Category: News from Mascoma Lake Association

  • Mascoma Lake Hats

    To purchase a Mascoma Lake hat, contact Caroline Lovejoy  [email protected]

  • MLA Remembers Austin Flint

    MLA Remembers Austin Flint

    Austin Whitcomb Flint passed
    away quietly at the Carriage House, a memory
    care facility at The Elms Assisted Living in
    Westerly, RI, Feb 2, 2020, at the age of 88. He
    followed Joyce, his wife of 40 years who
    passed away 9 days earlier, also in Westerly.

  • MLA Board Meetings

    April to September, third Tuesdays, 7pm at the Shaker Museum.  Public meetings, all are welcome.

  • In Memory

    In Memoriam: Starting in August 2019, the MLA would like to recognize the passing of members on our website’s News page.  When we learn of a loss, we will consult the family; with their permission, we will post a memorial on the website.  As some past members may no longer live on the Lake or maintain active participation in the Association, we encourage you to let us know if you learn that someone has passed who should receive this recognition.  Please contact Martha Rich at [email protected] call her at 802-338-0777.

  • Invasive Plant Presentation

    Wednesday, June 12th, 6:30 pm
    Enfield Community Building
    Invasive Upland Plant Species of New Hampshire
    We invite the whole community to an informative presentation by the NH Dept of Agriculture on invasive plants that may be growing in our yards and properties and how we can contain them.

    Description: The presentation provides an in-depth look at upland invasive plant species of New Hampshire.  Attendees will learn about the various issues, New Hampshire rules and regulations, characteristics, identifying features and control measures of some of the most aggressive non-native plants here in the Granite State.

    Bio: Douglas Cygan has been the Invasive Species Coordinator for the NH Department of Agriculture for the past 15-years as well as being a nursery inspector and an Authorized Certification Official for the USDA.  Prior to this he was a Wetlands Permitting Officer for the NH Department of Environmental Services (DES) for 2-years, and before that he was a Senior Environmental Manager for the NH Department of Transportation’s (DOT) Bureau of Environment for 7-years.  In 1992 he graduated from the University of Maine, Orono, with a B.S and an A.S in Plant Science with a minor in Conservation Biology and Wetland Science.

  • MLA has lost some friends

    We’ve lost some friends this winter in the Mascoma Lake Association and can take time to remember and celebrate their contributions.

    In November, Gary Gaudette our long-time treasurer, passed away.  Through battling his illness for the past several years, he kept our books and his sense of humor intact.  As anyone who worked with Gary would expect, he left the MLA records ready to hand off and Bob Barr has picked up the task (we will vote him into the office of Treasurer at our annual meeting in July).  Gary’s wife Barbara is planning a celebration of Gary’s life sometime in April in the Upper Valley.

    January came with more losses, first our friend George Crowe.  A long-time hockey coach at various schools including Dartmouth and his own training center, summers were spent on the lake.  He and wife Barbara volunteered for whatever was needed in the association and milfoil team.  The family is planning to have a celebration for George sometime this spring in Hanover.

    Then one of our newest board members, Paul Hartnagel, passed away suddenly last month.  He and his partner Barbara Gifford moved here in their retirement and both settled in to enjoy the lake and community.  Paul volunteered to serve as MLA vice president in 2017.  A service for Paul will be held May 23rd in East Greenbush, NY.

    We honor these three friends in recognition of the contributions they have given and they will be missed.  May they rest in peace.

  • A Message for Bald Eagle Watchers

    Hello New Hampshire Bald Eagle Watchers!

    We have just wrapped up the 35th annual New Hampshire Mid-winter Bald Eagle Survey, part of the national Mid-winter Bald Eagle Survey coordinated by the U.S. Geological Survey. The 2015 count results are truly remarkable! We shattered last year’s Count Day total and posted a new state record high for number of Bald Eagles seen! Most of the state had very cold but precipitation-free weather on this year’s Count Day (Sat Jan 10 statewide, except Thurs Jan 8 in Lakes Region). Overall, a record 102 volunteer observers participated in the 2015 Count Day, and located 90 individual eagles on Count Day alone, surpassing 2014’s previous high of 67 birds by an astonishing 34%.

    Two weeks of bitter cold weather preceded this year’s count, which likely had the effect of concentrating eagles into southern parts of the state where more open water and more observers were located. Add excellent visibility on Count Day and what is generally accepted to be a growing regional eagle population, and it might not be too surprising that we set a new record. However, the actual numbers for 2015 are stunning! Top regional honors for most eagles seen on Count Day 2015 goes to the Merrimack River watershed, where 29 eagles were tallied. The Great Bay-Coastal Region followed closely behind with 26 birds counted, and the Lakes Region was third with 15 individuals seen.

