Author Archives: Editor

UPDATE ON DENTON TRAFFIC INCIDENT INVOLVING OFF-DUTY TROOPER

Maryland State Police Press Release
05/23/2013
DENTON, MD

The condition of the off-duty trooper injured in Caroline County last night has improved and no charges are being filed at this time in connection with the incident.

The off-duty trooper, assigned to the Easton Barrack, has been upgraded to serious condition, according to officials at the University of Maryland R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center. The trooper is continuing to receive treatment at the hospital.

After interviews by State Police investigators and a review of information by the Caroline County State’s Attorney’s Office, no charges are being filed at this time against the three teenagers who were questioned overnight. All three were released after they were interviewed.

At this point in the investigation, information indicates the teen driver and his two companions may have encountered one or more trash cans in the roadway as they traveled in the area of 7th Street and Market Street in Denton, at about 7:15 p.m. yesterday. According to information developed during the investigation, the driver may have been attempting to push a trash can out of the way with the car. Then, a passenger reached out and grabbed the can, attempting to move it further out of the path of the car.

When the off-duty trooper drove up behind this scene in his personal car, it appeared the three may have been tampering with the trash can and possibly moving it into the roadway or turning it over. When the off-duty trooper approached the car, he was wearing plainclothes and was not displaying his badge or identification card.

The investigation indicates the 17-year-old driver was startled and unsure of whom the off-duty trooper was and may have instinctively accelerated away out of concern for his safety. The trooper was in contact with the car and was dragged down the street until he became dislodged and was injured as the car continued on.

Off-Duty MD State Trooper Injured in Hit & Run in Caroline County

Maryland State Police Press Release
05/22/2013
DENTON, MD

An off-duty state trooper is being treated for injuries he sustained when he apparently confronted vandalism suspects in a car and was dragged by the car when the driver accelerated and fled the scene in Caroline County earlier this evening.

Maryland State Police are still investigating the incident. Details are incomplete at this time.

The trooper is an eight-year veteran of the Maryland State Police assigned to the Easton Barrack. He is currently undergoing treatment at the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center where hospital officials say he is listed in critical condition.

The preliminary investigation by the Maryland State Police Criminal Enforcement Division indicates that at about 7:15 p.m. today, the trooper was traveling off-duty in the area of 7th Street and Market Street in Denton when he observed several people in a car ahead of him who appeared to be involved in some type of vandalism. The trooper exited his car and approached the car ahead of him on foot.

While the trooper was talking with the three individuals in the car, all apparently juveniles, preliminary information indicates the driver accelerated and the trooper was somehow dragged by the vehicle an undetermined distance down the road. The trooper became dislodged from the vehicle and fell to the roadway. The suspect vehicle fled the scene.

The trooper was flown by a Maryland State Police helicopter to the Shock Trauma Center. State and local police began a search for the suspect vehicle. A suspect vehicle has been located and three individuals are currently being questioned by State Police investigators.

No further information is available at this time. Additional information will be provided when it becomes available, probably at some point tomorrow morning.

The investigation is continuing

Experience the Relationship between Nature and the Underground Railroad during Adkins Arboretum Audio Tour Launch June 1, 2013

Adkins Arboretum
RIDGELY, MD
May 22, 2013

The Eastern Shore’s natural landscape provided a passageway to freedom along the Underground Railroad for hundreds, possibly thousands, of slaves, including abolitionists Frederick Douglass and Harriet Tubman. Designated as a “Place to Visit” on the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway, Adkins Arboretum reflects the conditions through which freedom seekers traveled en route to freedom. On Sat., June 1, join a special evening event celebrating the launch of “A Journey Begins: Nature’s Role in the Flight to Freedom,” a new Arboretum audio tour that explores the little-known relationship between nature and the Underground Railroad.

Developed by Arboretum staff and volunteers in concert with noted historians Anthony Cohen and Dr. Kate Clifford Larson and consultants Q Media Productions, and funded through generous grant support from Maryland Humanities Council and Maryland Heritage Area Authority, this educational and thought-provoking self-guided tour examines how nature provided both obstacles and opportunities for freedom seekers. The story of nature and the Underground Railroad also interprets the profound connection between landscapes and historic conditions and events, emphasizing the importance of preserving native landscapes throughout the Chesapeake Bay region.

