Category: Activities (Page 13 of 32)

Activities are gatherings that occur on a regular schedule, usually weekly, to enjoy a specific pastime.

Hike Waveny Park – Thursday, March 25, 2021

HIKING WAVENY PARK

    NEW CANAAN, CT

THURSDAY MARCH 25

    10 AM

Waveny Park in New Canaan is a 300 acre complex of athletic fields, extensive woodlands and numerous structures that was originally the Lapham Estate. Also on the park grounds are New Canaan High School and Waveny Life Care Network. It is a remarkable resource for New Canaan and surrounding towns.

We plan to meet at 10:00 AM in the first parking lot on the right after entering from South Avenue. This lot faces the large lawn used mostly for soccer. We will hike most of the woodland and parkland trails over a distance of 2.5 miles. The trails are wide and flat although the climb back to the parking lot from South Avenue is a little steep in spots. Be forewarned the wind up on the soccer field can be brutal but once in the woods no problem. Layer up if it is cold!

As always on our hikes guests are welcome and Waveny allows dogs on a leash. This venue should be another where it will be easy to keep distanced but have the opportunity to talk to each other in person, something we have missed during the pandemic.

The entrance to Waveny is at 677 South Avenue (Route 124) in New Canaan. There is ample parking.

 

CONTACTS: Dave McCollum and Bob Plunkett 

Trip report:

Our first hike of spring took place in magnificent Waveny Park in New
Canaan on a cloudy but pleasant morning. A group of 12 DMAers and
guests plus two dogs enjoyed the well groomed trails and the chance to
meet face to face rather than over Zoom.

We hiked a total of 2.5 miles in a little more than an hour over mostly flat
terrain on the former Lapham Estate, now owned by the Town of New
Canaan. The trails are mostly through woods but closely border the Merritt
Parkway for a relatively noisy stretch! Once away from the traffic, all was
serene again.

As has been our practice since the start of the Pandemic, no lunch was
scheduled after the hike.

 

Book Club: Unsinkable by James Sullivan, March 10, 2021

 

UNSINKABLE

FIVE MEN AND THE INDOMITABLE RUN OF THE USS PLUNKETT

The captivating story of a World War II destroyer that saw plenty of action.

While conducting research on the Plunkett, which was “all over the place, intersecting with the greatest events and personages of the war,” Sullivan discovered that several crew members were still alive, so he interviewed nonagenarian veterans, as well as their children and grandchildren, in addition to his diligent combing of archives, journals, and ship’s logs. The result is a vivid portrait of the sailors, wives, girlfriends, and families and their world, in which the Plunkett’s battles often seem like interludes. As is typical in war, tedium was the norm, excitement came at rare intervals, and one horrendous incident ensured the ship’s place in history. Launched in 1940, the Plunkett was one of 514 destroyers that fought WWII; 71 were lost, the most of any ship. Even before war broke out, the Plunkett escorted convoys to Britain across the North Atlantic. In November 1942, it accompanied a massive fleet and army that crossed to North Africa during Operation Torch. In July 1943, the Allies invaded Sicily, and the Luftwaffe sank many Allied ships—but not the Plunkett, which also narrowly escaped damage during the invasion of the Italian mainland at Salerno. Matters changed on Jan. 24, 1944 in the sea off Anzio, where a swarm of attackers seemed to target the Plunkett. Countless bombs missed, but one struck, causing terrible damage and killing 53 men. Sullivan delivers a gripping account of what followed as the men fought the fires, rescued survivors, retrieved bodies and body parts, and limped into harbor. After three months of repairs in the U.S., the ship returned to Europe to serve again. Sullivan has done his homework, and readers will enjoy his generous digressions into biography, courtship, shore-leave horseplay, shipboard politics, and a postwar summary.

An outstanding addition to the still-active genre of WWII histories focusing on a single unit, ship, or bomber.

Hike Rowayton, Friday, January 15, 2021

“HIKING” ROWAYTON

FRIDAY JANUARY 15, 2021

      9:00 AM

                 MEET AT ROWAYTON MARKET*

Please join us for a three mile tour of the village of Rowayton.

We will start out from the Rowayton Market at 9:00 AM and hike around most of the perimeter of Rowayton. Lot’s of water views and interesting architecture and history. While there will be some modest hills, for the most part the hike will be relatively flat over paved surfaces. It can be windy so layer up!

Guests and dogs on a leash are welcome. Should be fun!

 

*THERE IS PLENTY OF PARKING IN THE LOTS ACROSS THE STREET FROM THE MARKET

 

Contacts:

Dave McCollum and Bob Plunkett

 

HIKING ROWAYTON
JANUARY 15, 2021

Led by David McCollum and Bob Plunkett, a hearty group of 20 including
several guests participated in a walking tour of the coastal village of
Rowayton on a cool and windy Friday morning.
Our route started at the Rowayton Market and proceeded south along
Rowayton Avenue to the end and then around Pine Point and Nearwater
Lane to South Beach. DMA member Peter Tombros, a Bell Island resident,
joined us to get us access to the Rocky Point promontory surrounded on
three sides by the Sound. Normally a great place to see Manhattan, but the
misty weather blocked our view.
After a windy and cold stop for sightseeing,, we walked the length of Bell
Island over the stone bridge to the Rowayton Yacht Club. At that point, we
split into two groups, one taking the Sammis Street shortcut back to the
Market, and the remainder continued up Bluff Avenue and then down
Wilson back to the Market. About one and three quarters hours for the
longer walk.
A good start to what we hope is a series of winter walks over local venues.