    Count Day statewide results: This year we located 90 Bald Eagles (48 adults, 41 immatures*, 1 unknown age) in New Hampshire on Count Day, exceeding the previous state record-high of 67 seen in on Count Day in 2014. A PDF graph showing Count Day results since 1981 is attached. Count Day graph

    Count Period statewide results: The official “Count Day” occurs within a more inclusive two-week “Count Period,” which spanned the interval from January 1-15, 2015. We keep records on the number of eagles seen during this 15-day interval. Any additional individual birds that are reported during the Count Period, and which are distinguishably different (by plumage or location) from Count Day birds, are added to calculate an overall Count Period total. During this year’s Count Period, we documented a total of 110 Bald Eagles (62 adults, 47 immatures, 1 unknown age), 30% more than the previous record of 84 Bald Eagles for the Count Period in 2013. As for overall long-term trends, the number of eagles counted during the Mid-winter Survey in New Hampshire continues to double roughly every 10 years; for the Count Period in 2015 we had 110 eagles, in 2005 we tallied 55 eagles, in 1994 we counted just 25, in 1984 we counted only 12.

    So, where were all these eagles found during the 2015 Mid-winter Survey? We located the following numbers of eagles in the state’s five major eagle wintering areas (and a few elsewhere across the state) during the Count Day and the Count Period:

    Androscoggin River – Total of 10 Bald Eagles seen, including 9 individuals (3 adults, 6 immatures) seen on Count Day (5 observers), with 1 additional eagle (1 adult) confirmed during the two-week Count Period. The Pontook/Dummer area tallied 8 eagles.

    Connecticut River** – Total of 19 Bald Eagles seen, including only 6 individuals (5 adults, 1 immature) seen on Count Day (6 observers counting for NH’s total), plus 13 additional eagles (8 adults, 5 immatures) confirmed during the two-week Count Period. Several adult pairs not found on Count Day were observed near nests on other days in Count Period.

    Great Bay/Coastal – Total of 27 Bald Eagles seen, including 26 individuals (12 adults, 14 immatures) seen on Count Day (29 observers), plus 1 additional eagle (1 adult) confirmed during the two-week Count Period. Teams covering Adams Point on Great Bay all day saw at least 11 individual eagles!

    Lakes Region – Total of 16 Bald Eagles seen, including 15 individuals (10 adults, 5 immatures) seen on Count Day (19 observers), plus 1 additional eagle (1 adult) confirmed during the two-week Count Period. A bone-chilling cold morning starting at -15F but temps rose 30 degrees to a balmy +15F by afternoon, when the eagles finally showed up!

    Merrimack River – Pace-setting total of 33 (!) Bald Eagles seen, including 29 individuals (15 adults, 14 immatures) seen on Count Day (24 observers), plus 4 additional eagle (3 adults, 1 immature) confirmed during the two-week Count Period. Photos attached show eagles seen across the watershed on Count Day, from the upper Contoocook in Bennington, to lower Contoocook in Penacook, to lower Merrimack in Nashua, to the Powwow River drainage in East Kingston.

    Saco River/Ossipee River, and from elsewhere across NH – Total of 5 Bald Eagles seen, all 5 individuals seen on Count Day (6 observers).

    A FEW NOTES ON TERMINOLOGY:

    * Following the standardized rules of the National Mid-winter Bald Eagle Survey, all sub-adult plumage eagles (including those displaying almost full adult plumage but with minor remnants of immature plumage – often called “dirty adults”) are counted as “immatures” rather than as “adults”.

    ** To avoid double-counting, VT and NH “partition” the Connecticut River, with VT credited with all eagles seen upstream from Wilder Dam, and NH credited for all eagles seen downstream from the dam, regardless of which state’s volunteers see the birds, or which state the bird was flying over or perched in.

    This was the 35th consecutive year that New Hampshire Audubon has coordinated New Hampshire’s part of the National Mid-winter Bald Eagle Survey, starting with the Winter of 1980-81.

    With completion of the 2015 Mid-winter Survey, NH eagle-watchers can turn our attention towards the rapidly approaching 2015 Bald Eagle breeding season. Just 5-8 weeks from now, our breeding pairs will be laying eggs and beginning their 5-week incubation period. Please watch for, and report, any courtship or nesting activity that you may observe as NH Audubon continues to monitor and manage NH’s breeding eagles in collaboration with NH Fish & Game.

    NH Audubon monitors Bald Eagle abundance and distribution throughout New Hampshire each year as part of an annual contract with the NH Fish and Game Department’s Nongame and Endangered Wildlife Program. We have also received outstanding financial support from TransCanada Corporation. Donations to NH Audubon’s Conservation Department in support of this work are always appreciated. And thanks once again to each and every one of you who donated your time and skills to participate in this year’s successful Mid-winter Bald Eagle Survey!

    Thanks again for your support of the Mid-winter Bald Eagle Survey, and happy birding to all!

    – Chris

    Chris Martin
    Senior Biologist, NH Audubon
    [email protected]

    84 Silk Farm Road, Concord, NH 03301
    603/224-9909, x317 (office)
    603/226-0902 (fax)

    www.nhaudubon.org

    New Hampshire Audubon – Protecting New Hampshire’s natural environment for wildlife and for people.

    For more great photos of Bald Eagles click here: http://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/topic/1331893/0