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2023 Labor Day Issue

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

ake Hopatcong News<br />

LABOR DAY <strong>2023</strong> VOL. 15 NO. 5<br />

Centennial Celebration<br />

Fire Departments from Hopatcong and Mount Arlington Mark 100 Years of Service<br />

A DAY AT THE RACES<br />

THE GIFT OF THRIFT<br />

A NIGHT OUT<br />

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I<br />

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

From the Editor<br />

saw this post on Facebook recently where someone noted that the time between 1923 and<br />

1973 is the same amount of time between 1973 and <strong>2023</strong>—50 years. The purpose of the post<br />

was to point out how we perceive life to have been so different—maybe even difficult—between<br />

those early 50 years and the latter 50 years. And it begs the question: what will the babies being<br />

born five or six decades from now think about the year <strong>2023</strong>? Will the world change so much that<br />

they look back on it—on us—as so old-fashioned, outdated or even obsolete.<br />

Like me, most of you reading this magazine can remember life in 1973. I was 12 for most of that<br />

year, turning 13 toward the end of November and I would say life in the 1970s was objectively<br />

modern. Everyone had cars, air transportation was readily available and television brought the<br />

world to our living rooms. Sure, the computer age hadn’t hit yet, but it was right around the<br />

corner, knocking at the door.<br />

I’m not sure I have many readers who can lay claim to 1923 as their birth year, but I do know that<br />

some of you have been around for 80, maybe even 90 years, which affords you many memories<br />

well on the early side of the last 100 years.<br />

In stating the obvious, that’s a long time.<br />

I’m always curious to ask, what advancement over this period of time was most life-changing?<br />

The cover story in this issue by Mike Daigle is about two local fire departments celebrating 100<br />

years of service; Hopatcong and Mount Arlington. (See story on page 22.)<br />

From hand-pulled fire hose carts to state-of-the-art fire trucks, these two small towns have a<br />

long, strong history with regard to their volunteer fire departments.<br />

Mount Arlington commemorated its anniversary in July with a parade down Howard Boulevard<br />

followed by a celebration party. Hopatcong will be front and center, celebrating its 100th year on<br />

October 7, when it hosts the 103rd Sussex County Firemen’s Association Inspection <strong>Day</strong> & Parade<br />

in the borough.<br />

Then there’s the story about athletes Joe Greene and Frank D’Orio, both in their 80s and both<br />

living like they’re 25 again. (See the story by Ellen Wilkowe on page 26) Twenty-five-year-olds<br />

should take note.<br />

In July, my family got together to help celebrate my aunt’s 100th birthday. While she is not a<br />

blood relative or technically my aunt—she married my mom’s first cousin—Aunt Anne Froehner<br />

has always been one of my favorites. She is a great-great-grandmother who has a wicked sense of<br />

humor and still enjoys her favorite Old Fashioned drink every now and then.<br />

Five years ago, I wrote this column about my mom turning 90, a true milestone for anyone.<br />

When she sits and reads this, she’ll be days away from turning 95, another milestone that is<br />

worthy of recognition and will be celebrated by her children and their spouses, her grandchildren<br />

and their significant others and her great-grandson, Oliver. (Here’s a picture of my mom and me<br />

going to lunch on a windy day after getting haircuts.)<br />

We recently took her to dinner at the Cloverleaf Tavern in Caldwell, a somewhat famous local<br />

pub that’s been around forever and a place we’ve frequented often. As I was helping her navigate<br />

down the uneven, worn brick path to the back entrance, I made mention of a sign hanging off the<br />

side of the building. It was an invitation to join in the celebration of<br />

Cloverleaf’s 90th anniversary.<br />

“Look mom, you’re older than the Cloverleaf,” I said jokingly.<br />

I always thought of the Cloverleaf as this historic institution in my<br />

hometown, with every passing year adding to its age and its legacy.<br />

While every passing day adds age to my mom, these days also add<br />

to her legacy of a life lived, loved and appreciated.<br />

Happy birthday, mom, from all of us.<br />

—Karen<br />

A DAY AT THE RACES<br />

THE GIFT OF THRIFT<br />

A NIGHT OUT<br />

AGELESS ATHLETES<br />

ake Hopatcong News<br />

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

Centennial Celebration<br />

Fire Departments from Hopatcong and Mount Arlington Mark 100 Years of Service<br />

LABOR DAY <strong>2023</strong> VOL. 15 NO. 5<br />

ON THE COVER<br />

Hopatcong fire trucks in line as far as<br />

the eye can see at this year’s Memorial<br />

<strong>Day</strong> parade along Durban Avenue.<br />

—photo by Karen Fucito<br />

KAREN FUCITO<br />

Editor<br />

editor@lakehopatcongnews.com<br />

973-663-2800<br />

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS<br />

Michael Stephen Daigle<br />

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 />

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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 />

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Racing Tradition Continues on Lake Hopatcong<br />

Story by MICHAEL DAIGLE<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

The view of the watery racecourse from the<br />

driver’s seat of his Jersey Speed Skiff is a<br />

little different than from the second chair where<br />

the riding mechanic sits, said Mount Arlington’s<br />

Randy Weber.<br />

The Jersey Skiff is a powerful and swiftly<br />

maneuverable craft that is capable of taking<br />

tight turns in a race that to a spectator appear<br />

dangerously out of control, he said.<br />

“The excitement of several skiffs going into the<br />

first turn is one of the most exciting things at a<br />

boat race,” he said. “The way these boats turn,<br />

they get up on their sides and your shoulder<br />

almost touches the water. Being a driver is also<br />

the most challenging but exciting part of the two<br />

positions in a skiff.”<br />

Weber will be among 50 or so racers taking<br />

to Lake Hopatcong in September for the race<br />

series sponsored by the Lake Hopatcong Racing<br />

Association. This will be Weber’s second year<br />

racing at Lake Hopatcong.<br />

The event is scheduled from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on<br />

