Photo Reprints

Day in Photos - Dec. 31, 2011 - Jan. 2, 2012
Date: 1/3/2012 Album ID: 1389062
Pages: 1 2 3
Attendees meditate yesterday during a Tibetan Buddhist retreat at Wonderwell Mountain Refuge in Springfield, N.H. Valley News - Sarah Priestap
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Anne Marie Polanski takes notes during the morning session led by Lama Willa. Valley News - Sarah Priestap
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Yesterday morning, Janine Grillo-Marra, of Massachussets, leads a mini-yoga class at Wonderwell Mountain Refuge, a Tibetan Buddhist retreat center in Springfield, N.H. Mornings and afternoons consist of teaching, chanting, meditation and yoga.Valley News - Sarah Priestap
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After discovering the fish had taken off with the bait from one of their tipups, Clarissa Johnson and Carl Johnson, both of Orford, Andrew Avery, of Lebanon, and Sam Johnson, of Keene, work last week to replace one of 18 lines they had set up on a frozen section of the Connecticut River in Norwich. Last week was the first week of ice fishing for the group, who found the water on this part of the river to be around 4 to 5 inches deep. Valley News - Sarah Priestap
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A traffic light signals yellow Wednesday for a test in progress of databases built by engineers Siva Kandasamy, left, Steve Pierce, center, and Dennis O'connor at M2S in West Lebanon.Valley News - James M. Patterson
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Software engineer Steve Pierce waits for his coffee to brew Wednesday next to a room storing backup copies of more than 200,000 digital 3D models created from CT scans at M2S. Valley News - James M. Patterson
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Paul Auger builds a model of an aneurysm in the aorta with measurements taken from a CT scan. Valley News - James M. Patterson
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Buddy Severance feeds a new calf as his mother Penny, right, and Harland Duke Perley look on at Perley's Royalton dairy farm on Wednesday. The farm still shows signs of Tropical Storm Irene's devastation - the mud in the barnyard under a layer of ice and snow and piles of debris along the nearby bank of the White River. Perley's home stands empty waiting for repairs before he can move back in.Valley News - James M. Patterson
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On Sept. 1, Bruce Zug, of Tunbridge, scoops mud that had caked inside a barn at Perley's farm while Larry Severance, one of the farm's managers, waits with a tractor to haul the debris away.Valley News - Polina Yamshchikov
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With a foot of water collecting on the first floor of their home in Weathersfield Barbara and Gary Richardson were helped by firefighters out a doorway in the second story of the barn attached to the house and taken through the woods to safety during flooding from Tropical Storm Irene last August. The Richardsons have lived in their home on Amsden School Road for 43 years and after hiring a cleaning company to scrub out the silt, were able to move back in. Valley News - James M. Patterson
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West Weathersfield firefighter Mark Girard, right, and Capt. Mychael Spaulding cross rising water to evacuate residents from a home on Aug. 28.Valley News - James M. Patterson
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After the flood, Tastes of Africa owners Damaris and Mel Hall are on higher ground in a new kitchen.Valley News - James M. Patterson
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Damaris Hall rests her head on the shoulder of her friend Deb Scott, of Plainfield, as they attempt to salvage their flooded equipment on Aug. 30.	Valley News - Polina Yamshchikov
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In her first visit back to her lot on Friday, Kristie Potter peers into a storage shed that is the only structure left standing after her mobile home was destroyed in Irene's flooding. Valley News - Sarah Priestap
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On Sept. 3, Tom Young, property manager with the Vermont State Housing Authority, points out damage to Gwynn Kawakami, a property adjuster with Crawford and Co., which is handling claims relating to flood damage at the Woodstock trailer park.Valley News - Polina Yamshchikov
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Leslie Piela pulls on rubber gloves on Friday before sorting through moldy paperwork salvaged from her Bethel home, which was destroyed by Irene's flooding. After getting settled with her husband, Mike, in a rental home in Bethel, Piela was ready to begin putting her business as a wellness coach back together. It's like an emotional roller coaster, she said. It'll come and bite you when you're not expecting it.Valley News - James M. Pattersonjpatterson@vnews.comphoto@vnews.com
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The Pielas’ house, shown on Aug. 29, has been razed and a temporary bridge is now on the Route 107 property.Valley News - Geoff Hansen
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A conversation with a paving contractor whose crew hits the streets at 3:30 a.m.Valley News - Sarah Priestap
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