Star Island Corporation

For Your Shoalmate, And Other Notes

Star Island’s ability to create lasting relationships is generally talked about in the sense of friendship, but we’re not immune to Cupid’s arrow either. From guests growing smitten with each other while attending summer workshops to staff flirting while folding laundry, Star Island provides a certain set of circumstances for falling in love, or, at least, deeply in like.

It could be that Star Island provides a place for people with similar interests to learn and connect, or it could be that on a foggy day it seems that the rest of humanity doesn’t exist. Whatever the reason, a heartbeat on Star Island seems a bit more powerful than that on the mainland.

Yet here we are in mid-winter with guests set to arrive on island in June. Registration for a summer program is quick and easy online, but that’s not going to automatically transport you to the island. So how can one share the sentiments of love with a basis in Star Island nomenclature? We’ve got you covered with these Valentine’s Day images that you can easily copy or save and send along to that person you’ve been pining for ever since you caught each other’s eyes on the front porch during morning coffee.

Searching For Your Shoalmate

WillYouBeMyShoalmate

Send this note to someone you want to spend the rest of your life with while watching sunsets from the Summer House.


An A in My Book

YoureAnAInMyBook

Cottage A is representing in this sassy pick up line. Send this note to someone you want to walk the boardwalk with.


B Mine?

CottageBMine

Can’t let Cottage A have all the glory, here’s a Cottage B message to share with a person your heart pounds for.


Let Your Love Shine

YoureRadiantInMyEyes

Did you know we have a solar array that will power up to 60% of our energy needs this summer? Well, now it’s time to share this with the person who powers 100% of your heart.


Starry Eyed

StarryEyedOverYou

Share this with the person whom you love, but don’t tell them that you love Star Island more. It’s a fact they’ll have to live with.


BONUS: Appledore Love!

IAppledoreYou

That breathtaking beauty across the harbor? Is it you? Yes, it is. And oh, how we adore — ahem, appledore you.


If these cheeky messages get you inspired to plan a date night, why don’t you click here to reigster for a summer program first? You’ll love it just as much as we love you.


How To Share These Images

Click on any of the images you want to share. Then, right click the image and save it to your computer. Share it how you normally would by attaching it to an email, or inserting it to a post or tweet online.

Star Island Corporation

Volunteer, Visit Star in the Spring

by Linda Leehman, Volunteer Coordinator

Imagine Star Island without volunteers. Having trouble doing that? So am I. I can’t imagine how we could do all that island living requires without volunteers.

Spring Volunteer

If you volunteered for an open up work weekend at Star Island last year, you know how hard you worked to help get Star Island ready for the summer season. And you know the delight of being on the island in the spring, before guests come, working together with a small group of dedicated Shoalers. So, thank you, all of you who have volunteered in the past.

If you want to be an Open Up Volunteer this year, click here to apply. Applications are due by March 14, 2015.


Volunteer With Us This Spring

Click here to learn more about spring volunteering
Click here to apply for spring volunteering

Green Gosport Initiative

Star Island Partners with Seacoast Science Center and Shoals Marine Lab

On Thursday, February 5, three organizations from the New Hampshire seacoast partnered to advance their shared vision of a sustainable coastal community and healthy ocean. Hosted by the Seacoast Science Center, staff from the Shoals Marine Lab and Star Island gave a crowd of over 50 people details on the sustainability initiatives that have significantly impacted such things as energy consumption at both island facilities.

After conversation over dinner, which was prompted by trivia placards at tables focusing on each of the three partnering organizations, people gathered in the Interactive Learning Studio to learn more about solar panels, water usage, and composting toilets. Wendy Lull, President of the Seacoast Science Center, and Joe Watts, Star Island’s CEO (below), gave opening words.

