Palermo Food Pantry needs donations

Due to the recent fire at the Hannaford distribution center in Portland, food donations from Hannaford stores to the local food pantries have decreased. The timing could not have been more unfortunate, as very little local produce is coming in just yet.

Over the past six years, the Palermo Food Pantry has grown from 15 families to at least 50 families. Most of these people are disabled elders, although there are some young families with children and infants who regularly use the Pantry. Since food stamps have been cut drastically, food pantries across the country have sprung up to provide a safety net for people facing layoffs, injuries, and family breakups. Here in Maine, a recent report stated that 20% of us face food insecurity. Most of those people are children.

Meanwhile, people still need to eat. The Palermo Food Pantry has access to food from Good Shepherd, but must buy it from the distribution center in Orono. Please consider donating money or non-perishable food items to your local pantry. The Living Communities Foundation can also act as a funding conduit for the Palermo Food Pantry, to purchase gas and food. Please send your check to: LCF, P.O. Box 151, Palermo, ME 04354, and put “Food Pantry” in the “for” line in the lower left corner to assure that all 100 percent of your donation will go to feed people.

SOLON & BEYOND, Week of May 11, 2017

Marilyn Rogers-Bull & Percyby Marilyn Rogers-Bull & Percy
grams29@tds.net
Solon, Maine 04979

Good morning, dear friends. Don’t worry, be happy!

My thanks to Marie Poulin for sending me a Solon Historical Society program, I appreciate it greatly. Officers are president, Chris Shaw; vice president, Neil Hunnewell; secretary, Maureen Shaw; treasurer, Albert Starbird and financial secretary, Marie Poulin. Trustees: Rance Pooler, three years, Chris Shaw, two years, and Jeff McAllister, one year. Publicity Marie Poulin and Marilyn Rogers-Bull. Program Juanita McAllister, Neil Hunnewell and Ann Padham. Dues are $5 per person or family, payable at the annual meeting in September. Meetings will be held on the fourth Monday of each month at 7 p.m., at the Gray Merrill House, 28 South Maine Street, unless otherwise stated. No regular meetings will be held in December or January. Programs and locations are subject to change. This months meeting is on May 22 and the program is called Issac Davis Celebration presented by Issac Davis. The Solon Historical Society was organized on May 8, 1999, by Virginia Merrill.

The monthly supper at the Embden Community Center will be on Saturday, May 13, at 5 p.m. Country Sunday/Open Mic will be held there on Sunday, May 14, from 1 – 4 p.m.

I have always been an animal lover and when a friend showed me a clipping entitled “A Dog’s Plea” I thought it would be nice to share . It was written by Beth Norman Harris. Treat me kindly, my beloved friend, for no heart in all the world is more grateful for kindness than the loving heart of me.

Do not break my spirit with a stick, for though I might lick your hand between blows, your patience and understanding will more quickly teach me the things you would have me learn.

Speak to me often, for your voice is the world’s sweetest music, as you must know by the fierce wagging of my tail when the sound of your footstep falls upon my waiting ear.

Please take me inside when it is cold and wet, for I am a domesticated animal, no longer accustomed to bitter elements. I ask no greater glory than the privilege of sitting at your feet beside the hearth.

Keep my pan filled with fresh water, for I cannot tell you when I suffer thirst. Feed me clean food that I might stay well, to romp and play, to walk by your side and stand ready, willing and able to protect y6ou with my life.

And, my friend, when I am very old, and I no longer enjoy good health, hearing and sight, do not make heroic efforts to keep me going. I am not having fun.

Please see that my trusting life is taken gently. I shall leave this Earth knowing with the last breath I draw that my fate was always safest in your hands.

Another friend who reads this column faithfully, and finds Percy’s memoirs quite inspiring gave me some that she had saved. The love and thought were very precious to me.

Percy’s memoir this week is one we both found and loved, it is entitled “A Touch of Loveliness.” Add a touch of loveliness To the things you say and do, Give pleasure to more people By a happy smile, won’t you? Be thoughtful of the people Whom you meet in shop and store, Then to God you will be dearer, He will love you even more. Aim higher, think kinder, Be a better, nicer you, Aim higher, think kinder, For this world has a need of you. (words by Sr. Mary Gemma Brunke.)

