Maine Nature

Environmentalists Divided on Plum Creek’s Plans


We report, you decide. Which environmental groups are right on Plum Creek’s conservation and development plan for the Moosehead Region, approved by Maine’s Land Use on September 23? Here’s what major environmental organizations had to say about the project and LURC’s decision.

Forest Society of Maine

(Forest Society of Maine is a statewide land trust working with landowners to conserve and maintain the many values of forestlands in Maine.)

Sportsmen and Environmentalists Can Work Together


Sportsmen and environmentalists are too often and too easily divided when we actually have a great deal in common. I prefer to think of all of us as conservationists.

Today, the groups that represent those two major constituencies are collaborating in an unprecedented way. And you can help.

We do have examples of collaboration that are worthy of repetition.

Long Nights Are For Good Maine Books


The long, dark, cold, snowy winter provides a wonderful opportunity to read, by firelight if you prefer, gas lights if you are nostalgic, and bright electric lights if you are my age and can’t see the pages anymore.

I’m adjusting to my first pair of progressive lenses and the small focal point for reading is tough – a good excuse to read more until I get the hang of it. I already borrow more books from Mount Vernon’s Dr. Shaw library than any other patron – partly because, as chair of the trustees, I have a key to the library!

IF&W Finances Are a Disaster


After ending the last fiscal year on June 30, 2009, with a $450,000 deficit, the Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife is off to a disastrous start in the first two months of the state’s new fiscal year.

A report provided to the legislature’s Fish and Wildlife Committee by Gilbert Bilodeau, deputy director of the Natural Resources Service Center, disclosed that the department fell $637,581 short of budgeted revenues in July and August.

The Evolution of Conservation Easements in Maine


Maine has done an outstanding job of buying the rights and opportunities enjoyed by the public on private lands. Through an astonishingly successful collaborative effort by state and federal agencies, the nonprofit conservation community, and advocacy groups representing environmentalists, sportsmen, and other outdoor recreationists, Maine’s outdoor heritage is being secured for future generations.

The achievement includes both fee ownership purchases of land and the less traditional purchase of conservation easements.

Managing Maine’s Ecological Reserves


Ecological reserves may not be a hot topic in your household, but in Maine’s conservation, recreation, and landowner communities, they get a lot of attention.
On September 17, the Conservation Recreation Forum received a status report on the designation, monitoring, and uses of eco reserves in Maine from Andy Cutko of the Department of Conservation.

Caution Can Prevent Hunting Fatalities


Hunting is the safest thing you can do outdoors in Maine. A lot of people don’t believe that, including hunters. But it’s true.

Hunters are justifiably proud of the work we’ve done to make hunting safe, particularly for nonparticipants. In my fifty years of hunting in Maine, hunters have killed only two nonhunters.

Each of those deaths shook us to the very core of our hunting heritage, and reminded us of the tremendous responsibility each of us carries into the woods each fall to hunt safely.

Wildfire Is Back - On the Air


I am very pleased to announce that Wildfire will be back on the air and the Web beginning Saturday, September 26.

Wildfire is the only TV talk show focused on hunting, fishing, conservation, and environmental issues, hosted by Harry Vanderweide, editor of The Maine Sportsman, and me. It enjoyed a ten-year run on Maine commercial and cable TV stations before going off the air last fall due to a drop in advertising revenue.

Don’t Make Way For Invasive Species


The enemy can be a beautiful temptress. But shame on you for bringing it into your neighborhood.

Yes, that tall magenta-colored perennial dresses up your stream, but purple loosestrife is a bad invasive species.

“The problem is that it is very aggressive in wetlands and out-competes and replaces native species like cattails and native grasses,” reported Lois Stack of the University of Maine Cooperative Extension. “It is changing the whole system because it doesn’t just co-exist. It takes over.”

Time to Deal with Pesky Critters


Have you shared a significant portion of your vegetable garden with a fat and sassy woodchuck? Did you look out the kitchen window one morning recently and think a howitzer had hit the lawn? Has your attic been invaded by red squirrels and your basement by field mice?
Is a very fat raccoon knocking down your bird feeders and feasting on those expensive sunflower seeds?

Syndicate content