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Outdoors

  • Published
    July 3, 2011

    Outdoors Dispatches

    GRAY Moose exhibit on display this week From Tuesday through July 10, “Final Charge,” a massive display showing two bull moose with locked antlers, will be on display daily at the Maine Wildlife Park. Created by taxidermist Mark Dufresne of Nature’s Reflections Taxidermy in Gray, these moose are often exhibited at L.L. Bean in Freeport. […]

  • Published
    July 3, 2011

    Allen Afield: Family bike trip leads to future fishing spot

    Family time increases in July and August, and four favorite Maine pastimes for parents with children include swimming, hiking, bicycling and fishing together. These sports boom through the heart of summer. Of those activities, swimming has always drawn a following, and for the past two decades, hiking and biking have exploded in popularity, thanks to […]

  • Published
    July 3, 2011

    Canoeing: For paddling bliss, head north

    July and August are great months for canoe adventures. If you want accessible remoteness, the region up around the headwaters of the Saint John River makes for a great escape. No matter what driving route you select, it is a seven-hour drive from the Portland area. This makes a four-day window the minimum time needed: […]

  • Published
    July 3, 2011

    Mark Latti: Fourth of July hex hatch makes for exciting fishing

    While the arrival of the Fourth of July may signify fireworks for many of us, for diehard fly anglers, the Fourth means another explosive event that occurs on Maine’s lakes and ponds: the hatch of the hexigenia limbata, one of Maine’s largest mayflies. Known to most anglers as the hex hatch, this flurry of insect […]

  • Published
    July 3, 2011

    Remembering Tomah Joseph

    The Passamaquoddy chief, artist and friend of FDR will be the focus of festival celebration this summer.

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  • Published
    July 3, 2011

    Deirdre Fleming: Sunday River’s mud run gets bigger and messier

    It’s only year two, but the staff at Sunday River is ramped up to make its Tough Mountain Challenge muddier, uglier and more fun. Consider the names of some of the 16 obstacles: Trench of Terror, Black Hole, Slip, Slide and Die; and Burning Man, which really is a burning field. Last year, 200 people […]

  • Published
    July 3, 2011

    Carey Kish: Tunk Mountain: Terrific now and getting better

    The Donnell Pond Public Reserved Lands Unit encompasses 15,384 acres of Down East woods and mountains, lakes and ponds a few miles east of Ellsworth. Central to the preserve and popular with canoeists, boaters and campers is the namesake Donnell Pond. The pond is hemmed in by the walls of Schoodic and Black mountains, where […]

  • Published
    July 3, 2011

    It’s Worth the Trip: Exploring the Great Wass Island Preserve

    Great Wass Island projects farther out to sea than any other land mass in eastern Maine, which is a principal reason it’s a nature lover’s dream. Combine that with 1,540 acres of land preserved by the Nature Conservancy, a remote location well off tourists’ traditional path and the prototypical working harbors of Jonesport and Beals, […]

  • Published
    June 26, 2011

    Freshwater Fishing: Going after illegal fish

    Probably the folks at the big-box store who put up a sign encouraging customers to buy goldfish for their outdoor ponds didn’t know this was illegal. At least that’s what state biologist Bob Van Riper surmises. But the sign that was taken down when a game warden explained the law shows folks don’t know. Goldfish, […]

  • Published
    June 26, 2011

    Allen Afield: Small brooks suit a dedicated trout fisherman just fine

    William Clunie of Dixfield has earned a reputation as a fly-fishing guide on the Androscoggin River, where he floats a rubber-raft drift boat to get clients over smallmouth bass or salmonids such as browns, rainbows, landlocks and occasional brookies, depending on season. Clunie, an accomplished fly rodder, loves fishing with the slender wand, so it […]