Bond targets wind project, energy upgrades | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Will birds and wind farms compete? | Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram
Bond targets wind project, energy upgrades | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
Will birds and wind farms compete? | Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram
Posted in Economy, Education and Schools, Energy, Environment, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged BioDiversity Research Institute, bond, ducks, electronic tracking, fuel oil, Gov. John Baldacci, jobs, Maine, Maine Heritage Policy Center, Maine Maritime Academy, migration, offshore wind power, Orono, Question 2, University of Maine, wind power
Maine wants you to visit a state park | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
For more information, go to www.parksandlands.com
Update: Searchers for missing hiker spot tracks | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram.
Posted in Environment, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged Baxter Peak, Baxter State Park, Knife Edge Trail, missing hiker, Mount Katahdin, Pamola Peak, search, search and rescue, searchers
Acadia closes Beech Cliff area to protect nesting falcons – Bangor Daily News
For more information on trail closures, visitors may call 288-3338 or go to www.nps.gov/acad.
Posted in Environment, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged Aroostook County, meteorologist, National Weather Service, rain, severe thunderstorms, temperatures, weather, winds
Posted in Economy, Energy, Environment, Maine, Outdoors, Politics and government
Tagged Advanced Engineered Wood Composites Center, Gov. John Baldacci, Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Nobel Prize for Physics, offshore wind energy, Physics and Molecular and Cell Biology, Sen. Susan Collins, U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu, University of California, University of Maine
Posted in Disaster, Energy, Environment, Maine, Outdoors, Politics and government
Tagged BP, British Petroleum, cleanup, Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana, Maine Department of Environmental Protection, Maine Responder, Marine Spill Response Corp., oil spil, oil spill containment boom, U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree
Posted in Environment, Food and Drink, Law and Order, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged Freeport, hunting, L.L. Bean, moose, permit, permit lottery
[For some reason, I do not recall ever hearing about this fish when I was growing up in Aroostook County. It is wonderful that this restoration project is taking place. – KM]
TOWNSHIP 8, RANGE 10, WELS — To get from Big Reed Pond to Frenchville at the far northern tip of Maine requires a float plane trip to Munsungan Lake and from there a two-hour drive, most of that on logging roads.
It is a journey that state fisheries biologist Frank Frost has made on a regular basis for three years in an effort to restore one of Maine’s most uncommon species, the Arctic char. Until recently, Frost made the disjointed trek seemingly in vain.
Now the Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife biologist and several locals in the St. John Valley are celebrating the restoration of the char, northern Maine’s unique, threatened and much-loved game fish.
To say the Arctic char is native to Maine is an understatement.
The population in Big Reed Pond is one of the few that remain in North America since the last glacier retreated more than 10,000 years ago. It is one of 14 Arctic char populations in Maine and the only population in the lower 48 states.
Several years ago, however, rainbow smelt were illegally introduced into Big Reed Pond and decimated char numbers there.
Where fly fishermen once camped at the remote pond full of the brilliant orange char, the famous fishery now attracts none.
Then, three years ago, Frost began an ambitious project in hopes of restoring the wild Arctic char at Big Reed.
Click on the link for the rest of the story, photos and video by Deirdre Fleming in today’s Maine Sunday Telegram.
Posted in Environment, Food and Drink, Law and Order, Maine history, Outdoors
Tagged Arctic char, Big Reed Pond, fishery, fishing, fly fishing, Frank Frost, Frenchville, game fish, Gary Picard, Igor Sikorsky, Maine, Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, Maine Outdoor Heritage Fund, Mountain Springs Trout Farm, Munsungan Lake, old-growth forest, rainbow smelt, restoration, St. John Valley, The Bradford Camps, The Nature Conservancy
Aroostook farmers welcoming the weather – Bangor Daily News
[Potato farming is big in Aroostook County, the county where I grew up. I even picked potatoes one fall break from school — it was cold, wet, muddy, back-breaking work. The local school district generally let kids out for a week or so at harvest time so farmers could have enough hands to pick their crop. Mechanical harvesters pretty much take care of that now, I suspect. — KM]
Posted in Economy, Environment, Food and Drink, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged Aroostook County, farmers, Maine Potato Board, National Weather Service, planting, potatoes, weather
Two injured in car, moose collision – Bangor Daily News
[Two very, very lucky guys. — KM]
Posted in Environment, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged Aroostook County, Aroostook Medical Center, Castle Hill, collision, Maine State Police, moose, Presque Isle
Forest cover declining across New England – Bangor Daily News
A copy of the report can be found online at www.wildlandsandwoodlands.org.
Posted in Economy, Energy, Environment, Law and Order, Maine, Outdoors, Politics and government
Tagged “Wildlands and Woodlands”, conservation, environmentalists, forest, forestland, forestry and ecology research center, Great Northern Paper, Harvard University, Maine, Maine Forest Service, Maine’s North Woods, public-private partnership, timberland, trees, woods
HMS Bounty arrives in Bath | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram
For more information, visit www.tallshipbounty.org.
Posted in Environment, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged angler, angling, fish, fishing, fishing law book, Free Family Fishing Days, Maine Warden Service
From the BDN story:
Guides and safety experts recommend that kayakers always check weather forecasts before any voyage, get safety training and have:
• Open-water sea kayaks, generally 15 to 16 feet or longer, which have watertight flotation chambers. The boats are more stable in wind and waves.
• Spray skirts that can keep water from washing into a boat and reducing stability.
• Wet suits or dry suits, until water temperatures rise above 60 degrees, or until the combined air and water temperature exceeds 120 degrees.
• A waterproof VHF radio, or a cell phone in a watertight case.
• Signaling devices.
• Life jackets.
• Name and phone numbers written on the boat.
Posted in Environment, Maine, Outdoors
Tagged Casco Bay, hypothermia, kayak, Maine, paddling