Sept 16 and 17.<br />

The featured races are the New Jersey State<br />

Powerboat Championships and the New Jersey<br />

Governor’s Cup race. The Lake Hopatcong races<br />

were designated as the Governor’s Cup in 2017 by<br />

the New Jersey Legislature.<br />

The viewing area and start/finish line are at<br />

Hopatcong State Park in Landing. There is no<br />

fee for admission, but association member Ann<br />

Fitzgerald said the club requests donations to<br />

offset the cost of hosting the event.<br />

The event also received a grant from the New<br />

Jersey Division of Travel and Tourism.<br />

The racing association was founded in 1964,<br />

according to history written by member Dave<br />

Shaw.<br />

The races feature three boat classes, he wrote,<br />

hydro classes, flatbottom classes, and Jersey<br />

Speed Skiffs. Depending on the class, the hydros<br />

run engines from 44 cubic inch displacement<br />

Crosley engines, up to big block Chevrolets, Fords,<br />

and Chryslers. Straightaway speeds range from the<br />

mid-50 mph range for the smaller boats, to over<br />

100 mph for the larger boats, he wrote.<br />

The American Power Boat Association<br />

offered these definitions: A hydroplane is a fast<br />

motorboat, where the hull shape is such that at<br />

high speed, the weight of the boat is supported<br />

by planing forces, rather than simple buoyancy.<br />

A key aspect of hydroplanes is that they use the<br />

water they are on for lift rather than buoyancy, as<br />

well as for propulsion and steering.<br />

The Ultimate Guide to Flat Bottom Boat Racing<br />

defined the craft: “With a flat bottom and shallow<br />

draft a flat bottom boat can quickly get on plane<br />

and thus encounter less friction thus reaching<br />

higher speeds.”<br />

The 300-plus horsepower Jersey Skiffs are a wild<br />

ride; they spend a lot of time airborne, bouncing<br />

around, rolling sideways to seemingly impossible<br />

angles at 80 mph. The riding mechanic holds on<br />

tight, while the driver stays on course.<br />

“The races are a great<br />

spectacle,” said John<br />

Luime, who began<br />

watching in the mid-<br />

1970s when the races<br />

were held in the Lake<br />

Forest section of the<br />

lake.<br />

The association<br />

shifted to the state park<br />

in the late 1980s, Dave Shaw’s history noted. The<br />

races became known as the New Jersey State<br />

Championship Regatta.<br />

Luime said he has viewed the races from the<br />

shore and from his own boat.<br />

The event offers sensory overload, he said. The<br />

sound of the boats, the power and speed, the<br />

watery fantails all add to an exciting experience.<br />

“It’s a wonderful family event, whether seen<br />

from the shore or from a boat,” he said. “It’s fun<br />

and exciting.”<br />

Association spokesman Bill Pierce said the <strong>2023</strong><br />

races follow a couple years when the races were<br />

affected by the COVID pandemic, and travel and<br />

cost issues.<br />

Those issues especially hampered Canadian<br />

racers from participating, he said.<br />

The event costs an estimated $50,000 to stage,<br />

which includes a small amount of prize money, he<br />

said.<br />

The association relies on volunteers, donations<br />

and sponsors to stage the races, he said.<br />

By early August, 44 lake region sponsors<br />

were listed on the club’s website:<br />

lakehopatcongboatrace.com.<br />

Once a top competitor, Pierce said his job now<br />

is to administer the race and “raise money to<br />

offset the costs.”<br />

The Lake Hopatcong races were among 90<br />

American and Canadian race events listed on the<br />

website of the American Power Boat Association.<br />

In the sport, the Lake Hopatcong races are an<br />

important event, said Fitzgerald. Once a champion<br />

racer, she and her husband John now crew for the<br />

hydro racer Tenacity, piloted by Al Thompson.<br />

Fitzgerald said she and her husband were active<br />

racers from 1970 to 1984.<br />

She was calling from Tonawanda, New York, in<br />

early August where Tenacity was competing in the<br />

Thunder on the Niagara event.<br />

“Lake Hopatcong draws top racers from up and<br />

down the East Coast and Canada,” she said. “It’s an<br />

exciting course.”<br />

Tom Bush of Jefferson competed in his T-class<br />

Top to bottom, left to right: Tom Bush featured<br />

on the cover of the Daily Record TGIF<br />

magazine in September of 1982. Ann Fitzgerald<br />

in 1993. (Photo courtesy of Ann Fitzgerald.) Carolyn<br />

and George Thorne with Tom and Amy Bush<br />

in Tonawanda in August of 1982. (Photo courtesy<br />

of Tom Bush.) The start of a race at Hopatcong<br />

State Park in 2019. Randy Weber and Robert<br />

Boleslawski in Weber’s Jersey Skiff at a race in<br />

Maryland in May. (Photo courtesy of Jon Wittman.)<br />

6<br />

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


hydroplane racer for 30 years from New Jersey<br />

to Florida. He said he got into the speedboat<br />

community when he was working at Smitty’s<br />

Marine in Jefferson and had the opportunity to<br />

rebuild an old racer.<br />

It was a championship career.<br />

Bush, 69, was a member of the Lake Hopatcong<br />

Racing Association from 1973 to 1987, winning<br />

numerous national championships, including the<br />

1982 Nationals at Tonawanda, a place he knows<br />

well.<br />

It’s where, after winning the title, he got married<br />

to wife Amy.<br />

“It wasn’t spontaneous,” Bush said. “We had<br />

planned it. Amy knew the race was at Niagara Falls,<br />

so we got married on the banks of the Niagara<br />

River.”<br />

But by placing first, Bush’s boat was subject to<br />

scrutiny by race officials. The winning boat had to<br />

be inspected after the races, which included having<br />

the engine dismantled, he said. A time-consuming<br />

task that nearly sabotaged the wedding.<br />

“We were waiting to clear inspection and the<br />

judge who was performing the ceremony kept<br />

saying, ‘Tom, it’s getting darker,’” recalled Bush.<br />

Bush said he is concerned about his sport.<br />

Not as many youngsters are getting into racing<br />

because of other interests. Then there are the<br />

costs of travel, lodging, fuel, maintenance and the<br />

long weekends that challenge the racing teams<br />

and families, he said.<br />

Still, the sport survives.<br />

“We have a lot of legacy teams,” he said. “Sons<br />

and daughters, grandchildren of racing families.”<br />

What doesn’t change is the thrill of the sport,<br />

Bush said.<br />

The speed, the sensation of the boats skimming<br />

along the water barely in contact the surface test<br />

the skill of the drivers, he said.<br />

“It’s a lot of fun,” Bush said.<br />

The state park offers a clear view of the start<br />

line, the pit area where the boats are prepped, and<br />

the racecourse, said Fitzgerald.<br />

That excitement and the fellowship of the<br />

racers is what keeps them in the game, she said.<br />

“This a great sport. We’ve been at it for 53<br />

years,” she said with a laugh.<br />

From the state park, the lake opens into a broad<br />

expanse of water, offering unobstructed views to<br />

park visitors, lakefront homeowners and boaters.<br />

The course is 2.5 miles, said Shaw, whose three<br />

adult children—Richard, John and Katelyn—all<br />

race. The elder Shaw joined the association in<br />

1970, after buying a classic flatbottom boat for a<br />

few dollars and hustling it into racing shape.<br />

The attraction of the event is the speed of the<br />

boats and the skill of the drivers, he said. They<br />

take chances.<br />

The association’s goal is to offer competitive<br />

races, but also “keep the course as safe as we can<br />

make it,” he said.<br />

Thompson, Tenacity’s driver, said the<br />

competition is top-notch, which makes winning<br />

the Governor’s Cup so special.<br />

“That trophy is so big,” he said. “We all want to<br />

be holding it at the end of the day.”<br />

Weber said he has never been far from a New<br />

Jersey lake. Nor has his family been far from boat<br />

racing.<br />

“I grew up on Lake Hopatcong in King’s Cove<br />

and always attended the local races,” he said.<br />

His father, Ron Weber, operated a marina on<br />

Greenwood Lake and was also the president of<br />

the Greenwood Lake Powerboat Association, he<br />

said.<br />

Weber said he had been the rider-mechanic<br />

previously, but last year was his first race as driver.<br />

“It is hard to describe what it feels like,” he said,<br />

“but the ear to ear smile I have when I complete a<br />

race is all that needs to be said.”<br />

Skiffs are much faster than they look and many<br />

would argue can be the most exciting category of<br />

boat racing, said Weber.<br />

What adds to the adventure, he said, is talking<br />

to the other racers, listening for tips, hearing their<br />

experiences. “It is a true community,” he said.<br />

The <strong>2023</strong> race is special for Heather Johnson, the<br />

daughter in a boat racing family.<br />

This year her husband Kyle Johnson will pilot the<br />

reconditioned Geronimo, a Pro-Lite hydroplane<br />

built in the 1990s by her father Jay Brennan.<br />

Her father, who still lives in the lake region,<br />

watched the races as a child and decided he could<br />

build his own racer, she said.<br />

He built it in his backyard from okoume<br />

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He installed a 305 small-block Chevrolet engine<br />

and successfully ran the boat, piloted by Mark<br />

Johnson, in the 5-liter class, she said.<br />

Now Geronimo belongs to her, her brother Jon,<br />

and a grandson, she said.<br />

“The deep-rooted passion for the sport was the<br />

greatest driver of their success, and Jay instilled<br />

that deep in his children’s hearts,” she said.<br />

The rebuilt Geronimo is now powered by a<br />

small-block Chevy 350 with a 400 horsepower<br />

engine and will compete in the Hydro 350 class,<br />

she said.<br />

The trip from her home, now in Georgia, is<br />

important, Johnson said.<br />

“Lake Hopatcong is our hometown race,” she said.<br />

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Families Join First Responders for<br />

