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Category Archives: Interesting Info
2017 Annual Meeting Minutes and Audit Report
The 2017 annual meeting minutes and audit report are now posted on the at this link:
Please make sure you review them before next years meeting as the minutes will be voted on for acceptance.
Province Lake Island Up for Auction – August 5th 2017
So you and your family have always been attracted to the only island on the lake. Well, guess what? You can own it. The town of Wakefield now owns it due to back taxes and they are going to auction it off on August 5, 2017 to the highest bidder. See documents below and you can contact the Town’s Law office through Karen Rines at:
Karen I. Rines
Real Estate Paralegal
Sager & Smith, PLLC
5 Courthouse Square
P.O. Box 385
Ossipee, New Hampshire 03864
Tel. 603.539.8188 ext 105
Fax 603.539.7891
e-mail: Karen@SagerSmith.com
WE HAVE A NEW BABY LOON!
A new baby loon was born on July 1st on the nest we put in each year. Please boat with caution if you see the loons as the little one will be with them. Here are some photo’s thanks to Thom and Jan Townsend.
The next 4 pics are 2 day old chick
The next 2 pics are a 5 day old chick:
Laps 4 Backs Lake Swim
Tomorrow morning (Sunday July 31) 11-year-old Noelle Gregoire will be swimming across Province Lake for the 3rd year to raise money for Children’s Hospital in Boston.
Noelle will start her swim at 10 am from the Bailey Road area and finish near Rt. 153 at Butler Field about 11:30 am
Noelle will use all the donations she receives to purchase toys for Children’s hospital to donate to their young patients as well as grant wishes to ill children in need.
Laps-4-Backs T-shirts will be available for sale after the event.
You can read the details regarding Noelle and donate at:
at www.gofundme.com/

IT’S A BOY! NO IT’S A GIRL! MAYBE IT’S BOTH!
We have some exciting news to share for all of us around Province Lake. The Loons have had a pair of chicks! This is the first time that we are aware of this occurrence. Although very exciting to us on the PLA Board, the folks at the NH Loon Preservation Committee, and possibly to you, WE NEED YOUR HELP!
PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE do not go near them. Keep a very keen eye out when driving your boats and skiers … the young ones are not able to react like the adults can. Also, please spread the word to watch out and stay clear. If you must see what the chicks look like, check out the photo’s below and on the home page scrolling photo’s, compliments of Thom and Jan Townsend with a zoom lens camera. You will also start seeing red warning signs as pictured below.
One final note … a huge thanks goes out to Steve and Mary Craig and Thom and Jan Townsend who every year put out the nest and signs and monitor what is going on. There is finally success for the proud Grandparents.
Again, please help us out and educate others! And watch our website and Facebook page for any additional news.
Photo’s are from Thom and Jan Townsend, copying, re-posting etc. is strictly prohibited without their written consent.
2014 Water Quality Highlights Posted
The summary highlights of the 2014 water quality data is available at this link:
http://provincelake.org/water-quality/water-quality-reports/
This is a summary of the data that was gathered from all the water samples that were taken throughout the 2014 year. Thanks a lot to the efforts of Steve Craig and the UNH Cooperative Extension for gathering these samples and getting them analyzed.
Spring 2015 Newsletter Available
The latest and greatest newsletter is now available. It is full of all types of information about programs etc. that will be occurring around the lake as well as other interesting facts and tidbits. You can check it out by clicking here. Enjoy!
Baby Eagles and an Article about Loons

Loon activists urge boater holiday caution
DAN SEUFERT
Union Leader Correspondent
MOULTONBOROUGH — Loons may be protected by the government, but loon preservation specialists say lots of disruption and death of young birds occurs over holiday weekends.
“People see the loons, and they want to get closer because they are cute, or they don’t see them at all and they hit them crossing the lake,” said Harry Vogel, senior biologist/executive director of the Loon Preservation Committee.
This July 4th weekend, the committee is asking people to play it safe when it comes to loons on New Hampshire lakes and ponds. Vogel said boaters should stay at least 150 feet away from adult loons and their chicks.
“People may or may not see them when the loons cross the lake. We’re asking boaters to keep a close eye on what’s ahead of them,” Vogel said.“Also, when boaters see them in coves, remember that the parent loons have full-time jobs to do, and anything any of us do to disturb what they are doing can cause problems, maybe even deaths.”
Loons, a threatened species in New Hampshire, are protected by state and federal laws from hunting or harassment.
The Loon Preservation Committee was created in 1975 in response to concerns about a dramatically declining loon population and the effects of human activities on loons.
Its mission is to restore and maintain a healthy population of loons throughout New Hampshire, to monitor the health and productivity of loon populations as sentinels of environmental quality, and to promote a greater understanding of loons and the larger natural world.
For more than 35 years, the Loon Preservation Committee has undertaken state-wide monitoring, research, management and outreach to preserve loons and their habitats. The committee has a large grassroots network of more than 1,500 members and volunteers.Last year, the Loon Preservation Committee recorded 157 loon chicks hatched, but nearly a quarter of them did not survive, Vogel said.
Vogel also urged anglers to use non-leaded sinkers and avoid poisoning the birds.The Legislature has ruled that all lead sinkers under 1 ounce must be replaced with non-lead sinkers by 2016.
WILLIAM CARTER said:
The use or sale of lead sinkers weighing one ounce or less is already illegal in New Hampshire, as is the use or sale of lead jigs (weighted fishhooks) less than one inch long.
See pages 10 and 11 of Fish & Game’s Freshwater Fishing Guide for 2014, which is on line at:
http://www.eregulations.com/
What will change June 1, 2016, is that it will become illegal to use or sell lead jigs more than one inch long.
See the law at http://www.gencourt.state.nh.
If you are hosting or meeting visitors from other states who will be fresh-water fishing in New Hampshire, don’t let them be caught unaware, and help protect New Hampshire’s loons.
July 4, 2014 10:48 am