 It is now 6.06, select board meeting on September 7th. And first on the agenda is to look at the trees, discuss the trees and the possible amendments to the soil to help them. And also talk about some of the ones that need some definite maintenance in terms of clearing a lot of brush. So we have the trees and then one of the issues is, oh well. So for the maple trees, and actually in terms of the soil, phosphorus levels were pretty much optimum and then potassium and magnesium were high or excessive. So for the maple trees, well actually for all of them, whether the maple trees or the conifers over here, it's that pretty much at small amounts of a high nitrogen, low phosphorus fertilizer such as 621, 734, or two to three pounds per 100 square feet of alfalfa meal, or whatever your local supplier recommends. I don't think so. So that would be that. That's pretty much a recommendation. Can we do that in the fall or do we have to wait till spring? We have to wait till spring. Okay. So it's something we can budget for next year? Yeah. So we'll have to let them in for the next few months. Well no, there's actually some folks in town that are willing to help to volunteer to do it. We're still going to buy the prod. Oh yeah, we're still going to buy the prod. I mean, we can price out everything. Yeah. Why not? Yeah. Assume it's a matter of whether we do inorganic or inorganic. Right. Okay. So that was one of the items. That would be good. So go on and take a look. Might as well look at the tree. It's all cleaned up. Oh yeah. These were the big ones that were over there for a long time. Right. That's something I would think the guys should work on now. Or I guess it would be a good old landscape for some of those things. Let's see if they're... They could do that. They could come up here and exhibit and clean that right off of them. Three hours and clean it right up. That would change that. Pretty well. How far back behind do we go there? Just where those are? Is that pretty much the problem? Pretty close. And she goes in a little bit over there. Yeah, it probably is. Hey Jake, come out. You've already got my house. But it was on during the week. What was that right? There was a ditch line through here. Oh, okay. So pretty much just that one side. Yeah. I think I'll leave the trees, the mid-trees. I'll take all the sooner action. In the spring there we can fertilize those. They look really green to me. Yeah, they're looking good right now. I don't think they've ever cut anything. They have some kind of like greenery shrub thing. And half of it is dead. And it dies from the inside out. So these look kind of... I didn't know. I had no idea. But you don't trim these or anything, right? Yeah. I'm not trying to lie to you. The reason we planted the Arvovite was because the youth were going so slow. And it was really hoping to find a way. So Arvovite probably should have been planted right from the start. But so... Does it come to a point where we end up taking the youth down which we found a way to go? Are you proud of it? I'm not going to be too proud of it. Look at it. Oh well, it'll make a nice sound barrier. Yeah, it'll be. It's a great barrier. The bottom line will happen is eventually the Arvovite are going to grow out this way. And the youth are going to grow out on all sides. And they'll get taller too, right? Yeah. The Arvovite will definitely be the fall of the Chester. They really look a lot better than they did seven years ago. Yeah, that's good. Yeah, so... So hurt? Yeah, right. So when I walked us in March, we literally just took a stroll around. Yeah. And so that was one of... there's no particular order of stuff that, you know, Martin and I and then Craig somewhat, you know, just saw, reviewed, like, maintaining access for the fire trucks to fill for a fire. Because what happens is it's become a public. You'll see, he's now put up a lot of more parking signs. Because people can get out of the parking to access the river. Right. So, I don't know in the long run if there's somebody to make some plan where let's walk over that. Yeah. And then as we walk along, then the other stuff we saw where there was just review of some materials along the river and, you know, some cleaning up, like an old basketball hoop and some rubber mats and cullabricks. I mean, it's actually, like, looks like the team's worked on it a bit this summer. You know, you've got a really hot day and these guys are trying to do their work and they've got cars. That's why you've got the signs up. They're doing stuff and they've got cars in their way. Right. So, you know, I don't know if... The reason I had the guy, Greg, come was because, seeing that he's a designer, that maybe someday we could look at it if there was another way to do some lay out there or, you know, optimize the property a little bit differently and be able to have a little... figure out a little better parking thing or how we keep people from being in here. You know, I'm just brainstorming, you folks, just that it's kind of like an accident ready to, you know, wait to happen. Yeah, it's been a problem. You know, for a long time. But I mean, also, people have been doing this for years. I agree. I understand. But it would be nice to make it nice, but I don't know if that's possible. Yeah. So I was just, that's why we were doing the walk-through and then maybe over the winter when we're not thinking about swimming and stuff, we can, you know, talk about it a little bit. Right. So, you know, and then there's like that oil tank there. I don't know what happened with that. I can't remember what happened with that drawing I read. They're close to the river. Does anybody remember? The fuel tank. Okay, fuel. Yeah, that's where they get all the... That's where they get all the gas. It's up that container around it. Yeah. I don't know if that... I don't recall that being washed away. Well, this was certainly flooded. Yeah, you know. But no, I don't know. I was just, let's carry on. Because I know we have to get back to the office. So then, you know, you got one of the things in river access, parking right away, neighbors parking in the sand pit, blocking the access, tank