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BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY New Bay Times, The Chesapeake Independent Newspaper, bringing you all the local news and happenings every week. ANNAPOLIS TO HOST FIRST JUNETEENTH FESTIVAL The City of Annapolis will hold a festival to commemorate Juneteenth, the oldest known celebration of the end of slavery in the U.S., June 18–19. Annapolis was a central location in the history of slavery, as a prime port for the slave trade. The city announced this week that it will acknowledge the turning point in that history with an NEW BAY TIMES ONLINE The story of Castlebay doesn’t start in Annapolis; it starts in New York. There Quinlan spent his days working for a real estate investment company and his nights as a musician — but not the kind you might think. “I started out as a blues and jazz musician,” Quinlan says. “I didn’t know any Irish songs. FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY New Bay Times, The Chesapeake Independent Newspaper, bringing you all the local news and happenings every week. ANNAPOLIS TO HOST FIRST JUNETEENTH FESTIVAL The City of Annapolis will hold a festival to commemorate Juneteenth, the oldest known celebration of the end of slavery in the U.S., June 18–19. Annapolis was a central location in the history of slavery, as a prime port for the slave trade. The city announced this week that it will acknowledge the turning point in that history with an NEW BAY TIMES ONLINE The story of Castlebay doesn’t start in Annapolis; it starts in New York. There Quinlan spent his days working for a real estate investment company and his nights as a musician — but not the kind you might think. “I started out as a blues and jazz musician,” Quinlan says. “I didn’t know any Irish songs. FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
UPCOMING EVENTS
Murray Hill Annapolis, MD Murray Hill, Annapolis. Secret Garden Tour SGT Returns! Saturday, June 5 and Sunday, June 6 from 12 noon to 5 pm The 2021 tour features private gardens in the Historic District. Murray Hill, the area between West Street and Spa Creek, holds a beautiful collection of homes built in various periods and architectural styles.2021 CAMP GUIDE
On Fridays during summer camp, demonstrations are held so that kids can show off their new skills. Held at 3p.m., the events are open to parents, guardians, family and friends. En-tice-ment Stables at Obligation Farm, 4016 Solomons Island Rd., Harwood. Contact: 410-798-4980; www.enticementstables.com. WEEKENDS ON THE WATER Destination: Deale . By Jody Argo Schroath . This summer, we’re taking you on a short cruise around our local waterways, diving into some of the best waterfront destinations.DESTINATION: FUN
Live music by the water at Anchored Inn in Deale. By Meg Walburn Viviano “It’s a nice place to live and work,” my husband said, diplomatically, of the Midwest town where he grew up. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version.UPCOMING EVENTS
NOTE TO EVENT-GOERS: Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, we encourage you to contact individual organizers to verify the dates of an event posted here.For questions about the event calendar, email.
BEHIND CLOSED DOORS
Behind Closed Doors. By Margaret Tearman. Quirky. Eccentric. Eclectic. That’s how people describe Scientists’ Cliffs, the private community on Calvert’s famous cliffs. The twisting dead-end lanes and the collection of cabins lining them have been quietly hidden from public view for the last 74 years. All five entrances to the community JOIN THE FIGHT AGAINST INVASIVES By Jillian Amodio . Ready to get your hands dirty to help fight an invasion? Now through late summer, join the Scenic Rivers Land Trust to help stop the spread of invasive plants in Crownsville. THE WRONG SIDE OF HISTORY: LOYALISTS IN THE AMERICAN During the American Revolution the Americans who rejected independence and who fought to keep the colonies safely within the bosom of the British Empire lost almost everything when the patriots declared victory at the Battle of Yorktown in 1781. History quickly lost sight of them in the years afterwards and looking back now, it’s hardBAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
CHESAPEAKE COUNTRY’S HIDDEN HISTORY Thankfully, there is a vast collection of sites, programs, and organizations devoted to preserving Chesapeake Country history. In this week’s issue of Bay Weekly, we look at two particularly significant examples. This week, archaeologists announced a discovery that is arguably the most important site in the history of Maryland’s colonization.HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a ANNAPOLIS TO HOST FIRST JUNETEENTH FESTIVAL The City of Annapolis will hold a festival to commemorate Juneteenth, the oldest known celebration of the end of slavery in the U.S., June 18–19. Annapolis was a central location in the history of slavery, as a prime port for the slave trade. The city announced this week that it will acknowledge the turning point in that history with an CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green DAVID SIMON ON HOMICIDE, TRUTH AND JOURNALISM David Simon: The Man Behind Homicide. Baltimore, and especially its harbor neighborhood of Fell's Point, have become famous to watchers of television over the past six years as the headquarters of NBC's Friday night drama, Homicide: Life in the Streets.BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
