Holiday 2015 - Quechee Times

Transcription

Holiday 2015 - Quechee Times
Quechee, Vermont 05059 Holiday 2015
Published Quarterly
Dedicated Skier
Howard Trachtenberg
Ruth Sylvester
I
Carol and Howard Trachtenberg at the dedication.
n German, berg means “mountain.” Does
that mean Howard Trachtenberg was fated
to love mountains? Those who know this
cheerful man may well think so. In his home,
at once cozy and sun-filled, that he designed,
he leads the way to a comfortable study. The
walls are lined with mementos such as a pastel
portrait—obviously the gift of a friend—of
Howard knee-deep in a brook, with fly-casting
paraphernalia and a huge grin.
To celebrate his years of work and enjoyment at Quechee’s ski hill, where he and some
of his colleagues founded and developed a ski
patrol, family and friends donated a weather
station to honor Trachtenberg’s 80th birthday.
“They decided to do this since I spent the better part of my time on the ski hill, neglecting
my children and grandchildren…,” he laughs.
In fact, the hill was where his descendants
learned to ski.
The dedication of the station, at the top of
the chairlift, happened this past summer. Soon
Continued on page 16
met Bambi Koeniger
with an email
exchange about
harvesting produce
from the Quechee
Community Garden.
She and husband
John were away and
their tomatoes were
abundant and very ripe.
I had taken on the job
of assuring that excess
produce gets to The
Haven—the homeless
shelter and food bank in
White River Junction.
She asked that I go
ahead and pick those
tomatoes. I learned
that she had been the
primary Haven deliverer
the year before and that
her connection was
Continued on page 8
The Quechee Times
Y
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Pam Vernon
P.O. Box 104 • White River Jct., VT 05001
Classically Vermont
Life’s Calling
Bambi Koeniger
Ruth Sylvester
Postal Customer
Quechee, VT 05059
Landon, Jaxon, Larry and Roger Potwin
from the intersection with
Quechee Main Street.
In addition to the produce
that he grows and buys from
local farms, Potwin has filled
the farm stand with interestContinued on page 10
PRSRT STD
U.S. Postage
PAID
White River Jct., VT
Permit #71
may resemble braided strands
or a double helix, mixing
farming and the insurance
business. This past summer
he built and ran a farm stand
on his property on QuecheeWest Hartford Road, not far
ECRWSS
ears ago, Conrad
Richter
(probably
now best known for
his wrenching short novel
A Light in the Forest) wrote
a trilogy about European
settlers in the Ohio valley.
The titles reveal the basic
story: The Trees; The Fields;
The Town. One character, a
young girl in the first book,
feels the oppressiveness of
the dark, too-large-to dealwith trees in whose place the
early settlers try to establish
fields to grow food. By the
end of the third book (which
won the Pulitzer in 1951), she
begins to plant trees.
Larry Potwin has also
lived through “cycles of connection” with the land both
for farming and for recreation
in the Ottauquechee Valley,
though in his case the cycles
MOVE WITH THE LEADER SM
Coming Together to Serve You!
Derek Cosentino
Sales Director
802.369.0268
Lee Kauffman
Sales Associate
802.295.6709
Joyce Bahniuk
Lisa Baldwin
Sales Associate
802.738.9097
Sales Associate
802.295.1380
Mary Mayhew
Diana O’Leary
Sales Associate
802.356.3776
Bill Berry
Broker Associate
802.369.0142
Mary Paino
Sales Associate
802.291.3575
Broker Associate
802.295.6703
Kasia Butterfield
Broker Associate
802.296.6505
Mike Paino
Broker Associate
802.295.9500
Chris Crowe
Broker Associate
802.296.1300
Dale Vernon
Broker Associate
802.296.6502
Kristy Hosmer
Sales Associate
802.295.1376
Jim Lorenz
Sales Associate
802.359.9340
Jen White
Team Marketing
Administrator
Happy Holidays! Thank you for making us the #1 sales and rental
office in Quechee. We’re working hard to earn your business!
HARTLAND, VT Stunning views on 10+
acs w/ pond, hot tub. Elizabethan chimney
w/ 4 FPs, Viking stove, Bosch dishwasher.
4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths $689,000
POMFRET, VT Historic country Cape,
ideal rural setting. 10+ acres of mostly
open land & rustic barn.
4 bedrooms, 3 baths $579,000
QUECHEE, VT Spacious contemporary,
light & airy with gleaming floors
3 season porch, in-law suite.
4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths $539,000
QUECHEE, VT Lovely lake & valley
views; FP w/ natural stone, birch floors.
Deck, master suite on 1st flr, sits on 1.9 acres.
4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths $525,000
QUECHEE, VT Just steps to Highland
Golf Course, sited on 2 acres. Breakfast
bar, spacious pantry, FP, private guest suite.
4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths $489,000
QUECHEE, VT Wonderful spacious home
sited on a prime building site. 3 season
porch leads to patio w/ stone outdoor FP.
5 bedrooms, 3.5 baths $489,000
QUECHEE, VT
Meadow and long range views. Best of
contemporary living w/ many updates.
4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths $485,000
QUECHEE, VT Custom built cedar
clapboard 2-story Cape. Oak floors, lrge
eat-in kitchen w/ granite island.
4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths $449,000
QUECHEE, VT Stunning SW views,
spacious, private contemporary. Many
upgrades, a Vermont sanctuary.
4 bedrooms, 4 baths $445,000
QUECHEE, VT Gourmet kitchen w/
granite, S/S appliances, cherry cabinets.
1st floor living space w/ cathedral ceilings.
3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths $429,000
HARTFORD, VT Situated on the line of
Quechee, Woodstock & Pomfret. Newly
renovated, new deck, BR w/ FP, non-QLLA.
2 bedrooms, 2 baths $298,000
POMFRET, VT 39+ private wooded
acres, open flr plan. Deck leads to 23’x23’
studio, master on 1st flr.
1 bedroom, 2 baths $298,000
QUECHEE, VT Contemporary home
w/ country kitchen, Dining room w/ slider
to deck, large living rm w/ fireplace.
4 bedrooms, 3 baths $259,000
QUECHEE, VT Wonderful getaway that
has been recenty reduced! Lovingly cared
for and updated property.
3 bedrooms, 2 baths $199,000
QUECHEE, VT Updated contemporary,
corner lot in desirable nhbrhd. Large sun
room, master w/ private ba & 2 lrge closets.
4 bedrooms, 2 baths $189,000
1996 Quechee Main Street • PO Box 258 • Quechee, VT 05059
• Fax - 802.295.1747 • Toll Free - 888.592.2224
www.masiello.com • [email protected]
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
We are pleased to announce major software upgrades that greatly improve the rental
experience for guests and increase revenue opportunities for owners.
We piloted several properties this year with excellent results!
Features
• Seamless integration with VRBO and other national and international
vacation rental sites
• Real time owner portal to manage calendar and view financials
• Instant booking options and instant quotes
Benefits
• Increased revenue opportunities
• Easy for owners
• Meet and exceed consumer expectations and foster repeat business
We have already experienced heightened demand and we need qualified inventory to
meet this demand. Owners contact us today to learn more about the benefits!
We are excited about what we’re doing now and about the future!
Mike Paino, Lee Kauffman
& Derek Cosentino
QUECHEE, VT Exceptional views of
fairway, pond & lake. Entire unit renovated and new roof May ‘15.
3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths $479,000
QUECHEE, VT Beautifully maintained,
hardwd flrs, garge w/ lift, lrge deck w/
retractable awning, storage under deck.
3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths $444,900
QUECHEE, VT Fully furnished, open
living space, ample storage, walking distance to club; private tennis courts and pool.
4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths $435,000
QUECHEE, VT Views & sunshine, beautiful well-maintained end unit on golf course.
Gorgeous kitchen, master & bath on 1st flr.
3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths $329,000
QUECHEE, VT Beautiful end unit w/
newly custom painting. Top of the line appliances, granite countertops, valley views.
4 bedrooms, 3 baths $219,000
QUECHEE, VT Immaculate condo w/
Trex deck & scenic setting. Wonderful
natural light, propane FP, fresh finishes.
3 bedrooms, 2 baths $178,000
QUECHEE, VT Warming room & ski
locker at ground lev. Perfect comfort w/
gorgeous kitchen. Best Quechee has to offer.
2 bedrooms & loft, 1.5 baths $175,000
QUECHEE, VT Beautiful condo w/
direct access to ski trails. Updated kitchen, open living area w/ hardwd flrs, FP.
3 bedrooms, 3 baths $164,000
QUECHEE, VT - Kingswood Condos
Located on ski hill, great views, furnished. Ski in - ski out, move in condition.
$135,000, $115,000, $95,000
QUECHEE, VT Bright and cozy Salt
Box condo. Large balcony off master
bedroom; both bedrms w/ private bath.
2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths $124,000
QUECHEE, VT Loaded w/ charming
details & a beautiful setting. Propane heat
stove, open floor plan, wide pine floors.
2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths $119,000
QUECHEE, VT Beautiful setting with
views on gorgeous grounds. Updated
finishes, new kitchen appliances and FP.
2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths $109,000
QUECHEE, VT Move-in ready end
unit on ski hill. Available fully furnished;
beautiful stone fireplace.
2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths $65,000
QUECHEE, VT - Land
2.6 acres in established neighborhood
w/ beautiful views. Utilities at street and
community sewer hookup. $249,000
QUECHEE, VT - Land
Views of forested hills w/ potential for
bigger views. Established nhbrhd with
several high end homes. $175,000
CAREFREE QUECHEE VACATION RENTALS
PO Box 1226 • Quechee, VT 05059
802.295.9500 • www.carefreequecheevacations.com • [email protected]
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Page 4
A
T
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Quechee Me…
Calming & Relaxing
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& Spectacular Body Therapies
THE STRONG HOUSE SPA
Give the Gift or Treat Yourself!
Buy & Book Online
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CELEBRATING
15 YEARS
(802) 295.1718
www.stronghousespa.com
s many of us enjoy our families and friends this time of year, there are
others struggling to make sure they have heat for their homes, gifts and
food for the holidays, and companionship.
Please consider one of the many organizations in the Upper Valley—or in
your hometown—to donate food, clothing, money or time to during this holiday
season. Here’s just a few of the many organizations in the Upper Valley helping
those in need:
Upper Valley Haven – for over 30 years the Haven has provided temporary
shelter and educational programming for homeless families and adults, as well as
food and clothing to anyone in need. www.uppervalleyhaven.org
Listen Community Services – serves the children, seniors, individuals and
families with warm meals, fuel, holiday presents for children and life skill education for children. www.listencommunityservices.org
Hartford/Norwich Holiday Basket Helpers – provides area children with
holiday gifts, a food gift card to help with a holiday dinner and fruit baskets for
seniors. www.holidaybasketsvt.org
Upper Valley Humane Society – provides services to over 1,600 animals and
more than 3,500 people across 100 communities between New Hampshire and
Vermont. www.uvhs.org
Lucy McKenzie Humane Society – services many communities in Windsor
County, Vermont and the Upper Connecticut River Valley of Vermont and
New Hampshire, to provide shelter and placement for animals, and education.
www.lucymac.org
Cover – volunteers help low income homeowners—many are elderly and/
or disabled—with needed home repairs Their programs include: home repair,
weatherization and the ReCover Store. http://www.coverhomerepair.org/
about-cover-2/
Best wishes to you and your family this holiday season!
