Hill.<br />

Smith is equally agape at a white-knit shirt<br />

worn by Carolyn Adams, who was quick to<br />

downplay it as a part of her wardrobe for 20<br />

years.<br />

While many wear their work, expanding their<br />

personal wardrobes is low on the priority list in<br />

this group.<br />

Almost as soon as a blanket or bootie is fresh<br />

off the needles—or in some cases, machines—<br />

the item already has an assigned home at an


organization in need.<br />

Then there were the 60 felt nests donated<br />

to the now-defunct Antler Ridge Wildlife<br />

Sanctuary in Newton. (The sanctuary recently<br />

closed following the death of its founder.)<br />

The tightly knitted felt nests provided warmth<br />

and comfort for rabbits, chipmunks and squirrels,<br />

who were on the mend from injuries.<br />

In addition to charities, family members also<br />

reap the rewards of each member’s skills.<br />

“Five to ten percent of my winter knitting is<br />

given to family members as gifts,” said Sharon<br />

Hill of Roxbury.<br />

A well-versed knitter, Smith takes on the<br />

role of teacher and problem-solver during the<br />

weekly gathering.<br />

“Every newbie starts with [knitting] a<br />

washcloth, a ball of yarn and needles,” Smith<br />

said.<br />

Many of the women such as Alonge and Smith<br />

were pretty much born with a ball of yarn in<br />

their hands.<br />

The granddaughter of a seamstress who<br />

immigrated from Italy to America, Alonge<br />

developed a love for sewing through the love<br />

of her grandmother. “I was always by her side,”<br />

she said.<br />

She flirted with quilting 25 years ago and an<br />

in-person class unleashed her “addiction.”<br />

“The bug bites you,” she said.<br />

Smith, too, developed her crafting skills at the<br />

side of a family member.<br />

“I started learning when I was 4 years old,”<br />

Smith said. “I learned from my mom. She taught<br />

me knitting, embroidery, crochet, sewing and<br />

needlepoint.”<br />

Like Smith, Hill was also introduced to knitting<br />

by way of a family member.<br />

“I started when I was 6,” said Hill who was<br />

wearing a sage green, handmade cardigan. “My<br />

grandmother taught me.”<br />

She found out about the Knitwits through<br />

another knitting group and came on board eight<br />

months ago.<br />

Giving in nature, Hill stitches from the heart<br />

with the sole intention of caring by sharing. She<br />

reaps the warm-and-fuzzy feeling she gets by<br />

giving away her hats and scarves, for example.<br />

“When you knit for someone else, you put<br />

love in all those stitches,” she said.<br />

In addition to knitting, Hill also crochets, spins,<br />

weaves and cross-stitches. She is the proud<br />

owner of three home spinning wheels.<br />

“Yarn shopping and knitting are two separate<br />

hobbies,” she said.<br />

In addition to weekly knit-ups, the ladies<br />

participate in what Smith refers to as class trips.<br />

On a recent Thursday, the ladies were signing<br />

up for a cruise aboard Miss Lotta in June. Here,<br />

the Knitwits will mingle with other knitting<br />

groups for a day of fun, sun and purl one.<br />

The outings are knitting themed and often<br />

include stores that cater to their craft such<br />

as Rows of PurL in Chester (where they also<br />

participate in classes) or The Knitter’s Edge in<br />

Bethlehem.<br />

In the near future, the Knitwits have their<br />

sights set on visiting an alpaca farm and a<br />

spinning and weaving facility.<br />

“It’s been an amazing journey of ideas and a<br />

spontaneous combustion of joy,” Smith said.<br />

As the lunch winds down and the knitting<br />

ramps up, the ladies are asked to inscribe their<br />

names on a wooden plaque on behalf of their<br />

patronage at Patrick’s Pub. The plaque will be<br />

displayed at the restaurant in honor of them.<br />

Come summer, the Knitwits will still include<br />

Patrick’s Pub in their travels but will also branch<br />

out to wherever their yarns and threads may<br />

lead them.<br />

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Jefferson’s Plan for Its ‘Green Assets’ Takes Shape<br />

12<br />

Story by MICHAEL DAIGLE<br />

Photos by Karen Fucito<br />

At 43 square miles, Jefferson Township<br />

is home to miles of frontage on Lake<br />

Hopatcong, deep, winding river valleys and<br />

forested lands.<br />

It is a landscape that brought early settlers to<br />

the township to live and farm. It also offered<br />

the opportunity for industry, which left behind<br />

a community that took roots in the rocky soil.<br />

The early activity also left behind trails,<br />

dirt roads and abandoned railroad beds that<br />

today draw hikers, cyclists and day trippers to<br />

the township to marvel at hilltop vistas, seek<br />

picture-perfect views and conquer challenging<br />

terrain.<br />

But it is a landscape that has left the township<br />

with few places to expand its economic base,<br />

thanks to state law that put a premium on<br />

preserving open space.<br />

The response from the township is to use its<br />

“green assets” to develop additional economic<br />

activity.<br />

“It’s ecotourism,” said Mayor Eric Wilsusen.<br />

Beginning last year, the township offered<br />

support through a resolution for the Lake<br />

Hopatcong Regional Trails Plan that would—<br />

over time—develop a lake-encircling network<br />

of trails for walking, hiking and cycling.<br />

For Jefferson, the idea for this trail system<br />

began in 2001 after the Highlands Act became law<br />

and placed all of Jefferson in the environmentally<br />

sensitive protection zone, which severely limited<br />

development.<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

An open space master plan developed in 2001<br />

called for preservation as a way to protect the<br />

township’s threatened environment.<br />

By 2021, those preserved lands had become<br />

the “green assets” that could be used to boost<br />

the township’s business community as part of<br />

the lake-wide trails plan.<br />

The plan was kick-started in 2021 by a $1<br />

million donation from lake-area businessman<br />

Bela Szigethy. (Lake Hopatcong News is owned<br />

by Szigethy.)<br />

“Jefferson Township and Morris County have<br />

long been interested in building out trails in this<br />

area,” said Szigethy. “There’s a lot of land with<br />

many existing dirt roads and trails. In the long<br />

run, they can be tied in with the existing trail<br />

systems in Mahlon Dickerson and beyond, like<br />

up to Sparta and even down towards Wharton<br />

and Dover. And, of course, into Lake Hopatcong.”<br />

A trails plan was put together by consultant<br />

Pinto Consulting, which is owned by Frank Pinto,<br />

a former Morris County planning director.<br />

The plan will be outlined at 8:30 a.m. on June<br />

3 on National Trails <strong>Day</strong> at Our Lady Star of the<br />

Sea Church on Espanong Road, Jefferson.<br />

Russ Felter, manager of park projects for<br />

the Morris County Park Commission, said the<br />

public information session will include a brief<br />

discussion of the plan, the showing of maps and<br />

other information and a walk to the lake along<br />

one of the neighborhood trails.<br />

Briefly, the plan calls for creating a network of<br />

trails, mostly on public land, that would connect<br />

local neighborhood trails—that sometimes<br />

use roadways and sidewalks—to one another,<br />

and then to a regional trail system that already<br />

crosses the lake region.<br />

According to the plan, the trails would also<br />

connect with business areas, points of interest<br />

and public facilities.<br />

Over time, the plan calls for the development<br />

of 24.5 miles of new trails, at an estimated cost<br />

of $5 million.<br />

According to the report: “This is a major<br />

investment of public and/or private funds<br />

that would need to be carefully planned.” It is<br />

possible that up to 80 percent of the cost is<br />

potentially reimbursable<br />

from existing competitive<br />

trail grant programs, the<br />

report stated.<br />

The proposal comes at<br />

a time when nationwide<br />

trail use has increased.<br />

The data collection<br />

website, Jersey Island<br />

Holidays, reported that<br />

in 2018, there were 47.86<br />

million hikers in the<br />

United States. According<br />

to the site, in <strong>2023</strong>, there<br />

are 57.8 million.<br />

Bob Canace, president of Conservation<br />

Advising Services, who is consulting on the Lake<br />

Hopatcong trail, said trail use that rose during<br />

the pandemic remained high after the pandemic<br />

passed.<br />

Besides using the 12,000 acres of public lands<br />

owned by Jefferson, the proposed trails would<br />

connect with others in Morris County: Mahlon<br />

Dickerson Reservation, with 2,800 acres; the<br />

Berkshire Valley and Rockaway River Wildlife<br />

Management Areas, which are state-operated<br />

and total 5,600 acres; Minnisink Park at 297 acres;<br />

and the Mount Paul section of the 5,656-acre<br />

Kittatinny Valley State Park.<br />

The system would also connect with<br />

the regional Highlands Trail that runs from<br />

Pennsylvania to Connecticut and the local Lake<br />

Hopatcong Trail that runs along the western<br />

shore of the lake.<br />

Bringing the plan to fruition will require<br />

cooperation from Jefferson and Mount<br />

Arlington, Morris County and state Division of<br />

Parks and Forestry (which runs parks and trails)<br />

and the Division of Fish, Game and Wildlife<br />

(which operates the wildlife management areas<br />

with fees from hunting licenses). As such, in<br />

the wildlife management areas, the plan noted<br />

accommodation for hunters and trail uses would<br />

need to be addressed.<br />

The plan envisions a hiker being able to trek<br />

from the Mount Arlington train station to<br />

Kittatinny Valley State Park on a continuous trail,<br />

roughly 18 miles (about a five-hour hike).<br />

With connections into business areas, the plan<br />

offers a potential for economic growth, which<br />

numerous national studies list as a key ingredient<br />

in the development of extensive trail systems.<br />

A 2012 study of the Delaware and Lackawanna<br />

trails in eastern Pennsylvania determined an<br />

average day hiker spent $33.49 during a visit,<br />

while an overnight visitor spent $132 per day and<br />

stayed 2.2 days.<br />

Supporting the trails would be a unified<br />

system of logos and branding materials, including<br />

QR codes linking to services and businesses.<br />

Businesses could, for example, display decals<br />

featuring the trail logo in their front windows.<br />

Wilsusen, Pinto, Felter and Canace, along with<br />

Jesse Merbler and Peter Dolan, both of the New<br />

York-New Jersey Trail Conference, discussed<br />

details of the plan at a planning meeting on April<br />

7.<br />

Key issues were trail construction and safety,<br />

designing local trails to get hikers off streets,<br />

reducing conflicts between hikers and cyclists<br />

Top to bottom: Russ Felter uses ribbon to mark<br />

a new trail in the woods along Castle Rock<br />

Road. Frank Pinto, Bob Canace, Jesse Merbler<br />

and Peter Dolan look at maps during a recent<br />

trail planning meeting.


