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In the Right Place: Mmmm-MMMM

Here, we see the Fishing Vessel Tarr Baby becoming one of the first (if not the first) of our lobster boats being refitted yesterday with a mast and boom for winter Atlantic Scallop dredging.

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The scallop season here runs from later this month through March of 2021, depending on the type of scalloping (dragging a dredge or human diving) and the Maine zone in which it is done.

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For those lucky enough to live on the Down East coast of Maine, it’s time to place your order for fresh scallops with your favorite fisherman. David Tarr, the owner of Tarr Baby, is one of several fishermen already advertising with signs and on FaceBook.

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There’s nothing better for dinner than very fresh scallops, except perhaps very fresh lobster. But, soon we’ll have both here! Time to get out that recipe for lobster and scallop bouillabaisse. (Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: Change

Here, you see part of the marsh pond on the WoodenBoat School campus yesterday. It’s mostly iced up after a cold night and morning. If your eyes are very good, you’ll be able to discern a few Canada geese crammed in an area that has not yet frozen, probably because of their activity.

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Below, you can see the pond the day before yesterday, prior to its icing:

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Historically, the pond has been totally covered with thick ice by December, except (sometimes) for one or two river otter portals. The variable Climate Change weather has been changing that. For instance, this morning’s warm spell (47[F] at 9:45 a.m.) has been melting the ice and giving the thankful geese some paddling room. (Brooklin, Maine)

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Inthe Right Place: Imagining

I sometimes find myself fixated by windows, especially these old windows that I’ve photographed many times, including this image yesterday.

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These windows are part of the Beth Eden Chapel on Naskeag Road, a one-room church and meeting place that was finished in 1900. You can peer through the Chapel at the maple trees on its north, while the shadows of the maple trees on your side seem to be trying to enter the windows there.

Leighton Archive Image

Leighton Archive Image

This Chapel usually is vacant now, but it’s not hard to imagine the hope, joy, grief, and solace it has hosted as the place for a small rural community’s christenings, weddings, funerals, and prayers for the suffering.

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(Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: Nipper

The mornings here have been looking like October, but feeling like December. As our visiting neighbor said this morning, “It’s a nose nipper out there.” Yet, it’s been sparklingly clear and invigorating to be out of doors on days like this (when dressed warmly).

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The image above is of one of the neighboring field ponds yesterday doing what field ponds do best at this time of the year – giving us a second helping of beautiful views and giving the still-migrating Canada Geese safe havens. You can see several of those Geese in this same pond last month in the first Comment space.

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(Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: Exuberant

 Yesterday morning was beautiful. However, the 12.86-foot high tide, wind gusts of 33.37 miles per hour, and temperatures in the high 40s here might have been a bit exuberant for those on or near the sea.

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Above, you see Great Cove and the WoodenBoat School’s dock as the tide approached its high mark. Below you see the wind playing in Naskeag Harbor on the other side of our peninsula.

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(Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: Scoops and Dabs

Small flocks of little Bufflehead Ducks are now visiting Great Cove, flying here and there at high speeds. Buffleheads (Bucephala albeola), seldom reach 15 inches in length, which makes them the smallest diving ducks in North America. Their top flying speed has been clocked at a blurring 48 miles per hour.

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The males are mostly white with a black head on which it looks like a double scoop of vanilla ice cream has been dropped.The females are darker overall with a dab of that ice cream on their cheeks. They get their strange name from the swell-headed males, which reminded the name-givers of American “Buffalos”.

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Buffleheads eat crabs, clams, and water vegetation in winter and (unusually) nest in abandoned cavities of large woodpeckers. (Brooklin, Maine; Leighton Archive images used)

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In the Rigjht Place: Pendulous

This spectacular Weeping Beech Tree at Amen Farm is a Brooklin landmark and it would be a curiosity anywhere with its unusual bottom branch pruning and training. In this November 10 image, you see it starting to shed its leaves that have turned to copper in the fall.

