
Kelly and Bob McCarthy under the deliberately misspelled sign at their Kelly’s Kitchen Take 2.
Jack Sheedy


Kelly and Bob McCarthy under the deliberately misspelled sign at their Kelly’s Kitchen Take 2.
The ornate wooden sign is deliberately misspelled: “Apathecary.”
It greets visitors as soon as they walk into Kelly’s Kitchen Take 2 in Colebrook, described on the store’s website as “a charming sanctuary where time-honored traditions meet artisanal craftsmanship.” Co-founder Kelly McCarthy said, “I work with energy, and I’m all about the herbal tinctures and working with naturopaths and more natural medicine.” She said the misspelled sign is meant to denote a section of the store as “a path to wellness.”
In that section are consigned products by local artisans, including decorative cutting boards, CBD sprays, herbal candles, honeybee pollen, pet shampoos, loose-leaf teas, jalapeno jams, greeting cards, handcrafted hats, inspirational photos and natural bar soaps.
Most of the artisans are based in Connecticut. All are from New England or the Hudson River Valley, McCarthy said.
Her husband and the store’s co-founder, Bob McCarthy, shepherds another aspect of Kelly’s Kitchen Take 2: prepared grab-and-go foods. And speaking of shepherds, one of his most popular dishes is shepherd’s pie, that classic comfort food made with ground beef, vegetables, potatoes, butter and cream. If it or another menu item is sold out, Bob can often prepare more while customers wait.
In coolers and freezers are soups, chowders, stews, casseroles, chicken pot pies, homemade sauces and spreads, desserts and fresh-baked breads.
Bob declined to name any one dish as his specialty. “My specialty is food made from scratch that tastes good,” he said. He boasts more than 40 years as a foodie, having apprenticed with an Austrian master chef before working at Farmington Woods Country Club and Beefsteak Charlie’s. He opened Lily’s of the Valley Restaurant in Simsbury, where he met Kelly, who was a server there.
As the name implies, Kelly’s Kitchen Take 2 is a reboot of their popular restaurant, Kelly’s Kitchen, which operated in Winsted from 2004 to 2015. When their lease ended, Bob became the chef at Bantam Market, preparing foods for the deli section. Kelly used her professional marketing experience to expand her holistic practice, working with people to educate and nourish them spiritually, she said.
When the building they now occupy recently came on the market, they saw it as an opportunity for a turnkey retirement business where they could combine their two areas of expertise. The location previously was home to Spice320, which also featured prepared foods and had a working kitchen and space for cooling, freezing and displaying foods.
As a destination for freshly prepared foods, it is a rare oasis, according to a young couple who identified themselves only as Maya and Rob. “I checked it online, and the reviews were so good that I was like, ‘I gotta go and check it out,’” Maya said.
Another customer, a woman from the Berkshires, said she and her husband come to Winsted once a week to shop. She first tried shopping at Kelly’s on a Tuesday, then on a Wednesday, but was disappointed to learn the store was closed on those days. “Now we have to change our shopping day to Thursday,” she said.
“People don’t need to retire,” Kelly said. “Stop looking at retiring from life, and instead, what can you still bring to the table? There’s so much magic within each one of us.”
Kelly’s Kitchen Take 2 is at 320 Colebrook River Road in Colebrook. Hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Closed Tuesday and Wednesday. For more information, visit kktake2.com or call 860-379-7927.
Nathan Miller
MILLERTON — Two sitting members of the village Board of Trustees are up for reelection on Tuesday, June 16.
Deputy Mayor Matt Hartzog and Trustee Matt Soleau are each seeking additional two year terms to the Board of Trustees. Both incumbents are running unopposed for their respective seats.
Elections are scheduled for Tuesday, June 16, at the Millerton Village Hall on Route 22 north of the intersection with Route 44. Voting booths will be open from noon to 9 p.m.
Leila Hawken
Area music lovers turned out for a free concert at the Lyall Community Church on Friday, May 29, presented by the Millbrook Music Salon. The concert featured the award-winning Balourdet Quartet joined by acclaimed clarinetist Graeme Steele Johnson. Titled “Compass: Musical Distance,” the varied program included works by Mozart, Milhaud, Viet Cuong and Brahms. Left to right are Justin DeFilippis, violin; Angela Bae, violin; Johnson, clarinet; Russell Houston, cello; and Benjamin Zannoni, viola.
Graham Corrigan
PINE PLAINS — Pine Plains Central School District administrators detailed $291,000 in budget cuts Tuesday, May 26, after voters rejected a proposed budget last week.
