Wednesday, May 30, 2007
from the Kennebec Journal
PROPANE NO QUICK FIX
AUGUSTA Penny saved is a stamp forever Cost to mail regular letter rises 1 cent on Monday
CENTRAL MAINE Area residents' scrap metal rising to top of heap
Dunn celebrates 35 years as fire chief
Maranacook set for budget tests
FARMINGDALE NEVER FORGET
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL ROUNDUP: Rankin sparks Black Bears
Morang stymies Bulldogs in only 2nd varsity start
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Kennebec Journal
from the Morning Sentinel
Auctioneer sues woman over $300,000 Internet purchase
Prison time awaits
Waterville writer wins this year's Young Lions Fiction Award
Rising prices for scrap metal attract sellers to local facility
Colby seniors celebrate end of classes
JUDGES CHOOSE YOUTH OF YEAR Gary Fearon a 17-year-old member of Penobscot Nation Boys & Girls Club, a satellite unit of Waterville Area Boys & Girls Club
Biathlon might skip out on Fort Kent
HUSKIES COLLECT 1ST WIN
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Morning Sentinel
We refer, of course, to the show put on every spring in Damariscotta Mills. That tiny village is the site of one of the most thrilling displays of natural selection you're ever likely to encounter.
There, the fresh waters of Damaris-cotta Lake tumble down to meet the brackish waters of the aptly named Great Salt Bay, which is actually a bulbous protrusion at the head of the tidal Damariscotta River. And navigating upstream to spawn, from the Gulf of Maine through the Damariscotta River, Great Salt Bay and into Dam-ariscotta Lake, are tens of thousands of alewives.
What's thrilling is that it's not that easy a transition. There's no expensive fish elevator for alewives to get upstream from the top of Great Salt Bay to the lake, as there are on other rivers for finicky shad. There's no technically complex fish passage designed by the Army Corps of Engineers to usher these fish into fresh water.
Instead, there's an almost 200-year-old stone fish ladder that works just fine, thank you, and puts a lot of latter-day, fancy-pants fish passages to shame. The great clouds of alewives literally smell their way to this ancestral spawning ground, find the stream outlet on the western side of Great Salt Bay, cram through the abutments of a railroad bridge and squeeze even further into the tiny entrance of the fish ladder. Then, it's just 42 vertical feet up, and they've made it into Damariscotta Lake, where they'll reproduce.
That is, if they've made it that far. The tough ones make it, the less tough ones end up a feast for the dozens of osprey, cormorants, bald eagles, herring gulls, raccoons and all manner of other predators that show up every spring just like the alewives.
So these small, coppery fish -- a member of the herring family -- fight their way upstream, nosing and thrashing up the fish ladder's runs and resting pools, always, always, in the company of thousands of their fellow alewives.
Children love them. Adults love them. There are people who make the pilgrimage every year to see the great migration. Like the fish, they start at the bottom of the ladder. But unlike the fish, they walk their way up to the top, where they witness how, one by one, the strong and tenacious fish will rest, then shoot through the slot and into the lake.
That is, if there's no loon or largemouth bass waiting for 'em. Darn! Such is life, such is the cycle of life, such is the thrill of watching one of the most fundamental dramas on earth, fish version. Get thee off to Damariscotta Mills soon; you don't want to miss it.


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