and other enforcement issues. Also discussed:<br />

how to enlist volunteers to assist in the creation<br />

and maintenance of the system.<br />

Felter and Canace said the Jersey Off Road<br />

Bicycle Association had offered assistance in<br />

addressing conflicts between hikers and cyclists.<br />

Other topics were the larger projects that<br />

would aid in the creation of the trail. For<br />

example, the planned walkway along Brady<br />

Bridge would allow hikers and cyclists to cross<br />

the narrow bridge away from vehicles.<br />

A handful of the neighborhood-connecting<br />

segments have been completed in the Nolan’s<br />

Point and Prospect Point sections of the<br />

township. Most were trails, paths and dirt<br />

roads that already existed and needed minimal<br />

attention.<br />

The larger, more involved trail projects are in<br />

various stages of planning. They include:<br />

In Mount Arlington, two proposed sections.<br />

First, a segment of less than 1 mile that runs from<br />

the Mount Arlington train station along Howard<br />

Boulevard to the Berkshire Valley Wildlife<br />

Management Area.<br />

There, it would connect with a second section<br />

of existing trails leading from the wildlife<br />

management area parking lot off Howard<br />

Boulevard to a new trail hub/visitors center in<br />

Jefferson near the township’s animal shelter<br />

on Minnisink Road. According to the plan, this<br />

would allow access to the entire trail network<br />

from the Mount Arlington train station.<br />

And, in Jefferson: A 1.2-mile segment in the<br />

Lake Shawnee neighborhood near Beaver Brook.<br />

Also in Jefferson: A 4.7-mile segment along an<br />

unimproved roadway called Compton-Gobel<br />

Road. That section would connect Jefferson’s<br />

Longwood Lake neighborhood with a trail head<br />

near Route 15, which would create a safe highway<br />

crossing at Bowling Green Parkway.<br />

A 2-mile extension in the area of the Snow<br />

Bowl Recreation Area on Weldon Road in<br />

Jefferson would connect with trails in Mahlon<br />

Dickerson Reservation and the Mount Paul<br />

section of Kittatinny Valley State Park. The<br />

segment would mostly follow existing woods<br />

roads.<br />

Also in Jefferson: Two sections totaling 1.5<br />

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miles to connect existing trails near Liffy Island<br />

and the Prospect Point Preserve to recreation<br />

areas along Florida Avenue and Mason Street.<br />

These additions would allow access from<br />

neighborhood trails to the nearby Highlands<br />

Trail and the Lake Hopatcong Trail.<br />

Other planned additions would link<br />

neighborhood trails in the Espanong Road<br />

section; use unused woods roads to reach the<br />

Milton Fire Tower on Bowling Green Mountain;<br />

and make known neighborhood parcels<br />

accessible in Nolan’s Point in Jefferson.<br />

“It’s great for walkers and joggers to have a<br />

network of safe, off-road paths to get around<br />

town. Streets are fine, sidewalks are great, but<br />

trails are the best,” Szigethy said.<br />

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•Repowering<br />

•Winterizing/Summer run ups<br />

•Shrink wrapping<br />

•Winter storage<br />

•Stern drive/lower unit repairs<br />

•Marine electronics installations<br />

STEEL AND ALUMINUM WELDING DONE IN HOUSE<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 15


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16<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


JOANNE MADALENA<br />

LOCAL<br />

VOICES<br />

When your youngest daughter wants to join Girl Scouts but the only troop available doesn’t fit into the family’s schedule, you do<br />

what any good mother would do—you start your own. Then, a year later, when your oldest daughter’s troop leaders all step away,<br />

you do what any good mother would do—you become the leader. That’s what Hopatcong’s JoAnne Madalena did 14 years ago.<br />

But she did not stop there. Over the years Madalena, 46, has simultaneously led four Girl Scout troops while also serving as the<br />

Scouts’ service unit manager for the area. She has also helped fundraise for her son’s Boy Scout troop.<br />

WHERE ARE YOU ORIGINALLY FROM? WHAT MADE IT SPECIAL?<br />

I am originally from the Oranges, but I moved to Succasunna in third grade, which was a really<br />

hard adjustment for me because I came from a place where my whole family lived relatively<br />

close to each other and now we were spreading out.<br />

WHERE DO YOU LIVE, HOW LONG AND WHAT MAKES IT SPECIAL?<br />

I’ve lived in Hopatcong for about 22 years. It is a wonderful community. I owned a satellite<br />

bakery on Lakeside Boulevard from 2005 until 2008 called Trinacria. We sold baked<br />

products from my father’s bakery (JC’s Italian Bakery in Parsippany). It gave me my first<br />

opportunity to really get to know people in my town.<br />

WHO MAKES UP YOUR FAMILY?<br />

My husband, Dave, our three children, Francesca, 20, Nadia, 18, and David Jr, 15,<br />

