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Preparing to Celebrate the Only Season Named for the Soil: Mud Season


By Lambert Strether of Corremte.
Everybody know what mud is, right? Here’s a picture[1] of mud in season from the Bangor Daily News:
The reporter writes:
Mud season in Maine, sometimes called the state’s “fifth season,” generally occurs between March and late April or early May. It happens when the snow and ice start melting. All that extra water leads to a lot of mud…. The mud is deep, the texture often seems more like
Jello than hardpan and the damage it can do to your car or your peace of mind is real.
Sadly, I see I have given way to my tendency to be too optimistic about the approach of Spring I learned to hard way never to plant before Memorial Day when two days of snowish rain rotted all the seeds I’d planted two weeks early because Mud Season begins in towards the end of March, not the beginning. In fact, it’s still winter, at least in the Northern Hemisphere. ....

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County approves limits for expansion of solar farms in Agricultural Reserve


County approves limits for expansion of solar farms in Agricultural Reserve
Opposition disappointed as potential land for solar drops
February 25, 2021 | 10:32 am
A solar array installed at Craters of the Moon National Monument in Idaho.
Image via Flickr: National Park Service (Public domain)
A yearlong debate over whether larger solar farms should be allowed on part of Montgomery County’s 106,736-acre Agricultural Reserve culminated Tuesday with council members approving an expansion that was smaller than some hoped.
The zoning amendment, which passed 7-2, was first introduced in January 2020. It proposed opening 1,800 acres of the reserve for large solar farms, a significant expansion from what is allowed now. Under current zoning, only small solar installations, such as rooftop panels, can be built. ....

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