Anne
CELEBRATING 15 YEARS
Q
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peutic Massage, Facials, Aromatherapy, Therapeutic
Body Treatments, Classes ERMONT
UECHEE,
Therapeutic Massage,
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9 AM-5 PMFacials,
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& Sunday Therapeutic Body Treatments, Classes
8 AM-8 PM Monday-Friday,
and Female Licensed Therapists
~ Gift
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295.1718
www.stronghousespa.com (802) 295.1718
694
MAIN •STREET
, QUECHEE
,M
VERMONT
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QUECHEE
•www.stronghousespa.com
T . A SCUTNEY
MAIN •STREET
, QUECHEE
VERMONT
LAKE 694
MOREY
QUECHEE
• ,M
T . A SCUTNEY
is published quarterly by
VILLAGE GREEN PUBLISHING, INC.
Jennifer MacMillen • [email protected]
www.quecheetimes.com
EDITOR – Anne Clemens
[email protected]
802-356-3453
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ADVERTISING ASSISTANT
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Amy Tietjen Smith
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CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Joan Baret
Anne Clemens
Anne Critchley Sapio
Ron Dull
Kate Schaal
Pam Vernon
Ruth Sylvester
The Quechee Times is an independently owned publication. © 2015. All rights reserved.
No part of this paper may be reproduced without express written permission from the publisher.
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Holiday Merriment is
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Offering the best of the
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www.coopfoodstore.coop
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White River Junction
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Page 6
QUECHEE CLUB NEWS
The 20th Annual Quechee Club Cardboard Box Derby
Saturday, February 20 at 2 pm
forms are completed, they may be submitted
to member services via mail to The Quechee
Club P.O. Box 1301 Quechee, VT 05059 or
by email to [email protected].
The Cardboard Box Derby Pre-Race
Reception will be held Friday, February 19,
2016 from 6 pm to 8 pm in The Main Dining Room at The Clubhouse, following the
Annual Torchlight Parade. This fun and
informative event will highlight the derby
day experience with a streaming video display of race day rules and regulations, as
well as action packed footage from our derby
archives! This will be an amazing day for
everyone involved with food, fun and music.
Be sure to register your pit crew for this
event as well! Pre-registration is required,
see registration packet for details.
The Quechee Club looks forward to hosting you and another wonderful event. Please
contact Brian Bevacqua, Program Coordinator, with questions or concerns about the
Cardboard Box Derby. Brian can be reached
at 802-295-2135 or by emailing [email protected]. Dates and times are
subject to change pending weather conditions. Please visit our website on the day of
the derby for official updates.
Join Us Saturday, February 20, for the
20th Annual Cardboard Box Derby. This
event is open to the public and is sure to be a
great time for families of all ages. The Cardboard Box Derby takes place at The Quechee
Ski Area and participants are asked to be on
the sledding hill by 1 pm for pre-race organization. The derby will begin at exactly 2 pm
and an awards ceremony will take place in
The Main Dining Room of The Clubhouse,
following the race.
Test your creativity by constructing a
cardboard box that can cruise down our
snow-covered race track with friends and
family at the wheel! Contestants will be
judged on various categories. The more
unique the box, the better your chances of
winning!
Teams that register before February 5 pay
only $25 per team. Entries after February 5
are $35.00 per team. Derby entries will not
be accepted after February 18 at 5 pm, no
exceptions. Please download the registration
package for entry details, rules and regulations on www.quecheeclub.com. Once the
Great reasons to go to
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The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
2015-2016 SKI QUECHEE SEASON PASS
BENEFITS
This year, Ski Quechee is pleased to announce
a number of new benefits for Season Pass holders. Do more of what you love this winter! Please
visit online at www.quecheeclub.com or contact
Membership Services at (802) 295-9356 for more
information.
FREE Nordic Ski at 30 Different Ski Resorts!
Restrictions and blackout dates may apply.
Season pass holders should contact the Nordic
resort they intend to visit for applicable restrictions and conditions updates. The pass holder’s
Nordic area may be required to be open for skiing
at time of redemption. Please visit online at www.
quecheeclub.com or contact Membership Services
at (802) 295-9356 for a complete list of participating resorts.
30% OFF All Weekday Lift Tickets (Mon Fri) at Mt. Sunapee
Mt. Sunapee received seven top 10 rankings in
the east for grooming, snow quality, service, familyfriendliness, lifts, value and accessibility last year!
Mt. Sunapee is only 40 minutes from Quechee.
This offer excludes holidays: 12/26/15-1/3/15,
1/16/16-1/18/16 and 2/13/16-2/19/16. Season
pass holders must have their Ski Quechee I.D. card
with them at time of purchase. Mt. Sunapee is open
Thanksgiving and closes April 10, 2016, weather
permitting. Trail maps are available at Membership
Services for pass holders looking to take advantage of
the offer.
Discount on Pre-Ordered Lift Tickets at
Okemo
Tickets are good seven days a week through the
2015-2016 ski season with no blackout dates! Contact Membership Services with your ticket order.
Page 7
You will be contacted by the Club for ticket pick
up. Orders can be billed to your member account.
For more information about Okemo Mountain, visit
www.okemo.com.
Savings at Golf and Ski Warehouse!
• FREE Tune Season Pass
• $99 Junior Lease package
• 10% off ski & snowboard equipment
• 20% off helmets, goggles, poles,
• 10% off any already discounted ski travel bags,
tuning supplies, socks, or snowboard apparel
gloves and hats
Golf & Ski Warehouse is in West Lebanon, NH.
Season passes must be shown at time of purchase.
Offers cannot be combined with other offers or promotions. Some vendor restrictions apply.
Discounts do not apply to already discounted merchandise unless otherwise specified.
QUECHEE ARTISAN FAIR
Saturday, November 28, 2015
The Quechee Club
10:00 am to 5:00 pm
Free for all ages with
complimentary parking
The Crafty Ladies of the
Upper Valley in partnership
with The Quechee Club
seeks to provide an upscale venue and an opportunity for local artisans to display their creative works.
To this end, we welcome you to join us in the Second Annual Artisan Fair at The Quechee Club to
be held in the Clubhouse. The fair will include ongoing demonstrations by the artisans, an artisan’s
café provided by The Quechee Club, free admission
and parking, and an opportunity for attendees to
purchase quality works of art by local artisans. Door
prizes will be awarded throughout the day.
A portion of the proceeds will be donated to
local art organizations.
Featuring artists like...
Anne Clemens Silver Jewelry
Lisa Lacasse Photography
Lucy’s Paintings & Portraits
Honestly Simple Soaps
Train Brook Rustics
Folding Areas Designs
Route 4 Glass
One Chicken at a Time Farm
Max & Ozzie’s Handmade Gifts
Crafty Ladies of the Upper Valley
Kokopelli Pottery
Fireflies Handcrafts from Nature
Pamela Sullivan Contemporary Jewelry Designer
Ellen 1/2 Pint Farm
2015-2016 SKI QUECHEE SEASON
PASSES PRICING
QLLA Member Season Pass Pricings:
QLLA Member Family: $580, QLLA Member
Single: $360
Family Guest Family of Four: $600 Family Guest
Single Adult: $370
Additional Child: $175 Family Guest Single
Child: $250
Prices do not include Vermont State sales tax.
QLLA Member Family includes parents and
children under 23. Family Guest Family of Four
includes 2 adults/2 children 18 and under.
Public Season Pass Pricings:
Family: $625 Single Adult: $370 Single Child:
$275
Prices do not include Vermont State sales tax. Single Child applies to children ages 14 and under.
Great reasons to go to
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The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Page 8
Life’s Calling – Bambi Koeniger– continued from
page 1
even closer. The Haven is located
next to St. Paul’s Episcopal Church
and the two organizations often
work together. Koeniger, a Quechee
resident, is an Episcopal priest who
attends and enjoys the St. Paul’s
community and has celebrated and
preached there.
Koeniger was raised an Episcopalian, in Red Hook New York, until
she was 13; then in New Haven,
Connecticut at Trinity Episcopal Church. After years in all-girls
schools, she was ready for a change of
environment when she went to college and chose the University of New
Mexico where she majored in Art,
Art History and Music. The environment in New Mexico has been a big
influence in her life. As she describes,
“The land is hauntingly spiritual and
beautiful with the ethos of the Native
Americans in the land and air…
this was the beginning of my adult
call to live and experience more of
the divine. I was very involved in
meditation and spiritual education
groups in church that kept drawing
me to follow the call to seminary and
then ordination to the priesthood.
This began to reveal itself and was
hatched in my experience outside the
church, first in the expansive land of
enchantment, New Mexico.”
Her path to becoming
ordained
Following college, she worked in
educational publishing as a freelance
photo and project manager. She and
husband John were married in 1976
and have three children— Crawford,
Cole and Charlotte—all in their 30s.
In the mid-1980s, she participated in
an interfaith meditation group, which
triggered her decision to attend Drew
Theological School in Madison, New
Jersey, for her Master of Divinity. She
was ordained as an Episcopal priest in
1995. The first women were ordained
as priests in the Episcopal Church in
1974, only 21 years before her ordina-
tion. It’s interesting to note that Koeniger has uncovered that there have
been seven male Episcopalian priests
in her family history.
After several years as associate rector at St. Paul’s Church in Chatham,
New Jersey, with a very collegial rector, she “realized that I was not called
to be a rector, and could not be an
associate rector again. I spent several
years as a hospice chaplain and am a
priest through the Episcopal Diocese
of Newark, New Jersey. The church is
a wonderful place of community but
it limits the ministry to which I am
called. I kept sensing that the church
may not always be able to meet
people where they are, and there is
a broader, perhaps more flexible and
expansive way to reflect the light in
each of us. This is the call I have and
do follow.”
To reach this call, she studied
non-dual Kabbalistic healing—based
on a school of thought from the Jewish mystical tradition—over six years,
and also attended a three-year psychology certificate program through
the Center for Intentional Living
(CIL). This program focuses on the
study of psychological theory and
spiritual growth and transformation.
Great reasons to go to
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She now spends time with her
healing practice, providing counseling that incorporates her religious,
spiritual and psychological background. As a priest, she celebrates
weddings and funerals and fills in at
church services. When asked to do
a wedding, she requires at least five
counseling sessions with the couple
before they marry. She finds that
many young people describe themselves as spiritual but not religious.
They “haven’t yet discovered the
divine in themselves or the universe.”
She makes a major effort to personalize the wedding for the couple using
the basic Episcopal service structure.
To include the religious, the stole
(a wrap that means the Holy Spirit
is pouring down over you) is placed
around the couple’s joined hands,
which represents the blessing or their
union in marriage.
A well-lived life
Both Bambi and John are very
interested in photography—in fact
she considers them both to be photographers at a professional level.
John makes photo books and has had
two exhibits in New Jersey. Maybe
he would be willing to exhibit in
Continued on page 25
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Page 9
Dave Murray – Super Senior Club Champion
T
Anne Sapio Critchley
he label “Super Senior”
means over 70 years old.
