Francis William Bird Park

When it's sunny, I've been taking daily walks to Bird Park. It's a 5-minute walk from Lin's house to get to the closest entrance … one of eight … which leads to 89 acres of landscaped, waterscaped, understated wonder. If you like parks, this one is a most pleasant surprise in the middle of East Walpole, Massachusetts. It's a good place to think and walk and contemplate things. That's what a park should be, I reckon.

francis william bird park
francis william bird park

It's a well-used park. Old folks and young folks sit on park benches and read and let the sun shine on their faces. Big expanses of well-maintained lawns invite owners to play ball and frisbee with their dogs. There are big fenced playground areas and “tot lots” to encourage younger children to ride their trikes or swing or see-saw or play in a sandbox while their parents sit comfortably and read or just enjoy the peace of the place.

There are streams with old granite bridges traversing them and several duck ponds. Miles of bicycle paths and walks meander through groves of trees and over gently sloping forested hills.

view
view

Francis William Bird Park was created and endowed in 1925 by local industrialist Charles Sumner Bird, Sr. and his wife Anna in memory of their eldest son, Francis William Bird who had died seven years earlier. The Bird Corporation was initially involved in fine paper manufacturing during the turn of the 18th century, which led to producing waterproof tar paper, then eventually to asphalt shingles. Charles Sumner Bird wasn't your “usual” industrialist of the time who were prone to exploiting their employees with unsafe working conditions and long hours. Rather he was a pioneer in the area of employee relations. Between 1900 and 1925, Bird became one of the first American companies to offer an eight-hour workday (as opposed to the standard twelve-hour day of that time), an employee suggestion box, an employee credit union, paid employee vacations, and a benefit association to provide income for sick or disabled employees.

According to Wiki, landscape architect and town planner, John Nolen, a protégé of Frederick Law Olmsted, designed the park. Nolen believed that parks were critical to the health of urban residents and should be designed to provide a place of respite and relaxation in nature. In his original design plan, Nolen wrote that this park should be

"... a sequestered breathing place in the heart of East Walpole ... a combination of broad, sun-swept meadow lands, speckled with shadowed glades, higher tree-screened knolls for the lover of shade, the whole set to the music of a babbling stream."

Nolen did well. Bird Park is a lovely “breathing place”.

For most of its history, the park was owned and maintained by the Francis William Bird Park Trust. By the last decades of the 20th century, parts of the park suffered badly from neglect and vandalism. The Trustees of Reservations gained possession of the property in 2002 and it has made all of the difference.

Wildflowers provide color to the park. Bluettes and buttercups, Queen Anne's lace and lily of the valley, yellow wild poppies and purple speedwell are all a-bloom. And lest you get carried away with the wildflowers, there was also a good crop of poison ivy midst the beautiful blooms.

wildflowers
wildflowers

My favorite parts of the park are the duck ponds which currently have been taken over by Canada geese and their goslings.

goslings
goslings

I could watch them for hours. There were more than a dozen goslings with adults all around them for protection. Far be it for me to encroach on their territory … geese can be pretty vicious when you get near their young, like any reasonable parent. I watched as they went for a swim, then came ashore for a few nibbles and then back for a swim and some flying lessons. They've got the whole summer to learn the tricks of the goose trade and then they'll be on their own. Tough life if you're a goose.

goslings and mom
goslings and mom

Enchanted Village - Nostalgia Reigns

enchanted village  

At this time of the year, nostalgia reigns. We remember those perfect holiday seasons in years past and all the things we did as kids when the snow was deeper, the ice wasn't as hard when we fell down and it took forever for Christmas to arrive every year.

 

enchanted village

 

Lin and I have been hearing an ad on the radio for the Enchanted Village in Avon, Massachusetts. It's a huge 20th century holiday village that used to be on display every holiday season at Jordan Marsh in Boston when we were kids. It was there for 30 years. I even took Lin to see it when she was little.

 

enchanted village

 

Then Jordan Marsh, a Boston department store icon since 1861, went out of business and the village lay dormant until the city of Boston bought it. When the city couldn't afford to display it any more, they put it up for auction. Along came Jordan's Furniture owner, Eliot Tatelman, who bought it, restored it and now it's on display once again … for free, no less!

 

enchanted village

 

Though we had no plans to buy any furniture, we headed to Jordan Furniture to check it out. We walked through acres and acres of furniture to get to the holiday activities. Then waited in long lines for our turn to have fun.

 

lin and nick on the furniture

 

We followed the crowded queue through the storybook village enjoying the fine details that created an ambiance of holiday spirit from days gone by.

 

walking through enchanted village

 

They've commercialized and added to the spectacle just a bit. There's a synthetic ice rink, which we saw, but didn't try and a holiday laser light show that we thought was pretty lame.

 

ice rink

 

The 4-D 20 minute version of Polar Express was a multi-sensual experience and absolutely outstanding. We wore fashionable 3D glasses so the screen jumped out at us. We had to fasten our seat belts to hold us in our seats which moved in every possible direction as the Polar Express train went out of control on roller coaster hills before arriving at the North Pole. When hot chocolate was served on the train, we smelled hot chocolate and when the children were sitting by the Christmas tree, the scent of evergreen wafted through the theater. We felt snow and cold wind on our faces. It was hoot.

 

blueberry muffins

 

They even offered the huge blueberry muffins that we used to be able to buy at Jordan Marsh while we walked through the village. A touch of nostalgia … just what I needed to fight off the post-holiday blahs and missing David.

On the Third Day of Christmas, my true love sent to me...

Three e-mailed errands

Two bigger duffels

And a Christmas morning greeting on Skype

(feel free to sing this out loud … we certainly do)

 

 

 

 

 

The New Carousel on the Rose Kennedy Greenway.

codfish  

One of things we missed seeing in Boston on our July weekend is the new carousel on the Rose Kennedy Greenway. First, let me explain that I-93 used to be a terribly tortuous, torturous elevated interstate highway threading its way through downtown Boston. Then came Boston's Big Dig, a 15-year mega-public works project which rerouted the highway through a tunnel under the city at a cost of $14.6 billion. (whew … makes you take a breath).

 

lobsters

 

Beyond construction of the new tunnel system, the Rose Kennedy Greenway was constructed. It's a series of parks that stretch for a mile or so where the I93 surface artery used to be. It's absolutely lovely and the new carousel which opened at the end of August 2013 is part of the loveliness.

 

whale

 

I love traditional carousels. Remember the vintage Looff carousel in Pawtucket last summer and there was that one in Hobart's Botanical Garden in Tasmania when we visited? The new Greenway carousel is traditional in a way, but it's over the top in creativity. The designer, Jeff Briggs, is a sculptor and does carousel designing for a living. Can you imagine designing carousel critters as your life's work? When pursuing the creation of the Greenway Carousel animals, he was inspired by local kids' animals drawings as well as local fauna and, wow, did he ever have some inspiration.

 

bunnies

 

No hobby horses here. Instead, kids ride on a lobster, a cod fish, a sea turtle or a sea serpent. There's a peregrine falcon, a squirrel and a fox, butterflies, bunnies, a bright green grasshopper and a seal … all wonderfully lifelike, all very New England-y and all in lustrous colors … 36 seats in all. Some go up and down, some are bench-like for sitting, some are stationary, but all are wonderful.

 

peregrin falcon

 

In addition to traditional carousel songs, we heard a James Taylor tune. I read that at night the carousel lights pulse with the tunes. I definitely need to add this to my “Things to See and Do” in Boston list.