The audio tour launch runs from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Join this special evening to celebrate the project’s completion, meet the project team, and experience the tour. Refreshments will be served. The event is free and open to the public; reservations are required at adkinsarboretum.org.

Adkins Underground Railroad

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Adkins Arboretum is a 400-acre native garden and preserve at the headwaters of the Tuckahoe Creek in Caroline County. Open year round, the Arboretum offers educational programs for all ages about nature and gardening. Through its Campaign to Build a Green Legacy, it will build the W. Flaccus and Ruth B. Stifel Center at Adkins Arboretum and a “green” entranceway to broaden educational offerings and research initiatives promoting best practices in conservation and land stewardship. For additional information about Arboretum programs, visit www.adkinsarboretum.org or call 410-634-2847, ext. 0.

Pie Wars- Food Fight! to Benefit Horse Force One Hay Bank and the Caroline County Humane Society

Pie Wars- Food Fight! June 15, 2013

Horse Force Productions Presents…Pie Wars!

Join us for a food fight of epic proportions to take place on June 15, 2013 at the 4-H Park far far away… OK not so far away in Caroline County on Detour Road in Denton, Maryland.

Those attending should be prepared to throw lots of pies as well as be pied! With pie in the face fun like pie toss, dodge pie, beard relay and pie mayhem it is sure to be a fun filled day for the entire family.
Live music from local Southern Fried Rock Band Justified, pony rides and Barnum the Zebra and Henry the Camel from Workhorse Farm & Exotic Rescue will be in attendance.

Pie Wars offers some unique fun for equestrians as well, bring your horse and pie joust, participate in the pie obstacle relay or cream toss all included with the all day fun pass! Please note horsesare not pro- vided you must bring your own.

We will have demonstrations from several local equine and K9 groups.

It is a day you won’t want to miss!

Proceeds benefit the Caroline County Humane Society and the HF1 hay bank.

The hay bank has donated 2800 bales of hay to horses in need on the Delmarva.

Advanced tickets can be purchased at:
Caroline County Humane Society, 407 West Belle Street, Ridgely, MD 21660,
Rainbow Bridge Kennel 27528 Substation Road, Denton, MD, and
Out Back Tack 29535 Dover Road Easton, MD 21601 or at www.horseforceproductions.com.

We hope to see you all out Saturday, June 15, 2013 for the first ever PIE WARS!

Pie Wars Details
Gates Open at 9:00 AM
Fun starts at 10:00 AM

Adults
$15 for all day pass or $10 one event Children 12 & Under
$10 all day pass or $5 Per event
$5 Spectators
Save 10% with our Family/Group Discount (3 or more)
Church groups, clubs and organizations welcome!

For more information please contact Tracey at 410-479-0983 or visit www.horseforceproductions.com. Brought to you by Horse Force Productions and in part by: Hetrick Farms, Earth Origins, Talbot Guide and the Caroline Review.

For more information on Pie Wars, please contact Tracey at 410-479-0983 or visit www.horseforceproductions.com

Flyer - Pie Wars in Caoline County June 15, 2013

Adkins Arboretum Offers Soup ’n Walk Program on May 18, 2013

Adkins Arboretum
RIDGELY, MD
May 13, 2013

Tuckahoe Creek is a beautiful, tranquil spot that provides views of a wide variety of flowering plants. Join a walk to search for blooms along its banks when Adkins Arboretum hosts a popular Soup ’n Walk program on Sat., May 18. Following a guided walk, enjoy a delicious and nutritious lunch along with a brief lesson about the meal’s nutritional value. Copies of recipes are provided.

Participants may choose a one-hour or two-hour walk to catch glimpses of mountain laurel, beech and tulip trees, black cherry tree blossoms, pink lady’s slipper orchid and Solomon’s seal blooms, and May apple fruit. The menu includes vegetarian chili, roasted red beets over mesclun salad, apple date wheat bread with apple jelly, and blueberry marmalade crisp. The two-hour walk begins at 10 a.m.; the one-hour walk begins at 11 a.m.

The program is $20 per person for members, $25 per person for the general public. Register at adkinsarboretum.org or call 410-634-2847, ext. 0. To schedule Soup ’n Walk programs for groups of 15 or more, contact Ginna Tiernan, Adult Program Coordinator, at 410-634-2847, ext. 27 or gtiernan@adkinsarboretum.org.