When Dave Murray, eighttime winner of the Quechee Club
Super Senior championships,
pondered that label, he says, “It’s
(being over 70) not what you
would expect. I love being old!”
He’s grateful to have the continual
health and stamina to play a decent
game. Yet he’s much more than
“decent.”
This past summer, Murray outdid
himself winning the Presidents Cup
Tournament to earn the Quechee
Grand Slam of Golf. And as F.X.
Flinn excitedly wrote to the members the day after that tournament,
on July 26, Murray had also completed a career Grand Slam. For
such an achievement, the player
must win four major tournaments.
The President’s Cup is significant as
there is only one winner. The other
tournaments have winners for each
flight. The tournaments included:
the Club Championship, the Member-Member, the Member-Guest
See the
and the President’s Cup. Murray won
the championship flight for the first
three tournaments.
With a higher than usual number of entrants for the President’s
Cup and Fair Lady Cup events in
the summer of 2015, this tournament
returned some luster to the club. And
from Flinn’s memo, “[this tournament] gave us the gift of seeing one of
the finest golfers our club has had the
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privilege of calling one of our own,
win with one of the lowest scores in
Cup history.”
“If I could just be in his body for
one swing and see how he does it,
I would learn so much,” Flinn says
after commenting on the grace, the
power, the economy of movement of
Murray’s game.
The fit septuagenarian plays golf
every day on the Quechee links, and
for the past 12 years, he plays a good
bit in Florida in the winters. Though
he said he gets asked less frequently
to play in Pro Am tournaments and
he just may not get the distance
he might have some years ago, he
is quite content. “My club head
speed is about 160 and it used to
be about 180. That’s OK,” he said.
Steve Rogers, the Quechee Club’s
head professional says, “Mr. Murray
competes on weekends with our top
players—most of them are in their
40s. He plays from the back tees. He
is an amazing guy, and a golf tribute
to our club. No one works harder
than he at the game.” And explains
Murray, he is honored that these
guys want to play with him!
Lately, Murray has been seen on
the golf course with his 10-year-oldgrandson, Kyle. “He’s big for his age
and a good athlete with a strong
personality,” says Murray, who has
taken him under his wing in several sports, including golf. Murray
believes playing sports as a youth
is good preparation for life: skill
building, cooperation with others
Continued on page 26
page on our new website at www.quecheetimes.com
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Page 10
Classically Vermont– continued from page1
ing details, such as an old-fashioned
wood cook stove—connecting to
his history and Vermont’s. The wide
planks that top the counters in the
farm stand are from a 50-year-old tree
that he cut with his father. He has
a pony and some goats, and hopes
to expand the animal collection,
because, as he says, “I love to have
kids come here to have a chance to
be with animals, to be outside.” The
day after Thanksgiving he’ll be selling Christmas trees and wreaths.
Potwin’s farming roots
Some of Potwin’s earliest memories revolve around his parents rising early to prepare the morning
meal and do chores—milking a
small herd “of Jerseys” he says with
pride. “My dad and mom used to get
up at 5 am every day and milk the
cows, have breakfast, and then my
dad would go logging all day and
get home about 6 pm, eat supper
and go milk again.” Even as busy as
his father was, Potwin remembers
the little black pony he had when
he was five. His father found time to
build a little red sleigh for the pony
to pull around the yard.
The Potwin Farm Stand.
Potwin soon accepted that his
place in the family carried with it
an obligation to pitch in. “Kids on a
farm learn about life very fast and at
a young age,” he says—he was driving a tractor at age eight. “There is
never enough help. Farm kids learn
a lot about animal care as preschoolers, and everything from mechanical
work to growing food, sewing. And
most of all, how to put in a good day’s
work, which taught me that you can
accomplish anything you want.”
Farm families were often very large,
to provide more hands for the work.
Potwin was the only boy among four
siblings, while his father, Roger, was
one of fifteen children. His mother,
Beverly Blood, was one of ten living
on the Highland Homestead Farm
on Hillside Road, which is still in
the family.
When Potwin’s father gave up
the strenuous life of a logger in Randolph, Vermont, Roger became a
realtor, and so did Beverly. The family moved to Taftsville, while not a
great distance, it was a big change
Great reasons to go to
WOODSTOCK
V
E
R
M
O
N
T
for Potwin and his three sisters.
“Today my father couldn’t be a realtor because he had no high school
degree,” he says. Roger had also been
a realtor, at Woodstock’s Strout
Realty, driving prospects to farms in
his Model T Ford pickup in the ’40s
and ’50s.
Potwin learned about selling from
his father. “I was always going with
my dad, so I learned, as Vermonters
say, ‘the gift of gab.’ I knew every
property. One day my parents both
had appointments to show property
and a couple came in that wanted to
see a piece of land. Dad said ‘Larry,
go with them and show them the
[property] lines.’ Sure enough, they
bought it! I was so proud. I was about
10 years old.” Most of the farms, he
says, ranged from 50 to 200 acres,
and they sold for $10,000 to $20,000.
The Potwin family moves
to Quechee
“In 1965,” he recalls, “my dad
saw a piece of land in Quechee
with big red barns and 80 acres for
$10,000. He knew it had great potential so he offered to buy it from the
owner, Merle Henderson, if Merle
Continued on page 22
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Page 11
Life’s Transitions: Finding
Your Place as You Age
W
Pam Vernon
hat to Do is the title of an essay that Tim Martin wrote in response
to the series of programs addressing issues of aging presented by
the Quechee Lakes Community Affairs Committee (CAC) to
the Quechee Lakes Landowners Association (QLLA) and the Upper Valley
community. These programs were designed to help families and individuals
make informed decisions and to plan ahead for those “life’s transitions” as we
age. Programs addressed such topics as estate and financial planning, health
care and advance directives, local resources in support of seniors and their
families, and what you need to know if you want to stay at home. Martin, a
Quechee resident, hosted a discussion entitled “Senior Living Options: Finding
Your Place,” a very informative session about senior housing alternatives.
Martin is knowledgeable
and very passionate about
“helping to find the right living
environment for aging family
members.” Martin has devoted
his entire 35-year professional
career to this topic and wants
to share that expertise with the
Quechee community. Martin is
a member of the sub-committee
of the CAC focused on life’s
transitions, and the committee
looks forward to his energy in
moving this group forward in
support of our seniors and their
families.
Peggy and Tim Martin.
Martin and his wife, Peggy,
purchased a condominium in Quechee in 1999 in part because he worked
at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center (then known as Mary Hitchcock
Memorial Hospital) in Lebanon, New Hampshire, in the late seventies and
introduced Peggy to the Upper Valley while he was there. The Martins love
the area for its natural beauty and the ability to get involved in the many
cultural and recreational activities that are made available by Dartmouth
College. Their current plans are to make Quechee their retirement home
for at least the summer months and travel the country in a motorhome during the winter. Their son, Chris, 35, lives and works in Portland, Oregon,
and their daughter, Hannah, 34, lives and works in the Boston area. The
Martins have lived in Quechee full-time since 2013, and recently moved
from their condo to a house.
A New England native—Martin is originally from Augusta, Maine—
most of his career in health care and senior living has been in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. He worked to develop rural health clinics for the
indigent population (in Pennsylvania actually), in administration at 75-bed
hospital in Caribou, Maine and at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
(when he met Peggy, a leader in her field of health care risk management)
and for a community-housing program for the elderly in Brighton, Massachusetts. The bulk of his career was spent directing the Milton Residences
for the Elderly and the Milton Fuller Housing Corp., non-profit housing
and real estate management companies in Milton, Massachusetts. In 2009,
he was appointed president/CEO of Taylor Community, a continuing care
retirement community (CCRC) in Laconia, New Hampshire. Martin has
always worked for non-profit organizations. He tells me that “the thread of
helping is at his core,” and is stimulated by the challenges of business decisions and strategic planning, but within the context of helping people. That
is what motivates him. He is now the administrator of The Woodlands at
Alice Peck Day (APD) an independent living facility which is part of Alice
Peck Day Health Systems in Lebanon New Hampshire.
With retirement in 2013, and the decision to live full-time in Quechee,
Martin took up another line of work—if briefly. He stopped by Jake’s
Quechee Market on Route 4 when the Kerrigan family was working to
Continued on page 26
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Page 12
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
AROUND TOWN
LAW OFFICES OF
Steven R. Saunders, PLC
[email protected]
2029 Quechee Main Street
P.O. Box 1221
Quechee, VT 05059
Tel: (802) 295-3000
Fax: (802) 295-6344
The Law Offices of Steven R. Saunders, PLC are located on Quechee Main
Street, with a focus on legal services related to real estate transactions, estate planning
and probate matters. We enjoy working with the different real estate brokers who make
up our local real estate community, and are dedicated to providing our clients with individualized attention to their specific needs.
There’s Still Time to Join the
Quechee Ski Team
The Quechee Alpine Ski Club
(aka The Quechee Ski Team) is an
opportunity for children ages 7 to 18
to participate in alpine ski racing. Led
by an experienced coaching staff, the
Quechee Ski Team is for children who
love to ski and provides them with the
chance to improve their skiing skills,
while learning how to race. Racers are
placed in one of five different levels
depending on their age and ability.
There’s no racing experience required
to join the team, but skiers need to be
comfortable skiing all types of terrain.
Younger skiers must be able to get on
and off the chairlift unassisted.
As a member of the United
States Ski and Snowboard Association (USSA) and the Mid-Vermont
Council of the Vermont Alpine
Racing Association (VARA), the
Quechee Ski Team participates in
racing events with teams from Killington, Middlebury, Okemo, Pico and
Suicide Six. Quechee hosts four to six
USSA and VARA-sanctioned races
during the season. Our parent volunteers maintain a consistent reputation
for organizing and running successful
races.
Our regular season kicks off with
a Holiday Week Camp. Training and
races happen on the weekends during January, February and into the
beginning of March. During February
Vacation we have training and sponsor the Quechee Cup where teams
comprised of racers and their families
compete.
Registration begins October 1 for
returning racers and mid-October for
new racers.
Please feel free to contact us at
any time for information including
registration costs, program levels,
and general information at www.
quecheeskiteam.com or contact
Administrative Director Anne Clemens, [email protected] or call
(802) 356-3453.
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
QUECHEE GARDEN CLUB
Joan Baret
B
y now, the summer
is
a
distant
memory, but it
was a great summer
for the Garden Club.
Several members and
friends walked the
Ottaquechee Trail with
FOOT (Friends of the
Ottaquechee Trail)
founder and Garden Club
member Sheila Armen.
The Club kicked off
its 2015-2016 season
with a great presentation by Vermont TV and
Radio personality, Charlie Nardozzi. He talked
about the subject of his
latest book, “Foodscaping.” He reminded us
that we can mix up flowJoanne Roth and Linda Fisher chat with speaker Charlie
ers and shrubs with ediNardozzi.
bles. In October, Master
Gardener Ben Pauly spoke about the Woodstock Inn’s farm-to-table program.
He talked about “Kelly Way,” the Inn’s working gardens.
Events planned by
the club for the months
November through
the spring include floral designing, holiday
decorations and workshops and rock garden
designs.