along with our dogs, Ciccio and Bailey, and our cats, Nova and Luna.<br />

HOW DO YOU EARN A LIVING?<br />

I am a teacher’s aide (paraprofessional) in a neighboring district.<br />

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

I love helping others as I believe that is what we are meant<br />

to do. I believe it’s important to be involved and give back. I<br />

love people. We can learn a lot from one another.<br />

WHO HAS BEEN THE BIGGEST INFLUENCE ON<br />

YOUR LIFE AND WHY?<br />

My father. He was such a hard worker. He came to<br />

America from Sicily with about $20 in his pocket,<br />

and he really lived the American dream. He was a<br />

wonderful father and friend to me and an amazing<br />

grandfather to my children. He shared his love for Italy<br />

and Italian music with me. He passed away nine years<br />

ago. I’ve also been influenced by my Girl Scouts. They<br />

blow me away with the ideas they come up with to make<br />

the world a better place and their spirit to help others.<br />

DO YOU VOLUNTEER?<br />

I will be continuing as a Girl Scout troop leader next year<br />

for one or two younger troops while my 18-year-old is<br />

completing her last year. I’m currently training someone<br />

to replace me as service unit manager, where I recruit<br />

volunteers, train new leaders, put troops together and liaison<br />

between our council and our troop leaders.<br />

ANY HOBBIES?<br />

I love meeting new people, dancing and traveling.<br />

IS THERE ANYTHING MOST PEOPLE WOULD BE<br />

SURPRISED TO LEARN ABOUT YOU?<br />

While I owned a satellite bakery, unfortunately I never got to<br />

learn the art of baking from my father as I always worked the<br />

retail side of the business. I started working in his bakery at 13<br />

years old.<br />

invested creative involved<br />

I AM I AM I AM<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 17


At Batten the Hatches, She Brings Boatloads of Experience<br />

Story by ELLEN WILKOWE<br />

Photos by Karen Fucito<br />

Maria Pappas of Mine Hill said she has<br />

boarded “thousands and thousands of<br />

boats,” but nearly all of them never actually left<br />

the docks—at least not with her at the helm.<br />

As the owner of Batten the Hatches in Lake<br />

Hopatcong, Pappas refurbishes boats in their<br />

resting states, specifically the interiors that are<br />

in various stages of disrepair.<br />

“I didn’t grow up thinking this is what I wanted<br />

to do with my life,” said the 56-year-old.<br />

Raised in Dover, Pappas was unfamiliar with<br />

nearby Lake Hopatcong until she took a job at<br />

Bill Smith’s Covers after graduating high school.<br />

“I thought that this is a cool thing, working<br />

on the lake,” she said. “It’s a different kind of<br />

job.”<br />

Not to mention, long-lasting. What started<br />

as a summer job turned into a full-fledged<br />

rewarding career, which has lasted 33 years.<br />

Smith’s shop was housed upstairs in what is<br />

now San Bar Marina on Howard Boulevard.<br />

Pappas praised Smith for showing her the<br />

ropes for all matters concerning boat covers,<br />

upholstery, cushions and materials. The seats<br />

and cushions of a boat are fitted with marinegrade<br />

vinyl, she said, while the covers are made<br />

from Sunbrella, an acrylic woven fabric. When<br />

she began, canvas, a natural cotton fiber, was<br />

the only material used to make boat covers. By<br />

the late 1980s, Sunbrella was introduced and<br />

has since become the industry standard for<br />

boat covers.<br />

“I worked for Bob for five years. Then in 1990,<br />

he wanted to move down south. I bought all his<br />

inventory, took over the business and changed<br />

the name,” she recalled.<br />

Being on her own was challenging, she said,<br />

but through trial and error and perseverance<br />

she learned more about the industry and was<br />

able to build her business.<br />

In the process, she also developed a<br />

tough skin, a byproduct of being a female<br />

entrepreneur in a lake environment dominated<br />

by male business owners—and male boat<br />

owners.<br />

“At the beginning it was intimidating,” she<br />

said. “Especially when I was younger—about<br />

30 plus years ago. I’ve held my own, though.”<br />

By 2013, Pappas said she was looking for<br />

a change and sold the business, thinking<br />

she would work instead as a sales rep in the<br />

industry. But circumstances set her on a<br />

different course, and she wound up buying<br />

back the business before the end of the year.<br />

“Within a year of selling it, the person who<br />

bought it realized it wasn’t something he<br />

wanted to do, so I took it back. He was the<br />

one who moved the shop here [at its current<br />

location on 70 Route 181 in Lake Hopatcong]<br />

and it has worked out very well in the end.”<br />

In working alongside Smith, Pappas<br />

awakened a latent passion for working with her<br />

hands, particularly the creative freedom and<br />

satisfaction that comes with witnessing the<br />

start-to-finish process.<br />

“Every day is different,” she said. “Every job is<br />

custom. Some things take longer than others<br />

and it’s challenging at times, but you figure it<br />

out as you go along.”<br />

She credits her team—three full-timers<br />

and one part-timer—for the success of her<br />

business. “I’ve got a good team here,” she said.<br />

“We bounce ideas off each other.”<br />

But a typical day is often atypical. The flow<br />

of work could be as simple as a single seat<br />

cushion or complex as a custom design.<br />

“Some customers drop off cushions and<br />

others leave their entire boat,” she said.<br />

Pappas pounces on the opportunity to<br />

fabricate a custom interior.<br />

A recent custom job included the<br />

upholstering of an American Offshore boat<br />

with black diamond stitching and checkered<br />

racing strips. The diamonds were individually<br />

cut boxes that were stitched together,<br />

Pappas said. The work was recently entered<br />

into a Chesapeake Marine Canvas Fabricators<br />

Association competition, which is held at the<br />

organization’s annual convention, but the<br />

project did not receive an award.<br />

Pappas said the convention is a great place<br />

to learn and meet other shop owners from<br />

around the country.<br />

“There are seminars for people like us who<br />

have been doing this forever. If there’s a<br />

problem, I can call one of those people and say,<br />

‘Hey, I’m in this situation. Have you dealt with<br />

this before?’ It’s a nice community because<br />

where else can you go and learn this stuff?” she<br />

said.<br />

Just recently, shop manager Travis Amico<br />

came away with top honors for his design on<br />

a 1991 HydroStream boat. The colorful striped<br />

pattern was created to mimic the boat’s<br />

geometric design and took first place in Miami<br />

Corporation’s Miami Madness contest. Miami<br />

Corporation is an industry supplier that hosts<br />

a nationwide competition each year.<br />

So, what exactly does it take to custom<br />

design the interior of a boat or reupholster a<br />

comfortable cushion for four?<br />

Well, physical strength, for one, and of course<br />

a boatload of equipment and the deftness<br />

to operate it. Think industrial-sized Consew<br />

sewing machines (circa 1970), staple guns, drills,<br />

pliers and saws, to name a few.<br />

The calorie burn just comes with the<br />

territory.<br />

“At the end of the day you’re exhausted,”<br />

Pappas said. “Between climbing up and down<br />

ladders, in and out of boats, removing and<br />

installing seats…the job is the workout.”<br />

Given the niche of her business, Pappas all<br />

but shrugged off the possibility of competition.<br />

Those who some might consider to be her<br />

competitors she sees as peers.<br />

“There’s not anything detrimental,” she said.<br />

“There’s enough to go around.”<br />

Physicality and competition aside, Pappas<br />

is most challenged by projects that may take<br />

longer than expected due to unanticipated<br />

snags that often come with renovations.<br />

“I may be doing a seat but then I find I have<br />

to drill out this bolt because it’s rusted,” she<br />

said. “All of a sudden you become a carpenter.<br />

You have to cut a piece of wood and a new<br />

piece of vinyl.”<br />

Left to right: Maria Pappas at one of the shop’s<br />

sewing machines. The seat design by Travis<br />

Amico on this 1991 HydroStream boat recently<br />

garnered a first place award. Amico and Pappas<br />

work side-by-side at one of the shop’s large<br />

work benches.<br />

18<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


Despite the business’s name, the Hatches<br />

is open year-round except for Christmas and<br />

New Year’s.<br />

Her customers hail from around Lake<br />

Hopatcong and the northern part of the state,<br />

the Jersey Shore and even cross state lines into<br />

Pennsylvania and New York.<br />

“Word gets out, which is nice,” she said.<br />

At the moment, Pappas and her team are in<br />

the thick of their peak season, which begins in<br />

March. From now until sometime in July, they’ve<br />

got their hands full with fabricating custom<br />

boat covers and reupholstering cushions.<br />

After the rush, Pappas may escape with<br />

a book to the beach or visit with extended<br />

family.<br />

While summer keeps her and her crew<br />

among the elements, once the boating season<br />

ends, the work ramps up again. Winter projects,<br />

however, bring them indoors.<br />

“People drop off their boats for interior work<br />

such as flooring jobs, and we store them all<br />

winter,” she said. “We don’t do covers in the<br />

winter or any outside work.”<br />

What she will do, for example, is strip down<br />

a pontoon boat, remove the old carpet, scrape<br />

up the remains, remove the torn-up seats and<br />

present a near-new interior boat to its owner.<br />

On rare occasions, Pappas has had to turn<br />

down projects, considering them unsalvageable.<br />

“If the engine is good and you need some<br />

TLC, we can try and do what we can,” she said.<br />

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LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


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lakehopatcongnews.com 21


Roxbury Aviation<br />

First Student Ear<br />

Story by MELISSA SUMMERS<br />

Photos by Karen Fucito<br />

Not many students can say they<br />

landed a plane at LaGuardia<br />

Airport during a simulation at school.<br />

There are even fewer who can say<br />

they landed an actual plane anywhere<br />

at all.<br />

Through a partnership between a<br />

handful of New Jersey high schools<br />

and the Aircraft Owners and Pilots<br />

Association, a unique program is<br />

giving students the chance to not<br />

only explore careers in aviation and<br />

aerospace but to literally learn to fly.<br />

Currently in its third year at<br />

Roxbury High School in Succasunna,<br />

the program has even produced its<br />

first licensed pilot.<br />

The district was approached with the idea for the<br />

program four years ago by a commercial pilot, said<br />

one of the high school’s aviation instructors, Mike<br />

Gottfried. During the fall of 2019, representatives<br />

from the Board of Education attended an AOPA<br />

conference in Denver, Colorado, to learn about<br />

the program. AOPA provides the content for free<br />

to any school willing to implement it, Gottfried<br />

said.<br />

AOPA offers workshops, webinars and other<br />

resources to schools taking part in the program,<br />

Gottfried added, and each district allocates<br />

money in the budget to implement the program.<br />

Gottfried and fellow Roxbury High School<br />

colleague Chris Blough were already teaching<br />

geophysical science and physics. Since much of<br />

the subject matter aligned, they were asked to<br />

take on the aviation courses.<br />

Roxbury High School first offered an<br />

introduction to aviation class during the 2020-2021<br />

school year. “It was in the middle of COVID, so that<br />

was challenging,” Gottfried said of the endeavor.<br />

22<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


Program Soars with<br />

ning Pilot’s License<br />

The high school has continued to add classes<br />

in the years since and will offer a total of four<br />

different courses next school year. “Anyone can<br />

take the Introduction to Aviation course for their<br />

first year,” Gottfried explained.<br />

During the second year, students can choose to<br />

do the Pilot Pathway, which is two more years of<br />

classroom education towards a pilot’s license. “Or,<br />

they can take our Drone Technologies course. It’s<br />

everything you need to get your Part 107 drone<br />

commercial license,” explained Gottfried.<br />

He describes the pilot course as driver’s<br />

education for pilots. Students learn the ground<br />

portion, and they can choose to take the written<br />

test and enroll in flight training, according to<br />

Gottfried. “Pilot Pathway students will be ready to<br />

take that test at the end of three years,” he said.<br />

“It fits into the curriculum great,” said Matthew<br />

Mawn, supervisor of science, engineering,<br />

technology, design and visual arts at Roxbury<br />

High School. “It’s kind of a mesh of technology,<br />

engineering and science. Students who exhibit<br />

interest in those areas can come put those skills to<br />

the test in the field of aviation.”<br />

Much of the learning materials and tools of<br />

the trade, like maps and plotters and even some<br />

remote control planes, were provided free to<br />

the program by the Civil Air Patrol, a nonprofit<br />

civilian auxiliary of the United States Air Force,<br />

said Gottfried. Flight simulators were installed in<br />

the school in the first year. “The following year we<br />

added some more, and this year we are up to 11<br />

simulators,” he said.<br />

Gottfried is currently going for his pilot’s license,<br />

so he brings firsthand experience to the classroom.<br />

“Figuring out where the instruments are, how<br />

the plane works, how to start up the plane, little<br />

details like that, will save you a lot of time and<br />

money when you are in the air,” he said. “I printed<br />

Top to bottom, left to right: Max Corsi at a threemonitor<br />

simulator. Teacher Mike Gottfried at the<br />

aeronautical chart hanging in his classroom.<br />

Gottfried, right, watches as Yuriy Hrytsay lands a<br />

drone on the black case. Yuriy, Tyler Benedetto<br />

and Aaron Pineiro at the simulators. Gottfried,<br />

Aaron, Tyler, Michael Gutierrez, Daniel Sugarman,<br />

Sebastian D’Amoto, Max and Yuriy watch drones<br />

in flight. Tyler operates a drone. Michael, Aaron,<br />

Daniel, Tyler, Yuriy and Max watch as Tyler<br />

maneuvers a drone.<br />

out the checklists that you have to go through<br />

to make sure the aircraft’s ready. I teach that<br />

to them, and they practice on the simulators.”<br />

Tyler Benedetto, 17, a junior from Succasunna,<br />

is one of Roxbury High School’s first success<br />

stories, only two years into the program. He<br />

has wanted to go into aviation for a while, so<br />

when he started high school and heard about<br />

the new program, he said he had to take it.<br />

“It was the push I needed. I took it and ran<br />

with it,” he said.<br />

“I learned everything I needed to know for<br />

the written test,” Tyler said. That left the pilot<br />

training, which can be expensive. “Gottfried<br />

and I applied for a scholarship from AOPA both<br />

years. My sophomore year they implemented a<br />

requirement where you had to pass the written<br />

test in order to apply and that cut down the<br />

number of applicants,” said Tyler. This change<br />

resulted in both of them receiving $10,000<br />

towards flight training. “So that was the last<br />

piece I needed.”<br />

He began training with American Flyers in<br />

Morristown on <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> 2022, finally<br />