Photo: Adkins Arboretum docent Julianna Pax, at left, pauses on a bridge in the Arboretum forest so participants can search for spring blooms during a Soup ’n Walk program. This Saturday’s Soup ’n Walk will focus on Tuckahoe Creek.

Adkins Arboretum docent Julianna Pax, at left, pauses on a bridge in the Arboretum forest so participants can search for spring blooms during a Soup ’n Walk program. This Saturday’s Soup ’n Walk will focus on Tuckahoe Creek. Submitted Photo.

“Bluegrass By The Mill” to benefit Ames United Methodist Church Building Fund: Denton

Flyer: "Bluegrass By The Mill” to benefit Ames United Methodist Church Building Fund: Denton May 19, 2013

Adkins Arboretum – May 2013 Calendar of Events

ADKINS ARBORETUM
May 2013

First Saturday Guided Walk
Saturday, May 4, 10 a.m.
Free for members, free with admission for the general public
Explore the rich and unique native plant habitat of Adkins Arboretum. The plant habitats you’ll see include mature and young native forests, meadows, a wetland, as well as a rain garden and a pollinator garden. You may also visit the Arboretum’s Native Plant Nursery and the children’s teaching garden. Tours begin at the Visitor’s Center and last approximately one hour. 410-634-2847, ext. 0 for more information.

Bird Migration Walk
Saturday May 4, 8–10 a.m.
Free with admission
Join Wayne Bell on a guided walk to scout for migrants warblers that regularly pass through the Arboretum in early May. Warblers of note include include Black-and-white, Black-throated Blue, Black-throated Green, American Redstart, Yellow-rumped (Myrtle), Magnolia, and (rarer) Blackburnian. Rose-breasted Grosbeak should also be passing through, and resident Indigo Bunting and Blue Grosbeak may be present. Scarlet Tanager, which nests in the mature woods, should also be in good voice. Many of these birds are colorful and full of song.

Dr. Bell is Senior Associate and former Director of the Center for Environment and Society at Washington College. Prior to joining the Washington College faculty in fall 2000, he was Vice President for External Relations for the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science (UMCES), a global research facility headquartered at Horn Point near Cambridge, MD. He has served as president of the Arboretum Board of Trustees and is past president of the Maryland Ornithological Society.

Paradise Under Glass
Saturday, May 4, 1–2:30 p.m.
Fee: $15 members, $20 general public
Like many baby boomers in middle age, Ruth Kassinger was at an emotional crossroads. Confronted with numerous challenges, she was searching for a way forward. One cold, gray evening, flooded with thoughts of change and loss, she wandered into the U.S. Botanic Garden’s conservatory—and a dream was born. Dazzled by the vast and dense tangle of greenery, she began a quest to create a verdant sanctuary of her own at her home in suburban Washington, DC.

Paradise Under Glass chronicles her journey from brown thumb to green. Kassinger takes us step-by-step from the construction of her conservatory through her efforts to identify the easiest to grow, most beautiful houseplants. In chronicling journey to create her own tropical refuge, she also provides a lively narrative tour of the glasshouses of the past, including Renaissance orangeries, the whimsical follies of Georgian England, the legendary Crystal Palace, and secluded Victorian ferneries.

Throughout, she shares the knowledge and insights that creating and sustaining her garden has bestowed, lessons of loss and letting go, nurturing and rebirth, challenge and change, love and serenity. Paradise Under Glass is the remarkable story of the fruition of a dream that is sure to inspire us all.

Twelfth Night: Shakespeare in the Meadow
Saturday, May 4 at 6 p.m.
Sunday, May 5 at 3 p.m.
Fee: $15 adults, $10 students
Mark the date—Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night is coming to the Meadow! Bring a picnic, relax under the stars, and enjoy this classic comedy about love and mistaken identity. Directed by Peter Howell, the performances benefit the Arboretum and Shore Shakespeare.

For more information, visit shoreshakespeare.com. Those who support bringing Shakespeare to the Eastern Shore are invited to make tax-deductible donations to Adkins Arboretum and designated for the benefit of Shore Shakespeare.

