New Season. Same Pandemic. But New Get-Out-There Strategies

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Here comes a new season so I’ve got two new goals to get more use out of things I’ve taken for granted.

Goal One: Get out on the first snow, even if it’s only a few inches, and then get more use out of my snowshoes and skis than ever before.

Goal Two: Change up my blog posts so they get a better workout too. Find a way to reuse them, re-tweak them, and repurpose them to reach more people interested in their content.

First: The snow. On only a few inches of lawn, field, or golf course, we can snowshoe. (Long before terrain gets skiable.) Today I’ll share some visual encouragement and some links to find snowshoe places. If you can walk, you can snowshoe. “Just widen your stride a bit, kind of like you’re wearing diapers . . . “

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It's Really Okay to Call Something Stupid

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Apologies for crashing into this lovely fall weather with anything sobering (this is not about COVID), but maybe after the hottest summer on record in Maine, we can shake loose our brains for something we can do something about.

I have been on a bit of a mission. Both my novels attempt to seduce readers into a compelling murder mystery, into the magic of woods, and also into what threatens to murder those woods. (One murder mystery inside another murder mystery.)

In Maine, this forest is the last temperate forest of its size and kind in the northern hemisphere. Rich in all kinds of plant and animal diversity and essential water resources, and the last of its kind. Chunking it up with industrial development is, well, just stupid.

There, I’ve said it. Stupid.

And now if you’ll read on . . .

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Dreaded June Stuff. But great swamp video . . .

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My June topic is the dreaded Synopsis (or plot summary). I suspect many readers cannot get into this type of dread, so I’ve paired the issue with something we can all DREAD: the June onslaught of bugs when every species gangs up on us or staggers their hungry waves so they overlap. (Don’t miss the they’re-still-laughing black fly video… below.)

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