earning his license on February 1 of this year,<br />

just three months after getting his driver’s<br />

license.<br />

“I want to be an airline pilot—that’s the goal,”<br />

said Tyler. “There are a few different licenses<br />

and ratings that you need. Right now, I can<br />

fly a single-engine plane, up to six passengers,<br />

in nice weather—to put it in simpler terms.<br />

There’s an instrument rating that allows you<br />

to fly in bad weather and then you do your<br />

commercial rating, which allows you to fly in<br />

bigger planes. From there, you’ll build hours.<br />

After 1,500 flight hours, the last thing you need<br />

is the airline transport pilot license [ATP]. When<br />

you get that license, that’s when you can go to<br />

the airlines.”<br />

Tyler plans to attend college at either Embry-<br />

Riddle Aeronautical University in <strong>Day</strong>tona<br />

Beach, Florida, or Arizona State University,<br />

where he’ll earn all the ratings and licenses he<br />

needs, plus a bachelor’s degree in Aeronautical<br />

Science.<br />

This year, Tyler and sophomore Yuriy Hrytsay<br />

started an Aviation Club. They welcome<br />

anyone with an interest in aviation, especially<br />

those who might not have been able to fit the<br />

program into their schedules. “The club has<br />

exceeded all of our expectations,” said Yuriy,<br />

16, of Kenvil. “It is based on fostering a love for<br />

aviation, as opposed to teaching aviation.”<br />

Yuriy, currently in his second year in the<br />

aviation program, was surprised by how much<br />

he’s learned. “There’s a lot you don’t see on the<br />

surface. Someone flying an airplane is turning<br />

the steering wheel. They are moving some<br />

levers. It’s all the stuff that happens before and<br />

after the flight, all the calculations and all the<br />

preparation. A lot of people see the math and<br />

science and they get bored. Maybe I’m biased. I<br />

think this is fun math.”<br />

The course shows students the real-world<br />

application of what they are learning. “I can go<br />

on a simulator and use the calculations that I<br />

made to fly from an airport to an airport using<br />

weight and balance, using the amount of the<br />

fuel that I calculated I need,” Yuriy said.<br />

“I can take what I did on paper and bring it<br />

not necessarily into the real world because it’s a<br />

simulator, but as close as we can get in a school<br />

setting. I don’t think Roxbury’s going to pave<br />

a nice runway for us in the back,” Yuriy added<br />

with a laugh.<br />

Like Tyler, Yuriy wants to become a<br />

commercial pilot. But he’s taking a different<br />

approach—a training program sponsored by<br />

United Airlines called Aviate.<br />

“It’s a four-year program. You spend the<br />

first year getting all your licenses—private<br />

pilot, instrument, multi-engine, everything you<br />

need,” said Yuriy.<br />

The next three years he’ll work as a certified<br />

flight instructor, gaining experience and racking<br />

up flight time, he said. “You’re training other<br />

people to fly, and you’re getting paid for it, so<br />

it’s kind of a win-win-win.” Once he’s earned his<br />

airline transport pilot license, Yuriy said he’ll be<br />

guaranteed an interview with one of United’s<br />

subsidiaries.<br />

Senior Max Corsi, 17, of Succasunna, was<br />

in the program for two years but was unable<br />

to include it this year. He’s now a member<br />

of the Aviation Club. “I’ve been interested in<br />

flying for a really long time, but more into the<br />

engineering and math side of it,” he said. But<br />

it is his love of the aircraft and how they work<br />

that has given him direction.<br />

He’ll be attending Purdue University next<br />

year, where he’ll study Aeronautical and<br />

Astronautical Engineering. His dream job is to<br />

work at Boeing or Lockheed Martin, where he’d<br />

be able to envision and build the very planes<br />

on those simulators.<br />

“Knowing how to fly a plane, what the pilot<br />

sees and feels, is going to make it easier,” said<br />

Max. “I’ll have a better understanding of what<br />

to make, what to design.”<br />

Administrators remind students that the<br />

field of aviation doesn’t just include pilots,<br />

said Mawn. The school has brought in guest<br />

speakers, held career panels and even invited<br />

the New Jersey State Police to land their<br />

helicopter at the school. Field trips are also part<br />

of the experience.<br />

On a recent trip to Newark Liberty<br />

International Airport, Mawn said students<br />

were escorted into the air traffic control tower<br />

to observe the magic behind real takeoffs<br />

and landings. They went to the maintenance<br />

hangar; they saw inflight food being prepared.<br />

“If a student does have an interest and wants<br />

to check it out, I highly encourage them to join<br />

the club or try Intro to Aviation. There are a lot<br />

of fun things going on here,” said Mawn. “There<br />

are a lot of ways to explore the skies.”<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 23


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Art is the Same in Every Language<br />

26<br />

Story and photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

If art is a universal language, then the hundreds<br />

of current and past members of the Art<br />

Association in Roxbury have been speaking the<br />

same creative language since 1965.<br />

The art association was founded by members<br />

of the Roxbury Woman’s Club as a community<br />

service project. Forty people showed up for<br />

the first meeting, which was held at the First<br />

Presbyterian Church of Succasunna.<br />

The group has been meeting monthly since<br />

then, moving from the church to various other<br />

locations in the township. The group is currently<br />

meeting back at the church on the first Tuesday<br />

of every month.<br />

Not bound by the geographic borders of<br />

Roxbury, the association has been attracting<br />

professional and amateur artists—and nonartists—from<br />

all corners of northern New Jersey.<br />

By 1991, when the association celebrated its 25th<br />

anniversary, the group was 140 members strong.<br />

Today, there are 50 members but not all are<br />

active, said former AAR President Annette Lange,<br />

62, whose mother was an original member of the<br />

group.<br />

One of the longest-serving members is Carol<br />

Manochio, 81, who has lived in Succasunna<br />

for 53 years and joined the association in 1973,<br />

when it was a well-established club filled with<br />

artists who wanted to meet with other artists.<br />

Her participation ebbed and flowed, she said,<br />

depending on family commitments.<br />

“Each time I had a baby, I stopped coming,”<br />

chuckled the mother of four. Manochio, who<br />

works with watercolors and oils, has been a<br />

steady member since 2003 and said she is most<br />

fascinated by the group’s camaraderie.<br />

Since its inception, the association’s focus has<br />

been on sharing knowledge from across multiple<br />

mediums, giving members a chance to be<br />

exposed to other artists’ techniques, styles and<br />

procedures.<br />

At each meeting, demonstrations are offered by<br />

a well-known local artist of watercolors, pastels,<br />

oils or any other medium. With craned necks and<br />

intense interest, members often ask pertinent<br />

questions as the artist goes through the process<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