40th Annual National Night Out<br />

10<br />

Story by MELISSA SUMMERS<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

There’s nothing like bounce houses, ice<br />

cream, fire trucks and a helicopter to<br />

get families out into the fresh air on a summer<br />

night.<br />

The 40th annual National Night Out was held<br />

on August 1st in 17,000 communities across<br />

the United States in conjunction with local<br />

municipalities and first responders, including<br />

276 events in New Jersey alone. Local events<br />

included gatherings in Hopatcong Borough and<br />

Jefferson Township.<br />

Founded in 1984, the annual campaign<br />

focuses on building communities and<br />

promoting relationships between police and<br />

the neighborhoods they serve, according to<br />

the National Association of Town Watch, the<br />

organization that backs the event.<br />

Held on the first Tuesday in August, National<br />

Night Out brings together law enforcement,<br />

neighborhood watch groups, local civic<br />

organizations and volunteers for a variety of<br />

events.<br />

In the past 40 years, towns have combined<br />

block parties, parades and cookouts with<br />

safety demonstrations, kids’ events and meet<br />

and greets with local service organizations.<br />

Patrol officer Taylor Gentner spearheaded<br />

the Hopatcong event at Veterans’ Field<br />

Memorial Park, which featured a showcase<br />

of emergency vehicles, local businesses, pet<br />

adoptions and food.<br />

“It’s a great way for the community to have<br />

an interaction with the entire department,”<br />

Gentner said. “Typically, they’ll see the SROs<br />

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

[School Resource Officers] in the schools and<br />

they’ll see the patrol officers if they have to<br />

go to a call. But to see the people that we’re<br />

here to serve and for them to see us and get<br />

to know our faces— it’s just a great way to get<br />

everyone out there.”<br />

Residents get to interact with police and<br />

firefighters under more positive circumstances<br />

at National Night Out, as opposed to a traffic<br />

accident, medical emergency or potentially the<br />

worst day of someone’s life, Gentner added.<br />

“Dunk an officer in the dunk tank, have a hot<br />

dog with them,” she said. “It’s just our way to<br />

give back to them; show them that we’re here<br />

for them.”<br />

Mayor Michael Francis welcomed the idea<br />

of introducing Hopatcong’s Finest and Bravest<br />

to families as they took in the festivities.<br />

“Everybody is enjoying it, getting to meet them<br />

and learning that they are real people, not just<br />

people that show up in an emergency,” he said.<br />

Father of three Mike Wester, 34, brought his<br />

children to experience what’s great about their<br />

hometown heroes. “Everyone volunteers their<br />

time, the EMS, the fire department. I think it<br />

shows the good in the community,” said Wester.<br />

His daughter, Aubrey, 11, was there for the<br />

animals and the DEA helicopter that landed on<br />

the field. “It’s cool,” she said.<br />

Cub Scout Pack 194 had a booth where a<br />

handful of Pack parents offered crafts and<br />

information. Cubmaster Lisa Stanitz, 38, and<br />

her son Rylan were hoping to recruit new<br />

scouts.<br />

“Our kids have a blast here every year,” added<br />

Lindsay Cupples, 38, who was there with her<br />

son C.J. “They run around while we work the<br />

Top to bottom, left to right: A pint-sized visitor<br />

throws a perfect strike to send Sgt. Anthony<br />

Cirri (in tank) into the water as Det. Marlon<br />

Winbush and Lt. Ryan Tracey look on. Steve<br />

Holmes III and Iman Hussain take a turn in a<br />

skid steer loader at Jefferson Township National<br />

Night Out. Marine Pvt. Nate Van De Weert<br />

tracks the time Jacob Lombardo is able to hang<br />

from the chin-up bar. Members of Jefferson<br />

Township’s fire and rescue squads take part in<br />

a car extraction demonstration.<br />

booth, and we get to meet new people. It’s<br />

always a really nice day.”<br />

Nichole O’Shea, 42, currently lives in<br />

Succasunna but grew up in Hopatcong. She<br />

brought her three boys not only to support the<br />

town but also her husband and brother who<br />

are Hopatcong police officers.<br />

Her son, Connor, 11, has respect for the job<br />

other children might not. “I have two relatives<br />

that are police officers and others have only<br />

one or zero,” he said. “It seems like a lot of<br />

fun but it’s probably really hard. They help the<br />

towns a lot.”<br />

Gabriel Mathesius, 9, came with his mom and<br />

brother, not only to catch up with friends but<br />

also to rub shoulders with the police officers<br />

and firefighters. When asked how he’d describe<br />

them he said, “Someone who is dedicated to<br />

helping their town.”<br />

That’s the kind of inspiration Hopatcong Fire<br />

Assistant Kevin Schneider, a 44-year veteran<br />

of the force, is hoping for as he and his fellow<br />

firefighters served up hot dogs to the crowd.<br />

“We are trying to recruit people for our allvolunteer<br />

fire department,” he said. “Coming<br />

out into the community and being with people,<br />

and helping people, I enjoy it.”<br />

Over in Jefferson Township, over 500<br />

residents came out to the municipal building<br />

for ice cream, hot dogs, a petting zoo and<br />

demonstrations by the fire department and<br />

first aid squads. “We believe this was the largest


attendance in our history,” said Community<br />

Service Officer Jeremy Romash, who has<br />

participated in the event since joining the<br />

department in 2005.<br />

The town’s public works department showed<br />

off the equipment they use to keep Jefferson<br />

Township roads and infrastructure in top order.<br />

“I like the music. The DJ is good,” said Sabina<br />

Hussain as her kids climbed on the excavators.<br />

The fire department offered a “Touch a<br />

Truck” that was also a big hit with the younger<br />

crowd. “This is a nice event. Keeps them busy<br />

and out of the house,” said Saima Holmes as<br />

she watched her kids enjoy exploring the<br />

trucks and equipment.<br />

“I look forward to seeing all of the residents<br />

coming out to participate,” Romash said. “We are<br />

a very community-oriented police department<br />

and we strive to have great relationships. Since<br />

our fire and EMS are volunteer, many members<br />

are involved in the community.”<br />

The Jefferson Police Department strives<br />

to foster positive interactions in every way<br />

possible, Romash stressed, and town-sponsored<br />

events are a great way to do that.<br />

National Night Out offers access to town<br />

officials in a casual environment. In Jefferson<br />

Township, they trade in uniforms and suits for<br />

informal yellow t-shirts, which Romash said<br />

made it easy for residents to approach them<br />

and strike up a conversation.<br />

“We offer activities for the kids, which allow<br />

citizens to speak without hesitation while we<br />

enjoy a hot dog together,” Romash said. “It’s<br />

not a meeting in Town Hall, so we feel people<br />

are more prone and committed to speaking<br />

from the heart.”<br />

Although Jefferson Township Mayor Eric<br />

Wilsusen believes there has been a nationwide<br />

disconnect between some communities and<br />

the police, he said that isn’t the case in Jefferson<br />

Township. “We have been very fortunate that<br />

we have had wonderful support over the years<br />

and a lot has to do with programs like National<br />

Night Out,” he said.<br />

Feedback on the event has always been<br />

encouraging, which Wilsusen said is evident in<br />

the turnout. “I believe many even look forward<br />

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Wilsusen said the police department’s<br />

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ideas for ways to interact with the community.<br />

Jefferson Township also holds Coffee with a<br />

Cop, Putt with the Police, Family Movie Night<br />

and sponsors a Junior Police Academy, among<br />

other programs. Someday he’d like to start a<br />

similar program to give all citizens a firsthand<br />

look at what the police are up against every<br />

day.<br />

“You’re always going to have negative<br />

interactions here and there, it’s just the nature<br />

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


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Growing up on a 10-acre farm in an old farmhouse in Wantage, Seth Stephens said his time was split between school<br />

and tending to the family’s flock of sheep and two horses. “The animals were 4-H projects and kept my brothers and<br />

me busy,” said the director of the Jefferson Township Public Library. Stephens, 61, now lives in Hamburg, where his<br />

father’s family has lived for “at least five generations,” he said. “It is quite interesting to see how it has changed since I<br />

visited aunts and uncles when I was little.”<br />

WHO MAKES UP YOUR FAMILY?<br />

My wife Jean, our adult children Samantha, Zachary, Noah and Emma, and their spouses and companions. Two small dogs,<br />

Boydo and Gidget. I am also a guinea pig dad to my daughter Emma’s guinea pigs.<br />

EXPLAIN YOUR PATH TO LIBRARY DIRECTOR IN JEFFERSON TOWNSHIP.<br />

I began my library career at the Montclair Public Library in 1986 as a library assistant and worked my way up to managing the<br />

library’s branch on Bellevue Avenue. In 1996, I wanted to be closer to home to spend more time with my wife and our growing<br />

family. I applied for the director’s position at the Jefferson Township Public Library and<br />

was hired and I’ve been here ever since.<br />

WHAT ARE YOUR FUTURE PLANS AS DIRECTOR? FOR THE LIBRARY?<br />

To continue building a strong, sustainable organization where people want<br />

to work. My goal is to create a work culture that enables employees to do<br />

their best serving the community through the library. Also, with the Trustees<br />

of the Library and the Township Administration and Council, I am exploring<br />

the feasibility of expanding the library. A lack of space hinders the growth of<br />

library services. It would be great if we could expand the building.<br />

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I have many favorite genres. I try to ignore genre labels and follow my curiosity.<br />

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I am a simple, kind, honest, hardworking person who loves<br />

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share things I am curious about with others.<br />

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

I have been blessed with many positive influences<br />

in my life. The greatest have been my wife Jean, our<br />

children and their spouses—companions.<br />

DO YOU VOLUNTEER?<br />

For many years I have worked with the Main Library<br />

Alliance. This is the nonprofit group that supports the<br />

computer system and technology shared by individual<br />

public libraries of Morris County. At various times I<br />

have been it’s treasurer, vice president and president.<br />

I have been a part of the Alliance since I came to<br />

Jefferson. It is amazing to see how it has grown. I am<br />

also a member of Prince of Peace Lutheran Church<br />

in Hamburg. At Prince of Peace, I have been a<br />

Sunday school teacher, congregation president, vice<br />

president, treasurer and lay deacon.<br />

ANY HOBBIES?<br />

In addition to reading, I woodwork, cook, bake and endlessly<br />

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I have an identical twin brother Jonathan who lives in Wantage.<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 17


More Than a Thrift Store, a One-Stop Shop for Hope<br />

18<br />

Story by ELLEN WILKOWE<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

The racks are full of the shirts off your<br />

backs—as well as the slacks, dresses,<br />

shoes and any number of accessories. And all<br />

items are waiting to find new lives with those<br />

who need them most.<br />

This is the mission of Nick’s Hope, a nonprofit<br />

organization full of fashion, faith and well, hope,<br />

which offers free clothing to anyone in need.<br />

The nonprofit was founded in May of 2020 as<br />

a way for Hopatcong resident Laura Luminelli to<br />

honor her son, Nick Luminelli, who died of an<br />

asthma attack in 2017 at the age of 31.<br />

With friends Melissa Kevlahan of Oak Ridge<br />

and Sherry Guzman of Oak Ridge, the three<br />

women collaborated on how to pay forward<br />

Nick Luminelli’s legacy of kindness. As the story<br />

goes, he gave up his jacket to a homeless man in<br />

Dover on a cold night.<br />

“I was online one night and saw that a woman<br />

had put out a message about a homeless man<br />

named Eddy in Dover,” she said. “She was asking<br />

people to try and find him and help.”<br />

Luminelli sprang into action and called her<br />

son. The duo packed up some items and set out<br />

on a search in the wee hours of the morning.<br />

After nearly three hours, they located Eddy in<br />

a church.<br />

“Nick had an army fatigue coat on—he loved<br />

his fatigues,” Luminelli said. “Eddy never said a<br />

word but pointed at the coat as if to say that’s<br />

the one he wanted.”<br />

Without hesitation, said Luminelli, her son<br />

gave Eddy the coat off his back.<br />

That was two months prior to his death, said<br />

Luminelli, who described her oldest son as a funloving,<br />

kind and generous all-around good guy.<br />

“He lived his life the way he wanted to live it,”<br />

she said. “He was a free spirit.”<br />

Nick’s Hope was run out of Kevlahan’s<br />

basement, with donations coming from three<br />

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

Left to right: A photo of Nick Luminelli sits high on a top shelf, overlooking the store. Melissa Kevlahan and Laura Luminelli,<br />

front, stand with volunteers Patrick Bubniak, Maria Rivera, Karen Helmstetter, Vicky Sullivan, and Jenny Clancy in the<br />

original storefront. Melissa Kevlahan snaps a photo of a dress that will be added to the online shopping site.<br />

