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THE EARLIEST NATIVE CORN of the season is showing up at roadside farmstands and the public is taking notice. Above, Dolly Morse of Topsham recently inspects an ear of bicolored corn at the Swango Farm shack in West Bath, a stone’s throw from the Congress Avenue rotary in Bath. Morse, who says she eats her corn raw, approved the looks and bought some. Another customer quickly followed suit. Access to the farmstand from the Bath end will be shut off for two to three weeks in mid-September, when the state begins a road project to replace culverts.
THE EARLIEST NATIVE CORN of the season is showing up at roadside farmstands and the public is taking notice. Above, Dolly Morse of Topsham recently inspects an ear of bicolored corn at the Swango Farm shack in West Bath, a stone’s throw from the Congress Avenue rotary in Bath. Morse, who says she eats her corn raw, approved the looks and bought some. Another customer quickly followed suit. Access to the farmstand from the Bath end will be shut off for two to three weeks in mid-September, when the state begins a road project to replace culverts.

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