Monthly Archives: March 2010

One syllable is plenty

I haven’t been sharing DownEast.com’s trivia questions lately because the feature apparently went green and was recycling a bunch of questions I had already shared. It didn’t make sense to share them again.

But when I first read today’s question, I immediately thought: “Well, it’s the shortest name. … Oh, wait, there’s Texas and Idaho” and probably another that I can’t think of just yet.

Anyway, a Mainer might say that one syllable is all we need.

What is unique about the state’s name?

Answer

Maine is the only state with a single-syllable name.

Jury begins deliberations in Maine lobsterman shooting case – Bangor Daily News

[Deliberations have started, apparently. — KM]

Jury begins deliberations in lobsterman shooting case – Bangor Daily News.

Maine ‘lobster wars’ trial of illustrates case of bad blood on Matinicus | The Kennebec Journal, Augusta, ME

[I posted a link to a wire story about this trial earlier, but this has far, far more details. — KM]

Trial illustrates case of bad blood on Matinicus | The Kennebec Journal, Augusta, ME.

Proposal would set ‘real Maine’ apart from rest of state

[Every so often someone in California offers up a proposal to split up California into two or three states. It usually falls flat on its face pretty fast. I sort of get the mindset that Rep. Joy is trying to express, but I don’t get this proposal, especially since he admits the chances are “slim to none.” Maine would lose more than gain. Rep. Joy perhaps should spend more of his time helping in the cutting of the state budget shortfall rather than cutting the state in two. – KM]

For Mainers who tire of summer traffic and wish those tourists would just stay away, Rep. Henry Joy, R-Crystal, has a solution: Split Maine in two.

If a bill he has proposed gets any traction – a possibility he described as “slim to none” – there would be a “real Maine” up north, and the rest would go back to its former landlord: Massachusetts.

“Some of them are sort of upset because I call this Northern Massachusetts, but their lifestyle is like those in Massachusetts,” he said.

Joy knows something about the Bay State. He traces his lineage to the first Joy in Boston, Thomas Joy.

His hometown – Crystal, in Aroostook County – is nowhere near Boston, however. In 2000, Crystal had 285 residents with a per-capita income of $14,338.

“I’d rather have my roots in Maine,” Joy said.

The new Maine Joy imagines would encompass Oxford, Aroostook, Piscataquis, Somerset, Franklin, Penobscot and Washington counties, and part of Hancock County. All others would become the new state of “northern Massachusetts.”

Click on the link to read the rest of this story by Ethan Wilensky-Lanford in the Kennebec Journal.

Maine’s budget hole again altered for the better | The Kennebec Journal, Augusta, ME

Budget hole again altered for the better | The Kennebec Journal, Augusta, ME.

Closing arguments today in trial of Maine lobsterman | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Closing arguments today in trial of lobsterman | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Hearing today on Maine’s medical pot plan | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Hearing today on medical pot plan | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Maine high court upholds state wind farm law | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Maine high court upholds state wind farm law | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Senate bill expands offshore wind incentives to 2020

Senate Bill Expands Offshore Wind Incentives to 2020

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Maine’s official dessert? | Bangor Daily News

[Just a quick note on this somewhat funny story in the Bangor Daily News. The high school mentioned in the third paragraph is the one I attended years ago. (Class of 1980) Go Hornets!! And the teacher, Sarah Brooks, is a longtime local educator and I believe she still owns horse stables in Nashville Plantation, just south of Portage, Maine. And for full disclosure, I thoroughly enjoy whoopie pies and blueberry pie equally, so I’d be interested in a compromise. Clicking on the link below will bring you to the story and there is a recipe for whoopie pies in the story. I pasted the recipe below in the event you are not interested and going to the story. Enjoy! Or not! It’s your choice. – KM]

A lover if whoopie pies

campaigns for state action

Amos Orcutt is so passionate about whoopie pies he’s taking it to the governor. Well, not quite yet — but eventually. Orcutt earlier this year filed the paperwork for a bill to recognize the chocolate and cream confection as Maine’s state dessert.

 “It’s a sense of pride for Mainers. We need to promote products from Maine and focus on those little niches that we have,” said Orcutt, president of the University of Maine Foundation. “We have all these great foods and products that come out of Maine, and they’re part of what makes us unique. Whoopie pies are definitely one of those things.”

Orcutt recently enlisted the help of a group of Ashland High School students, led by teacher Sarah Brooks, to support his measure in last weekend’s mock legislation session in Augusta. Part of the Maine Youth in Government program, the students from Ashland traveled to the Capitol to debate with fellow students from around the state several items — including the whoopie pie bill.

Click on the link for the rest of this story by Emily Burnham in the Bangor Daily News.

 Sandy Oliver’s Whoopie Pie

Makes about 14 to 16 3-inch whoopie pies This whoopie pie recipe ran April 14, 2007, in the Bangor Daily News.

