Interesting Information: The Good Life: The Movement that Changed Maine

Interesting Information:  May 4, 2014

The Good Life:  The Movement That Changed Maine

 

Friend Marsha Smith (founder of the immensely successful Citizens for a Green Camden group here in Camden, Maine) sent me this post at least two weeks ago.  I treated myself to reading it this morning.

Lo and behold, the little gem is not just about reading, it’s a very different kind of internet presentation to tell a story.

I knew many of you would enjoy this experience.

It will take you 20 to 30 minutes, depending on how involved you get with the text.  So ENJOY!

This site operates differently–just keep scrolling down, as instructed, and click on each chapter as it comes to you.

 

The Good Life: The movement that changed Maine.

 

The story starts with Scott and Helen Nearing–who spawned a back-to-the-land movement back in the 1970s.  They, in turn, helped spawn Eliot and Sue Coleman’s work on an adjacent farm–now known as Four Seasons Farm.  Eliot Coleman went on to pioneer growing/harvesting greens/tomatoes/etc. in hoop houses in the middle of the Maine winter.  That marriage broke up, and Eliot Coleman is now married to the horticulturist Barbara Damrosch, who has written about food for The Washington Post for many years, has written numerous books, and is a mainstay of MOFGA–the Maine Organic Farmers and Growers Association.  I heard her speak a few years back and found her to be an engaging speaker.

 

Turkey Tracks: Remembering Winter

Turkey Tracks:  August 21, 2013

Remembering Winter

 

Those of you who have read this blog for any length of time will know that in the midst of one season, I love to harken back to its opposite.

Friend Marsha Smith, a pioneer of Citizens for a Green Camden, sent me this picture of her adorable grandson, Devon, last winter.  And I saved it for just this moment when we are in the dog days of August.

Devon's frozen shirt

As an experiment last winter–probably around the time we had the blizzard which dumped up to five feet of snow on us, Devon hung out his t-shirt for a few minutes.

It froze solid–which you can tell by his expression that he loved.

Turkey Tracks: Camden Snow Bowl: View From the Top

Turkey Tracks:  January 5, 2013

Camden Snow Bowl:  View From the Top

My friend Marsha Smith–a founding member of Citizens for a Green Camden–for which she works tirelessly and for which she has done so much good work–sent me this picture of her 9-year old grandson–taken at the top of Ragged Mountain.  The recent snow meant folks could ski the whole mountain, which many of them are doing as often as they can.

Look at the view from the top!

That’s Megunticook Mountain to the north; Penobscot Bay is out there; and Hosmer Pond is the white, frozen expanse below Ragged Mountain.

Devon, Marsha's grandson

It takes a good 10 minutes to ride the lift all the way up–which I have done in the summer–so the downhill run must be so much fun if you ski.

Cl;early this young man is already an accomplished skier!

A link to Green Camden is on the right sidebar of this blog.