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tamarack

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Everything posted by tamarack

  1. Maybe this event was enough crisis to spur action, though I doubt it. Our small (1400 or so) town dithered for 30 years about replacing our decrepit and wholly inadequate fire station, and about the moldy and asbestos-filled town office for the latter half of that period. Even a winter of seeing the office equipment under plastic (roof leaking) when one visited the town clerk for excise tax, dog licenses, etc., didn't move the needle, though I think it kind of prepped things. Then last fall an asbestos-wrapped steam pipe blew, forcing the office to close - nice folks in Chesterville made a place for our town clerk to work temporarily. That did the trick - a well-attended meeting early last December presented plans for a new town office/fire station and attendees approved the expense by an 11:1 margin. Most of those folks had voted down a (better, IMO) proposal 3 years earlier. Squeaky wheels come in many forms. Edit: Saw yesterday that my old NNJ stomping ground was mostly still dark, and Jersey Central said that 95% of its customers would have power back by this coming Tuesday. Yay!
  2. Our place had a Burnham, maybe 4 years old when we moved here in 1998. Seven years ago it began to leak and I thought we might need to replace the seals, maybe up to $1000. The repairman looked into it while I was at work, then asked my wife if she wanted the good news first or the bad news. "Good news." "Today is Tuesday." "Okay, the bad." "The boiler is cracked, the whole thing needs to be replaced." We had a similar unit put in, would have to go downstairs to check the brand but not a Burnham. Fortunately our little (200 cords) timber sale a few months before had earned enough to pay cash.
  3. And they were about a mile away. Some of the later clips came from 2+ miles.
  4. Our 13KW Generac install was twice that, though 40% was for purchase, installation and filling of 2 hundred-gallon propane tanks, whereas you would only need a couple hundred if there's natural gas. We finally coughed up the cash after 6-7 outages Oct-April, longest 31 hours in April with others 2-20. Heat was never the issue with the big Jotul in the living room, but food and other things plus our no longer being young led to the decision.
  5. Doesn't always take large differences in elevation. On still clear Fort Kent winter mornings, my commute from the back settlement at 970' led east and then due north so I could see the cedar mill and its cone burner across the river in Clair, NB. If there was a smoke layer about 50 yards above that burner, I knew it would be 10-15F colder at our riverside office (about 540') than it had been at home.
  6. Greater than any single conventional weapon. This event led me to look up the 1917 explosion in Halifax harbor. That was a munitions ship and the blast was evaluated as being equal to about 2,900 tons of TNT. It pretty much leveled everything within a half mile and tossed heavy pieces of metal over 3 miles. Nearly 2,000 fatalities - I hope Beirut casualties remain in the low hundreds.
  7. We've occasionally had paper wasps in underground nests here - once did a partial striptease in my driveway (sometimes being at the end of a dead-end road is good) when those critters flew into my clothing on my 4th lawnmower pass by their hole in the ground. They have kind of a reverse yellowjacket pattern, skinny yellowish stripes on a black background.
  8. Probably thinking of ice/snow more than wind with the one-sided trim. Of course, trees can fall across the road and onto the lines from those events. That's how we lost power in the April snowstorm - 2 trees (pine and maple) tipped onto the lines a few hours after the snow had stopped. (And by which time we thought we'd dodged the bullet.)
  9. Congrats. I'm in the queue at Maine PERS to have my benefits and options calculated. When that's ready, wife and I will meet with those folks (probably on ZOOM) with the intent to leave in December. Some possibility for contract work to aid in training my successor (or at least making sense of my tangled computer files for him/her) and with next year's full recertification audit for forest sustainability. Also have a permanent invite to future expert peer-review field trips like we had last 2 days, only as one of the experts* rather than the host/note-taker. *Ex-pert: Ex: A has-been. (s)pert: A drip under pressure.
  10. Not like anything I've seen. The shape and (estimated-from-pic) size suggests some species of stonefly but I've never seen one anywhere near that dark. Adult stoneflies run 1.5-2"+ long.
  11. Checking in late as we were having our 2-day field trip in the BGR area. If having a TC at field trip time, this on could not have been better timed. A few light showers Tues. afternoon but all the real RA came 9P-3A and winds were meh, followed by perfect wx yesterday. Gauge at home caught 0.71" and my wife reported strong winds, though the amount of twigs/leaves scattered around suggest peak gusts <40 mph. Did lose our clothesline to a dead branch - disastah!
  12. That's almost too narrow for a kick turn. I thought that Scotch Mist (Glen Ellen's name for the upper lift line at Sugarbush North) was a pucker-power trail, but it's about twice as wide. And though it's steep, it may not be as vertical as that chute, though it has a number of very hard vertical obstacles down the middle. Back when Glen Ellen was a thing I got to where I could ski some black diamonds, but would never set a ski on that one.
