‘No running!’ — A Salisbury tradition

LAKEVILLE — The town Grove, the epicenter of the town’s summer youth activity and a major attraction for out-of-town visitors, takes a lot to operate.

As Manager Stacey Dodge explained, the Grove has the largest and deepest public swimming area in the region (at the “big raft,” the water’s depth is around 35 feet). Lake Wononscopomuc is the deepest lake in the state.

To maintain a safe swimming environment for both youth and adults alike, Dodge oversees a staff of 17 certified lifeguards.

Serving in this role in 2016 are: Hannah Pouler, Rebecca Rashkoff, Tristan Gaynor, Henry Kaufman, Taylor and Molly Dowd, Kathrine and Mike Namon, Jensen Hellmers, Maddie Horosky, Bailey Derr, Jim Bartram, Bradford Rawlings, Ellen Cowgill, Kristin Fisher, Ethan Marshall and Alison Holmes.

The ongoing success of recreation programs that take place at the lake has meant an ever-growing number of patrons.

“When we started, we didn’t have paddle boarding and kayaking and all of the swim programs that they have now,” Dodge said. She also mentioned an increase in sales of park stickers for out-of-town visitors.  

The staff’s greatest strength, she added, is its strong sense of community.

Whether they participated in the EXTRAS youth enrichment program, the swim lessons and swim team or simply had the daily habit of visiting the Grove, many of the lifeguards spent their childhood summers at the beach. 

“It’s like home,” said lifeguard Taylor Dowd, a Salisbury resident and second-year student at Curry College, studying nursing.

Ethan Marshall, a lifeguard and second-year student at Northeastern University, recalled the days when he was the one repeatedly reminded of the waterfront rules by the lifeguards.

Now that his position has changed, he said he sees a bit of his younger self in young visitors’ energetic behavior. Such a perspective allows Marshall to appreciate the leadership role he and his coworkers fill.

The greatest risk of danger in the water, Dodge said, is swimmers who overestimate their swimming ability and don’t realize the water’s depth.

But again, “because they [the lifeguards] are from here, they know a lot of the kids. They know their abilities.”

Concerning the most common call the lifeguards have to make, the vote was unanimous: “No running on the dock!”

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