All programs are
held at the Quechee
Club on the first
Thursday of each
month. Email us at
quecheegardenclub@
gmail.com for more
information. We wel- Joanne Roth and Linda Fisher chat with speaker Charlie
Nardozzi.
come new members!
Finally, in the middle of winter, it’s nice to take a look back at the beautiful
gardens created and maintained by Club members. Many thanks to all our community gardeners. n
The Memorial Garden at the Green, maintained by Marny Kaufman and others.
Page 13
1820 Quechee Main Street
P.O. Box 213
Quechee, VT 05059
e-mail: [email protected]
fax: 802-296-6696
SINGLE FAMILY HOMES
Quintessential “ Vermont farm house.”
Built in 2000, with 200+ acres. There are
open meadows, ponds and a small orchard. The home features a chefs kitchen
with a 10 burner stove, 4 door refrigeration, convection oven, walk in pantry and
full baking area. The master suite is very
large and includes an office, fireplace,
sitting area, custom walk in closet, marble steam shower and large bath. There
are 2 guest rooms, a formal living room,
glass lined dinning area, family room and
a large wine cellar, and a total of 4 fireplaces along. Restored large, two story
barn with plenty of room for horses and
animals. This property is broker owned.
QUECHEE/POMFRET $2,350,000
Located along a private tree canopied drive, this 4 bedroom, 6 bath home is situated on four
big view acres. On one side is the Quechee Ski Hill, and on the other the Highland Golf
Course, and a lovely apple orchard. Magnificent 10 room Alpine Log Home has more than
8,000 square feet of living space with large ruggedly elegant rooms. There are 4 fireplaces
including 2 impressive soaring fieldstone fireplaces. 2 home offices, loads of storage space, a
wine cellar, a sun room, and decks across the entire view sides of the house, with built in hot
tub, all adding to the function and luxury you will enjoy. Long range views of the Quechee
Valley. QUECHEE $2,500,000
Thoughtfully placed on 4.3 acres, both
the house and the extra large deck
enjoy splendid views. The custom
kitchen is truly the heart of this home
with it’s high end appliances and
granite counters and cherry cabinetry,
and an open floor plan. Perfect for
entertaining friends and family or quiet
nights alone. There are 5 bedrooms, and
5 baths, with the master suite being on
the main floor. The lower walk-out level
has a full wet bar, large game room, and
wood stove with stone hearth. A quality
built home to enjoy for years to come.
QUECHEE $750,000
View, Location, Comfort, This house
has it all and is only a golf cart ride
or walk to the club. Over 3700 square
feet and more than an acre of land.
The blue stone Patio is a great place to
enjoy the views and a casual meal with
friends. Inside, the kitchen is a pleasure
to work in with plenty of space. The
dining room, with fireplace, is located
between the kitchen and the large
sunny living room. With the master
suite and office also on the main floor,
the home is perfect for one-levelliving. QUECHEE 695,000
Located on desirable Royall Tyler Road
this thoughtfully designed and custom
built home is ready to welcome new
owners. With over 4700 square feet of
finished space, five bedrooms and four
and a half baths, large living and dining,
and family rooms, there is generous
space for everyone. The eat-in kitchen
has cherry cabinets and granite surfaces.
There is a screened in porch and large
deck for outdoor relaxing and dining.
This one is designed for comfort. A
great home at a good value. This one
wont last long. Extra lot available.
QUECHEE $675,000
Built in 2003 this wonderful home
features
beautiful
wood
work
throughout, a 2 story field stone
fireplace and lots of windows. Open
spaces and flow. 4 bedrooms and 4.5
baths including a master suite on the
main level. Great room, family room,
attached 2 car garage and a large deck
overlooking a lush back yard. over 4000
sq/ft of finished space. QUECHEE
$450,000
This 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath home is nestled
between two additional lots and 3.74 contiguous acres of wooded land. Lots of space
and upgrades including an attached 2 car
garage, newly completed deck, stone patio,
enclosed porch and a gazebo. The roof is
about 5 years new. Inside you will find two
propane fireplaces, and a VT Castings gas
stove. There is an ensuite Master is one of
the newer additions and comes complete
with it’s own walk in closet, bathroom,
propane fireplace and radiant heated floor.
QUECHEE $385,000
What a charming, well cared for
property, lots of exposed wood and the
wonderful smell that goes with it. The
living room has a large wood burning
fireplace and cathedral ceiling. The
kitchen is fun and cheery. All three
bedrooms have their own baths and
plenty of space. There is a wonderful
screened in porch and a handy fenced in
yard so go ahead and bring the dog. This
sweet, cozy, home is a great buy, priced
way below assessed and appraised value.
Better hurry. QUECHEE $187,500
Close to the Quechee grade school
and a walk to the village with 3
bedrooms and 2 baths, this is a cozy
home with fireplace and about 1900
sq/ft of finished space. There is a
nice lawn and garden space. Relaxing
private deck for cook-outs. Priced
below assessed and appraised value.
QUECHE $149,000
THANK YOU FOR MAKING 2015 AN AMAZING YEAR FOR
SALES & RENTALS
802-295-1999
800-639-5110
www.QuecheeHomes.com
With more than 6 and a half acres
this lovely home is a wonderful house
for entertaining friends and family.
The large eat-in kitchen has granite
counters and is filled with light. With
dining, living, den, and master suite
on the main floor you can enjoy one
floor living. The large lot has views to
be enjoyed from the house and decks
and sun room. A cozy little tea house
sits beside the driveway and could
be used for many purposes. This is a
special home and should be seen to be
appreciated. QUECHEE $795,000
Light and open custom designed home.
Completely rebuilt in 2001 with an eye
for quality and detail. 3 bedroom, 2.5
bath. Living, dining, and kitchen open
to one another and to the mahogany
deck facing long range views. Expansive master suite on the upper floor with
guest and family spaces on the lower
level, including extras like the screened
in porch and an extra hobby/exercise/
game room or 4th bedroom. Privacy and
convenience along with quality, space
and great views. QUECHEE $699,000
One of the grand old farms of it’s day.
Built in 1850, sitting on over 5 1/2 acres.
Numerous bedrooms, 3 full baths and
almost 4600 sq/ft of finished space. The
home is filled with lots of potential. The
barns are currently producing income by
renting storage space on a year round
basis. Take a look at this wonderful
home and see all that it has to offer.
QUECHE NON-QLLA $600,000
Convenient location close to school
and a short drive to the Village. This
home has a private location tucked into
the edge of the trees for privacy. There
is a fireplace in the living room, sunny
dining room and 2 bedrooms, 2 baths
and work spaces spread out onto 3
floors. The side porch is a good place for
grilling while the back deck is a good
place to get out of the sun when you
want to. QUECHEE $199,999
A very happy holiday
and joyous new year
from our family to yours.
CONDOS & TOWNHOMES
Beautiful Vale condo- 3 bedroom, 3.5
baths in excellent condition. Open floor
plan, hardwood floors, chef ’s kitchen, gas
fireplace, deck. Master suite on main level.
Upstairs are two bedrooms and a full bath.
Lower level has a family room and another
full bath. Located a short walk to the village
green, post office, library and Simon Pearce.
QUECHEE $350,000
Ridge condo with great views. Large 3
bedroom, 3+ bath town homes. Wood
floors, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, open
kitchen and more. Has a large loft with a
3/4 bath.Two decks to enjoy the view and
desirable end unit location. QUECHEE
$195,000
Saltbox Village condo with master bedroom on main floor! Second bedroom/bath
and loft upstairs. Beautiful views from the
living room, bedrooms and the back patio.
Nicely maintained condo with wood floors,
open floor plan, and a pellet stove. A single
car detached garage is included! Pleasant
walk to the Library and Quechee Village.
QUECHEE $95,000
Two Mill Run condos to choose from.
Both 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, and end units.
They have been updated through out with
new floors, kitchen, doors, paint, lighting,
appliances and more. These units offer an
open floor plan, vaulted ceilings and a nice
deck. QUECHEE $79,500 & $84,900
LAND & LOTS
D
UCE
D
E
R
A sweet 3 bedroom cape with pine
floors, located on a nice parcel in the
center of Quechee Village. 1100 sq/
ft of finished space. An easy walk to
the Library and the Village Green
and Simon Pearce. Priced below the
assessed value this is a great home at
a great buy. QUECHE $99,500
Spectacular views.!! Water, mountains, meadows, red barns, 2 states and more. Red Barn
Farms has it all and you can be a part of it. You can purchase a home site and build your
dream home in this lovely community. The infrastructure is in place and the first home
is nearing completion. Give us a call and come take a look. QUECHEE NON-QLLA
$377,000 to $397,000
R US IN SALES. WE TRULY APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS.
Page 16
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Safety and Information for Quechee Ski Area – continued from page 1
Whether you are dreaming of a new home, a renovation or
addition to your existinghome, or expanding your office space,
making your dream a realityis only a phone call away!
NEW HOME CONSTRUCTION • ADDITIONS • RENOVATIONS
WWW.BOYNTONCONSTRUCTION.NET
Dedication plaque at the top of the chair lift.
skiers will be adding information to
their recreation, even accessing realtime readings online. Ken Lallier,
property manager for Quechee Lakes
Landowners Association, describes
the new equipment. “The station
measures temperature, wind speed
and direction, and barometric pressure. And rain.” Rain?!? “Well,” he
explains, “a machine can’t measure
snow, not accurately.” Ski area personnel keep a running total of new
snow through the season, and the
area now has 100 percent snowmaking coverage.
When it started, the area relied on
natural snow, but now has fan guns
that use a relatively small amount
of compressed air, making them
cheaper to run. They put out big piles
of snow, which are then distributed
with snow machines. Machine-made
snow is more durable than natural
snow. Those who remember the early
days of snowmaking, when heaps of
ice were an all-too-common occurrence, appreciate today’s sophisticated and effective guns.
Living Quechee’s Ski
History
Trachtenberg has been involved
with Quechee skiing almost from
its beginning. He bought property
in Quechee around 1971, when the
Quechee Ski Area opened. He had
grown up in New York City, so he
“hadn’t done a whole lot of skiing.”
When he married a Boston girl and
realized he was going to be spending a lot of time in New England, he
looked around for winter entertainment and took up skiing.
Trachtenberg’s friend Lenny Berliner joins the conversation, noting that he and his wife, Rochelle,
bought land in Quechee around the
same time, but didn’t build for several
years. The two men have become
good friends, and have traveled “all
over the place—out west, Europe” for
skiing. “We’ve probably skied every
area in Vermont,” says Berliner.
“And of Ski Magazine’s national top
25, we’ve probably skied 20.”
Over the years Trachtenberg has
seen evolution on the ski slopes.
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
“The
biggest
change is snowboards,” he notes,
“and also the design
of skis has changed
dramatically. Even
at my tender age of
80, I’m skiing better! Of course, the
snowmaking and
grooming help.”
Berliner adds, “We
were taught a lot in
beginner-ski classes.
Now it’s about skiing parallel as soon
The vests were made with the logo Z80, which stands for what the
as possible, but we
kids call him “zayde” Yiddish for grandfather.
learned the snowplow and Stem Christi. When you got in trouble, you had something to fall
back on. Patrollers have to snowplow and sideslip to get a toboggan down.”