Obituaries, Week of May 11, 2017

DANIEL L. SAWLIVICH

SOUTH CHINA––Daniel Sawlivich, 61, of South China, passed away Thursday, April 27, 2017, in his home following a short period of declining health. He was born on May 20, 1955, in Waterville, the youngest child of Victor and Lorette Sawlivich.

Daniel attended Waterville Schools. He married the former Tina Labbe on December 3, 1982. Dan worked many different labor trades throughout his life but spent the majority of his time, 31 years, working as a supervisor at Mid-State Machine, in  Winslow. Dan was an avid lover of the outdoors and enjoyed hunting and fishing most of all. Much of his free time was spent “Upta Camp” at his home away from home.

Dan was predeceased by his parents, Victor and Lorette Sawlivich; and a granddaughter, Teagen Partridge.

He is survived by his wife, Tina, of China; son Jason Plante, of Benton, son Rikki Plante and husband Luther Harvey, of Worcester, Massachusetts; daughter Jessica Sawlivich, of China; granddaughter Brianne Plante, of Albion; sister Cindy Huard and husband Ricky, of Benton; and many aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces and nephews.
Condolences can be sent to Dan’s family at 115 Bog Brook Rd., China ME 04358.

ELLSWORTH E. DAMON

WHITEFIELD––Ellsworth (Ellie) Ernest Damon, of Whitefield, passed away Friday, April 28, 2017, at Togus Hospice. Ellie was born in Greenville, October 5, 1921, to Ernest and Orpha Damon.

When Ellie was a very young child the family moved to the Thayer Road in Whitefield to the house that he called home for the next 90 years. Ellie was an avid gardener and the homestead flourished under his care. He grew apples, plums, blueberries, grapes and a huge garden. His root cellar was always full and the shelves in the basement were well stocked with his preserves. Ellie took pride in growing what he ate, and he loved to eat!

Ellie served his country in the army during WWII. He deployed to the European Theater until the war ended and was in the Army of Occupation after the war. He served in an armored car division as gunner and radio operator.

After the war Ellie went to work in Alaska where he first learned to fly. Ellie continued to fly for many years and owned a Piper J3 that he flew all over the state, landing in fields and snowfields as he never had a pilot’s license. He kept his plane in Dresden at the airfield of the “Flying Farmer” with whom he was great friends.

After his time in Alaska, Ellie worked various jobs, working in the woods and lumber mills, and working for Potters Pots, in Whitefield, making lobster pots. He continued to work in the woods cutting his own firewood his entire life. He was always a few years ahead on firewood and said that it was the key to a long life. At 92 he could still be found out in the woods with his John Deere B and Stihl chainsaw, head down doing what he loved.

Ellie joined the Masons in 1950 and had been a member of the Riverside Lodge #135 in Jefferson for more than 65 years.

In the late 1950s he went to work at the then young Baxter State Park where he worked as the ranger at South Branch Pond. He lived and worked at South Branch for 12 years. He helped cut some of the early trails in the park and there is still a trail there that bears his name.

After leaving Baxter, he worked on the Maine Central Railroad in Rockland where he ran the entire railroad yard. He ran the office, did maintenance on the trains, cleaned cars, greased couplings, you name it, he did it. He worked at the railroad until his retirement.

After retirement Ellie devoted the rest of his long life to the things he truly loved: working in the garden, cutting firewood for himself and others, taking hunting and fishing trips with family and friends. He had many connections around the state and loved to go on road trips with his camper. He was always invited on a moose hunt because he was a great cook as well as great outdoorsman. He loved company and always had visitors, when you visited Ellie there was always someone there with him on the porch or in the living room.

Ellie is survived by his extensive family.

FRANCES L. GOULD

WHITEFIELD­­––Frances Lula (Brann) Gould, 86, of Whitefield, passed away Sunday, April 30, 2017, at MaineGeneral Medical Center. She was born in Windsor on June 12 1930, a daughter of Delbert Brann Sr. and Inez R. (Sproul) Brann.

Frances graduated from Erskine Academy and was a proud alumnus, class of 1947.

