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David Bull of Londonderry

David A. Bull, 73, of Londonderry, NH died Monday May 14, 2012 at the Southern NH Medical Center of Nashua. He was born on February 28, 1939 in North Grafton, MA, a son of the late Robert W. and Ruth M. (Charamella) Bull. Mr. Bull was raised and educated in Grafton, MA, graduating in 1956 from Grafton High School, he later attended Northeastern University. He is a US Air Force veteran, having served with the 2nd Armament and Electronic Squadron, The Gunnery Systems Unit, the 2nd Bomb Wing and the 38th Air Division and was stationed at SAC- Hunter AFB, Savannah, GA. David was a resident of Londonderry since 1975 and had been employed for over 23 years for Honeywell, retiring as a Principle Manufacturing Engineer. In his retirement, he enjoyed building computers for Future Microsystems and friends. He also enjoyed camping, kayaking, and was a dedicated NASCAR fan.

He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Susan A. (Clark) Bull of Londonderry, three sons, David Kevin Bull and his wife Priscilla Jean of Londonderry, Dana Robert Bull and his wife Stacy of Bow, NH, and Andrew Francis Bull and his wife Sherrin of Derry, NH, four grandchildren, Adam David, Jacob Alden, Elisabeth Ann, and Charlotte Lynn, one great granddaughter, Ava Marie, as well as many nieces, nephews and cousins. He was predeceased by his brother Ronald D. Bull.

Friends and family may call on Thursday May 17, 2012 from 4 – 7:30pm at the Peabody Funeral Homes and Crematorium, 290 Mammoth Road, Londonderry. A service to celebrate David’s life will be held at 7:30pm at the close of visiting hours with cremation to follow. In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made to Breathe New Hampshire, 145 Hollis St., Unit C, Manchester, NH, 03101.

Visit the Peabody Funeral Homes website to leave a condolence note or view others.

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UNH Cooperative Extension Continues Workshop Series

Are pests, disease, and weeds the bane of your beautiful garden? Learn how to better identify and control the vermin that feast on your garden’s bounty at a hands-on workshop sponsored by UNH Cooperative Extension on Tuesday, May 15 at 6:30 PM.

This garden workshop is the third of a series. Each workshop is $15 per family, or $40 for all four remaining sessions. All workshops will be held from 6:30 to 9 PM at the Hilton Auditorium of the Rockingham County Nursing Home at 117 North Road in Brentwood.

To register, contact Ron Christie at (603) 679-5616 or ron.christie(at)unh.edu. Because of limited space, registration is required.

The series continues through September with three more workshops:

  • May 29, “Permaculture, Composting, Cover Crops, and Green Manures”
  • September 11, “Extending Your Growing Season”
  • September 25, “Closing Your Garden, Assessing Your Success, Planning for Next Year”

For a workshop flyer, click here.

UNH Cooperative Extension provides New Hampshire citizens with research-based education and information, enhancing their ability to make informed decisions that strengthen youth, families and communities, sustain natural resources, and improve the economy. For more information on UNH Cooperative Extension programs in Rockingham County or the Master Gardener Program, call (603) 679-5616 or visit them online.

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Marilyn Garland of Londonderry

Marilyn R. Garland, 76, of Londonderry, NH died Sunday, May 13, 2012 at Parkland Medical Center, Derry following a period of declining health. She was born on February 20, 1936 in Minneapolis, MN, the only child of Henry W. and Mollie (Summerfeld) Longfellow. She was a resident of Derry since 1972, formerly living in Minnesota. Marilyn was a free spirited artist with an incredible amount of talent. She was a great cook and a fabulous seamstress with flair and style above and beyond the average. Once Mrs. Garland moved to the East Coast, she fell in love with New England, the beach and the ocean, but especially enjoyed her yearly trip with John to Maine. She was a very proud, independent woman who was very much loved by her family.

She is survived by two children, Mona L. Hamel and her husband Nick of Shoreview, MN, Mike Schelmeske and his wife Myra of Grand Marais, MN, three grandchildren, Nick and Luke Hamel, and Aurora Theimer-Schelmeske. She was predeceased by her husband John A. Garland in 1998 and one son Mark Schelmeske.

