
Greenhead flies are coming, and this will be their most evil season in memory
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TODAY'S STARTING POINT
There's a dumb tradition, in the towns along the Great Marsh in the northeastern corner of Massachusetts, of debating whether it's a 'good' greenhead season or a 'bad' greenhead season.
That's because every greenhead season is wretched. I live in of those Great Marsh towns, and I can assure you there is no good or bad. There is only evil, for what those vile creatures accomplish each July is obscene: They wait for the best beach days, and then they take them from us.
If you are unfamiliar with the greenhead horsefly, play the Powerball immediately, because
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They are out for blood. Literally, for they need a blood-meal to lay a second round of eggs, and they love dining on the human leg. These vampire bugs prefer sunny, windless days, so they can land so gently you won't even feel them. They will then use their sharp mouth parts to open a hole in your leg, inject you with an anticoagulant, and start dining. Only then does the unsuspecting mammal realize what's up, because that anticoagulant hurts. A lot. Like a lot a lot. There's a reason that Crane Beach in Ipswich, in the heart of fly country, puts out a sign at the parking lot entrance warning that the greenheads are out, and there are no refunds.
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If you know, you know. If you don't, you'll end up like my college roommate,
I don't know if you've ever seen a 260-pound former catcher in fight-or-flight mode while trapped on the deck of an old Boston Whaler, but you'll want to bring a video camera. You know that dance they do at Oktoberfest, slapping their legs and flailing about? Now picture this dance being performed by someone on fire.
Any day now, this will all begin again, and it will be the worst greenhead season in memory. Not because it will be 'bad.' But because it will steal the best days of July in a year where Mother Nature already stole most of the best days of May and June. We had
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I'm launching the boat as soon as I'm finished writing this, because it feels like I'm racing a ticking time bomb. (I was supposed to be off anyway,
Globe.
And yes, I know I was supposed to write this
Wednesday,
but I got traumatized thinking about these sinister bugs
.
)
And, as always, I will be armed.
Because there is one good thing about greenhead season, and that is murder. There is no such thing as a greenhead repellant,
No, the only defense is a good offense. You must kill them.
And so as I pack the boat with all the rods and lures and other tools I use to rarely catch fish, I will follow the Baker Family Safe Boating Guidelines: Every passenger must have one life jacket, two fly swatters, and be out for blood.
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A Supreme Court ruling will allow states to cut Medicaid funds to reproductive health provider Planned Parenthood.
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Sowing doubt:
Pediatricians are slamming RFK Jr.'s new vaccine advisory panel after it voted to reassess current vaccination schedules for children and adolescents, a move they say is designed to undermine trust in immunizations. (
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Restaurant manager detained:
A popular West African restaurant in Roxbury may suspend operations after its
Funding cut:
A divided Supreme Court ruled that South Carolina can cut off all Medicaid funding for Planned Parenthood, even for non-abortion health care. The decision has nationwide implications. (
Abortion bill:
The Mass. Senate approved a measure
'One if by land, two if by D.C.'
Remember that projection on Old North Church? A small collective is staging acts of protest with
GOP bill obstacles:
Between the Senate parliamentarian's rejections and internal disagreements about Medicaid cuts, the GOP's domestic bill is languishing. (
Science shift:
As Trump starves Harvard and other prestigious blue state universities of billions in scientific research funding, large public universities in the South and Midwest believe they are
Big carrots:
The Trump administration is trying to get Iran back to the negotiating table by offering it $30 billion for a civilian-energy nuclear program, easing sanctions, and freeing up billions of dollars in restricted Iranian funds. (
Not a laughing matter:
A card game based on Boston's deadly Great Molasses Flood of 1919 is designed to commemorate the disaster, but
some local historians say its whimsical nature
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Retrospective:
MFA director Matthew Teitelbaum dissects the kaleidoscopic jumble of issues he's had to navigate
VIEWPOINTS
Should the town of Brookline keep its select board and representative town meeting form of government, or become a city and switch to a mayor-city council or city council-city manager form? Two op-ed columns debated the issue.
Keep town meeting:
The current system offers just as much accountability, transparency, and leadership as a mayor/city manager and city council would,
Change to a city structure:
Three members of a town committee that spent 16 months studying the issue say that town meeting is
BESIDE THE POINT
By Teresa Hanafin
📺 Weekend streaming picks:
A new 'Looney Tunes' movie, the UK action-adventure 'Nautilus,' a coming-of-age tale perfect for movie night,
🎬
Top 100 films:
The New York Times polled more than 500 filmmakers, stars, and influential film fans to create a list of the 100 best movies of the 21st century — so far. (
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Blind date:
She plays guitar in a band and works with kids; he's a former chef who likes to play tennis and soccer.
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👨🍳
Epic:
Episode 4 of the new season of 'The Bear' represents
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Bezos bash:
Here are some details about Jeff Bezos' Venice wedding, and a list of some of the celebrities who are attending. If you care. (
🦈 Great sighting:
Guides and passengers on a whale watching tour near Cape Ann caught a glimpse of
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