She worked at GTE Sylvania and retired in 1988.

She was predeceased by her parents; daughters, Sally Russell and Greta Robbins; grandsons, Mark and Donald Russell; and siblings, Austin Brann, Delbert Brann Jr., Marsha Farrington, and Nina Aho.

Surviving are her husband of 65 years, Donald, of Whitefield; son, Dennis and wife Debbie, of Whitefield; brother, Freeman Brann, of Houston, Texas; sister, Betty Lou
Crocker, of Coopers Mills; grandsons, Daryl Russell and wife Marie Hellene, of Newport, North Carolina, Lane Gould and wife Jessie, of Augusta, and Lucas Gould and partner Logan Hinkley, of Whitefield; great-grandchildren, Kayleen, Kaley, Maya, Ellie and Blake; niece, Dawn Spoden, of China, as well as many other nieces, nephews and cousins.

OTHERS DEPARTED

PATRICK S. SMITH, 53, of Waterville, passed away on Sunday, April 23, 2017, from cancer, at MaineGeneral Medical Center. Locally, he is survived by his mother, Pauline Smith, of Vassalboro, and brothers Arnold P. Smith Jr. and companion Mona Allen, Troy C. Smith, and aunt Rosemay Rowe, all of Vassalboro.

FRANK LIZZOTTE JR., 89, of Waterville, passed away on Friday, April 28, 2017, at Oak Grove Nursing Hoe, in Waterville. Locally, he is survived by his children Steven Lizzotte and wife Judy, Danny Lizzotte and wife Linda, and Jeffery Lizzotte, all of Winslow, George Lizzotte and wife LeeAnn, of Sidney, and Paula Grenier, of Fairfield; and daughters-in-law, Sandy Lizzotte, of Waterville, and Roxanne Lizzotte, of China.

JANE D. CIANCHETTE, 63, of Pittsfield, passed away on Saturday, April 29, 2017, following a courageous fight with cancer. Locally, she is survived by a daughter, Darcy Latham, of Winslow.

MARIE A. PELLETIER, 77, of Canaan, on Tuesday, May 2, 2017. Locally, she is survived by granddaughter Hilary Pelletier and husband Ryan, of South China.

SADIE M. GAGNE, 92, of Waterville, passed away on Wednesday, May 3, 2017, at Oak Grove Center, in Waterville. She had been a member of MacCrillis-Rousseau VFW Post #8835, in Winslow. Locally, she is surbvived by sons, Raymond Gagne, of Waterville, Robert Gagne and wife Jan, of Oakland, and Rodney Gagne, of Waterville, and one daughter Patricia Keyes and husband Dana, of Skowhegan.

Senior Service Fair set for May 25 in Vassalboro

by Mary Grow

The Vassalboro organization known as FAVOR (Friends Advocating for Vassalboro’s Older Residents) is sponsoring a Senior Services Fair from noon to 4 p.m. Thursday, May 25, at the Vassalboro Town Office.

All interested residents are invited to talk with representatives of area organizations providing services to a clientele that includes older people. Admission is free, and there is a door prize: dinner for four at the winner’s home, donated by Lori Dumont, of The Parsonage House, on Dunham Road. Organizations scheduled to be represented at the fair include AARP, Inc. (formerly the American Association of Retired Persons), Delta Ambulance, KVCAP (Kennebec Valley Community Action Program), MaineGeneral Health’s Mid Maine Medicine, Maine Savings Federal Credit Union, Spectrum Generations (the Central Maine Area Agency on Aging), University of Maine at Augusta Senior College, United Way of Mid Maine, Vassalboro Food Pantry and Vassalboro Public Library.

More information on the fair is available from the Vassalboro town office.

Vassalboro News: Finally, agreement on school budget

by Mary Grow

After a series of serious and occasionally contentious meetings, Vassalboro Budget Committee members, school board members and selectmen have agreed on budget recommendations to voters at the June 5 town meeting.

The total budget they support, if it remains unchanged, would increase the local property tax rate by 0.88 mils (88 cents for each $1,000 of valuation), a result that does not please most of the officials involved – and that they expect will not stand.