There are no calling hours. Following cremation, memorial services will be held at a later date by the family in Minnesota. Memorial Contributions may be made in Marilyn’s memory to Pet Tails Rescue,35 Youngs Crossing, Northwood, NH 03261, In memory of Marilyn Garland.

Visit the Peabody Funeral Homes website to leave a condolence note or view others.

 

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Londonderry Breaking News for May 6th – May 13th 2012

  • Great event for Elm Age! @Londonderry_ses @Londonderry_nes @Londonderry_mte @Londonderry_mhs http://t.co/X8FqMXsb 1:30-4:30 Mack’s Upick2 #
  • Londonderry Fire is headed out for a medical for a male that was choking, now disllodged. 3:08pm #
  • Art Inaction, story updated with more photos from Ltown News photojournalist Lauren Holahan http://t.co/iXozhsnP#
  • Still one hour left at the Visit and Discover Adams Pond event Mack’s U-Pick 2 $150 Gift Free Raffle, just fill out a card! Free Stuff too! #
  • Great Day at Adams Pond Event. Plans are being formulated for next year. Thank you to everyone that attended. #
  • MVA at Crossroads. No PIC #
  • Traffic Alert if you are headed north on I93 the exit 19 off ramp is closed the detor is up to exit 20 and then head back. 7:45am #
  • LFD toned out to CVS Pharmacy for service call. Time 2:39 PM #
  • Ltown Farm Weather, a nice day with rain throughout cloudy and highs in the mid 70s. Newly Planted apple trees and strawberries celebrate! #
  • Good Morning Weather @Al_Kaprielian: Mostly Cloudy Scattered showers, T-storm humid 67-73 Weds. Patchy fog, shower mid 50′s Weds. night. #
  • LFD responding to Stonyfield Yogurt on Burton Drive for unknown medical emergency. Time 3:03 PM #
  • LFD toned out for medical at Manchester-Boston Regional Airport at terminal. Time 4:43 PM #
  • LFD toned out to Winding Pond Road for medical with mutual aid from Derry. Time 4:47 PM #
  • Sports Readers: Londonderry baseball defeats BG 8-4 #
  • Sports: Londonderry girls lacrosse defeats Pinkerton Academy 19-11 #
  • Sports as it happens: Londonderry softball defeats BG 13-4 #
  • Sports Readers: Londonderry girls and boys tennis vs BG ppd until Sat 5/11 #
  • LFD toned out for elevator rescue at Presbyterian Church. Time 2:28 PM #
  • LFD on scene reporting occupant is out of the elevator at Presbyterian church. Companies returning to service. Time 2:30 PM #
  • LFD toned out to police department for medical emergency. Time 9:26 AM #

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Conserving Rare Cottontails

For the New England cottontail, mild winter conditions were a stroke of luck – a lack of snow made it easier for them to hide and find food. For the biologists who are surveying cottontails, the same conditions made it maddeningly difficult to find evidence of their presence. The challenges have not slowed the efforts of biologists from New Hampshire Fish and Game’s Nongame and Endangered Wildlife Program, along with partners across the Northeast, to ensure the survival of this state-endangered native rabbit.

Over the past few years, Fish and Game has worked with University of New Hampshire researchers, who developed protocols for detecting New England cottontails and creating population estimates from survey results. Fish and Game staff helped collect data and are continuing to look for any rabbits that may not have been identified during the previous years’ work and to confirm the persistence of individual rabbits at the occupied patches.

To find out how many New England cottontails are left and just where they are found, biologists usually look for evidence of the rabbits’ presence in the snow. Needless to say, last winter there wasn’t much snow in which to track rabbits in New Hampshire!

Monitoring for New England cottontails provides information about the location of remaining individuals, but the road to recovery for the species lies in the management efforts that are being done to increase the amount of available habitat on the landscape and number of rabbits that occupy these patches.

Many habitat management tools are used to create the “thickets” that New England cottontails need for survival — the same type of brambly patch that saved Br’er Rabbit many a time. Timber harvesting, invasive species removal, and planting of native shrubs and forbs for cover and food are three techniques that Fish and Game has been using to turn historic cottontail habitat to its shrubby, scrubby ideal. These management actions are based on a scientific species recovery plan that will benefit New England cottontails as well as dozens of other species, such as chestnut-sided warbler, smooth green snake and American woodcock, which require healthy young forests and shrublands. To date, more than 300 acres of new habitat have been created on both public and private lands since 2009. An additional 1,700 acres is needed to meet the goal for available habitat in New Hampshire by 2030.

