Sign In:


Outdoors

  • Published
    August 11, 2012

    Carey Kish: Recreation, leisure activities abound on an island of another era

    Travel across the arching Deer Isle-Sedgwick Bridge over Eggemoggin Reach and onto Deer Isle, and you will have crossed the boundary into a different time zone of sorts, what I like to call “island time.” The pace of life seems slower, more relaxed, and perfect for many hours of recreation and leisure activities. And there […]

  • Published
    August 11, 2012

    Best Bets

    TUESDAY Pemaquid Paddlers / 9 a.m. in Thomaston This week’s paddle is a new adventure for the group: the St. George River. The state put-in site from Thomaston is just a few miles. At the traffic light in town, turn right on Knox Road if you are coming from the south, or left if coming […]

  • Published
    August 4, 2012

    Canoeing: Sebec Lake truly a scenic treasure

    If one were to create a list of the 10 most visually stunning lakes in Maine to explore by canoe, Sebec Lake would have to be given serious consideration. It definitely would be in the top 10 for swimming. For us it all started in the beachside parking lot of Peaks-Kenny State Park on the […]

  • Published
    August 4, 2012

    Birding: It’s near fall, but migration is already under way

    We are all accustomed to misleading or even paradoxical phrases in our conversations that we often use without thinking. Shouldn’t a “near miss” be a glancing collision? Have you ever gotten a “free gift”? Biology is not immune from such phrases, and “fall bird migration” is at the top of my list. Even though none of us wants […]

  • Published
    August 4, 2012

    Allen Afield: Family and friends can make a hike a lifelong memory

    Hiking picks up in a Maine summer, and often the whole family participates, creating lifetime memories that may last decades and maybe more. When a family stays in shape over generations, a Saturday hike may include children, parents and grandparents. Also, families into good health often have one or two generations that remember walking along […]

  • advertisement
  • Published
    August 4, 2012

    Best Bets

    DAILY Learn about nature / 2 p.m. in Freeport Wolfe’s Neck Woods State Park is offering free nature programs daily through Labor Day. Programs last an hour and are suitable for all ages. Meet at the benches at the park’s second parking lot. Today’s program is about the ecology along Casco Bay. Monday’s seminar will […]

  • Published
    August 4, 2012

    North Cairn: This forest so sublime is home

    Of all the earthly things that please me these days, none surpasses the sounds rising out of the sunset silence, the natural emptiness interrupting nothing on the ocean or the bay’s far coast. The lingering of the grasshopper in the unclipped grass stops me, and I listen for the disordered chorus of the crickets as […]

  • Published
    August 4, 2012

    Deirdre Fleming: A day to honor Baxter, with stories from an outdoor-loving president

    When Governor Baxter Day is held in two weeks in Portland, a more famous conservationist will share in the celebration of the governor’s legacy. And when Teddy Roosevelt seemingly speaks to us from the grave, he’ll tell stories about his time in Maine and how it was a time that shaped his life, perhaps even […]

  • Published
    August 4, 2012

    Hog Island Camp: The rebirth comes to life

    A unified effort between various groups is taking a camp steeped with history and making it a valuable spot to join with nature again.

  • Published
    August 4, 2012

    Josh Christie: Rachel Carson deserves thanks for her contributions

    Fifty years ago, Houghton Mifflin published Rachel Carson’s seminal “Silent Spring.” The book, a damning look at the environmental effects of pesticides, was a national bestseller. Carson gets much of the credit not only for a national ban of the pesticide DDT in the 1970s, but with the birth of the modern environmental movement. On […]