cake

Kindergarten Wows With Wedding Vows

Like any wedding, the ceremony forever joining the letters Q and U — actually, two Qs and two Us, for it was a double-wedding — involved meticulous planning and a certain amount of chaos anyway.

Twelve kindergarten students had invitations to consider, the music, proper attire, and most importantly, the cake. It took some time to pull it together.

Announcing William

Announcing William

Tara and Jeffrey Simmons of Vineyard Haven announce the birth of a son, William Topley Simmons, born on March 24 at the Martha’s Vineyard Community Hospital. Will is welcomed by brother Hudson and sister Amelia. He weighed 6 pounds, 15 ounces at birth.

Daffodils’ Dark Side

It seemed like a harmless sort: a symbol of purity and hope, a cancer crusader and fundraiser, and beautiful harbinger of spring; but, if the truth be told, the daffodil has a dark and sinister side.

Many herbalists of yore thought the world of the daffodil, which is in the plant genus Narcissus and is known to some by that name. The daffodil’s healing powers were widely admired and recommended. One of this flower’s proponents, a healer named Culpepper, gave his opinion:

chickens

The Vineyard Gardener

By LYNNE IRONS

Nothing can revive a guy

Quite like a piece of rhubarb pie

Serve it up

Nice and hot

maybe things

aren’t as bad as you thought

— Garrison Keiler

Those in the know hear this little song every week on the Prairie Home Companion (Saturday at 6 p.m. or Sunday at 1 p.m.) on National Public Radio.

bird

Migration Behind Schedule

Mid-April this year looks even less like spring than it usually does on the Vineyard. Although conditions were looking up a bit during the middle of this week, the last few weeks have averaged cloudy and cool. Accordingly, there appears to have been little activity among Island birders, and the migration appears to be running slightly behind schedule. But all this is poised to change.

meeting

West Tisbury Voters Find Accord on Town Hall Renovation Project

It took three tries, but at their annual town meeting this week West Tisbury voters finally found a plan they could agree on to renovate their old town hall. On Tuesday night voters said yes to spending $5.2 million to restore the building.

A corresponding ballot question to exempt $4.8 million in bond debt from the provisions of Proposition 2 1/2 was approved at the annual town election yesterday.

The remainder of the funding will come from free cash and town Community Preservation Act funds, which will contribute $500,000 over five years.

meeting

Tax Override Fails in Oak Bluffs; Meeting Heads Into a Third Night

The annual town meeting in Oak Bluffs this week was at times testy and decidedly prolonged — so much so that two nights and seven hours of spirited debate were not nearly enough, forcing the meeting to spill into next week.

After a grueling second night that focused almost entirely on the town budget and finances, voters agreed to adjourn until Monday at 7 p.m. at the Oak Bluffs School.

meeting

Edgartown Takes Care of Business in Short Order With Few Scrapes

There was a palpable pre-meeting giddiness to Edgartown voters as they filed into the Old Whaling Church to pass a $25 million budget in under three hours Tuesday evening. In this town’s recent past, the thrill of participating in the democratic process at annual town meetings has not been marred by drawn-out floor debates or consecutive nights of warrant reading.

If Only Martha Knew the Power She Possessed

Stories abound as to how the Island of Martha’s Vineyard got its name.

But there are no volumes which tell the tale of how it got its apostrophe.

Or that said apostrophe is protected by federal decree.

Beer and Wine Question to be Decided Tuesday

If Tisbury restaurants had begun laying down wines when the question of alcohol sales in the town first came up, they would have a nicely aged cellar by now.

It was September 2005 when the Tisbury Business Association first brought the idea of allowing restaurant sales of beer and wine before town selectmen. Now, close to three years later, after an exhaustive round of meetings, hearings and business and taxpayer surveys, it will finally be voted on this Tuesday.

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