After we build it, New England cottontails will come; we need to be patient, however, because it may take up to 5 years of growth for the new thicket to be suitable for rabbits to live in.In the meantime, working with partners at the Roger Williams Park Zoo in Providence, Rhode Island, biologists have established a pilot program for captive-breeding the cottontails. The goal is to breed New England cottontails in a controlled setting, using best practices to ensure genetic diversity and health in the animals, and then release the rabbits into the wild. This pilot program may be expanded to include other facilities across the Northeast – to augment declining populations across the region and reintroduce rabbits to their historic range.

While the warm, dry winter made things difficult for biologists, the weather was quite advantageous for the cottontails.The lack of snow provided better concealment for the rabbits, whose fur remains brown in the winter. It also improved conditions for the rabbits to forage on twigs, bark and buds of woody shrubs that can be difficult to access in soft, deep snow. In addition, the early spring brought green-up during the first part of the breeding season, providing high-quality nutrition for new litters of the year.

New Hampshire Fish and Game is working with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Natural Resource Conservation Service and other conservation partners across six states in the Northeast to recover the New England cottontail. Once common in our state, the population of this rabbit has dwindled over the last 50 years, so that today this unique native mammal faces possible extinction. Learn more here.

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Wim Hereijgers of Londonderry

Wilhelmus (Wim) Hereijgers of Londonderry NH, formerly of Salem and Peabody, MA, died suddenly on Thursday May 10, 2012 at the age of 57. He leaves his wife of 33 years, Nancy (LaChapelle), and two sons, Adriaan and Kristiaan. Born in Roosendaal, Holland, Wim served two years in the Dutch Royal Navy, after which he worked at Koninklijke Phillips Electronic in the Netherlands. It was during a business trip to Norelco during the Blizzard of ’78, that he met his future wife at the Hawthorne Hotel. By years’ end, he had emigrated to the U.S.

In 1979, he went to work at Sylvania in Danvers, MA as a mechanical engineer. During his 33 year career at Sylvania, he designed and built state of the art machines that produce a full range of incandescent, fluorescent and halogen lamps. In 1989, Sylvania transferred him to Lexington Kentucky and then transferred him back to Massachusetts in 1993. Over the course of his career, he patented several products and was honored with a design award.

In his leisure time, Wim was a skilled builder and fine furniture maker. He was a beloved husband and father as well as a good friend and neighbor. As a younger man, he was an avid soccer player, playing semi-professionally both in Holland and Massachusetts. After his playing years, he was a coach for Peabody and Salem youth soccer

In addition to his wife and sons, he is survived by his mother, Adriaana Hereijgers, his brother in law Jan van et Ende, two nieces, Sharon and Stefanie van et Ende, all of Roosendaal, Netherlands. In the US, he is survived by two sisters in law and their husbands: Lynn and Gerard Lavoie and Laurie LaChapelle and David Leach of Salem, MA, and many nieces and nephews: James LaChapelle of Freemont, NH, Stacey (LaChapelle) Abbatessa of Danvers, MA, Julie (LaChapelle) Macsata of Beverly, MA, Brian Lavoie of Rowley, MA, Brett Lavoie of Arlington, VA and Victoria and Nathaniel Leach of Salem, MA. He was predeceased by his father Adriaan Hereijgers and his sister Rian van et Ende, and parents- in- law, Albert and Marilyn LaChapelle as well as a brother- in- law, Marc LaChapelle.

Relatives and friends are invited to gather on Tuesday, May 15, 2012 at the Levesque Funeral Home, 163 Lafayette St. [Rt. 114 / 1-A] Salem, MA at 9:45 A.M. to be followed by his funeral mass in Ste. Anne Church, 290 Jefferson Ave., Salem at 11:00 A.M. Visiting hours: are on Monday 4 to 8 P.M. Burial will be in Greenlawn Cemetery, Salem. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to, Londonderry High School, c/o Jason Parent, Principal, for the Soccer Team, or the Swim Team, or the Marching Band, 295 Mammoth Rd., Londonderry, NH 03053. For guestbook and additional information, visit the Levesque Funeral Home Website.

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