Letters to the Editor - Issue 122
Issue 122
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Bob Raynor
Marysville, Washington
A Response That Makes Us Feel Good
Fantastic issue! (MBH&H #121) All sorts of pics I like, people I know, and fish that are cute.
Casey A. McGraw
Brooklin, Maine
Advice to Live By
Back in the 1980s I moored my boat in the back channel in Kittery, Maine, where I grew up. Bud McIntosh had his cutter moored there as well. (See “From Whence We Came,” MBH&H #121.) It was not near my mooring but was in front of my parents’ house. Every time we went out—whether it was for an afternoon, a week, or months—when we returned we would offload at my father’s dock. When Bud was on his boat (which was often), he would run to the foredeck and inquire where we had been. After we told him, he would always raise his arm with a wave and yell, “Ted, do it while you’re young.” Bud was not just a builder and designer; he was a true advocate of the people who used boats as well.Jay Potsdam
Ted Weaver
Naples, Florida, and York, Maine
We will. —The Editors
Ruth Ann Redux
Wow! An issue (MBH&H #121) to answer my heart’s desire—almost. For several years I have mourned a gap in your coverage; in this issue it was filled: Ruth Ann is back! (“The Lovable Lumpfish.”) Keep her pieces coming, please.Leslie Harlow
Nancy Morrison
Steuben, Maine
Respect Our Animal Friends
I was pleased to read in MBH&H #121 that I have a fellow road-kill mourner in Rob McCall, author of the Awanadjo Almanack. In it I also learned of my previously unknown-to-me membership in the Wandering Order of St. Francis the Undertaker.
I, too, am bothered by the amount of animal death on Maine roads. I feel even worse for the creatures who meet their demise in spring. I imagine they likely struggled to survive through the long winter months and finally headed for a patch of green grass, or crossed the road to meet their mate. While walking along back roads I have paused to remove a chipmunk or squirrel pancake off the compacted surface and give the poor thing a softer resting place.
I understand that some critters, such as deer, dart unexpectedly in front of cars, but I have never seen a porcupine dart. A porcupine probably can beat a sloth or turtle in a race, but I find it hard to believe motorists cannot take the time to slow down or dodge these short-legged amblers.
Thanks to Rob and others who care.
Stacey Palmer
Union, Maine