Sign In:


Outdoors

  • Published
    February 25, 2012

    Weekend event at state parks gives Mainers chance to connect to outdoors

    Maine state parks will participate in the upcoming “Great Maine Outdoor Weekend” on March 3 and 4, with unique activities highlighting four state parks. The “Great Maine Outdoor Weekend” has been organized by the new Maine Outdoor Coalition, a group of 26 organizations and companies, including the Maine Bureau of Parks and Lands, that is […]

  • Published
    February 25, 2012

    What’s Up in March: A perfect month for eyes on the sky

    March was the first month of the year on the early Roman calendar. It is named after Mars, the Roman god of war. March always marks the start of spring in the northern hemisphere. That will happen on Tuesday the 20th at 1:14 a.m. The vernal equinox and autumnal equinox are the only two days […]

  • Published
    February 25, 2012

    Best Bets

    TODAY Hike in the Park 2 p.m. in Freeport Wolfe’s Neck Woods State Park offers nature programs year-round every weekend. This week’s program focuses on the wonder of Maine’s pine tree forest. Meet at the benches at the end of the second parking lot. Free with park admission, which is $1 for ages 5 to […]

  • Published
    February 19, 2012

    Every February, Yosemite waterfall turns to lava

    Nature photographers are flocking to Yosemite National Park hoping to see a phenomenon that only happens in mid-February.

  • Published
    February 18, 2012

    Carey Kish: Adventure at AMC lodge has some comforts, too

    The soft light of dawn is filtering through the cabin windows. Despite the winter chill outside, the room is cool but not cold. I should get up and stoke the woodstove, but it’s no easy task when you’re toasty warm beneath flannel sheets and a down comforter. Instead I lay content for a while, listening […]

  • advertisement
  • Published
    February 18, 2012

    Hearts of gold at Gould

    Athletes with disabilities are given ski lessons from students.

  • Published
    February 18, 2012

    Deirdre Fleming: State parks not just for summer

    There’s been scarce little snow so far this winter, and those who need their Nordic fix are getting antsy. That means that when we get that great, long-awaited dump of snow — and at some point we will — the Nordic skiers among us will be heading to the woods and fields. Well, here’s a […]

  • Published
    February 18, 2012

    Allen Afield: Longer days brighten life for bird lovers

    One recent night, my yellow Lab, Bailee, went outdoors to do her duty before heading to bed to sleep until dawn, when she’d then roust me to feed her breakfast. While Bailee sniffed and snuffed around the dark lawn without getting to the job at hand, I stood on the front steps in cold silence […]

  • Published
    February 18, 2012

    John Christie: Sugarloaf, Saddleback are great places to learn

    It was exactly 70 years ago when Roger Page taught his first ski lessons as an instructor on a little rope-tow ski slope in Leominster, Mass. Three short years later he was one of just six professionals in the soon-to-be-world-acclaimed Sepp Ruschp Ski School on Mount Mansfield at Stowe, Vt. His first visit to the […]

  • Published
    February 18, 2012

    Birding: Snowy owls make beautiful visitors

    A suite of birds resides year-round on the Arctic tundra or on the taiga, the habitat of sparse trees just south of the treeless tundra. These birds include great gray owls, snowy owls and common redpolls. If food is in sufficient quantity, these hardy birds can survive the deep cold of these northern habitats. However, […]