CHESAPEAKE COUNTRY’S HIDDEN HISTORY Thankfully, there is a vast collection of sites, programs, and organizations devoted to preserving Chesapeake Country history. In this week’s issue of Bay Weekly, we look at two particularly significant examples. This week, archaeologists announced a discovery that is arguably the most important site in the history of Maryland’s colonization.HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a ANNAPOLIS TO HOST FIRST JUNETEENTH FESTIVAL The City of Annapolis will hold a festival to commemorate Juneteenth, the oldest known celebration of the end of slavery in the U.S., June 18–19. Annapolis was a central location in the history of slavery, as a prime port for the slave trade. The city announced this week that it will acknowledge the turning point in that history with an CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green DAVID SIMON ON HOMICIDE, TRUTH AND JOURNALISM David Simon: The Man Behind Homicide. Baltimore, and especially its harbor neighborhood of Fell's Point, have become famous to watchers of television over the past six years as the headquarters of NBC's Friday night drama, Homicide: Life in the Streets.UPCOMING EVENTS
Murray Hill Annapolis, MD Murray Hill, Annapolis. Secret Garden Tour SGT Returns! Saturday, June 5 and Sunday, June 6 from 12 noon to 5 pm The 2021 tour features private gardens in the Historic District. Murray Hill, the area between West Street and Spa Creek, holds a beautiful collection of homes built in various periods and architectural styles.2021 CAMP GUIDE
On Fridays during summer camp, demonstrations are held so that kids can show off their new skills. Held at 3p.m., the events are open to parents, guardians, family and friends. En-tice-ment Stables at Obligation Farm, 4016 Solomons Island Rd., Harwood. Contact: 410-798-4980; www.enticementstables.com. WEEKENDS ON THE WATER Destination: Deale . By Jody Argo Schroath . This summer, we’re taking you on a short cruise around our local waterways, diving into some of the best waterfront destinations.DESTINATION: FUN
Live music by the water at Anchored Inn in Deale. By Meg Walburn Viviano “It’s a nice place to live and work,” my husband said, diplomatically, of the Midwest town where he grew up.I DO! - BAY WEEKLY
Married June 23, 2001. Kevin and I were married at the United States Naval Academy. We were joined by 350 family and friends, including Kevin’s sponsor parents, Mitch and Susan Brown, who were responsible for setting us up on a blind date. It was a beautiful summer day. We were attended by a bridal party of 20.PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version.UPCOMING EVENTS
NOTE TO EVENT-GOERS: Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, we encourage you to contact individual organizers to verify the dates of an event posted here.For questions about the event calendar, email.
NEW LACROSSE LEAGUE DEBUTS IN ANNE ARUNDEL By Steve Adams. Nearly five months after they saw their spring seasons canceled by COVID, lacrosse players in Anne Arundel County have a chance to get in some safe, serious competition in 2020 thanks to a brand new league: the Fall Anne Arundel Lacrosse League (FAALL). Hosted in partnership with Anne Arundel County Recreation and Parks JOIN THE FIGHT AGAINST INVASIVES By Jillian Amodio . Ready to get your hands dirty to help fight an invasion? Now through late summer, join the Scenic Rivers Land Trust to help stop the spread of invasive plants in Crownsville. THE WRONG SIDE OF HISTORY: LOYALISTS IN THE AMERICAN During the American Revolution the Americans who rejected independence and who fought to keep the colonies safely within the bosom of the British Empire lost almost everything when the patriots declared victory at the Battle of Yorktown in 1781. History quickly lost sight of them in the years afterwards and looking back now, it’s hardBAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY New Bay Times, The Chesapeake Independent Newspaper, bringing you all the local news and happenings every week. MOLL DYER ROCK RELOCATED This weekend, a local historical society hopes to rewrite her history and protect the physical reminder of her story when the Moll Dyer Rock is relocated. While little exists by way of historical records, Dyer likely began her life in Devon, England. In the mid-1600s she and her two brothers travelled first to the West Indies as indentured FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY New Bay Times, The Chesapeake Independent Newspaper, bringing you all the local news and happenings every week. MOLL DYER ROCK RELOCATED This weekend, a local historical society hopes to rewrite her history and protect the physical reminder of her story when the Moll Dyer Rock is relocated. While little exists by way of historical records, Dyer likely began her life in Devon, England. In the mid-1600s she and her two brothers travelled first to the West Indies as indentured FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
UPCOMING EVENTS
Murray Hill Annapolis, MD Murray Hill, Annapolis. Secret Garden Tour SGT Returns! Saturday, June 5 and Sunday, June 6 from 12 noon to 5 pm The 2021 tour features private gardens in the Historic District. Murray Hill, the area between West Street and Spa Creek, holds a beautiful collection of homes built in various periods and architectural styles.2021 CAMP GUIDE
On Fridays during summer camp, demonstrations are held so that kids can show off their new skills. Held at 3p.m., the events are open to parents, guardians, family and friends. En-tice-ment Stables at Obligation Farm, 4016 Solomons Island Rd., Harwood. Contact: 410-798-4980; www.enticementstables.com.CLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. WEEKENDS ON THE WATER Destination: Deale . By Jody Argo Schroath . This summer, we’re taking you on a short cruise around our local waterways, diving into some of the best waterfront destinations.DESTINATION: FUN
Live music by the water at Anchored Inn in Deale. By Meg Walburn Viviano “It’s a nice place to live and work,” my husband said, diplomatically, of the Midwest town where he grew up.BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
UPCOMING EVENTS
NOTE TO EVENT-GOERS: Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, we encourage you to contact individual organizers to verify the dates of an event posted here.For questions about the event calendar, email.
PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version. JOIN THE FIGHT AGAINST INVASIVES By Jillian Amodio . Ready to get your hands dirty to help fight an invasion? Now through late summer, join the Scenic Rivers Land Trust to help stop the spread of invasive plants in Crownsville. PAX RIVER QUILTERS GUILD Pax River Quilters Guild Welcomes you All levels of Quilters Welcome Visit our Website www.paxriverquiltguild.com or email prqgsomd@gmail.com for an application to join. Meetings are currently being held online on zoom during covid restrictions. If you become a member you can join in on Online Guest Speaker nights, Sit and Sews and online Quilto(Bingo). MondayBAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY New Bay Times, The Chesapeake Independent Newspaper, bringing you all the local news and happenings every week. MOLL DYER ROCK RELOCATED This weekend, a local historical society hopes to rewrite her history and protect the physical reminder of her story when the Moll Dyer Rock is relocated. While little exists by way of historical records, Dyer likely began her life in Devon, England. In the mid-1600s she and her two brothers travelled first to the West Indies as indentured FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY New Bay Times, The Chesapeake Independent Newspaper, bringing you all the local news and happenings every week. MOLL DYER ROCK RELOCATED This weekend, a local historical society hopes to rewrite her history and protect the physical reminder of her story when the Moll Dyer Rock is relocated. While little exists by way of historical records, Dyer likely began her life in Devon, England. In the mid-1600s she and her two brothers travelled first to the West Indies as indentured FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
UPCOMING EVENTS
Murray Hill Annapolis, MD Murray Hill, Annapolis. Secret Garden Tour SGT Returns! Saturday, June 5 and Sunday, June 6 from 12 noon to 5 pm The 2021 tour features private gardens in the Historic District. Murray Hill, the area between West Street and Spa Creek, holds a beautiful collection of homes built in various periods and architectural styles.2021 CAMP GUIDE
On Fridays during summer camp, demonstrations are held so that kids can show off their new skills. Held at 3p.m., the events are open to parents, guardians, family and friends. En-tice-ment Stables at Obligation Farm, 4016 Solomons Island Rd., Harwood. Contact: 410-798-4980; www.enticementstables.com.CLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. WEEKENDS ON THE WATER Destination: Deale . By Jody Argo Schroath . This summer, we’re taking you on a short cruise around our local waterways, diving into some of the best waterfront destinations.DESTINATION: FUN
Live music by the water at Anchored Inn in Deale. By Meg Walburn Viviano “It’s a nice place to live and work,” my husband said, diplomatically, of the Midwest town where he grew up.BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version.UPCOMING EVENTS
NOTE TO EVENT-GOERS: Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, we encourage you to contact individual organizers to verify the dates of an event posted here.For questions about the event calendar, email.
JOIN THE FIGHT AGAINST INVASIVES By Jillian Amodio . Ready to get your hands dirty to help fight an invasion? Now through late summer, join the Scenic Rivers Land Trust to help stop the spread of invasive plants in Crownsville. THE WRONG SIDE OF HISTORY: LOYALISTS IN THE AMERICAN During the American Revolution the Americans who rejected independence and who fought to keep the colonies safely within the bosom of the British Empire lost almost everything when the patriots declared victory at the Battle of Yorktown in 1781. History quickly lost sight of them in the years afterwards and looking back now, it’s hardBAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysBLOODY POINT
By Christina Gardner. What happened across the Bay at Kent Island to give Bloody Point and the Bloody Point Lighthouse that chilling name? Nobody knows — for certain. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Photo by Visit Annapolis & Anne Arundel County ; By Steve Adams . As statewide vaccine numbers and temperatures continue to climb, Visit Annapolis & Anne Arundel County (VAAAC) is hoping its latest innovation, the Arundel Ambassador, will encourage stir-crazy Marylanders to choose businesses and attractions in the region when they begin looking for some safe, socially-distanced fun. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Just How Republican Is Anne Arundel’s 33rd, Bobby Neall Wonders. A sort of civil war ravages Anne Arundel’s 33rd legislative district, where Senator Bobby Neall’s defection to the Democrats threatens to divide district Republicans. CHESAPEAKE COUNTRY’S HIDDEN HISTORY Photo by Jillian Amodio. By Meg Walburn Viviano, CBM Editorial Director. History gets a bad rap. I suspect social studies classes are to blame—full of dates, wars, and geographical regions that you will be tested on later.. For those who aren’t so good with retaining dates and other minute facts (guilty!), it’s easy to feel detached and disengaged from the history that unfolded rightHARUNDALE MALL
By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in GlenBurnie,
CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH By Dr. Francis Gouin. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home withoutusing weed killers.