 

 

Money Matters: Trusts & Estates, Karen Goersch, Financial Advisor, Jan 19,2021

Host: Doug Campbell

An update on Trust and Estates  – John Schachtenhaufen

Karen Goersch, Financial Advisor  will present. Introduced by John Schlachtenhaufen

  • The Secure Act, passed in December 2019, has largely eliminated the ability for our beneficiaries to “stretch” our IRA over their lifetimes.
  • Strategies and ideas to reduce your or your beneficiaries’ tax burden including:
    • Qualified charitable distributions
    • CHET 529 contributions
    • Donor advised fund
    • Roth conversion
  • Will also discuss why these strategies can be helpful, including things like,
    • Do you know your incremental tax bracket and what the next lower or higher bracket is?
    • How reducing your Adjusted Gross Income can save you money on your Medicare Premiums and the “cliffs”
    • Are you charitably inclined and might there be ways to “do good” and save on taxes?  If giving to charity, do I give now or later?
    • If I have more than I need, where does it go and how to ensure it goes where I want and most tax-efficiently

Video recording of Karen’s presentation:  https://youtu.be/UVxZPh4mJGw

Tax Reference Guide 2021

9circles

Qualified Charitable Distributions – FAQs and Checklist

USCGT Key Differences between DAF vs Private Foundations 07 2020

 

Book Club: Agent Sonya by Ben MacIntyre, February 10, 2021, 2:00

The New York Times bestselling author of The Spy and the Traitor tells the thrilling true story of the most important female spy in history: an agent code-named “Sonya,” who set the stage for the Cold War. In 1942, in a quiet village in the leafy English Cotswolds, a thin, elegant woman lived in a small cottage with her three children and her husband, who worked as a machinist nearby. Ursula Burton was friendly but reserved, and spoke English with a slight foreign accent. By all accounts, she seemed to be living a simple, unassuming life. Her neighbors in the village knew little about her. They didn’t know that she was a high-ranking Soviet intelligence officer. They didn’t know that her husband was also a spy, or that she was running powerful agents across Europe. Behind the facade of her picturesque life, Burton was a dedicated Communist, a Soviet colonel, and a veteran agent, gathering the scientific secrets that would enable the Soviet Union to build the bomb. This true-life spy story is a masterpiece about the woman code-named “Sonya.” Over the course of her career, she was hunted by the Chinese, the Japanese, the Nazis, MI5, MI6, and the FBI-and she evaded them all. Her story reflects the great ideological clash of the twentieth century-between Communism, Fascism, and Western democracy-and casts new light on the spy battles and shifting allegiances of our own times. With unparalleled access to Sonya’s diaries and correspondence and never-before-seen information on her clandestine activities, Ben Macintyre has conjured a page-turning history of a legendary secret agent, a woman who influenced the course of the Cold War and helped plunge the world into a decades-long standoff between nuclear superpowers

Money Matters: Chip Schroeder on Hydrogen in the Economy, Dec 1, 2020

Chip’s introductory notes: Hydrogen – the _Green Fuel__ (v2)

Article from Geoffrey Rezek: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20201127-how-hydrogen-fuel-could-decarbonise-shipping

https://theconversation.com/hydrogen-where-is-low-carbon-fuel-most-useful-for-decarbonisation-147696

https://theconversation.com/hydrogen-isnt-the-key-to-britains-green-recovery-heres-why-143059

https://theconversation.com/hydrogen-cars-wont-overtake-electric-vehicles-because-theyre-hampered-by-the-laws-of-science-139899

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymer_electrolyte_membrane_electrolysis

 

Battery vs Fuel Cell fields of use

Book Club: Daniel Yergen, “The New Map”, Jan 13, 2021 @ 2:00

THE NEW MAP

ENERGY, CLIMATE, AND THE CLASH OF NATIONS

The latest on global energy geopolitics from the pen of an expert.

Yergin is the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of multiple magisterial volumes on world affairs as they relate to energy. In The Quest (2011), he described the stormy rivalry between an America struggling to maintain its hegemony in the face of upcoming rivals Russia and China. The following decade has not improved matters, and the current global pandemic is proving to be a disaster. However, bad news often makes for entertaining reading, and Yergin delivers a fascinating and meticulously researched page-turner. He maintains that an energy revolution has transformed the world to America’s benefit. However, it’s not wind and solar but fracking. American oil production had been dropping since 1970, but after 2000, fracking changed the game. In 2018, the U.S. overtook Russia and Saudi Arabia to again become the world’s largest oil producer. Production tripled between 2008 and 2020. Yergin astutely examines how other nations responded. Russia, with an economy “only slightly larger than Spain’s,” depends on oil income as much as the old Soviet Union. Responding to American oil sanctions, Putin has vastly improved relations with China, by many measures the world’s leading economy. “China,” writes the author, “has become what Britain had been during the industrial revolution—the manufacturing ‘workshop of the world.’ ” It’s already the largest producer of steel, aluminum, and computers as well as the largest energy consumer. Turning to the Middle East, Yergin describes an unhappy collection of failed states, civil wars, oppressive theocracies, bloody insurgencies, and wealthy ministates, all dealing with plummeting oil prices. The author views Trump with the same mild disapproval he applies to Putin and China’s Xi Jinping, and he chastises environmentalists for getting certain facts wrong. Yergin accepts that humans have dramatically affected the climate, but he doubts the practicality of proposed solutions.

Required reading. Another winner from a master.

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