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Businesses report robust February vacation weeks

CONWAY — Despite limited ski area ticket sales and restrictions on restaurant seating due to the pandemic, Mount Washington Valley businesses still described the two February vacation weeks (President s Day vacation week, followed by New Hampshire vacation week) as busy with increased traffic, sales and bookings. The fact that regular snow falls kept local areas with great conditions for skiers and riders certainly didn t hurt. Last year at this time, nervousness about the brand-new coronavirus was just beginning to flare. Yet the February vacation weeks were still strong. Fast forward to 2021. Lodging members of the chamber weighed into the survey with mostly positive comments. In fact, Christopher Bellis, co-owner of the Cranmore Inn in North Conway, was featured in a story on WMUR-Channel 9 about what a strong vacation week the valley had.

Yes, there is a Santa Claus

Spying something hanging from a tree across the street from the Lakeside post office, a closer look reveals that yes, there is a Santa Claus or at least Santa helpers. Hanging from the tree were several carefully packaged gifts for someone in need - each bag contained a crocheted hat and mittens along with candy canes and hot chocolate. Words printed on a special printed paper read: Kind Heart. If you are cold and you need a hug, please take me with you. I will keep you snug. Let me be a reminder as you make your way, someone sends warm thoughts to you this day. Go ahead - if you need warm clothes. If you are already toasty, then please join the movement and spread the love. By Barbara Bruce

Pipe Dream? Arizona Man Believes Legal Loophole Lets Him Sell Pot Seeds

Michael Moss was a welder until degenerative disc disease forced him into an early retirement. In 2011, he moved to Arizona for the climate, landing in the small Navajo County city of Show Low. What followed was a series of surgeries that sandwiched the broken vertebrae in the middle of his spine between 24 screws in his neck and six lag bolts in his lower back. When the heavy, opioid-based painkillers doctors prescribed him left him emaciated and like a zombie, he turned to medical marijuana. But the high-potency medicine he needed cost as much as $400 a week. That was unaffordable on disability pay, so he started growing his own.

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