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Christine and Jamie at a park near their NJ home |
Wednesday, September 15, 2021
Jamie lands 'dream job' - She and Christine will move to California later this year
Monday, September 6, 2021
Charlie celebrates third birthday
Monday, August 9, 2021
A Midsummer gathering at the bay
Dan and Julie rolled out from New Jersey for a five-day stay at Fair Play. Vivien, CJ, Charlie and Austin joined Kathy at her summer home. And Genevieve, John, Bea and Jack spent the weekend at their cottage.
Family friend Robert was also in Noyac, mooring his sailboat off Mill Creek. He and Kathy treated Dan and Julie to a sail around Noyac Bay, something they hadn't had a chance to enjoy in the past few years.
Wednesday, July 7, 2021
Christine & Jamie make a move to New Jersey

A combination of circumstances led the couple to relocate to Christine's native state. In March 2020, they moved from a suburban Boston apartment to the home of Jamie's father, Paul, in Nashua, N.H., in order to save money toward eventually buying their own place. That move coincided with the onset of the pandemic, and Jamie has been working remotely ever since. Paul retired this spring, and decided to put his home on the market and move to Florida. Meanwhile, Jamie has scheduled surgery with a specialist near Trenton, N.J., during August, which will require a stay of several weeks in the area.
So, rather than find another apartment in New England, Jamie and Christine looked for a place in the Garden State - and landed in the same town where Christine's older siblings, Marie and Danny, grew up. They were fortunate to find a newly renovated apartment in a building in a nice neighborhood, across the street from a large county park.
Thursday, July 1, 2021
Birch Street Web editor retires from 'day job'
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Dan pays last visit to Hoboken office, June 29, 2021 |
His career began in local radio news at WSTC-Stamford and WOBM-Toms River. That was followed by 21 years at The Associated Press in New York, Washington and New Jersey, 12 years at The Star-Ledger newspaper in New Jersey, and nearly 11 years at the business-newsletter company known as Harrison Scott Publications until its 2020 acquisition by Green Street Advisors.The past year and a half was quite eventful. Dan was promoted in January 2020 to lead editor for two of the company's four publications (Real Estate Alert and Commercial Mortgage Alert). The next month, the company was sold. The month after that, its office in Hoboken was closed due to the pandemic. From March 13, 2020 onward, Dan worked from a home office he set up in daughter Christine's former bedroom. From there he was able to manage the two newsletters' reporting teams, edit articles and train new editors.
Wednesday, June 30, 2021
Julie completes term as Fanwood-Scotch Plains Rotary President

Julie has completed her year-long term as president of the Fanwood-Scotch Plains Rotary Club - an unusual year, to be sure.
Taking office a few months after the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, Julie faced the challenge of keeping the club operating and continuing its mission of community service. She succeeded by innovating -- conducting meetings on Zoom, moving fund-raisers to various online platforms and staying in constant communication with other club officers and members.
Club members responded to the crisis by sewing face masks, initially to donate to health-care workers and then for sale to the public, raising over $1,500 for area food banks. Throughout the year, FSP Rotary continued providing support for local, regional and international charities.
With the help of other dedicated Rotarians, Julie kept the club moving forward in spite of the disruption and limitations caused by the pandemic. As immediate past president, she will remain an active member of the club's board, and is taking on the role of assistant treasurer.
Tuesday, March 9, 2021
Sings of spring and hope
Tuesday, February 2, 2021
The first big snowstorm of 2021
Julie waves from the back door at Birch Street HQ |
The beginning of February brought heavy snow to parts of the Northeast. The storm moved up the coast on Monday, Feb. 1, and the snowfall continued throughout Groundhog Day in parts of the region.
Among places of interest to our extended family, accumulations ranged from 2-6 inches around Baltimore to about a foot and a half in the northern Catskills. (The highest accumulations reported by the National Weather Service were 35 inches in Nazareth, PA, and Mount Arlington, NJ.) Coastal areas saw far less snow, mixed with rain.
Cathy shared these views of her suburban Philadelphia neighborhood on Monday afternoon. Accumulations of about 8 inches were reported in the area.
At Birch Street Headquarters in New Jersey, Dan measured more than 14 inches on the ground on Tuesday afternoon, with occasional snow showers continuing.In upstate New York, Andy and Wren had about 16 inches on their porch Tuesday morning, with light snow still falling. That was on top of about 5 inches already on the ground from occasional snow in recent weeks.Southern New Hampshire had about 10 inches as of Tuesday morning. Here, one of Christine and Jamie's cats watches the snowfall on Monday evening.Throughout the storm, Dan and Julie's backyard birdfeeder was very active. "It must be the only restaurant open for miles around," Dan remarked. As seen above, a female Cardinal, a Chickadee and a couple of sparrows were among the visitors. Others included Dark-Eyed Juncos, House Finches, Tufted Titmouses and two varieties of woodpecker. And, in the photo below, an American Goldfinch (the official state bird of New Jersey) stopped by briefly.Sunday, January 31, 2021
Here's hoping for a good year ahead
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Buh-bye, 2020 |
The start of 2021 has brought hope for progress against the pandemic that is now in its 11th month in the U.S., but also doubts about when life can get fully back to normal. The development of vaccines provides hope; their disorganized distribution and the emergence of new virus strains create doubt. The formation of a government dedicated to overcoming the health crisis, and the hard work of healthcare providers, bring hope; the continued resistance from anti-science and anti-social forces raises doubts.
While we hope for common sense to prevail, I wish all our extended family continued health and safety, and look forward to a time when we can again visit one another in gatherings large and small. In the meantime, please keep us posted on your activities so we can share them here on the Birch Street Web and continue Keeping In Touch.
Sunday, December 27, 2020
A very 2020 Christmas get-together
Wednesday, December 23, 2020
Snow scenes from mid-December storm

While they've had snow on their northern-Catskills property before, this was the deepest since they moved in at the end of January.
Most of their chickens took one look at the piled-up snow and opted to stay in their coop. This one ventured out, hopped atop the snow and tried to plow its way into the yard before retreating.
With no need to go anywhere, Dan and Julie were able to just enjoy the view. (And paid a couple of enterprising young men with shovels to clear their driveway.)
The Philadelphia area was about as far south as the snow reached.
The city received 6-7 inches in what the Philadelphia Inquirer called the region's first major winter storm in 1,000 days.
Cathy took these photos of the pretty scene as the snow fell in her suburban neighborhood.
Saturday, November 28, 2020
Distanced Thanksgiving 2: Game Night
Friday, November 27, 2020
Distanced Thanksgiving: Sharing greetings online
Thursday, October 29, 2020
Autumn leaves and family visits
Fall view from Andy & Wren's porch |
It was a chance to enjoy a fall hike in the woods and observe some art along the way. This work, called "Bones of the Earth," incorporated an existing rock outcropping. It was along the park's "Quarry Trail," which turned out to involve some rugged, rocky climbing.
Friendly-looking "Animals" |
Christine engages in "The Debate" |