The two factors that encourage them to predict the actual result will be easier on taxpayers are:

  • The estimated amount of state subsidy for the school department is about $3.644 million, a decrease of more than $249,000 from the current year, based on figures and a state education plan proposed by Governor Paul LePage. Vassalboro officials expect the legislature to amend the figures to the town’s advantage, but they do not anticipate a final figure until after town meeting.
  • Town Manager Mary Sabins’ estimated property valuation is likely to increase when assessor Ellery Bane finishes his review. A higher valuation spreads the tax burden over more property, lowering the tax rate.

The total municipal budget endorsed by the selectmen and budget committee is $60,450 above the current year’s budget, including a three percent pay increase for town employees (except Sabins, who by contract gets two percent). Because income from sources other than taxation is expected to increase, the municipal budget alone would lower the tax rate slightly.

The town’s required contribution to the Kennebec County budget has gone up a grand total of $258, making an almost invisible 0.08 percent impact on taxation.

Even the school budget has increased very little, less than $10,000 in an almost $7.4 million total. The outsize impact on local taxes – a request for $338,681 – comes because revenues other than taxation have declined, especially the state subsidy.

Voters will make final 2017-18 spending decisions at their annual town meeting, scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Monday, June 5, at Vassalboro Community School. The meeting will continue Tuesday, June 13, at the town office, with polls open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. for voters to ratify or reject the school budget approved June 5 and elect local officials.

Vassalboro News: Selectmen sign final warrant for June town meeting

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro selectmen signed the final warrant for the June 5 and 13 town meeting at their May 4 meeting, after public hearings on two ordinances that are included and a final discussion of school funding.

The ordinances, in Articles 24 and 25 of the 68-article warrant, are titled “Town of Vassalboro Shoreland Zoning Ordinance as revised November 2016” and “Vassalboro Sanitary District Charter, as revised March 2017.” Copies of both are available at the town office and on the town web site.

Planning board members and sanitary district trustees attended the hearings to answer audience questions. There were none about the sanitary district charter; several people were interested in the revised shoreland ordinance. Planning Board Chairman Virginia Brackett told them:

  • The revisions presented June 5 are the same ones that voters rejected in November. She said without exit polling, she did not know why voters did not approve the changes. Selectman Lauchlin Titus surmised that voters did not understand the changes and therefore voted against them.
  • The major change is from volume to floor area or impervious surface as the standard for deciding how much a building in the shoreland can be expanded. The change means, for example, that basements can now be allowed, as they do not change the area of impervious surface. Brackett and others think voter approval of the changes would increase expansions of camps and houses within 250 feet of lakes.
  • The revised ordinance transfer authority over timber harvesting in the shoreland zone from the town to the state, a change Brackett expects would provide more expert regulation.

A two-page handout summarizing changes from the current to the proposed ordinance is also available at the town office and on the web site.

Selectmen commended planning board members for their hard work on the ordinance revisions.

The one issue remaining in the town meeting warrant presented May 4 was a wording question in the article added to deal with possible additional state school funding, beyond what the school board currently expects.

Over a series of meetings, school board and budget committee members and selectmen have predicted the legislature will provide more than the $3.644 million in the current list of school revenues. That figure is more than $249,000 lower than the current year’s subsidy.

However, no one knows what the final figure will be, and legislative action is not expected until after Vassalboro’s town meeting.

To deal with anticipated post-town-meeting changes in the state education subsidy, school officials proposed an article at the end of the school budget asking voters to authorize giving part of any additional state revenue to the town to make up for the amount required from property taxes, $338,681 in the budget as it now stands. Initially, the school board approved that wording, while selectmen endorsed an article that would have given the town all unanticipated state revenue.

At the May 4 meeting, School Board Chairman Kevin Levasseur asked indignantly if town officials expected a million dollars if the state should somehow provide that much. Selectmen agreed on an article saying the town will receive up to $338,681 in additional state revenue, if it materializes; should the state subsidy increase even more than that, the rest would go to the school budget.

In other business May 4, selectmen again discussed the request to designate a handicapped parking place in front of Hairbuilders on Oak Grove Road. Town Manager Mary Sabins said a representative of Lucas Striping told Road Commissioner Eugene Field that marking the area would cost about $100, and that it needed a 16-foot-wide area. Selectmen advised asking Field to measure to see if that much space is available without running into the road or onto the sidewalk.