counties thanks to a Facebook post put out in<br />

March of 2020. To work around the shutdown<br />

due to the pandemic, clothes were picked<br />

up from people’s driveways, said Guzman.<br />

The women, along with a handful of other<br />

volunteers, washed and sorted the clothing.<br />

By May, the group was working with social<br />

service agencies, churches and food pantries<br />

distributing the clothes through outdoor popup<br />

markets in areas most in need.<br />

Once the cold weather set in and still unable<br />

to distribute at indoor venues, the women took<br />

the operation online with a website for free<br />

clothes.<br />

There was no shortage of clothing.<br />

“People were home cleaning out their closets<br />

during lockdown, and we would go to their<br />

homes and pick up their bags at the end of<br />

their driveways and take them to my basement,”<br />

Kevlahan said.<br />

With so much inventory—some of it top of<br />

the line—the women were looking to expand<br />

beyond the pop-up markets and the online<br />

operation, and the idea of a thrift store was<br />

born.<br />

What began as a below ground venture in<br />

Kevlahan’s basement emerged above ground<br />

two years later as a buzzing brick-and-mortar<br />

thrift store.<br />

The organization and its mission were moving<br />

ahead full steam until tragedy struck again when<br />

Guzman contracted COVID and passed away in<br />

February of 2022.<br />

The same way the three women celebrated<br />

Nick Luminelli, Kevlahan and Luminelli paid<br />

homage to their friend when they affectionately<br />

named the sales-side of the organization after<br />

Guzman referring to it as the “Very Sherry<br />

Boutique.” It opened in April of last year in a<br />

small storefront at 5716 Berkshire Valley Road in<br />

Oak Ridge.<br />

“Sherry was the original hippie chick,” said<br />

Kevlahan. “So, whenever we saw something,<br />

we’d say, ‘Oh, this is so very Sherry.’”<br />

The nonprofit is now run out of the Very<br />

Sherry Boutique store, which just recently<br />

moved to a larger storefront a few doors down<br />

in the same strip mall.<br />

“We’re not here to make money. We just want<br />

to pay the rent and keep the lights on,” said<br />

Kevlahan of the thrift store.<br />

The warm and welcoming space is where<br />

paying customers leave with full bags and full<br />

hearts.<br />

Such was the case for Oak Ridge resident<br />

Cathy Struck, one of a steady stream of regular<br />

shoppers who learned about the store from her<br />

regular visits to a bagel shop located in the same<br />

strip mall.<br />

“I stopped in one day and Melissa told me the<br />

story and I came back and dropped off clothes<br />

and now come about once a week [to shop],”<br />

she said. “It’s a great cause and you can find<br />

wonderful things.”<br />

Such as?<br />

“I found a fur coat here for a dollar,” she said.<br />

And yes, a real full coat.<br />

On a recent Thursday, Struck scored two<br />

dresses. Just as she was about to check out,<br />

she was, well, struck by a third dress: a $6 navy<br />

polka-dot, flared ensemble that she just had to<br />

purchase.<br />

“If it doesn’t fit me, it will fit my daughter,” she<br />

said, adding it to her collection.<br />

Kara Vincelli, of Lake Hopatcong, was also<br />

scouting for dresses. She learned about the store<br />

on Facebook, and as a social worker, applauds<br />

the cause.<br />

“They share all the info with the community<br />

[on Facebook] and do great things,” she said,<br />

clutching two dresses.<br />

Looking for a bridal gown or prom dress?<br />

Prices are between $25 and $30. Need some high<br />

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Oak Ridge resident Kathy Seeger landed<br />

herself a sage green Gap cardigan for $4.25. New<br />

to the area, she was visiting the store for the<br />

second time, her sister in tow.<br />

While the store caters primarily to women, it<br />

also offers some items for men and children at<br />

equally low prices.<br />

Both the store and the nonprofit accept gently<br />

used clothing, plus accessories and shoes. Items<br />

are categorized by 15 dedicated volunteers who<br />

wash and sort the clothes at their homes.<br />

Damaged goods are donated to Goodwill or<br />

the Salvation Army. Name-brand clothes are set<br />

aside for the thrift store. The rest are tagged<br />

and photographed for the pop-up markets and<br />

online shopping.<br />

Sparta resident Jenny Clancy is one such<br />

dedicated volunteer who answered the<br />

Facebook call in the fall of 2020 to drop off<br />

donations and volunteer.<br />

“I called to volunteer and showed up at<br />

[Kevlahan’s] house and there were racks of<br />

clothes to pack up for online orders,” she said.<br />

With her daughter away at college, the<br />

opportunity filled Clancy’s case of empty<br />

nest syndrome while fueling her passion of<br />

working with clothes by assisting with pricing,<br />

photographing the items and dressing the<br />

mannequins.<br />

“Prices are set to move,” she said. “We’re not<br />

looking to make money. We want the community<br />

to come back in, so we keep the prices low.”<br />

Clancy can also be found at the cash register in<br />

the front end of the boutique.<br />

Due to the overwhelming success, Nick’s<br />

Hope and Very Sherry Boutique moved to a<br />

bigger space just a few doors from their original<br />

storefront location in late August.<br />

The larger site allows the organization to<br />

display more items in the boutique, as well as<br />

open their doors to organizations such as the<br />

Girl Scouts, whose members need volunteer<br />

hours. Nick’s Hope already partners with<br />

Jefferson Township High School students with<br />

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“We just needed a bigger place to help us be<br />

more organized,” Luminelli said. “So far this has<br />

worked. Melissa came up with every idea. She’s<br />

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The expanded space allows for more volunteer<br />

opportunities for residents with developmental<br />

disabilities who live in group homes such as<br />

Rebecca’s Homestead in Wantage and Katie’s<br />

House in Newton. The boutique is already on<br />

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fashion show at Katie’s House.<br />