of creating a piece of art. It’s what distinguishes<br />

this group from other art groups, said Joan<br />

Thomas, association secretary. Demonstrators are<br />

paid from the association’s yearly membership<br />

fee of $35.<br />

“It’s a great learning experience,” said Wendy<br />

Stamer, 76, of Sparta, a former AAR president<br />

who started with oils and watercolors. Stamer,<br />

who is known for Sussex County landscapes,<br />

began painting in 1980. “You can pick up tips,<br />

whether you are a beginner or a professional.”<br />

Carol Kouba, 70, from Fredon, another past<br />

president, agrees.<br />

“I learn something from every demonstration,<br />

even though I may not use that medium,” said<br />

Kouba, who works in oil, pencil and Japanese<br />

marbling and said she enjoys the exposure of a<br />

new technique of art at each meeting.<br />

“I found that the people in the group are very<br />

supportive of other artists. In some settings, it<br />

isn’t always that way, but people in this group are<br />

supportive.”<br />

That support can also be found in the<br />

association’s biannual critiques. Twice a year,<br />

members welcome the opportunity to have their<br />

works critiqued, once by an outside professional<br />

and another time by one another.<br />

“I find the critiques valuable,” said Thomas.<br />

“Everyone is very honest but in a helpful and<br />

uplifting way.”<br />

During its heyday in the 1980s and 1990s, the<br />

association was equal parts art association and<br />

social club. Not only did the group enjoy field<br />

trips to museums and galleries but also organized<br />

dinner dances and social events. The 25th<br />

anniversary celebration was a formal masquerade<br />

ball that attracted “a good amount of people,”<br />

said Lange.<br />

But in recent years, with membership waning<br />

and those remaining getting to a certain age, the<br />

association has come to a crossroads of sorts.<br />

In 2022, the bylaws were rewritten, which<br />

would allow club duties to be spread among<br />

more members, said Lange.<br />

“We’re in that mode to make it less structured<br />

and easy to volunteer, giving smaller tasks to<br />

more people,” said Thomas, 67. She, along with<br />

all other club officers, will be taking turns running<br />

meetings and keeping the club organized and<br />

viable, she said.<br />

That includes keeping the meetings available<br />

on Zoom.<br />

“Before COVID, all we did was meet face to<br />

face and it was sometimes difficult to get people<br />

to sit down because everyone was so social,”<br />

said Thomas. “COVID and Zoom took that away.<br />

Now that we’re hybrid, live and Zoom, it’s been a<br />

challenge to get everyone to come back.”<br />

On average, she said, each meeting attracts<br />

about 20 people in person with a handful joining<br />

on Zoom.<br />

One of those who attends regularly is Kate<br />

Paccioretti, a painter who splits her time between<br />

her home in Charlotte, North Carolina, and her<br />

childhood home in Jefferson Township. At the<br />

urging of family friend, neighbor and artist<br />

Irene Spratt, Paccioretti and her mother, Ginny<br />

Paccioretti, joined the art association about a<br />

year ago.<br />

At 33, Kate Paccioretti is the youngest member<br />

and has taken on the role of vice president,<br />

tasked with recruiting new members.<br />

“You don’t need to be a practicing artist to be<br />

a part of this club. You don’t need a portfolio<br />

to become a member. If you like to see art, talk<br />

about art or see the demos, you can become a<br />

member. It’s about the appreciation of art,” said<br />

Paccioretti.<br />

Her mother, who works full time in a local<br />

school system, is a prime example.<br />

“When I am retired, I look forward to having the<br />

time to focus on my own artwork,” said the elder<br />

Paccioretti, 68, who was accepted to art school<br />

out of high school but chose another path. “Every<br />

time I go to a meeting, I’m more encouraged to try<br />

to start doing something again. I haven’t shown


Far page, clockwise: At the May meeting,<br />

pastel artist Laurie Harden, right, demonstrates<br />

upside down portraiture. Artist Irene Spratt with<br />

a collection of her botanical watercolors at the<br />

Roxbury Public Library. Also at the library, a<br />

display of Spratt’s Ukrainian Easter eggs. This<br />

page: Debbie Harrington, center, watches the<br />

artist demonstration at the April meeting.<br />

any of my work yet. I have the supplies. I have<br />

what I need. But I gain more encouragement each<br />

time I go. I think everyone there enjoys seeing the<br />

demos, enjoys seeing each other’s work.”<br />

The younger Paccioretti has crafted a<br />

recruitment plan that will ramp up later this<br />

summer and will include visits to local colleges<br />

where she will speak with professors and students<br />

and hopefully “get young people who are already<br />

studying art involved.”<br />

She also plans a big push on social media.<br />

“Currently, there is no strong presence, not<br />

a big following. Up to now, it’s been mostly for<br />

the members,” said Paccioretti, who recently<br />

won a handful of prestigious awards and sells her<br />

paintings on Etsy, at art fairs, markets and other<br />

events. She also donates a portion of her sales to<br />

the National Alliance on Mental Illness.<br />

Long-time member Donna Kusama, who is in<br />

her late 60s, concurs.<br />

“I have a passion for art, and I want to join with<br />

others who have the same feelings. Art is good<br />

for my mental health,” she said.<br />

Since its inception, the association has been<br />

displaying art across the state. In the early days,<br />

Roxbury Township’s former municipal building<br />

was used for shows. When the County College<br />

of Morris was built, the shows were moved there,<br />

with each new show garnering a formal cocktail<br />

reception.<br />

In the recent past, the association has shown<br />

at the Sussex County Community College and<br />

the Morris County Library. In April, the group was<br />

featured at the Bernardsville Public Library.<br />

At the Roxbury Public Library, members rotate<br />

through a schedule, showcasing their work in a<br />

prominent place in the main room.<br />

For the month of April, Jefferson’s Spratt was<br />

the featured artist, with her watercolors of<br />

botanicals—“they’re kind of like my babies,” she<br />

said—and pysanky eggs (commonly known as<br />

Ukrainian Easter eggs) on display. The association<br />

also uses the library for occasional group painting<br />

sessions, said Manochio.<br />

“At the recent show in Bernardsville, when<br />

you looked around, the room was a perfect<br />

representation of what the club is about,” said<br />

Paccioretti. “We’re not just pastels or water<br />

colorists or portraitists—there was every type of<br />

art.”<br />

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Elks’ Youth Division Inspires Empathy, Volunteerism<br />

Story by ELLEN WILKOWE<br />

Photos by Karen Fucito<br />

It’s Friday night and the weekend is finally in<br />

full view and wide open with possibilities.<br />

For a select group of youths, Friday night may<br />

mean heading to Lake Hopatcong Elks Lodge<br />

#782 in Mount Arlington and serving up dinner<br />

to members and the community at large.<br />

Add to that schoolwork, sports, social lives<br />

and other assorted extracurricular activities,<br />

and it’s just another week in the life of an Antler,<br />

otherwise known as a junior Elk.<br />

Steeped in history, the Antlers were organized<br />

in the late 1930s as the youth division of the Elks.<br />

According to the Elks USA website, the group<br />

was formed as a means for “young people in<br />

our communities to get involved with the Elks<br />

in the many service-related projects” sponsored<br />

by local lodges.<br />

The program is open to 12- to 21-year-olds.<br />

The qualifications for membership are to be an<br />

American citizen, a person of good character<br />

and to believe in the existence of God. As with<br />

the Elks, the Antlers program is also deeply<br />

rooted in patriotism while fostering respect for<br />

parents and love of home.<br />

The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks<br />

was launched in 1867 by a group of theatrical<br />

men who called themselves the Jolly Corks and<br />

met often for their own amusement. After the<br />

death of a member—who left behind a wife<br />

and children—the entertainers decided the<br />

group needed to use their talents as a way to<br />

serve those in need. The group adapted many<br />

traditions and formalities from the Freemasons<br />

and always put service to others at the forefront<br />

of their mission.<br />

The Elks remained a men’s-only organization<br />

until 1995, when women were admitted. The<br />

Lake Hopatcong Antlers currently reflects a<br />

greater young women to young men ratio and<br />

boasts 18 members.<br />

Two of these members are Adrianna Martin,<br />

18, of Rockaway, and her brother Matthew, 15.<br />

The lodge community has been part of the<br />

siblings’ upbringing. Their mother, Samantha<br />

Martin, is exalted leader and has been involved,<br />

along with husband, Eric, with the Elks for more<br />

than 20 years.<br />

“Our kids grew up in the lodge,” said Samantha<br />

Martin. “We were there all the time.”<br />

They still are, except now, she said, their<br />

children are official members as well.<br />

The experience made such an impact on her<br />

daughter that, when she became of age, she<br />

wanted to join, as did Martin’s son when he<br />

became eligible.<br />

“I grew up around the lodge, so I’ve been<br />

around the Antlers since I was very young,”<br />

Adrianna Martin said.<br />

The involvement has broadened her horizons<br />

in terms of making new friends, having<br />

new experiences and helping people in the<br />

community.<br />

Kaitlyn Erickson, 18, of Rockaway, also came<br />

into the Antlers by way of family members who<br />

were immersed in lodge life.<br />

“My parents and some of my parents’ friends<br />

were involved as members of the Elks Lodge<br />

before I joined,” she said.<br />

Erickson initially tested the waters by<br />

volunteering to serve Friday night dinners, and<br />

her future involvement snowballed from there.<br />

“After a short time, I really began to enjoy<br />

volunteering and got involved in doing summer<br />

barbecues, holiday events, working events for<br />

children with special needs, our annual Leap in<br />

the Lake.”<br />

Erickson ramped up her involvement even<br />

more after being elected to the Antlers’ board<br />

where she first served as secretary for the youth<br />

program and then as president. She currently<br />

holds the position of chaplain.<br />

“During these years, I got involved a lot<br />

more with the lodge and getting to know the<br />

members and those who help out with events,”<br />

she said. “Each individual I meet is extremely<br />

kind and wanting to help the community.”<br />

Over the years, Samantha Martin noticed<br />

that kids like Erickson—as well as her own—<br />

who have<br />

been exposed<br />

to the Elks’<br />

combination of<br />

volunteerism<br />

and altruism, have developed compassion for<br />

the causes at hand—specifically children with<br />

special needs and veterans.<br />

With a tenet of patriotism, the Elks attract<br />

veterans as members and visitors, especially<br />

to the Friday night dinners where the Antlers<br />

volunteer as servers.<br />

The youth group also participates in Leap<br />

in the Lake, an annual lodge fundraiser for<br />

children with special needs. Antlers can be<br />

found not only helping during the event but<br />

also participating, putting together a team and<br />

raising money.<br />

Funds are also raised from earnings received<br />

from the lodge’s clothing donation bins, hosting<br />

one of the weekly Wednesday night barbeques,<br />

the annual Mother’s <strong>Day</strong> flower sale and other<br />

lodge events.<br />

Each month, the Antlers give $100 of the<br />

money they’ve raised to a charity of its choice.<br />

Some of the organizations that have reaped<br />

the benefits of their efforts include: Roots<br />

& Wings, a nonprofit that works with foster<br />

children; Eleventh Hour Rescue, an animal<br />

Top to bottom, left to right: Volunteers, including<br />

London Long, center, prepare and serve food at<br />

the annual fish fry at the Lake Hopatcong Elks<br />

Lodge. Volunteers, including Antlers Kaitlyn<br />

Erickson, center, and London, right, in the lodge<br />

kitchen. Samantha Martin and her daughter,<br />

Adrianna Martin. Erickson busses tables during<br />

a recent Friday night dinner.<br />

28<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


escue; Susan G. Komen, a breast cancer<br />

foundation; and Pink Witches Night Out, an<br />

annual fundraiser in October that benefits a<br />

woman in the community in need of breast<br />

cancer treatment.<br />

Come holiday time, the Antlers adopt two<br />

families and fulfill the wish lists of the children<br />

by purchasing gifts.<br />

Funds raised are also used to help defer the<br />

cost of the annual Peer Leadership Conference<br />

held at Ocean Place Spa in Long Branch every<br />

February.<br />

In its 34th year, the three-day conference<br />

for middle and high school students features<br />

motivational speakers who teach students to be<br />

leaders in their schools and communities. It also<br />

includes a one-day path to leadership program<br />

for middle schoolers.<br />

The conference is coordinated by a team<br />

led by Lisa Rovito, the New Jersey State Elks<br />

Association drug awareness chairperson.<br />

Given her background as a certified substance<br />

abuse counselor, Rovito, who lives in Hopatcong,<br />

became involved with the Elks at the urging of<br />

her late husband, who was a member for more<br />

than 30 years.<br />

What started primarily as a drug awareness<br />

and prevention weekend, has evolved into<br />

an all-encompassing retreat with workshops<br />

that tackle timely issues such as social media<br />

awareness, cyberbullying, emotional intelligence<br />

and, of course, leadership, said Rovito.<br />

“In addition to substance abuse, they address<br />

dealing with stress, peer pressure, bullying<br />

and just about every issue that teenagers face<br />

today,” she said.<br />

The <strong>2023</strong> conference attracted 450 Antlers<br />

from across the state.<br />

This was Rovito’s fifth year as state chairperson.<br />

In the past year, she and Martin have swapped<br />

leadership roles, with Martin taking the helm<br />

as exalted leader and Rovito serving as group<br />

leader and advisor for the Antlers.<br />

The Antlers, too, take on leadership roles<br />

within the organization, filling 10 administrative<br />

positions.<br />

Due to the hectic schedules of middle and<br />

high school students, the Antlers hold most of<br />

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their monthly meetings during actual events.<br />