Sabins and Selectman Philip Haines reported briefly on a meeting they attended at which a preliminary plan for a fishway at the China Lake Outlet Dam was displayed.

The next regular Vassalboro selectmen’s meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. Thursday, May 18.

Full Fork Farm, a project on the land in China

Roland D. Halleeby Roland D. Hallee

Following an 11-year span when he lived in New York and California, Anson Biller, of China, yearned to return to the northeast, where he had moved from after growing up in Massachusetts.

Last year, he purchased the former Dutton Pond Farm at 154 Dutton Road, about one-and-a-half miles from the northeast corner of China Lake. He renamed the location Full Fork and began his endeavor.

His path to vegetable farming wasn’t exactly a straight shot. He was initially pulled into it through an after-school youth education program in which one of his jobs was teaching children the ins-and-outs of growing vegetables. An after school program led him to take on living at and producing food for the kitchen at a retreat center for two-and-a-half years, then to running s small CSA and U-pick farm at an environmental education center north of San Francisco for another two-and-a-half years.

Anson Biller displays oyster mushrooms grown at Full Fork Farm, in China, this spring. Contributed photo

He missed the northeast and the sense of home that comes from being around the trees and animals.

“I missed the seasonal changes and the comfort of knowing a space by virtue of having grown up within it. The environments of California are fascinating, but they weren’t home. So two years ago I moved back,” said Anson.

“I spent my first year in Maine working on a sheep farm in Whitefield,” he continued, “building up 10-acres worth of paddock fencing, pruning it’s one-acre apple orchard, and helping to build its barn – while searching for the right space to start Full Fork. That spot was here in China, and the farm is now entering into its second growing season.”

There are no other family members involved in the farm, and he lives on the land in the old farmhouse with six other people.

“We hang out, cook and share meals together,” he states, “put energy into a small home garden. A lot of us are also involved in farming in some way, too, so are also bringing home food from our work.”

They have chickens, Silver Appleyard ducks, and weeder geese, one house rabbit and an Australian shepherd pup from a local breeder. “It’s a full house, but it’s a big house,” he adds, “and while I can definitely understand how it wouldn’t be a living situation that is for everyone, it really works for us to live in community with one another.”

“Full Fork being my project on the land, I’m grateful to come indoors at the end of a long work day in the field and be able to spend time with my partner and friends,” Anson states.

What else does he do besides farming?

“I’ve been playing fingerstyle acoustic guitar now for 13 years,” he says, “and mix and dabble with a handful of others. Farming has taken me away from it to a large extent, but I also love to camp and travel by bicycle (a little travel guitar strapped to my bike rack).”

His bicycling started off with a trip riding from Boston to San Fransisco and he has been hooked since. He’s done it for work, leading high schoolers up to Montréal from New York City. He has biked down California’s coast to Monterrey for a farm conference once. “You experience a lot more than driving by car, and have a lot more opportunities to meet and talk with people,” he remembers.

An exciting piece of news that he only just learned about is the Sustainable Agriculture Research & Education (SARE) grant for which he received approval.

SARE is a part of the USDA that awards research grants to farmers seeking to test an innovative idea in the field. These can run the gamut, but the idea is that these research projects meant to aid farmers are best carried out by other farmers. He applied last fall and was awarded an $11,000 grant to study the use of spent brewers’ grains as a field amendment in vegetable production.

To start, spent brewers’ grain is the major byproduct of beer production. It is what’s leftover after what’s called the masher steeps the grain and malt in hot water and converts the grains’ starches into fermentable sugars. To breweries, it’s a waste product. To farmers, it has the potential of significantly increasing a field’s organic matter.

Fresh spent brewers’ grains as delivered directly from the masher at Oxbow Brewery. Contributed photo

Spent brewers’ grain has a long history of use as a feed supplement for pigs and cows, but presents challenges for vegetable farmers. It emerges from the masher essentially pasteurized – in other words, with few living microorganisms – with both high nitrogen and moisture content. All in all, a great breeding ground for negative anaerobic decomposition. If you have a compost pile at home you might be familiar with that type of anaerobic decomposition when your compost pile smells foul because its too wet.