In addition to Nick’s Hope, Luminelli has one<br />

of her own. “My real hope is that there won’t<br />

be a need for this and we just do the boutique,”<br />

she said.<br />

Nick and Sherry would probably very much<br />

agree.<br />

“He’s smiling down and saying, ‘Good job<br />

mamma,’” she said.<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 21


Fire Departments Celebrate 100 Years of Service<br />

22<br />

Story by MICHAEL DAIGLE<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

One hundred years ago, in 1923, the newly<br />

minted Borough of Hopatcong had<br />

about 200 residents.<br />

And a fire department.<br />

The roads were bad, the water supply—other<br />

than Lake Hopatcong—spotty.<br />

But it had a fire department.<br />

And a need for one, said Frank Steinberg,<br />

Hopatcong Fire Department’s informal<br />

historian.<br />

This was Lake Hopatcong’s resort era and<br />

surrounding the lake were many large, popular<br />

wooden hotels that, if they caught on fire,<br />

burned quickly, Steinberg said.<br />

To celebrate its 100th anniversary, the<br />

Hopatcong Fire Department is hosting the<br />

103rd Sussex County Firemen’s Association<br />

Inspection <strong>Day</strong> and Parade on October 7.<br />

The parade will step off at 1 p.m. from St. Jude<br />

Roman Catholic Church on Maxim Drive and<br />

travel River Styx Road to Hopatcong Defiance<br />

Engine Co. No. 3 at Hopatchung Road and<br />

Durban Avenue.<br />

The parade will be followed by a hose rolling<br />

competition and public celebration.<br />

The Sussex County Firemen’s Association has<br />

26 volunteer fire department members, the<br />

first of which joined in 1920. Charter members<br />

were the departments in Hamburg, Franklin,<br />

Newton, Ogdensburg, Sussex and Branchville<br />

Hose Co. No. 1.<br />

Hopatcong joined the association in 1926.<br />

Twenty-six departments will be represented<br />

at the celebration, said Lt. Carlos Goncalves,<br />

a 12-year member of the Northwood Engine<br />

Company No. 2, the borough’s oldest fire<br />

company.<br />

He has been working since October to<br />

organize the parade.<br />

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

“This is a great honor,” Goncalves said. “Sussex<br />

County has a tradition to hold countywide<br />

parades in honor of such events as the 75th or<br />

100th anniversary of a department,” he added.<br />

Goncalves’ duties include lining up<br />

participating fire companies, arranging fire<br />

coverage for Hopatcong from neighboring<br />

Roxbury and putting together post-parade<br />

festivities, including a band and food trucks.<br />

Hopatcong has hosted the parade five times.<br />

The parade also honors the tradition of the<br />

volunteer firefighter, Goncalves said. Sussex<br />

County is one of the last counties in New Jersey<br />

with all-volunteer fire departments.<br />

Hopatcong Fire Chief Esad “Steve” Kucevic,<br />

a 12-year veteran of the department, said the<br />

parade is “a testament to the values of the fire<br />

department and the community.”<br />

Beyond the job of protecting the borough<br />

from the ravages of fire, Kucevic said the<br />

department’s members reflect the values of<br />

community, companionship and courage.<br />

Across Lake Hopatcong on July 29, the Mount<br />

Arlington Fire Department also celebrated<br />

its centennial with a parade down Howard<br />

Boulevard and a post-parade celebration.<br />

During the parade, Mount Arlington borough<br />

Mayor Michael Stanzilis stood shoulder to<br />

shoulder with Assistant Chief Mike D’Arco, as<br />

they recognized the dozen or so departments<br />

that rolled by during the procession.<br />

In 2024, D’Arco said he will take the helm as<br />

the fire department’s new chief, which have<br />

one-year tenures.<br />

“We are so blessed to have him,” Stanzilis said<br />

of the retired Paterson firefighter.<br />

Nick Lima, the department’s current chief,<br />

said the parade recognized the dedication of<br />

the local firefighters, volunteers and families.<br />

And it was a personally meaningful day for<br />

Lima.<br />

“I knew the anniversary was coming up, but I<br />

never thought about being chief on that day. And<br />

there I was. It was special,” he said.<br />

Mount Arlington Fire and Rescue Department<br />

President John Feinberg said the event was an<br />

opportunity to “show pride in and appreciation<br />

for the department’s members.”<br />

The Hopatcong and Mount Arlington<br />

departments share similar histories, said Feinberg<br />

and Steinberg.<br />

In the 1920s, both lake towns were, tiny is not<br />

the word, more like vacant.<br />

Mount Arlington had 213 residents in 1920 and<br />

had suffered a loss of about 30 residents from the<br />

year before, the U.S. Census reported.<br />

Hopatcong, meanwhile, recorded 179 residents<br />

in 1920.<br />

What both towns had, both men said, were<br />

hotels and a burgeoning temporary summer<br />

population intent on fun and relaxation.<br />

“These were big hotels with wooden hollowwall<br />

construction,” Steinberg said. “Once they<br />

caught fire, they kept going.”<br />

Mount Arlington also had numerous wooden ice<br />

houses dotting the shore, adding to fire concerns,<br />

according to a department history provided by<br />

Feinberg.<br />

And no fire departments, until in both towns<br />

a few residents saw the need to organize<br />

them. These were the “summer workers,” and<br />

in both towns they were joined in creating fire<br />

departments by what few year-round residents<br />

lived there, Steinberg said.<br />

This was Lake Hopatcong’s heyday, a glamorous<br />

splash before the lake region settled into the<br />

thriving residential and recreational community of<br />

today.<br />

Attracted by the fresh air and lake life, the wellto-do<br />

occupied hotels and waterfront villas.<br />

Some also built fabulous cottages, like actress<br />

Lotta Crabtree, whose Mount Arlington home still<br />

draws admiration. And comedian Joe Cook, whose<br />

Sleepless Hollow compound in Hopatcong was


Left to right: Hopatcong Fire Chief Esad “Steve” Kucevic<br />

places a wreath at this year’s Memorial <strong>Day</strong> ceremony.<br />

Mount Arlington’s 1939 Ahrens-Fox pumper truck leads<br />

the department’s anniversary parade in July. Mount<br />

Arlington Mayor Mike Stanzilis and Assistant Chief<br />

Mike D’Arco greet parade attendees. Members of the<br />

Hopatcong volunteer fire and rescue department gather<br />

before Memorial <strong>Day</strong> ceremonies in May.<br />

legendary and still dominates Davis Cove today.<br />

Historian Marty Kane, writing in the Lake<br />

Hopatcong News in 2022, said, “From the 1880s to<br />

the 1930s, Lake Hopatcong was a major northeast<br />

resort with hotels of all sizes operating on its<br />

shores. During the 1925 season alone, there were<br />

some 36 locales, ranging in size from 10 to 250<br />

rooms.”<br />

The most famous hotel was the Hotel Breslin in<br />

Mount Arlington, Kane wrote in 2008. “The Hotel<br />

Breslin was the single most important factor in<br />

Lake Hopatcong’s growth as a major northeastern<br />

resort. The hotel’s construction gave Lake<br />

Hopatcong instant credibility.”<br />

In 1948, after its career as a major hotel had<br />

passed, it burned during reconstruction.<br />

In the history of the Mount Arlington Fire<br />

Department Feinberg provided, the department<br />

historian wrote: “Mt. Arlington’s firefighters were<br />

called to battle a blaze at the former Breslin Hotel,<br />

which was undergoing renovations, fighting the<br />

enormous fire for 5 days during which the Ahrens-<br />

Fox pumper continuously pumped water from<br />

Lake Hopatcong to quench the fire.”<br />

Feinberg said that the 1939 Ahrens-Fox is one<br />

of 21 such pumpers in the United States. It was<br />

shipped to Mount Arlington from Ohio on the<br />

Lackawanna railroad, he said. It was featured in the<br />

100th anniversary parade.<br />

The lake resort also brought day-trippers, trolley<br />

riders to Bertrand Island Amusement Park and<br />

others whose campsites later evolved into homes<br />

and a more permanent population.<br />

By 1960, Mount Arlington reached a population<br />

of 1,246. Today, it has 5,900 residents.<br />

Hopatcong reached 1,173 residents in 1950. Today,<br />

it has nearly 15,000 residents.<br />

Steinberg, a past Hopatcong fire chief, is also the<br />

borough’s deputy fire marshal.<br />

The first fire company in Hopatcong was formed<br />

in 1923, he said. It was Hopatcong Fire Department<br />

No. 1, located near the center of town.<br />

This was a forward-thinking move for a borough<br />

that had only officially become Hopatcong in<br />

1922, the year that residents in the Byram Cove<br />

and Northwood sections of the borough<br />

voted to leave Byram Township and join<br />

Hopatcong, which since 1898 had been<br />

known as Brooklyn Borough.<br />

The trouble at the time were the roads,<br />

Steinberg said. Hopatcong had few good<br />

ones, and there were no winter roads, which<br />

made for slowed response times, he said.<br />

Sometimes the Hopatcong fire<br />

department traveled around the lake,<br />

through Mount Arlington to get to a<br />

Hopatcong fire in Northwood.<br />

Roads were a problem that persisted,<br />

Steinberg said.<br />

“The borough didn’t get real roads until<br />

the 1950s and 1960s,” he said.<br />

The demands of more than 1,000 residents<br />

had to be met.<br />

“There was also no central source of<br />

water,” he recalled. The department used<br />

the lake and wells, as needed.<br />

Facing such issues, in 1926, the Northwood<br />

Engine Company No. 2 was formed, providing<br />

fire service in what had been a difficult-toreach<br />

section of the borough.<br />

Then the department history got<br />

complicated, Steinberg said.<br />

Fred Modick, who was mayor for 37 years and<br />

a fire chief for 28, decided to form a third fire<br />

company that would be placed in the “center”<br />

of the borough, though it is located in the<br />

southern portion, he said.<br />

The company was named Defiance Engine<br />

Co. No. 3 because it was formed in “defiance”<br />

of the majority of the department members’<br />

wishes, Steinberg said.<br />

Over time, the original Hopatcong Fire<br />

Department No. 1 withered and became<br />

inactive.<br />

When a new department was created in 1953<br />

in response to the rapid conversion of summer<br />

cottages into year-round homes, it was called<br />

Hopatcong Hills Fire and Rescue Co. No. 4.<br />

The result of Modick’s determination,<br />

Steinberg said, is that Hopatcong has no “fire<br />

company No. 1” but has a fire company number<br />

“4” even though there are only three fire houses.<br />

One persistent issue is finding a water source<br />

in the Hills section of the borough, which relies<br />

on wells. Hopatcong, like the other lake towns,<br />

sits on hard rock hills and, at times, he said,<br />

there is not enough water to fight a fire.<br />

The firefighters get creative, he said, and<br />

once emptied a swimming pool.<br />

“They refilled it,” he added.<br />

In 1924, Steinberg said, the department<br />

purchased an American LaFrance fire engine.<br />

The apparatus is still proudly maintained. It will<br />

be featured in the 100th anniversary parade, he<br />

said.<br />

Feinberg said Mount Arlington has 50 fire<br />

volunteer firefighters and operates two fire<br />

houses, one on Howard Boulevard and the<br />

other in the Lake Rogerene section.<br />

Hopatcong firefighters are also volunteers.<br />

Going forward, Kucevic said, the department<br />

will continue to seek ways to draw new recruits.<br />

With an aging population and members<br />

and potential members working out of town,<br />

“retention of members is an issue,” he said.<br />

“People retire, take a new job out of town or<br />

move, you know, to like Texas.”<br />

Still the department has a steady roster of 55<br />

members and getting sufficient firefighters to a<br />

fire has not been a problem, he said.<br />

Hopatcong firefighters are volunteers, but it<br />

can take an average of three years to qualify<br />

for service, he said. Training costs can average<br />

$8,000, state reports said.<br />

New Jersey requires a minimum 110 hours of<br />

training.<br />

There are a few reimbursement or<br />

award programs designed to offer tuition<br />

reimbursement or some stipend after<br />

retirement. The state’s Length of Service Award<br />

Program (LOSAP) offers some retirement<br />

funding based on the amount of time on the<br />

job, Kucevic said.<br />

In 100 years, the equipment has gotten<br />

better, the roads have improved and modern<br />

building codes have resulted in safer, more fireresistant<br />

buildings.<br />

But what hasn’t changed in that time is the<br />

willingness of Hopatcong and Mount Arlington<br />

residents to stand ready to save a structure,<br />

save lives as members of fire and rescue<br />

departments.<br />

Volunteers then, volunteers now.<br />

“It’s about pride of service,” Kucevic said.<br />

Left to right: Lt. Carlos Goncalves from<br />

Northwood Engine Co. No. 2 in Hopatcong at<br />

this year’s Memorial <strong>Day</strong> ceremony. Members<br />

of the Mount Arlington volunteer fire and rescue<br />

department walk past the station during the July<br />

anniversary parade.<br />

lakehopatcongnews.com 23


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Time and Road-Tested: This One is for The Ages<br />

26<br />

Story by ELLEN WILKOWE<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

From Memorial <strong>Day</strong> to <strong>Labor</strong> <strong>Day</strong>, Joe<br />

