Comment

In the Right Place: Grand

Yesterday was dazzling, today is dreary, and tomorrow will be disturbing. And so it goes in Downeast Maine.

Let’s remember yesterday, which is when the images here were taken. The sun, in its favorite big blue sky, poured so much shine on our melting snow that the glare made you wince; but, you couldn’t not-watch:

Fortunately, the woods were dappled delights to the eyes, and virtually all of the ice was gone from the country lane surfaces:

Today, we’re in a mostly cloudy prelude to another winter storm that’s predicted to begin tomorrow with increasingly heavy snow and winds that could exceed 40 mph.

Nonetheless, yesterday was grand and there will be others like it soon. (Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 12, 2023.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: American Victorian

Here you see Brooklin’s iconic Beth Eden Chapel in Friday morning’s sunshine. This one-room church and meeting place was completed in 1900 and dedicated as “a house for the worship of God favoring no one denomination.”

It’s not used much now, but it was once the center of a small community of hard-working people. They went there to offer prayers; celebrate christenings and weddings; join in rousing hymn-sings; weep at funerals, and discuss important matters.

Named in 2001 to the National Register of Historic Places, the Chapel is listed as an example of late Victorian architecture with interesting wood siding composed of wave-cut shingles and clapboard.

There are mature maple trees on both sides and, sometimes, you can see the shadows of the trees on the Chapel’s south side while looking through the windows at the maples on the north side:

(Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 10, 2023.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Surprise of the Week

This bobcat came surprisingly close to our house early Thursday morning to sniff the scents of the night’s traffic under our birdfeeder.

I assume that he’s our old friend Robert, whom we’ve shown here before. He probably was hungry and having trouble hunting in the snow-clogged inner woods. Bobcats don’t do well in snow, and our snow has not fully melted.

These little felines usually try to avoid humans and often hunt in the half-light of dusk and dawn, when their remarkably good eyesight is an advantage. As with some of our white-tailed deer, Robert’s coat appears to be starting to change from its fall/winter tawny-gray to its spring/summer reddish-brown. (Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 9, 2023.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Positioning

This image of a small colony of herring gulls illustrates what had been a mystery to me until recently. These birds were sleeping and resting at Naskeag Point during a snow flurry on chilly Tuesday.

Note that most of them are sleeping with their beaks tucked under their shoulder blade (scapula) feathers. This is a very vulnerable, sensory-dulling position, especially for a large bird that can’t take off like a rocket when a predator comes by. Why would they take that increased risk?

It turns out that head-tucking significantly lowers birds’ respiratory and metabolic rates as compared to untucked sleeping, according to thermal imaging research. This means that tucking creates significantly less heat loss.

Now look at the image again. Note that not all of the birds are tucked in. One advantage of sleeping and resting in a group is that there is a likelihood that a few in the group will be awake at any given time and will be readier to give a warning.

(Image taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 7, 2023. Brooklin Weather today at 7 a.m.: partly cloudy; temperature 34°F; north-northwesterly wind at 11 mph with gusts of 20.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Indecision

Here you see today’s indecisive morning from Flye Point Ridge– she didn’t know whether to rain, snow, or let the sunshine in.

That’s one of our favorite red barns, well-sited high over Herrick Bay. It apparently is not a “working barn,” in the sense that it stores grain or shelters farm animals, but it’s a picturesque reminder of days gone by.

By the way, the word “barn” reportedly is derived from the Old English word “bere,” which specifically meant barley but generally meant grain.

(Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 8, 2023. Brooklin Weather today at 7 a.m.: part cloudy; temperature 35°F; north-northwest wind at 8 mph with gusts of 21 mph.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Consequences

There are hidden consequences of snowstorms: Accumulated snow sometimes makes it difficult for wild turkeys to find natural ground food; plowed snow sometimes makes it impossible for outdoor people to do what they have to do:

(Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 1 [turkey] and 5 [portable toilet], 2023. Brooklin Weather today at 6:15 a.m.: part cloudy; temperature 29°F (wind chill = 21°); northwest wind at 7 mph with gusts of 15.)


Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Inconvenient Beauty

Here’s the morning view from Great Cove ridge yesterday after the latest snowstorm.

Here’s another view from within a stand of spruce and balsam fir trees:

It’s a beautiful inconvenience.

(Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 5, 2023. Brooklin School Weather Station report today at 6:15 a.m.: clear; temperature 35°F; wind gusts of 25 mph from the west-northwest.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Scalloping Season Report

Here you see Fishing Vessel Tarrfish in today’s early morning light, stoically bearing ice and snow from yesterday’s significant storm.

In the summer, Tarrfish harvests lobsters. In the winter, she not only “drags” for Atlantic sea scallops with a bottom-skimming dredge, she also is a scallop diving platform for her owner/captain, David Tarr. He dives from her in a wet suit and air tank, hand-harvesting the more expensive “divers’ scallops.”

As of yesterday, the scalloping season “has gone well” with both price and catch being “decent,” according to David. Some well-fished areas are beginning to get shut down by the State to protect against over-harvesting, as usual, and the recent stormy weather has slowed harvesting down, he said. The State dragging season will end this month, but the diving season will continue through most of April.

(Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 5, 2023. Weather data at 7:30 a.m.: clear; snow accumulation 12.5”; temperature 25°F [WC = 19°]; wind gusts from the west 7 MPH.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Bearding the Lion, Part II

This March lion is still roaring at 5:15 p.m., as I write this second post. It looks like we have about 8 inches so far. The temperature is 27°F (wind chill = 19°) with Northeast winds gusting up to 14 miles per hour. The views from the home office have been spectacular all day:

The deer have to dig for food, but you can tell how well insulated they are by the snow on their backs — it’s not melting.