The purpose of his study is to take the spent brewers’ grain and put them through a special composting process called bokashi. In simple terms, bokashi is a form of a beneficial anaerobic decomposition that utilizes the same bacteria used to make sauerkraut. Rather than trying to work against the high moisture content of the spent brewers’ grains, the idea is to work with it. “I’m getting my spent brewers’ grains from Oxbow Brewery, in Newcastle,” Anson said. “They’ll be inoculated in airtight 55-gallon drums, fermented for two weeks, then tilled into the soil in the field.” Over the coming year, he will be monitoring the effect the spent brewers’ grain has on growth and yield of Full Fork Farm’s main crops.

Full Fork’s primary focus is the salad plate. They grow baby salad mixes, arugula, spinach, and specialty greens for restaurant and wholesale – including the local grocery store and hospital – as well as herbs, garnishes, and tomatoes. The farm also has a half-acre u-pick strawberry patch that opens in June and an on-site roadside market stand with a smattering of other produce beyond greens like garlic, duck eggs, beets, kale, oyster mushrooms, and husk cherries.

“In the short term, we’re working to finish establishing our permanent beds and irrigation system this season,” he states. Having farmed in California for six years, last season’s drought wasn’t something unaccustomed but it did present challenges for direct-seeding crops. Linking an irrigation system to the well they had drilled last year will help ensure they have the water needed.

They’re also moving toward year round greens production. The farm is starting out modestly, but the hope is to become known throughout the region for their salad mixes.

On the longer term, they’re just planting the gamut of perennial fruits, nuts, and support species on the land. “I grafted about 35 heritage apple trees this month and propagated about 200+ plants from cuttings and seeds,” he adds. This was helped in great part through support of neighbors, local organizations, and friends. He’s not quite sure how it might manifest, but looking forward to the years they can offer the fruit back to the community.

The farm will also provide produce for the public.

The u-pick strawberry patch and market stand are great ways to support the farm directly, and you can find their produce at Uncle Dean’s Good Groceries and several restaurants in Waterville, locally. He also works through a couple distributors, too, so the produce is already making it down to Portland and up to Bangor, along the coast, and out to the Carabassett Valley.

Anson Biller inoculating the spent brewers’ grain with the bokashi culture. Contributed photo

Why take on such a huge commitment?

“Well, in a narrow view, I believe that spent brewers’ grains will be good for my soil, for my crops, and for the farm’s growth overall,” he explains. “In a greater sense, I’m interested in taking on this project out of a commitment to mitigating the effects of climate change through my work. There’s a good understanding of human-related activities on climate change as it relates to fossil fuels, but less focus on agriculture’s contribution, which accounts for nine percent of CO2 emissions in the U.S. Farming though, in my opinion, offers the very best storage space for carbon: back into the soil. This is the concept of carbon sequestration.” The fact is that, even if as an individual a farmer remains skeptical about climate change, they’re unlikely to deny that building putting carbon into the soil and building soil’s organic matter is good for a farm. The ability for farms to partner with the burgeoning craft brew market both in the state and in the country presents an excellent, free source of organic matter that can play a part in sequestering carbon in the atmosphere back into our soils. According to the Brewers’ Association, this number has more than doubled nationally to 5,300 since 2012.

To find out info about it online, the farm’s website is www.fullforkfarm.com.

Opening day at Waterville’s Wrigley Field replica

Members of the Bole’s Cal Ripken baseball team take the field at the special opening ceremony on April 29.
Photo by Kevin Giguere, Central Maine Photography staff

by Mark Huard
Central Maine Photography

On April 29 Purnell Wrigley Field, in Waterville, joined the Harold Alfond Fenway Park, in Oakland, as the only two licensed replica turfed fields in the country.

CEO Ken Walsh, of the Boys & Girls Clubs and YMCA at the Alfond Youth Center said, “These fields give kids the opportunity to feel like real Major League players! The turf not only gives everyone the chance to play but extends the baseball season here in Maine, giving kids more time to develop their skills and learn sportsmanship while playing the game they love. The Purnell Wrigley Field is truly a grass roots community project built on the support of many and varied contributors of monetary and in-kind gifts. It’s a wonderful project honoring the legacy of some terrific ‘home town’ heroes.”

