Submitted by Earthling1a t3_127y0c4 in news
Earthling1a
Earthling1a t1_jeavcf2 wrote
Reply to comment by bbpr120 in "In the summer of 1955, when my father was 8 years old, he won 5 acres of Maine lakefront property in a Davy Crockett cartoon coloring contest." by GlobeOpinion
It's clear you've never experienced one of my turkey sandwich, cole slaw and baked bean farts.
Earthling1a t1_je697eg wrote
Reply to comment by GraniteGeekNH in What the GIANTS behind C.M.P. don't want you to know! by mainething
*nook-you-ler
Earthling1a t1_jdy01k9 wrote
Reply to comment by MathematicianGlum880 in Land covenants by Lfcfan2187
Chickens are only confined to a ROW if they are in a vehicle and wearing seat belts. George Washington wanted it that way.
Earthling1a t1_jdx5zn8 wrote
Reply to comment by MathematicianGlum880 in Land covenants by Lfcfan2187
No different than a right of way. If I have a deeded ROW over your land, and you sell it to Jake DeBrusk, I still have that right of way whether he likes it or not.
Earthling1a t1_jdmqxwv wrote
Reply to comment by ancientgenes10 in Family Heirlooms & Mysteries in Maine by ancientgenes10
Went from him to my grandfather (I remember learning to play cribbage with him on one of the pull-out writing shelves). When he died it went to my cousin, and when she died it came to me. I have a few other artefacts from great-grandpaw's time with the desk including a tintype photo of him in front of one of the churches he praught at (teach -> taught :: preach -> praught) and a book of his somewhat religious poetry that he self-published.
Earthling1a t1_jdl941e wrote
Reply to comment by Earthling1a in Auroras likely visible tonight! by ThisOriginalSource
1:30AM. Bupkis. Rats.
Earthling1a t1_jdl4pdy wrote
My great grandfather was a minister in Mars Hill about a hundred years ago (among other places). I have the rolltop desk he bought in 1909, along with the receipt.
Earthling1a t1_jdl0kbo wrote
Reply to comment by Earthling1a in Auroras likely visible tonight! by ThisOriginalSource
Midnight, still nothing.
Earthling1a t1_jdksh0j wrote
Reply to Auroras likely visible tonight! by ThisOriginalSource
10:48PM, Skowhegan area. Just took a look outside - clear skies to the N, but no roarers. Will check again in an hour or so.
Earthling1a t1_jdkibc1 wrote
Reply to Whats the weather like during May? by Local_Bum_4202
It may be warm or it may be cold. It may rain or it may be cloudy or it may be sunny.
Maybe.
Earthling1a t1_jdaz0g5 wrote
This is the future Republicans want.
Earthling1a t1_jd8b9lx wrote
Reply to comment by seeclick8 in Huge National Park suggested for around Katahdin. by Camooses
I remember climbing Katahdin about 30 years ago and thinking there were an awful lot of other people on the trail with me compared to the other times I had climbed it. First time was probably around 1975 or so, I think I saw less than five other people outside my group of two. Climbed it a few years later (in nicer weather) and probably saw about two dozen others, mostly at the top. Last time (that time 30 years ago) I saw lines of people, probably over 100 overall. I can't imagine what it must be like today. I'm imagining walking on a crowded sidewalk.
Earthling1a t1_jd8a96m wrote
Reply to comment by lintymcfresh in Huge National Park suggested for around Katahdin. by Camooses
Damn they oughta be about done building it by now yo.
Earthling1a t1_jd87641 wrote
Reply to comment by ghguyrur7 in [m28] realizing I have no real life friends (Saco Biddeford, let’s grab a drink/bong rip and chat) by ghguyrur7
Gold panning (and lessons) is available in Byron on the Swift River up route 17. Not exactly in the Portland area, but great camping and hiking and scenery up there. And there's a lot more gold in them thar hills than anyone thinks there is.
