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Sunday, October 18, 2015

Lions Club hosts fourth annual craft/vendor fair - By Michelle Libby


The Windham Lions Club is raising money to help with their programs which include purchasing glasses and hearing aids for kids, eye screenings for all incoming kindergarteners and participating in the “Speak-Out” student presentations. For the fourth year they will hold a craft/vendor fair at the North Windham Union Church, 723 Roosevelt Trail. There will be crocheted items, repurposed kitchen items, bird houses, tote bags, dog treats, Avon, Halloween treats, jewelry, Scentsy, quilts, handmade cards and more, a total of 14 vendors. 
 
In addition to the craft items, the Windham High School Leo Club will have a table of items to raise money for the Madsen family, whose 4-year-old daughter is in treatment for a rare form of leukemia.
“We do eye screenings for incoming kindergarten students, close to 250 of them. We take pictures of their eyes and a doctor looks at it,” said Eileen Frost, the coordinator of the craft fair. 



There will also be a raffle for many items and gift certificates from the community and the winners don’t have to be present to win. There will also be a 50/50 raffle for that day.  

Admission is free, but donations of non-perishable food items are appreciated. 

The event will take place from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. There will also be a hamburger and hot dog luncheon from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.  

The Lions Club has 22 members and is always willing to accept new members. Their future fundraisers and community events are the breakfast with Santa at the Windham Veterans Center on December 12th and Stuff the Bus at Windham Hannaford on December 5th

For more on any of the events or to join the Lions, call Eileen Frost at 892-7530 or visit them on Facebook.

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

My School Color Run raises money for school supplies - By Jim Beers


On what was an absolute perfect Maine autumn day last Sunday, the Raymond Elementary School, (RES), held it's first "My School Color Run" to help benefit students and teachers with school supplies at RES. Along with a silent auction, as well as plenty of refreshments, the school's soccer field was a hive of activity before the start of the race. Approximately 240 walkers, joggers and runners of all abilities took to the starting line in hopes of making a difference for the school and its supply needs.


Event organizer and RES teacher Susan Cherner-Brackett was overwhelmed by the number of participants. "Just a perfect day today and to see so many of the community here to lend a helping hand is truly amazing! We are just so excited by the turnout," she said. It did seem that most of Raymond/Windham was there to either help with the event or be a part of it in some way. The Raymond PTO was there with a great refreshment table, and a host of local businesses donated items for the silent auction. 

The event kicked off sharply at 1 p.m., and it wasn't long before the first competitors navigated the 1-mile course and started to cross the finish line. The race was held on the school's property, starting on the soccer field, then moved to wooded trails before ending up back on the field. So many volunteers lined the course to help out with water, snacks, and of course--spraying the participants with color as they went through the "splash zones". With ages ranging from pre-school kids to grandparents, fun was had by all who were there to participate. 

Top three finishers were seventh grader Boden Sabasteanski, seventh grader Keegan Brooks, and third grader Carter Engelman. Top female finisher was seventh grader Molly Cochrane. Once all competitors completed the course, there were plenty of treats and well-wishers on hand to greet them at the finish line. 

After announcing the top finishers, Cherner-Brackett directed everyone to the middle of the soccer field to throw their color packet into the air. On the count of three, the area and everyone in it was immersed in a cloud of color. RES assistant principal Deb Hutchinson was overjoyed by the turnout.
"So wonderful to see the whole community come together for this event. The funds will go to materials for our classrooms and teachers,...just fills my heart, couldn't have been a better day," she said. 

The event raised $3,300.00. 

"Such a successful day, what a great community event. A big thank you goes out to all our volunteers from the Raymond/Windham community, as well as all the local businesses who donated for the silent auction, they truly made this event happen," added Cherner-Brackett. The hope is to do it bigger and better in the future.












Octoberfest changes locations to offer more parking and fun - By Jon Bolduc


Octoberfest will take place on October 17th, and will move from the Buck’s Naked BBQ parking lot off of Route 302 to Camp William Hinds in Raymond. 
 
Allen Faraday, event organizer and executive VP of Operations at Windham Weaponry said that the event has outgrown its previous space. 