Greene of Lake Hopatcong arrives at<br />

Lakeside Field in Jefferson at 5:30 a.m. and<br />

begins his day with 15 minutes of stretching.<br />

This is followed by some “long, slow-distance<br />

running.” Then the real workout begins:<br />

sprinting over various distances, followed by<br />

practicing starts.<br />

Oh, and he’s 81 years young.<br />

“These are all about focusing on those first<br />

strides,” he said. “Sprints require an explosive<br />

start, lengthening your stride, and finally<br />

managing your oxygen intake.”<br />

Meanwhile, Frank D’Orio of Lake Forest<br />

spends his afternoons hitting the trails outside<br />

Forge Fitness at Picatinny Arsenal in Rockaway.<br />

He uses the inside of the gym for weightlifting<br />

only. Don’t even mention a treadmill to this<br />

88-year-old long-distance runner. It’s all<br />

outdoors, all the time, no matter what the<br />

weather.<br />

“I need the fresh air, the sunshine on me and<br />

the birds singing,” he said.<br />

These are no run-of-the-mill workouts,<br />

though running is certainly the focal point.<br />

These regimens are serious training sessions for<br />

the New Jersey Senior Olympics, which, over<br />

the years, have landed the two octogenarians a<br />

collection of medals.<br />

Since 2018 Greene has accumulated 13 medals,<br />

including three gold, seven silver and three<br />

bronze, running in the 50-, 100- and 200-meter<br />

races as well as participating in the shot put.<br />

Meanwhile, D’Orio, who started competing<br />

two years ago, has also amassed a collection of<br />

medals, including two golds in the 1500-meter,<br />

a silver in the 800-meter and a silver in the<br />

50-meter dash.<br />

The New Jersey Senior Olympics take place<br />

throughout various athletic fields and sporting<br />

facilities in Woodbridge from September 8 to<br />

September 10.<br />

In existence for more than three decades,<br />

the competition is open to athletes 50 and<br />

over and includes 22 games, including archery,<br />

bocce, bowling, cycling, horseshoes, running,<br />

swimming and of course pickle ball, the most<br />

popular entry, to name a few.<br />

The New Jersey games are also a qualifying<br />

event for competitors who wish to move on to<br />

the National Senior Games.<br />

Participants such as Greene and D’Orio are<br />

placed into age categories that are divided into<br />

five-year increments. Greene will compete in<br />

the 80-84 group. D’Orio will compete in the<br />

85 and older group. In addition to age groups,<br />

the event further divides the competitions<br />

according to gender.<br />

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

Greene and D’Orio are long-time<br />

acquaintances who have crossed paths over the<br />

years, either at Our Lady Star of the Sea Church<br />

in Lake Hopatcong or Pope John XXIII Regional<br />

High School in Sparta, which their similarly aged<br />

but now-grown children attended.<br />

They also crossed literal paths during their<br />

runs on local roads. This was all before they<br />

entered or even knew about the New Jersey<br />

Senior Olympics.<br />

“I found out about it in the sports section of<br />

the paper,” said Greene. “I went to the website<br />

and it was easy to navigate, so I decided to<br />

throw my hat into the ring when I was 75.”<br />

That was six years ago.<br />

He added shot put to his resume out of mere<br />

curiosity, as well as a means to balance out the<br />

running.<br />

“It was something I wanted to do, an added<br />

dimension to just running,” he said. “I tried the<br />

discus at first but couldn’t do it. It surprised<br />

me how challenging it was to get off a decent<br />

throw.”<br />

Now in a new age bracket—the 80-84-yearolds—he<br />

jokes that his load has been lightened<br />

as he trades in the standard six-pound shot put<br />

for a four-pounder.<br />

“The shot put is all concentration and<br />

an oomph at the end,” he said. “It’s a little<br />

different.”<br />

An English teacher for 40 years, Greene<br />

consistently ran for 30 of those years, running<br />

“three times a week for about five miles,” he<br />

Left to right: Frank D’Orio does sprint<br />

work at Lakeside Field. Joe Greene<br />

practices the shot put at Lakeside Field in<br />

Jefferson. Greene and D’Orio with some<br />

of the medals they’ve won.<br />

said.<br />

An athlete since his youth, Greene played<br />

football, baseball and of course ran track in high<br />

school.<br />

On the competitive front, he participated<br />

in 5Ks and boasts the completion of a halfmarathon.<br />

One too many knee operations later, he<br />

switched to biking. Then, following a bad<br />

accident, he traded in his wheels for track and<br />

field and balances that out with gym workouts.<br />

In addition to training outside, he lifts weights,<br />

stretches and does yoga three days a week.<br />

“I try to firm up and tone the muscle groups,”<br />

he said. “I try to make it about fitness, rather<br />

than bulking up. That’s a young guy thing!<br />

“When you get older, being injury free is half<br />

the battle,” he said.<br />

D’Orio agreed, emphasizing the importance<br />

of taking recovery days. “You gotta take time<br />

to heal,” he said.<br />

This will be D’Orio’s third year participating in<br />

the Senior Olympics. He found out about the<br />

games through Greene when the two ran into<br />

each other at the post office.<br />

“I mentioned it to him and the next thing you<br />

know he’s at the starting line,” Greene joked.<br />

In his debut year, D’Orio finished first, taking<br />

home the gold in the 1500-meter run.<br />

A retired engineer from Picatinny Arsenal,<br />

D’Orio took up running 55-60 years ago as an<br />

after-work social activity with a group of his<br />

colleagues. He also ran with the Morris County


Striders running club.<br />

“It was all in good fun,” he said. “There’d be<br />

plenty of bickering, too.”<br />

Prior to running, his athletic career consisted<br />

of high school and college wrestling, but he<br />

never pursued another sport until he met his<br />

colleagues at Picatinny, and he’s been running<br />

ever since.<br />

“It’s always been distance running,” he said.<br />

“Mostly 10 milers and 15 milers.”<br />

Then there was the New York City Marathon<br />

that he trained for and completed in 1976, as<br />

well as a few Army ten-milers.<br />

Both men hail the positive side effects of<br />

their fitness regimens. “I sleep much better,”<br />

D’Orio said.<br />

“Psychologically it’s a wonderful experience,”<br />

Greene added, citing the “runner’s high.”<br />

Come race day, the men travel to Woodbridge<br />

and join fellow competitors in their respective<br />

age groups. Despite having competed for<br />

multiple years, Greene said there’s still an<br />

element of surprise in anticipation of the event.<br />

“You never know what you’re getting<br />

into until you’re there,” Greene said. “You’re<br />

completely outside of your comfort zone.”<br />

When he is not training, he can be found<br />

reading, a lasting effect of his English teacher<br />

career, and tending to chores around the house.<br />

D’Orio enjoys his off-track time spending<br />

time with family, particularly his five grown<br />

daughters and their families.<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 27


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30<br />

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


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lakehopatcongnews.com 31


Marketplace Offers a Bit of Everything<br />

Story and photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

kid’s hose down courtesy of the Netcong Hilltop Fire Company No. 2 was the featured<br />

A attraction at the Community Marketplace in Netcong on Saturday, Aug. 5.<br />

A dozen vendors were also on hand, including local entrepreneurs selling food, farm fresh<br />

produce, baked goods, jewelry and handmade crafts, to name a few.<br />

The Marketplace was established in 2021 by the Netcong Community Partnership (NCP),<br />

a management company designated by the mayor and council to manage the Special<br />

Improvement District (SID) of Netcong and be responsible for the revitalization and general<br />

upkeep of the borough’s business district, according to a statement provided by Maria<br />

Patamia, Marketplace manager.<br />

Newcomer Katie Pomeisl, owner of Sweet Tucker’s Bake Shop, a cottage kitchen bakery<br />

out of Hackettstown, is pleased with her decision to participate.<br />

“Business is good,” she said while standing behind a table full of freshly baked goods.<br />

“This is only my second time, but I plan on finishing out the season here. It’s been a fun<br />

experience,” she said.<br />

The Marketplace is open Saturdays through November from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and is located<br />

at the Netcong train station parking lot on Main Street.<br />

For more information, email netcongmarketplace@gmail.com.<br />

Top to bottom, left to right: Steve and Carmela Lotesta. PJ, Jessica, Tristan and Gabriel<br />

(stroller) Butler with Rita Juliano. Emily Montgomery and Kyle Scheper. Katie Hale, 12, owner<br />

of Katie’s Jewelry. Desmond and Declan Tediashvili. Arjana, Eida and Amy Goroveci. Katie<br />

Pomeisl, owner of Sweet Tucker’s Bake Shop. Olivia Lofgren and Hollie Lane. Max, Adelynn,<br />

Wyatt and Lauren Richman.<br />

32<br />

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


lakehopatcongnews.com 33


HISTORY<br />

Photos courtesy of<br />

the<br />

LAKE HOPATCONG<br />

HISTORICAL<br />

MUSEUM<br />

On July 13, <strong>2023</strong>, 350 people gathered at<br />

the parish hall of St. Jude Roman Catholic<br />

Church in Hopatcong to commemorate the 40th<br />

anniversary of Bertrand Island Park’s last season.<br />

The celebration of the amusement park,<br />

facilitated by the Lake Hopatcong Historical<br />

Museum, sold out in 48 hours. T-shirts and other<br />

souvenirs of the park were gobbled up.<br />

One Bertrand Island Park Facebook group has<br />

16,000 members and another has over 4,000.<br />

What is it that brings forth such passion and<br />

devotion to this park after all these years?<br />

Of all the attractions that have existed at Lake<br />

Hopatcong, none is more beloved than Bertrand<br />

Island Park.<br />

A class trip or family outing to the park was<br />

a long-awaited and much-anticipated event for<br />

generations of children. Bertrand Island Park<br />

was the first place many local youngsters were<br />

allowed to go without parents, and it provided<br />

a wonderful summer job for countless area<br />

teenagers.<br />

Situated on the lake’s eastern shore in the<br />

borough of Mount Arlington, Bertrand Island is a<br />

peninsula today but was once an island separated<br />

from the mainland by a narrow channel.<br />

In the early 1860s, Charles Bertrand purchased<br />

significant land at Lake Hopatcong, which was<br />

then a remote, sparsely populated area of New<br />

Jersey. Bertrand built a grand home for his family<br />

on the island that would bear his name.<br />

He died in 1870, and the house burned down<br />

several years later.<br />

The land was subsequently sold to a group<br />

of men who built a clubhouse on the old<br />

foundation. Known as the Bertrand Island Club,<br />

it was a place to hunt, fish, play cards and drink<br />

a little whiskey. During the summer, members<br />

took turns bringing their families to the lake.<br />

In the 1890s, the Bertrand Island Club also<br />

succumbed to fire.<br />

In 1905, the island was purchased by a group<br />

of businessmen with ambitious development<br />

plans. The island was divided into 257 lots of<br />

about 50 x 110 feet. About four acres at the<br />

center of the island were reserved for a hotel.<br />

The group proposed moving one of the<br />

casinos used at the 1904 St. Louis Exposition to<br />

34<br />

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

Memories for a Lifetime<br />

by MARTY KANE<br />

the island. Their plans also included direct train<br />

service to Bertrand Island and steamer service to<br />

all parts of the lake.<br />

While these grandiose ideas never materialized,<br />

the group was responsible for creating a beach<br />

on the proposed development in 1905.<br />

The beach quickly became a popular spot for<br />

swimming at the lake and caught the attention<br />

of the Morris County Traction Company, the<br />

trolley line attempting to establish service<br />

throughout much of Northern New Jersey.<br />

Like trolley lines across America, the Morris<br />

County Traction Company was looking for ways<br />

to increase use on weekends and determined<br />

that expanding service to the beach at Bertrand<br />

Island would be a perfect weekend destination.<br />

Nationwide, many amusement parks were<br />

established at the end of trolley lines for just<br />

this reason.<br />

Trolley service to Bertrand Island began on<br />

Decoration <strong>Day</strong> (now Memorial <strong>Day</strong>) in 1910,<br />

