Christmas pg 1 12-14-23

caption, page 2:

Left: The Hoover family of Safe Haven Rescue, from left: Jim, Teagan, Galen and Cory. Above: One of the rescues. Linda Lemmon photos.

Christmas
wish: a
501c3 OK
By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
PUTNAM — What would make an excellent Christmas gift for the Hoover family?
Notification that their application for 501c3 nonprofit status is approved.
Cory Hoover said her daughter Galen Hoover put in the paperwork for the designation for Safe Haven Rescue in mid-November and they are hoping to hear in the next week or two that the application is approved.
The Hoover family bought property on Heritage Road about a year ago with the goal of creating a safe haven for horses — and for humans, Cory Hoover said. Finding enough space in Connecticut is rare, she said. They moved to Putnam from Columbia.
The family, which also includes Jim Hoover and daughter Teagan, rescue horses, donkeys and mules.
Cory said they wanted a safe haven for horses, a place to teach and to have the horses here at home. Three generations live on the Heritage Road property.
Cory and Jim have pulled in rescues already. They have four currently and one has already been adopted out.
They go to local auctions in New York and Pennsylvania and save the animals from the slaughter house.
Once they have them back, they get their health back up, then assess what’s needed behaviorally and train them with the goal of adopting them out to a better life. One horse they saved was 400 pounds underweight.
Their goal is also to become known as a safe haven locally. Cory Hoover said if, for example, someone has had a horse for 20 years and finds they can no longer afford to keep it, Safe Haven Rescue will rescue it. And the original owner can even visit their horse if they like.
And if for some reason a horse adopted out does not work out, Safe Haven Rescue will always take them back.
Galen Hoover has Natural Horsemanship Training certification. Cory said if a horse has a behavior that might keep it from getting adopted, for example, if the horse is “head shy,” Galen is trained to correct the behavior.
And daughter Teagan is now a furrier.
And if a horse isn’t rideable he’s still worth saving — as a companion horse. Currently, Cory Hoover said, one of their horses is doing companion duty for a horse in Brooklyn after another horse there died. “Horses are herd animals,” Cory said. “They need to be with other horses.”
Cory is a Certified Horsemanship Association member. She is both a therapeutic and standard instructor.
The rising cost of taking care of the rescuees is one reason for the 501C3 filing — donations would then be tax deductible.
For example, she said, one bale of hay, weighing 50 to 70 pounds, but that feeds one horse for one day. The 800-pound hay bales are gone in 3 days.
Forty to 50 pounds of grain used to cost $10. Now it’s $30.
Dec. 9 the family held a “Photos with Santa” (and photos with one of the first rescue horses) event to raise funds. There were vendors including a huge table of items crocheted by a family member. There were also custom candles and hand-worked leather items.
Galen works with a jousting group and they have offered to come do an event this coming summer.

