Beginning Jan. 17, people can begin making reservations to camp this summer and fall in the the state’s largest park.
outdoors
Finding fun without snow
NEWRY — Frozen waterfalls, whispering brooks, and the distant hum of snow guns outside a quiet grove. These are some of the things that make zip line rides in winter so unique.
BOB HUMPHREY: IF&W considers many things
The Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife is continually looking for ways to increase or improve hunting opportunity where, when and how it can be done without adversely impacting the resource. The agency also must protect wildlife populations where and when they are in decline. As a result, change is inevitable, and 2012 will see its fair share.
ALLEN AFIELD: Decisions impact nature
Recently, at Barnes and Noble’s café in Augusta, Katelyn, my 23-year-old daughter, listened to me expounding on the 1995 wolf reintroduction in Yellowstone National Park.
OUTDOORS: Learn new ways to enjoy winter
Every winter, bigger and better winter festivals are rolled out somewhere in Maine. Outdoor gatherings are more in vogue today than ever, with state parks, land trusts and cities promoting frozen family fun and snow carnivals.
ON SKIING: Resolutions for the skier in all of us
Saturday at midnight, we bid adieu to 2011. Toasts were made, champagne quaffed, and decisions regretted. And we reached the ever-popular Jan. 1 tradition — New Year’s Resolution. What better promises to make for 2012 than resolve to take on some skiing-related tasks?
BOB HUMPHREY: Nonresidents not hunting in Maine
The problem is significant enough that the Legislature passed a resolve establishing a “Task Force To Examine the Decline in the Number of Nonresident Hunters,” charged with reviewing the numbers of nonresident hunters over the last five years, comparing that with national trends and developing recommendations to increase the number of nonresident hunters.
ALLEN AFIELD: Thoughts turn south in cold of winter
When winter dreams begin feeling like a nightmare, many Mainers start thinking of warmer climates where salty fishing, sunbathing and beach bumming turn into a high art form.
Noonan hopes to develop the statewide derbyinto the nation’s largest ice fishing event
Most of the roughly 6,000 ice fishermen who descend on Sebago Lake each February for the annual ice fishing derby don’t know Tom Noonan.
DEIRDRE FLEMING: Funding for projects may be headed to Maine
Professor Richard Barringer likes to start at the beginning when he begins the tale of the outdoor funding windfall heading for Maine. But really, the good timing and hope in this story is in what could happen in 2012.