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Harwich plans to bring back article to buy land near Hinkley s Pond

HARWICH  Selectmen on Monday promised to bring an article to purchase 31 acres of cranberry bogs and upland that was indefinitely postponed at town meeting Saturday back before the town as quickly as possible. The intent of town meeting was very clear. They want this done, Selectman Michael MacAskill told the board, which expressed interest in setting up a meeting with the Harwich Conservation Trust, the Real Estate & Open Space Committee and the Community Preservation Committee.  Town meeting voters vented their frustration Saturday when told that the only vote they had was for indefinite postponement after the Community Preservation Committee voted at its meeting the night before not to recommend the article.

Harwich town meeting approves budgets, new fire engine and library and museum repairs

HARWICH The second town meeting in a row held outside to lessen the potential impact of COVID-19 was not an easy one for voters to endure.  Harwich Town Moderator Michael Ford warned voters at the outset that a hat might be needed as Canada geese were flying overhead. An osprey clutching a fish in its talons, circled, landing on its nest atop a light pole on the Monomoy Regional High School athletic field, the pleading of hungry young birds momentarily interrupting the meeting debate below.  But it was a piercingly cold spring wind sweeping over the field that was especially hard to endure, and it winnowed participants from the more than 250 that constituted a quorum at the start of the meeting to just over 100 by the final article.

Cape Cod Shipwrecks: Stories of Tragedy and Triumph don wilding

Wicked Local EASTHAM Cape Cod’s Outer Beach has always been known for its shipwrecks. Between 1626 and the mid-20th century, this solitary 40-mile stretch of what is now the outer beach of the Cape Cod National Seashore saw the demise of more than 3,000 vessels. It’s been said that if all the wrecks were raised, one could walk from Provincetown to Chatham without getting his or her feet wet. Since 2015, Don Wilding has been writing the popular “Shore Lore” column for The Cape Codder, often focusing on maritime tragedies. He has now compiled some of those columns and more research for his third book, “Cape Cod Shipwrecks: Stories of Tragedy and Triumph.”

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