“Trying to get a bunch of high school kids<br />

together for a meeting is near impossible,”<br />

Rovito said. “Some are involved in soccer,<br />

baseball, cheerleading. They are good kids. They<br />

are active in everything.”<br />

In moving the organization forward, Martin is<br />

focused on the next generation.<br />

“This isn’t your grandfather’s type of club,”<br />

she said. “There’s a younger crowd.”<br />

With a passion to serve their communities,<br />

lead and make friends in the process.<br />

“We make our time fun by bonding with<br />

one another,” Erickson said. “I truly cherish the<br />

friendships and the community that we have<br />

built at the lodge.”<br />

Wishing everyone a safe and healthy Spring launch.<br />

745 US 46 W • Kenvil, NJ<br />

God Bless America<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 29


Rescue Group Raises Money for<br />

Story and photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

Homeless Pets<br />

Stanhope Mayor Patty Zdichocki and her partner, Maria Grizzetti, were guests of<br />

honor at a fundraiser benefiting homeless pets and pets of domestic violence<br />

survivors.<br />

Hosted by Only Kindness Rescue, a Passaic County nonprofit, no-kill organization,<br />

the event raised over $7,000.<br />

Also recognized at the fundraiser were staff from DASI, a Newton-based nonprofit<br />

that helps victims and survivors of domestic and sexual violence and human trafficking.<br />

The organization also aims to provide a pet-friendly place for those escaping abuse.<br />

Held in April at the Lake Hopatcong Elks Lodge in Mount Arlington, the event drew<br />

just over 70 guests. Money was raised through a 50/50 raffle and a live auction that<br />

included the hawking of two boxes of the new Raspberry Rally Girl Scout cookie, which<br />

are unavailable to New Jersey residents. Each box sold for $100.<br />

Since adopting two cats from Only Kindness Rescue in 2019, Zdichocki and Grizzetti<br />

have supported the group through donations, food drives and referrals.<br />

Zdichocki, a three-time Volunteer of the Year for DASI, connected the two nonprofits.<br />

A portion of the money raised at the fundraiser will go to DASI, said Mary Linn Lombardo,<br />

founder and executive director of Only Kindness Rescue.<br />

“The money raised will be used to help provide options for victims of domestic<br />

violence to leave their abusers without having to give up their pets or leave them behind<br />

in danger,” she said.<br />

From top left, clockwise: Lynn and Roy Wilson. Patty Zdichocki and Maria Grizzetti. Ellen and<br />

John Thiessen, Rob and Cheryl Martins. Dana DiCrosta, Judy and Joan Walsh, Stephanie and<br />

Cynthia Spera. Kim Spangenberg, Athena Storm, Heather Scott, Dan Slavik. Cindy Weisz,<br />

Stacy Shapiro, Jodi Cirignano, Maryann Esposito. Michael and Dorothy DeLorenzo. Kim and<br />

Peter Jungfer. Sandy Suker and Rhonda Dray.<br />

30<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


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LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


