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CONTRACTOR LOU NOP and his helpers spent several days this past week dismantling a 130-year- old carriage barn on the Otter Creek Child Center property at 150 Weybridge St. in Middlebury. The barn will be reassembled at Sunrise Orchards in Cornwall, where it will serve as an event/retail venue. Sunrise’s Barney Hodges took part in the removal process.
Independent photo/Steve James
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CONTRACTOR LOU NOP and his helpers spent several days this past week dismantling a 130-year- old carriage barn on the Otter Creek Child Center property at 150 Weybridge St. in Middlebury. The barn will be reassembled at Sunrise Orchards in Cornwall, where it will serve as an event/retail venue. Photos by Emily May
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JULIAN STEIN TRIES out some eclipse glasses at Mary Hogan School.
Independent photo/Steve James
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MARY HOGAN STUDENTS Zara Trump, left, Matilda Boyce and Julian Stein try out eclipse glasses while learning about the astronomical event last week. The protective spectacles will help students
safely view the total solar eclipse on April 8.
Independent photo/Steve James
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FOURTH-GRADER MATILDA Boyce has the moon in her hands.
Independent photo/Steve James
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ZARA TRUMP STANDS between the sun and the earth in the Mary Hogan library.
Independent photo/Steve James
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FIELDING HENDRICKSON, A fourth-grader at Mary Hogan Elementary School in Middlebury, squints during a lesson eclipses last week as she tries to imagine what it will look like when the
moon passes between the Earth and Sun on April 8.
Independent photo/Steve James
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FOURTH-GRADER JACK Simpson takes a closer look at the moon.
Independent photo/Steve James
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THE APRIL 8 total solar eclipse is less than two weeks away, and students at Mary Hogan Elementary School are getting ready for it. Pupils spent time learning about the once-in-a-lifetime astronomical event this past Wednesday, March 20, with the help of some kid-sized models.
Independent photo/Steve James
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THE APRIL 8 total solar eclipse is less than two weeks away, and students at Mary Hogan Elementary School are getting ready for it. Pupils spent time learning about the once-in-a-lifetime astronomical event this past Wednesday, March 20, with the help of some kid-sized models.
Independent photo/Steve James
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THE APRIL 8 total solar eclipse is less than two weeks away, and students at Mary Hogan Elementary School are getting ready for it. Pupils spent time learning about the once-in-a-lifetime astronomical event this past Wednesday, March 20, with the help of some kid-sized models.
Independent photo/Steve James
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CATIE RAISHART AND her husband, Mark, tap around 500 maples on their Foxglove Farm in Leicester. Unusually, they tap red maples, rather than the celebrated sugar maple. It doesn’t seem to matter — the 150 gallons of syrup they produce is as sweet as any you’re going to taste. After the heavy snowfall on Saturday, the crowd at the sugarhouse on Sunday was not huge, but they were appreciative. Independent photos/Steve James
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MARK RAISHART FEEDS another piece of hardwood into the evaporator at the Foxglove Farm sugarhouse in Leicester on Sunday during Vermont Open Sugarhouse Weekend. He and his wife, Catie, boil up about 150-200 gallons of maple syrup each year.
Independent photo/Steve James
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MARK AND CATIE Raishart tap around 500 maples on their Foxglove Farm in Leicester. Unusually, they tap red maples, rather than the celebrated sugar maple. It doesn’t seem to matter — the 150 gallons of syrup they produce is as sweet as any you’re going to taste. After the heavy snowfall on Saturday, the crowd at the sugarhouse on Sunday was not huge, but they were appreciative. Independent photos/Steve James
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THE APRIL 8 total solar eclipse is less than two weeks away, and students at Mary Hogan Elementary School are getting ready for it. Pupils spent time learning about the once-in-a-lifetime astronomical event this past Wednesday, March 20, with the help of some kid-sized models.
Independent photo/Steve James