The original 2026-2027 budget, which totalled $40,500,000, failed to pass on May 19, despite winning a 52% approval from voters. The proposed budget needed 60% of voters backing it, a supermajority necessary due to a school tax levy that exceeded the state’s allowed cap.
New York generally limits municipalities and school districts to a tax levy increase of 2%, but the allowable cap can be higher in some cases. Pine Plains administrators said the district was limited to a tax levy increase of just under 3.4% this year. The initial proposed budget raised taxes by 4.43%.
To fall within the tax cap — which could then pass with a simple 50% majority at the ballot box — administrators had to find about $291,000 in cuts. Residents will re-vote on the amended budget on June 16.
Following the initial budget failure, district officials deliberated and decided to propose three staffing cuts. The new budget would eliminate a head bus driver position, a typist position and one nurse. Those three reductions would save about $290,569, bringing the year-over-year school tax increase to 3.39% and the total budget down to $40,488,222.
A public hearing on the new proposed budget will take place on June 9. If the budget is defeated a second time, the district will be forced to adopt a contingency budget.
That means the tax levy would stay at 2025-2026 levels, requiring a further $945,000 in reductions. Deep cuts to athletics, Pre-K programs, and extra curricular activities would become likely — as well as staffing cuts to custodial, counselor, librarian, and social services, administrators said.

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Graham Corrigan
Former Stanford Town Supervisor Wendy Burton dragged a few Stanford Pride crew members onto the "Pink Pony Club" dance floor, being careful not to slip in the rain at Stanford Pride 2025 last June.
It’s officially Pride Month, and Dutchess County is showing up to the party with a panoply of exciting events to celebrate the LGBTQ+ community.
On June 6, Stanford Pride is hosting their annual event from 1 to 4 p.m. There will be food, music, and community at coworking space Bangallworks at 57 Hunns Lake Road. It’s the group’s fifth annual celebration, and they’re back at the site of the first Stanford Pride.
June 10 is Pride Night at Heritage Financial Park in Wappingers Falls, where the High-A Yankees affiliate Hudson Valley Renegades will host the Jersey Shore BlueClaws
On June 13, the Dutchess County Pride Center heads to Poughkeepsie for the eighth annual Poughkeepsie Pride March & Festival. They’ll gather in Waryas Park from noon to 4 p.m., where local artists, food vendors, and community resources will coalesce.
The Beacon is honoring Pride with a month-long programming slate of LGBTQ+ films: “But I’m A Cheerleader,” “The Crying Game,” “Wedding Banquet,” and “Brokeback Mountain” will run in consecutive weeks during June.
The festivities end with a 5K Fun Run Fundraiser in Poughkeepsie — Dutchess Pride has partnered with Fleet Feet Poughkeepsie for the race, which will kick off June 28 at 9 A.M. All ages and running abilities are welcome.
Nathan Miller
MILLERTON — Representatives of a historic boarding school are seeking formal permits from the North East Planning Board in an effort to comply with state requirements.
Ray Nelson — a Millerton-based engineer who spoke on behalf of boarding school Olivet Academy — described the school’s need for an official special use permit at a rescheduled regular meeting of the Planning Board on Wednesday, May 27.
Nelson said the property’s change of ownership six years ago triggered a New York State Department of Education requirement that all paperwork, including certificates of occupancy and permits, be held under Olivet’s name.
Olivet Academy is a Christian boarding school that primarily serves students from South Korea. The academy is part of a larger family of boarding schools with locations in Missouri, California and South Korea.
The school currently operates out of a campus in the Town of North East near the intersection of Morse Hill Road, Perrys Corners Road and Haight Road. Boarding schools have operated on the campus since the 1940s, Nelson said. The campus’s long history predates building and zoning codes, meaning many of the structures did not require formal permits in the past because they haven’t been altered since their construction.
It’s unclear why the school is now required to receive this documentation.
A special use permit is required for schools located in a residential agricultural district in the Town of North East. No special use permit has been issued for the property in the past because many of the facilities predate zoning.
Deliberation on the special use permit had to be delayed as the school had yet to receive proper approvals from the town’s building inspector. Planning Board chair Dale Culver explained the board cannot grant permits before the building inspector has issued certificates of occupancy.
The property will also have to receive approval from the Dutchess County Department of Health for septic systems that lack formal documentation.
Given those missing details, board members declined to move forward with the application, opting to wait until their next meeting to see if the necessary documents are complete before scheduling a public hearing.
