Business blooms for new Wassaic flower shop

WASSAIC — Images of butterflies and ladybugs are hard to avoid at Monarch Creations, a new flower and decorations shop located on Route 22 in Wassaic. They’re even a part of the store logo.The new business is owned by Melissa Conklin, and if a flower shop in that location strikes a familiar chord, it’s because she purchased the business from Judy Marshall, who ran Judy’s Flower Shop there for more than a decade and still owns the building.“It’s really just something I always wanted to do,” Conklin said. “I’m the crafty one in the family, and I have a lot of hands-on, self-taught experience.”Conklin said the goal for her business is that everything that comes out of the store will be a hand-crafted and unique piece.“Creation is part of the name,” she said. “It’s about creating gifts for people that you can’t just go to any store and buy.”In addition to flowers (and there are a wide variety that can be ordered daily), there are specialty baskets, candles and soaps, among other items.Going back to the theme of butterflies and monarchs, Conklin said the images are in memory of her father and close family members, several of whom she lost during the last year.“They really gave me the inspiration to go for it and open the business now,” she said.“This is where I bought my flowers,” she said of the store. “The location means a lot to me. One door closes and another one opens.”Monarch Creations is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., and Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon. Reach the business at 845-373-7053 or by email at monarchcreations11@gmail.com.

Latest News

Harding sounds alarm on farm tax hikes; Lamont halts reassessments

Farmland in the Northwest Corner, where family farms rely on Public Act 490 to keep land in agricultural use

Photo by Debra A. Aleksinas

NORTH CANAAN — Concerns mounted last week across the state and Northwest Corner that proposed farmland tax increases could threaten the future of working farms. In response, owners of large agricultural tracts warned that higher property tax assessments would make it impossible to continue operating under the same rules as residential development.

Those concerns — echoed by farmers who traveled to Hartford to testify and amplified by local lawmakers — prompted Gov. Ned Lamont to order an immediate halt to steep increases in farmland property tax assessments that critics said could push land out of agriculture and into more intensive use.

Keep ReadingShow less
Winter costs mount as snowstorm hits the Northwest Corner

The Salisbury town crew out plowing and salting Monday morning.

By Patrick L. Sullivan

FALLS VILLAGE — A powerful winter storm dumped more than 18 inches of snow in parts of the Northwest Corner of Connecticut Sunday, Jan. 25, testing town highway departments that were well prepared for the event but already straining under the cost of an unusually snowy season.

Ahead of the storm, Gov. Ned Lamont declared a state of emergency and urged residents to avoid travel as hazardous conditions developed Sunday and continued into Monday. Parts of the region were hit with more than 18 inches, according to the National Weather Service, with heavy, persistent bands falling all day Sunday and continuing into Monday morning.

Keep ReadingShow less
Cornwall board approves purchase of two new fire trucks following CVFD recommendation
CVFD reaches fundraising goal for new fire trucks
Provided

CORNWALL — At the recommendation of the Cornwall Volunteer Fire Department, on Jan. 20 the Board of Selectmen voted to move forward with the purchase of two new trucks.

Greenwood Emergency Vehicles, located in North Attleboro, Massachusetts, was chosen as the manufacturer. Of the three bids received, Greenwood was the lowest bidder on the desired mini pumper and a rescue pumper.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robin Lee Roy

FALLS VILLAGE — Robin Lee Roy, 62, of Zephyrhills, Florida, passed away Jan. 14, 2026.

She was a longtime CNA, serving others with compassion for more than 20 years before retiring from Heartland in Florida.

Keep ReadingShow less