  13. Certainly a minima-based record at PWM - maxima outside top 10 while minima all alone at the top for warmest month on record. At my place it was 4th warmest of 23 Julys, a tiny bit behind 2006. Average maxima was +0.2 and is actually the median value while average minima was +4.2 and mildest by a lot. Monthly temp range of 33 (84/51) ties Nov. 1998 for my lowest here.
  14. As a NJ expat I can relate. However, in 47+ years in Maine only once have I had someone take issue with my being from away, and he was a politician with an axe to grind. CTS (consider the source.) I've never expected to be considered a native, however. Unlike what Skivt2 posted about born in VT vs growing up there, in Maine there's still some of the "Those kittens being born in the oven doesn't make them biscuits", or as a (humorist) Tim Sample fictional routine, "Chester Gormley was 6 months old when he and his family moved to Maine. All his adult life he could never understand why folks considered him to be from away. When he died at age 97, his tombstone was inscribed 'He was almost one of us.'"
  15. From the west side of the pond one can probably see the higher hills (1300' in Vienna and Rome) in the Kennebec Highlands.
  16. Yesterday was a near perfect summer day, 75/54 with dews 60 or below. It was also slightly BN, only the 6th BN day for the month. Despite that 25-to-6 advantage the month was only 2.2° AN, though that's 4th warmest of 23 Julys here. Avg max: 76.6 0.2 AN and the median value of the 23 Julys. Avg. min: 58.8 4.2 AN and the mildest July minimum by 1.1° Warmest: 84 on 20th. Warmest minimum: 70 on the 27th, only the 2nd 70+ low here. Coolest: 51 on the 17th. July coolest 1998-2019 range from 37 to 46. That 33° monthly range ties Nov. 1998 for the lowest in any month. Ironically, June's 63° is tops for that month. Precip: 5.84" 1.88" AN Biggest one-day RA was 1.54" on the 10th, remains of Fay. Yearly precip up to 27.32", a modest 0.18" AN.
  17. Our system has hot water thru the oil-fired boiler but the tank is tiny - 2 or 3 gallons and up near the joists, just enough to cover that initial surge before the boiler kicks in. Running the boiler in summer adds to the oil bill but it also helps keep the basement from getting too musty.
  18. A dozen or so years ago I built a 6-ft-square compost bin out of small (3"diam.) cedar logs, stacking rather than notching them to allow airflow. Don't shovel dirt atop - wood ashes serve that purpose. Bears are uncommon in my part of the woods; one probably wanders thru every so often but in 22 years only 2 have been noted, the 2nd bagged by a friend who asked to hunt on our woodlot. Having never eaten bear meat I was hoping for a piece (one should never ask) but the carcass was handled poorly and I think it ended up feeding someone's dogs. Being a meat hunter, I won't kill a bear (short of self-defense) unless I've eaten the meat and found it very good.
  19. Given the cost (and beauty) of those sweaters I wouldn't have worn one for downhill skiing if I still did that, more likely for X-C. Three years ago we bought Dale sweaters for our son-in-law and our only grandson (then, but his little bro will grow into it), I think while we were in Andalsnes. Together the 2 came to 3,500 NOK, or north of $400 at the 2017 exchange rate. (This past May that 3,500 would've been about $100 less.)
  20. Had 3.5" in 2 hours in NNJ from "Doria", August 1971. Storm total was 5.1" and with the previous day's PRE dumping 3.8" we had nearly 9" in about 20 hours. Things had been quite dry so flooding was surprisingly modest.
  21. Sounds like my mom, especially after age 55, which was when her emphysema was diagnosed. She was especially adverse to drafts and when they planned to visit us at our first house in Fort Kent, a small (18x20 ft 2-story) somewhat drafty and poorly insulated place in town, we were a bit concerned. However, even with some lowery cool days during that summer visit, she would camp 4' from our little Jotul 602 and bask in its warmth.
  22. I thought that 495 was just the connector between 295 and 95 north of PWM. And "Suckerville" probably (hopefully ) refers to fish - sucker-gigging used to be a rite of spring, not so much nowadays.
  23. Another one well south (along with the nice echoes well north.) It's like the Whites help sustain the TS but the Mahoosucs kill them - or something. Still have not seen a single lightning bolt this year, even after a significant amount of time on my front porch waiting and watching as thunder arrives. Of course we scored multiple times June 28-July 14 but it's been pretty scratchy since then. Our 2-day expert peer-review field trip is this coming Tues-Wed, probably means we get Isaias. Having been gully-washed in NW Maine by the remains of Katrina in 2005 and dodging multiple TS (not always successfully) on these trips 2 years later, c'est la vie.
  24. 2.8" from that storm in mine. At least the ground stayed white from early November thru early April, and having storms of 3"+ in 7 different months was kinda cool, even in a year with both snowfall and SDDs were BN and it never stayed cold for more than 2-3 days at a time. (Some would count that last as a plus. Not me)
  25. The whole winter was boring. The most interesting wx came either in November or after the equinox.
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