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lakehopatcongnews.com 33


HISTORY<br />

A Beacon in the Styx<br />

by MARTY KANE<br />

Photos courtesy<br />

of the<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG<br />

HISTORICAL<br />

MUSEUM<br />

This spring I learned that, after a 21-year<br />

run, Mario Ferra sold Pavinci Italian Grill<br />

to three partners who already own two pubstyle<br />

restaurants in Manhattan. Renovations<br />

to the River Styx location are expected to be<br />

completed shortly and include a new deck and<br />

remodeled interior.<br />

The new establishment will be known as<br />

The Beacon and continues the evolution of<br />

this location, which has been home to several<br />

popular long-term businesses over many years.<br />

River Styx Cove was sparsely developed<br />

in 1906 when Martin Kjellman established a<br />

houseboat as a refreshment stand. The August<br />

11, 1906 edition of the Lake Hopatcong Breeze<br />

reported that “the house boat [sic] on the<br />

Styx is pictured on souvenir postcards. Martin<br />

Kjellman, the Captain, does his utmost toward<br />

keeping the Styx dwellers cool.”<br />

A 1908 advertisement bills the houseboat<br />

as “the most unique and popular place on the<br />

lake for all kinds of refreshments, such as ice<br />

cream, fancy biscuits, orangeade, soft drinks …<br />

Cigars, tobacco and souvenir postals for sale.”<br />

To convince boat owners that River Styx<br />

Cove was not too shallow to navigate, early<br />

ads for the houseboat noted “water deep<br />

enough for launches.” Kjellman’s idea proved<br />

successful, and his business grew.<br />

The June 29, 1912 edition of the Breeze<br />

reported that “the houseboat on the Styx is<br />

no more. It has changed into something better<br />

and more beautiful, as a butterfly comes forth<br />

from its chrysalis. It is now the Pagoda, which<br />

the dictionary informs us means a Hindu<br />

temple. The Pagoda in the Styx is indeed a<br />

temple of pleasure.”<br />

The article further noted that “the structure<br />

with its wide porches, white columns and<br />

unique roof makes a pretty picture and is well<br />

worth a visit in itself to say nothing of the dainty<br />

refreshments served there for a consideration<br />

by the busy hands of Mrs. Kjellman.”<br />

While the Breeze reporter may have been a<br />

bit confused about the architectural style of<br />

the River Styx pagoda, one can imagine how<br />

surprised visitors arriving for the 1912 season<br />

were to see this new structure. How odd it<br />

must have seemed to enjoy a refreshment<br />

in this Asian-inspired building while looking<br />

across River Styx at the imposing hotel Castle<br />

Edward, built to resemble a European castle.<br />

The early Pagoda offered useful items such<br />

as film and postcards, along with Schrafft’s<br />

chocolates and Viedt’s ice cream served on an<br />

open-air porch.<br />

The porch was enclosed, and an addition<br />

was built during the 1920s and 1930s to create<br />

a luncheonette and soda fountain. By 1940,<br />

the Pagoda added a swimming dock, housed<br />

the post office, offered bungalows for lease<br />

and became a popular spot to rent boats<br />

and canoes, while still maintaining the lunch<br />

counter and soda fountain.<br />

During this era, the Pagoda also housed<br />

Goody’s Bike Station, where visitors could rent<br />

bikes for 25 cents per hour or $1.50 per day.<br />

Following World War II, the Pagoda added gas<br />

pumps for boats and cars.<br />

The Kjellmans sold the Pagoda in the late<br />

1920s to the Osterblom family, who owned it<br />

for nearly 40 years, until they sold to Lennie<br />

Eisenstein in the mid-1960s.<br />

Envisioning the business as a full-service<br />

restaurant, Eisenstein built another addition,<br />

which he called the Lobster Shack. Len E’s<br />

Pagoda and Lobster Shack proved to be very<br />

popular. When the church next door became<br />

available, Eisenstein had even grander plans.<br />

The first church services in the Borough of<br />

Hopatcong were held during the<br />

late 19th and early 20th centuries<br />

by the Rev. T.A.K. Gessler at Tangle<br />

Wild, his property in Davis Cove. After the<br />

Hopatcong School (later Hudson Maxim<br />

School) was built in River Styx in 1908, church<br />

services were conducted in the one-room<br />

schoolhouse. Locals noted that the borough<br />

had a jail but no church.<br />

On July 2, 1911, the cornerstone for the West<br />

Side Church, the borough’s first church, was laid.<br />

Gessler preached at the nondenominational<br />

church until his death in 1925.<br />

In 1949, following a vote of the congregation,<br />

the church became the West Side United<br />

Methodist Church. After a 1968 fire gutted the<br />

inside of the church, the congregation decided<br />

more space was needed. A new church was<br />

built across River Styx Bridge on Maxim Drive,<br />

opening in 1971.<br />

The old West Side Church structure seemed<br />

headed for the wrecking ball, but Lennie<br />

Eisenstein had another idea.<br />

Having doubled the size of the Pagoda,<br />

Eisenstein bought the church building and<br />

connected it to his existing establishment,<br />

creating one large restaurant. Though unique,<br />

the expansion proved to be a step too far.<br />

Overextended financially, the restaurant was<br />

forced to close.<br />

The business reopened under new owners<br />

as the Jolly Buccaneer in 1975 and, after being<br />

sold again, became the Lighthouse in 1978. The<br />

Lighthouse operated as a dinner theatre for a<br />

year before latching onto the disco craze of<br />

the late 1970s.<br />

With its large dance floor and numerous bars<br />

on multiple levels, The Lighthouse became<br />

one of the most popular clubs in New Jersey,<br />

drawing customers from a wide area. The<br />

steeple of the church served as the Rock<br />

Room, a unique venue for live bands.<br />

Following the Lighthouse’s closure in the mid-<br />

1980s, several other restaurants experienced<br />

various degrees of success at the location.<br />

During this period the unique remaining<br />

portion of the old pagoda roof was covered.<br />

(It remains under the existing roof, should a<br />

future owner wish to revisit the establishment’s<br />

original theme.)<br />

With the turn of the century, the property<br />

was split into three different businesses and<br />

given fresh life by new owners led by Scott<br />

Barber.<br />

Johnny’s Marina, long run by the Salamone<br />

family, offers boat slips, sales, repairs and a wide<br />

variety of boating and fishing<br />

supplies. In the former church<br />

structure, Barber and his team<br />

established the Barber Shop,<br />

a state-of-the-art recording<br />

studio. And in the restaurant<br />

Far left: The Pagoda, circa 1912,<br />

which replaced a houseboat,<br />

circa 1908, that served<br />

refreshments (immediate left).<br />

34<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


space, Mario Ferra opened Pavinci Italian Grill<br />

in 2002. It remained a mainstay at the lake for<br />

two decades with its Italian menu, live music<br />

and popularity as a venue for parties and group<br />

functions.<br />

When Ferra hosted his last event at Pavinci’s<br />

in February <strong>2023</strong>, an era ended. A new one<br />

is about to begin under the leadership of<br />

Brendan Clinkscales and two business partners,<br />

Shane Buggy and Mike Brannigan.<br />

The trio, all originally from Ireland, operate<br />

the Copper Still pubs in Manhattan’s East<br />

Village and Chelsea neighborhoods. Their goal<br />

when opening the first location nine years ago<br />

was to offer a family-style Irish pub with a great<br />

whiskey selection.<br />

Clinkscales, who lives in Sparta with his wife<br />

and two children, handles the day-to-day<br />

management responsibilities. The 36-year-old<br />

has been involved with restaurants since he<br />

was 20 and plans to be at The Beacon full time.<br />

He expects the menu to be similar to the<br />

New York City locations, which he described<br />

as “modern American,” with a prolific beer,<br />

wine and alcohol selection. The Beacon will be<br />

open seven days a week and will offer 14 dock<br />

slips, which are part of the long-term lease.<br />

Clinkscales said he looks forward to adding<br />

weekend breakfast in the future and music<br />

once they are established and have a better<br />

understanding of the musical tastes of the<br />

clientele.<br />

He stressed that he wants The Beacon to<br />

be a valued member<br />

of the community,<br />

adding that the<br />

Borough of Hopatcong<br />

has been great to<br />

work with in getting<br />

the new business<br />

going. While much has<br />

changed in the years<br />

since a houseboat first<br />

arrived in River Styx, this site continues to<br />

make Lake Hopatcong a more interesting<br />

and vibrant place.<br />

See you at The Beacon!<br />

From top, clockwise: The Lighthouse advertisement. The Pagoda, circa 1910, with West Side<br />

Church peeking through the top of the trees. The author (left) with best friend, Steve Kleiman,<br />

investigating the building of the Lobster Shack in 1970. A poster featuring special guest Lawrence<br />

Taylor at The Lighthouse in 1985.<br />

• Choice of plated, buffet, or reception style meal.<br />

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FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT OUR<br />

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PACKAGES CAN INCLUDE<br />

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• Tent rental available for your outdoor event<br />

• Large parking lot with a covered foyer for dropping<br />

people off by the door.<br />

Lake Hopatcong Elks | 201 Howard Boulevard | Mount Arlington,NJ 07856<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 35


COOKING<br />

WITH SCRATCH ©<br />

Pick a Door,<br />

Any Door<br />

36<br />

by BARBARA SIMMONS<br />

Photo by KAREN FUCITO<br />

Is it the front door<br />

or the back door?<br />

I wonder if many<br />

of you have a front<br />

door versus back door controversy at your<br />

house.<br />

What do you call the front door? Is it the<br />

one everyone uses to enter and exit the<br />

house or another more formal, less used one<br />

on a different side of the house?<br />

This was definitely an issue in the home<br />

I grew up in on the lake. This argument<br />

resurfaced when my husband and I bought<br />

our house over 30 years ago.<br />

Some of you may argue there are other<br />

factors—such as location—that determine<br />

which is the front door. If you think it’s the<br />

door that faces the street, that would make<br />

me right in both locations—Ha! But there are<br />

several who would argue with me.<br />

At the lake, we entered and exited on the<br />

side of the house where there were steps<br />

going up to a landing and a door that led to<br />

the mudroom. There was a doorbell on this<br />

door, which, in and of itself, should classify<br />

it as a front door, right? The mudroom led<br />

into our kitchen. Most everyone in the house<br />

agreed it was the front door.<br />

But my father, Horst Kertscher, insisted<br />

the front door was the one that faced the<br />

lake, on the other side of the house. Yes, the<br />

view was more aesthetically pleasing, but<br />

that door was only used by the Jehovah’s<br />

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Witnesses and people who were lost, asking<br />

for directions. It also opened into our living<br />

room and we kids weren’t supposed to use<br />

that door when returning from the lake with<br />

sandy feet and wet bathing suits.<br />

In addition, the route to Horst’s “front<br />

door” was a bit more roundabout. You had<br />

to come up from the garage, take a left onto<br />

the concrete sidewalk, walk around the side<br />

of the house, up some steps and walk across<br />

the rocky outcropping the house was built<br />

upon. Then you had to traverse a small patch<br />

of lawn before you got to a flagstone landing<br />

leading up the stairs to the living room door.<br />

Actually, there were three doors at the<br />

lake house: Horst’s front door, my front<br />

door and a side door that opened onto a<br />

concrete patio that led to what we all called<br />

the backyard. After swimming, we were<br />

supposed to hang our towels and bathing<br />

suits on the clotheslines strung between the<br />

big oak trees … not draped over the dining<br />

room chairs.<br />

It’s also where we set up the grill when we<br />

had company on the weekends. Our picnic<br />

table was back there, too.<br />

My husband, Aaron, and I have disagreed for<br />

the last 30 years about which door is which<br />

in our current home. As a matter of fact, we<br />

recently argued about it at the garden center<br />

when he said he wanted to buy an additional<br />

hanging basket of geraniums for the front<br />

door, in addition to the two I had chosen for<br />

the (other) front door.<br />

At our house, my kids and I agree that<br />

the front door is the one everyone uses to<br />

enter and exit, the one that opens to the<br />

mudroom and kitchen (just like at the lake),<br />

the one the UPS driver leaves packages at. It<br />

also faces our street.<br />

Aaron says our front door is the living<br />

room door. Like Horst’s front door, it is rarely<br />

used except to let the cat in and out, and it’s<br />

where the occasional wayward floral delivery<br />

ends up. And, yes, it is also the one that the<br />

Jehovah’s Witnesses knock on when they are<br />

in the neighborhood.<br />

The difference between our house and the<br />

lake house is that here, Aaron’s “front door”<br />

is one quarter of the way around the corner<br />

of the house from my front door.<br />

We don’t have a back door at all.<br />

OK, so I Googled “is there a difference<br />

between a front door and a back door” and<br />

this is what I found:<br />

“Generally speaking, front doors face<br />

the street and the public. The front door is<br />

where one meets the postman and watches<br />

a passing parade. By contrast, the back door<br />

and backyard are private: it is where families<br />

have barbecues, swimming pools and store<br />

things they don’t want the public to see.”<br />

However, as you know, you can always<br />

support both sides of an argument when you<br />

Google an answer to a question! Read on:<br />

“So, is there a difference between back<br />

doors and front doors? The answer is no,<br />

the choice of door is simply down to your<br />

preference and your needs. These doors<br />

make the perfect entranceway into the front<br />

or back of your home and can even be fitted<br />

on garages and sheds.”<br />

But wait, there’s more:<br />

With additional Googling, I learned the<br />

placement of front and back doors is a very<br />

important aspect of feng shui, the Chinese<br />

belief that harmonious energy—and better<br />

fortune—can be achieved by the positioning<br />

of furniture and other objects.<br />

“Having a direct line of sight from the front<br />

to the back of a home is considered poor<br />

feng shui because with nothing to slow or<br />

redirect it, qi (energy) will rush straight from<br />

the front door out the back. This allows the<br />

energy, which might bring luck or money,<br />

to leave your home without circulating and<br />

bestowing its benefits.”<br />

So, neither of my homes—childhood or<br />

present—have had this direct line of sight<br />

issue. Phew. Thank goodness we’ve had good<br />

feng shui all these years.<br />

Having lived in the lake house for about<br />

20 years and in our current house for about<br />

35, I can’t say that the front door versus back<br />

door controversy has ever been satisfactorily<br />

resolved. Perhaps not calling them front or<br />

back doors would work? Can we just call<br />

them kitchen doors or living room doors?<br />

Maybe being a little more specific would<br />

solve the problem<br />

It seems I’ve lived in homes that have had<br />

hybrid front-back-side doors. What’s it like at<br />

your house? Do you agree which is the front<br />

door and which is the back door? What about<br />

your yard? Are the members of your family in<br />

agreement about which yard is which?<br />

I think we can all relax a bit and have a good<br />

chuckle over this. Regardless of what you<br />

believe, you can make this recipe for roasted<br />

vegetables and enjoy it while sitting outside<br />

in warmer weather. I’ll let you decide which<br />

door you use to get there.