DAVID SIMON ON HOMICIDE, TRUTH AND JOURNALISM David Simon: The Man Behind Homicide. Baltimore, and especially its harbor neighborhood of Fell's Point, have become famous to watchers of television over the past six years as the headquarters of NBC's Friday night drama, Homicide: Life in the Streets. FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH By Krista Pfunder . A passion for cheese brought them together. Soon a South County couple will be sharing that affection with Calvert County by opening a new storefront.BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysBLOODY POINT
By Christina Gardner. What happened across the Bay at Kent Island to give Bloody Point and the Bloody Point Lighthouse that chilling name? Nobody knows — for certain. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Photo by Visit Annapolis & Anne Arundel County ; By Steve Adams . As statewide vaccine numbers and temperatures continue to climb, Visit Annapolis & Anne Arundel County (VAAAC) is hoping its latest innovation, the Arundel Ambassador, will encourage stir-crazy Marylanders to choose businesses and attractions in the region when they begin looking for some safe, socially-distanced fun. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Just How Republican Is Anne Arundel’s 33rd, Bobby Neall Wonders. A sort of civil war ravages Anne Arundel’s 33rd legislative district, where Senator Bobby Neall’s defection to the Democrats threatens to divide district Republicans. CHESAPEAKE COUNTRY’S HIDDEN HISTORY Photo by Jillian Amodio. By Meg Walburn Viviano, CBM Editorial Director. History gets a bad rap. I suspect social studies classes are to blame—full of dates, wars, and geographical regions that you will be tested on later.. For those who aren’t so good with retaining dates and other minute facts (guilty!), it’s easy to feel detached and disengaged from the history that unfolded rightHARUNDALE MALL
By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in GlenBurnie,
CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH By Dr. Francis Gouin. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home withoutusing weed killers.
DAVID SIMON ON HOMICIDE, TRUTH AND JOURNALISM David Simon: The Man Behind Homicide. Baltimore, and especially its harbor neighborhood of Fell's Point, have become famous to watchers of television over the past six years as the headquarters of NBC's Friday night drama, Homicide: Life in the Streets. FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH By Krista Pfunder . A passion for cheese brought them together. Soon a South County couple will be sharing that affection with Calvert County by opening a new storefront.UPCOMING EVENTS
NOTE TO EVENT-GOERS: Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, we encourage you to contact individual organizers to verify the dates of an event posted here.For questions about the event calendar, email.
