Connecticut
Connecticut man hooks 8-foot shark while paddle boarding in Long Island Sound
A Connecticut man caught an 8-foot shark while paddleboarding in the Long Island Sound.
Eddie Carroll, 30, of Northford, was participating in the Greatest Bluefish Tournament on Earth when he snagged a 8-foot female sandbar shark on Aug. 27.
It was the second day of the tournament when Carroll caught the fish, also called a brown shark, that was just a few feet shorter than his 12-foot paddleboard.
He had caught a much smaller fish the first day of the tournament and returned the second day hoping to bring in a prize winner.
“I’m hooked into the biggest thing I’ve ever had on the line,” Carroll can be heard saying in a video he filmed.
His fishing pole was sharply bent as he struggled to rein in the beast.
“I’ve got a glimpse of it, I think it’s a giant shark,” he said in the video.
Seconds later, the shark surfaces alongside his board, calmly swimming alongside it.
“That’s f–king crazy,” Carroll said.
Carroll started his journey at Middle Beach Road in Madison, Connecticut, around 8 a.m., where he caught porgy as bait to help track larger fish, according to New Haven Register.
After he dropped a small anchor off his board, the shark quickly took to his line.
“I knew it was something really big,” he told the Register.
The shark pulled Carroll out farther, near Faulkner Island.
The shark continued to pull him around for an hour before the 30-year-old realized he had not caught a bluefish.
After catching a glimpse of the animal, he realized he was being tugged along by a shark.
He eventually cut the line and let the shark go off on its own.
The frequent fisher has caught smaller sharks before, like dogfish, but has never caught a shark as big as the brown shark.
“They don’t have nearly the girth or power that the brown shark had. It was pretty incredible to feel the power of the brown shark,” he told the local outlet.
The brown shark is one of the largest breeds of sharks that can be found in the Long Island Sound.
Connecticut
Library in South Windsor wraps up 14th annual Gingerbread House Festival
Some people found a sweet escape from Sunday’s frigid winter temperatures. A chance to step outside the cold and into a different snowy environment.
It just made it feel like Christmas,” said Michael Mizla, of Manchester.
“We try to do this every year,” said Susan, Mizla’s wife.
Sunday was the last day to check out a festive, holiday tradition at the Wood Memorial Library and Museum in South Windsor – The 14th Annual Gingerbread House Festival, which organizers say is one of the largest gingerbread house festivals in New England.
“People have made this their tradition,” said the library’s executive director Carolyn Venne. “We see the same large Vermont family every year the day after Thanksgiving on opening day. So, as people come in to see family locally, this becomes part of their tradition, and that makes it all meaningful for us.”
These gingerbread houses are on display in multiple rooms and floors throughout the library for weeks, from late November to just before Christmas.
“We probably range from about 75 to 150, and I think one year we topped out around 200,” said Venne.
Venne says behind these intricate candy creations are bakers, students, and community members.
At the end of the day, the gingerbread houses went to some lucky raffle winners or were donated to a nursing home in the area.
Those who needed to do some last-minute holiday shopping, were covered – just like the icing on these graham cracker homes – as people could visit the library’s ‘Ye Old Gingerbread Shoppe’ and take some of the magic home with them.
“The holidays are full of things you remember as a kid, so it just feels like the kind of tradition you will remember as you grow up.”
While Sunday was the last day to immerse yourself in these festive, edible villages, there are more holiday traditions coming up at the library, including a Christmas concert next Saturday at 1:30 p.m.
Connecticut
Connecticut farmers to benefit from federal disaster relief package
Funding to help farmers impacted by disaster is on the way for those who have been seeking help.
That’s one aspect of what came out of a vote in Washington D.C. that in part prevented a government shutdown.
A 13 minute hailstorm in August destroyed William Dellacamera’s crops and cost him $400,000. He was only able to receive a little less than half of that from programs already in place.
“From that day on, basically everything I had grown for the season was destroyed,” said Dellacamera of Cecarelli’s Harrison Hill Farm.
He’s become known locally for driving his tractor from Connecticut to Washington D.C., advocating for more state and federal funding for farmers like him.
In his travels, he landed meetings with the USDA and Connecticut’s delegation.
“I think they’re taking it seriously, and they did. They took it seriously,” said Dellacamera.
President Biden signed a disaster relief bill into law, advocated for in part by Connecticut’s delegation.
Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro says Connecticut has lost 460 farms over the last five years, primarily related to weather events that put their livelihoods at stake.
“I am pleased that we have an agreement on $100 billion in disaster aid,” said DeLauro on the House Floor Friday, who advocated for the bill.
As part of that, Connecticut farmers like Dellacamera will be able to tap into $23 million of relief from crop losses, according to Representative John Larson.
“Now knowing this is going to make a difference is a big deal. And I hope it does, I hope it does make a difference,” said Dellacamera.
Also part of the bill, DeLauro advocated for a block grant of $220 million that’s only for small and medium-sized farmers who have lost crops in 2023 and 2024.
All of New England would fit in the parameters for the grant, allowing farmers to get help without crop insurance or a national disaster declaration.
“We came to a conclusion that these were all of the pieces that were needed to move forward,” said DeLauro on the House Floor Friday, about the bill as a whole.
DeLauro’s team tells us that disaster relief funding will go from the USDA to the states to get payments out.
Dellacamera says he’s grateful, and there’s more work to be done. He hopes this block grant and general disaster relief funding will be able to live on.
“It takes the red tape out of it a little bit,” said Dellacamera of the block grant. “Hopefully it could be funded into the future, you know, as it might be needed more and more,” he said.
In the meantime, the state of Connecticut will be identifying which farmers experienced disasters in 2023 and 2024 to see who would benefit from block grant funding.
Connecticut
Gifts of Love provides for Connecticut families in crisis
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