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In the summer, the leaves form a dense green canopy:

Leighton Archive Image

Leighton Archive Image

When the leaves are gone, the tree looks like it’s having a massive bad hair time:

Leighton Archive Image

Leighton Archive Image

Weeping Beeches (Fagus sylvatica, “Pendula”), named after their pendulous branches, are not native to North America; they’re cultivars of the European Beeches. This one is 70 years old and is still growing; most Weeping Beeches live between 150 and 200 years. (Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: Obedient Grace

We lost an old friend on Tuesday (November 10). It was a 60-foot Red Spruce that had partly framed our view from the house of the North Field, Great Cove, and Eggemoggin Reach. An ancient injury to the Spruce’s trunk was opened up (probably by piliated woodpeckers) and it started to rot internally. We had to have the tree removed; it was beyond repair and large enough to damage the house if it came down in that direction.

Above, we see our tree cutter, Tobey Woodward, beginning to notch the tree base after cabling the trunk to his big tractor about 100 feet away. The fatal cut from the opposite side of the trunk felled the tree obediently, but gracefully, where the cable pulled it:

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By the way, Red Spruces are a principal source of building lumber, especially for heavy construction, yet their wood also is valuable for the sounding boards of musical instruments. Their resin was the principal source of the spruce gum chewed and used for healing by Native Americans and American pioneers.

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(Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: In the Still of the Day

Yesterday was extraordinary. It looked like November: there were very few leaves above ground, the cattails were dead, and the North Field was browning. Yet, the temperatures were in the sixties (F).

Yesterday also was still and quiet near the pond, which became a reflecting pool. We sat unmoving on Flat Rock behind the pond and stared at the Field the way the deer and coyotes do from the woods’ edge, looking for movement before stepping into the open.

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There was no movement, but we could imagine the flock of sheep that grazed this Field in the 19th Century, nosing the grass as they moved toward us. (Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: Hanging Around

The leaves of this young Sugar Maple, photographed here yesterday (November 9), have just recently started changing to their fall colors.

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On November 3, when other Sugar Maples were bare of leaves, this teenager’s leaves were still green and collecting snow:

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Why do some trees hold onto their leaves longer than others?

Research shows that the more stress that a tree undergoes, the earlier it will shed its leaves to conserve water and energy. The amount of water that a tree gets in the spring and summer is especially important. This year we had semi-drought conditions, but this tree is in a low area (near our raised driveway) that collects some water when it rains. It also is fairly well protected from the high winds that we get on our ridge. Moreover, we’ve been experiencing unseasonably warm temperatures.

Meanwhile, about 200 feet from this Maple, our Katsura Tree looked like this yesterday:

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(Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: In Memoriam

 As we walked by this mooring gear yesterday at the WoodenBoat School, Maine’s self-proclaimed status as the nation’s “Vacationland” came to mind.

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This gear hasn’t been in the water since the summer of 2019, when it last served the School’s fleet of beautiful boats and the happy students who sailed and rowed them. Now, the gear seems to be a memorial to the 2020 vacation time that never was here. Yet, it also gives us hope – it seems to be eagerly ready for the fleet and smiling students to return in 2021 and for the world to start to return to what is loosely called “normal.” (Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: Curiosity

Something unusual happened to the moon this morning. Well, actually, it happened to our view of the moon. While the sun was trying to break through a very cloudy sky, a full moon appeared from time to time. This was at 10:25 a.m. Tonight, only a quarter of the moon is scheduled to be illuminated for us and there is no guarantee that we’ll see that.

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Perhaps it was because, from our perspective, the orbiting moon was closer to the sun than usual and at an angle that received more light; but, the moon wasn't so close that the sun’s glare blotted it out to us. And, the clouds helped cut down on that glare. Maybe you have a better explanation for us. (Brooklin, Maine) Click on image to enlarge it.

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In the Right Place: True Confessions

Now is the time to locate Tamarack Trees, and we did a little of that yesterday, as you see.

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In the summer, when gazing at the distant woods, it can be hard to tell the thin and wiry Tamaracks from their sturdier neighbors, the Spruces and Balsam Firs. All are a mass of green-needled branches. But at this time of year, the Tamaracks confess their secret: their needled branches flare into yellow incandescence and then the needles let go and drop like golden sprinkles.

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These trees are different. They’re “deciduous,” not evergreen, but they’re also “coniferous” because they produce and drop cones (both male and female ones from the same tree).

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“Tamarack” is the Algonquin Tribe’s name for “snowshoe wood,” which is what the tree’s flexible wood trunk and branches could become in the hands of a good craftsman. Nonetheless, the tree also is commonly called a “Hackmatack” (Abanaki Tribe name) and a “Larch” (European name). (Brooklin, Maine) See also the image in the first Comment space.