2021 CAMP GUIDE
Annapolis School of Seamanship Junior Captains Course . Kids get the chance to get out on the water and have fun this summer while learning essential boating skills from licensed professionals. WEEKENDS ON THE WATER Destination: Deale . By Jody Argo Schroath . This summer, we’re taking you on a short cruise around our local waterways, diving into some of the best waterfront destinations.DESTINATION: FUN
Live music by the water at Anchored Inn in Deale. By Meg Walburn Viviano “It’s a nice place to live and work,” my husband said, diplomatically, of the Midwest town where he grew up.I DO! - BAY WEEKLY
Phyllis and William Conrad Married September 25, 1954. I, William, take thee Phyllis I, Phyllis, take thee William Sixty-four years ago, these vows were spoken at the Ager Road Methodist Church inBLOODY POINT
By Christina Gardner. What happened across the Bay at Kent Island to give Bloody Point and the Bloody Point Lighthouse that chilling name? Nobody knows — for certain.PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version. JOIN THE FIGHT AGAINST INVASIVES By Jillian Amodio . Ready to get your hands dirty to help fight an invasion? Now through late summer, join the Scenic Rivers Land Trust to help stop the spread of invasive plants in Crownsville. PAX RIVER QUILTERS GUILD Pax River Quilters Guild Welcomes you All levels of Quilters Welcome Visit our Website www.paxriverquiltguild.com or email prqgsomd@gmail.com for an application to join. Meetings are currently being held online on zoom during covid restrictions. If you become a member you can join in on Online Guest Speaker nights, Sit and Sews and online Quilto(Bingo). Monday THE WRONG SIDE OF HISTORY: LOYALISTS IN THE AMERICAN During the American Revolution the Americans who rejected independence and who fought to keep the colonies safely within the bosom of the British Empire lost almost everything when the patriots declared victory at the Battle of Yorktown in 1781. History quickly lost sight of them in the years afterwards and looking back now, it’s hardBAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY New Bay Times, The Chesapeake Independent Newspaper, bringing you all the local news and happenings every week. MOLL DYER ROCK RELOCATED This weekend, a local historical society hopes to rewrite her history and protect the physical reminder of her story when the Moll Dyer Rock is relocated. While little exists by way of historical records, Dyer likely began her life in Devon, England. In the mid-1600s she and her two brothers travelled first to the West Indies as indentured FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY New Bay Times, The Chesapeake Independent Newspaper, bringing you all the local news and happenings every week. MOLL DYER ROCK RELOCATED This weekend, a local historical society hopes to rewrite her history and protect the physical reminder of her story when the Moll Dyer Rock is relocated. While little exists by way of historical records, Dyer likely began her life in Devon, England. In the mid-1600s she and her two brothers travelled first to the West Indies as indentured FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
UPCOMING EVENTS
Murray Hill Annapolis, MD Murray Hill, Annapolis. Secret Garden Tour SGT Returns! Saturday, June 5 and Sunday, June 6 from 12 noon to 5 pm The 2021 tour features private gardens in the Historic District. Murray Hill, the area between West Street and Spa Creek, holds a beautiful collection of homes built in various periods and architectural styles.CLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. PAX RIVER QUILTERS GUILD Pax River Quilters Guild Welcomes you All levels of Quilters Welcome Visit our Website www.paxriverquiltguild.com or email prqgsomd@gmail.com for an application to join. Meetings are currently being held online on zoom during covid restrictions. If you become a member you can join in on Online Guest Speaker nights, Sit and Sews and online Quilto(Bingo). MondayPLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version.BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
BLACKSMITHING: FLINT & STEEL Learn about colonial blacksmithing and create your own flint and steel (ages 15+). 10am-2pm, Jefferson Patterson Park, St. Leonard, $30 w/discounts, RSVP: www.jefpat.maryland.gov. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
GENERATOR - BAY WEEKLY Hurricane Season Is Here! Generator for sale, 10,000 watts. Includes heavy duty electrical cables needed to connect to home panel. Electric start, runs great, $650, Call 240-434-8864. COVE POINT LIGHTHOUSE, 172 YEARS OLD At 172 Years Old, Cove Point Lighthouse Has its Job to Do By Connie Darago Follow the southern corridor of Route 2/4 through Calvert County, and you make your way down the center of a peninsula.With the Chesapeake Bay to the east and the Patuxent River to the west, it seems only fitting to find a lighthouse near the end of your journey. NEW BAY TIMES ONLINE The story of Castlebay doesn’t start in Annapolis; it starts in New York. There Quinlan spent his days working for a real estate investment company and his nights as a musician — but not the kind you might think. “I started out as a blues and jazz musician,” Quinlan says. “I didn’t know any Irish songs.BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY New Bay Times, The Chesapeake Independent Newspaper, bringing you all the local news and happenings every week. MOLL DYER ROCK RELOCATED This weekend, a local historical society hopes to rewrite her history and protect the physical reminder of her story when the Moll Dyer Rock is relocated. While little exists by way of historical records, Dyer likely began her life in Devon, England. In the mid-1600s she and her two brothers travelled first to the West Indies as indentured FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY New Bay Times, The Chesapeake Independent Newspaper, bringing you all the local news and happenings every week. MOLL DYER ROCK RELOCATED This weekend, a local historical society hopes to rewrite her history and protect the physical reminder of her story when the Moll Dyer Rock is relocated. While little exists by way of historical records, Dyer likely began her life in Devon, England. In the mid-1600s she and her two brothers travelled first to the West Indies as indentured FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
UPCOMING EVENTS