A few through-the-window images follow:

(Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 4, 2023.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Bearding the Lion

Last night’s snow continued into the morning light here and is turning spruce branches into Santa Claus beards. I think that I’ve had enough of March’s roaring lion act; I’m beginning to wish that she would get an early start on her imitation of a bleating lamb soon.

For you weather fans: at 7:30 a.m. when these images were taken in falling snow, the temperature was 32°F (wind chill = 23°) and the wind was gusting up to 16 miles per hour.

(Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 4, 2023.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Fashionably Late

March delayed a day then came in yesterday like the lion we have come to expect, delivering a significant snowstorm that we document here:

We seem to be getting a lot of late snowstorms. (Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on March 2, 2023.)

Comment

11 Comments

February Postcards From Maine

February this year brought freezing Arctic winds down from Canada to create the coldest days we have ever had during the year’s second month. The icy air swooped over our warmer (but still cold) coastal waters and created “sea smoke” that rose from the waters, “sea mist” that crystalized on boats and coastal trees, and “sea ice” that rose and fell with the tides.

But February, being our most fickle month, gave us a wide variety of weather — unusually warm and sunny days, dank and foggy ones, and gray and snowy ones.

At times, our woods became crystalized, our larger streams became ice-caked, and our small brooks became solid.

Nonetheless, our fellow winter mammals seemed to glory in the February weather. Their coats remained sleek, their eyes were clear, and (unfortunately) their appetites for more easily-obtained garden plants and bushes increased.

On the waterfront, February means Atlantic scallop fishing. A good number of our lobster fishing vessels converted to scallop dredgers and braved the varying weather, tying up at the Brooklin Town Dock when they had to. Of course, many other fishing and recreational vessels continued taking their winter vacations “on the hard” during the month.

Despite its weather, February is the proud host of Valentine’s Day when we see hearts everywhere and get candy and flowers delivered by strange romantics.

Finally, February is the last month in which we can enjoy the sometimes sensational moods of winter sunsets. This February, we had a celestial bonus: the moon appeared at dawn on several days and was caught by the sun’s early light.

(All images in this post were taken in Down East Maine during February 2023.)

11 Comments

Comment

In the Right Place: Comfortable Calm

Yesterday was a comfortable calm between winter storms. Here you see the iconic view of Blue Hill Bay and Acadia National Park from Brooklin’s Amen Ridge at mid-day yesterday:

The temperature was 21°(F) with no significant wind. It was comfortable enough to do some work on Fishing Vessel Tarrfish at the dock in nearby Naskeag Harbor:

It snowed last night and continues to do so now in a fussy, small-flaked way, but it’s warmer and windier than it generally was last week. More specifically, it’s 28°(F) with a windchill of 19° at 6:30 a.m. and wind gusts of up to 23 miles per hour out of the East. (Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on February 27, 2023.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Hungry, But Not Frozen

You know the deer are hungry when they start eating viburnum bushes, as you see in this image of one of “our” white-tailed deer this morning:

Some of the better food is under several inches of ice, which the deer have to dig through with their hooves. That’s what this yearling had just done:

On the other hand, we’ve seen no indication that the deer are having any problems with the cold weather. It was 14°F with a windchill of 7° when these images were taken. (Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on February 27, 2023.)

Comment

Comment

Ice Bursting in Air

It’s warming up considerably here, compared to yesterday, but I suppose that’s only a relative comparison. It’s 8°F (wind chill = 2°) as I write this at 6:30 a.m., compared to 1° (WC = minus 5°) yesterday at 6:45 a.m.

The image above is from yesterday morning in Patten Bay. It’s “young” sea ice doing what it does as the tide lowers: the surface ice blanket lowers with the tide, but has to give way to sizable rocks, which burst through the descending ice plane in interesting formations.

Nearby, Patten Falls at the mouth of Patten Stream was pouring a torrent of fresh water from melting snows and ice into the Bay:

(Images taken in Surry, Maine, on February 25, 2023.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Booted Mummy Time

It’s 1 degree (F) with a wind chill of -5 here as this is written at 6:45 a.m. To be sure, our benign blizzard of two days ago left some beautiful snow, but she also left a vast, freezing wake. Nevertheless, here’s a look at a stand of spruce with cold feet during yesterday’s frigid morning:.

Below, you’ll see how the WoodenBoat School’s pond was doing then:

If you’re drawn outside by the beauty of it all, make sure you’re dressed like a booted mummy. (Images taken in Brooklin, Maine, on February 24, 2023.)

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Civilized

Here you see two images of this morning’s first light on the aftermath of yesterday’s much-anticipated “blizzard”:

Contrary to some forecasts, the storm turned out to be a civilized visitor that gently tucked the community into a fluffy blanket of powdery snow before leaving quietly. The following are images of it in progress and shortly thereafter:

Country lanes and roads were quickly and easily plowed.

On the waterfront, lobster traps provided the only color and fishing vessels seemed not to notice.

There was some color here and there and plenty of texture..

Comment

Comment

In the Right Place: Fickle February

We’re getting some serious snow as I write this morning, but that will have to wait until later; I don’t want to let yesterday’s weather go unnoticed in this journal.

Yesterday probably was as perfect a day in Great Cove as fickle February is capable of producing: miles of wispy cirrus clouds raced in a big blue sky above a magnificent high tide of restless winter water.

(Images taken on the WoodenBoat School campus in Brooklin, Maine, on February 22, 2023.)

Comment