Kokedama
Tuesday, May 7, 10 a.m.–noon
Fee: $30 members, $35 general public
Kokedama is the Japanese art form of enclosing a plant’s root mass in moss. Traditionally, Kokedama is displayed on a unique, often handcrafted tray but more recently these ‘moss balls’ are hung from translucent string to appear to float in the air. Join Samantha McCall to create your own Kokedama to bring home and enjoy.

An avid gardener and a dedicated plantswoman, Samantha is a floral designer, a Master Gardener, and a perennial student at Longwood Gardens. A member of several Eastern Shore garden clubs, she also is the owner of Fleurish, an environmentally friendly floral design studio committed to using local plant material whenever possible.

Botanical Shoes
Thursday, May 9, 1–2 p.m.
Fee: $15 members, $20 general public

In 1987, Lenny Wilson learned to make shoes at Cordwainer’s Technical College, a leather trades college in London. Shortly afterward, he began a career in public horticulture and was inspired to create a pair of shoes that incorporated parts of plants into their construction. Using traditional methods and materials, he unifies leather, leaves, and other materials to craft unique life-size shoes.

Join Lenny for a unique presentation as he shares his journey, illustrates what inspires him, demonstrates how he selects plants and employs tools, and relates exhibition and workshop experiences.

A native of Wilmington, Delaware, Lenny holds a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Delaware. Currently he is the Assistant Director of Horticulture and Facilities at Delaware Center for Horticulture, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the quality of life in Delaware’s diverse communities through horticulture. His one-of-a-kind shoes made from plant material are displayed in local art galleries and exhibits.

National Public Gardens Day
Friday, May 10, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.
Celebrate public gardens and their special place in the community! Admission is free—enjoy a walk in the woods, meadows, and gardens.

A Celebration of Natives, Adkins Arboretum’s first native garden tour, will feature seven gardens in Caroline County. The tour not only will highlight the beauty of these gardens but will emphasize the importance of their role in a bio-diverse landscape. Each garden is unique and demonstrates its own flair and commitment in its use of natives.

The Native Garden Tour is Saturday, May 11 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tickets are $15 per person in advance and $25 on the day of the tour. Visit www.adkinsgardentour.org or call 410.634.2847, ext. 0 to reserve tickets.

Maryland Native Plant Society Movie Night
Tuesday, May 14, 7–8:30 p.m. An early-bird guided walk will be offered at 6:15 p.m.
Free
Maryland Native Plant Society will screen the video Urban & Suburban Meadows: Bringing Meadowscaping to Big and Small Spaces by author and photographer Catherine Zimmerman. The video brings into focus the amazing diversity of life inhabiting meadows, and the beautiful imagery inspires meadow creation. The 60-minute video features meadow experts Michael Nadeau, Larry Weaner and Neil Diboll, who walk the viewer through meadow site preparation, design, planting, and maintenance. Entomologist Doug Tallamy, author of Bringing Nature Home, explains the intricate connection between native plants, native insects, and the soil food web.

The video was created as a companion to the popular book of the same name. It addresses the problems caused by the extensive planting of pesticide-ridden, non-native grass lawns across America. Discussion of the video will follow. Refreshments will be served. Registration is requested.

ART EXHIBITS
One Hundred Footsteps is a unique collaboration between writer Jennifer Wallace and visual artist Katherine Kavanaugh, both of Baltimore. In this limited edition work, fifty of Wallace’s haiku-like poems are paired with fifty small collage drawings by Kavanaugh. Although the poems and images aren’t meant to illustrate one another, they share parallel contemplative moods. On view through May 31, this meditative exhibit was inspired by a medieval Japanese collaborative poetic form, the renga, often composed of 100 verses.

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Spring Soup ’n Walks
Nature, Nurture, and Nutrition

Saturday, May 18 11 a.m.–1:30 p.m.
Fee: $20 members, $25 general public
Registration required. Limit: 25
Track the changing landscape from winter to spring. Following a guided walk with a docent naturalist, enjoy a delicious and nutritious lunch along with a brief lesson about the meal’s nutritional value. Copies of recipes are provided.

May Theme: Tuckahoe Creek and Beyond
Tuckahoe Creek is a beautiful, tranquil spot that provides views of a wide variety of flowering plants. Join a one- or two-hour walk to search for mountain laurel, beech and tulip trees, black cherry tree blossoms, pink ladyslipper and Solomon’s seal blooms, and Mayapple fruit.