GreeningShoalsEvent1-1

Ross Hansen, the Shoals Marine Lab’s Facilities Director, started the presentation focusing on the undergraduate marine lab located on Appledore Island, the largest island of the Isles of Shoals. Hansen highlighted the valuable impact sustainable engineering interns have had on the facility since 2006. The work of these students has included designing a water treatment system and installing solar panels, among other important projects.

GreeningShoalsEvent2-2

Jack Farrell, Star Island’s Facilities Director & Island Manager, continued the presentation with statistics and annecdotes about Star Island’s push for sustainability starting in 2011. Farrell noted the community effort that has brought changes to Star Island including the re-use of waste items like heat, increase in recycling, and an emphasis on composting. Star Island’s recent installation of a solar array that will power up to 60% of the island’s energy needs capped this portion of the presentation.

GreeningShoalsEvent3-3
GreeningShoalsEvent4-4

Left to right: Jack Farrell, Ross Hansen, Wendy Lull, Joe Watts.

History

Historic Wallpaper

Sour cream. On Star Island, that’s not just a condiment for the chili lunch. Sour cream is also the name of the paint used in guest rooms and meeting spaces throughout the island’s 32 buildings. The rooms, often painted by volunteers during the spring, have not always been so uniform. The photos below, shared with us by Shoaler Martha Burnham from one of her first summers on Star Island in 1962 depict guest rooms adorned with rather bold wallpaper. No word on what the wallpaper budget was in the 1960’s.

Our guest rooms are not entirely changed from those days, however. We still have much of the same furniture. Those bureuas are still in use — our staff cleaning them in wood oil between stays. The side tables used for pitchers and basins are also still found throughout the island. So while the walls have gone through some changes, each room is still made and cared for with the same dedication from our volunteers and summer staff.

Cottage A

WallpaperPost

A relatively mild wallpaper print on the second floor of Cottage A.


Cottage A

WallpaperPost2

Well, that’s a lot of ships.


Oceanic Hotel

WallpaperPost1

This second floor room is looking rather stately in its patterned wallpaper.


And Now?

What do our guest rooms look like now? Here are a few pictures to compare to the historic ones. For 2015, our guest rooms are in two categories: standard, or motel unit. Our standard rooms, often shared, are those located in the Oceanic Hotel, Gosport House, and any of the cottages (A through E). Some standard rooms are available as single occupancy. Motel units are those in the one story Sprague, Founders, Baker, and YPRU buildings located along the boardwalk. Each motel unit has two twin beds, and a private half bathroom. Click here to learn more about our accommodations.

Cottage C

WallpaperPost3

Our historic furniture still in use.


Oceanic Hotel – Atlantic Wing

WallpaperPost4

This room, on the second floor, overlooks the front lawn and Summer House.


Interested in staying in one of these rooms in 2015 even without the wallpaper? It’s simple: Just choose a summer program and register. Click here to see all of our 2015 summer programs.

History

Salt Water Pool Once Planned for Island

Salt Water Pool Letter Image

On July 2, 1969, a letter was sent to Shoalers seeking their opinion regarding a proposed addition to the Star Island grounds. That addition being a salt water pool. This pool, let’s be clear, never came to be, but it did provide ample opportunity for people in the Star Island community to think about such an ammenity.

The letter that Shoalers received from Board President Roland B. Greeley in 1969 talks about a pool not in the traditional sense of one with “tile and chromium”; rather, an “artificial, salt-water, sanitary pool with enough ‘prepared’ space around it so that it affords opportunity for pool-side visiting, for swimming in water 5 to 10 degrees warmer than the ocean, but probably not for diving in the formal sense.”

We bet there are a number of you who wouldn’t mind a swimming area 5 to 10 degrees warmer than the ocean. During the summer, our morning polar bear swimmers are often dipping into water that hovers in the high 50’s and low 60’s. Yet the warmer water of an artificial pool did not come to fruition. But why?