Fran Purnell and his volunteers of 48 years were recognized along with the many sponsors who helped contribute to building the field. Over 100 youth Cal Ripken baseball players and coaches attended this special celebration to kick off the 2017 baseball season. The Challenger team players developed by Fran Purnell in 1990 will also be celebrated. Former Cubs and Red Sox Major League Baseball player Lee Smith joined and threw out the first pitch and signed autographs for all of the kids and fans!

The new turf field has a 30-foot replica Wrigley scoreboard, new press box, concession stand and bathrooms. The dugouts have 24-foot murals of the Chicago Cubs winning the World Series along with a new lighting system. Thankfully, $600,000 of the $1.4 million project were in-kind gifts from the surrounding community. The project was in partnership with the Boys & Girls Clubs and YMCA at the Alfond Youth Center and the Waterville Park & Recreation Department.

A new book “Fields of Dreams” is now available describing the development of the replica MLB parks. All proceeds go to the field. Purchase through Amazon or AYC.

Former Chicago Cubs and Boston Red Sox relief pitcher Lee Smith, left, signs an autograph for Keegan Dumais during opening ceremonies.
Photo by Tawni Lively, Central Maine Photography staff

SCORES & OUTDOORS: The return of the phoebe

Roland D. HalleeSCORES & OUTDOORS

by Roland D. Hallee

Several years ago – there seems to be disagreement when it was – we had an Eastern phoebe build a nest under the awning, on a cross beam that abuts our camp. We watched as the female incubated the eggs, and my wife had the opportunity to witness the last of the chicks leave the nest.

Well, I think it’s about to happen again, and to quote the late, great Yogi Berra, “it’s déja vu all over again!” We noticed an Eastern phoebe hanging around last Sunday when we went to camp to assess the winter damage and begin the clean up. She seemed to be scoping out the area for a potential site for a nest.

In the past, the female arrived and began building the nest sometime after May 1. When we moved out to camp for the summer on May 9, the nest was about half complete. Even with the increase in traffic, the bird continued on its mission of finishing the task it had begun, despite the fact that the nest was about two feet from the door to the camp, in the exact location the other bird had chosen a few years back.

eastern phoebe

There were four eggs in the nest. We determined this by taking a mirror, placing it on a stick and looking inside the nest. The female, at that point, would leave the nest every time the door opened. They were all phoebe eggs. The Eastern phoebe is occasionally host to the nest-parasitic brown-headed cowbird.

As the incubation period approached its end, she was a little more reluctant to leave the nest unattended. She was more tolerant of our presence and did not leave the nest after sunset, regardless of the commotion that was going on around her.

Returning north at the beginning of spring, sometimes before the snow has left, these early arrivals are unmistakable. They pump their tails up and down, as only phoebes can. They have remarkably large heads, and the straight-up feathers on their heads are far too short to make a respectable crest.

In inhabited areas, the phoebes like to build their nests under bridges, porches, eaves and sheds. They will practically move in on favored homeowners – which I suppose is what we became – who may then be lucky enough to watch the construction of their moss and mud nests, the hatching of the eggs, the feeding of the young, and finally the fledgling of the brood as they take their first awkward flights, all things that we have been fortunate enough to observe.

Phoebes will frequently return to the same nest sites year after year, which we have discovered.

Although only the female incubates the eggs, both parents share in the feeding of the young. They generally will raise two broods a year, sometimes three. In our case, the last experience with them was only one brood, because we deduced that because of the many times she leaves the nest in our presence, it may take longer than the customary 14-17 days to incubate.

The young will leave the nest approximately two weeks after hatching.

The nest is an open cup with a mud base (makes a mess on the windows) and lined with moss and fine grass stems and hair.

Although the book on the phoebes indicate they are loners, and that even during egg laying the female will chase away the male, the pair that we have stay close. While the female is in the nest, the male is never too far away. We witnessed the male attack a Baltimore Oriole that had landed on the edge of the roof, eight feet away from the nest.