Mediterranean Roasted Vegetables<br />

This can be served as a side dish as part<br />

of a larger grill menu. (The vegetarians in<br />

your family will thank you for the meat-free<br />

option.) Serve the tzatziki and crumbled feta<br />

cheese in separate bowls and the warmed<br />

pita bread cut in halves or quarters in a<br />

basket.<br />

I also like to serve this on its own as a<br />

veggie gyro sandwich topped with tzatziki<br />

and crumbled feta cheese.<br />

Serves 6<br />

Ingredients<br />

Veggies<br />

1 small eggplant, peeled and cut into<br />

large cubes<br />

1 medium zucchini, cut in half lengthwise<br />

and sliced into 1/2” half moons<br />

1 medium summer squash, cut in half<br />

lengthwise and sliced into 1/2”<br />

half moons<br />

1 red bell pepper, cored, seeded and cut<br />

into large cubes<br />

1 green bell pepper, seeded and cut into<br />

large cubes<br />

1 yellow or orange bell pepper, seeded<br />

and cut into large cubes<br />

1 large red onion, cut into thick slices<br />

Dressing<br />

1/2 cup good olive oil<br />

1/2 cup balsamic vinegar<br />

1 teaspoon sugar<br />

1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper<br />

4 large cloves garlic, smashed and minced<br />

1 tablespoon (or to taste) kosher salt<br />

Tzatziki<br />

1 cup plain Greek yogurt<br />

½ cup grated cucumber<br />

2 cloves garlic, minced<br />

2 tablespoons lemon juice<br />

1 teaspoon dried oregano<br />

2 teaspoons dried or fresh dill<br />

Salt and pepper, to taste<br />

For serving:<br />

Crumbled feta cheese<br />

3 pitas, warmed in the oven or on the grill,<br />

sliced in halves or thirds<br />

Procedure<br />

Prep all of the vegetables and put them into a very large bowl. Whisk the dressing<br />

ingredients together in a small bowl. Pour the dressing onto the vegetables, giving them a<br />

good toss. In another bowl, combine all the ingredients for the tzatziki, stir and set aside.<br />

Oven method:<br />

1. Preheat oven to 420 F. Adjust the oven rack to the lowest position. If using two pans, use<br />

the two lowest positions.<br />

2. Place vegetables on a large sheet pan and roast them for about 30 to 40 minutes, stirring<br />

halfway. Cook until they are well done and nicely caramelized. If using two sheet pans,<br />

rotate them top to bottom halfway through the roasting.<br />

Grill method:<br />

1. Bring the grill to a very high heat.<br />

2. If you have a perforated grill basket, you can use it for this recipe. You can also use a sheet<br />

pan if you have one that fits your grill and allows you to close the cover.<br />

3. Once the grill is smoking hot, add the dressed veggies to the grill basket or sheet pan and<br />

place it on the grate.<br />

4. Cover the grill and roast the vegetables for about 45 minutes, tossing with a spatula every<br />

15 minutes or so until they are nicely charred.<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 37


WORDS OF<br />

A FEATHER<br />

Enjoying the<br />

Dawn Chorus<br />

Story and Photo by HEATHER SHIRLEY<br />

My best friend, Kellie, is having a tough<br />

time.<br />

Her parents, who live in Augusta, Georgia,<br />

are struggling with health issues. Her mom<br />

has started using a wheelchair, her father has<br />

cancer.<br />

Kellie went to Augusta to take care of her<br />

parents, and I drove up to Augusta (from my<br />

home in Florida) to take care of Kellie.<br />

Seeing your parents decline and face the end<br />

of life is awful. Speaking from experience—my<br />

father died about a year ago—it just sucks.<br />

It’s important, I believe, to find joy wherever<br />

possible and to practice serious self-care.<br />

Since her parents have moved into an<br />

assisted living facility, Kellie and I, along with<br />

our dogs, have been staying in her parents’<br />

house. The beautiful home is on a magnificent<br />

golf course. Every morning—before dawn and<br />

before any players are about—she and I walk<br />

the golf course, let the dogs frolic and enjoy<br />

the dawn chorus of the birds.<br />

“Cheer, cheer, cheer!” called a northern<br />

cardinal during a recent walk. Regal and red, he<br />

raised his jaunty crest as he hopped higher in a<br />

shrub to call out from a better perch.<br />

“Drink your tea!” replied an eastern towhee.<br />

His impressive plumage includes a striking black<br />

head, snowy white belly and black and reddishbrown<br />

on his sides. He peeked out from dense,<br />

low shrubbery to sing his morning tune.<br />

Hearing the birds, our moods instantly lifted.<br />

Do you, too, hear the dawn chorus? As you<br />

walk your own dog? As you hurriedly climb<br />

into your car to start your commute? Do you<br />

hear the birds luring you into your day?<br />

All around the world, just before the sun<br />

comes up, songbirds greet the day with a<br />

loud, exuberant practice session. Studies<br />

38<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />

show that just as orchestras practice before a<br />

performance, birds warm up at dawn in order<br />

to perform better throughout the day. (There<br />

is also, for those of you who are not early<br />

risers, an evening chorus, but the performance<br />

is not as robust.)<br />

It is mostly male birds who sing. The main<br />

purposes for singing include declaring and<br />

defending breeding territories and attracting<br />

a mate.<br />

When choosing a mate, a female judges<br />

many aspects of a male’s song. She considers<br />

how loud the song is and how far the sound<br />

carries. This indicates how strategic the male<br />

is. Because he chooses the same perch from<br />

which to sing over and over, he must make a<br />

careful choice to optimize the acoustics for his<br />

performance.<br />

His choice of perch—whether it is high in<br />

the forest, out in the open or buried in dense<br />

cover—will impact how successful he is in<br />

winning a mate.<br />

Successful males sing repeatedly throughout<br />

the day. This requires tremendous energy and<br />

time. By singing so frequently, males indicate<br />

to prospective mates that they have secured<br />

enough resources in their territories to sustain<br />

a growing family. They don’t need to stop<br />

singing to go find more food; they have plenty<br />

available to keep them going all day.<br />

Some birds are born with innate knowledge<br />

Scan the QR code with<br />

your phone’s camera<br />

to hear the sounds of<br />

multiple birds.<br />

of their species’ specific song. The females of<br />

these species will listen for how accurate the<br />

male’s song is.<br />

Other species learn songs from their fathers<br />

or neighbors and may put their own spin on a<br />

song. Their potential mates will focus on their<br />

vast and varied repertoires.<br />

The spring breeding season—before and<br />

just after the sun comes up—is the best time<br />

The author in the company of dogs.<br />

(Photo courtesy of the author)<br />

to enjoy the dawn chorus. After chicks have<br />

hatched, many bird fathers continue singing so<br />

they can teach their offspring songs.<br />

Some species, such as black-capped<br />

chickadees, even teach a specific family-only<br />

song. As they forage in a loose group, they can<br />

tell if an interloper tries to sneak onto their<br />

turf. The stranger will not know the family<br />

song, and the family can chase it off to protect<br />

their food supplies.<br />

As Kellie and I rounded the 18th hole and<br />

headed for home, the sun peeked up from<br />

the horizon. The morning sky was aflame<br />

with lavender, pink and orange streaks. The<br />

golf course’s breathtaking azaleas were in full<br />

bloom.<br />

I love azaleas. Entire hedges here are so<br />

massed with flowers you don’t see a single<br />

green leaf, only brilliant eruptions of magenta,<br />

coral, violet.<br />

Kellie and I have talked about the things<br />

ahead that scare us. We try to counter those<br />

fears by dreaming aloud of future adventures<br />

we want to plan, and we laugh over memories<br />

we share.<br />

The dogs also make us laugh. Dog love is<br />

excellent balm for anything and everything.<br />

With tongues lolling and eyes sparkling, they<br />

are ready for their breakfasts, warm beds and<br />

morning naps.<br />

Dogs are spectacular. The exuberant dawn<br />

chorus is spectacular. This time with my friend<br />

and her time with her parents are spectacular.<br />

Life is spectacular.<br />

Enjoy it, and make it count.<br />

martinnurserynj.com • Randolph • Tewksbury • East Amwell • 973-584-5111


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lakehopatcongnews.com 39


directory<br />

CONSTRUCTION/<br />

EXCAVATION<br />

Al Hutchins Excavating<br />

973-663-2142<br />

973-713-8020<br />

Lakeside Construction<br />

151 Sparta-Stanhope Rd., Hopatcong<br />

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Lake Hopatcong Cruises<br />

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Lake Hopatcong Mini Golf Club<br />

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Roxbury Arts Alliance<br />

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HOME SERVICES<br />

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Homestead Lawn Sprinkler<br />

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Happs Kitchen & Bath<br />

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Jefferson Recycling<br />

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Martin Design Group<br />

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The Polite Plumber<br />

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Royalty Cleaning Services<br />

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Wilson Services<br />

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LAKE SERVICES<br />

AAA Dock & Marine<br />

27 Prospect Point Rd., LH<br />

973-663-4998<br />

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Batten The Hatches<br />

70 Rt. 181, LH<br />

973-663-1910<br />

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MARINAS, BOAT<br />

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Katz’s Marinas<br />

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342 Lakeside Ave., Hopatcong<br />

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Lake’s End Marina<br />

91 Mt. Arlington Blvd., Landing<br />

973-398-5707<br />

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745 US 46W, Kenvil<br />

201-400-6031<br />

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862-254-2514<br />

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NONPROFIT<br />

ORGANIZATIONS<br />

Lake Hopatcong Commission<br />

260 Lakeside Blvd.,Landing<br />

973-601-7801<br />

commissioner@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 Museum<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 />

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973-770-1380<br />

Fox Architectural Design<br />

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RESTAURANTS & BARS<br />

Alice’s Restaurant<br />

24 Nolan’s Pt. Park Rd., LH<br />

973-663-9600<br />

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Big Fish Lounge At Alice’s<br />

24 Nolan’s Pt. Park Rd., LH<br />

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The Beacon<br />

453 River Styx Rd., Hopatcong<br />

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The Windlass Restaurant<br />

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SENIOR CARE<br />

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SPECIALTY STORES<br />

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470 Rt. 10W, Ledgewood<br />

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STORAGE<br />

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17 Rt. 181 & 20 Tierney Rd.<br />

Lake Hopatcong<br />

973-663-4000<br />

A Hands-On Adventure on<br />

New Jersey’s largest lake!<br />

Hop aboard the Lake Hopatcong Foundation’s<br />

Floating Classroom for a fun on-the-water<br />

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Fun for the whole family!<br />

Scan to find out more!<br />

40<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG NEWS <strong>Memorial</strong> <strong>Day</strong> <strong>2023</strong>


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lakehopatcongnews.com 41


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OUR FARM STAND OPENS JUNE 8, <strong>2023</strong><br />

THURSDAYS & FRIDAYS: 1PM - 6PM SATURDAYS: 10AM - 1PM

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