Down East July 2005

July 2005

The table of contents from the July 2005 issue of Down East.

Features

Fine Feathered Scapegoat

Fishermen have long blamed the common shag for woes of all sorts, but now they want permission to shoot it. Ken Textor looks at the brewing controversy.

  • By: Ken Textor
 

The Little Town That Loves a Parade

Nothing about picturesque Round Pond suggests that it might be home to the most outrageous Fourth of July celebration in Maine, as ardent flag-waver Elizabeth Peavey found out.

  • By: Elizabeth Peavey
 

Glorious Glazes

The colors that distinguish the pottery of Cathy Hammond were inspired, she says, by the natural world she’s observed in Maine.

  • By: Edgar Allen Beem
 

Sweet Pea Revival

A Surry woman and her family are working overtime to meet the burgeoning demand for these old-fashioned flowers.

  • By: Rebecca Martin Evarts
 

Letters to The Editor

East Machias Legacy – I read with great interest your April article about East Machias, as I was born there and spent twelve years living there when my father was a teacher, coach, and principal at Washington Academy. Your article mentions in passing that “the region was once an important shipbuilding…”

 

Room With A View

I’m told that my colleagues are going to give me a party to mark my retirement from more than thirty years at Down East. I only wish it were possible to invite all quarter-million of you who read this magazine each month, as I think together we would have one of the liveliest parties in the history of…

  • By: Dale W. Kuhnert
 

Behind the Scenes at Acadia

Most of the visitors who pour into Maine’s only national park each summer have no idea that the pristine “natural” splendor is kept up by a veritable army of workers.

  • By: Abby Zimet
 

Alex Katz’s Maine

Although he’s renowned for his work in Manhattan, his iconic paintings of summer up here showcase this artist’s genius.

  • By: Paul Doiron
 

Studies in Black and White

Between the villages of Rockport and Camden lies a remarkable farmstead that has been charming photographers for decades.

  • By: Richard Grant
 

Great Maine Pizza

Sometimes nothing else will do. Here are ten places guaranteed to satisfy your craving.

  • By: Andy King
 

The Outsider

Homespun cosmetics tycoon Roxanne Quimby may become Maine’s greatest benefactor since Percival Baxter despite threats and ugliness that have forced her to move out of state.

  • By: Gerry Boyle
 

Calming The Motion Of The Ocean

Is your fear of seasickness keeping you from setting sail this summer? Our own Joshua F. Moore, a schooner captain himself, explains how easy it is to beat this maritime malady.

 

Departments

In A Fog

Opinions, advisories, and musings from the length and breadth of Maine.

 

Methadone Madness

Across the state, Mainers are panicked over the possible spread of addiction treatment clinics.

  • By: Jeff Clark
 

Murder in New Sweden

A new book about the infamous church poisonings bungles the story.

  • By: Agnes Bushell
 

Maine from A to Z

An Insider’s Guide to Summer in the Pine Tree State

 

Bilking Government Workers

The state employees’ union just received a $700,000 annual windfall from the governor.

 

Trolleys and Treats

Here’s a bargain for families vacationing in or anywhere near Wells.

  • By: Andrew Vietze
 

At Sea in South Freeport

I might have been homeless in Casco Bay, but I wasn’t friendless.

  • By: Ken Textor
 

Blue Spoon, Portland

A neighborhood restaurant on Munjoy Hill might be the city’s most buzzed-about.

  • By: Andy King
 

July Highlights

Garden tours, concerts, and antique shows make for a lively summer.

 

Catch of the Day

Walter Tolman knows how to draw a crowd. From the group of onlookers, at left, who have gathered on the docks of the Lane-Libby Fisheries Company in Carvers Harbor to the piles of cod, hake, and pollock that cover his decks, the arrival of Captain Tolman, standing at lower right on the foredeck of his…

  • By: Joshua F. Moore