At Quechee, people realized early on that the lack of a ski patrol was a
hazard. “My son and I took the American Red Cross first aid course,” says
Trachtenberg. “That was about it for training back then.” Trachtenberg is an
anesthesiologist, but his expertise in the operating room did not supply most
of the information he needed on the ski hill. The non-profit National Ski
Patrol, founded in 1938, is the “go-to” organization for the necessary training
and systems. Their Outdoor Emergency Care courses (“a training program…
tailored to the non-urban rescuer”) teach emergency management as well as
first aid. Their programs and techniques have grown over the years, in sophistication as in number. There are now over 28,000 members serving more
than 650 patrols. At Quechee, Russ McClennan was the first Patrol director,
followed by Nancy Schwartz, and then Dave Courtney, the current director.
“We’ve both been patrollers for 30 plus years, and I’ve been the medical director,” says Trachtenberg. “I’m officially retired now,” interjects Berliner, and Trachtenberg adds, “I’m hanging on by a thread.” Both men laugh.
Nowadays most of the volunteer patrollers are EMTs recruited among local
fire and police, and medical personnel from the hospitals. One lure to the
job is the season’s passes for the patroller’s family, but recruiting volunteers
can still be a challenge.
Most accidents on the hill are minor. Trachtenberg recalls being summoned from the hill to the Clubhouse where a wedding was in progress and
the mother of the bride had fainted. On occasion the patrol has had to evacuate the chairlift. “We have a procedure we practice every year,” he says. One
Martin Luther King weekend they had to evacuate the quad chair, which
they managed to do in an hour.
“The ski patrol is great because it not only gets you out and about, but it’s a
really nice group of people,” says Trachtenberg. “Wherever you go, patrollers
are a great group. Here you can know everybody, and we’ve had that privilege
for over 35 years.” With another big smile he adds, “There’s no place like
Quechee and Vermont for skiing.” n
Page 17
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Page 18
MEET THE SCIBETTA FAMILY
Cindy and Dan
Rosemarie and Lou
Rosemarie: My favorite Quechee
memory is the joyous, noisy conversation that comes from our kitchen
when all 21 “kids” – including
spouses and eleven grandchildren
are together. Quechee has been a
magnet for our family gatherings.
Lou: My favorite Quechee memory is “driving up from New Jersey after retirement, meeting new
friends, and feeling the gift of this
community where everyone was
pleasant, accommodating and downto-earth. This led to us moving to
Quechee full-time 15 years ago.
Cindy and Dan: On New Year’s
Eve 1988 at midnight at the top of the
Quechee Ski Hill, my husband, Dan,
asked me to marry him. It was cold and
snowy outside and we loved the short
walk from Kingswood 7B to the top of
the ski hill. When he asked me to spend
the rest of my life with him, I said a very
loud “YES!”…and then I did many
cartwheels in the snow to celebrate our
engagement. I was a gymnast, so this
seemed perfectly normal for me to do,
even in the snow! Dan had asked my
dad for my hand in marriage earlier that
day, so when we returned to the condo,
there were champagne glasses waiting for us. We toasted our engagement
with my parents and my brother Paul
and his wife Colleen, who had married
earlier that year. We still have about 10
years before we officially retire and we
have already decided that we will retire
in Quechee! Dan and I want to recreate the same memories for our grandchildren that we were lucky enough to
have with our own children.
Maddy and Danielle
Maddy: We LOVE Lou and
Rosie’s spectacular home and my
Grandmother’s impressive berm.
(Berm: a flat strip of land, raised
bank, or terrace—in case your
Grandma wasn’t an English teacher
like mine). It has the most vibrant
flowers and, come August, it provides boundless blueberries for pancake breakfasts. One of my favorite
memories of Quechee is a year or
two after Rosie and Lou moved
into 94 Vista Drive, when the berm
was in its infancy, and during my
butterfly-obsessed phase. Rosie let
me research, design and create a
butterfly garden at the base of her
beloved berm! A lifelong teacher to
the core, Rosie helped me research
which plants to buy and understand
the Feng shui of butterfly gardens
for optimal Monarch sightings.
Quechee has contributed to my
love of the nature, learning, and our
crazy, wonderful Scibetta clan.
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For more information please visit our website or call
802-448-2852
www.killdeerfarm.com
Colleen and Paul
Paul: My favorite memory is taking a balloon ride above Quechee
with my Mom for her 70th birthday
celebration!
Dr. Eugene J. Bernal
Dr. Sandra K. Dufour
Dr. Nicholas A. Pittman
Dr. Johni L. Curts
Locally Grown Fresh
Produce, and Much More.
Growing, producing and purveying outstanding, fresh
seasonal food, plants, and flowers with a commitment
to certified organic and sustainable agricultural
practices for over 30 years.
Danielle: My favorite Quechee
memory is playing games, especially
Phase 10 and Bananagrams. I love
playing games and there is always a
group ready to play. We sat around
the coffee table in the family room,
on the couch and on the floor, making room for whoever wanted to join
in. Sometimes it was a big group and
sometimes small. We played for hours
and hours, taking tiny breaks to eat,
get a snack or visit with the Kuhns,
Heimarcks, or Goldsteins, who would
stop by to see everyone. It didn’t
really matter who won. It was just
fun being together since we all live
in different places and didn’t get to
see each other that often. Grandma
always played games with us and still
does, even when she is fixing an elaborate dinner for 25 people that night!
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The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Colleen: I love Fourth of July at
the lake. For many years we lived
oversees where there are no traditional U.S. celebrations. Celebrating
the 4th at the lake reunited with family watching the fireworks has always
been a very special time for me.
Susan and Tom
Tom and Susan: Our favorite memory of Quechee is stargazing in mom
and dad’s back yard with the entire family—seeing shooting stars, pointing out
different constellations and seeing the
satellites fly by
Sam and Lucas
Sam (grandson): I have two favorite Quechee memories: I remember
when I was very young, sitting on
the couch in Quechee looking at
pictures with Grandma rubbing her
elbows. I know that sounds funny but
I thought she had the softest elbows
in the world! I also have a very special memory of going to the driving
range with Grandpa. Afterwards he
was always so nice and would bring
us and introduce us to all of his
friends!
Lucas (grandson): “When I was
little I loved sitting on Grandpa’s lap
in the golf cart with his arms around
me. He would stop to talk to so many
people. He made me feel important
and special. That is what Grandpa is
good at, making you feel special.”
childhood to exciting announcements
about our futures. We always find our
way back to at least one delicious meal
in Grandma’s kitchen every holiday.
Something about simply enjoying each
other’s company over some lasagna or
salmon brings me so much ease and joy.
There is nothing better than ending a
day full of adventures in Quechee than
sitting at the Scibetta dinner table.
Catherine (granddaughter): My
favorite Quechee memory by far is all
of those that come with being a camp
counselor for two years and truly becoming a part of the lovely Quechee community! The camp has a wonderfully
enriching and uplifting atmosphere for
campers and counselors alike - I will
always cherish the time I spent as a part
of something so meaningful.
Grace (granddaughter): My favorite Quechee memories are being in ski
school and on the swim team.
Alijah (granddaughter): My favorite
Quechee memory is being at the balloon festival, as well as times our family
has spent together in Vermont.
Caleb (grandson): My favorite
Quechee memory is learning to ski and
snowboard on the Quechee hill.
Annie, Catherine, Grace, Alijah,and Caleb
Annie (grandaughter): My favorite memory in Quechee is the many
family dinners we have sitting around
Grandma and Grandpa’s extra long
table in the kitchen. We can go for
hours at this table overlooking their
backyard, which will either be covered
in a thick blanket of snow or rolling with
hay and blooming buds in Grandma’s
berm. I simply love listening and telling
our favorite stories from the past at that
table. A lot is revealed at our dinners
from mischievous stories of our parents’
Linda and Jim
Page 19
Jim: My favorite Quechee memory is twenty years of New Year’s Eve
celebrations with the granddaughters, starting at ages 6 or 7, performing a show at 11 pm. Priceless!
Linda: My favorite Quechee
memory is having Maple Walnut
French Toast at Dana’s By the
Gorge, sometimes with a bunch of
the family along with me, and sometimes alone!
Alex and Andie
Alex (granddaughter): Quechee
is responsible for my love of Vermont, my desire to see my family as
often as I do, my decision to attend
Middlebury College, and my love
for skiing, hiking, camping and the
outdoors.
Andie (granddaughter): My
favorite Quechee memory is snow
tubing down Grandmas and Grandpa’s backyard on a very beautiful,
snowy February afternoon. n
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Page 20
QUECHEE LIBRARY
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his fall a young mother from Brazil visited the library for her family’s first
storytime here. Alice Goldstein, having handled the circulation desk on
Wednesday mornings for more than a decade, has warmly welcomed, and
then grown to know many families from many places. Alice played a particularly
special role as she arranged a meeting for the mother with Fabiola Hammond,
whose children have been among the most ardent of our young library patrons
since their family moved to Hartford several years ago.
These are the occasions that don’t neatly fall into any category but that energize library staff, volunteer and professional, as the changing seasons continue.
On November 1, Nick Clemens, our technical services librarian for the past five
years, began a new job that takes fuller advantage of his computer programming
skills and yet keeps him in the library world. He will continue to live in Hartland
with his wife Kristi and son Liam as he
will work remotely for ByWater, a library
support company. Happily, it is the support company for VOKAL, the Vermont
consortium of 50 libraries and Nick will
stay connected here. He will continue to
lead the science fiction discussion group he
started and which next meets on Monday,
November 23 at 6 pm to discuss Among
Others by Jo Walton.
Because part of Nick’s responsibilities
were to accomplish the now completed conversion to VOKAL for all Hartford libraries, his position has been reconfigured.
There will be several new faces to meet and
welcome to the library community and one
very familiar one. Linda Labriola returns to the library for one busy afternoon a
week, Abby Walsh, a young mother from Sharon with an MLS, will be on duty on
Saturdays; and, rounding out the staff as circulation desk clerks are Jake Kelleher on
Tuesday and Thursday evenings, and Pat Nowlan for the Wilder Club and Library.
Fortunately, Marieke Sperry continues on as assistant librarian with, always, an
array of special children’s programs. Coming up on Wednesday, November 25, is
a perfect sibling morning. There will be a Thanksgiving storytime as usual at 10
am, but downstairs children over the age of 9 and young adults are invited to an
e-textile workshop (10 am to noon) as part of the STEAM grant the library won
last year. Email [email protected] to pre-register or ask any questions.
Halloween was a particularly enjoyable event this year as Paula Pitts donned one of
her many witch hats and drew the winning raffle ticket for the delightful Halloween
quilt she made and donated.
The Friends of the Library will have their annual holiday ornament-making
workshop for kids on Wednesday, December 9 at 3 pm. The keepsakes will delight
for years to come and the afternoon of making is particularly merry. The workshop
is repeated at Wilder Club and Library on Thursday. (Friday, Dec. 11 is the snow
date.)
Kim Zoe Potter has also noted that winter is coming. She’s an artist, new to
town, who is also a knitter and looking forward to the restarting of the library’s
Needleworkers United. With her offer to cross Willard Road from her apartment
on Tuesday evenings to welcome whoever comes, this ensures that the group meetings will resume in January. Charlotte Merrill has some fiber themes planned for
some of those evenings so stay in touch by the website or email.