Culver said he wants this application to serve as a precedent under the town’s new zoning code. North East adopted changes to its zoning codes in March after a years-long process of revisions and updates aimed at modernizing language, improving information organization and encouraging further commercial and mixed-use development along Route 44 east of the Village of Millerton.
Olivet’s plans don’t include any changes to the property, just a formal documentation of the site’s structures and uses in an effort to comply with state regulations. Because there are no proposed changes, Culver said he thought it would be inappropriate to require the school to update things like outdoor lighting as that would impose work at the school that the applicants were not already planning to do.
“We could point out that in the future — if you’re going to make changes — these may be some of the areas of concern,” Culver said. “I don’t think we should attach onerous costs to something as simple as ‘we need to document what already is there.’”By Nathan Miller
nathanm@millertonnews.com
MILLERTON — Representatives of a historic boarding school are seeking formal permits from the North East Planning Board in an effort to comply with state requirements.
Ray Nelson — a Millerton-based engineer who spoke on behalf of boarding school Olivet Academy — described the school’s need for an official special use permit at a rescheduled regular meeting of the Planning Board on Wednesday, May 27.
Nelson said the property’s change of ownership six years ago triggered a New York State Department of Education requirement that all paperwork, including certificates of occupancy and permits, be held under Olivet’s name.
Olivet Academy is a Christian boarding school that primarily serves students from South Korea. The academy is part of a larger family of boarding schools with locations in Missouri, California and South Korea.
The school currently operates out of a campus in the Town of North East near the intersection of Morse Hill Road, Perrys Corners Road and Haight Road. Boarding schools have operated on the campus since the 1940s, Nelson said. The campus’s long history predates building and zoning codes, meaning many of the structures did not require formal permits in the past because they haven’t been altered since their construction.
It’s unclear why the school is now required to receive this documentation.
A special use permit is required for schools located in a residential agricultural district in the Town of North East. No special use permit has been issued for the property in the past because many of the facilities predate zoning.
Deliberation on the special use permit had to be delayed as the school had yet to receive proper approvals from the town’s building inspector. Planning Board chair Dale Culver explained the board cannot grant permits before the building inspector has issued certificates of occupancy.
The property will also have to receive approval from the Dutchess County Department of Health for septic systems that lack formal documentation.
Given those missing details, board members declined to move forward with the application, opting to wait until their next meeting to see if the necessary documents are complete before scheduling a public hearing.
Culver said he wants this application to serve as a precedent under the town’s new zoning code. North East adopted changes to its zoning codes in March after a years-long process of revisions and updates aimed at modernizing language, improving information organization and encouraging further commercial and mixed-use development along Route 44 east of the Village of Millerton.
Olivet’s plans don’t include any changes to the property, just a formal documentation of the site’s structures and uses in an effort to comply with state regulations. Because there are no proposed changes, Culver said he thought it would be inappropriate to require the school to update things like outdoor lighting as that would impose work at the school that the applicants were not already planning to do.
“We could point out that in the future — if you’re going to make changes — these may be some of the areas of concern,” Culver said. “I don’t think we should attach onerous costs to something as simple as ‘we need to document what already is there.’”
Aly Morrissey
Shoppers crowd Jones & Daughters new space on Millerton’s Main Street for the boutique’s grand opening on Friday, May 29.
MILLERTON — A new boutique owned by two Salisbury residents opened its doors on Main Street Friday, May 29, drawing a steady stream of shoppers and supporters eager to welcome the business to the village.
Jones & Daughters, a boutique offering apparel, jewelry, home goods, and gifts, has opened at 34 Main Street in the former Geary Gallery space.
Co-founders Constance Edwards of Lakeville and Sabina Breece of Salisbury said they saw an opportunity to bring a curated shopping experience to the region.
“We wanted people to have somewhere to find a great pair of jeans, a beautiful dress, comfortable and stylish shoes or a thoughtful gift,” Edwards said.
Both women and their families were part-time weekenders before settling in the area full time during the pandemic. Edwards previously lived in Stanfordville, while Breece spent weekends in Kent.
The Millerton store builds on a business Edwards built with her sister and co-founder, Amanda Eckmann, established years ago in Louisville, Kentucky. The Hudson Valley location celebrated its grand opening Friday with friends, neighbors and first-time visitors.
“We wanted to create a place to shop that felt as thoughtful as this community,” Edwards said. “The perfect outfit, something beautiful for your home, a gift that actually means something.”
The shop carries women’s and men’s apparel, jewelry, shoes, and home goods and gifts, including candles, pillows, puzzles, and more.
Jones & Daughters is open Thursday through Monday at 34 Main Street, Millerton.

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