Murray Hill Annapolis, MD Murray Hill, Annapolis. Secret Garden Tour SGT Returns! Saturday, June 5 and Sunday, June 6 from 12 noon to 5 pm The 2021 tour features private gardens in the Historic District. Murray Hill, the area between West Street and Spa Creek, holds a beautiful collection of homes built in various periods and architectural styles.CLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. PAX RIVER QUILTERS GUILD Pax River Quilters Guild Welcomes you All levels of Quilters Welcome Visit our Website www.paxriverquiltguild.com or email prqgsomd@gmail.com for an application to join. Meetings are currently being held online on zoom during covid restrictions. If you become a member you can join in on Online Guest Speaker nights, Sit and Sews and online Quilto(Bingo). MondayPLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version.BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
BLACKSMITHING: FLINT & STEEL Learn about colonial blacksmithing and create your own flint and steel (ages 15+). 10am-2pm, Jefferson Patterson Park, St. Leonard, $30 w/discounts, RSVP: www.jefpat.maryland.gov. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
GENERATOR - BAY WEEKLY Hurricane Season Is Here! Generator for sale, 10,000 watts. Includes heavy duty electrical cables needed to connect to home panel. Electric start, runs great, $650, Call 240-434-8864. COVE POINT LIGHTHOUSE, 172 YEARS OLD At 172 Years Old, Cove Point Lighthouse Has its Job to Do By Connie Darago Follow the southern corridor of Route 2/4 through Calvert County, and you make your way down the center of a peninsula.With the Chesapeake Bay to the east and the Patuxent River to the west, it seems only fitting to find a lighthouse near the end of your journey. NEW BAY TIMES ONLINE The story of Castlebay doesn’t start in Annapolis; it starts in New York. There Quinlan spent his days working for a real estate investment company and his nights as a musician — but not the kind you might think. “I started out as a blues and jazz musician,” Quinlan says. “I didn’t know any Irish songs.BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000.PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
ANNAPOLIS TO HOST FIRST JUNETEENTH FESTIVAL The City of Annapolis will hold a festival to commemorate Juneteenth, the oldest known celebration of the end of slavery in the U.S., June 18–19. Annapolis was a central location in the history of slavery, as a prime port for the slave trade. The city announced this week that it will acknowledge the turning point in that history with an CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green THE SKELETONS OF BEVERLY-TRITON BEACH Mayo Beach, Beverly Beach and Triton Beach were all resorts that catered to the influx of summer residents. “People from D.C. and Baltimore owned summer cottages in the area. Women and children would stay longer, while the husbands worked during the week and joined them on weekends,” explains Lara L. Lutz, author of Chesapeake’sWestern
FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
BAY WEEKLY
It’s Summer! Now Hit the Road; Putting the RV in Travel; Land Trust Protects Old Growth Forest; Dunkirk District Park Playground to be Replaced; The Moviegoer: Cinema Two WaysCLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000.PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
ANNAPOLIS TO HOST FIRST JUNETEENTH FESTIVAL The City of Annapolis will hold a festival to commemorate Juneteenth, the oldest known celebration of the end of slavery in the U.S., June 18–19. Annapolis was a central location in the history of slavery, as a prime port for the slave trade. The city announced this week that it will acknowledge the turning point in that history with an CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green THE SKELETONS OF BEVERLY-TRITON BEACH Mayo Beach, Beverly Beach and Triton Beach were all resorts that catered to the influx of summer residents. “People from D.C. and Baltimore owned summer cottages in the area. Women and children would stay longer, while the husbands worked during the week and joined them on weekends,” explains Lara L. Lutz, author of Chesapeake’sWestern
FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
UPCOMING EVENTS
Marley Station Mall 7900 Ritchie Hwy., Glen Burnie. Enjoy midway fun for the whole family with rides and games for all ages and favorite fair food. Event admission is free except after 6 pm Saturday (ride ticket pack purchase required). Unlimited ride wristbands (for riders 36 inches and taller) are $35 on site and discounted online. PAX RIVER QUILTERS GUILD Pax River Quilters Guild Welcomes you All levels of Quilters Welcome Visit our Website www.paxriverquiltguild.com or email prqgsomd@gmail.com for an application to join. Meetings are currently being held online on zoom during covid restrictions. If you become a member you can join in on Online Guest Speaker nights, Sit and Sews and online Quilto(Bingo). Monday2021 CAMP GUIDE
On Fridays during summer camp, demonstrations are held so that kids can show off their new skills. Held at 3p.m., the events are open to parents, guardians, family and friends. En-tice-ment Stables at Obligation Farm, 4016 Solomons Island Rd., Harwood. Contact: 410-798-4980; www.enticementstables.com.BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
BLACKSMITHING: FLINT & STEEL Learn about colonial blacksmithing and create your own flint and steel (ages 15+). 10am-2pm, Jefferson Patterson Park, St. Leonard, $30 w/discounts, RSVP: www.jefpat.maryland.gov. GENERATOR - BAY WEEKLY Hurricane Season Is Here! Generator for sale, 10,000 watts. Includes heavy duty electrical cables needed to connect to home panel. Electric start, runs great, $650, Call 240-434-8864.HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a DAVID SIMON ON HOMICIDE, TRUTH AND JOURNALISM David Simon: The Man Behind Homicide. Baltimore, and especially its harbor neighborhood of Fell's Point, have become famous to watchers of television over the past six years as the headquarters of NBC's Friday night drama, Homicide: Life in the Streets. BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S LEAD STORY A frantic woman runs through the mall, looking for her lost son. She had turned away, for only a second, to admire a pair of shoes in a storefront. When she turned back around, her child was gone. Solomon takes a full description of the child including age, race, height, hair length and color and clothing. NEW BAY TIMES ONLINE The story of Castlebay doesn’t start in Annapolis; it starts in New York. There Quinlan spent his days working for a real estate investment company and his nights as a musician — but not the kind you might think. “I started out as a blues and jazz musician,” Quinlan says. “I didn’t know any Irish songs.BAY WEEKLY
May 20, 2021. Posts navigation. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000.Classified Ads.