Popping Our Clogs & Difficult, Valuable Conversations:
Monday, November. 16, 5 pm
Two Upper Valley friends have long conversed about death and have now published a well-reviewed book based on their written conversations since the tragic
murder of two Dartmouth professors. Irene Kacandes (German studies & comparative literature professor) and Steve Gordon met as a result of the violent deaths of
Kacandes’s close friends, Half and Suzanne Zantop. Her tribute to their lives and
ongoing attempts to come to terms with their senseless deaths became the catalyst
for a correspondence and friendship with Steve Gordon. Gordon, who founded
the Hand to Heart Project in 2007 in a mid-career shift from journalism to massage
therapy, will speak at the library. Hand to Heart is a non-profit organization providing massage and compassionate touch to people with advanced cancer.
In the book, Let’s Talk About Death: Asking the Questions That Profoundly
Change the Way We Live and Die, (Prometheus Books, 2015, the format of the book
is an exchange of emailed letters between them over the course of several years on
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
topics related to death, dying and mortality. They explore questions and contexts of
mortality, illness, and how best to live and die from different but complementary
perspectives.
The library will have copies of the book for sale and for borrowing following a
public discussion with Steve Gordon on Monday, November 16 at 5 pm. Steve,
still in many ways a questioning journalist, will welcome questions about massage
therapy, his own mid-career change, and, of course, questions about death and
dying. He and Irene Kacandes were among the first to hold “Café Mortals”, to help
make us more comfortable avoiding the “kick the bucket, pop the clogs” clichés to
talk meaningfully about what we must all face.
Story Walks and Mystery Talks
Tourists and residents alike were in for an extra treat while taking a foliage
walk at the Quechee Gorge. The library did a story walk, choosing Donald Hall’s
wonderful Ox Cart Man for the book to post, page by laminated page, on stakes so
it could be read on the way down to the river. One mother said her four-year-old
son was equally delighted by the story and by the chance discovery of a snake on
the way back up. Olivia Collins made the practical suggestion that a second book
should have been posted to make that climb up more fun too. That’s now a goal
for 2016…with nominations welcome.
Meanwhile, the Monday mystery group will be discussing mysteries by Jane
Haddam and C.C. Benison on December 7. After that discussion leader Charlotte
Merrill plans to delve into historical mysteries in some chronological order. For
January, the group will read books set in ancient Egypt and for February, ancient
Rome. n
Library hours are M,W,F, 10-6, T,Th, 2-7, and Saturday 9-2. Storytime is every
Wednesday at 10 am. Check the website at www.quecheelibrary.org for holiday hours,
snow closings, up to date program information and many electronic resources as well as
the library catalog for reserves and renewals.
Page 21
Quechee Library Events
Every Wednesday at 10 a.m.: Story time at the Quechee LIbrary
Monday, November 16, 5 p.m.: Public talk at Quechee Library with
Steve Gordon, journalist turned massage therapist, about his new book,
Let’s Talk About Death: Asking the Questions that Profoundly Change
the Way We Live and Die.
Monday, November 23, 6 p.m.: Sci Fi Book Discussion at Quechee
Library. Focus is on Among Others by Jo Walton. Books available for
borrowing.
Wed., November 25, 10 a.m.: “E-textiles workshop” for tweens and
teens at the Quechee Library. Email [email protected] for more
information about this STEAM grant program.
Monday, December 7, 4 p.m.: Mystery Book discussion group meets to
talk about C.C. Benison and Jane Haddam.
Wed., December 9, 3 p.m.: Keepsake Ornament Making Workshop at
Quechee Library for kids ages 4-12. (Snow date: Fri., December 11)
Monday, December 28, 6 p.m.: Sci Fi Book Discussion at Quechee
Library focuses on Dream Master by Roger Zelazny
Monday, January 4, 4 p.m.: Mystery Book Discussion group meets to
talk about historical mysteries. See www.quecheelibrary.org for more
information.
Tues., January 5, 6:30 p.m.: Needleworkers Unite. Join knitters and
other fiber workers at the Quechee Library.
Monday, February 1, 4 p.m.: Mystery Book Discussion group meets
to talk about historical mysteries. See www.quecheelibrary.org for more
information.
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Holiday 2015
The Quechee Times
Classically Vermont– continued from page10
would finance it with $1,500 down. My mom said he was crazy, since they
owned almost a thousand acres at the time. Little did they know that John
Davidson was thinking about starting a huge development right next door
at the Quechee Fells Farm. We fixed up the barns and cut all the lumber in
the summer of 1969 to build a five-bedroom farmhouse. My dad always said,
‘Don’t buy lumber if you have the trees.’ I was able to run all the logging
equipment, and learned a lot from my uncle Harold, my dad’s brother, who
was a top-notch carpenter.”
Potwin was delighted to move back to Quechee. What kid wouldn’t want
to live in Quechee, he laughs, when all the kids in town could ski for free?
He put some of the earliest tracks on the hill, he claims, before the chairlift
was running, when he got a ride up the hill in the snowcat. He went to high
school in Hartford and took electrical and building courses.
In the mid-1970s Potwin received his real estate license, but the market
was bad at the time and he turned to selling cars, and also worked as a financial advisor for MetLife and a district sales coordinator for Aflac. There he
became one of the top annuity salesmen. At 19, he married Lynn, and a year
later moved with her into a new house he was building himself. “We moved
into it unfinished, but we loved it since we had no mortgage, and were both
working other jobs.”
Back to his farming roots
Quechee is a microcosm of what some parts of Vermont have become,
observes Potwin. He hopes his farming and farm stand venture will become
self-sustaining, a model for the future, but he knows his success depends
on the support of the community. He’s delighted to share the beauty and
benefits of life in Vermont with those escaping overcrowded places, though
he recognizes—especially since his family has been so intimately involved
with the changes—the potential for the hills to sprout nothing but houses.
“Will it prove to be as in past years that Vermont farm land is more profitable
for growing houses than for growing vegetables?” says Potwin. “I do think
Quechee Lakes was great for Quechee,” he adds. “It put a lot of people to
work and resurrected an old mill town. My dad always said these hills and
woods weren’t much good for anything else but home sites.” n
The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Will the 2016 Heating Season
Be Déjà Vu (All Over Again!)?
Page 23
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The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Page 24
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THE ETHICAL HUNT
H
Ron Dull
unters, like fishermen, love to tell stories. Bill
Moyers wrote, “Once in East Africa, on the shores
of an ancient lake, I sat alone and suddenly it
struck me what community is. It is gathering around a fire
and listening to someone tell us a story,” so light a fire and
listen, Quechee, to lessons learned from an old hunting tale.
I am a hunter, or else I used to be. Now, I find that when
the weather turns cool in the autumn of the year I am simply content wandering around the woods, looking somewhat like Elmer Fudd, and feeling a vague desire to actually
not have to shoot anything. Perhaps I have matured. God forbid!
I have observed a few important things while rambling along in the fields and
forests, which pertain to respect and can help for all of us in getting along.
A few years back I was part of an elite group of five men who were given
the privilege of hunting on Inuit land on the Nunavut Peninsula in northern
Canada. This land was reserved for the native people only and, as the American
Indian believes, you cannot “discover” a place; you can only discover your place
in it.
The chief guide told me one day, “Before my father died, he made me promise
that this land would always be for the people, that only Inuit would walk these
lands, that others would not defile our special place. And now look at what I
have done.” He pointed to distant freighter canoes, which were ferrying my companions between the many islands. “You and your friends are killing our animals,
shooting our geese and eating our fish.” The guide shook his head in self-disgust
and then spit angrily over the side, “like a drug, I and my people now need your
damn money. This is a new century. We cannot continue to exist by living solely
in the old ways. We must change to survive, even though the changes are not
good or easy for us. I wish that you would just leave your American dollars and
go away, but that is not going to happen, is it?” he sneered.
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The Quechee Times
Holiday 2015
Although we continued to fish for trout and char and shot many geese and
ptarmigan during our time in Nunavut, our primary prizes were the huge herd
of caribou which migrate through the tundra during the autumn of the year.
It’s not as easy as National Geographic makes it look. The tundra offers no substantial cover. There is no way to disguise yourself and when you are spotted,
the animals will merely walk or swim away like frighten ducks. All of the game,
which we took during our stay at Camp Tekkeitsertok, went back to the native
people because an Inuit without rod, reel or rifle is a poor man indeed and there
is much scarcity of material goods found in the northernmost villages. In some
ways, while we intruded upon their lives, we also provided a service of food and
money. I still do not know if that was a good trade-off.
There was something, which I noticed almost immediately, about the Inuit.
Whenever there was fresh game for a meal, be it caribou, goose or even arctic
char, our hosts would make a special presentation and give tribute to both the
hunter and the hunted. If, on the other hand, we were served camp food, which
the Inuit demeaned as “groceries,” no such blessing was ever forthcoming. It
was obvious that such provisions were looked down upon. Groceries had no
honor. They were “things.” They were hidden things in metal cans such as
vegetables soft and salty or fruit heavy with sticky syrup. They were dry things
in boxes such as stiff pasta manufactured in New Jersey or rice incarcerated in
cardboard by Texans. They were incongruous things suffocated in heavy cellophane. We were served chickens where no chicken could ever survive and
ate beef that had once grazed on land two thousand miles from this place; all
in their own unique manner frozen, surreal and dead. This was food to fill our
empty stomachs. It was bought with money and had no history. There was no
way to track and remember its life. It was not food for the soul. It was not food,
which you recognized, felt a kinship with or paid for with effort. Food, which is
grown and animals, which are slaughtered by your own hand, have an immeasurable value irrespective of their monetary cost. We see the life before us and
participate in its death and it is the learned lesson of life’s impermanence that
makes the food more precious and honorable to us.
Author Rachel Carson once inferred that hunting can bring you closer to
life for, the more clearly a man can focus his attention on the wonders and
realities of the woods which surround him, the less taste he will display for its
destruction.
So, what was it I personally “discovered” to become an ethical hunter? It was
this. Hunters must respect those who live on the land but the property owners
have an obligation, too. If you do not wish for hunters to be on your property
then it must be posted in accordance with Vermont State law or else the yellow
sign indicating “no hunting” is invalid. Google Vermont Fish and Wildlife for
a full explanation and please do it properly. Secondly, treat the animals of the
land with respect. They are a precious gift from God. Celebrate them. Finally,
tread lightly upon the land and leave nothing but footprints. We neglect it at
our own peril. n
See you in the woods and, please, don’t
shoot at the Elmer Fudd guy wearing orange!
Page 25
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Life’s Calling – Bambi Koeniger– continued from page 8
Quechee! Koeniger is working on what to do with her large collection of
photos from years of taking them.
They began to travel in 2008 with the realization that they could in fact
live the dream of “getting to places all around the world.” They have been to
Africa, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, Bhutan, Myanmar and Iceland. During my
visit with them, John showed me a spectacularly beautiful book of his photographic study of people in Ethiopia.
