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Can a bike trail spur love for the Delaware River? These advocates think so

Hurricane Ida: Lambertville benefit concert happening Oct 9 and 10

Hurricane Ida: Lambertville benefit concert happening Oct 9 and 10
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Electric bicycle shop opens in N J river town

Electric bicycle shop opens in N.J. river town Posted May 18, 2021 Pedego Electric Bike store has opened on North Union Street in Lambertville.Keith A. Muccilli | For NJ Advance Media Facebook Share But those behind Pedego Electric Bikes say it does both. “People might think by riding an e-bike you’re kind of cheating, that you’re not getting as much exercise as a conventional bike,” said Bob Lonsdale, store manager for Pedego Electric Bikes in Lambertville. “But there have been different studies . where they found that people actually get as much exercise if not more on an e-bike for two really big reasons. First is that they ride longer on an e-bike, and the second is because it’s so fun they do it more often.”

He loved to talk and had a huge heart Locals share stories of N J s Famous River Hot Dog Man

He loved to talk and had a huge heart. Locals share stories of N.J.’s Famous River Hot Dog Man. Updated May 13, 2021; Posted May 12, 2021 Greg Crance, who, since 1987, operated a hotdog stand on a platform stationed in the middle of the Delaware River. Crance died Monday of complications related to COVID. Facebook Share He had a heart that was as big as anything. That’s how a close friend of Greg Crance, ubiquitous for his role as the Famous River Hot Dog Man, described him in the wake of his death on Monday from COVID-related complications. “He was very passionate about his business and did everything he could as far as the (Delaware) River goes to clean it,” said Wes Siegel, a resident of Delaware Township. “I know him and his boys and his employees once a year would go up and down the river and clean all of the garbage that they would find.

Invasive plants are being turned into artwork by this N J -based eco-artist

Invasive plants are being turned into artwork by this N.J.-based eco-artist Posted Apr 27, 2021 Lambertville artist Lauren Rosenthal McManus is pictured processing pigments in her studio at the McColl Center for Art + Innovation in North Carolina.Courtesy Facebook Share New Jersey residents are regularly encouraged to remove invasive plants and species they come into contact. One local artist is joining in the effort to mitigate invasive species in an unprecedented way that benefits both her and the community she lives in. An eco-artist based in Lambertville, Lauren Rosenthal McManus is spearheading a project in which she will remove invasive plants species

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