A car crashed into a Kingston bank on Tuesday morning. The crash happened at Rockland Trust Bank at 184 Summer St. There were no reports of any injuries, and the incident remained under investigation. NewsCenter 5 and TheBostonChannel.com will have more information when it becomes available. wcvb.com
This is the Epic Journey, of Rockin’ the Gauntlet, at the Natick Collection, Natick, Massachusetts. This is a video attempting to ride all the people-movers in the mall, on a single video. Downcoverted from 1280x720p, to 720x480x15 @ 3000Kb/s (down from true 3K, or 3072Kb/s, to save a little extra upload time). This was messed up, almost from the get-go, and you’ll see the biggest Monkey Wrench, and it’s effects on some of the people-movers. Since it’s for PATRONS ONLY, an elevator in a Chineese Restraunt was not attempted. On top of this, there’s blunders, ducking security, employee hounding, there was just a lot that went wrong, but nevertheless, you get to see all the movers, but not ride them all, due to the afornemntioned Monkey Wrench that’s early in the video. Apperently, the Flip UltraHD has a 4GB filesize limit, so at that point (1 hour, 4 minutes in), it stops, and saves the file. Camera behaved like it was still going, as I check it after each mover. 2 minutes were lost, but it was mostly walking from one leg of the mall, to the final leg. Camera picked up halfway up an escalator (didn’t know this until reviewing footage) with the continuing segment. No movers lost! Bad thing is, you’ll have to trust me that this was a continuous event, end-to-end. (With my reputation, it’s likely to not be discredited. Those that have been here can verify all were riden, or shown, at least). Against all odds, MISSION ACCOMPLISHED. (Even if it’s not 100% perfect.)
Grass pond is a small natural pond from which water flows through Cold Brook to meet Nantucket Sound at Saquatucket Harbor in Harwich, Massachusetts. A maximum size of 24 acres has been reported for Grass Pond, although historical flow manipulations for cranberry growing have likely reduced the size of Grass Pond. Presently there is high seasonal variability to the wetted perimeter and oufflow of the pond. The Harwich Conservation Trust (HCT) own 60 acres of former cranberry bog east of Bank Street, Harwich, in the Grass Pond watershed. They share water rights with an adjacent cranberry bog operator granted from license No. 769 issued in 1927 by the MA Division of Waterways. The HCT has been considering options for land-use and habitat restoration of their bog property. They contacted the MA Division of Fish and Wildlife (Mass Wildlife) and Division of Marine Fisheries (MarineFisheries) for advice on fish and wildlife restoration. They have also been working with the National Resource Conservation Services (NRCS) on potential agriculture and habitat restoration options for the property. Observation by HCT, Mass Wildlife, and MarineFisheries confirmed the presence of American eel in the Grass Pond watershed.