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Junorch obs and discussion 2026


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8 hours ago, powderfreak said:

Black flies are horrific right now.  Bloody arms and legs, from killing them as they bite.  They are insufferable once you get into the woods and especially at elevation.  Eventually they will die off, and then it will be deer/horse flies as the culprit. 

Both deer and horse suck the big one........I ithink deer are worse.

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8 hours ago, powderfreak said:

Black flies are horrific right now.  Bloody arms and legs, from killing them as they bite.  They are insufferable once you get into the woods and especially at elevation.  Eventually they will die off, and then it will be deer/horse flies as the culprit. 

Very mild black fly period here, but the mosquitos are thick.  Also, fireflies have arrived.
This year makes 30 years since the worst black flies I've encountered.  On Friday, 6/7/96, I was with 3 others at Oquossuc Bald Mountain scoping out a sno-mo trail, and I don't think we saw 10 black flies.  The following Monday-Friday was our church's men's wilderness retreat, that year at Deboullie, about 25 miles SW from Fort Kent, and I predicted a modest black fly population.  We drove to Portage Lake, got out at Coffin's store, and despite the high 80s (black flies tend to hide when it's hot) the area was thick with the little beasts.  I slathered some Ben's 100 before launching our canoes at Pushineer Pond, and by the 75 minutes to reach the west end of Deboullie Pond where we would camp, the bug dope was no longer working.  Another application lasted but an hour - Ben's usually is worth 5-6 hours; no way I would put that stuff on hourly.  Next day when CAR hit the 90s, I was getting bombed while in the middle of the pond, 100+ yards from shore.  (Not enough air space over land?)  Only place to escape, other than the 100°+ temp sun-blasted tent, was in the rock crevices on the NW side of the pond, where there were still ice and snow.  The black flies weren't interested where the temp was under 50.

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