making the beach accessible to large numbers<br />

of people in Northern New Jersey. While<br />

not speedy by today’s standards, the trolley<br />

provided cheap transportation for the masses.<br />

The trip from Morristown to Bertrand Island<br />

took about two hours and cost 35 cents round<br />

trip. As travelers began to arrive by trolley, food<br />

stands and amusements were built near the<br />

beach. A large open-air dance pavilion, carousel<br />

and other attractions soon followed.<br />

By 1917, the beach at Bertrand Island included<br />

a shooting range, water chute and diving float.<br />

In 1919, Louis Kraus, a teacher from Newark<br />

who had operated a summer camping colony<br />

at Prospect Point, acquired the property<br />

surrounding the beach at Bertrand Island. Giving<br />

up teaching, Kraus followed his dream and built<br />

a hotel at the lake known as California Lodge.<br />

After a couple of years operating the hotel<br />

The park in 1927: Dodgem (bumper cars), the<br />

entrance to the roller coaster when it was known<br />

as The Cyclone, the Old Mill (later known as the<br />

Lost River), and the popcorn stand.<br />

as a neighbor to the bathing beach, Kraus saw<br />

there was more of a future in the amusement<br />

business than as a hotel owner. When the<br />

beach at Bertrand Island was offered for sale in<br />

1922, Kraus and his partner, Charles Schleicher,<br />

acquired it. They now owned all of the land that<br />

would ultimately become Bertrand Island Park.<br />

A wooden boardwalk was quickly constructed<br />

along the lake. When fire destroyed the old<br />

dance pavilion in March 1923, Kraus quickly<br />

erected an attractive new building, known as the<br />

June Rose Ballroom.<br />

Kraus instituted an operating plan that would<br />

prove to be key to the park’s success. Rather<br />

than owning all of the amusements and stands,<br />

he rented spaces to concessionaires for rides,<br />

games and refreshments. This resulted in loyal<br />

concessionaires who stayed for many years and<br />

were long remembered by the park faithful.<br />

Although Kraus did not own or operate the<br />

rides or games, he was a master of promotion.<br />

Spurred by the addition of attractions, Bertrand<br />

Island quickly grew in popularity.<br />

The roller coaster, built in 1925, was the first<br />

in Northern New Jersey. The 1920s also saw<br />

the addition of a Ferris wheel, Dodgem cars,<br />

aeroplane swing, the Old Mill (later renamed<br />

the Lost River), sightseeing boats, the Whip and<br />

more.<br />

Rides continued to evolve and grow at the<br />

park through the 1920s and into the 1930s.<br />

The famous Illions Supreme carousel arrived<br />

in 1937 and various rides and games would be<br />

added over the years to meet current fads and<br />

trends.<br />

Beauty pageants became a popular summer<br />

Left to right: Bertrand Island Park Beach, circa 1920. The Wildcat roller coaster, circa 1950s. Children<br />

on the wooden boardwalk along lake, circa 1920s.


event at Bertrand Island during the 1930s with<br />

Miss Bertrand Island and Miss Lake Hopatcong<br />

contests. In 1934, due to the Depression, no<br />

Miss America pageant was held in Atlantic City<br />

and a non-sanctioned Miss America Contest at<br />

Bertrand Island created much excitement that<br />

summer.<br />

Another highlight occurred in 1937 when Bette<br />

Cooper, who had been named Miss Bertrand<br />

Island, was crowned Miss America in Atlantic<br />

City.<br />

Dancing was another popular diversion during<br />

the 1930s and the park’s June Rose Ballroom<br />

(later Bertrand Island Villa) featured many of the<br />

area’s top bands.<br />

In 1948, still feeling the effects of the<br />

Depression and the war years, Kraus decided<br />

to sell the park to Lorenzo D’Agostino and<br />

his son, Ray, and Larry Donofrio, who were<br />

concessionaires under Kraus. Recognizing the<br />

value of his experience, the new owners asked<br />

Kraus to continue helping manage the park,<br />

which he did until his death in 1955.<br />

Following his father’s death in 1969 and Larry<br />

Donofrio’s decision to sell his share shortly<br />

thereafter, Ray D’Agostino became sole owner<br />

of the park and would remain so until 1978.<br />

In many ways the 1950s and 1960s were golden<br />

years at the park. The park seemed to fill a<br />

perfect niche at Lake Hopatcong, and it was<br />

filled with locals, summer residents and folks<br />

visiting the lake for the day.<br />

Bertrand Island Park was a favorite spot for<br />

school, business and church outings.<br />

During the Depression, discount nights had<br />

been introduced at Bertrand Island Park.<br />

In 1950, Mondays and Thursdays were deemed<br />

Nickel Nights, providing a tremendous boost in<br />

attendance. Nickel Nights also forever endeared<br />

the park to thousands of youngsters, who<br />

arrived with a dollar or two and kept busy all<br />

night as every ride cost just five cents.<br />

One of the most popular postwar additions<br />

was Kiddieland, which debuted in 1951 and<br />

featured rides scaled solely for children.<br />

While Bertrand Island Park was able to survive<br />

the Depression and World War II, the changes<br />

occurring in America during the 1970s were<br />

another matter. The park faced competition<br />

from larger parks opening across the country, as<br />

well as the slowing of the baby boom.<br />

Other regional parks had already succumbed:<br />

Irvington’s Olympic Park closed in 1965 and the<br />

venerable Palisades Park shut down in 1971.<br />

After 30 years in charge, D’Agostino became<br />

interested in selling. Larger amusement park<br />

operators were not interested in acquiring the<br />

park as it did not include sufficient land for<br />

expansion. The existence of an old-fashioned<br />

family amusement park at Lake Hopatcong was<br />

quickly becoming unfeasible.<br />

D’Agostino finally sold in 1978. While the new<br />

owner initially continued to operate the park,<br />

development of the land was foremost on his<br />

mind.<br />

The park’s last season came to a close 40 years<br />

ago on <strong>Labor</strong> <strong>Day</strong>, 1983.<br />

In these ensuing years, memories of the park<br />

have stayed very much alive. Those youngsters<br />

of the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s still vividly recall<br />

their time spent at Bertrand Island Park.<br />

Memories of the wooden roller coaster, the<br />

spectacular carousel, the Lost River, Boomerang,<br />

Nickel Nights, the penny arcade and many more<br />

are indelibly etched in the minds of so many<br />

residents of North Jersey.<br />

While the wood and concrete may be<br />

long gone, the park will live forever for those<br />

thousands who visited Bertrand Island Park.<br />

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lakehopatcongnews.com 35


COOKING<br />

WITH SCRATCH ©<br />

Uglier is Better<br />

by BARBARA SIMMONS<br />

Photos by KAREN FUCITO<br />

When I was 11,<br />

I visited my<br />

German relatives in<br />

Wiesbaden with my<br />

dad. It was my job<br />

to pick up fresh Kaiser rolls with poppyseeds<br />

from the Abt family bakery every morning.<br />

Abt’s was just across the street from my Tante<br />

Lucie’s house. There was also a Konditorei<br />

(confectionery) a little farther up the block.<br />

Abt’s always had, in addition to the Kaiser<br />

rolls, several kinds of bread and some modestlooking<br />

sweet pastries, like crumb cakes and<br />

plain-looking things like “Äpfel im Schlafrock”<br />

(apples in nightgowns—a kind of apple<br />

dumpling). Everything was reliably delicious<br />

from Abt the baker.<br />

The Konditorei down the block sold<br />

beautiful, ornately decorated cakes for special<br />

occasions, fancy pastries and ice cream and<br />

had tables where you could sit with coffee and<br />

a slice of their fancy cakes.<br />

I remember tasting one of the buttercream<br />

encrusted behemoths from the Konditorei<br />

at one of the relatives’ homes and was so<br />

disappointed. Pretty, yes, but it missed the<br />

mark on flavor. I decided then and there<br />

that homely baked goods tasted better.<br />

The Konditorei cakes were decorated with<br />

buttercreams that were flavored with liqueurs,<br />

the cake parts were usually way too dense—<br />

ugh, and sometimes they were even decorated<br />

with chocolate coffee beans. Yuck! Not so<br />

appealing to an 11-year-old kid.<br />

I decided the uglier the better.<br />

I learned to bake from my mother. I have to<br />

say, most of the things she baked were on the<br />

homely side but compensated for their looks<br />

with their delicious flavors.<br />

The plum cake she made, topped with two<br />

pounds of plums, looked impressive, but<br />

wasn’t exactly pretty. Her strawberry tart<br />

glistened under its mantle of red glaze—also<br />

not a showstopper, but it was absolutely<br />

bursting with flavor.<br />

Since it is blueberry season somewhere, I<br />

felt motivated to offer a blueberry recipe in<br />

this issue.<br />

My mother, Gertrude, and I didn’t bake much<br />

with blueberries, probably because the region<br />

that she came from, Hessen, doesn’t grow a lot<br />

of blueberries. German blueberries are grown<br />

mostly in the southern region of Bavaria.<br />

I do like blueberries, though, and have<br />

experimented with a few recipes that I’ve<br />

added to my baking repertoire. I have managed<br />

to make some great blueberry muffins from<br />

Deb Perleman’s Perfect Blueberry Muffin<br />

recipe. (smittenkitchen.com/2010/08/perfectblueberry-muffins)<br />

But I was intrigued by a recipe for blueberry<br />

cheesecake that I found<br />

on a German website. It<br />

reminded me of my official<br />

birthday cheesecake that<br />

Gertrude made for me<br />

every year. That cake, too,<br />

was not much of a looker.<br />

It had sort of a fluffy filling<br />

made with cottage cheese and whipped egg<br />

whites with raisins and cinnamon. The original<br />

German recipe called for quark (a German<br />

dairy product similar in texture and flavor to<br />

low-fat Greek yogurt.)<br />

Gertrude had to force the cottage cheese<br />

through a Foley food mill to imitate its texture.<br />

Quark was not available at all when I was<br />

growing up, and now I only see it once in a<br />

blue moon at a few fancy supermarkets. (I look<br />

every time I visit one!) Don’t worry though,<br />

dear reader, I won’t be sending you on an<br />

ingredients wild goose chase in this column!<br />

We will be using cream cheese and Greek<br />

yogurt here.<br />

36<br />

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


Blueberry Cheesecake<br />

This recipe uses a technique that I’ve seen in several German cake recipes. It is a two-step<br />

method, and you need to use a springform pan.<br />

First the crust is made and pressed into the bottom and sides of the pan. The filling is added<br />

afterwards, and then baked and released from the springform when cooled. The cake is held up<br />

by the crust that goes up the sides.<br />

The original German recipe calls for one kilo (6 ½ cups) of blueberries, so this cake is loaded!<br />