We have rather little to work with in terms of archives for this pool proposal (a pun would probably work quite well about now), so the actual reason might be lost. What we do know is that of the responses Greeley’s letter received, there was a consistent mention of youth not wanting it. And, in one letter, which is dated several months prior to Greeley’s, there is a rather poetic view of youth standing in the way of change.

On April 22, 1969, Helene McVey writes her friend Rolly (who we believe to be Roland B. Greeley), to say: “Adults seem to have a gut committment to addition, improvement, and renovation. It is interesting that these youngsters feel so strongly to the contrary where Star is concerned.” McVey’s letter reports that a number of youth are simply “against the idea” of a swimming pool, and even a proposed youth center. And the reason? McVey writes: “their answers boil down to not wanting any changes at Star.”

McVey’s letter, and the letter Greeley sent out seeking opinions, both represent the Star Island community so well. A community that relies on discourse and debate, of proactive involvement.

Once you get over the idea of a swimming pool on island, you might wonder where one would have been installed. Drawings of the proposed pool place it below the summer house, very close to the Caswell Cemetery, and very much in the part of the lawn used as the outfield for softball games. Another proposal sought to re-make the cistern ponds by the Art Barn for swimming pool use.

The conclusion of the salt water pool proposal is obvious to people who have been to Star Island: there is no pool (unless you’re counting tide pools, in which case we have many). But the outcome remains a mystery, at least to those of us in the office. We are not sure what the final vote of the Board was, or if a vote was even held. Maybe so many youth were against this proposal that the idea of a pool never seemed to float.

We’d be remiss to leave out the postscript in McVey’s letter. She reports that All Star 1 is nearly full in April of 1969. That’s our reminder to tell you to register for your summer program before it fills up.

And if you know anything about the salt-water pool proposal from 1969, please share your information with us. You can mail any documents you have to 30 Middle Street, Portsmouth, NH 03801 or email ambassadors@starisland.org.

Star Island Corporation

2015 Program Catalog

StarIslandProgramCatalog2015Cover

The 2015 Program Catalog will be reaching your mailbox by the middle of February and it is packed with program descriptions that are sure to get you thinking about how many vacation weeks you can spend on Star Island this summer.

This year’s catalog is specifically designed for people new to Star Island. How? We took a look at our programs, and grouped them together by themes. We believe this way of organizing provides an easier way to navigate through similar programs to choose the one that fits you best. For example, if you are seeking a program rich in multi-generational activities, you’ll want to know which one’s those are. The 2015 Program Catalog provides just that knowledge.

And for people who have been coming to Star Island for years, and know the exact program they want to attend, you can easily order lasix pills find it through the table of contents in the front of the catalog, or the chronological list of programs on the last page.

Click here to view the 2015 Program Catalog

Another aspect of the 2015 Program Catalog is the number of photographers we’ve included. Totalling 21, here are their names:

  • Kyle Belmont
  • Lori Benson
  • Kim Bernard
  • Tristan Binns
  • Katy Biron
  • Martha Burnham
  • Ashley Collins
  • Sean D. Elliot
  • Bob Giles
  • Brian Gruhn
  • Bob Levine
  • Jared Lipton
  • Peggy Martin
  • Eric Masterson
  • Martha McGovern
  • Jessy O’Keefe
  • Dave Scheuneman
  • Dale Slongwhite
  • Susan Stibler
  • Carrie Tyler
  • Brenda Watts

And while the catalogs are on their way to your mailbox, you can still register online. Registering with a paper form is also possible. Click here to download the registration form to mail in.

We’ll see you on Star Island this summer!

Star Island Corporation

Follow the Blizzard

We don’t mean to feed into the hype that a storm brings, but thought you might be interested in seeing how tomorrow’s blizzard affects conditions out at the Isles of Shoals, and Star Island. This type of weather makes us ponder how people who lived out on the Shoals year round, like Celia Thaxter, could do it. We suppose writing poetry, or taking photographs (as our current winter caretaker does) provides a creative outlet to pass the time.

