March 2010

Worn thin

Worn thin

Last Light

MEADOW’S FULL

Meadow's full

In This Room – Lucia Weinhardt

IN THIS ROOM

    Waking to the peace of an untethered

               white light in the tiny room

                     I’ll call my own for this

                             island in time,

the morning breeze billows the lace beside my

comfortable bed and I am rested in a way that

           I cannot be except when I am here

                             in this place,

                                 at peace.

                 I am still, not burdened

                   with a single urgency

                            on this day,

            and I wallow most pleasantly

               in long, mellow thoughts:

                   morning daydreams,

                       an easy jumble of

paths to be trod, vistas to be discovered anew,

the sound of the surf, the scent of seaweed and salt in the thick morning air,

          the sweet, soft cushion of a million pine needles beneath my feet,

the simple good fun of becoming a ten year old again as I step warily onto an old

                      board stretching across a questionable pool of mud…

                                  and still, for a moment more, I lay still

                                     between the smooth cotton sheets

                                               reveling in the knowledge

                                                            that I am so

                        safe and at peace in this tiny room by the sea,

                                               welcoming the day

        as the morning breeze billows the lace beside my comfortable bed.

Lucia Weinhardt

March !!!

March !!!

Dorothy Stanley died

Dorothy Stanley died yesterday, March 12th.

Key Maine legislators tell committee: No windfarms in state waters – bad for fishermen. Monhegan discussed

Thursday March 11th, the Legislature’s Utility and Energy Committee held its  public hearing on LD 1810.

Listen to the legislators and testimony  to them by MDEP,  DMR, Neptune Energy & other would-be wind industrialists, and opponents and supporters of the same. Lance Burton describes  to legislators his life on Monhegan and in Castine and what that makes him think about the bill. LD 1810

Hats off to legislators Leila Percy and Hannah Pingree for insisting on mammoth changes to the bill (2 minute mp3) in response to outrage from theirscalloping shrimping and groundfishing constituents. Specifically, they told the committee to

(1) Turn LD 1810 into a  Resolve directing  Marine Resources Committee and Natural  Resources  legislative committee to take it  to their  commercial fishing constituents recreational fishermen, scenic activists, birders, next session in 2011 to see if the people want this to happen and let the legislators decide from that, not just get a 38 page bill   foisted upon them late in the session, and be told to just bite the bullet and approve it anyway.
OR

Boston-based Neptune Wind exec to Legislators: I want your state's waters

(2) Remove everything from  LD 1810 that would promote  or facilitate commercial windfarm leasing anywhere in Maine state waters.  Then approve the remainder of the bill. this would continue to keep the wind industry happy by giving it tax breaks, if they locate in federal waters outside state waters.  Because it costs a lot more to locate out there.  tax break or not,l keeping them out of Maine state waters – which as the Maine Lobsterman’s Association noted at the hearing  there will be many less entrepeneurs rushing to Maine and grabbing leases.  (The heating oil  industry wants to strip out other non-ocean related parts of the bill)

It is as if a mighty iceberg headed at the Maine inshore fisheries’ Titanic is being successfully turned, by those answering the alarm that now is ringing in desperate peals from Passamaquoddy Bay  to f the Piscataqua. For, if  diverted a few degrees with relentless pressure,   it may harmlessly  pass by our waters, an icy white horseman heading  for some other apocalyptic encounter.

The word from outer Penobscot groundfishers, shrimpesr and scallopers is to either can the bill or

If you care to be involved –  for, against, or neutral – email the Utility& Energy Committee clerk Krisen Gottlieb  Kristen.Gottlieb@legislature.maine.gov  and the Marine Resources  Committee clerk  Marianne Macmaster Marianne.MacMaster@legislature.maine.gov  and let them know of your opinion or insight; they will  get your message to their committees’ members.

Listening as Leila Percy testifies at the hearing

Spring Rain

Spring Rain

Spring really is here?

Spring is really here?

This is What it’s all about

This is what is all about

Heading Ashore

Heading ashore