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My name is Keith Michaud and this is “Letters From Away,” a blog written by a Mainer living outside the comfortable and sane confines of New England. The blog is intended for Mainers, whether they live in the Pine Tree State or beyond, and for anyone who has loved ’em, been baffled by ’em or both. Ayuh, I am “from away.” Worse still, I live on the Left Coast – in California. Enjoy! Or not. Your choice.
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- How Maine Became a Laboratory for the Future of Public Higher Ed | The Chronicle of Higher Education
- Angus King Urges Interior Department To Reconsider Offshore Drilling Proposal | Mainepublic.org
- Maine Voices: Higher education, employers must work together for bright future | Portland Press Herald
- Stunning reversal: McDaniels turns down Colts’ job to stay with Patriots | The Associated Press via the Portland Press Herald
- Kennebec River water levels could stay high into next week | Bangor Daily News
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Category Archives: Maine
Portland to host waterfront conference | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Posted in Economy, Food and Drink, Maine, Outdoors, Politics and government
Tagged federal policy, National Fisherman, National Marine Manufacturers Association, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Sea Grant, Portland, Rep. Chellie Pingree, Sen. Susan Collins, The Maine Sea Grant, The Working Waterways and Waterfronts National Symposium on Water Access
Award-winning tourism photo | Bangor Daily News
Award-winning tourism photo | Bangor Daily News
Check out the winning photo for the Aroostook County Tourism summer photo contest. Follow this link to the Bangor Daily News or to the Aroostook County Tourism website. The photo is very nearly Rockwellesque.
The scenic views category winner took a shot of Portage Lake at sunset. It’s just as I remember it growing up! I’m guessing from the angle that it was shot from the south or southeast corner of the lake not too far from the public beach, but I could be wrong. It is unfortunate that the Aroostook County Tourism website does not allow for a larger version of the photos.
Posted in Environment, Maine, Outdoors, Photos
Tagged Aroostook County Tourism, moose, Norman Rockwell, photos, Portage Lake
Baldacci a B+ on environment, group says | Bangor Daily News
Posted in Energy, Environment, Maine, Politics and government
Tagged air quality, climate change, conservaton, election, endorsement, Environment, forest management, Gov. John Baldacci, gubernatorial race, land conservation, League of Conservation Voters, protection, toxics, transportation policies, water quality
Thousands of toy cars yield thousands of kid smiles | Bangor Daily News
Most people’s basements are packed full. Old family photographs, records, furniture, you name it. But Tom Christensen’s basement is full of cars. Often as many as 5,000 at a time.
The handmade wooden cars Christensen assembles in his basement workshop are donated to children in hospitals and homeless shelters, or those with parents in the military or in prison.
“It’s all about making some kids happy,” Christensen says. “There are a lot of kids in tough situations that they didn’t cause. It gives them a time to step out of their problem for a while. Some kids just need to know somebody cares about them.”
The project began in 2007 when the University of Maine professor of electrical engineering technology saw an article in Workbench magazine. It was about the ToyMakers, a Florida organization that provides free wooden toys to children in need.
Christensen founded the ToyMakers of Bangor, and at first, he spent up to an hour and a half creating each car as a custom-painted work of art.
Click here for the rest of the story by Kathleen MacFarline in the Bangor Daily News.
Komen Race for the Cure draws 5,000 to Bangor | Bangor Daily News
Posted in Education and Schools, Maine
Tagged “Mount Katatas”, Bangor, breast cancer, breast exams, fundraiser, Maine, mammograms, Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure, walk
The killer catch: Groundfishing in Atlantic the deadliest by far | Portland Press Herald
Study: Scalloping also more risky than fishing
for Alaskan king crab seen in television series
Fishing for scallops or groundfish in the Atlantic is more dangerous than fishing for king crabs off Alaska, says a new federal study.
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health has found that the highest death rates for commercial fishermen – whose occupation is one of the most dangerous in the country – are among groundfishermen and scallopers.
With safety improvements made by Alaska’s crab industry in recent decades, Alaskan crab is no longer the deadliest catch, despite the image conveyed by the “Deadliest Catch” cable TV reality series, which chronicles the working lives of Alaskan crab fishermen.
Click for the rest of the story by Beth Quimby in the Portland Press Herald.
25 fun fall things to do in Maine | Bangor Daily News
Your alarm goes off in the morning. After coffee, a shower, reading the newspaper and getting dressed, you’re out the door — and that’s when it hits you.
There’s a slight chill in the air. A yellow leaf flutters gently to the ground. Your clothing isn’t warm enough. Autumn has arrived.
In between unpacking your sweaters and bringing in the patio furniture, the change of season means a renewed vigor for experiencing all that Maine has to offer. From leaf-peeping driving trips around the state to Halloween events, from apple picking to concert-going, the fall is the time when Mainers really get to bask in the glory.
The gold, red, orange and yellow that light up treetops lasts only about a month — so what are you waiting for? Get out and have fun, before you make that appointment to put on your snow tires.
Click for the rest of the story by Emily Burnham in the Bangor Daily News.
Posted in Entertainment, Maine
Tagged American Harvest Picnic, Aroostook County, Aroostook State Park, Art and Poetry Gallery Walk, Autumn, “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre”, BangPop!, Blue Hill Fall Foliage Food & Wine Festival, Camden International Film Festival, Collins Center for the Arts, Common Ground Country Fair, Craft and Gift Show, Ellsworth, fall, Fling Into Fall, foliage, Fort Knox State Park, Fright at the Fort, Gifted Hand Fine Art, Great Maine Apple Day, Halloween, Haunted Woods Walk, hunters breakfasts, Lord Hall Galleries, Maine, Mainers, Monday Blues, Orono, Pemaquid Oyster Festival, Portland Stage, Rockland, Sebago Lake, SmackFest, State Theatre Opening Weekend, The Grand, The Strand Theatre
It’s official: Bill Clinton to visit Maine for Dem rally | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
People can reserve tickets in advance at http://www.mainedems.org/clinton.
Where is Ram Island light?: Newly sold lighthouse to be added to the tax rolls of Cape Elizabeth or Portland | Portland Press Herald
Ram Island Ledge Light will move onto the tax rolls because of its pending sale from the federal government to a doctor from Windham.
The question is, which tax rolls?
According to the online auction site set up by the U.S. General Services Administration, the lighthouse is at the entrance to Portland Harbor, off Cape Elizabeth.
The site says its street address is “Cumberland County,” and the city is Cape Elizabeth.
That’s news to Cape Elizabeth’s town manager.
“We don’t believe it’s in Cape Elizabeth,” said Mike McGovern. “We believe it’s in the city of Portland.”
Portland’s tax assessor, Richard Blackburn, said McGovern is probably right.
“There have been some questions” about which municipality the lighthouse is in, Blackburn said, and those questions have never been answered.
Click for the rest of this story by Edward D. Murphy in the Portland Press Herald.