CLASSIFIEDS
The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. Classified Ads.PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version.BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
WHO WAS ANNE ARUNDEL? Anne was born at Wardour in 1615. A beauty, as you can see in her portrait, at age 13 she married family ally Cecil Calvert, the Second Lord Baltimore, who was dedicated to establishing a new English colony in Maryland. Anne and likely her father supported him in his efforts. Lord Arundell built Anne and Cecil a stone house called Hook Farm CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
BAY WEEKLY
May 20, 2021. Posts navigation. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000.Classified Ads.
CLASSIFIEDS
The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. Classified Ads.PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version.BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
WHO WAS ANNE ARUNDEL? Anne was born at Wardour in 1615. A beauty, as you can see in her portrait, at age 13 she married family ally Cecil Calvert, the Second Lord Baltimore, who was dedicated to establishing a new English colony in Maryland. Anne and likely her father supported him in his efforts. Lord Arundell built Anne and Cecil a stone house called Hook Farm CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
UPCOMING EVENTS
Marley Station Mall 7900 Ritchie Hwy., Glen Burnie. Enjoy midway fun for the whole family with rides and games for all ages and favorite fair food. Event admission is free except after 6 pm Saturday (ride ticket pack purchase required). Unlimited ride wristbands (for riders 36 inches and taller) are $35 on site and discounted online.PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version. BLACKSMITHING: FLINT & STEEL Learn about colonial blacksmithing and create your own flint and steel (ages 15+). 10am-2pm, Jefferson Patterson Park, St. Leonard, $30 w/discounts, RSVP: www.jefpat.maryland.gov.I DO! - BAY WEEKLY
Married June 23, 2001. Kevin and I were married at the United States Naval Academy. We were joined by 350 family and friends, including Kevin’s sponsor parents, Mitch and Susan Brown, who were responsible for setting us up on a blind date. It was a beautiful summer day. We were attended by a bridal party of 20. GENERATOR - BAY WEEKLY Hurricane Season Is Here! Generator for sale, 10,000 watts. Includes heavy duty electrical cables needed to connect to home panel. Electric start, runs great, $650, Call 240-434-8864. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
BEHIND CLOSED DOORS
Behind Closed Doors. By Margaret Tearman. Quirky. Eccentric. Eclectic. That’s how people describe Scientists’ Cliffs, the private community on Calvert’s famous cliffs. The twisting dead-end lanes and the collection of cabins lining them have been quietly hidden from public view for the last 74 years. All five entrances to the community BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
DAVID SIMON ON HOMICIDE, TRUTH AND JOURNALISM David Simon: The Man Behind Homicide. Baltimore, and especially its harbor neighborhood of Fell's Point, have become famous to watchers of television over the past six years as the headquarters of NBC's Friday night drama, Homicide: Life in the Streets. NEW BAY TIMES ONLINE The story of Castlebay doesn’t start in Annapolis; it starts in New York. There Quinlan spent his days working for a real estate investment company and his nights as a musician — but not the kind you might think. “I started out as a blues and jazz musician,” Quinlan says. “I didn’t know any Irish songs.BAY WEEKLY
May 20, 2021. Posts navigation. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000.Classified Ads.
CLASSIFIEDS
The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. Classified Ads.PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version.BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
WHO WAS ANNE ARUNDEL? Anne was born at Wardour in 1615. A beauty, as you can see in her portrait, at age 13 she married family ally Cecil Calvert, the Second Lord Baltimore, who was dedicated to establishing a new English colony in Maryland. Anne and likely her father supported him in his efforts. Lord Arundell built Anne and Cecil a stone house called Hook Farm CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
BAY WEEKLY
May 20, 2021. Posts navigation. In This Week’s Issue. The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000.Classified Ads.
CLASSIFIEDS
The Long-Awaited Summer. Bike the Bay? Stream Expert: Stream Restoration Works, Sort Of. Check out a Fishing Pole? A Shot at $400,000. Classified Ads.PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version.BLOODY POINT
Story 1: In the early days of the colonies, the land that would become known as Kent Island was inadvertently given to two people who represented two colonies — one from Maryland and the other from Virginia. The mistake, unnoticed until one had established a town, led to a bloody scrimmage. Story 2: Native Americans were massacred at thepoint.
HARUNDALE MALL
Harundale Mall. By Diana Dinsick. Millersville resident Joe Campbell and his high school buddies have fond memories of the former Harundale Mall in Glen Burnie, touted as the first enclosed mall on the East Coast. “It was the go-to place on the weekends,” says Campbell, now 66 and the owner of a VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
WHO WAS ANNE ARUNDEL? Anne was born at Wardour in 1615. A beauty, as you can see in her portrait, at age 13 she married family ally Cecil Calvert, the Second Lord Baltimore, who was dedicated to establishing a new English colony in Maryland. Anne and likely her father supported him in his efforts. Lord Arundell built Anne and Cecil a stone house called Hook Farm CLEAR YOUR UNDERBRUSH Clear Your Underbrush. A Bay Weekly reader recently asked me how he could clear away the underbrush in woods surrounding his home without using weed killers. It can be done with persistence and perseverance. You don’t want to cut away any brush until you see mature foliage on the brush you desire to control. Mature leaves go from light green FAMILY OWNED CHEESE SHOP SET TO OPEN IN NORTH BEACH The Vaughans picked North Beach as the spot to open the company’s first physical location. Located on 7th Street, customers can dine in at the shop or take their food to go and enjoy it on North Beach’s nearby boardwalk or beach. Vaughan Cheese Counter & Bar will serve more than 75 American artisan cheeses cut to order as well assandwiches
UPCOMING EVENTS
Marley Station Mall 7900 Ritchie Hwy., Glen Burnie. Enjoy midway fun for the whole family with rides and games for all ages and favorite fair food. Event admission is free except after 6 pm Saturday (ride ticket pack purchase required). Unlimited ride wristbands (for riders 36 inches and taller) are $35 on site and discounted online.PLACE YOUR AD
Place your 25-word ad in the print edition of Bay Weekly and online. Pictures will only be displayed in the online version. BLACKSMITHING: FLINT & STEEL Learn about colonial blacksmithing and create your own flint and steel (ages 15+). 10am-2pm, Jefferson Patterson Park, St. Leonard, $30 w/discounts, RSVP: www.jefpat.maryland.gov.I DO! - BAY WEEKLY
Married June 23, 2001. Kevin and I were married at the United States Naval Academy. We were joined by 350 family and friends, including Kevin’s sponsor parents, Mitch and Susan Brown, who were responsible for setting us up on a blind date. It was a beautiful summer day. We were attended by a bridal party of 20. GENERATOR - BAY WEEKLY Hurricane Season Is Here! Generator for sale, 10,000 watts. Includes heavy duty electrical cables needed to connect to home panel. Electric start, runs great, $650, Call 240-434-8864. VISITOR CENTER GOES MOBILE Unveiled during a sneak preview event in downtown Annapolis on March 6, the 20-foot-long travel trailer will be hitting the road and serving as a mobile visitor information center at high-traffic locations throughout the county and state, distributing promotional materials for businesses and attractions, playing video blogs on itstwo 65-inch
BEHIND CLOSED DOORS
Behind Closed Doors. By Margaret Tearman. Quirky. Eccentric. Eclectic. That’s how people describe Scientists’ Cliffs, the private community on Calvert’s famous cliffs. The twisting dead-end lanes and the collection of cabins lining them have been quietly hidden from public view for the last 74 years. All five entrances to the community BAY WEEKLY: THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY Three women dance their ways back to youth every Wednesday as they slip into leotards, straighten their backs and point their toes. Nancy Proebstle, 45, of Millersville, gracefully arches her back and brings her head toward the floor. Nancy Wright, 57, of Arnold, glides like aswan.
DAVID SIMON ON HOMICIDE, TRUTH AND JOURNALISM David Simon: The Man Behind Homicide. Baltimore, and especially its harbor neighborhood of Fell's Point, have become famous to watchers of television over the past six years as the headquarters of NBC's Friday night drama, Homicide: Life in the Streets. NEW BAY TIMES ONLINE The story of Castlebay doesn’t start in Annapolis; it starts in New York. There Quinlan spent his days working for a real estate investment company and his nights as a musician — but not the kind you might think. “I started out as a blues and jazz musician,” Quinlan says. “I didn’t know any Irish songs.Skip to content
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