Earthling1a t1_jd86jq4 wrote
Reply to comment by MaineKent in [m28] realizing I have no real life friends (Saco Biddeford, let’s grab a drink/bong rip and chat) by ghguyrur7
I never got into fishing, but my uncle was literally the fish whisperer. He had a place on a small lake in NH (he's dead now, lived to 90+), and he had named the fish individually. He knew where to find each one, and would catch/release them just to maintain contact. He'd go out on a new lake and just sit for an hour watching, pull out some obscure lure, and in about three minutes land a gigantic bass or trout or whatever he was after. He would literally yell at the fish if they weren't biting, and they'd wake up and hit his line. It was amazing to watch. I miss that dude.
Earthling1a t1_jcwz0jg wrote
Reply to Scientists find heatwaves at bottom of the ocean along the continental shelves of North America by Creative_soja
This is where the excess heat has been going for decades. Back in the 90's we hadn't really done any deep water temp assessments and we certainly didn't have historical data for comparison. I was auditing a discussion group with a bunch of Ph.D. candidates, looking at satellite data and watching them being all baffled about where the extra energy (insolation was known, radiative loss was known, delta indicated accumulation) was going. I (non-degree candidate and therefore scum) asked if they had looked in the ocean. They said it wasn't there. I think I invented the facepalm at that point. Water has a very high specific heat, and there's a f*kload of water in the ocean. We only started measuring deep water temps around 2004, and not extensively until within the last 5 years or so. All that energy that was stored (and is still being added to) back over the last half-century or so has been cheerfully flowing along in the AMOC at depth, and is now showing up where we can notice its effects. Just watch those glaciers, baby. We're coming up on the time frame for the industrially-warmed waters from 100 years ago to start working on the edges of Antarctica. Party time.
Earthling1a t1_jb82ya3 wrote
Reply to Global food consumption alone could add nearly 1 °C to warming by 2100. Seventy five percent of this warming is driven by foods that are high sources of methane (ruminant meat, dairy and rice). by Plant__Eater
Good thing the global population isn't still exploding.
​
oh wait
Earthling1a t1_jassimu wrote
Reply to comment by Sufficient-Squash428 in Maine Energy Progress? by whatsamain
Private companies built the electric grid.
Government regulators got involved when power distribution started to cross state lines, but private enterprise built it.
Earthling1a t1_jasedcq wrote
Reply to comment by siebzy in Maine Energy Progress? by whatsamain
Hmm, what kind of government is it that's famous for taking over private business and making it state-run?
Earthling1a t1_jaqda65 wrote
LD 522 currently in committee (Transportation, work session on March 9) would make it illegal to drive without removing the snow.
https://legislature.maine.gov/bills/getPDF.asp?paper=HP0327&item=1&snum=131
5 items in testimony - 4 citizens in favor, logging industry opposed. Call your representative, especially if they are on the Committee.
https://legislature.maine.gov/committee/#Committees/TRA Committee members listed on the bottom left of the page.
Earthling1a t1_j91x3q7 wrote
Reply to comment by Macasumba in Despite 'dirty rain,' DEP says Maine will likely not be affected by Ohio train disaster by DrMcMeow
Who you gonna trust? Some paranoid redneck who can't tell one chemical from another? A bunch of imbeciles who can't seem to understand that the fucking cloud moved out to sea almost two weeks ago? Or maybe a group of scientists who actually know what they're talking about?
Earthling1a t1_j8nubu5 wrote
Reply to An ankylosaur larynx provides insights for bird-like vocalization in non-avian dinosaurs by BenjaminMohler
Now say "ankylosaur larynx" three times fast.
Earthling1a t1_j8cc1i7 wrote
Reply to comment by TarantinoFan23 in Ohio death cloud coming here? by TarantinoFan23
We're working on it at the state level. One step at a time.
Earthling1a t1_jeb4d1b wrote
Reply to My painting of Mattawamkeag river, oils by cerrvine
Somewhere I have a photo of the Magalloway River up in the woods that looks almost identical to this. Very nice work.