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Outdoors

  • Published
    May 12, 2012

    Josh Christie: ‘Up’ chronicles hiking adventures of mother, daughter

    That Mother’s Day rolls around just as spring kicks into high gear in New England is a happy coincidence of timing — not only are there fresh flowers for Mom, but there’s ample warm weather to bring families outdoors. I know I spent a lot of Mother’s Days as a kid gardening, hiking, or just […]

  • Published
    May 12, 2012

    Best Bets

    TODAY Fish Fry for Mothers / 10 a.m. in Shapleigh The Saco River Salmon Club is hosting a fish fry party on Mother’s Day. The fish party is at Shapleigh Pond in North Shapleigh from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. No cost. All welcome. Bring a canoe or kayak with proper safety gear. To learn […]

  • Published
    May 5, 2012

    Nature-based community hidden in plain sight

    Jefferson's five-year-old Hidden Valley Nature Center is growing through the efforts of its volunteers.

  • Published
    May 5, 2012

    Deirdre Fleming: Call of the wild birds, decoded

    OGUNQUIT – Dan Hansche turned from his makeshift drawing board in the barn at Hilton-Winn Farm and posed the most basic question of the day to the adult students: “What caused the bird to move from the dangerosity?” Hansche asked with early morning zest. “He likes to make up words,” colleague Dan Gardoqui quipped. Be […]

  • Published
    May 5, 2012

    John Christie: The lowdown on enjoying the high points of Mount Desert’s ‘quiet side’

    Mount Desert Island is always a great place to spend some outdoor time, and no time, as far as I’m concerned, is better than before the vacationing hordes turn the roads headed that way into something less than the private thoroughfares we natives enjoy for a good part of the year. And my favorite part […]

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  • Published
    May 5, 2012

    Michael Perry: East Pond offers a wonderful paddling day

    Bald eagles, ospreys and mountains are among the views on this majestic ride in the Belgrade Lakes chain.

  • Published
    May 5, 2012

    Allen Afield: Studying insects leads to fishing success

    Each May, predictable mayfly hatches explode across Maine’s bottom third, and in the subimago stage, the bugs float on the surface and bring salmonids topside, extremely visible rises that excite fly rodders.  This column has occasionally mentioned a basic tactic that helps folks catch trout, salmon and even bass during insect emergences. Fly fishers match […]

  • Published
    May 5, 2012

    Hunting: Gobblers oblige on Nebraska hunting trip

    Thunder clapped in the distance, eliciting a chorus of gobbles that rolled from left to right across 100 yards of tall pines. There were so many birds it was impossible to tell their number; two, three a dozen? I chuckled to myself thinking about what our guide, Doug Stults of Table Mountain Outfitters, had told […]

  • Published
    May 5, 2012

    Carey Kish: Kennebago Divide is next on list of region’s top 100

    The north peak of Kennebago Divide rises to 3,775 feet in remote Seven Ponds Township in northwestern Maine, a couple of miles shy of the Canadian border. A check of the DeLorme Atlas confirms what I’d suspected: It’s going to take some work to navigate the maze of logging roads just to get to the […]

  • Published
    May 5, 2012

    Freshwater Fishing Report

    Spring fishing doesn’t get any better than right now. And reports pouring in from state biologists in the seven regions across Maine echo the same message: Fast action. SOUTHERN MAINE While smelt runs are slowing down in most places, the trout and salmon fishing is picking up everywhere, including the southern region. Thompson Lake is […]