Menu
Thick and Hearty vegetable chili (vegetarian)
Roasted red beets over mesclun salad
Apple date wheat bread with apple jelly
Blueberry marmalade crisp

State Highway Administration Installs New Sidewalks on Legion Road in Denton

STATE HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION

Additional Sidewalk to Improve Pedestrian Safety near Walmart

(April 25, 2013) – The State Highway Administration (SHA) will install 430 feet of new sidewalk along one block of Legion Road from 5th Street to MD 404 (Shore Highway) in Denton to facilitate pedestrian safety and mobility adjacent to the Walmart store, which opened in 2012. Construction of the new sidewalk begins Monday, April 29 and is expected to be complete by mid-June, weather permitting.

Motorists should expect single lane closures on Legion Road Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. The contractor will use cones and barrels together with a flagging operation as needed, to direct traffic during the work.

“SHA is pleased these sidewalk improvements will be complete before the summer to keep pedestrians and shoppers safe,” said SHA District Engineer Greg Holsey. “Drivers should use extra caution as they adjust to the growing number of pedestrians along Legion Road.”

In December, new pedestrian crossings were added to the intersection across both Legion Road and MD 404. Pedestrians are now able to cross the intersection with countdown pedestrian signals as well as audible signals to assist the visually impaired. The $53,000 sidewalk project was awarded to Nations Contracting, Inc. of Baltimore.

Maryland now features FREE 511 traveler information! Call 511 or 1-855-GOMD511 or visit: www.md511.org for current travel information. Sign up to personalize travel route information through MY511 on the website. Remember to use 511 safely – Maryland law restricts hand-held mobile phone use and texting while driving.

SHA is making it easy to get safety tips and information on the go! Join the conversation on Twitter @MDSHA and on Facebook atwww.Facebook.com/MarylandStateHighwayAdministration.

Status of Caroline Town Crier

May 2013

Updated Status of Caroline Town Crier:
About two years ago I started the Web site CarolineTownCrier.com with the hope of being able deliver information about events and other happenings in Caroline County. Part of that was to I was going to get out into Caroline County (I live in Kent County) and attempt to do the same as I have with Kent County and the site Local in Kent – LocalinKent.com.

As stated in the last update, unfortunately due to some personal issues, I have not been able as much as planned. This still remains true, but I still want this site to happen.

When I do receive information I put it on the site. I also add whatever I come across to the Events Calendar. I am also hoping to get to some events in the county this summer to take some photographs.

Being that I am in Kent County, I have regularity been taking photographs at the sports event at Kent County High and their opponents including those from Caroline County. Some have been posted at ShoreToBeFun.com/Photographs or Facebook.com/CarolineTownCrier

How can you help?
Let your friends and relatives (and enemies too) know about Caroline Town Crier. If you know someone who is having a event, let them know that we exist and that they should contact us so we can help publicize it.

Thank You to our followers and readers.

Wishing everyone a GREAT SUMMER!!!

Celebrate National Public Gardens Day with Free Admission to Adkins Arboretum

Adkins Arboretum
RIDGELY, MD
May 1, 2013)

Adkins Arboretum will celebrate the American Public Gardens Association’s (APGA) fifth annual National Public Gardens Day by waiving admission fees on Fri., May 10.

Slated to coincide with Mother’s Day weekend, the unofficial start of spring, National Public Gardens Day affords public gardens an opportunity to showcase their gardens and highlight the valuable contributions they make to their communities.

On National Public Gardens Day, Arboretum visitors can shop from the region’s largest selection of ornamental native plants at the Native Plant Nursery; view an exhibition by artists Katherine Kavanaugh and Jennifer Wallace; take a self-guided tour or an audio tour; explore the forest, wetland, meadows and gardens; and learn about the link between native plants, land conservation and a healthy Chesapeake Bay. Visitors who become members will receive a free one-year subscription to Better Homes and Gardens magazine, in addition to a host of other benefits.

Arboretum hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, and Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. Nursery hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and weekends by appointment.

Founded in 1940, Delaware-based APGA is devoted to strengthening public gardens throughout North America. Its membership includes more than 500 public gardens in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Canada and seven other countries.

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