The relationship between an audience and a musician is often symbioticâboth the performer and the listener receive something from the experience. âWe love performing for an audience and need to do it as much as they enjoy hearing it,â said Mary Lindberg, who together with her partner John Redden comprise the acoustic duo The Silent Trees.
In terms of playing live music, 2020 was definitely a year for the record books.
âIn March we knew something serious was happening, and we knew it would affect us because we play shows every weekend,â said Mr. Redden, adding that the pair, who have been together as a band for 10 years, are usually booked for gigs every Friday and Saturday and have a regular Thursday night gig in the summer playing at the West Falmouth Market.
Construction of a sewer system to serve the areas of Teaticket and Acapesket is projected for 2026.
âThe town has put up money for design and planning is currently underway, and this is the timetable,â Water Quality Management Committee chairman Eric T. Turkington told the select board on Monday, December 21. âThese two pieces both affect Great Pond, which except for Waquoit Bay, is the water body most in need of nitrogen reduction.â
While sewering will go a long way toward reducing nitrogen in Great Pond, it will not eliminate it.
âI will caution us, because 60 percent of the water that comes into this water body comes from the Coonamessett River system, sewering these two areas will get rid of a lot of the problem. It will not get rid of all of the problem,â Mr. Turkington said. âThere is a lot of water coming in that isnât coming from the neighborhood. It is coming from north of [Route] 28.â
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See the nor’easter’s impact: Massachusetts residents post images of Winter Storm Gail’s bed of snow
Updated Dec 17, 2020;
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Winter Storm Gail continues to hit Massachusetts hard Thursday, with the ongoing nor’easter causing more than a foot of snow to accumulate in numerous Bay State communities.
Several National Weather Service forecasters and residents took to their yards or to the streets in the morning hours to take photographs of the immense amounts of snow that had developed from Wednesday evening through early Thursday.
High wind gusts, expected to reach 60 miles per hour on the Cape and Islands, and heavy snowfall swept through Massachusetts overnight, with the snow falling at rates of 1-2 inches per hour at various points, according to the weather service.