The Koenigers split their time between their home in Quechee and apartment in Summit, New Jersey. They bought their house in Quechee in 2007
after searching for a home near mountains and water with lots of recreational
opportunities and the cultural richness of a college. “We wanted a place to
relax and be with friends and family in a sacred intimate home space. It has
been just that, a welcoming wonderful environment we call home. It is a quiet
retreat place for us with the opportunity to be in a community that offers many
benefits. We enjoy especially the fitness center, swimming, skiing, hiking,
Upper Valley offerings and….John could not live without the golf courses.”
There were already some family and friends in the area when we moved, but
we are happily expanding our community here in Quechee.” n
Auto • Home • Business
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Page 26
Holiday 2015
The Quechee Times
Life’s Transitions: Finding Your Place as You Age – continued from page 11
Dave Murray Super Senior Club Champion– continued from page 9
get going and thought “I can help out here!” He started with just showing
up and helping—painting, moving things, whatever needed to be done—
and was then hired. His biggest pleasure was working with the customers.
Perhaps you saw Martin there last year—he’s the guy who was always
smiling! This also gave him a nice break and the time to realize that he
wasn’t quite ready to transition out of his career (with help from Peggy
who knew he wasn’t).
Back to “what to do” about the decision as to where and how to live as
we age. Ironically, even though Martin has spent almost his entire career
helping people each and every day address these issues, he and Peggy are
now confronting the same. They are asking questions like: Do we stay at
home in Quechee and still be able to go south to escape the harsh winters and pay rising property taxes? Move to a senior community or retirement community close to friends, perhaps closer to family—a place like the
Woodlands or Kendal? Move in with one of the kids? What services will we
need and how will we get them?
Martin says, “I have spent most of my career listening, watching and
waiting for the questions that people have; contemplating a change of lifestyle is not easy. Moving is not easy. It is important to do the homework
and think about options. The good news is that there is lots of information
available from groups like LeadingAge, AARP, the VNAs, the QLLA CAC
and private consultants there to help, but it can be overwhelming.” His
advice is “not to assume that ‘aging in place’ is the only or the best option,
and involve family and important friends in the decision process. They may
influence and assist, but ultimately, we will decide the best place for us.
Martin also says, “If you are thinking about moving, move when you can,
not when you have to. ”
For the Martins, they do believe that after spending 36-years together
they are home here in Quechee. Winters in Palm Desert, California, and
summers in Quechee seem pretty good. Like the license plate on the motor
home, they too are looking ahead toward their NXTCHPT. n
and a great way to expend youthful energy. They also play basketball on the
Quechee court.
Murray moved to the Upper Valley 28 years ago with his artist wife, Maevis, and their two children, when he changed careers from academia to insurance brokering. Currently his daughter, Shane, manages the Allstate office
in West Lebanon, with some business support from Murray.
The roots of his passion for golfing
Murray’s passion for golf began at age ten as a caddy at the Albany Country Club in Voorheesville, New York.
He explains that he found ways to play as much golf as he could. College
and graduate school at Syracuse University limited the amount he played,
and the cost. He remembers not having a sand wedge and using his wedge
when he was in his late twenties because he couldn’t afford one.
Murray got involved with the Vermont Golf Association, based in Rutland, which is the organization that regulates all U.S. Golf Association rules
and regulations, supporting all member clubs. Other responsibilities include;
course ratings, handicap systems, tournament and program planning, including youth play.
Murray claims he watched golf on television much more when Tiger
Woods was in his prime, “a sensation in the golf world, for sure. Golf seems to
be a dying sport, lately,” he says. Now he relentlessly cheers for the Patriots,
and also football for his alma mater, the University of Notre Dame.
He would rather not talk about himself. Raised in a solid, Catholic family in
Albany, his sense of giving, his work ethic, his loyalty, his humility and sense
of duty were germinated in this environment. His education at the University
of Notre Dame contributed to his proclivity to be a force of good in the world.
His great joy and purpose right now, besides golf and immediate family, is his
contribution to the growth and development of his grandchildren, including
Kyle. When in Florida this winter he will look for opportunities where he might
contribute in some way to other school children. n
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INCLUDES SEPARATE, SUBDIVIDABLE,
ADJACENT 1-ACRE LOT. $232,000.
Lakeland Village 1D and 6D – The closest Village to the
Quechee Club, adjacent to the Highland and Lakeland Golf
Courses and an easy walk to Lake Pinneo and all amenities.
Two end units, each with 3BR/2 full baths, A/C, electric and
gas heat and sold mostly furnished. Both units significantly
updated. Great values @ $189,000 – $219,000.
829 Baker Turn – Superb location near top of the ski mountain & golf cart ride to the Quechee Club. Level lot with
plenty of sunshine. Spacious home w/open floor plan,
3BR/2BA, oversized decks & huge screened porch. Two car
garage with front to back bonus room w/full bath. Wonderful
opportunity listed below assessed value. $249,900.
Fairway 4D & 6D – A most picturesque Village.
#6D-2BR/1.5BA, furnished & priced to sell @$115,000.
#4D-2BR/2BA end unit w/deck overlooking the 6th
hole of Highland, Ottauquechee River & western exposure for lovely sunsets. Hrdwd floors & stone fireplace,
$159,000. furn. Both units have golf cart storage sheds.
R
DE ACT
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75 Naulahka – If you are looking for total privacy and
like living in the treetops, you must see this house.
This 3BR/3BA home sits on a 1 acre parcel but offers
2 contiguous lots of about 1 acre each that could be
sold if you wanted to. Convenient to the Polo field,
Deweys Pond and the entire Upper Valley. Asking
price of $125,000., less than assessed value!
Herb Hart
Sales
469 Baker Turn – Wonderful corner lot contemporary home w/southern exposure and mountain
views. This 4BR/3.5BA home has substantial wrap
around decks, stone fireplace, nice yard, window
quilts throughout, hard wood flooring on main level,
skylights, updated kitchen w/granite and ample
space for guests. Great opportunity for the next family as this is the original owner. $349,900.
Coach Road 5A – An outstanding unit in Coach Road
Village with beautiful views of the 13th Fairway. The
ultimate in townhouse living. Over 2700 sq. ft. Of elegant
living space. Kitchen w/breakfast area, sun-space dining
room, 3 oversized BR/3.5BA, jacuzzi, fireplace in master
BR and living room. One car attached garage, walk to
Quechee Club, pool and tennis courts. Beautifully
kept, many upgrades. Move in condition $339,000.
Fox Hollow 10B & 8C – Our premier townhouse village
graces the perimeter of the Lakeland Golf Course w/
views of Lake Pinneo. Phase I - #10B offers 3BR/3.5BA,
loft, vaulted ceilings, sauna, jacuzzi, 3,000 sq. ft. and a
new roof - $320,000, furnished. Phase II -#8C offers the
finest details w/4BR/3.5BA, hardwood floors, granite
counters, stainless steel appliances, private courtyard &
1 car garage. Quality throughout $435,000.
163 Fox Lane - One of the great values of 2015! This wonderful
property works for primary or second home owner. Nestled in
the tall trees w/great curb appeal, this "Cottage Like" property
offers 3BR/2.5BA, loft, family room/recreation room, vaulted
ceilings, fireplace, 2 wood stoves, beautiful screened porch, large
mud room, attic & 2 car garage with storage above. Spacious
eat-in kitchen w/large bay window overlooking the back yard.
Hardwood floors on main level w/open deck off living room.
Master BR on main level w/private bath. Priced way below
assessed value & ready for immediate occupancy! $189,000.
696 Deweys Mills Road - An exceptional Vermont Country
Estate with a rich history dating back to circa 1860! Wonderful
private setting surrounded by stone walls, majestic trees &
tranquility, h 7BR/4BA, 5 fireplaces, original hardwood floors,
country kitchen & formal dining room. This residence allows
for a family home, home occupation, Bed and Breakfast or
other multiple options. Beautifull grounds & landscaping, short
walk to Quechee Gorge, Dewey's Lake & the Quechee Polo
Field. Furnishings are negotiable. $845,000.
Sales
648 Morgan Road – For the discriminative buyer. An extraordinary house that has been completely renovated with an
in-door heated pool! A custom designed gourmet kitchen w/
large island, granite counter tops & stainless steel appliances.
Beautiful Brazilian cherry flooring leads you into a spacious
living room enhanced by 2 fireplaces, vaulted ceilings and a
wet bar. The expansive windows on the south west portion of
this room offer wonderful light & views into a lovely peaceful
setting. Beautiful stone walls, landscaping and patio area.
The lower level offers 2 additional fireplaces and a walk-out
to the terrace. This house offers 4 bedrooms and 4.5 baths,
all of which are completely remodeled w/limestone counters, maple vanities & heated tile flooring. Words simply cannot describe the detailed work in this property. Property
includes a second lot. A must see, one of a kind! $699,000.
1968 Hillside Road – This 4BR/5BA spacious, unique
Country home sits on a beautifully landscaped 2.99 acre
lot w/western exposure & spectacular sunsets! Great
country kitchen/family room w/wood stove. Beautiful
views from the brick-floored sunroom surrounded by
terraced landscaping. Large sunken living room w/
fireplace & expansive windows. Wrap-around deck w/
patio, gazebo, w/hot-tub & a pond with waterfall. 2
master bedroom suites-one on main level w/cathedral
ceiling & private bath, the other upstairs w/private
bath, & 2 add’l br’s & separate bath. Easy access to
Quechee Club & a short ride to Woodstock. A special
offering. Priced @ $599,000
70 Vista Drive - Stunning Farmstead property located off
Hillside Rd. offers open meadows on 5.49 acres w/180
degree views of the Quechee Valley. Custom designed
kitchen, granite & red birch cabinetry. Double sinks, SubZero refrigerator, Miele dishwasher, Viking stove, Kitchen
Aid wall oven & microwave. First floor master bedroom w/
full bath & adjacent den/library w/fireplace. Additional
full bath on first floor. Pine flooring in dining & living
room. Fireplace w/woodstove. Sitting room off kitchen has
woodstove & radiant heat. Two guest rooms upstairs w/full
bath & sitting area. Large family room has woodstove, wet
bar, & refrigerator. Additional unfinished room w/plumbing, wiring, studding & AC hookup for 4th bedroom &
bath. Basement has 2 finished rooms. Viessmann oil fired
boiler w/13 zones for baseboard & radiant heat. Oversized
3 stall garage w/radiant heat. Central vacuum, intercom, &
AC throughout house. Detached 19x30 barn w/power.
Security system for main dwelling & barn. $879,000.
LD
SO
218 Hopson Road, Norwich - 3BR/3.5BA in prime location. Listed @$399,000.
Andy Hunnewell
Rental
Karl Tessier
Rental
Terri Patterson
Office Manager
Landmark 3B -Superb location overlooking the 3rd tee of
Highland Golf Course. Townhouse offers 3BR/2.5 BA, large loft,
oversized deck & attic storage space. Being offered fully furnished w/personal exceptions. Electric golf cart included. Nice
views of Ski Mtn. & 5 minute walk to Lake Pinneo, 10 minute
walk to Quechee Club. Location, Location, Location! $187,500.