Ingredients<br />

Crust:<br />

1 1/3 cups flour<br />

5 tablespoons butter<br />

¼ cup lemon-scented sugar<br />

¼ teaspoon salt<br />

1 egg<br />

2 tablespoons milk<br />

1½ teaspoons baking powder<br />

Filling:<br />

3 pints (6 cups) blueberries, picked over,<br />

washed and drained in a colander<br />

3 tablespoons butter<br />

½ cup lemon-scented sugar<br />

1-8-ounce package cream cheese, softened to room temperature<br />

1/3 cup Greek yogurt (5% or 10% milkfat)<br />

2 eggs<br />

2 teaspoons vanilla<br />

1½ tablespoons cornstarch<br />

Juice from ½ of a lemon<br />

Procedure<br />

1. First, make the lemon-scented sugar. Before starting both the crust and the filling, mix all of<br />

the sugar from the recipe (¾ of a cup of sugar, total, plus the grated rind of a whole lemon).<br />

Massage the grated lemon rind into the sugar with your fingertips until it is well incorporated.<br />

This infuses the cake with a beautiful lemon flavor and fragrance that complement the<br />

blueberries really well.<br />

2. Heat the oven to 350°.<br />

3. Generously butter a 9” springform pan.<br />

4. Make the crust:<br />

Cream the butter and lemon-scented sugar together. Add in the egg and milk.<br />

Add the flour, salt and baking powder. Mix until the dough comes together- it will be clumpy.<br />

Add the dough into the springform pan and, using your fist, press it into the bottom, bringing the<br />

edges of the dough about halfway up the sides of the pan.<br />

5. Make the filling.<br />

Sprinkle the cornstarch over the blueberries and toss well to coat.<br />

Add the coated blueberries into the dough-lined springform pan.<br />

Beat the butter, lemon-scented sugar, cream cheese and yogurt together until smooth. Add<br />

in the eggs and lemon juice.<br />

Pour the filling over the blueberries. Holding the filled springform pan firmly in both hands, gently<br />

tap it on the counter to distribute the filling evenly.<br />

6. Bake for 65-70 minutes, until it is no longer wobbly in the center when the pan is jiggled.<br />

7. Remove to a rack and refrigerate for an hour before serving.<br />

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WORDS OF<br />

A FEATHER<br />

38<br />

by HEATHER SHIRLEY<br />

Charismatic<br />

Megafauna<br />

just returned from Alaska. It was my third<br />

I time there. Certainly not my last trip to<br />

visit the largest state in the country.<br />

Its vastness is mind-boggling. If you<br />

superimpose a map of Alaska onto a map of<br />

the continental United States, Alaska stretches<br />

almost entirely across the lower 48.<br />

I’ve only explored a fraction of it, but every<br />

bit I’ve seen is glorious.<br />

As a birder, I am keen to see new species<br />

of birds everywhere I go. Of course, the more<br />

species you see, the harder it gets to spot new<br />

ones.<br />

Even though on this most recent trip to<br />

Alaska I went to areas I hadn’t previously<br />

explored, I only saw one new species: a pelagic<br />

bird, the short-tailed shearwater. Of course,<br />

I wish I had seen more new species, called<br />

“lifers” in birder parlance. But I really can’t be<br />

disappointed because I saw so, so, so much<br />

other amazing wildlife.<br />

I was traveling with wildlife experts—people<br />

who have spent their careers studying wildlife<br />

in remote places all over the earth. (Can you<br />

imagine?) They were tremendous resources<br />

throughout the trip, identifying what we saw<br />

and teaching us natural history.<br />

We were kayaking, and I pointed out a raft<br />

of otters, noting that some were holding paws,<br />

others were twirling floating kelp around their<br />

babies so they didn’t float away and still others<br />

were holding shellfish in their tiny adorable<br />

paws. So cute!<br />

That’s when a burly, grizzly, seasoned scientist<br />

leaned over and told me: “That’s what we call<br />

charismatic megafauna.” I hadn’t heard the<br />

term, but loved the idea that scientists came<br />

up with a description for cute animals.<br />

Wikipedia notes that, “Charismatic<br />

megafauna are animal species that are large—<br />

in the relevant category that they represent—<br />

with symbolic value or widespread popular<br />

appeal and are often used by environmental<br />

activists to gain public support for<br />

environmentalist goals.”<br />

Think of giant pandas, the symbol of the<br />

World Wildlife Fund. Conservationists got the<br />

idea to drive more public support for their<br />

goals by attaching cute, familiar animals to<br />

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

the cause. The overall environment benefits<br />

because when the habitat of a panda—or<br />

other animal—is protected, many more<br />

species beyond just pandas are ensured the<br />

resources they need to survive.<br />

Critics also exist, however. There may be<br />

more critically endangered species in an area,<br />

but they don’t get enough attention because<br />

they’re not “cute.” The public can also become<br />

overly focused on protecting “cute” species<br />

that aren’t native to an area and should be<br />

removed to restore an ecosystem to optimal<br />

health.<br />

Science and conservation always seem<br />

incredibly complicated.<br />

What’s not complicated is the joy and<br />

wonder I felt when I experienced the wildlife<br />

sightings in Alaska. A mama grizzly bear and her<br />

three cubs emerged from their winter den. The<br />

cubs, who had contented bellies full of their<br />

mother’s milk, tumbled along the coastline,<br />

rolled in the grass and splashed in the water.<br />

Two stood on their hind legs and used their<br />

forepaws to box and wrestle with each other.<br />

Mama bear, in contrast, hadn’t eaten since<br />

she had gone into the den last fall. She pretty<br />

much ignored the cubs and instead rummaged<br />

around to find food. Her first food of spring<br />

may include grass, clover, dandelions, ants,<br />

seeds and mammals.<br />

Bears are omnivorous and after months<br />

hibernating, I’m sure she’d eat pretty much<br />

anything she could. The bears were a delight<br />

to watch.<br />

But Alaska is full of delights and more wildlife<br />

waited ahead. I kayaked past a colony of harbor<br />

seals with their pups. They were basking in the<br />

spring sunshine, hauled out on boulders at the<br />

edge of Disenchantment Bay.<br />

Seeing me glide past, they raised their heads<br />

and stared with large, dark<br />

eyes. The males, however,<br />

bellowed protectively,<br />

urging me to quickly<br />

paddle towards my goal,<br />

the Hubbard Glacier.<br />

The spectacular glacier<br />

glowed icy blue in the<br />

Left to right: A Stellar’s sea lion swims past the<br />

author’s boat. A moose emerges from the Alaskan<br />

forest.<br />

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to hear the sounds of<br />

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sunshine and thundered as ice calved into the<br />

sea. I picked up a chunk of the ice that floated<br />

past my kayak and learned that it was at least<br />

3,000 years old! Amazing!<br />

My attention turned from the ice as we heard<br />

a large expulsion of breath. Humpback whales!<br />

Swimming right alongside us! They winter and<br />

have their calves, or babies, in Hawaii, then<br />

cross the ocean and spend summers feeding in<br />

Alaska’s nutrient-rich waters.<br />

We watched as one breached, gloriously<br />

erupting out of the ocean. Others were finslapping,<br />

lying on their sides at the surface of<br />

the water, lifting their long pectoral fins and<br />

slamming them down. Scientists believe this<br />

behavior to be a way the whales communicate<br />

with each other.<br />

So much wildlife and not enough space in this<br />

magazine to write about it all! Moose wading in<br />

rivers swollen from the spring melt. Sea lions<br />

leaping in the waves all around our Zodiac boat.<br />

Mountain goats defying gravity, scampering up<br />

sheer mountainsides of granite. Dall’s porpoise<br />

leaping and cavorting. Wildflowers blooming<br />

across valleys.<br />

Everywhere, constantly, Alaska offers<br />

breathtaking experiences in nature. If it’s been<br />

on your bucket list, don’t put off that dream<br />

trip to Alaska. Book it and enjoy. Go see some<br />

charismatic megafauna!<br />

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Lake Hopatcong Adventure<br />

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Lake Hopatcong Cruises<br />

Miss Lotta (Dinner Boat)<br />

37 Nolan’s Pt. Park Rd., LH<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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NONPROFITS<br />

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Lake Hopatcong Foundation<br />

125 Landing Rd., Landing<br />

973-663-2500<br />

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Lake Hopatcong Historical Museum<br />

260 Lakeside Blvd., Landing<br />

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PROFESSIONAL SERVICES<br />

Barbara Anne Dillon,,O.D.,P.A.<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 />

973-663-9600<br />

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The Beacon<br />

453 River Styx Rd., Hopatcong<br />

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The Bagel Place<br />

181 Howard Blvd., MA<br />

973-810-3636<br />

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The Windlass Restaurant<br />

45 Nolan’s Point Park Rd., LH<br />

973-663-3190<br />

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SENIOR CARE<br />

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973-512-5131<br />

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SPECIALTY STORES<br />

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At The Lake Jewelry<br />

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Hawk Ridge Farm<br />

283 Espanong Rd, LH<br />

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1215 Rt. 46, Ledgewood<br />

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STORAGE<br />

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40<br />

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


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lakehopatcongnews.com 41


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