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In the Right Place: Bobbing

This morning, I was sitting in an intermittent drizzle on Flat Rock, hidden behind the cattails while scanning our North Field. I wasn’t comfortable. The rock was wet and not equipped with a roll of Bounty Towels.

I was debating moving to another location when our alarm went off – about 20 crows started screeching their black hearts out in the trees at the edge of the Field. “Eagle!,” I thought and intensively searched the tree tops while the birds went insane. Nothing.

I fortunately looked down at the Field in frustration and there he was. (Sex assumed.) He was loping low and keeping his eye on me. While I was watching crows, he was watching me: a gorgeous mature Bobcat. When I “shot” with a “click,” he stopped and studied me for a second and ran off.

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I was lucky; Bobcats are mostly nocturnal. They’re named for their bobbed” (shortened) tails, of course. Although not commonly seen, they’re the most abundant wildcat in North America and have been roaming the earth for about 1.8 million years.

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Bobcats can be fierce hunters and kill prey that is much larger than they are, but they usually eat rabbits, squirrels, birds, and other small prey. They’re fast for a small, stocky animal: They’ve been clocked at 34 miles an hour and seen to jump 12 feet high. (Brooklin, Maine)




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In the Right Place: The Beat Goes On

It seems that traps are being off-loaded daily at the Town Pier in Naskeag Harbor.

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Today, as you see above, we had Cool Change bringing her traps in. When they’re all in, she may be refitted for scallop fishing over the winter.

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The preferred means of trap transportation is by truck and trailer, as you can see in today’s image below of the traps of a different vessel.

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(Brooklin, Maine)

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Inthe Right Place: The Other November Gobblers

We went by the Reversing Falls in Blue Hill today and noticed that our annual “paddling” of Common Eiders was forming far offshore in Blue Hill Bay. There were about 70 of these ducks have flown in so far – fewer than usual for early November.

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These are our largest native ducks. By December, hundreds of them usually have arrived to over-winter as a group in the Bay.

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Each year, the Annual Blue Hill Eider Convention seems to attract fewer vacationers. Part of the reason is that this duck’s favorite food, the Blue Mussel, has been significantly diminished along our coast. Actually, these ducks are part of their own problem – each can gobble down (whole) more mussels than you get for dinner at a generous restaurant.

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When humans get close to these ducks while they’re feeding, they paddle away in a collective frenzy, which may be a defensive move designed to obscure individual targets and appear to be a single, large body.

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We haven’t yet been able to get close enough to the Eiders to take good photographs this year. So, we’ll show a couple of images from prior years. The males are white and black and the females are bronze.

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(Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: Snow Job

This Election Day morning, we had the first snowstorm of the Winter. Although not a big one — about an inch’s worth — it delivered enough snow to cover the trees and bushes, some of which still were wearing their Fall leaves.

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The early morning light gave familiar sights — including two familiar deer caught trespassing (again) — new aspects.

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The Winterberry and Viburnum plants were caught by surprise with some of their leaves on when the Winter weather arrived. Some of the Maple trees were caught with all of their leaves on, which can be dangerous if the snow gets too heavy.

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In the afternoon, the sun appeared occasionally to dapple the landscape while melting the snow. Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park got caught by a sunspot as the clouds opened for a few seconds.

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A similar dappling effect was seen at the Brooklin Cemetery and a local pond..

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In the evening, the sunset afterglow was befitting a special day.

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(Brooklin, Maine)

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In the Right Place: Pot Luck

Here, we see a pleasing display of garden pots at the Mainescape Plant Nursery in Blue Hill on October 19. We wondered why we found a group of pots so pleasing.

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It turns out that there is significant research on the subject of the pleasing nature of circles. It begins with the finding that humans have had a predilection for circles and other curvilinear shapes for at least 40,000 years and the addition of colors and concentric lines has been a traditional way to make those forms even more pleasing.

The reported three leading theories on why we like circles start with an evolutionary finding that ancient humans found that curvilinear shapes in nature, such as bushes, generally were safer than angular ones, such as animal teeth and rocks.

The second theory is based on tests in which most humans associated circles and other curvilinear shapes with happiness and associated triangles with anger. The final theory is that circular shapes conform with the circular and curvilinear shape of the human eye and complement the act of viewing. (Brooklin, Maine) Click on the image to enlarge it.

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