When we go back to camp this weekend, we will try to find if the phoebe has found a place to nest. The beam that once was home for these birds is no longer there. I’ll keep an eye on the outbuildings.

Legal Notices, Week of May 4, 2017

STATE OF MAINE
PROBATE COURT
Court St., Skowhegan, ME
Somerset, SS
Location of Court
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
18-A MRSA sec. 3-801

The following Personal Representatives have been appointed in the estates noted. The first publication date of this notice is May 4, 2017

If you are a creditor of an estate listed below, you must present your claim within four months of the first publication date of this Notice to Creditors by filing a written statement of your claim on a proper form with the Register of Probate ofthis Court or by delivering or mailing to the Personal Representative listed below at the address published by his name, a written statement o f the claim indicating the basis therefore, the name and address of the claimant and the amount claimed or in such other manner as the law may provide. See 18-A MRSA 3-804.

2017-084 – Estate of CHARLES H. BAGLEY, late of Harmony, Me deceased. Brian L. Bagley, 37 North Road, Harmony, Me 04942 and Ronald C. Bagley, 450 Guilford Road, Cambridge, Me 04923 appointed Co-Personal Representatives.
2017-102 – Estate of WOLFGANG G. FASSE, late of St. Albans, Me deceased. Walter F. Fasse, PO Box 725, Hampden, Me 04444 and J. Peter Fasse, 120 Robin Road, Weston, MA 02493 appointed Co-Personal Representatives.
2017-103 – Estate of MARJORIE L. MERRY, late of Smithfield, Me deceased. Frederick Merry, 1494 Beech Hill Road, Mercer, Me 04957 appointed Personal Representative.
2017-104 – Estate of CONCEPCION HARRIS, late of Skowhegan, Me deceased. Jeanne Hogate, 169 West Ridge Road, Cornville, Me 04976 appointed Personal Representative.
2017-112 – Estate of EDWIN B. WESTON, late of Madison, Me deceased. Thomas B. Weston, 380 Weston Avenue, Madison, Me 04950 appointed Personal Representative.
2017-113 – Estate of DOROTHY M. AUSTIN, late of Palmyra, Me deceased. Floyd H. Austin and Jo-Anne Austin of 29 Wyman Road, Palmyra, Me 04965 appointed Co-Personal Representatives.
2017-115 – Estate of ETHEL L. BRAY, late of Madison, Me deceased. Cherryl L. Gillis, 38 Davis Road, Madison, Me 04950 appointed Personal Representative.
2017-118 – Estate of EARL A. GARLAND, late of Norridgewock, Me deceased. Jason A. Garland, PO Box 371, Norridgewock, Me 04957 appointed Personal Representative.
2017-119 – Estate of ALICE S. WAUGH, late of ornville, Me deceased. Frances W. Flick, PO Box 3, Athens, Me 04912 appointed Personal Representative.
2017-120 – Estate of BARBARA J. ELWELL, late of Hartland, Me deceased. Karen Allen, 209 Nichols Street, Pittsfield, Me 04967 appointed Personal Representative.
2017 – 121 – Estate of LINDA L. GERRY, late of St. Albans Me deceased. Stephen A. Gerry, Sr., 79 Pond Road, St. Albans, Me 04971 appointed Personal Representative.
2017-122 – Estate of GERTRUDE E. BIZEAU, late of Hartland, Me deceased. Kathy-Jo Bizeau, 34 Pleasant Street, Hartland, Me 04943 appointed Personal Representative.
2017-123 – Estate of JOHN G. GILBERT AKA JEAN GUY GILBERT, late of Concord Township, Me deceased. Rhonda Gilbert, PO Box 44, Bingham, Me appointed Personal Representative.
2017-214 – Estate of WILLIAM R. FRIGON, late of Moose River, Me deceased. Erik W. Frigon, 782 Poland Range Road, Pownal, Me 04069 appointed Personal Representative.
2017-125 – Estate of NAOMI C. SUTHERLAND, late of Pittsfield, Me deceased. Barbara A. St. Jean, 38 Jenkins Street, Lewiston, Me 04940 appointed Personal Representative.

To be published on May 4 & May 11, 2017.
Dated: April 28, 2017
/s/ Victoria Hatch
Register of Probate
(5/11)