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11.30.22 - Volume 1, Issue 2

Page 1

FINAL-2 CP_MBHC_20221130_1_A01 Mon, Nov 28, 2022 3:02:40 PM

PUBLIC SAFETY

WILDLIFE

PAWS & CLAWS

‘Spirit of ’76’ comes home

The wild turkeys of Marblehead

Winslow needs a home

Page 9

IN THIS ISSUE

PRSRT STD U.S. POSTAGE

PAID

MARBLEHEAD, MA PERMIT NO. 25

Page 24

Page 17

NEWS FOR PEOPLE, NOT FOR PROFIT.

TM

November 30, 2022

| VOLUME 1, ISSUE NO. 2

| MARBLEHEADCURRENT.ORG

| ON SOCIAL @MHDCURRENT

ENVIRONMENT

Joe Brown’s Puddle?

Are droughts speeding up the disappearance of Marblehead’s ponds? BY WILLIAM J. DOWD Marblehead resident Bette Keva walks her neighbor’s dogs a lot through the town’s conservation lands. Over the past couple of months (especially during the summer), she noticed the shallow water levels in Marblehead ponds and bodies of water. To convey just how bad the water

level had gotten, she once suggested Joe Brown’s Pond should be renamed “Joe Brown’s Puddle.” She shared photos depicting the pond’s water level from the Barry Road entrance and from the Browns’ home and tavern. “From the view, you can see just how dried up the pond is,” she said. “The ground was showing from the middle of it.”

Photos from resident Bette Keva depicting Joe Brown’s Pond, showing just how low water reached during the summertime drought.

Keva said she saw similar conditions in Steer Swamp, noting a trail entrance that is usually underwater was “completely dried up.” “Several streams throughout the 48-acre woods are either completely dried up or muddy ground,” she said. The Marblehead Conservancy, through a partnership with the Marblehead

Conservation Commission, cares for the town’s conservation lands. The Conservancy’s deeply dedicated corps of volunteers that carries out the upkeep know the green spaces intimately. “The Conservancy’s job is keeping Marblehead conservation areas and trails POND, P. A4

Longtime moderator dies at 82

Blast off

Spiess remembered for fairness, wit BY WILLIAM J. DOWD

quite like being hit with that first tidal wave of youthful energy coming into the town landing. “It was unbelievable,” Whear says. While Whear is relatively new to his role with the Marblehead Chamber, he is not totally unfamiliar with the red suit and white beard. Whear says he has now served as “Santa’s helper” for more than 40 years—dating back to his late teens. He is something of a natural for the role, and he now knows he is not the only one.

Gary Spiess, the town moderator who led Marblehead Town Meeting with dexterity, fairness, and a quick wit for 16 years, died on Friday, Nov. 25. He was 82. The cause of Spiess’ death was not readily available, but it comes just months after he decided not to run for a 17th term as town moderator, opening an elected office that for nearly 60 years had been held by only two men, Spiess and Steve Howe. “It is sad to think that he will not be at Town Meeting as CURRENT PHOTO / WILLIAM J. DOWD Gary Spiess, who served a citizen, instead of as town moderator for 16 running the show,” years, died on Nov. 25. said Marblehead Select Board member Jackie Belf-Becker. “Gary Spiess was a wonderful man.” Voters elected Spiess in 2005 as Howe’s successor after Howe had served as town moderator for 42 years, from 1963 to 2005. Spiess was what some might consider Howe’s Town Meeting “wing man.” “Steve had me as his ‘assistant town moderator’ for a number of years,” Spiess told the Marblehead Current in June. “And I didn’t have much choice when I ran: Steve came up to me and said, ‘I want to retire, but I won’t retire unless you run for moderator.’” But Spiess still needed to get his wife’s approval to run. “She was like, ‘Why not?’” Spiess said with a chuckle. “So, I got the green light right there.” Spiess took his stewardship of Marblehead

SANTA, P. A9

SPIESS, P. A4

PHOTO BY EYAL OREN/WEDNESDAYSINMHD.COM

Members of Glover’s Regiment start the annual Thanksgiving Day game with a bang at Piper Field, and the Magicians took things from there, cruising past rival Swampscott, 48-7. See more in Sports, Page 13.

CHRISTMAS WALK

Star of the show

For Whear, serving as ‘Santa’s helper’ a gig like no other BY KRIS OLSON His counterpart—retired National Grand Bank employee Laura Best— knew what to expect. But she kept quiet, »More Xmas not wanting to spoil preview the surprise for Bruce coverage on Whear. A9, A21 “When we came around the corner and could hear the roar of the crowd, it was like a kid coming up the tunnel at Fenway Park and seeing the Green Monster for the first time,” Whear

says of his maiden voyage across Marblehead Harbor aboard the Sea Hooker, captained by Barnacle Restaurant owner Jay Sahagian, as “Santa’s special assistant.” “It was that big of a deal.” But just because Whear knows what to expect in his fourth turn as Kris Kringle’s Christmas Walk consigliere does not mean he relishes it any less. A performer since he was a child, Whear notes that he has stood in front of crowds as large as 1,100 people on a cruise ship. But nothing he has experienced is

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