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elliott pg 1 12-14-23



Connor Elliott is ready to get to work. Even if he has several months to wait.
The Woodstock Academy social studies teacher and assistant football coach will now have his own program at the school.
Elliott was recently named head baseball coach.
“It’s already on my mind and I have to keep reminding myself that it is just December, football just ended and it’s time to take a breath. I’m very excited, excited to build on the foundation that coach (Brian) Murphy has started here. Learning from him the last four years has been an amazing experience and I’m excited for the kids. We have a good, energetic squad coming back,” Elliott said.
Murphy stepped aside after guiding Woodstock for the last seven seasons.
“I’m starting to feel my age, have a few health issues but it’s also time for a change. We’ve had some good years, won a couple of divisional championships and elevated the program from what it was. I’ve been coaching for 15 or 16 years and (his son) Kaden is in college (a freshman baseball player at St. Joseph’s in West Hartford) and I want to go and see him play,” Murphy said.
He also had a capable assistant in Elliott who was ready to move up.
“I’m just excited that Connor is taking the job. I’ve always been impressed with him over the three years that he has been with me. He has integrity, good knowledge of the game and develops relationships with the players but there is also separation which is big. I think the program is in great hands,” Murphy said.
Elliott graduated from East Lyme High School in 2014 where he played the corner infield positions and pitched a bit. He went on from there to play football and club baseball at Stevenson University in Owings Mills, Md., before transferring to UConn.
He got into baseball umpiring and coaching including two years with the Niantic American Legion program and two more with an AAU program in the Southeast portion of the state before heading north to Woodstock.
“I’ve been coaching baseball ever since I stopped playing baseball,” Elliott said.
He feels that being coached by and working with Jack Biggs at East Lyme and Murphy with the Centaurs, it has given him a strong pedigree.
“I’m going to do my best to emulate (the East Lyme program) and coach Murphy as far as the hard work and commitment it requires to be a good baseball team consistently. It’s going to be good to see (East Lyme) and play against them in the (ECC) this year,” he added.
For Athletic Director Sean Saucier, it was the natural move.
“It’s good to have a succession plan,” Saucier said. “He’s been in the program for a few years and it should be relatively seamless but I’m also excited to see what he brings to the team.”
Murphy will still be around the program, helping with offseason conditioning, and the offseason open gyms, volunteering wherever he can something that Saucier is pleased with.
“(Murphy) really has solidified the program and has had a tremendous amount of success. We’re going to miss him but he still plans to be around in almost a consultant’s role and maybe help us with some of the training and extra things with the program,” Saucier added.
Another extra for Elliott. Murphy did not leave the cupboard bare.
“There are a lot of key returners, guys with a lot of varsity experience where we should be able to plug-and-play some new guys and get their feet wet a bit,” Elliott said.
Another big plus, Woodstock will return its top two starting pitchers.
Junior lefthander Brady Ericson (6-0) gave up just 15 hits and four earned runs in 39 2/3 innings with 76 strikeouts and 19 walks.
Ericson committed this past fall to play for the UConn baseball team in 2025-26.tar
It means there might be some UConn coaches in attendance at Centaur games or practices and it could give Elliott the opportunity to pick their brains a bit.
“Any insight they have, I would be a fool not to listen to. (The Huskies) have been a top-25 program pretty consistently. I have a buddy that I’m hoping to get on to our coaching staff who actually played for coach (Jim) Penders at UConn. I’m hoping he comes on to the staff to kind of be a liaison and kind of show Brady what it means to be a Div. I athlete,” Elliott said.
In addition, senior Riley O’Brien (5-2, 33 K’s) returns as does fellow senior Eric Mathewson who was the team’s closer last season.
The big thing Elliott would like to see is a couple of steps forward in tournament play as the Centaurs lost to East Lyme in the ECC championship game and fell to Masuk in the first-round of the Class L state tournament.
The Centaurs were Div. II champs last year but will move back to Div. I this season.
 “You can go 20-0 (in the regular season) and still lose in the first round of the ECC and state tournaments and the (20-0) didn’t do anything for you. It’s definitely a point of emphasis. Finish the season, to do that you have to finish games, to do that, you have to finish practices well. The things you do consistently well or not will show up at tournament time,” Elliott said.
Marc Allard
Director of Sports Information
The Woodstock Academy

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memorable pg 1 12-14-23



Woodstock Academy freshman Mia Auger made her debut as a member of the Centaurs Co-Op girls’ hockey team a memorable one.
Auger scored twice within a minute of each other in the third period to give the Centaurs a 3-2 victory over Simsbury in the season opener for both teams Saturday.
“What a way to make a mark on the team,” coach Eric Roy said.
Auger tied the game at two with 5 minutes, 10 seconds left in the final period with an unassisted goal.
Roy had noted that the Simsbury defensemen had been making passes inside its own zone and Auger was able to read one of those, intercepted the pass, and went in alone for the breakaway goal.
“It was hockey IQ awareness on her part,” Roy said.
Mia Williamson won the ensuing face off and got the puck to sophomore Sky Patterson who brought the puck over the blue line and found Auger streaking to the net.
The game-winner came just 49 seconds after the game-tying goal.
“For me, personally, this is my sixth year as a coach and I’ve never beaten them and they are always a perennial power in girls’ hockey. It is nice for our team to get a win like that,” Roy said.
Woodstock junior goalie Renee Porter preserved it with 24 saves.
Woodstock sophomore Ellary Sampson had given the Centaurs the 1-0 first period lead off an assist from Ledyard sophomore Stella Morrison.
“Since putting her in the leadership role as an assistant captain, she has flourished,” Roy said of Sampson. “She has taken this team under her wing and she was amazing on that play. She took the puck off the boards, had three, maybe even four, Simsbury girls draped on her and used her strength and powered her way to the net.”
Simsbury took the lead with a pair of second period goals.
It had the Centaurs worried in the locker room between periods.
“In the two years prior here, our team has not been the most resilient, we would get down on ourselves. We got into the locker room, went over what was going on and the girls had a fire in their eye. They weren’t going down without a fight,” Roy said.
The Centaurs have four games to play including home contests at the Jahn Ice Rink at Pomfret School against Smithfield (R.I) on Wednesday at 5 p.m. and the Mercy/East Catholic/East Hampton co-op on Saturday at 2 p.m.
Marc Allard
Director of Sports Information
The Woodstock Academy

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santa pg 1 12-14-23



Santa Visit
The Ferdman family, who just moved to Woodstock from Boston, visited Santa at Woodstock Creamery at Valleyside Farm. From left: Jack, Sebastian, Henry and Brittany Ferdman --- plus Santa and Mrs. Claus. More photos on page 4 and expanded photo array Wed. night on our FB page: Putnam Town Crier & Northeast Ledger. Linda Lemmon photo.

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