 2 cups flour

1/2 cup cocoa

1 teaspoons baking soda

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/3 cup shortening

1 cup sugar

1 egg

1 teaspoon vanilla

1 cup milk

 Preheat oven to 375 F. Sift together dry ingredients. Cream together shortening and sugar, beat in the egg and vanilla, then add the dry ingredients and milk alternately. You will have a fairly stiff cake batter. Drop by tablespoonfuls onto a greased cookie sheet, leaving room for them to spread somewhat. Bake for 10 to 15 minutes. Allow to cool slightly before removing them to a rack.

 Whoopie Pie Filling

 2 egg whites

2 cups confectioners’ sugar

1/2 cup shortening

1 teaspoon vanilla

 Beat the egg whites until they are fluffy, gradually adding 1 cup of confectioners’ sugar. Then spoonful by spoonful add the shortening and the rest of the sugar to the egg white mixture until it is smooth and fluffy, then beat in the vanilla. When the cookies are cool enough to handle, make pairs of similarly sized ones and spread the filling on one half and top with the other half. Wrap in plastic wrap or put into an airtight container.

3 Maine women honored as WW II pilots | Bangor Daily News

3 Maine women honored as WW II pilots – Bangor Daily News.

Maine Gov. Baldacci releases $79M bond package | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Baldacci releases $79M bond package | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Garciaparra retires as member of Red Sox | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Garciaparra retires as member of Red Sox | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

January jobless rate rises to 8.2% in Maine | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

January jobless rate rises to 8.2% in Maine | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Trader Joe’s eyeing Portland | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Trader Joe’s eyeing Portland | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Coffeehouse observation No. 74

I don’t get it sometimes how a person can loudly carry on a conversation in a public place. This guy at the next table at the coffeehouse was trashing his brother and the brother’s girlfriend. Come on, Dude! Take it outside at least.

Go to Coffeehouse Observer for more coffeehouse observations.

Police probe death of Mainers linked to California pot growing operation | Bangor Daily News

Police probe death of Mainers linked to pot growing operation – Bangor Daily News.

More Maine Guard soldiers going to Afghanistan | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

More Maine Guard soldiers going to Afghanistan | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Mainers encouraged to complete census forms | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Mainers encouraged to complete census forms | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

A vision for the Maine’s North Woods

In delicate talks, the many factions

of landowners are forging a plan

that tries to satisfy all of their interests

The long-simmering debate over the future of Maine’s northern woodlands is about to move back to the front burner.

A group called the Keeping Maine’s Forests steering committee is working on a proposal to protect millions of acres of the working forest from further development. The committee is close to having a final plan and will deliver it to federal officials as early as this month.

People already are lining up to oppose it with competing plans for the more than 10 million acres known as Maine’s North Woods. It’s the largest unfragmented forest east of the Mississippi River, with most of it in private hands.

The steering committee grew out of an effort, organized by state officials, to get the traditionally warring factions of landowners such as Katahdin Timberlands, environmental groups such as Maine Audubon, outdoor recreational organizations such as the Appalachian Mountain Club, and members of the forest products sector such as the Forest Products Council, to forge a plan that would satisfy all of their interests.

“The fact that we got them sitting down at one table is unprecedented,” said Alec Giffen, director of the Maine Forest Service.

Click on the link for the rest of today’s story by Beth Quimby in the Portland Press Herald.

Here’s more:

The Maine Woods

• Maine is the most heavily forested state in the nation, with trees growing on 90 percent of its land base, or 17.8 million acres.

• The Maine woods are home to more than 20,000 species of wildlife.

•  As an economic resource, Maine’s forests directly employ nearly 23,000 people.

•  About 95 percent of Maine timberland is privately owned, with small, non-industrial landowners holding more than 6.2 million acres.

•  The Maine woods generate $1.15 billion in revenues from forest-related recreation and tourism activities.

•  Maine’s forest industry harvests 6 million to 7 million cords of wood each year to build homes and make furniture, paper and other products.

Source: Maine Forest Service

 

Steering committee members

• Eliza Townsend, Maine Department of Conservation

• Wolfe Tone, The Trust for Public Land

• Rosaire Pelletier, adviser to Gov. John Baldacci

• Sherry Huber, Maine Tree Foundation

• Karin Tilberg, Office of the Governor

• Mike Tetreault, The Nature Conservancy

• Alec Giffen, Maine Forest Service

• Patrick Strauch, Forest Products Council

• Ted Koffman, Maine Audubon

• Roger Milliken, Baskahegan Co.

• Marcia McKeague, Acadian Timberlands

• John Williams, Maine Pulp and Paper Association

• Eleanor Kinney, Environmental Funders Network Council

• Karen Woodsum, Sierra Club

• Brownie Carson, Natural Resources Council

• Alan Hutchinson, Forest Society of Maine

• Peter Triandafillou, Huber Resources

• Walter Graff, Appalachian Mountain Club

• Don White, Prentiss and Carlisle

• Mathew Dunlap, Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine

• Rich Merk, Small Woodlot Owners of Maine

• Ken Elowe, Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife