Category Archives: Environment

Maine driftboat race skillful and entertaining | Lewiston Sun Journal

Maine driftboat race skillful and entertaining | Lewiston Sun Journal

Winterport man builds home as therapy after battle with cancer \ Bangor Daily News

Winterport man builds home as therapy after battle with cancer | Bangor Daily News.

Fall Foliage Festival draws community outside in Madawaska | Bangor Daily News

Fall Foliage Festival draws community outside in Madawaska | Bangor Daily News.

Portland joins list of top college cities | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Portland joins list of top college cities | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

THE TOP 20

Top 20 best small cities for college students to live:

1. Boulder, Colo.

2. Ann Arbor, Mich.

3. Bridgeport, Conn.

4. Trenton-Ewing, N.J.

5. Gainesville, Fla.

6. Madison, Wis.

7. Durham, N.C.

8. Santa Cruz, Calif.

9. Honolulu, Hawaii

10. Fort Collins, Colo.

11. Santa Barbara, Calif.

12. New Haven, Conn.

13. Lincoln, Neb.

14. Albany, N.Y.

15. San Luis Obispo, Calif.

16. Naples, Fla.

17. Manchester, N.H.

18. Oxnard, Calif.

19. Santa Rosa, Calif.

20. PORTLAND, MAINE

Maine tribes finish 100-mile Spiritual Run | Bangor Daily News

Maine tribes finish 100-mile Spiritual Run | Bangor Daily News.

‘Deadliest Catch Live’ coming to Maine | Bangor Daily News

‘Deadliest Catch Live’ coming to Maine | Bangor Daily News

Limited seating remains available for Deadliest Catch Live. For tickets, call the Merrill Auditorium box office at (207) 842-0800 or visit porttix.com.

Labor Day tourism takes a hit in Maine | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Labor Day tourism takes a hit in Maine | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Spreading the word about Lyme disease in Maine: New nonprofit wants to educate the public, help to prevent cases of Lyme disease in Maine | Portland Press Herald

Life cycle of deer tick

With cases of Lyme disease on the rise in Maine, a new nonprofit organization has a mission to educate the public and raise awareness about the tick-borne health hazard.

MaineLyme was officially announced by its board of directors Sept. 1. Its mission is to decrease the prevalence of Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses through awareness, prevention, education and advocacy.

In 2008, 908 cases of Lyme disease were reported, a 72 percent increase over 2007, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. The number of cases rose again in 2009, with 929 reported, most of them in Cumberland and York counties. A fact sheet compiled by the Maine Lyme Working Group said these numbers may be underestimated by a factor of 10.

“We’ve been working hard in the past six months with that … in mind,” said board secretary Barb Maurais.

Click for the rest of the story by Emma Bouthillette in the Portland Press Herald.

 Fighting Lyme Disease

Follow the organization on Facebook by searching “MaineLyme Nonprofit.” To donate to the educational efforts, mail checks to MaineLyme, P.O. Box 8533, Portland, ME, 04104-8533.

Where are ticks found?

In every county in Maine and both urban and rural communities. However, people should be especially careful when in the following areas:

• Wooded, forested sites.

• Wild, unmaintained landscapes with tall grass.

• Brush or leaf piles.

Baldacci names new top Maine environmental enforcer | Bangor Daily News

Baldacci names new top Maine environmental enforcer | Bangor Daily News.

MaineBiz magazine recognizes geologist | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

MaineBiz magazine recognizes geologist | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Portland has 10th straight above-normal month | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Portland has 10th straight above-normal month | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Maine asks bids for offshore power | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Maine asks bids for offshore power | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Mainers protest Senate inaction on climate bill | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Mainers protest Senate inaction on climate bill | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.

Camden Windjammer Festival off to affable start | Bangor Daily News

CAMDEN, Maine — The Camden Windjammer Festival, abbreviated by the threat of hurricane winds but promising two days of activities nonetheless, got off to a thunderous start Saturday with a bang of cannons and a bevy of maritime enthusiasts.

Gone were the threat of Hurricane Earl, the downpour and the oppressive heat as the clouds parted and a refreshing breeze tousled Camden Harbor, causing the flags atop several windjammers to flutter over the festivities.

“Everything is working out,” said Dan Bookham, executive director of the Camden-Rockport-Lincolnville Chamber of Commerce, one of the organizers of the 16th annual festival.

Under a nearby tent, former windjammer Capt. Jim Sharp made adjustments to a 1902 Fairbanks Bulldog engine, whose piston fired once for every four or five revolutions. The clunky old piece of iron — which he affectionately called “Bertha” — was once used by Sharp to haul anchors weighing as much as 1,500 pounds. On a true windjammer, explained Sharp, engines were for lifting anchors or turning bilge pumps, not propulsion. Today, very few vessels of any significant size run without engine power.

“An engine will forgive a lot of sin by a captain,” said Sharp.

Click for the rest of the story by Christopher Cousins in the Bangor Daily News.

A full schedule of events is available at the web site, www.camdenwindjammerfestival.com.

Tropical storm Earl swipes Maine no more than a glancing blow | Bangor Daily News

Tropical storm Earl swipes Maine no more than a glancing blow | Bangor Daily News.

Mainers get ready for Earl: Local marinas pull vessels out of harm’s way | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Mainers get ready for Earl: Local marinas pull vessels out of harm’s way | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram

Camden’s Windjammer Festival will get a late start, while high school sports officials reschedule games.

From the Portland Press Herald coverage:

Keep track of Earl

Go to our special Hurricane Earl tracking map to see the storm’s current position and predicted path up the East Coast.

STORM CANCELLATIONS

Maine Eastern Railroad has canceled its rides between Brunswick and Rockland today through Sunday.

Portland Discovery has canceled its cruise today to Eagle Island.

Elsewhere in New England, the Steamship Authority said Thursday that ferry service from Hyannis to Nantucket is likely to be suspended before noon today. The agency said ferries between Woods Hole and Martha’s Vineyard will continue to operate for as long as possible, but service is also likely to be suspended by early or midafternoon today.

Anonymous bidder raises stakes for lighthouse: Bid casts doubt on Maine-based organization’s effort to acquire Ram Island Ledge Light | Portland Press Herald

Ram Island Ledge Light

Ram Island Ledge Light

An anonymous bidder has raised the stakes in what appears to be a three-way struggle for ownership of a historic lighthouse off the coast of Cape Elizabeth.

The $35,000 bid, made online Thursday by a party known only as “tugdocto,” cast doubt on a Maine-based organization’s effort to acquire Ram Island Ledge Light.

Robert Muller of Brunswick, executive director of the Ram Island Ledge Lighthouse Community, said his group must somehow raise $5,000 to $10,000 in the next day or two “to stay in the game” and put the lighthouse under public, locally based ownership.

“I really need to make up the gap with some large pledges,” he said.

Under federal rules, bidders have until 3 p.m. today to outbid tugdocto. Bids must be made in increments of at least $5,000.

If someone does outbid tugdocto today, the online auction will continue on to the next regular business day – Tuesday.

Click for the rest of the story by Dennis Hoey in the Portland Press Herald.

Anyone who wants to get more information or make a contribution can go to www.ramislandlighthouse.com, call (207) 956-0699 or e-mail Muller at bob@RamIslandLighthouse.com.

Some Maine schools again dismissed due to heat | Bangor Daily News

Some Maine schools again dismissed due to heat | Bangor Daily News.

Weakening Earl to make landfall in Nova Scotia | Bangor Daily News

Weakening Earl to make landfall in Nova Scotia | Bangor Daily News.

Sugarloaf unveils plans to double size of ski slopes | Bangor Daily News

Sugarloaf ski resort expansion to Burnt Mountain.

Sugarloaf ski resort expansion to Burnt Mountain.

CARRABASSETT VALLEY, Maine – Sugarloaf Mountain is celebrating its 60th anniversary as a ski resort and thousands call Maine’s second highest peak their home mountain. For as long as skiers have hit the slopes there, they’ve looked longingly to the east and wondered “what if?”

What if the neighboring mountain was open to skiing, too?

“We’ve been talking about Burnt Mountain for 59 1/2 years,” Sugarloaf General Manager John Diller said at a Tuesday press conference.

The talking is over.

Click for the rest of this story by John Holyoke in the Bangor Daily News.