Rock talk with Richardson

LAKEVILLE — Stonemason Doug Richardson took time out the other day from repairing the wall at the Bicentennial Park on Route 44 to talk rocks.

“Riga schist,� he said, pointing to one specimen in a large pile. “Local limestone.�

The schist is an unforgiving material. “Look at the oldest headstones in the town burial ground. They’re carved out of this. It’s a real testament to the skill of those guys.�

The wall of the little park, tucked discreetly off Holley Street, had deteriorated from water damage and road vibration. Richardson has removed a section and is building up a new wall of cinderblocks, with improved drainage.

He made a face at the cinderblocks, which he said is grunt work. “A trained monkey could do this part.�

The wall is home to two time capsules — one installed by the town in 1976, at the park’s dedication, and an older one from the Freemason Lodge. Richardson said the former capsule is in First Selectman Curtis Rand’s office and the latter at the Masonic lodge on Sharon Road, for safekeeping.

There’s history in the wall. Richardson unearthed two sharpening stones he said came from the former Holley knife factory across the street.

He expects to have the portion of the wall he’s working on now done by June. The remainder has to wait for the thumbs-up from the state Department of Transportation and Connecticut Light & Power.

No conversation with Richardson stays on one topic for long. A burly man, he looked at his battered work trousers, made of a tough twill fabric with fasteners at the leg cuff and a double thickness of material at the thighs, and wondered aloud where, in this unsettled post-modern world, he could find a suitable replacement.

Then he segued into fishing. It was that kind of morning.

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