Edgecomb
Jo Cameron
Farmers' Markets are coming! Starting the third full week of May, the
Boothbay Area's FM will be set up on the Town Common, on Thursdays, 9 a.m.
to noon until Oct. 4. Call Dan Heydon, 563-1076 or
mushroom@lincoln.midcoast
.
com
. In Damariscotta, on the DRA grounds, the FM will be open on Fridays, 9
a.m. to noon (and from June 19 through August, it will be open also on
Mondays, 9 a.m. to noon) through October.
The Edgecomb Historical Society performed its Rites of Spring by
bouncing around the Schmid Preserve's cluster of long-ago mica mines. One
piece of graphic granite we turned over had a whole colony of translucent
little yellow ants milling around. Gently, we replaced it so they could go
on about their business. But were they a distinct species of ant none of
us had ever seen before? Or an immature form of a perfectly unremarkable
Maine ant? We need a few entomologists on our mailing list!
Let me tell you what I found about mica and fel[d]spar in the
Encyclopedia Britannica, 11
th
edition (1911, which is where my expertise on anything stops!): The
variety of mica found in our parts is probably more properly called
Muscovite, and was once used instead of glass in stove, furnace and
lantern windows, and the chimneys of lamps and gas-burners. Even longer
ago it was used for house windows and the portholes of ships. To quote
from EB1911, "Powdered mica is also used in the manufacture of paints and
paper, as a lubricant, and as an absorbent of nitro-glycerine and
disinfectants. Sheets of mica are used as a surface for painting... for
lantern slides, for carrying photographic films, as a protective covering
for pictures and historical documents, for mounting soft and collapsible
natural history specimens preserved in spirit, for the vanes of
anemometers, mirrors of delicate physical instruments, for various optical
purposes. Being a bad conductor of heat it is used for the packing and
jackets of boilers and steam-pipes. Other applications depend on the
strength of its resistance to acids. The most extensive application of
mica at the present day is for electrical purposes. Being a bad conductor
of electricity, it is of value as an insulator, and the smooth flexible
sheets are much used in the construction of armatures of dynamos and in
other electrical machinery."
Mica occurs as a component of any igneous rock; for instance, in
granite, it's the sparkle. Locally, it is often found in association with
feldspar, which has been used in the manufacture of porcelain because of
its fusibility. As feldspar breaks down chemically, it yields kaolin, the
pure white china-clay. Highly translucent porcelain, known as "ivory
porcelain" has a large proportion of feldspar in it. It is also an
important constituent of most ceramic glazes, and was once used in the
making of false teeth. Anyone wanting more current data can go to
Wikipedia!
As a result of the above adventure, and still buoyed up by our success
at having a marine botanist and a marine molluscologist (is that a genuine
discipline?), EHS will plan to invite geologists, paleontologists and
archaeologists to grace our meetings in future. Any suggestions? Any
volunteers?
The Fort Edgecomb Bicentennial Committee will have a small but select
silent auction table at the Town Meeting on May 17, at the Edgecomb Eddy
School, from 10 a.m. to noon or whenever we stop debating. Our thanks to
donors of items to our first such effort, which netted us over $1,300! for
letting us stockpile unsold wares for this "intravaganza."
Congratulations, Dominic Lom- bardo, who graduated April 18 as a Delta
Company Honor Graduate from the U.S. Marines' boot camp at Parris Island,
South Carolina, ranked as the most outstanding and motivated Marine among
his cadre of 400.
And congratulations, Roger Bintliff, who was recently honored by the
Marine Corps League, Department of Maine for his "Project Recognition,"
which has treated 20 military families with their service members to a
week of relaxation at the Sheepscot River Inn Resort. Next year, Roger
says, he will extend hospitality to 40 such families.
Boothbay Region Land Trust is now seeking applications for Barge-McKee
Education Fund scholarships for 2008. Applicants can be from Boothbay,
Boothbay Harbor, Southport and Edgecomb. There is no age limit and the
scholarship funds can be used to attend colleges, schools, camps and
conferences involved in the scientific study of the environment.
Scholarships have ranged from $100 to $1,000, and have been granted to
dozens of students for studies all over this country and abroad. The
scholarships are awarded annually, and depending on each year's
applications, can go to one or more student.
Interested applicants are asked to write a letter to BRLT explaining
the program they wish to attend, their planned course of study, what they
hope to learn and how the program is related to the environment. The
deadline is May 9th. Letters should be sent to the Education Committee,
Boothbay Region Land Trust, P.O. Box 183, Boothbay Harbor, ME 04538. For
more information on BRLT, visit
www.bbrlt.org
.
This Saturday, Morris Farm is holding its 12
th
Annual Contra dance, 7:30 to 10 p.m., following an informal potluck
dinner, if you wish to participate, from 6:00 to 7:15 p.m. Admission to
the dance is $10, free beverages and nibbles. For details, call the Farm
at 882-4080.
The Damariscotta River Association is offering a student internship
this summer, for a 2008 high school graduate or college student who is
interested in ecology and conservation education for children in this
region. It would be the ideal job training for future teachers,
naturalists, biologists and other similar careers. Call 563-1393, e-mail
dra@dracltorg, or go to DRA's Webpage,
www.draclt.org
for the details.
Safety in the home, I don't think! Last week, my spouse went down
cellar to turn off lights on the seed flats, and missed a step, breaking
his shoulder blade and a couple of ribs.
Our hearty thanks to Dr. David Millay and the staff of St. Andrew's
Emergency Room for the speedy diagnosis, X-rays, etc. Bones knitting
nicely at 234 River Road, 633-2978,
jocam@midcoast. com.
This column appears in the Boothbay Register, The Lincoln County News,
the Wiscasset News-paper, and at
www.Edgecomb.org
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