“With the tremendous facilities at Camp Hinds, it will more than make up for the lack of high visibility on 302,” he said.  

The space at Camp Hinds will help to make the event more secure and safe, with room for parking and traffic-- two significant problems at when the event was hosted off of Route 302 in Windham.
“We just want it to be a very safe, comfortable event, and not have to worry about the traffic and the parking,” Faraday said. Faraday also said the facilities at Camp Hinds, situated on over 300 acres of land on Panther Pond-- offer exciting new opportunities for fun events. 

“We have beautiful waterfront property, we have a place where we can do a pancake breakfast...I have a secure place across the street where I can do the helicopter rides,” says Faraday. 

Many local businesses, and, most importantly, local food banks and food pantries, will be represented with booths and fun activities at the event.

“We probably have about 40 or so different businesses represented that are going to offer some type of activity, food or music,” said Aimee Senatore, executive director of the Sebago Lakes Chamber of Commerce. 

Faraday said some of the new activities include a climbing wall, food booths set up across the camp’s waterfront, zip-lining and a shooting range: The Boy Scouts are providing Range Safety Officers and are offering the ability to shoot five to 10 shots with .22 rifles at 25 yard targets for a donation, like all of the other activities. 

In addition, Camp Hinds will provide canoe and kayaking trips up the Tenny River, a climbing wall, nature walks and a huge fire pit for S’mores. 

To top off the fun, Matthew McFadden, owner of Naples Seaplane Adventure, will be offering ten minute rides off of Panther Pond, with a donation of $40.  

Octoberfest is for a good cause with proceeds help raise cash for Feed the Need, a fundraising initiative that aims to eliminate hunger and food insecurity in the 10 towns served by the Sebago Lakes Chamber of Commerce. 

“It’s just shocking what the need is. How so many of our neighbors are in need of extra food, or support,” said Faraday. 

Octoberfest, and other events hosted throughout the year by the initiative, like the Community Coin Challenge, raise significant funds for area food banks. 

“One dollar. Just one dollar from a food pantry’s perspective can feed a family of four for a day. If you look at the fact that we give most of our food pantries over a $1,000...it goes a long way,” Senatore said.






Windham house for sale: Some disassembly required - by Walter Lunt


Adrianna Gibson of Newfield saw the ad on Craig’s List. A vintage cape for sale at a very reasonable price in Windham; the catch, it had to be disassembled and removed from its lot by late fall. 
Intrigued, Gibson encouraged her partner, Clifford Plummer III, to join her in seeing the property. The former Week’s farm, a landmark, of sorts, at the corner of Highland Cliff and Alweber Roads, had been vacant for about 15 years and considered structurally unsound.
 
Gibson remembers their first visit in July. She was standing on the second floor; “You know how some old houses can feel really creepy inside? This one was different. I was leaning on a ceiling beam, just looking around. Right then, I fell in love with the place.” She told Plummer, “This is the one. This has got to be our house.”

After exploring the inside further, Plummer told her he could see the “possibilities,” that is, incorporating many of the historic features into a new build. But Gibson, a builder from northern Maine and self-described purist disagreed, strongly favoring a piece-by-piece take-down and rebuild on their 8-acre property in Newfield. 

And the delicate demolition began. The couple rented a mobile storage container. Sections of the disassembled building were photographed, labeled, bundled and stored in the container beside the house. Slowly, the antique cape shed its unique features as Gibson and Plummer labored several hours a day, seven days a week, even while Plummer maintained his full-time job as a warehouse foreman in Westbrook.

On one work day, Gibson stood in the entryway admiring the beaded tongue and groove panels partially adorned with faded Victorian wallpaper. “It’s amazing the way they built…without power tools,” she observed. The 200 plus year old post and beam structure was a solid build; built to last. Time had only weakened it; Gibson knew that minimal structural repairs during the rebuild would restore it for a third century of life. Meanwhile, Plummer had come around to Adrianna’s desire to restore the house with its historical integrity intact. He said he used the house number in various combinations when playing the state’s Pick-3 lottery game. “I won,” he proclaimed, “And that’s when I knew this was a lucky house.”

Many residents in the neighborhood believe the antique cape, which once had an unattached barn, to be one of oldest homes in Windham. But the house is hard to date. Town tax records show the time of build to be 1800. County deeds reveal that Thomas Trott willed the farm to his daughter, Abigail, in 1809. Some members of the Weeks family and Windham Historical Society president Linda Griffin have speculated the house could date back to the mid-to-late 1700s. One society member recalls that oral tradition suggests the house had been moved to Highland Cliff Road from another location, a practice common in earlier times. There exists, however, no record of relocation.

The last occupant of the house, around the late 90s, was Gladys Weeks, then in her nineties. It is said that Grammy Weeks often complained about “spongy” floorboards as she moved about the house in a wheelchair. Visitors who frequented the deconstruction project shared memories of the house going back several decades, reminiscing about May baskets hanging in the yard, Easter egg rolls and political party meetings.

Much of the building’s history is revealed as Gibson and Plummer remove generations of renovation. In one parlor, sheetrock gave way to old paneling which in turn revealed two separate applications of lathe with horse-hair plaster; one of each side of the wall studs. Griffin said the inner and outer layers added strength to the construction and provided a dead-air pocket, an early form of insulation. She also observed the plaster formulas were different; the exterior application, probably the earliest, appeared yellowed and sandy while the inner coating was white, thinner and utilized pig or horse hair.

More historic revelations came to light as the new owners peeled back to the house’s earliest time. Pine roof boards, some more than 30 inches wide bore the tell-tale signs of rough circular saw markings, typical of early sawmill lumber.

Gibson also pointed to hand hewn beams, square nails and the 2 over 2 Victorian windows which probably replaced original 9 over 6 panes from the early 1800s. Griffin said the house displays a floor plan typical of late colonial houses: Two front parlors and kitchen and birthing/storage rooms in the rear.

Perhaps the most prominent feature to be exposed during the trim down is the chimney. Roof board removal revealed a double chimney in the shape of an inverted V – two single flues rising from the first floor and joining just above the second story. Disassembly in the center of the building revealed the remains of three fireplaces. Griffin believes the double flues serviced two stoves that replaced the fireplaces in the mid-1800s. The unconventional brick formation attracted much attention from passers-by, many stopping to take photographs. Gibson said countless people stopped by to chat, many multiple times just to observe the progress of the take-down.

One indignant observer rarely left the site. A tiny chipmunk scampered about the property, ducking in and out of the house remains, chattering noisily as if protesting the activity. Plummer said the pesky little fellow succeeded in achieving a triumphant moment. While removing clapboards, Plummer had set his ladder and started climbing. However, one leg of the ladder sunk into a small hole in the ground sending him crashing onto the lawn. As he regained composure, he observed the chipmunk chattering, seemingly joyously, as it disappeared into the offending hole. Plummer nursed a sore shoulder the rest of the day while Gibson, barely controlling laughter, shared the story with every visitor for the next two days.

One prodigious construction feature gave Gibson and Plummer a moment of wonder and surprise. Upon removing the boards from a parlor floor, they stared in awe; the floor joists consisted of small tree trunks with the bark still clinging, except for a portion of the circumference which was flattened to meet the floor boards. Limb knots and a few square nails protruded here and there. 

Joan and Ray Weeks, who are members of the family whose generations occupied the house for over 100 years, said they have mixed feelings as they watch the house come down from their home a few hundred yards away. “We are so, so sad to see it go,” said Joan, “but glad it’s being repurposed rather than bull dozed or burned.”

Walking by the Weeks’ house with a pet calf on a leash, Andrea (Elder) Stultz paused. “What they’re doing is amazing and heartwarming,” referring to Gibson’s and Plummer’s act of preservation over demolition. Dozens of others stopped with similar sentiments. Marnie Childress of South Portland, who was picking up her granddaughter from a nearby school bus stop, commented, “I absolutely love that it’s going to have a new life.”

The new life, observed Gibson, will be its third century of existence – same building, same construction techniques, just a new family and a new location.

Gibson and Plummer plan to have an open house after the reassembly in Newfield, probably in the fall of 2016. All the Weeks family, the neighborhood and the curious onlookers will be invited.