location, location of the storage box. Did that happen? I don't know where that... Did we ever do that? Where is that storage box? Did that happen? Oh, the... The box with the storage container. Did I just... You were still getting the permit last night over here? Oh, okay. So that didn't happen. Yeah. Well, that location needed to, you know, sort of figure out where that was going to go. And then, you know, you know, there's some different things here. I mean, you know, it's a working guy. I mean, right? Yes. There's no parking. It helps a lot. You know, you must have heard that. It's got to be helping. I would think it would be. Well, I don't know. But I know when the fire department comes down here, they still have a right to back down there to get the water. That's right. Yes. That's still... Even though we don't have that, we still have that land. We still have access to the river. But who owns that land where those cars are driven down? No, the people in that house right there. In Randy, in Liza, the old house there, right? Yeah. They own it out to here? Yeah. They bought that piece. Right. But we have it right away for fire. But not for townspeople that park it? Yeah. No. What do they do? Well, these are townspeople parking here, right? Yeah. Well, yeah. Someone, yeah. And I think that is as well down there, people parking to go to the river. So I thought if I had a place to park, it would just go there. Oh, no, no. I agree. A park right there. Yeah. But I've lived with that. You know? Martin was wondering if the one they park on this road on a hot day, what that does, God forbid, the fire department needs to get access to the river. They can't block the road. Yeah. So maybe we have to say fire. Block road. You know, maybe there needs to be something that tells people that. They're not block road. You know, fire, fire access. I mean, how many cars can be in a park? More than four? Oh, yeah. Yeah. I've seen that. And he must have just, these signs just went up a couple of weeks ago because I hadn't seen them before. And I would come by here cycling and I'd see cars parked down in there. You know, because there's a good way to walk down and do the river there. So, but now I'm sure the signs have helped. Yeah. I mean, it's pretty straightforward. I can't, no parking. Right. But, yeah, so anyways, that was just another item identified as something that, you know, maybe needs to be addressed just to keep the fire access. You know, again, it's never been an issue, but who knows. Right. It ever was. Right. It wouldn't be, whether, you know, we wanted to, someday, I don't know, take all these little pieces and see if there was some, I don't know, some way to, I'm not a just landscape designer, but if there was a way to make it so that this was maybe more public and then the sand that was on the other side of maybe a fence or trees or something, you know? I don't know. I think it's dry. How do you eat that grass? Yeah. But I mean, you know, then there's, obviously, there's space needed for all this to put, so just something to get our eyes on, you know? Yeah. It's like going down. I was under the impression that anything that they're not using, maybe it's gotten brutal. I don't see much here that they're not using. Yeah, that's what I'm saying. I mean, they used to have a lot of, obviously, we have more plows than we have trucks here. Yeah. Well, I think Martin told me this, and it's a couple old plows and a basketball hoop. You have a basketball hoop. It's still right over there. I think we can set that up down here and start shooting some hoop. Yeah. Yeah, Stefan took that one. They brought it here. But, you know, I mean, I don't know. I just, I appreciate that you took the time to come here. Yeah. You know, it's just something to think about for them. Oh, I think it's a good idea. You just spent time and people in our community and other than just dealing with the same old stuff, just dealing with all the time. Yeah. I do know. It's definitely a good one. Yeah. Yeah, you know, just, yeah, if there's a way we could, you know, engage Martin and the crew and talking, you know, they're the ones who live with their people coming here. Yeah. I would definitely have a concern with people going down there. Mm-hmm. Because we already had a complaint about that. And so we should definitely address that. Yeah, maybe another story. Yeah. Yeah. We're all sick of sighing. Yeah. Unfortunately, it's something we need. Mm-hmm. Because a lot of people don't know that. We still think that that's town land. Yeah. They probably do. Yeah. That's why I'm saying this is, you know, accesses for fire department use alone. And maybe we consider planting some different trees along here because the maples are along with those maples. Yeah. You know, another way of blocking it a little bit, but I don't know if we're up for it. I suggest that something, you know, grab on. And they will ask the market that they're going to have some, you know, to be able to do it. Well, okay. Yeah, none of that. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I guess if I would take an address and they are like, well you got it, well you got an enrollment. Well, it's the good life. I suppose I want to help guys. Hmm. Yeah you can do that. That's the favor, that's good. I can do that. Yeah. Do you have a fiscal assessment to do here? Yeah. We're going to go in straight up and put different infrastructure and What did you say? No, you can see he's used here to not let himself do it. Yeah. Yeah, I think that's what the report says, these maples. So it's a little different than the soil here. So when I talked to Mike Brown, you know, as far as we had Mike Brown, he was saying, it's because of the soils and what the maples are having. I go through here. We're very compacted soils. Yeah, very good, yeah. Well, that one's bad. That one's not good. So I mean, those branches are little suckers. Yeah, yeah. They're doing great. What? They're doing okay. What's that? Still suckers. Yeah, right. Chain from color. Good. All right, so should we go back to now on to the... I guess so. Okay. All right. Can you temporarily recess? Can we get back to that?