To fully understand the impact of a storm on the Isles of Shoals, being there would certainly help. But since that’s not possible this time of year, here are some resources for your snowday pleasure:

Shoals Marine Lab Webcam

The Shoals Marine Lab has numerous webcam shots available of Appledore and Star Islands. The images this webcam produces allow anyone to virtually stand on top of the old submarine tower on Appledore and take a glance at snowfall and waves crashing against shorelines.

Webcam Link

National Weather Service

Using the National Weather Service data as a companion to the Shoals Marine Lab webcams is a great way to get a deeper context to what is happening, and what will happen at the Isles of Shoals. From wave heights (which are currently predicted to be about 19 feet on Tuesday), to wind speeds (which might be gusting to 60 mph) provide numbers that speak to the visible conditions from the webcams.

Weather Service Link

National Data Buoy Center

To keep track of the actual wind speed and wave heights, buoy data is quite useful and readily available. The buoy off of York, ME is about equidistant from the coastline as the Isles of Shoals, and will share wave height that is comparable to what Star Island is facing. The collection center on White Island will provide the most accurate data on wind. A graph on that page also shows wind speeds over the past few hours. The data is displayed in knots, so you may want to click here to convert that info into mph.

York Buoy Link | White Island Data Link

Our Winter Caretaker

Our winter caretaker, Alex de Steiguer, is a noted photographer who is usually willing to step out into the freezing wind on island to snap photographs and video of conditions. We can’t guarantee that weather conditions will allow her to do such tomorrow, or if the storm impacts the island’s internet connection; however, you can follow her page on facebook where she usually posts a video or two when the weather is especially captivating.

Alex’s Facebook Page


Office Hours

Please note that our mainland office will be closed on Tuesday, January 27 due to the expected snowfall. We plan on returning to the office on Wednesday, but that is dependent on road conditions. Conference calls planned for Tuesday, January 27 are still expected to occur as scheduled.

Conference Updates

Your Summer Starts By Registering

International Affairs Conference Profile

Summer might seem far away now, but once you register for a program on Star Island it will be that much closer. Registering for a program, or conference as they are often called, is easy. Well, easy once you pick which program to attend. With a number of options having themes including religion, education, history, yoga, writing, and art, the act of choosing a program will be the most daunting task.

Click here to view the 2015 summer programs
Once you have your program picked out, there are a couple simple ways to reigster.

Online

    • Each conference listing online has an option to “Click Here to Register” at the top and bottom of their page. Simply click on that link, enter in the pertinent details, supply information for a room & board deposit and program fee payment and you’re golden. You’ll pay the remainder of the room and board on island this summer.

Paper

  • Living life old school? That’s fine by us. Paper registration forms are available by clicking here. A form can be mailed to you as well. Email priligy medication office@starisland.org or call 603-430-6272 for a form. Fill out the information on the form and mail it with a check totalling the room & board depoist plus the program fee payment. The form explains how much the room & board deposit is, and program fees may be found on the conference’s online listing. Mail the form into our office: 30 Middle Street, Portsmouth, NH 03801. You’ll pay the remainder of the room and board on island this summer.

If a youth under the age of 18 is attending any conference without a parent/guardian, a minor medical release form must be mailed to the Star Island office upon registration. Click here for the minor medical release form.

Now that everything is cleared up, time to register. Our popular weeklong conferences are known to fill up and have waiting lists, so registering early secures you a spot.

Questions

If you have any questions about registering, our Island Registrar is available to help. Email Mike Bray at registrar@starisland.org with your questions.

Click here to view the 2015 summer programs

History

The First Blue Book

StarIslandBlueBook1966CoverImage

Every year we publish a catalog providing a description of the upcoming summer programs on Star Island. With the 2015 program catalog currently at the printers, getting ready for a mid-February arrival in your mailbox, we decided to take a look back in our archives at earlier program catalogs, once called the “Blue Book” for its rather blue-hued cover.

