Glimpses of Hidden Wonders In Falls Village

Documentary filmmaker Eric Veden is back with episode 23 of his series on Falls Village, Conn. The DVDs are available at the town’s David M. Hunt Library to borrow or for sale ($10).

The latest documentary kicks off with chickens and bluegrass music before moving into an interview with First Selectman Henry Todd, who reminisces about his 40-odd years of traveling the world for business.

Todd says he spent four months per year out of the country, working in the commodities and flavoring businesses.

This took him to Japan to China, to Madagascar, Indonesia and India — a very partial list.

Todd says every country has different ways of conducting business, and he had to learn them all.

“It was fun. I loved it.”

Next up is a visit to Lou Timolat and Eric Carlson at the Falls Village Sawmill on Route 7. 

Timolat explains how he came to be in the sawmill business and how it evolved since the early 1980s.

Carlson, Timolat’s son-in-law and a 20-year Army veteran, explains how he took an interest in the business.

“It’s hard work,” Carlson acknowledges before adding, “I hate to use the word ‘soothing,’ but there’s something about it.”

In the third chapter, Star Childs explains how his grandfather, Starling W. Childs, and Frederic C. Walcott originally acquired 400 acres of land around Tobey Pond in 1909, which was the start of the Great Mountain Forest that stretches over 6,000 acres in Falls Village and Norfolk, Conn.

The men were interested in the idea that private individuals could demonstrate that forest and wildlife conservation could go hand in hand.

Chapter four is a quick detour to the present day, with footage of the Hunt Library’s plant sale back in May, with an emphasis on the measures taken to protect buyers and sellers from the COVID-19 pandemic.

And the video wraps up with an unusual look at Music Mountain (one of the nation’s premier sites to hear live chamber music), with bird calls and music. 

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