Kingswood – Ski On/Ski Off – Terrific
Values!! Move in condition with outstanding locations on our Ski Mtn. 2 BR, 3BR and
1.5 – 2.5 BA, fully furnished and priced to
sell. $89,000 - $100,000
475 Jay Hill – This 3 bedroom/2.5 bath contemporary is
on a level, lightly wooded lot with nice southern exposure. The living room has a cathedral ceiling, magnificent
stone fireplace, wonderful open concept and a slider to a
10 x 26 west facing deck. In addition there is a one-car
attached garage with direct access. $169,900.
35 Austin Way – Priced well below assessed value, this home offers an
abundance of space. There are two large living rooms, a large den
and an enclosed porch in addition to four bedrooms and 2.5 baths.
Large open concept kitchen/dining area with hardwood flooring on
the main and upper levels. Ideal as a vacation home for entertaining
family and guests or as a primary residence. Priced @ $199,000.
702 Quechee Hartland Road – Beautiful circa 1800
Federal Home with rear ell. 4BR/3BA , large eat-in
kitchen, butlers pantry, stone terrace & patio, multiple
fireplaces, with 4+/- acres. Several outbuildings for a
variety of uses. Beautiful grounds surrounded on 3 sides by
stunning and ancient stone walls. Multiple uses - primary
residence, second home or a delightful Bed and Breakfast!
A very special property that exudes character. $689,000.
60 Deer Path Lane – MOTIVATED SELLER! This home is situated on a private lot with an outstanding yard for children to play,
including many perennial gardens & stone walls. It offers good
size with two living rooms, one w/fireplace, 3 BR/3BA and large
back deck that is ideal for entertaining family & friends. The Master bedroom has a bonus room that can be used as an office
or den. Recent improvements include new Security System, roof,
interior/exterior paint & hardwood flooring! Priced @ $179,000.
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120 Quechee West Hartford Road - A very rare offering in Quechee Lakes. A 1902 farmhouse w/barn
and shed on 3+ acres of beautiful open meadow. nice
porch on front and room for garden close to house.
This 3BR/2BA house was renovated recently and
ready to move into and enjoy. $319,000.
Deere Run 9A - Excellent end unit w/Air conditioning, Jacuzzi and oversized wrap around deck. Move
in condition & being offered fully furnished w/personal exceptions. terrific floor plan for families or
multiple couples. 4BR/3BA & family room. Overlooking Lakeland golf course & Lake Pinneo.
Private swimming pool & 2 tennis courts for owners
to enjoy! $224,000.
Ridge 1B – Three bedroom, three bath condominium in pristine condition and being sold fully furnished with few exceptions. Outstanding views of
Lake Pinneo, the Quechee Ski Hill, Highland and
Lakeland golf courses and the mountains beyond.
Beautiful village with an on site in ground pool make
this a special offering. Owner has outstanding vacation rental history on file. $229,000.
Newton Village 2B, 6B, 13B – Three of the finest townhouses currently being offered. Phase 1 #2B-immaculate
2BR/2.5BA w/open mainlevel, 2 fireplaces,wood floors &
fully furnished @169,000. Phase 2 #6B-meticulously
maintained w/the finest details. 4BR/3Ba, A/C, oak
flooring, cherry cabinets, granite, views & mostly furnished. A must see @$399,000. #13B- Another must see,
turnkey, townhouse w/all the finest finishes. A 4BR/3BA,
private unit w/approx 2500 sq.ft. Offered mostly furnished. Views, pool & tennis on site @ $435,000.
SALES 888-654-9560 • 802-295-7525 / RENTALS: 800-745-0042 • 802-295-1970 / FAX 802-296-6852
E-MAIL: [email protected] • ROUTE 4, QUECHEE, VT 05059
CHECK
CHECK US
US OUT
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Quechee Lakes Real Estate Center
Happy
Specializing in Quechee Lakes Properties Since 1968
Charlie Bacon
Sales
Maureen Bacon
Sales
Carol Dewey-Davidson
Herb Hart
Sales
Sales
Andy Hunnewell
Rental
Karl Tessier
Coach Road 7A-Stunning and upgraded luxury
condominium, just an easy walk to the Quechee
Club for tennis, dinner and numerous acitvities.
Step outside the door to enjoy a round of golf. 4
spacious bedrooms and 3.5 baths and attached
garage. Listed @$ 279,000.
Windsor Village 5E -Beautiful end unit with
wrap around deck, 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths in
excellent condition and just a short walk to
Lake Pinneo. Recently reduced. Listed @
$82,000.
Fox Hollow 10A – Original owner – first time on
the market! May be the best location at Fox
Hollow Village. Very private with 3BR/4BA,
views of the Golf Course, Lake Pinneo and
Mountains. The only Fox Hollow that has a golf
cart storage area. Listed @ $379,000.
LD
SO
1380 Old Quechee Road – Custom built home
on 10.3 private & beautifully landscaped acres.
Four bedrooms, five baths, gourmet kitchen,
maple counter tops and custom cabinets. Master
bedroom has en suite bath, lower level has rec
room, third floor office with full bath. Three bay
garage with workshop. Listed @ $685,000.
LD
SO
Lakeland Village 6A – Located near the
Lakeland golf course, a short distance to the
bridge over the river & straight to the Quechee
Club by foot. This immaculate four bedroom
end unit has a Master bedroom w/bath on main
level and deck outside the door. Open floor plan
w/gas fireplace & Rinnai gas heater & A/C. A
rare find in a private location, short walk to Lake
Pinneo! Listed @ $209,000.
LD
SO
Saltbox 6B – Wonderful 2BR/2.5BA townhouse
with easy access and western exposures.
Generous sized bedrooms with private baths,
new Anderson sliding doors, lovely gas fireplace,
good flooring throughout and nice landscaping
enhance this well priced townhouse being
offered mostly furnished.. Excellent value!
Priced well below assessed value. Detached
Garage is also available for sale and is negotiable. Listed @ $109,000.
Office Manager
LD
SO
LD
SO
LD
SO
Terri Patterson
Rental
LD
SO
Mill Run 8B – This two bedroom, 1.5 bath condominium has been renovated from top to bottom. All new appliances, open concept kitchen,
hard wood floors, new paint, A/C, etc. An
immaculately cared for townhome! Listed @
$88,000.
LD
SO
Coach Road 2B – Great location and move-in condition, being offered mostly furnished. Renovated
kitchen and master bath. Three bedrooms, 3.5
baths, within walking to the Quechee Club and just
minutes away from Woodstock and Billings Farm.
Sale includes golf cart. Listed @ $350,000.
LD
SO
Ridge 4D – Spectacular 180 degree views of the
entire Quechee Valley. East, South, West exposure allows for wonderful passive solar with some
of the best views in the entire community. Three
bedroom/ 3 bath furnished end unit townhouse
with large wrap around deck on main level and
another on lower level. Beautiful village with on
site in-ground pool make this a special rare
offering. Listed @ $229,000.
LD
SO
Birchwood A2 – A truly beautiful Birchwood
Condo owned by the original owner's family.
Immaculate and very nicely furnished. Views
of the forever open field behind the Quechee
Inn. Watch cross country skiers & wild turkeys
from your living room. Two BR/1 full BA
upstairs, beautiful built-in book shelves and
full bath on lower level with direct access to
the back patio. Could easily be a 3rd bedroom,
family room or playroom. Listed @$149,000.
LD
SO
Coach Road 7B – A very spacious, three level
condominium with 3BR/3.5BA, A/C throughout, propane heat upgrades. Expanded garage
w/workshop and large 2 level patio. One of the
best locations in Quechee. Listed @ $250,000
LD
SO
210 Galaxy Hill Lane, Lot #5 – This land blends the
conveniences sought by today's families with the
serenity of a traditional Vermont farm setting, withing walking distance to the Quechee club. This
property is poised high above Quechee, offering
the most spectacular views of the valley as well as the
areas finest long distance views. Listed @ $397,000.
LD
SO
Snow Village 5A – Located on the top of the ski
hill, this 3BR/2BA condominium is very well
maintained. Perfect place for families and
friends to gather. Master bedroom on first level,
2 BR, bath and family room on lower level.
Second floor has loft overlooking the living
room. Open floor plans with many upgrades and
3 fireplaces. Listed @ $169,000.
We want to thank the
entire Membership
for your continued
support. We look
forward to being
of service to you
in 2016!
LD
SO
Kingswood 3C – This townhouse is steps away from
the top of the Quechee Ski Hill. The Owner has
renovated this two bedroom, 2.5 bath unit from
top to bottom including all new paint, carpet, tiling, counter tops, lighting, etc. Ready for immediate enjoyment and priced to sell! Listed @ $99,000.
LD
SO
Kingswood 2B - Wonderful condominium with
almost 2000 sq. ft. living space, with easy access to
the ski trails. Since 2002, it has been lovingly maintained by the same family. This condominium has
four very good sized bedrooms and a spacious living/dining area with wood burning fireplace. Has
to be seen to be appreciated. Listed @ $120,000.
LD
SO
38 Old Birch Road, Hartland – Cozy early
1900's Cape located at the end of road within a
few minutes drive of Woodstock Village. Two
bedrooms, 2.5 baths with newly updated kitchen and fresh paint. Fir floors, Vermont Castings
wood stove and fireplace in the master bedroom enhance living in this delightful home.
Listed @ $299,900.
LD
SO
470 Baker Turn – Outstanding 180 degree views
enhance this high on the hilltop house. Sunrise
to Sunset and total privacy. Five bedrooms, 3.5
baths, open floor plan with vaulted ceilings allow
for family gatherings and entertaining. Chef's
kitchen, hardwood flooring fireplace, family
room & quality throughout make this a special
property within golf cart distance to the Club.
Huge wrap around deck & oversized 1-car
garage. Listed @ $529,00.
LD
SO
Lakeland Village 3B – One of Quechee's favorite
locations. Ideal getaway with everything you need
to move right in. Walk to Lake Pinneo, the
Quechee Club, the Golf Course and the village.
There is a bedroom and full bath on each level,
open loft, and A/C. Listed @ $159,000.
LD
SO
84 Primrose Lane – Four bedroom/four bath
contemporary. Spacious main level living with
views and privacy & cathedral ceiling in living
room, kitchen expertly equipped, hardwood
floors, screened porch with access to dining &expansive deck. Southern exposure compliments
the scenic Vermont landscape. Listed @ $549,000.
LD
SO
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Windsor Village 2A – This 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath
outstanding end unit is ready for immediate occupancy. Excellent condition with hardwood floors,
updated baths, new carpet, granite & new cabinetry
in kitchen and is being offered completely furnished. Great yard space and ample windows allowfor lots of sunlight. Walk to Lake Pinneo, Quechee
Club and Murphy Farm. Listed @ $89,000.
LD
SO
Coach Road 12B – One of the best condo locations in Quechee. Sited facing West and well
back from the golf course creating a park-like
setting. Three bedrooms/ 3.5 full baths with
each full bath en suite. Wonderful approacheverything about this unit invites you in.
Propane heat upgrade and offered fully furnished with exceptions Listed @ $249,000.
SALES 888-654-9560 • 802-295-7525 / RENTALS: 800-745-0042 • 802-295-1970 / FAX 802-296-6852
E-MAIL: [email protected] • ROUTE 4, QUECHEE, VT 05059
CHECK
CHECK US
US OUT
OUT ON
ON THE
THE WEB
WEB –– WWW.QUECHEELAKESREALESTATE.COM
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