We can’t say for certain that the 1966 catalog is the first “Blue Book” printed, but it is the earliest one we currently have in our possession. Looking through this catalog, we are delighted to read through such charming descriptions of what Star Island was and, for the most part, still is. For example, the conferences on Star Island remain “tremendously exciting and stimulating to Shoalers” with the ability for guests to take part in as much or as little of each conference as they choose.

Activities popular in 1966 that continue to provide enjoyment for guests include “tennis, baseball, volleyball, horseshoes and exploring the island.” Okay, we focus on softball now instead of baseball. The 1966 brochure advertises that “swimming is probably the most universally enjoyed activity on island” which might still be true, especially on a hot day.

The catalog’s main purpose, providing conference descriptions, shares information in 1966 about a handful of conferences, many that remain to this day. The All Star Family Conferences, “designed especially for Unitarian Universalists, their families and their friends” had two weeks in July — which they still do (All Star 1 & All Star 2). Religious Education was “aimed at providing practical help to a wide variety of people in their specific roles of communicating the message of Liberal Religion” and still does (along with the families of religious educators” at the Lifespan Religious Education conference. The Congregational Conferences started off August of 1966 and continue to start off August of 2015, but now with a new name: Star Gathering UCC 1 & Star Gathering UCC 2. Rhese conferences were just as exciting and invigorating then as they are today.

We encourage you to look through this old catalog by clicking here or on the cover image to the left. Next week we’ll share the 2015 program catalog (now featuring a cover printed in more than just blue ink). You might also note that the opening words of the 1966 catalog talk about the 50th anniversary of Star Island’s dedication. Over the next few weeks we’ll also be sharing more information about our 100th Anniversary, and how we’ll start celebrating this centennial beginning in the summer of 2015 and concluding with a rededication of Star Island in 2016.


Interested in registering for a 1966 conference? Sadly that boat (the M/V Sightseer no longer exists) has sailed its last voyage. B you’re more than welcome to explore the 2015 conference listing by clicking here.

History

Some Old Notes

We recently came across a pile of work request notes that guests filled out in 2008 and, for a reason we’re not too sure of, were kept in an envelope in our office. Granted, not as exciting as the recent opening of the time capsule left by Samuel Adams in 1795, these almost seven-year-old notes capture some odd and humorous requests during one fine summer on Star Island. Here’s a selection of those notes.

Pump It!

Note1-1

Bicycle pumps are hard to come by on a 47 acre island, so we try to keep one handy. We appreciate the time frame given in this note.


Fresh Ice

Note2-2

While not as elusive as a bicycle pump, fresh ice is in high demand most evenings during social hour (and especially on margarita night it turns out).


Whenever for Bubbles

Note3-3

This is possibly the cutest note we’ve ever received. Whenever for bubbles! How about right now?

We’re thinking this bubble recipe was used for one of many lawn game afternoons for youth and families.


From Ursula or Whoever

Note4-4

This invitation (?) to dances in Newton all week is great. We just don’t know exactly who is inviting us. You’re right, it’s more likely we are being told about a scheduling change for a conference activity, but we’d like to think this is our invitation to some awesome themed dance.


Celery Secret

Note5-5

These people want some butter, and some celery. Just keep the celery on the downlow.


Spill

Note6-6

This is why we can’t have nice things. Someone is spilling coffee on the bed linens. We smudged out the name to protect the guilty as the statute of limitations has expired. But in all honesty, we are more than happy to switch out your linens if you ever need (you can always blame things on ghosts when you want, too).

Also, thank you Dan for replacing those sheets.


Movie Night?

Note7-7

Like you even had to ask, Kate. Certainly. We can even watch “Never Been Kissed” every night this week.


Want to write your own note? Visit Star Island this summer for one of our many conferences. And if you do write a note, maybe you’ll see it on our website in seven or eight years.